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    Default Keeping Communications Private (a practical HOWTO)

    Keeping communications private in the age of Big Brother (a practical HOWTO)

    The Saker May 18, 2017

    Dear friends,

    I have decided to share with you something which I originally sent out to the key members of the Saker community: my recommendation on how to keep your private communications private in the age of “Big Brother” aka NSA, ECHELON, GCHQ, Unit 8200, etc.

    I have been interested in the topic of encryption for many years already, and I have had to use encryption techniques in the past to protect myself from snooping by indelicate employers.

    There have also been some discussions inside the Saker community of what did and did not work for us. I have now come to the conclusion that there are two services out there which I feel I can recommend to our entire community, one for emails and another for messaging/audio/video/file sharing.

    Why two different services rather than one?

    The truth is that the confidentiality issues with email are unique and require a unique solution. Typically, emails are designed to remain kept on some kind of storage device whereas most telephone calls or video conferences are not recorded (at least not by the participants).

    Let’s look at these two issues separately.
    ABSTRACT: if you want to protect your communication from any kind of snooping, including government snooping, the most reliable and advanced solution currently available are:
    For your emails: Prontonmail https://protonmail.com/ (free of charge)

    For your messaging/telephone/video/filesharing needs: the Silent Phone app for Android and iOS https://www.silentcircle.com/product...ions/software/ ($9.99/month)
    ——-

    Protecting your emails with Protonmail:

    Protonmail is a Swiss company whose history is well described in this Wikipedia article: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ProtonMail. I won’t repeat it here. I will just say that with Protonmail your mailbox remains encrypted in such a manner that even the managers and technicians at Protonmail cannot access it. Here are a few videos which will give you more details:
    Quick Introduction To ProtonMail and ProtonMail Plus:

    ProtonMail – Is this The alternative email we’ve been looking for?:

    Protonmail and Encryption – A Re-visit:

    Protecting your messaging/telephone/video with Silent Circle’s Silent Phone:
    Unlike Protonmail which deals ONLY with emails, Silent Circle’s software (called “Silent Phone”) which can be installed on any Android or iOS smartphone, protects your instant messaging, your telephone conversations (audio), your video conferences and even allows you to securely send your files up to 100MB in size. However, while the Silent Phone software is free of charge for download, you will have to pay $9.99 a month to get all of the following:
    • Unlimited Worldwide Secure Voice/Messaging between Silent Circle Members
    • Up to 100MB File Transfer
    • Full Burn Functionality
    • Video Calling
    • Conference calling for up to 6 callers
    • Direct access to Technical Support
    • Available on iOS, Android, and Silent OS
    You can check all their fancy marketing materials here: https://www.silentcircle.com/

    Here is the Wikipedia article about them: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silent_Circle_(software)

    This is the link to their software solution: https://www.silentcircle.com/product...ions/software/

    And this is the link to their White Paper: https://www.silentcircle.com/enterpr...y-white-paper/

    Finally, here are some of their case studies: https://www.silentcircle.com/wp-cont...se-Studies.pdf

    This is all very slick and could hide anything, right?

    Actually, no. What makes their offer so interesting is that it is based exclusively on open source code which is publicly available.

    Why is that important?

    For two reasons:
    first, they cannot hide some backdoors in the software. But,

    second, even MUCH more important, is that the best encryption algorithms are NOT the secret ones that nobody can check, but the public ones which everybody can check. This is long to explain, but please trust me. The level of confidence which you can have in the technologies used in Silent Phone are about as good as it gets. Not perfect maybe, but very very close.
    [If you are interested in the details, I can explain to you one on one why you ALWAYS want to make use only of open sourced encryption technologies (You can find out about the protocols and algorithms used by Silent Circle here: https://www.silentcircle.com/product...chnology/zrtp/)]

    You might notice that both Protonmail and Silent Circle (the company which makes the Silent Phone app) are located in Switzerland. This is not a bad thing since Swiss laws about privacy are pretty good. However, this is not the reason why you can trust these products. In fact, in the past the Swiss have worked with the US CIA to sell the Iranians encryption devices with backdoors. The current Swiss government is as pro-USA as any other.

