NSA: Please Turn off the Lights When You Leave. Nothing to See Here.

Linux Advocate Dietrich Schmitz shows how the general public can take action to truly protect their privacy using GnuPG with Evolution email. Read the details.

Mailvelope for Chrome: PGP Encrypted Email Made Easy

Linux Advocate Dietrich Schmitz officially endorses what he deems is a truly secure, easy to use PGP email encryption program. Read the details.

Step off Microsoft's License Treadmill to FOSS Linux

Linux Advocate Dietrich Schmitz reminds CIOs that XP Desktops destined for MS end of life support can be reprovisioned with FOSS Linux to run like brand new. Read how.

Bitcoin is NOT Money -- it's a Commodity

Linux Advocate shares news that the U.S. Treasury will treat Bitcoin as a Commodity 'Investment'. Read the details.

Google Drive Gets a Failing Grade on Privacy Protection

Linux Advocate Dietrich Schmitz puts out a public service privacy warning. Google Drive gets a failing grade on protecting your privacy.

Email: A Fundamentally Broken System

Email needs an overhaul. Privacy must be integrated.

Opinion

Cookie Cutter Distros Don't Cut It

Opinion

The 'Linux Inside' Stigma - It's real and it's a problem.

U.S. Patent and Trademark Office Turn a Deaf Ear

Linux Advocate Dietrich Schmitz reminds readers of a long ago failed petition by Mathematician Prof. Donald Knuth for stopping issuance of Software Patents.

Showing posts with label Internet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Internet. Show all posts

Saturday, December 13, 2014

Kim DotCom Facing Down a Death Sentence Without a Trial

Kim Schmitz aka Kim DotCom


Many of the readers of this story know of Kim Schmitz aka Kim DotCom.  It's a mix of either great respect or contempt depending on what is understood about him.

There is an untold story about him that needs to be recorded as to what happened to his MegaUpload website.

MegaUpload was a popular file sharing website up to a few years ago when it was summarily ordered to be taken down by the U.S. Federal Government.

As Kim recently said the MegaUpload case is "a death sentence without a trial".

He has managed to remain out of jail in New Zealand up to now but his financial resources have dwindled.  In the time spent since MegaUpload's take down, Mr. Schmitz formed Mega, the technological embodiment of change necessary to avoid MegaUpload ever happening again.

Mega is now in full production offering 50 gigabytes of free cloud storage space.

What sets it apart from other cloud ISPs?

MEGA employs Zero Knowledge end-to-end encryption (ZKE) and a MEGAsync graphical drag/drop files client to 100% guarantee privacy.

What the technology also affords is something which took down MegaUpload in the first place.  Plausible Deniability.  ZKE ensures Mega knows nothing about your data.  It is just an encrypted block of data.

Mr. Schmitz was assumed guilty of being complicit with illicit file sharing activities, alleged to have occurred on MegaUpload.  Today, he still maintains his innocence but a legal case is pending.

Despite his adversities, he has somehow managed to achieve what few others have.  Cloud storage can and should be a safe choice.  Your data and meta data on the Internet are presumed to be yours and only yours.  They belong to no one else.  Mega, the fruit of Mr. Schmitz' labors, is a resounding success.

In reality, few ISPs offer such guarantees.

Mr. Schmitz just put up on his personal website a Whitepaper which is a 'must read'.  It tells the untold story of what happened to MegaUpload.

Kim DotCom Twitters a message to let the public know about his just published whitepaper


Here is part of the whitepaper's opening Executive Summary:

The criminal prosecution of Megaupload and Kim Dotcom is purportedly the “largest copyright case in history,” involving tens of millions of users around the world, and yet it is founded on highly dubious legal principles and apparently propelled by the White House’s desire to mollify the motion picture industry in exchange for campaign contributions and political support.
The U.S. government’s attack on the popular cloud storage service Megaupload and the dramatized arrest of Kim Dotcom, the company’s principal founder – together with the seizure of all their worldwide assets – represents one of the clearest examples of prosecutorial overreach in recent history. One day after the U.S. Congress failed to enact the controversial Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA), the executive branch of the U.S. government commandeered Megaupload in a coordinated global take-down, and drew battle lines between digital rights advocates, technology innovators and ordinary information consumers on the one side, and Hollywood and the rest of the Copyright Lobby on the other.
Megaupload operated for seven years as a successful cloud storage business that enabled tens of millions of users around the world to upload and download content of the users’ own choosing and initiative. The spectrum of content ran from (to name just a few) family photos, artistic designs, business archives, academic ourse work, legitimately purchased files, videos and music, and – as with any other cloud storage service – some potentially infringing material. Despite Megaupload’s lawful uses, the U.S. government has charged the company and its executives under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations (RICO) Act, and has branded the company, its personnel and its tens of millions of users a “criminal enterprise” dedicated solely to infringing U.S. copyright laws.
The U.S. government’s case against Megaupload is grounded in a theory of criminal secondarycopyright infringement. In other words, the prosecution seeks to hold Megaupload and its executives criminally responsible for alleged infringement by the company’s third-party cloud storage users.  The problem with the theory, however, is that secondary copyright infringement is not – nor has it ever been – a crime in the United States. The federal courts lack any power to criminalize secondary copyright infringement; the U.S. Congress alone has such authority, and it has not done so.
As such, the Megaupload prosecution is not only baseless, it is unprecedented. Although the U.S. government has previously shut down foreign websites engaged in direct infringement, such as the sale or distribution of infringing material, never before has it brought criminal charges against a cloud file storage service because of the conduct of its users. Thus, the Megaupload case is the first time the government has taken down a foreign website – destroying the company and seizing all of the assets of its owners (and the data of its users), without so much as a hearing – based on a crime that does not exist.

