'Obnoxious' RSA Protests, RSA Remains Mum
An anonymous reader writes "By 'buying out' the most obvious lunch spot nearest the RSA conference yesterday, opponents and truth-seekers regarding RSA's alleged deal with the NSA raised awareness amongst attendees in the most brutal way possible: by taking away tacos and tequila drinks. Robert Imhoff, Vegas 2.0 co-founder, says, 'RSA could begin to fix this by going on the record with a detailed response about the accusations.'" I tried to get attendees of the conference to comment on camera — even a little bit — on what they thought of the NSA spying revelations, and not a single person I approached would do so. The pained facial expressions when they refused were interesting, though, and reflect the problem with a surveillance society in a nutshell. Especially at a conference where the NSA is surrounded by vendors who sell the hardware and software that enables your "mere" metadata to be captured and sifted, plenty of the people on the floor know that the companies they work for are or might one day be seeking contracts to do all that capturing and sifting, even if they'd rather not be subject to it personally, so their don't want their face shown saying so.
I don't think this little stunt has anything to say about a "problem with a surveillance society"; they have something to say about a problem with some a$$hole ambushing some geeks at a tech conference that just want to get their lunch and get back to the conference sessions.
And the RSA did go on record. They said it wasn't true. As far as going into the gory details of the contract? Contract details of any contract, with any customer, are generally not something a security company is ever going to disclose. That's not surveillance-state paranoia or evidence of evildoing; it's routine business practice.
Stupid reasoning. There are plenty of other reasons these people might not want to publicly comment. The most likely is that they're not authorized to speak for their employers, and fear rebuke or dismissal at their workplaces if they speak publicly on the topic.
Sure, they can release the details of that contract. Government contracts are supposed to be public. Go take a look at usaspending.gov and fpds.gov There are plenty of security contracts posted there, just not any between RSA and NSA. It's not the easiest system in the world to navigate, you have to know a lot about government contracting to make sense of it.
But, you'll see military hardware contracts, homeland security database contracts, all of them are published on federal websites as a matter of course (you have to get special approval to not post a contract publically). The government mandates this so that competing companies and the public can see that they're getting a "fair deal". Never mind that a lot of these show they weren't competed, no one actually takes advantage of government transparency when it's available.
Are you referring to this RSA's CTO Sam Curry's "defense", which Mathew Green and Matt Blaze has had so much fun ridiculing? http://blog.cryptographyengine...
RSA Security really haven't made anything close to a coherent defense.
I worked as a government employee overseeing R&D contracts. It wasn't that long ago. We were required to post the contracts publically. They're on the websites I mentioned...
First they came for the tacos, and I did not speak out -- because we had a CmDrTaCo.
Then they came for the tequila drinks, and I did not speak out -- because I was more a fan of Wine.
Then they came for the chips 'n dips, and I did not speak out -- because everyone had moved on to Slashdot
Then they came for Slashdot, -- there was no one left to speak for it...
Video meliora proboque deteriora sequor - Ovidius