    No, the reason why I like these is that Switzerland has some of the best cryptologist on the planet (even if very few people know about this). In fact, the technology for Silent Phone is so secure that even the US government had to certify it for governmental use (in spite of it being open source, which tells me that they don’t have much better): http://www.zdnet.com/article/silent-...overnment-use/

    I hope that this reference to the US government does not freak you out. If it does – relax, Silent Circle was co-founded by Phil Zimmerman, the man who single handedly forced the US government to give up trying to keep a monopoly on military-grade encryption (read about him here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phil_Zimmermann).

    Here is a keynote presentation by Zimmerman

    and here is an interview with him:

    In other words, his “I do not work for the NSA” credentials are the best on the planet.

    By now you must be wondering if I am working for Silent Circle or whether I have bought shares in their company. Don’t worry, I did not. I am only writing to let you know that I think that this product is fairly secure and very reasonably priced. I know of no better one. Just think of it – worldwide unlimited calling (including VIDEO!) for 10 bucks is already a halfway decent deal. But with rock solid encryption it becomes very good.

    There is one important caveat which you have to keep in mind:
    Both Protonmail and Silent Phone are truly secure only if BOTH people communicating are using them (from Protonmail to Protonmail email addresses or from Silent Phone subscriber to Silent Phone subscriber). Likewise, the $9.99 subscription costs with Silent Phone only covers all communications between Silent Phone subscribers. You *can* call a non-subscribed number, but it will not be secure and you will pay international calling rates.
    Also, if you get Silent Phone, you will be given 2 options:
    a) to use a username only

    b) to pay 2 dollars a month for a dedicated phone number. Since using Silent Phone only really makes sense if used between two Silent Phone subscribers, I recommend you forgo the extra cost for a dedicated telephone number unless you really need it (depending on your usage of your telephone).
    Here are a few short videos showing how Silent Phone works on Android (for iOS go to the Silent Circle YouTube channel):
    Calling and Conference calling

    Logging and Setting:

    Messaging:

    Conclusion:
    We live in complicated and, frankly, dangerous times. Having personally worked in Electronic Warfare (EW), Communication Intelligence (COMINT) and military intelligence in general, I believe that the ability to keep communications secure is absolutely crucial for most people.

    Until recently, the kind of technology which could protect you from government (or corporate) snooping was simply too complex to be used by most people (keep in mind that bad encryption is much worse than no encryption since it gives you an illusion of security!).

    Even software like the famous PGP/GNUpg were not that easy to use and required a fairly solid understanding of the technologies used. Nowadays we are lucky that we can use VERY sophisticated services with do not require that kind of expertise from us. But then, you might ask, how do we know that we can trust them? There are two replies to this. We can trust them because
    1. all the technologies used by these services, including source code, protocols, algorithms, etc, are fully “open source” meaning that they are available for download and audit. Not by you or me, but by colleges, institutes, corporations and even governments worldwide. For encryption that is the highest standard of security: when everybody can see your code and check it for flaws.
    2. because all these services are regularly audited by entities we can trust, such as the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) which, for example, reported this “scorecard” for Silent Phone:

    (Full disclosure: I am a card-carrying member of both the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) and the Free Software Foundation (FSF))

    If you are an active member of the Saker Community (author, researcher, translator, computer tech, editor, etc.) I STRONGLY recommend that you use both Protonmail and Silent Phone. If you are not a member of our community, I recommend that you at least use Prontonmail.

    If you make a lot of international calls to trusted relatives, friends or colleagues, I also STRONGLY recommend you sign up for the Silent Phone subscription as for $9.99 you get unlimited worldwide and high-quality audio (telephone) and even video every bit as good or better than Skype or Whatsapp. And it happens to [be] as secure as the best government/military grade communications.

