Startup Provides Secure Calls For Egypt 84
An anonymous reader writes "As the technology used to fuel democracy protests in Egypt continues to evolve, Whisper Systems, the company founded by well-known security researcher Moxie Marlinspike, just released encrypted calling and text messaging applications into Egypt to help keep protesters safe from surveillance."
The way things are going... (Score:2)
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There has been a need for this forever. Just look at the rate that people go through disposible cellphones. Those roving wiretap laws are a real PITA for people involved in certain types of transactional businesses. Instead of having to come up on a new burner every couple of days, they just can rock the 'droid and get around the LEOs.
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They way things are going we may need that here in the USA sometime in the next few years.
Don't tell me. Some dude with a blackboard told you about impending dictatorship?
I find nothing as amusing as the rage of the entitled. You live in the most free society on Earth (or so you're fond of bragging anyway) but as soon as the party that you don't support takes power or your income tax bill goes up a little (it probably hasn't, by the way, Obama has lowered middle class taxes, you're welcome) you're crying about being "oppressed". Yeah, right. Try telling that to people who have been unable to ou
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A rather uncharitable comment about the people who have been financing and supplying you with arms and ammunition for centuries (well, almost), "Fianna Fail man". Surely you're aware of the sympathies of the American people toward your cause, right? So chill, FF man. And up the IRA. Whoever they are these days...
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Go learn the difference between Fianna Fail and Sinn Fein and then get back to me with some sort of relevant point.
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"They should have been ranked lower because the voter-participation is low in USA."
The reason voter participation is low is simple: the two-party system encourages anyone in the middle, and anyone with half a brain, to stay home or else hold their nose for insane choices.
I support the US's military spending - after all, if we didn't, we couldn't be the world's policeman and cover 99% of the UN's peacekeeping bills with our own troops.
I support the US's public education system and think it needs more money f
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"we couldn't be the world's policeman and cover 99% of the UN's peacekeeping bills with our own troops."
Not quite, you never pay up, even Ted Turner, 'left commie bastard' as you might call him had to pay a billion of your debt out of his own pocket.
You forgot to mention the 3rd party in US politics (Score:1)
The extremist in the media in collaboration with sheep voters, progressive socialist unions new world order folks.
Some seem to think the 3rd party is an expedient low effort choice, all it requires is absolute commitment to apathy.
These people are not free, they vote as a mindless block and cripple any real democratic debate.
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Actually our government likes to say that. Left-wing types fearing a US dictatorship usually do not.
Yeah, but when our government tries to help out with ousting dictators, w
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How many dictators have you actually ousted lately? Only one or two that I can think of, which is good, but you botched the follow-up operations so badly that your troops are still in the middle of those messes. On the other hand you have a history of ousting democratic governments and insta
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The guy's comment was that "the way things are going" (i.e. health insurance companies prevented from operating the real death panels, as opposed to the fictitious ones concocted by the Alaskan bimbo-in-chief) we are going to need social media to stage a revolution in the USA. "Retard" indeed!
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No. his comment was "the way things are going".
"health insurance companies prevented from operating the real death panels, as opposed to the fictitious ones concocted by the Alaskan bimbo-in-chief" is what you, being a presumptuous fuck, assumed he was referring to.
Try leaving your basement for once in your life and maybe you'll realize that in the real world, despite what American media would like you to believe, political beliefs are commonly more nuanced and varied than just "hurrr durr palin" vs. "hur
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He talks about us heading towards a dictatorship in the most spoiled-brat country in the world and you expect me to believe that he might not be a Fox-watching mad hatter? Gimme a fucking break! I've listened to these pricks for long enough now that I can smell them a mile away.
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Binary "us vs them" politics? check
Base your worldview off american media? check
Presumptuous cunt? check
You are more stereotypically "American" than most redneck flaghumpers I know.
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Okaaay.
So basically what you are saying, is that since we have it better than most places in the world, but still worse than others, that we have no right to complain? That because the US has not *yet* started physically oppressing its people at a large scale (it does do so at a small scale in notable situations) that we cannot complain about any of the losses of our freedoms and violations of our rights *till* it happens?
How does that make any sense? It's like a doctor saying to wait till your appendix ex
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It's like a doctor saying to wait till your appendix explodes before surgery, or for that cancer to spread a little bit more before you get treatment.
