John McAfee Airs His Beefs About Privacy In Def Con Surprise Talk
John McAfee made a surprise appearance at Def Con to talk about privacy: he's for it. Trouble is, he says, lots of companies feel otherwise, and he took the stage to single out "don't be evil" Google: “Google, or at least certain people within Google, I will not mention names because I am not a rude gentleman, would like us to believe that if we have nothing to hide, we should not mind if everybody knows everything that we do,” he said from the podium. “I have to take serious issue with that.”
The BBC has video. McAfee also announced his new complaints website, The Brown List. (Good usernames are still available, and your complaint can be about anything, not just privacy violations by humongous corporations.)
Why would anyone listen to this paragon of paranoia?
A compelling illusion, but an illusion nonetheless. The metadata generated by even the most privacy conscious individual leaves a mark, and given the resources of an interested government, only the most dedicated living off the grid can escape their view.
The only thing we have going for us, is that the vast majority of us won't raise the eyebrows of any government employees in our lifetimes. The sad part is that a lonely few will, and they'll be dealt with unfairly and harshly.
The general masses don't have much to fear, but anyone who raises the ire of a nameless bureaucrat will.
Sun Microsystem's Scott McNealy made that prescient quote back in something like 1998. He may have been thinking partly about Google, but he was really talking about a trend that would occur regardless of whether Google was around to help lead the way.
There's a lot of surprising consequences of the Internet, big data, mobile computing, and robotics that help and hurt people and professions and entire industries. It's an upheaval not unlike the Industrial Revolution in the first half of the 19th century.
Because it's fascinating
That is why we should strongly favor, promote, encourage and demand the development of a mixnet type internet to protect our freedom and privacy. Better than focus only in guns.
He's innocent and exposed the corruption of the Belize government.
This guys is no privacy advocate, he's still a fucking charlatan
- If you are still bitching about "Don't be Evil" as a bad slogan, you need to move the fuck on.
- If you are still whining about a Eric Schmidt's quote "If you have something that you don't want anyone to know", you need to move the fuck on. That was 5 years ago and out of context. Look it up if you are really curious what it meant.
Most importantly if you are some fucking drug addled has been who used scamware to make your money, you should just fucking go away.
If he was a brave man he would have taken on the hard topic recent Google and MS stories of volunteering user information to vigilante organizations to hand over to police. Repeating whines about company slogans and out of context misquotes from 5-10 years ago doesn't make you an advocate for privacy, just an attention whore.
Google, Facebook, MS, and Apple should all be held accountable. As well as ISPs and telcos. Especially in this post-Snowden era. You want to help restore privacy? Donate to the EFF. Contribute to easier to use PGP email and messaging software. Help audit and fork truecrypt.
But this guy does not help that cause.
You can complain about literally anything? So it's the superset of all reviews sites/forums on the internet? How accurate do you expect the results to be?
10 PRINT CHR$(205.5+RND(1)); : GOTO 10
He may have done some drugs, but we all have. As far as murder, well, let's just say you'd have to be a complete idiot to think he killed anyone.
" I will not mention names because I am not a rude gentleman" - alright, how much?
My hotcakes are cold... and the waitress won't give me any extra butter.
That out of context quote about having nothing to hide has persisted for years despite corrections. It's really quite amusing how easy it is to irreparably tarnish someone's reputation. That or it's depressing.
As of 9:32PM PDT the brown list is down. I would say it is slashdotted, but given the dwindling number of readers of this site and the server error it tossed out, I expect it's either been hacked, or is just broken.
It's somewhat ironic that after his rant against Google, I go to sign up for brownlist.com and I see a "Login with Facebook" link, along with pages and pages of 'Terms of Use' buried in a pdf file.
First post is always stupid because it's rushed and not thought out, in order to be faster than everyone else.
Fuck you shithead. You and your kind are the reason America sucks now.
Well before the Snowden relevations, Eric Schmidt got on TV and told everyone that if they had something they didn't want to government to find out about it, they probably shouldn't do it online. Maybe he should have listened.
Sure thing there IDF.
I smell an infinite regress - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Q...
Government has power over people to keep them from doing wrong.
Government watchers have power over government to keep them from doing wrong.
Government watcher watchers have power over government watchers to keep them from doing wrong.
So on, and so forth. It's not just a question of making abuses of the surveillance state/corporation illegal, it's having any sort of system in place that can possibly ensure that those abuses are prosecuted.
We've made some progress on this with FOIA and sunshine laws in general, but those systems are still gamed by those willing to destroy evidence and fight transparency.
Hello,
Most people would likely get thrown off the stage at DEF CON for using it to promote their business in such a fashion. Instead, Mr. McAfee gets applause and people lining up to take photos with him.