    Finally, three final and minor points:
    First, let’s imagine that some government agency (Swiss, American or other) comes to Prontonmail or Silent Circle and orders them to have them [hand] over all your communications (as has happened already so many times):
    neither Prontonmail nor Silent Circle will be able to comply, not because of bad will or some heroic resistance to pressure, but because they will [have] NO ACCESS to your data: in the case of your mailbox, it will be completely encrypted and only you will have the capability to decrypt it, and in the case of Silent Phone the encryption used is one between end-user to end-user which is NOT shared with Silent Circle in anyway and as soon as you hang up it is also erased.
    Second, the company Silent Circle also manufactures a real “physical” phone, called the “Blackphone 2“. It was a failure, don’t bother with it. I don’t want to discuss the reasons for that, but just ignore that option which simply does not work too well and has major problems.

    Third, I want [to] mention something crucial here: both Protonmail and Silent Phone offer the option to destroy your email, message, of file after a specific delay. In other words, you can configure these two services to destroy everything which you ever send through them. So by the time somebody tries to get that data it will already have vanished. So even though your Protonmail mailbox is heavily encrypted and even though Silent Phone exchanges encryption keys only between end-users (p2p), you have that additional level of security of having all your data self-destruct after a pre-sent time/date.
    That’s it.

    Please don’t bombard me with questions about these technologies and products. If you do your own research and just follow all the links above you should get all the info you need. Right now I literally don’t have the time to do more about this than share the above with you. And just to make thing worse, I currently have a painful gout flare-up which makes it hard for me to sit and type. If you still have questions, ask them in the comments section and the more tech-wise will probably help you, but first please make sure that you do your own research. The geek community refers to this as RTFM or Read the “French” Manual :-) Also please do take the time to watch the videos above, they are very informative.

    I hope that the above has been useful and that at least some of you will decide to at least try out these two outstanding service.

    Good luck, kind regards,

    The Saker
    "La réalité est un rêve que l'on fait atterrir" San Antonio AKA F. Dard

    Troll-hood motto: Never, ever, however, whatsoever, to anyone, a point concede.

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    Default Re: Keeping Communications Private (a practical HOWTO)

    I'm using Tutanota (based in Germany) for some emails.

    Keep Your Emails Private with End-to-End Encryption Using Tutanota for Android, iOS, & Web [How-To]
    Last edited by EFO; 20th May 2017 at 19:08. Reason: adding video
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    Default Re: Keeping Communications Private (a practical HOWTO)

    There is an another one, but be-aware, intelligent agencies can identify or target you as a potential conspirator.

    https://apkpure.com/bylock-secure-ch...client.by.lock
    Love and Hope

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    Default Re: Keeping Communications Private (a practical HOWTO)

    I know how to press the turn on button and that is about it, so encryption of anything for me is useless. Switzerland says Top Bankers Nest and Top Spy Services to me. Don't all providers have access to who you are through your cookies in the computer? And, beside having all the knowledge of encryption and its reverse, all this does, it seems, is point a finger at the person(s) using the service as someone to watch.

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    Default Re: Keeping Communications Private (a practical HOWTO)

    Security is a threat-driven exercise (ComSec in the age of Big Brother follow up)

    The Saker May 20, 2017

    Dear friends,

    The following is a follow-up to my recent post about communication security (ComSec). I decided to write it after reading the comments to the original post which clearly showed to me that there was a dire need of even basic information about ComSec. I am going to try to keep it very, very basic so please bear with me.

    First and foremost – security is a threat-driven exercise.
    You cannot protect against “anything”. You cannot protect against something diffuse like “they” or “the powers that be” or even “the US government”. You can only protect against a specific threat. Let’s take an example: as soon as we discuss the protection of our computers we think of the NSA. This is normal, since the NSA is the arch-villain of the IT world and the US government the number one “rogue state” on the planet.

    However, what is missed here is that the NSA has no interest in most of us. But the US IRS (revenue service) might. What you have to realize here is that the NSA has means which the IRS does not and that the NSA has absolutely no intention of sharing any information with the IRS. In fact, the US IRS also probably does not care about you.

