yeah i use it for sites i don't care about loosing the password to like my account needed to comment on popular science or gawker sites don't really care if they are compromised. slashdots password is not saved and neither is my email accounts' password. a large problem is that every site under the sun wants you to register a account just to make one comment so peoples mind become inundated trying to remember dozens of passwords they rarely ever use.
Most VPN tunnels are between networking devices (usually Cisco ASA), but you can use pretty much anything, including a Linux box on both ends to handle the tunnel.
Anyone who uses a Windows Server on either end of a corporate-critical 24/7/365 VPN tunnel is, well, an idiot.
unfortunately IT acquisitions and licensing is handled by pointy haired bose
well if you use double xor encryption with randoms keys as long as the massage (and a new one for each message) you can.
alice xor's plain-text making ciphertext1 then sends it to bob. bob xor's ciphertext1 creating ciphertext2 then sends it to alice alice xor's ciphertex2 creating ciphertext3 returns it to bob bob xors ciphertext3 and gets the plain-text
We have another tool tor, and they were so kind as to provided it to us. It was reported here yesterday that they were attacking freedom hosting the host of tormail and many other hidden tor services this shows that their current tools are so ineffective at tracking inside the tor network they way they do with the open web that they are forced to illegally hack a hosting company and deliver spy-ware to be able to make any progress. It was also shown that simply fallowing the directions recommended by tor and good browsing habits you would still be able to thwart the three letter agencies exploit attacks. the only thing that the freedom hosting attack showed is that we a need more distributed services. What is called for is a i2p/freenet like distributed peer 2 peer encrypted network over tor. goodluck trying to take it down then.
Have you actually taken a look at the XKeyScore slides? They give specific examples of filtering out PGP users and obtaining lists of exploitable machines with a simple query... If they can't break the encryption, they'll attack the endpoints instead.
yes i have read the slides what they can do is find who is using pgp. what they cant do is decrypt it.
Technical solutions to social & political problems don't work.
Really you want to try brute force decrypt 4092 bit random key encrypted folder stored to random joe's sky drive folder? No, well neither does the NSA.
Well, those cognitive routers will license technology from Sirius Cybernetics Corporation which allows the routers to see the future. Since the routers will know in advance what packets will arrive when for which destination, they can figure out the routing in advance, and as soon as the packet arrives, sent it to the right port immediately.
My 'dumb' router is never going to decide my fridge needs to route through china to send my grocery list to my phone.
Actually, it might. The quick and easy smart device schemes I have seen require that all communication between devices route through an external server. If hosting starts migrating to China and local infrastructure to to short circuit these paths doesn't become pervasive in the mean time, you might very well find that your fridge talks to your phone via China.
the problem is they want intrenet of things when what we need is a intranet of things. i want it all controled by me and talking to only who i want it to not who the manufacturer thinks i should talk to. it should be rootable and open.
A dynamic ip address really isn't an issue as there are lots of free and pay dynamic dns services that cater to the geek/home server market i use one for my home computer so I can ssh in and access my files and not have to memorize what ever my ip address is this week.
you just have to make sure that tracking you down and finding then putting you away is more costly than leaving you be. for most purposes using an anonymised bit coin account over tor at a wificafe with a changed mac address is more then enough.
yeah i use it for sites i don't care about loosing the password to like my account needed to comment on popular science or gawker sites don't really care if they are compromised. slashdots password is not saved and neither is my email accounts' password. a large problem is that every site under the sun wants you to register a account just to make one comment so peoples mind become inundated trying to remember dozens of passwords they rarely ever use.
Were the founding fathers responding negatively when they had the Boston tea party?
you forgot to select encrypt harddrive
tails is good.
Mod this up. Encryption will continue to be a 'grey' area legally for the sake of the children. Fuck the children.
i believe that is actually the excuse they use for all of the spying and hacking
thats why you encrypt locally
hmm how may times do I have to roll a d20 to get significantly strong key...
except with web-mail email is delivered at endpoint via www
Most VPN tunnels are between networking devices (usually Cisco ASA), but you can use pretty much anything, including a Linux box on both ends to handle the tunnel.