Aside from that, the whole concept of simultaneously railing against the erosion of privacy while creating a web site that encourages people to share private information (without much information about how it will be safely secured) that is possibly libelous and may even be criminal at times is, well, going to be interesting. Especially with a FAQ which states things like " Yes, any entity can respond to a complaint. However, if the entity is not a subscriber, the response will not be featured in the official response section." and " It must not be possible for information on the site to be altered for any purpose."
It is going to be very interesting to see how this latest business venture of Mr. McAfee's turns out.
Regards,
Aryeh Goretsky
Dexter is a good dog.
http://www.brownlist.com/
- Slow
- Pointless
- Buggy
Nothing new. The guy is still making crap software, for pointless projects.
He needs to show up too!
Ant(Dude) @ Quality Foraged Links (AQFL.net) & The Ant Farm (antfarm.ma.cx / antfarm.home.dhs.org).
He wasn't thinking of Google in 1998.
You are a traitor to freedom and to the USA. Go kill yourself.
Within brownlists terms and conditions, section B, 2nd paragraph last sentence. "You hereby consent to the Subject contacting you directly regarding any of Your
Content that you post about a Subject" - hard to imagine how that would happen without them passing on your private details...
You're a bit late.
This guy is in league with Microsoft and Apple and parrots their talking points because he can see the writing on the wall for his crapware when people stop using windows and apples OS. Its the same talking points Microsoft and Apple constantly chant to try to stop people from migrating away from thier products. Best advice is to just stop listening to their crap and tell the media to stop reporting crap as stories cause they get paid by gates and his mob of bastards.
How can this be abused. Perhaps by selling the whistleblowers revelations back to companies that they are against or to the government?
I've got a complaint... The site is slow as shit and buggy as hell. After a long wait, the homepage FINALLY loads. Click on anything, and get a spinning little "loading" thing pop up in the middle of the page, and then nothing happens. After some minutes, and error box popped up in the top-right corner of the page saying there is some technical issues.
OH wait, this is McAfee we're talking about... yeah, shit's gonna suck, forgot.
He may have done some drugs, but we all have.
No we haven't.
you'd have to be a complete idiot to think he killed anyone.
How do you know he didn't?
systemd is Roko's Basilisk.
He may well be right...However John McAfee has a well earned reputation of drugged out paranoia, so I think I will reserve judgement for now
Choose your allies carefully, it is highly unlikely you will be held accountable for the actions of your enemies
This is why we can't have nice things.
John McAfee is not a great posterboy for why privacy should exist at all...
No we haven't.
So no caffeine, no aspirin, no cigarettes, no alcohol, no marijuana, no LSD, no antibiotics, no medicines and/or no prescription drugs? When you go to the dentist, do you have them work on you without Novocain (ie. synthetic cocaine) or nitrous oxide? Sorry, but you're a liar.
How do you know he didn't?
Because the Belizean government nor the Guatemalan government nor the US government ever charged or even named him as a suspect to the murder. The murder also occurred after police raided his home but found nothing to pin on him, which casts a lot of suspicion upon the Belizean government itself. By contrast, your vilification of Mcafee is utterly baseless.
Get involved with DOD. Guess who provides the search engine for NSA? I'll never tell...
I don't think many like Google see data privacy the same way they see privacy with physical mail, or paper documents, or physical documents or files. People in Google see opportunity with personal data that can supposedly better your life by using your data to help you. I don't know how much is malice and how much is just being naïve on Google's part? McAfee is hardly a person with legitimate credentials to make many take notice of privacy issues with companies like Google.
I think the shear ease of having so much information that can be manipulated and compared on a grand scale through data storage is just too tempting for agencies like the NSA, Google and any other entity that can benefit from personal data. Its like a kid in a candy store that has unlimited free samples. Why would you ever buy any?
Wow! I'm impressed with how citizens of the U.S. support freedom of speech. One guy comes out in support of NSA and gets a "fuck you shithead" in response. Wow.
When someone is trying to quash the freedom of speech, that is what you should rightly expect. Nowhere in that response did I see anything telling GGP that he couldn't express his opinion, just that he's a shithead.
Also what? You extend the freedom of speech to the GGP but not the person you replied to, Mr. Hypocrite?
Why is this modded down?? I hate the NSA as much as any of you, but his/her comment actually makes sense (tho I don't necessarily agree with it 100%)
The info will be collected no matter what. We simply have no say in it. If you don't like it, create your own chips, write your own code, manufacture your own products. It's what is DONE with that info that we should be focused on.
Casting a wide net is a good strategy. Giving the punk ass fuckin police and other gubment agencies freedom to do whateverthefuck they want with that info, including harassment, torture, black mail etc, is just fucking despicable.
I for one, would prefer the NSA not exist, not collect data AND not share it, but let's get real... I also prefer that guns not exist, but guess what, they DO. And so I'm glad I have the freedom to purchase one to protect my family because it's already too late. GUNS EXIST. NSA EXISTS. Now let's deal with this shit.
