Privacy, encryption vs. Surveillance state

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Just goes to show - when creating alpha numeric passwords, the most important variable for password strength is the length of the password, not the use of numbers, symbols or mixed cases.

 

EFF Urges Pennsylvania Supreme Court to Find Keyword Search Warrant Unconstitutional​

SAN FRANCISCO—Keyword warrants that let police indiscriminately sift through search engine databases are unconstitutional dragnets that target free speech, lack particularity and probable cause, and violate the privacy of countless innocent people, the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) and other organizations argued in a brief filed today to the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania.

Everyone deserves to search online without police looking over their shoulder, yet millions of innocent Americans’ privacy rights are at risk in Commonwealth v. Kurtz—only the second case of its kind to reach a state’s highest court. The brief filed by EFF, the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers (NACDL), and the Pennsylvania Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers (PACDL) challenges the constitutionality of a keyword search warrant issued by the police to Google. The case involves a massive invasion of Google users’ privacy, and unless the lower court’s ruling is overturned, it could be applied to any user using any search engine.

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The hub can be found here:

 
Some history of cryptography (not crypto currency) including PGP and the Clipper Chip:
 
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Related, but from the Central Bankers point of view.

 

What Happens When National Governments and Law Enforcement Agencies Use Biometric ID and Surveillance Systems Illegally?

The answer, it seems, is nothing. But some governments, including the UK and Australia, are now modifying their laws to make sure it is no longer illegal.

In October last year, the UK’s Minister of Policing (and former McKinsey & Company consultant) Chris Philip unveiled plans to create a vast facial recognition database out of passport photos of people in the UK. It was as brazen and as egregious an example of mission creep as you’re likely to find. Forty-six million passport holders who had given their facial images for travel purposes alone will soon have that data used by police to conduct facial recognition searches without their consent.

It now turns out that British police departments have been doing this all along, without public knowledge or approval, for years. The covert practice has been going on since at least 2019, according to documents obtained by The Telegraph and Liberty Investigates.

The facial recognition searches were conducted despite the fact that Philip did not raise the possibility of using the passport database in this way until October 2023. Now the UK government wants to make legal a covert practice that has already been going on for years. Also, in December it was revealed that police forces will soon be able to conduct facial recognition searches on a database of Britain’s 50 million driving licence holders, and have already been carrying out similar searches of the UK immigration database, which holds information on foreign nationals.

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Gov agencies having banks search customers transactions.

How is this legal? It ain't. Just one more way the gov violates the People's Constitutionally protected Rights as standard operating procedure.

US gov does today what the stasi could only dream of, and has convinced the majority of people that it's what the Founders intended. Lol


 
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""In other words, FinCEN used large financial institutions to comb through the private transactions of their customers for suspicious charges on the basis of protected political and religious expression," Jordan wrote.

I realize that it was a partisan use of power that half the nation will ignorantly cheer about, but how can any American actually be in favor of such actions that are so clearly a violation of Constitutional limitations on gov power?

What good are Constitutional limitations on gov power, if the bureaucrats in the swamp can just shit all over them whenever they feel like it?
 
... What good are Constitutional limitations on gov power, if the bureaucrats in the swamp can just shit all over them whenever they feel like it?

Snowden on line 2 .... Snowden on line 2 ...
 
Coming soon to a city near you?
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Amazon says DOJ disclosure doesn’t indicate violation of facial recognition moratorium​

The statement came after FedScoop reporting noting that, according to the DOJ, the FBI is in the “initiation” phase of using Rekognition.

ADepartment of Justice disclosure that the FBI is in the “initiation” phase of using Amazon’s Rekognition tool for a project doesn’t run afoul of the company’s moratorium on police use of the software, an Amazon spokesperson said in response to FedScoop questions Friday.

The statement comes after FedScoop reported Thursday that the DOJ disclosed in its public inventory of AI use cases that the FBI was initiating use of Rekognition as part of something called “Project Tyr.” The disclosure is significant because Amazon had previously extended a moratorium on police use of Rekognition, though the company did not originally clarify how that moratorium might apply to federal law enforcement.

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Here's some more.................

FBI recruits Amazon Rekognition AI to hunt down 'nudity, weapons, explosives'​

The FBI plans to use Amazon's controversial Rekognition cloud service "to extract information and insights from lawfully acquired images and videos," according to US Justice Department documents.

In its Agency Inventory of AI Use Cases, the DOJ lists the project, code-named Tyr, as being in the "initiation" phase for the FBI, which intends to customize and use the technology "to review and identify items containing nudity, weapons, explosives, and other identifying information."

