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Russia Posts $110,000 Bounty For Cracking Tor's Privacy

hypnosec writes: The government of Russia has announced a ~$110,000 bounty to anyone who develops technology to identify users of Tor, an anonymising network capable of encrypting user data and hiding the identity of its users. The public description (in Russian) of the project has been removed now and it only reads "cipher 'TOR' (Navy)." The ministry said it is looking for experts and researchers to "study the possibility of obtaining technical information about users and users' equipment on the Tor anonymous network."

2 of 98 comments (clear)

  1. TOR is a US-backed project by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Remember, TOR was made by the US Navy specifically to anonymize the traffic of government spies. The public release of the project and transfer to EFF and later parties was specifically to provide cover for said spies. The current developers even consult with the NSA regarding it's security, and the NSA itself has tools to deanonymize it to a certain extent. (It probably relies on the fact that they run a large amount of exit nodes.)

    Russia doesn't want to decrypt your packets. They want to decrypt the CIA/NSA/FBI traffic you're relaying around.

    1. Re:TOR is a US-backed project by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      No, TOR was a project about creating the ability for people in repressive countries to be able to access the Internet in ways that their government was either blocking, or whose access could endanger the user since it was not in line with the government's decrees and/or filters.

      No, you're wrong and OP is right:

      http://cryptome.org/0003/tor-spy.htm

      Creators of TOR:
      David M. Goldschlag
      Michael G. Reed
      Paul F. Syverson
      Naval Research Laboratory

      More:

      http://www.onion-router.net/Publications/IH-1996.pdf
      http://www.isoc.org/inet97/proceedings/F7/F7_1.HTM
      http://www.onion-router.net/

      TOR Made for USG Open Source Spying Says Maker

      Date: Tue, 22 Mar 2011 16:57:39 -0400
      From: Michael Reed
      To: tor-talk[at]lists.torproject.org
      Subject: Re: [tor-talk] Iran cracks down on web dissident technology

      On 03/22/2011 12:08 PM, Watson Ladd wrote:
      > On Tue, Mar 22, 2011 at 11:23 AM, Joe Btfsplk wrote:
      >> Why would any govt create something their enemies can easily use against
      >> them, then continue funding it once they know it helps the enemy, if a govt
      >> has absolutely no control over it? It's that simple. It would seem a very
      >> bad idea. Stop looking at it from a conspiracy standpoint& consider it as
      >> a common sense question.
      > Because it helps the government as well. An anonymity network that
      > only the US government uses is fairly useless. One that everyone uses
      > is much more useful, and if your enemies use it as well that's very
      > good, because then they can't cut off access without undoing their own
      > work.

      BINGO, we have a winner! The original *QUESTION* posed that led to the
      invention of Onion Routing was, "Can we build a system that allows for
      bi-directional communications over the Internet where the source and
      destination cannot be determined by a mid-point?" The *PURPOSE* was for
      DoD / Intelligence usage (open source intelligence gathering, covering
      of forward deployed assets, whatever). Not helping dissidents in
      repressive countries. Not assisting criminals in covering their
      electronic tracks. Not helping bit-torrent users avoid MPAA/RIAA
      prosecution. Not giving a 10 year old a way to bypass an anti-porn
      filter. Of course, we knew those would be other unavoidable uses for
      the technology, but that was immaterial to the problem at hand we were
      trying to solve
      (and if those uses were going to give us more cover
      traffic to better hide what we wanted to use the network for, all the
      better...I once told a flag officer that much to his chagrin). I should
      know, I was the recipient of that question from David, and Paul was
      brought into the mix a few days later after I had sketched out a basic
      (flawed) design for the original Onion Routing.

      The short answer to your question of "Why would the government do this?"
      is because it is in the best interests of some parts of the government
      to have this capability... Now enough of the conspiracy theories...

      -Michael