    The folks most likely to spy on you are your bosses, your colleagues, your family and your friends (sorry! don’t get offended; it’s more or less the same list for those most likely to murder you too). In fact, some people close to you might even want to report you to the IRS in order to get you in trouble. Once you understand that, you can also conclude the following
    1. All security planning must begin with the question “what is the threat?”
    2. Giving up on ComSec because the NSA can probably beat you is plain stupid, unless you are somebody really important to the NSA


    Second, both spying and ComSec are cost-driven.
    Yes, even the NSA has a limited (if huge) budget. And yes, even the NSA has to prioritize its efforts: shall they use their supercomputers, translators, analysts, senior officers, etc. to spy after, say, the girlfriend of a senior Chinese diplomat or spy after you?

    It is true that all our communications are intercepted and recorded. This is especially true of the ‘metadata’ (who contacted whom and when and how and how often), but it is also true of our more or less ‘secure’ communications, be they protected by a very weak encryption algorithm or a military-grade encryption system. Once that data is stored, the NSA has to parse it (mostly looking at the metadata) and take a decision as to how much resources it is willing to allocate to your specific case.

    No offense intended, but if you are a small pot grower with a history of political activism who emigrated to the USA form, say, Turkey 10 years ago and if you are emailing your friends in Antalya, the NSA would need to decrypt your email. That would take them less than 1 milisecond, but somebody needs to authorize it. Then they would have to get a machine translation from Turkish into English which will be hopefully good enough (I am quite sure that the few Turkish-language translators they have will not be allocated to you, sorry, you are just not that important). Then some analyst must read that text and decide to pass it on to his boss for follow-up. If the analyst finds your email boring, he will simply send it all into a virtual trash bin. Conclusions:
    1. For the bad guys to spy after you must be worth their time as expressed in dollars and cents, including opportunity costs (time spend *not* going after somebody more important)
    2. It is exceedingly unlikely that the NSA will put their best and brightest on your case so don’t assume they will.


    Third, security flaws are like bugs.
    Okay, this is crucial. Please read-up on the so-called “Linus’ Law” which states: “given enough eyeballs, all bugs are shallow“. This “law” has been paraphrased in Wikipedia as such: “Given a large enough beta-tester and co-developer base, almost every problem will be characterized quickly and the fix obvious to someone.” I would paraphrase it as such: the most effective manner to detect and eliminate bugs (such as security flaws) in software code or mathematical algorithms is to have them available for review by experts and to insure that a maximal amount of experts have a strong stake in very carefully reviewing them.

    Now before proceeding I need to debunk a huge myth: the US government has more means than anybody else on the planet. That is absolutely false. Think of it: to work for the NSA, you not only need to have a US passport, but a high-level security clearance. Right there, you have rejected almost all Chinese, Indian or Russian candidates (along with millions of US Americans!). You might reply that the NSA has more money. Wrong again! Take a look at this article which begins with the following absolutely true, if amazing, statement:
    The total development cost represented in a typical Linux distribution was $1.2 billion. We’ve used his tools and method to update these findings. Using the same tools, we estimate that it would take approximately $10.8 billion to build the Fedora 9 distribution in today’s dollars, with today’s software development costs. Additionally, it would take $1.4 billion to develop the Linux kernel alone. This paper outlines our technique and highlights the latest costs of developing Linux. The Linux operating system is the most popular open source operating system in computing today, representing a $25 billion ecosystem in 2008.
    Let me ask you this: did you ever think that the free software community, using a de-centralized development model, would be able to produce a product with the corporate world or a government would need to spend more than TEN BILLION dollars to develop?

    Let me give you another example: Debian, which is the “ultimate” GNU/Linux distribution has over 1000 developers and package maintainers worldwide (including Chinese, Indians, Russians and Americans without a security-clearance) which are selected by showing the Debian community that they are the best at what they are doing. Do you really believe that the US government could hire that amount of top-level coders and then manage them?

    I remind you that the NSA is an “agency”, meaning that it is a bureaucracy, run by people who have reached - risen to - their level of incompetence according to the “Peter Principle“. Such agencies are slow to adopt new technologies or methods, they are inherently corrupt (due to their secrecy), they are permeated with the “where I sit is where I stand” mindset which leads to a strong opposition to progress (since if you are used to doing X you will lose your job or will have to re-train if Y is introduced) and which is hopelessly politicized. Buck per buck, brain per brain, the free software community is vastly more effective than this gargantuan mega-agency.