The DOJ document doesn't mention a start date, and simply says the Feds will be using a Rekognition-based commercial off-the-shelf system purchased pre-built from a third party. The FBI declined to comment, and though Amazon promised The Register a statement in response to our inquiries, that has yet to arrive.

 

 

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The shady companies helping governments hack citizens’ phones

A pair of reports by the world’s biggest internet firms shed more light on the murky cyberweapons market and put more pressure on government to take action.​


Named for the winged horse of Greek mythology and often sent by text message, Pegasus can burrow into your phone without your knowledge or even your click, hiding for days or weeks inside, surreptitiously recording everything—messages, photos, encrypted chats, and video and audio—in real-time. Exactly where your data is going often remains a mystery, lost in a tangle of servers. But the deadly impacts of Pegasus and other cyberweapons—wielded by governments from Spain to Saudi Arabia against human rights defenders, journalists, lawyers and others—is by now well documented. A wave of scrutiny and sanctions have helped expose the secretive, quasi-legal industry behind these tools, and put financial strain on firms like Israel’s NSO Group, which builds Pegasus.

And yet business is booming. New research published this month by Google and Meta suggest that despite new restrictions, the cyberattack market is growing, and growing more dangerous, aiding government violence and repression and eroding democracy around the globe.

“The industry is thriving,” says Maddie Stone, a researcher at Google’s Threat Analysis Group (TAG) who hunts zero-day exploits, the software bugs that have yet to be fixed and are worth potentially hundreds of millions to spyware sellers. “More companies keep popping up, and their government customers are determined to buy from them, and want these capabilities, and are using them.”

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The Government Really Is Spying On You — And It’s Legal​

Consumer data has become a lucrative commodity, and the US government is buying.

The freakout moment that set journalist Byron Tau on a five-year quest to expose the sprawling U.S. data surveillance state occurred over a “wine-soaked dinner” back in 2018 with a source he cannot name.

The tipster told Tau the government was buying up reams of consumer data — information scraped from cellphones, social media profiles, internet ad exchanges and other open sources — and deploying it for often-clandestine purposes like law enforcement and national security in the U.S. and abroad. The places you go, the websites you visit, the opinions you post — all collected and legally sold to federal agencies.

In his new book, Means of Control , Tau details everything he’s learned since that dinner: An opaque network of government contractors is peddling troves of data, a legal but shadowy use of American citizens’ information that troubles even some of the officials involved. And attempts by Congress to pass privacy protections fit for the digital era have largely stalled, though reforms to a major surveillance program are now being debated.

On today’s episode of POLITICO Tech, Tau and I discussed the state of our personal privacy and the checks on all this government surveillance. I asked what differentiates the U.S. from authoritarian states like China when it comes to data collection, how our digital footprints will impact policy areas like abortion and what broader implications we can expect for civil liberties. He didn’t sugarcoat his responses.

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Law Enforcement Caught Snooping on Private Land... Again​

Mar 7, 2024

Tom Manuel is a forester who owns timberland in East Feliciana Parish, Louisiana. First and foremost, the land is part of his private forestry business/tree farm. Similar to most non-industrial, private forest owners, Tom also manages the property for wildlife conservation, recreation, and multiple other uses as well.

https://ij.org/case/louisiana-open-fi...

When his kids were young, his family spent time on the property learning about tree farming, hunting, camping, and riding four-wheelers. Tom, an avid outdoorsman, also enjoys hunting on the land. And the land is marked accordingly: Boundaries are fenced and painted, entrances are gated and posted. It’s a private place—and Tom wants to keep it that way.

But Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries (LDWF) game wardens have other ideas in mind. Twice in December 2023, they entered Tom’s land without consent, a warrant, or probable cause and confronted first him and then his brother. They were interrogated but both were complying with hunting laws and neither was given a citation.

The game wardens think they have unlimited power to invade private land under an old Supreme Court rule called the “open fields doctrine.” The rule says that the U.S. Constitution’s protections against unreasonable searches and seizures do not extend to land outside the immediate area around a home. But the wardens are ignoring that the Louisiana Constitution is different—it protects all “property” from warrantless searches.

To vindicate his property rights for himself and all other users of private property in Louisiana, Tom has partnered with IJ to file a suit in Louisiana state court that aims to put a stop to these warrantless intrusions once and for all.

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In Alabama if you are hunting or fishing, a Game Warden can search you, all your gear, your boat and vehicle for any reason or no reason. You give them the right to do so when you purchase a license. Not sure about their ability to enter private property with out cause.
 