Anyone who uses a Windows Server on either end of a corporate-critical 24/7/365 VPN tunnel is, well, an idiot.
unfortunately IT acquisitions and licensing is handled by pointy haired bose
not quite. what your thinking of is obfuscation.
encryption make your payload unreadable without they key
obfuscation hides your payload unless you know how and where to look.
If you are the only one who has the key
then you're not communicating much.
well if you use double xor encryption with randoms keys as long as the massage (and a new one for each message) you can.
alice xor's plain-text making ciphertext1 then sends it to bob.
bob xor's ciphertext1 creating ciphertext2 then sends it to alice
alice xor's ciphertex2 creating ciphertext3 returns it to bob
bob xors ciphertext3 and gets the plain-text
We have another tool tor, and they were so kind as to provided it to us. It was reported here yesterday that they were attacking freedom hosting the host of tormail and many other hidden tor services this shows that their current tools are so ineffective at tracking inside the tor network they way they do with the open web that they are forced to illegally hack a hosting company and deliver spy-ware to be able to make any progress. It was also shown that simply fallowing the directions recommended by tor and good browsing habits you would still be able to thwart the three letter agencies exploit attacks. the only thing that the freedom hosting attack showed is that we a need more distributed services. What is called for is a i2p/freenet like distributed peer 2 peer encrypted network over tor. goodluck trying to take it down then.
Have you actually taken a look at the XKeyScore slides? They give specific examples of filtering out PGP users and obtaining lists of exploitable machines with a simple query... If they can't break the encryption, they'll attack the endpoints instead.
yes i have read the slides what they can do is find who is using pgp. what they cant do is decrypt it.
That is why I encrypt my private key
the xkeyscore presentation suggests they do this while they get coffee.
I thought they were using stolen ssl keys or blank ssl keys provided by verasign for that.
you mean the minimum wage walmart drone that smells of pot. yeah not worried about him fallowing directions of the key.
Technical solutions to social & political problems don't work.
Really you want to try brute force decrypt 4092 bit random key encrypted folder stored to random joe's sky drive folder? No, well neither does the NSA.
that sound like a good idea maybe we should all make pressure cooker and backpack our sig
Well, those cognitive routers will license technology from Sirius Cybernetics Corporation which allows the routers to see the future. Since the routers will know in advance what packets will arrive when for which destination, they can figure out the routing in advance, and as soon as the packet arrives, sent it to the right port immediately.
or they could make the nic out of Resublimated Thiotimoline https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thiotimoline
My 'dumb' router is never going to decide my fridge needs to route through china to send my grocery list to my phone.
Actually, it might. The quick and easy smart device schemes I have seen require that all communication between devices route through an external server. If hosting starts migrating to China and local infrastructure to to short circuit these paths doesn't become pervasive in the mean time, you might very well find that your fridge talks to your phone via China.
the problem is they want intrenet of things when what we need is a intranet of things. i want it all controled by me and talking to only who i want it to not who the manufacturer thinks i should talk to. it should be rootable and open.
A dynamic ip address really isn't an issue as there are lots of free and pay dynamic dns services that cater to the geek/home server market i use one for my home computer so I can ssh in and access my files and not have to memorize what ever my ip address is this week.
GPL isn't about sharing, it's about forcing others to share.
no it is about reciprocal sharing. i share with you as long as you agree to share not take.
no that would never happen because if we did that then we would see more than the republican and democrat candidates
you just have to make sure that tracking you down and finding then putting you away is more costly than leaving you be. for most purposes using an anonymised bit coin account over tor at a wificafe with a changed mac address is more then enough.
yes but it is trivial to setup anonymization schemes to send the bitcoins through as many accounts as you want to hide who really owns it.