    And then there is academia. There are superb technical institutes worldwide, many in China and India, by the way, which are filled by the best and brightest mathematicians and cryptologists who are not only competing against each others, but also against all their colleagues worldwide.

    The “eyeballs” of these people are focused with great attention to any new encryption algorithm developed anywhere on the planet and the first thing they look after are flaws simply because being the guy (or group) who found a security flaw in a previously assumed flawless algorithm is a guaranteed claim to fame and professional success.

    Most of these folks are far more driven than the bureaucrats at Fort Meade! But for them to be able to do their job it is absolutely crucial that the code of the encryption application and the actual encryption algorithm be made public. All of it. If the source-code and encryption algorithm are kept secret, than very FEW “eyeballs” care review them for flaws. The conclusions from that are:
    1. The assumption that the NSA is miles ahead of everybody else is plain false.
    2. Placing your trust in peer-reviewed software and encryption algorithms is the safest possible option
    3. The worldwide hacker and academic communities have superior means (in money and brains equivalent) to any government agency


    Using sophisticated ComSec technologies only draws unwanted attention to you.
    This one was very true and is still partially true. But the trend is in the right direction. What this argument says is that in a culture where most people use postcards to communicate using a letter in a sealed envelope makes you look suspicious.

    Okay, true, but only to the extend that few people are using envelopes. What has changed in the past, say, 20-30 years is that nowadays everybody is expecting some degree of security and protection.

    For example, many of you might remember that in the past, most Internet addresses began with HTTP whereas now they mostly begin with HTTPS: that “s” at the end stands for “secure”. Even very mainstream applications like Skype or Whatsapp use a very similar technology to the one justifying the “s” at the end of HTTPS. We now live in a world were the number of users of sealed envelopes is growing where the usage of postcards is in free fall. Still, it IS true that in some instances the use of a top-of-the-line encryption scheme will draw somebody’s attention to you.

    [Sidebar: I have personally experienced that. In the late 1990s I used to use PGP encryption for email exchanges with my Godson. Sure enough, one day my boss calls me into his office, presents me with the printout of an encrypted email of mine and ask me what this was. My reply was “an encrypted message”. He then proceeded to ask me why I was encrypting my emails. I replied that I did that to “make sure that only my correspondent could read the contents”. He gave me a long hard look, then told me to leave. This incident probably greatly contributed to my eventual termination from that job. And this was in “democratic” Switzerland…]

    My advice is simple: never use any form of encryption while at work or on the clock. If your email address is something like $fdJ&3asd@protonmail.com your employer won’t even know that you are using protonmail. Just keep a reasonably low profile. For public consumption, I also recommend using Google’s Gmail. Not only does it work very well, but using Gmail makes you look “legit” in the eyes of the idiots. So why not use it? Conclusions:
    1. Using advanced ComSec technologies is now safe in most countries.
    2. The more private users and the industry will become ComSec conscious (and they are) the safer it will be to use such technologies


    The weakest link in a chain determines the strength of the chain.
    The US government has many ways to spy on you. You can use the most advanced encryption schemes, but if your computer is running Windows you are *begging* for a backdoor and, in fact, you probably already have many of them in your machine. But even if your operating system is really secure like, say OpenBSD or SEL-Debian, the NSA can spy on you through your CPU, or through the radiation of your computer screen, or even by installing a key-logger in your keyboard or a simple camera in your room. Most so-called “hacks” (a misnomer, it should be “cracks”) are traceable to a human action, not pure technology. So you should not just blindly trust some advanced encryption scheme, but look at the full “chain”.

    However, while it costs Uncle Sam exactly *zero* dollars to use a backdoor pre-installed with Windows, it would cost him a lot more to direct a crew of humans to install a camera in your room. So fearing that the NSA will use any and all of its tools to spy after you is also plain stupid. Chances are, they won’t. You are just not that important (sorry!). The conclusions here are:
    1. Your ComSec depends on it’s weakest link and in order to identify this link you need to
    2. Acquire enough knowledge to understand the full chain’s function and not rely on one even very cool gadget or app.