Alaska high court rules against warrantless aerial police surveillance of private citizen

Alaska law enforcement agencies do not have the right to conduct aerial surveillance of private property with high powered telephoto technology without first obtaining a search warrant.

This was the March 8 ruling of the Alaska Supreme Court in the case, State of Alaska v. John William McKelvey.

Back in 2012 the Alaska State Troopers received a tip that McKelvey had a grow operation on his property located in rural Fairbanks. After initially flying over the property and taking photos with a telephoto lens, the Troopers then obtained a search warrant. The central issue in this case concerned the validity of the search warrant and whether the Troopers’ use of aerial photos violated the Fourth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution and the Alaska Constitution’s rights to privacy and freedom from unreasonable searches.

According to the Alaska Supreme Court’s ruling, the State Constitution protects Alaskans from law enforcement aerial surveillance by requiring a warrant prior to taking pictures of private property from the sky.

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Imagine a world in which the internet is first and foremost about empowering people, not big corporations and government. In that world, government does “after-action” analyses to make sure its tech regulations are working as intended, recruits experienced technologists as advisors, and enforces real accountability for intelligence and law enforcement programs.

 
Digital ID will be used to determine compliance with govco mandates and coerce compliance or you are cut out from participating in the economy:

 
This may be in play on the border for now but in the future could be your street, mayhaps your back yard.

U.S. GOVERNMENT SEEKS “UNIFIED VISION OF UNAUTHORIZED MOVEMENT”​

AS THE IMMIGRATION crisis continues and the Biden administration pursues a muscular enforcement strategy with an eye to public opinion and the 2024 presidential election, the Department of Homeland Security prospers. One obscure $6 billion program has grown silently: a network of over 1,000 surveillance towers built along America’s land borders, a system that it describes as “a unified vision of unauthorized movement.”

A broad outline of the Biden administration’s plan to solve the immigration crisis in America was unveiled this week, including 5,800 new border and immigration security officers, a new $4.7 billion Southwest Border Contingency Fund, and more emergency authority for the president to shut down the border when needed. Moving forward on these programs will “save lives and bring order to the border,” President Joe Biden said in his State of the Union address last week.

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We're all hobbits now living under...........................
 

Google's Legal Conundrum: Ordered to Disclose YouTube User Data Amid Privacy Fears​

Federal investigators in the United States have issued a mandate compelling Google to provide extensive user data from viewers of specific YouTube videos, setting off a firestorm of privacy concerns and constitutional debates. The implications of the court orders, obtained by media, have sparked a critical discourse on the balance between law enforcement needs and individual privacy rights.

The case under scrutiny in Kentucky involved undercover authorities targeting an individual known by the online handle “elonmuskwhm”, suspected of engaging in bitcoin transactions that could potentially violate money laundering laws and regulations on unlicensed money transmission. During early January engagements with the suspect, agents sent YouTube tutorial links related to drone mapping and augmented reality software. These publicly available videos, watched by over 30,000 people, became the cornerstone of the controversial order for Google to provide not only the names, addresses, and phone numbers of Google account users who watched the videos but also the IP addresses of those who viewed them without being logged in.

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Biometric locks are not protected information. Use number codes or geometric designs. They cannot compel you to disclose those locks as it is information in your head.
 

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https://www.msn.com/en-in/travel/ne...-qr-code-requirement-for-visitors/ar-AA1nMRds
 
Like privacy? Don't want a surveillance state? Well, here's a little food for thought.

A second Trump term would be a surveillance nightmare​

It’s darkly ironic that Donald Trump’s upcoming appearance at the Libertarian Party’s national convention was announced the same week his stunning interview with Time magazine was published, in which he indicated all the ways a potential second term would imperil our personal liberties.

Reading through the interview, I was struck by the scope of the surveillance state — and widespread intrusion into Americans’ personal lives — that will be required for Trump to accomplish his agenda.

Take immigration, for example. Trump said he would tap state police forces to aid a mass deportation plan that his advisers have said will involve rounding up most of the roughly 11 million undocumented people in the United States, holding them in camps along the southern border, and deporting them. Aside from the monumental resources that authorities would require to search for and apprehend that many people, it also stands to reason many of them, once apprehended, would be subjected to intense surveillance already deployed against people at risk for deportation, like ankle monitors and strict curfews.

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There are only a handful of DC critters that care about the privacy and the surveillance state and most of them are in the GOP. That article is dumb to focus just on Trump. Is the author purporting that Biden would be any better? That's not supported by the track record of his current administration.
 
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