It's what is DONE with that info that we should be focused on.
Nope. The mere collection of the information is a violation of the constitution. Furthermore, by allowing them to have the data, you must trust all people who will ever be in government to not abuse that; a foolish level of trust, given history.
You don't seem to understand free speech, nothing the AC said in any way interferes with the exercise of free speech. You are free to say it and others are free to respond, you may not like their response, but they are free to speak it.
http://www.brownlist.com/ = Server Error in '/' Application.
-Ignacio Agulló
When you are in dept to someone you are a slave to them. Currently the USA owes money to the same people that own our major news agencies, and hollywood, mainly China, and Russia. You do not have to conquer the USA militarily, you just have to buy out their politicians.
The largest holder of US debt is the Social Security fund, which, using your "logic", explains why Fox News exists.
Social Security: 16%
Fed Reserve: 12%
China: 8%
Japan: 7%
I have been ungoogling myself. Took the app off my phone.
Changed to duckduckgo and switching email.
You cant scan and have end to end encryption their just cant be both. So I switched.
I might also pay for a proxy as ISP's are all up in your business too.
Apparently you don't know how the fuck freedom of speech works, nimrod.
Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
Typed www.brownlist.com URL into my browser and after a long wait got:
Server Error in '/' Application.
Runtime Error
Description: An application error occurred on the server. The current custom error settings for this application prevent the details of the application error from being viewed remotely (for security reasons).
[...and some more]
Slashdotted?
Such as banging underage girls while ranting for hours how bath salts give you massive boners, followed by having to bribe his way out of a murder charge that, and lets be honest here folks, there was more than enough circumstantial evidence to be fairly certain he'd be on trial now if it happened here, its really no surprise he is beating the privacy drum. I wonder if he sent something incriminating through Gmail and is now spooked?
ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
The benefits of shining sunshine on evil doers far outweighs the minor "privacy" inconveniences.
One hypothetical: What if the murder or rape of a loved one by a perpetrator that had committed similar acts prior could have been prevented by a lookup against national DNA database taken from every resident at birth.
I don't have an opinion on Snowden, honestly. Part of me wants to call him a traitor, as he did reveal information about clandestine operations, but part of me thinks him a hero for revealing the same information about homeland-based activities. I love this country, but I hate its government with a passion... and, as I'm related to a federal employee, I'm not worried about this post landing me on any watch list; I'm already on most of them. God Bless America.
APK quotes people (including myself) without context and should not be trusted. Just thought you should know.
You didn't hear that sound, did you?
Sorry, but you're a liar.
Ooh, ouch. Called a liar by a pedant on the internet.
By contrast, your vilification of Mcafee is utterly baseless.
I've never villified him. I have no idea, and no real opinion, on whether or not he killed anyone. I do have an opinion of those who - with likely little more knowledge of the actual facts than anyone else - go around spouting invective against anyone who dares to disagree with them.
systemd is Roko's Basilisk.
Hint: Freedom of speech doesn't mean others have to accept what is said. Quite to the contrary, it means others are free to say things like "fuck you shithead," which equally qualifies as free speech. There seems to be an increasing trend of people attempting to equate vocal disagreement with some sort of repression of free speech, and this habit appears to be especially prevalent among those who like to use terms like bigoted, racist, or intolerant to cast aspersions upon the speech of those who in fact merely vehemently disagree with certain views or practices. Does the last sentence describe some of your social interactions perchance? Are you still still unclear on the concept?
In short, you can kiss my ass.
(philip.paradis posting AC because I don't log in on this machine)
Didn't he retire to a life of sex and drugs, preferably of the illegal kind?
I'm all for privacy, but I'm not sure if that argument gets more weight if it's John McAfee who says it.
Ooh, ouch. Called a liar by a pedant on the internet.
What, do you believe that the legal status of a drug makes it a non-drug and therefore harmless? If not, then thanks for the admission of guilt.
I've never villified him. I have no idea, and no real opinion, on whether or not he killed anyone. I do have an opinion of those who - with likely little more knowledge of the actual facts than anyone else - go around spouting invective against anyone who dares to disagree with them.
You were defending the stance that McAfee is a murderer. You know who do have more of the facts? The Belizean, Guatemalan and United States governments and they say he's not even a suspect.
Have you forgotten that every dollar that exists is a debt to the Federal Reserve, plus interest?
Ever since Eric Schmidt was hired, fired and paid off, then brought back, Google's 'Do No Evil' policy has flown out the window with little hopes of return. He is more profit over quality and does not care about what that does to Google's customer's. They use nothing but Apple products in their daily lives, instead of Google products to improve, and this is one of many reasons Google has down so far down hill.