    Trust is always relative but, when carefully granted, beats distrust.
    I hear a lot of sweeping and nonsensical statements like “I will never trust any technology or corporate” or “I will never trust any encryption scheme”. These sound reasonable, but they are anything but.

    In reality, we don’t have the option of “not trusting” any more. We all use cars, computers, RFID-chips, smartphones, GPSs, the Internet, credit cards, etc. Those who say that they don’t ever trust anybody are just lying to themselves. The real question is not “trust vs distrust” but how to best allocated our trust.

    To go with open source code and public encryption algorithms is far more rational than to refuse to use any ComSec at all (we all know that the post office, and many other people, can open our mail and read it – yet we still mostly use sealed envelops and not postcards!). If ComSec is important for you, you really ought to ditch your Windows or Mac/Apple machines. They – like anything Google, are basically a subsidiary of the NSA.

    If you use remote servers to provide you with “software as a service” try to use those who have a stake in being peer-reviewed and who only use open source technologies (Silent Circle’s Silent Phone is an example). There are public interest and “watchdog” type of organizations out there who will help you make the right choices, such as the Electronic Freedom Foundation. Conclusions:
    1. We live in a complex and high technology world. While you can reject it all and refuse to use advanced technologies, you thereby also make yourself the ideal passive sheep which the powers that be want you to be. What the powers that be are terrified of are the cyberpunks/cypherpunks, free software hackers, folks like Assange or Snowden and institutions like Wikileaks. They are so terrified of them that they *reassure* themselves by claiming that these are all “Russian agents” rather than to look at the terrifying reality that these are the natural and inevitable reaction to the worldwide violation of human and civil rights by the AngloZionist Empire. It is your choice as to whether educate yourself about these issues or not, but if you chose to remain ignorant while paranoid the powers that be will give you a standing ovation.
    2. Placing your trust in X, Y or Z does not have to be a ‘yes or no’ thing. Place as much trust in, say, open source software as you deem it to deserve, but remain prudent and cautious. Always think of the consequences of having your ComSec compromised: what would that really do to you, your family, your friends or your business. It is a dynamic and fast moving game out there, so keep yourself well informed and if you do not understand an issue, decide whom amongst those who do understand these issues you would trust. Delegating trust to trustworthy experts is a very reasonable and rational choice.


    The real cost of security will always be convenience:
    the painful reality is that good security is always inconvenient. In theory, security does not need to harm convenience, but in reality it always, always does.

    For example, to become more or less proficient in ComSec you need to educate yourself, that takes time and energy. Using a key to enter a home takes more time than to open an unlocked door. A retinal scan takes even more time (and costs a lot more). You might always spend a great deal of time trying to convince your friends to adopt your practices, but they will reject your advice for many more or less valid reasons.

    The key here is “is it worth it?” and that is a personal decision of yours to take. Also, you will also need to factor in the costs of not using high-tech. You can email a friend or meet him face to face. But in the latter case, you need to ask yourself how much time and money will it take for you two to meet, how easy it will be for the bad guys to eavesdrop on your whispered conversation, how fast you could transmit any information by such means or whether physically carrying sensitive information to such a meeting is a good idea in the first place. Conclusions:
    1. Going low-tech might be far more costly and less safe than intelligently using high-teach solutions.
    2. “No-tech” at all is usually the worst choice of all, if only because it is delusional in the first place.


    Conclusions:
    I tried to debunk some of the many myths and urban legends about ComSec in general and an agency like the NSA in particular. I had the time to do that once, but since this topic is not a priority for this blog, I won’t be able to repeat this exercise in the future. I hope that this has been useful and interesting, if not I apologize.

    Starting next week, we will return to our more traditional topics.

    Hugs and cheers,

    The Saker
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    Troll-hood motto: Never, ever, however, whatsoever, to anyone, a point concede.

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    Default Re: Keeping Communications Private (a practical HOWTO)

    I think I am going to move back to the cave.

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    Bayareamom (19th June 2017), Hervé (22nd May 2017)

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