Clearly, there was a baseless rush to judgment without any legal due process of law.  In fact, there was total disregard for protective mechanisms in our U.S. Constitution that should have resulted in Mr. Schmitz being presumed "innocent until proven guilty".

Dear Reader, we live in very troubled times and I would dare say at this time we don't have much in the way of Constitutional rights which are negated by special Supreme Court Judicial powers that ignore the Constitution, the continuing presence of the Patriot Act, and the NDAA.

Thus, I feel obligated to share this developing story with you in order to shine the light on a 'wrong' dealt to a Man who has shown himself to be of great integrity and willing to stand up for his and your rights and fight back.

Please help Kim Schmitz by reading and sharing his whitepaper with Friends and Family, your state Senator and Congressman.  -- Dietrich

Tuesday, July 16, 2013

An Unmet Need: Privacy Integration on the PC Desktop

by Dietrich Schmitz

I had a nice chat (Google Plus) today with +Aaron Seigo regarding RetroShare.

He came to the realization as I have that really, thus far, there isn't any form of integrated privacy control built into any computing Desktop system.

Should there be?  We both agreed that the answer is a resounding 'YES'. (Image credit: Wikipedia.org)

It begs the question:

Should privacy software become an integrated feature, much as having a Microsoft Office or LibreOffice?

It also begs the follow-on question:

Is Internet Privacy-mandated software for general utilitarian email, chat, file sharing, voip, needed?

I submit that we are now confronted by the PRISM effect which has revealed that surveillance is ongoing with the assistance of ISPs, software vendors and the like.  Whether the assistance given to the U.S. government is voluntary or involuntary (National Security Letter) is a separate matter.

Has the government run 'rough-shod' over U.S. and foreign Internet users' privacy rights?

That question will be answered eventually and history will show whether privacy truly matters.

But in the meantime, the PRISM story has galvanized public reaction both domestically and internationally and spurred action by national concerns to begin moving their current tenancy on U.S. Cloud ISPs to off-shore safe-haven equivalents.  The general public are left without a solution to the dilemma that presents:

To what extent should I conduct my personal activities on the Internet?

This question will continue to linger and create fear, uncertainty and doubt unless an effort is undertaken to immediately shore up the general perception that Internet privacy is 'non-existent' with exception to a few limited use cases relegated to corporations and technology elite.

At least, with Federally mandated privacy laws in place, e.g., enacting an email encryption standard would have for example manifold benefits.

For one, folding the aged clear text MIME rfc standard into a layer of GPG encryption would ensure email is readable only by its intended recipient(s).  Email encryption is already being used by a small minority of corporations who must secure their correspondences.

But, there is nothing in the way of designing and implementing a 'turn key' drop-dead simple application to which the general public can avail themselves.  To date, the only application on the horizon which approaches the needed degree of usability I have found is RetroShare, and, it has the best opportunity for being further enhanced so as to become more user-friendly and a candidate for Desktop integration, since it is written in trending Qt and is ported to Windows, OSX, Linux and BSD versions.

If such a Federal mandate were legislated, it might also offer financial assistance to developers to defray their cost to create and/or modify software applications so as to become compliant.

Presumably, such a mandate would have to be on a phased schedule to come into full implementation over perhaps one or two years.  And with those dollars such software would be then made available as part of a larger privacy integration package on the Desktop.

The other perhaps as important benefit of such a mandate is that with open standard GPG keys for the sender and recipient, the currently abused/exploited MIME rfc spec sender id field could no longer be 'forged' by spammers.

