Born In the NSA: These Former Spies Are Starting Companies of Their Own
First time accepted submitter ElyKahn (3637855) writes "The diaspora of startups with an NSA pedigree is rapidly growing. These startups, such as Sqrrl, Virtru, and Synack, are typically security-focused and often are commercializing technology projects from the NSA. However, coming from the NSA is a dual-edged sword... the technology is world-class and cutting-edge, but they must also fight the viewpoint of some that the startups are merely a front for the NSA."
Now that basically every US tech company has that taint, it should become a lot easier for the NSA spinoffs to find customers. Not internationally, of course.
You can't branch off with new names and expect me to fall for it!
Fun Fact: Years ago I stayed at an apartment complex where someone was murdered in a fight. Three months later, the complex changed its name, mainly because of all the bad results that would come up when people Googled the name.
I was BORED in the NSA
I was BORED in the NSA
Born down in a dead man's town
The first door kick I took down hit the ground
End up like a dog that's been beat too much
Till you spend half your life just covering up
Got in a little public network jam
So they put a rifle in my hand
Sent me off to my own land
To go and kill the geeky man
Come back home to commercial land
Hiring man said "son if it was up to me"
Went down to see my P.I. man
He said "son, don't you understand"
When your customers are forced to pay for your "services" -- especially those who would never even consider paying for such a thing voluntarily -- your chance of being financially successful is guaranteed. Those who have a foot in the door of this "business" will retire very rich indeed.
The NSA has its grubby little paws everywhere. Whether the company is in bed with them willingly is another matter.
I know a many European business owners who think twice or more before doing business with *any* US company, just because the US surveillance state isn't far behind.
"A door is what a dog is perpetually on the wrong side of" - Ogden Nash
no need to participate in the deceptive spy vs. die epidemic... creation remains undefeated & we are just warming up (r)evolution wise. the need to silence & cull us has never been more urgent for the mutant crown royal inbred's WMD on credit cabals.. some are still calling this 'weather' http://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=weather+manipulation+weapons fake history & heritage pretense has become obsoletely fatal rock on /. http://youtu.be/u6BesY5Doec
Now I'll never be able to sing again the Bruce Springsteen song without remember this news title!
"All of our security products come with a free back^H^H^H^H^H emergency exit."
That's not the actual problem. The actual problem is like going to a world-class and cutting-edge insurance company that has been started by retired Mafia members.
You don't want to trust people with business ethics compatible with their background. Never mind how qualified they are.
Government: founded by and for the people, beholden to certain truths inalienable to all mankind, servant of the public trust and keeper of the freedom. checks and balances exist in theory to crush any attempt to tread on constitutional rights. :D
Corporations:: Facebook gmail gchat pinterest funtime! its snapchat loads of fun social social! just sign up! its free and all ur friend r here its fun! play farmville!
Fusion Center: Warrants are hard, congress is slow, we steal your data, but you'll never know..
Good people go to bed earlier.
As the NSA is so fond of placing these days, thereby exceeding the damage even the most capable data-terrorists could ever hope to cause and attacking the very fabric of society: trust.
Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
I fear the NSA a lot less than Russian Mafia and or the others that seem to be running things like the Target break in. I feel that many people do not have their threats in line with reality. Kind of like people that live in terror of nuclear power plants and flying but drive a 1982 Volvo with no airbags, traction control, or anti-lock brakes.
See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
The NSA has its grubby little paws everywhere.
I wonder how many of these companies were started by ex-sysadmins with their pockets full of thumb-drives? Is their security is that bad, there must be a thriving business in recycled secrets (;-))
davecb@spamcop.net
There is no such thing as a former KGB man.
Vladimir Putin - May 2000
Aww, look at the cute, grubby little paws, implying a cuddly, harmless family pet loved by everyone. If anything fits the notion of ubiquitous mass surveillance funded and implemented through coercion (and ultimately violence), it's got to be a cute little 5-pound yorkie.
While I'm at it, why don't we also stop using the term "congress critters", for the same exact reason.
After an NSA education and government benefits, I'm can't wait to hear how these guys became 'self-made millionaires' who built the log cabin they were born in.
This company A10...
http://www.a10networks.com/pro...
If they cut off one head, two more shall take its place.
See, this is why we need to boost funding for the government!
All these spinoffs! It's given us velcro, the microwave, handheld diagnostic devices, heat shields, radiant barriers, brainwave monitoring, real time tracking of the populace, the license plate database, live interception capabilities on all foreign leaders, the space shuttle, data mining tools, radiant barriers, Stuxnet, improved rocket engine designs, automated facial recognition, new anti-icing formulas, access to the data in the cloud, oxygen sensors for bioreactors, speech recognition, micro-accelerometers, the ability to recover data off a dead hard drive, behavior prediction tools, sensors that enable plants to text farmers, graphing all social connections in America based on phone calls, photocatalytic surfaces, satellite maps for more realistic gaming (http://ntrs.nasa.gov/archive/nasa/casi.ntrs.nasa.gov/20130009018.pdf) and US soldiers (http://ntrs.nasa.gov/archive/nasa/casi.ntrs.nasa.gov/20120001904.pdf)... NSA, NASA, what's the difference?
Steve Gibson from GRC.Com is sqrrl inventor. Totally open source
coming from the NSA is a dual-edged sword... the technology is world-class and cutting-edge
There's also the human problem that more often than not, "usta work for the NSA" means "could not hack it in private sector," "buzzword compliant," or "washout."