No, it's like waiting for your doctor to say that there actually is any indication that you need surgery before going in for surgery. Going under the knife when there's fuck all wrong with you is the act of a hypochondriac. People like you are political hypochondriacs who think they're in the same boat as the Warsaw Jews just because a black dude got elected President.
Recognizing that the US is heading for a totalitarian dictatorship with all the abuses you mentioned is not a partisan or divisive act in of itself.
I think "deluded paranoia" would be a better description.
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Why are you still on Obama? Just because somebody complains about our loss of freedoms over here does not mean we are anti-Obama. I still don't get that. Most people I know concerned about rights and freedoms are not anti-Democrat, anti-Socialism, or anti-Obama.
You mentioned "black"... what the fuck does that have to do with it? So all the people complaining about our loss of freedoms are now racist as well?
Deluded Paranoia? Right. You tell me I am deluded after understanding the Patriot Act, how it ha
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The blackboard brigade belong in an asylum. They are paranoid delusional idiots. It's okay to say that.
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The unique encrypted traffic will glow and any average user will stand out.
A fusion centre http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fusion_center [wikipedia.org] would get your details and the vans would be on the way.
Also remember what this software runs on. Nokia Siemens was to Iran as a that nice telco/web 2.0
Mubarak Speech transcript plagiarized! (Score:5, Funny)
Here's the transcript of mubarack speech tonight:
You know the rules and so do I
A full commitment's what I'm thinking of
You wouldn't get this from any other guy
I just wanna tell you how I'm feeling
Gotta make you understand
Never gonna give you up
Never gonna let you down
Never gonna run around and desert you
Never gonna make you cry
Never gonna say goodbye
Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you
We've known each other for so long
Your heart's been aching but
You're too shy to say it
Inside we both know what's been going on
We know the game and we're gonna play it
http://tinyurl.com/2g9mqh [tinyurl.com]
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May need? Start encrypting your calls and messages today. Don't wait for any public announcement. That will never come.
Cell Phones (Score:1)
Can they do something about those unwanted text messages sent to cell phones? Too many of the new cell phone users in Arab countries are getting prematurely detonated by unwelcome messages.
Problem is... (Score:3)
In the places you need to use this the most just using this app will be grounds for a head kicking. The classic "You're trying to maintain your own privacy/secrecy, you must be up to something bad."
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Further, there is nothing secure about communications, however well encrypted they might be as people in Egypt found out when the entire country's net went dark.
Secure also means Operational.
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Further, there is nothing secure about communications, however well encrypted they might be as people in Egypt found out when the entire country's net went dark.
Secure also means Operational.
RedPhone is just one piece of a larger puzzle [imagicity.com] that could create some very exciting stories for freedom-lovers everywhere:
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> there is nothing secure about communications, however well encrypted they might be
> as people in Egypt found out when the entire country's net went dark.
Electronic communication. There are more ways to (securely) communicate than calling and texting.
The usual paradigm also applies here: The more complicated and high-tech a system you're relying on is, the higher the likelihood of it failing (or deliberately being made to fail).
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True there are other means of secure communications, but the man in the street can not use these.
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Ham radio
SAT Phones
Heliographs
Direct Dial up to a foreign ISP
Once the phones and the net go down, Joe in the street is dead in the water.
Further its illegal to encrypt ham traffic in most countries.
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"RedPhone uses your normal mobile number for addressing, so there's no need to have yet another identifier or account name;" [http://www.whispersys.com]
Seems to me, like the above poster stated, this can easily single you out for a head-kicking.
Of course, the government could always pass a law outlawing civilians from possessing any t
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Phone companies are already required to keep logs of who you are communicating, but not the content of the message, so from a government intrusion point of view, it's keeping the bit they don't have secret without some effort on the governments part. I suppose if you were texting a mistress and didn't want your wife to know about her existance as well as not knowing about the contents of the messages it migh
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Well, if they've got nothing to hide, why would they object to the secret police looking at it?
What color is that hat? (Score:5, Interesting)
An odd story. The company (Whisper Systems) makes software (for Android systems only, apparently) that supports VoIP and SMS encryption. But it also has a history of rolling over for repressive governments, providing them with user data, and allowing them (well, Egypt's government, anyway) to send propaganda messages via their systems. It sounds like this "beta" software is also available in the US. But what good does it do to use software from a company that will just rat you out to whatever government snaps its fingers?