ISPs could under Federal guidelines for handling email on Mailer daemon transfer agents shunt 'non-compliant' email off-line entirely if the sender's GPG key were not signed by the recipient.  The U.S. postal service could also have their own GPG postal key which by default all users would sign to receive USPS-routed email.  But as with ISPs, the USPS would also not forward email unless the sender's subkey was signed by the recipient.  That would result in a reduction of spam approaching zero and save billions of dollars spent annually on anti-spam software measures and labor expense.

Extending this idea further, having privacy integration in the Desktop ought to include support for other Internet-related activities:  Chat, file sharing, Voice over IP.

So, you begin to see that software such as RetroShare does have a large potential to be adapted for general public use to enforce mandated privacy measures for access to the Internet.

I hope that this post spurs additional feedback and moves the agenda forward for implementing standards of privacy for all who use the Internet.

-- Dietrich
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Tuesday, April 16, 2013

Of Trolls, Individual Accountability and the Internet

by Dietrich Schmitz

I am not perfect.  I make mistakes.  But I try to learn from my experiences.  Hopefully, as you grew up you took all those mistakes and have filed them into a brain folder of things you know you won't ever do again because either they are painful or just not appropriate to a situation or both.

Take for example how you go about doing your daily errands in public.  For one, you don't wear a ski mask.  Oh no.  That is probably not a good idea lest someone get the wrong impression.  Right?

Nor, do you approach a person who you don't know and begin shouting insults at them.  For one, it's not good manners and it will most likely escalate to face meets fist.  This is obvious and for the most part it never happens in a public place setting.

Yet, if you go on the Internet, the situation can be different.  Why don't common courtesies and good manners prevail there?  Why is it that people uncharacteristically exhibit bad behavior on the Internet yet may be perfectly likable in person?

I had an interesting exchange with one individual +Fabian Scherschel the other day.  Previously, I had a different impression of him.  But his behavior was both odd and a good example of how people feel they are not accountable for their actions on the Internet.  I'll let you read the thread that ensued and decide for yourself as to whether this person has some growing up to do:



Fabian ScherschelApr 13, 2013
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There is no controversy. Unlike PA, it was adopted when it was ready to be adopted and everybody seems to like it very much. With the exception of the Ubuntu people but that seems to be based on NIH alone. This is a completely different situation then PA.

Dietrich SchmitzApr 13, 2013
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+Fabian Scherschel Everybody?  I think not. ;)

Fabian ScherschelApr 13, 2013
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Fedora, Mageia, SUSE, Arch and several other distros are using it. And I have not heard of major problems with it ever since Fedora switched to it. It's faster than SysV and Upstart and does some very cool things.

Apart from a few idiots who do not like the log file format and complain about silly things such as new root directories, what problem are there, really?

Fabian ScherschelApr 13, 2013
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Pulse Audio is a completely different kettle of fish. It was very badly broken when Ubuntu adopted it originally. I have about 50 podcast episodes to prove it too....

Dietrich SchmitzApr 13, 2013

+Fabian Scherschel We'll see if comments align with the story or your view.  Feel free to make your comment to the post.

Fabian ScherschelApr 13, 2013
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Internet comments aren't a measure of anything. Especially since a site with that name will always be a self-reinforcing echo chamber. I run a podcast called "Linux Outlaws", I know how it goes. I am constantly fighting that phenomenon....

Dietrich SchmitzApr 13, 2013

+Fabian Scherschel I hope you didn't hurt yourself when your knee hit your chiny chin chin. ;)

Andrew WyattApr 13, 2013 (edited)
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ConsoleKit + UDev + Syslog + DBus + Polkit + Sysinit + this + that.   RedHat Enterprise Systemd is the best product we've ever been force fed.  We are facing being forced to integrate it at Fuduntu because it's replacing so many core tools now that it's impossible to continue the project without it.

Those "idiots" that don't like binary logs aren't "idiots", some of us actually have some idea of what we are talking about, but what do I know..

Ikey DohertyApr 13, 2013
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Hate to say it but PulseAudio was actually the fault of the distros implementing it

Dietrich SchmitzApr 13, 2013
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+Ikey Doherty Hey stay out of it ... you! (kidding)

Ikey DohertyApr 13, 2013
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Lol don't worry, I intend to. SolusOS 2 is using systemd ^^

Chris AhlstromApr 14, 2013
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+Andrew Wyatt The first question that comes to mind about the log format is "how many log analysis tools does it break"?  The second question is, why the F make it binary -- that's a Microsoft thang!

Fabian ScherschelApr 14, 2013
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You people are still bitching about the log format? Jesus Christ. You're supposed to be Linux geeks. Write a fucking script! You are acting as if it's a proprietary format.

Andrew WyattApr 14, 2013


+Fabian Scherschel great job missing the point, but I guess that's to be expected.

Fabian ScherschelApr 14, 2013
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The point being what? That you hate change? I bet you're still using HAL, eh?