Here at a small software company in the PNW, we've literally hired hundreds of ex-NSA and similar defense intel people. The vast majority cannot think their way out of a paper bag. Once you get past the secret squirrel BS and the kill-chain-chinese-haxxor-APT-APT-APT!!!!! grandstanding, nary a one has any creative idea about big data analysis, could not tell you how "taxonomy" is different than "tagging", nor could they explain the difference between a malware hit and a behavior. By and large, the NSA people are useless and only here to steal our soda.
You want scary analysts who know you better than you know yourself? Go talk to the Google/Bing advertising analytics researchers.
Steve Gibson of GRC.Com invented sqrrl. He isn't affiliated with the NSA
Doesn't mean you're not paranoid.
The front corporations are fairly easy to find, just look who buys certain equipment.
After all, since nobody respects the US Constitution, or the Canadian Constitution, or the EU Constitution and their rights, why should we Serfs care?
-- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
I'm sure they'll work for *anybody.* The NSA, the CIA, the Chinese, the Russians, the NYC police department, NASA, BP, Exxon....
Heck, the beauty of it is that the intelligence can be sold over and over to different parties to the highest bidders. It doesn't even have to be accurate, just convincing.
Of course, if the NSA hopes to shield itself from controversy by outsourcing to these front organizations would never allow that to happen.... (Ahem). Unless, perhaps, there was money to be made.
Please do not read this sig. Thank you.
commercializing technology projects from the NSA...
Ummmm.....if it's gov't tech, it's the people's technology, and therefore all profits should go to the IRS at the very least!
Intelligent life on Mars living underground will be disclosed before Obama is out of office. Teleportation tech will soon follow. Then it will be obvious that teleporting through space also requires teleporting through time. You can't violate causality, because there is no causality.
Sneaker Net: Decentralized peer to peer data exchanges using paper, punched cards, scrolls, stone tablets, bits of knotted string and other primitive methods such as the Postals Services get humans to the personal computing explosion.
Prior to mid 1980's: Software doesn't have patents yet, no innovation could have happened before this point.
Software Patents: Due to government restriction on innovation in the 1980's Personal Computers instantly appear. Some say it is a conspiracy, involving E.T.s
ARPANET: After millions of years of primitive communication, humans finally test peer to peer data routing on machines, and one day this becomes the Internet. Semaphores and Radios remain a CIA Hoax!
FIDONET: The Internet (being designed by committee) takes too damn long so the citizenry say, "Well, fuck that let's do it our selves", because of long distance fees and the FCC the Internet wins over a more decentralized approach.
The WWW: A centralized approach to digital file sharing. In ignorance of all prior human history (including such one-to-many landmark designs such as Hollering, Signal Fires and Television), HTML and DNS fails to leverage the Internet's capabilities fully, creates lots of needless bottlenecks at the data silohs it erects, enables censorship, and spying on data consumption for the first time. (Librarians shudder, and eventually the state takes away the right to privacy in dead-tree reading material too, because "Turrist!").
Distributed File Sharing: Online decentralized information transfers, tries to make the data storage work the way the Internet, and every-"bloody"-thing else does. Fine upstanding citizens understand such technologies can only be used for, evil (I mean, just look at rumors, gossip, repeating camp-fire stories, and brains).
Tor: Online Anonymity to fight the dumb-ass "features" of the centralized web's design. This centralized approach to anonymity fails because it's fucking laggy and it bounces data between endpoints instead of placing the technology in the IP routers.
Anonymous P2P: Anonymous (somewhat) Distributed File Sharing, lays the groundwork for what will replace the WWW.
Dead Drops: Offline decentralized digital information transfers, because "Oh yeah!", the FIDONET approach and packet routing doesn't actually need wires; Sneakernet v2.0 don't even need broadcast radios -- as if such things had ever existed.
DTN: NASA tries to figure out how Disruption Tolerant Networking would work, but completely ignores that DHT infohashes deduplicate the fucking data. Meanwhile, users of napster, Bittorrent, WoW game installers, and dark-age-couriers scratch their heads vigorously and realize since "information conveyance isn't rocket science" space agencies pretty much suck at it.
Web 4.2.0: Finally mirroring, life, the universe and everything, the web becomes decentralized too, because caches should talk to each other Derp! You mostly pull from neighbors so tracking your online habits has exponential cost. There is no more "fast lane", everything essentially has free collocation, and the more popular content is the more available and faster it comes in. The world's surviving sysops give a collective shrug and say, "well, that finally happed." (Marijuana is also universally legalized, purely by coincidence).
Terrestrial DTN: A NASA engineer, once fined for using Bittorrent, takes a break from rolling out the DTN and realizes it would cost a lot less if everyone just owned their own software defined short-wave radio to operate the
"The basics on backdoors in security systems" on How the NSA (may have) put a backdoor in RSA’s cryptography: A technical primer. I thought the "pool ball" analogy was very interesting....
"The backdoor allows anyone with knowledge of a secret user agent string to log in and modify settings on any router running the vulnerable software,"... "The values for the points P1 and P2 could have been chosen randomly or they could have been chosen with a deliberate relationship. If they were chosen deliberately, there is a backdoor."
Is there any way to tell if they were chosen deliberately or not, and if not is this a possibility for any of these programs out there?
but they must also fight the viewpoint of some that the startups are merely a front for the NSA
Only some? Isn't it clear that with NSL, which can compel any US company to do anything for the government, ALL American companies have become a front for the US Govt?
Any sane foreign government will treat ALL US companies as fronts of the US govt, there is nothing a US company can do short of moving the whole company to another country and have every employee either giving up their job or their American citizenship.