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No, I think you may be mistaken: TFA says that Vodaphone was the company involved with handing over information to the govt.
"...a Vodafone official in 2009 confessed that the company was legally required to give up data on a group of Egyptian dissidents in 2008 who had pulled down a large poster of president Hosni Mubarak. Last week the company said that it had been forced by the Egyptian government to use its network to send out propaganda text messages to users. "
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RTFA
You should take your own advice methinks. If you did, you'd notice that Vodafone is the company responsible for sending mass texts (since it's their network...) and giving information to the Egyptian "authorities". Whisper Systems has absolutely nothing to do with that, and if you have been paying attention [slashdot.org] recently you'd know quite clearly that Moxie is the last person who'd be giving info to a government of any sort.
Re:What color is that hat? (Score:5, Informative)
Whisper Systems is an US based company that has never provided user data to Egypts government, nor has it allowed them to send messages through their system. You are thinking about Vodafone which was forced to do so by the government.
Existential threats=no restraint (Score:4, Insightful)
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Can they guarantee encryption? (Score:1)
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Moxie has a way better track record than the Haystack folks.
Plus, he's in the "extra search club" at airports supposedly for having been in Jacob Appelbaum's address book. That means he either has something good, or the feds are incompetent idiots.
Oh wait.
Or maybe that's exactly what they want us to think. Or all of the above.
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Overstating the role of new media (Score:5, Insightful)
The subtext of all this ubiquitous commentary is that technology invented in the USA is helping these poor plebs in less advanced countries to win their freedom and hence become more American-like.
It is, of course, a load of bollox.
The role of new media has been picked up by the mainstream western press and held up as if it would never have happened without this technology and hence allows the west to take credit for this uprising. The fact that the era of cheap food has come to an end [economist.com], the demographics of the Arab world and the middle east has produced a massive generation of young people [newsflavor.com], and people are willing to organise by any means available including good old fashioned word-of-mouth doesn't have the same soundbite-friendly ring to it.
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Damn right. Almost every story I see these days crediting social networks would have happened without cellphones or the internet... Hell, without print for that matter. Sure, they may have made it marginally easier, but if enough people are upset about something, they'll organize the good old fashioned way.
Something like 30% of folks in Egypt are illiterate. Fat lot of good twitter is going to be doing them. I assume some of them are among the protesters?
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...the technology used to fuel democracy protests in Egypt...
The role of new media has been picked up by the mainstream western press and held up as if it would never have happened without this technology [...]
"fuel democracy" != "sole cause of uprising"
"Western" technology has been a contributor to the protests across the region - even if not used directly by the people on the streets.
Without the internet (or atleast the near-instant exchange of information over long distances) would joe sixpack even know of unrest in Egypt?
Would muhammed sixpack in egypt have known about the unrest in tunisia and other areas? [wikipedia.org]
Would we have any other sources of information other than official government mouthpieces?
Would the Thre
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Actually, I would say yes. In fact, I would say the internet makes it worse. It's one thing that newspapers do right that the internet does wrong - it attempts to be broad-spectrum. I read more about Egypt through my daily newspapers than I do online, and I know lots of people who gave up newspapers for their RSS readers and the like.
Given that in a broadsheet, it doe
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"fuel democracy" != "sole cause of uprising"
My comment was a reference to the general tone of the discussion in the west where new media is cited as being the sole cause of the uprising.
Without the internet (or atleast the near-instant exchange of information over long distances) would joe sixpack even know of unrest in Egypt?
Yes. Newspapers and television are quite capable of disseminating information.
Would muhammed sixpack in egypt have known about the unrest in tunisia and other areas?
I'm pretty sure he would. If he didn't get it from Al Jazeera he'd have gotten it from somewhere.
Would we have any other sources of information other than official government mouthpieces?
Yes. Western news agencies are actually pretty good at getting into the thick of it and getting the information out. Just because American broadcasters don't give a shit about the outside world d
Wonder why the powers that be... (Score:3)
Iran was on the verge of that, but they got lucky and Micheal Jackson died. The distraction was enough for them to go back to oppressing their people, but unless the Pope buys it I don't think there's anyone else in the world now important enough to distract the entire planet at once.
Encrypted email (Score:2)
This is all good, but what about email? Shouldn't we be pushing more for the adoption of PGP and/or S/MIME?