Andrew WyattApr 14, 2013


Now you are just trolling, or an idiot.

Fabian ScherschelApr 14, 2013
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Says the guy with the distro that nobody gives a rat's ass about. What exactly are you complaining about anyway? You have upstart and sysv init. Nobody is forcing anybody to use systemd. My only point is that the comparison to PA is bull. Back when PA was new, the problem wasn't if a fucking log format was binary or text, it was more like you couldn't record any audio on your system at all with the wrong hardware. Call me when 20% of systems don't boot at all with systemd. Or if anyone actually starts using your distro. I am perfectly happy with my logs as they are and I can dump them into plain text for anything that breaks.

Andrew WyattApr 14, 2013


Oh, I see you are trolling and an idiot.  My mistake. :)

Fabian ScherschelApr 14, 2013
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Oh dear, I am so offended. How will I be able to sleep at night.... LOL

Andrew WyattApr 14, 2013
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It's only April 14th, and we've had 3.5m hits to our website and mirror, I guess there are a few no-ones that care just a little about it. :)

Dietrich SchmitzApr 14, 2013

Of all people, I'd expect perfect behavior, temperance and restraint from you Fabian.  Please restrain yourself.

The analogy to PulseAudio is a good one.  Even if inaccurate or open to question, it makes a point.  Any work done on this level is going to be 'contentious', unless handled carefully, pragmatically, and SLOWLY.

As Aaron used the reference, I see it all the more appropriate and if it engendered a knee-jerk reaction, then in part the story succeeds in making those in the community pull back and think.

I'd agree with Aaron that there is at present overreaching ambition and the pace of change is too quick and would be better if put in the hands of someone other than Lennart to manage.
Expand this comment »

Andrew WyattApr 14, 2013


You shouldn't expect anything more +Dietrich Schmitz they simply can't handle anyone that doesn't tow the line, and they prove it time and time again.  Challenge them in any way and they resort to this sort of behavior because they can't form a legitimate argument in their own defense.  Take his argument apart and it simply fails, you are forced to use systemd or you have to take on the burden of supporting all of the various components they are force-deprecating yourself.  It's an impossible task, and they know it.

Dietrich SchmitzApr 14, 2013

+Andrew Wyatt Fabian is a writing colleague and I expect restraint from both sides; no personalizations. NONE.

Andrew WyattApr 14, 2013


Fair enough. :)

Dietrich SchmitzApr 14, 2013

Now, the both of you please exchange apologies and let's join  together and be professionals, yes?
+Fabian Scherschel +Andrew Wyatt 

Fabian ScherschelYesterday 11:46 AM
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Never expect restraint from me. Seriously. I always say exactly what I think, nothing more nothing less. I never claim to be 100% right, I just always give it my best shot.

Dietrich SchmitzYesterday 11:50 AM

+Fabian Scherschel You (and Andrew) were rude and used inappropriate language.  That was not your best shot.

You can and should both apologize for your behavior.

Fabian ScherschelYesterday 11:55 AM
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Oh yes, I am quite rude. Australian upbringing. It's somewhat of a national sport there. I didn't even try BTW, I could be a lot more insulting if I actually give it a shot.

Dietrich SchmitzYesterday 11:59 AM
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+Fabian Scherschel That is rather immature and  disappointing.  That is not acceptable behavior.

Are you being belligerent for any special reason?

Fabian ScherschelYesterday 12:03 PM


Insults are just words. I prefer to concentrate on important things. Being offended is basically a personal choice. It's not like people on the internet are nice to me all day. Why should I be nice? I'm not a theist so basically there's no point from where I stand.

Dietrich SchmitzYesterday 12:08 PM
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+Fabian Scherschel I don't care about your point of view.  It's your behavior I am talking about.  Take ownership.

You have a chance to redeem yourself.
Simply apologize and we can put this issue to rest.

Fabian ScherschelYesterday 12:15 PM


You are not my mother. You have absolutely no right to judge me. I can be as insulting as I want. Especially since I am not talking as "a professional" here. This is my personal account and I say what I want here. If you want my professional opinion, go and read The H. :)

Dietrich SchmitzYesterday 12:19 PM
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+Fabian Scherschel I am afraid you are incorrect.  You are in full view 'public' and must conduct yourself accordingly.

This is being recorded for future reference and you are responsible for all of your behavior regardless of location, including what you say to others here at Google Plus.

Now, mind you this is an individual who writes for H-Online.  He's right.  I am not his Mother, but he is accountable, not just in public, but on Google Plus too.

I really am tired of people behaving badly and who simply are doing it with impunity as though they are not accountable for themselves.  It's wrong.  Take responsibility on the Internet 'the same way' you do in public.  Be a good Netizen.

-- Dietrich


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