Evan Buswell on Wed, 24 Jun 2009 22:49:57 +0200 (CEST) |
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Re: <nettime> FW: When technology is utilized against us. |
I used to work for a company that was trying to turn encryption into a everyday user product. The problem was (and still is, for this company) that protecting internet communication has very little intuitive relation to protecting regular communication. On "Get Smart", if any of you remember from late night re-runs, there used to be this device that Maxwell Smart and the chief used to protect their communications. It was two bubbles connected by a little shaft, descending slowly over their heads to block all sound from leaving. If I remember rightly, it hilariously also blocked sound between them. But overall, a (working) device like this is what we picture when we picture privacy. Walls have ears, so we need to make a silencer to keep anything from getting out. On the internet, the main problem is not actually encryption, silencing, it is trust. We can't see each other; we have little tangible physical relationship. Nobody can be sure whether their messages are consistently going to the same place or not. If that problem is not solved, then encryption is just ensuring that no other government agents are intercepting the communication between you and the government agent that, unbeknown to you, you are speaking to, and is in turn speaking to somebody else on your behalf. This is the certificate hell that all internet security has entered into. For the company I worked for, that issue boiled down to everyone trusting the service providing company to sort out the identity of everybody else. And of course, the more completely the problem is solved, the more complete control over everything that one company has, with the limit being just about the same hypothetical vulnerability that everyone else has sending it all in the clear and trusting the ISPs forwarding the packets not to legally or illegally be monitoring packet flow. Which brings me to the second point: anonymity is a very different problem than encryption. The messages being posted from Iran are public, by design. Because all IP records both source and destination address, in the absence of random message delays, all that the Iranian government has to do is monitor packet flow and correlate that with the times when suspicious messages publicly appear. It doesn't actually have to read anything that those packets contain. I have no idea what "deep packet analysis" is supposed to mean, but I would imagine that the analysis I'm talking about here is all Iran is doing. It seems like probably all they need to do. The real problem is that the two goals of trust and anonymity are mutually exclusive. This is not just an internet problem. But our perceptions of the internet obscure this especially, because in most situations where one would want anonymity (piracy, random one-off posts on bulletin boards, periodic lurking in chat rooms with strangers, twittering from an ad hoc account), one more or less has anonymity. And then in situations where one would want non-anonymity (facebook, sometimes twitter, email, etc), one more or less knows who one is talking to, though this latter is notoriously often broken. We continue to be shocked by reality not matching our expectations, and expect technology to be improved so that it will match them. But it is not a technological problem, nor a problem which can be solved by ditching convenience, but a fundamental problem about our togetherness in communication. All the twitter/facebook stuff which brings the events in Iran out so clearly is an interesting case study about our communication. The parts where the communication here is failing to work in the desired way are small compared with the parts where it's functioning as desired. Why? I certainly don't have a full answer, but I imagine that the internet is really only one piece in the puzzle, whether or not it's a *sine qua non*. Evan Buswell # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: http://mail.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org