And while we're at it, why does it seem like adoption of those technologies is actually dropping? FireGPG recently lost its GMail support and GMail closed the google labs bit that verified signatures.
Encrypted VoIP? Wow. (Score:2)
That was sarcasm. If people want encrypted VoIP, they'll load Skype. There are already umteen million Skype users, so there is an actual possibility there will be someone to use it with.
Wake me when they write an Android/iPhone app that can insert itself into a traditional voice call, encrypting the voice stream without using VoIP.
Activate it with a hash code (# or *) for a "push to go secure" bit.
Obviously it'll only work if the person on the other end has the same software, but not relying on a 3G data
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That was sarcasm. If people want encrypted VoIP, they'll load Skype. There are already umteen million Skype users, so there is an actual possibility there will be someone to use it with.
The wonder of Android phones is that you can download and install software on it. Much like if you wish to speak to somebody on Skype both parties must install the requisite software, this also works with other software too.
Wake me when they write an Android/iPhone app that can insert itself into a traditional voice call, en
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The wonder of Android phones is that you can download and install software on it. Much like if you wish to speak to somebody on Skype both parties must install the requisite software, this also works with other software too.
Which, if you note, I said "assuming the other person has the same software on the other end".
Whilst you were asleep, traditional voice calls have switched from analogue to digital. It's now all packet based behind the scenes.
While napping, I spent 5 years as a telecom engineer with Alcatel-Lucent. 2 of those years were as a CALEA specialist. That is, cell phone wiretapping.
In short, I know what I'm talking about and analog vs digital wasn't it.
My reference to OpenMoko was that it was the only phone that had a fully open hardware and software stack, including access to the telephony and GSM radio components. Even the Nokia N900 doesn
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Hopefully you will still see this reply (just seen yours). The chances of somebody having Skype are still small in overall terms. As a general rule, family/friends will agree on whatever is convenient at the time. Here in France our group of friends shifted as one to a certain operator as they allowed free mobile calls between that operator. If a group wish to talk to each other they may choose Fring, Skype, Wengo, or whatever else, and everybody will just install that app. It's quick and simple, and there
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Thanks for the intelligent replies.
My main thrust was the ability to insert itself into the GSM stream because GSM 2/2.5G is so much more prevalent and thus has the potential for reaching a wider audience. While I have T-Mobile "4G" in the city where I work, they still don't have 3G coverage out in the rural area where I live. All I get is EDGE.
It has been 20+ years since I've been to Eastern Europe, and that was well before Wifi. In fact, there was this whole Iron Curtain thing at the time... :-)
I wonde
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Which is why it's important for people to use it even in the absence of a pressing need for privacy. If you never encrypt anything, then one day start doing it, of course that looks suspicious.
If you personally always encrypt things, then that looks less suspicious - there's no discernible change in activity. You can even use MORE encryption, and no one can tell without breaking the first code. But this is not ideal - since targeting the cryptonerds is a good first start to wiping out any potential dissiden
How nice (Score:3)
Has he also released this for the people of Cuba?
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Flat out wrong.
Public opinion polling shows the majority of Egyptians want to keep the peace treaty with Israel [theatlantic.com]
Also The New York Times is publishing statistics that Egyptians are liking the US more than before [nytimes.com]; 45% positive rating vs 29% negative rating.
Maemo & Meego Apps? (Score:2)
Anything like that (encrypted calls and text message apps) available for Maemo and Meego?
Out of interest: can apps for Android, which AFAIK is basically a custom-Linux distro, be used on Maemo/Meego?
Possibly snake oil...but you might never know! (Score:2)
It's not open source. The vast majority of all proprietary encryption products are flawed or intentionally flawed. In fact, I would say that nearly all of the products that have been scrutinized by experts (i.e. reverse engineered, etc.) have turned out to be seriously flawed. The ones that don't appear to have buggy implementations just haven't interested anyone enough yet to take a closer look.
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According to this article [h-online.com], it uses standard ZRTP for voice and OTR for text.
Phillip.
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Sure, but how do you know that it's implemented correctly without auditing the source code?
I'm sure that the developer is competent, but as history has shown over and over competent and experienced implementers of cryptographic modules also make serious mistakes. Moreover, the Patriot act can be used to force a US developer, no matter how idealistic and good-willing he might be, to include a back-door and prevent him ever from telling anyone about it. My point of view is that for this reason alone you canno