We LOST More of our Privacy in 2023

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They Found the iPhone ‘backdoor’.

Complex attack chain which leads to full control via a zero-click download.


This sparked the whole debate with the EU and inserting themselves as root Ca’s.  I’m surprised that this didn’t happen sooner globally.  When in fact you only need about 6 or 7 CAs in your cert store.


NSA Blocked 10 Billion Connections to Malicious and Suspicious Domains

The National Security Agency has published a new yearly report detailing its cybersecurity efforts throughout 2023. The post appeared first on SecurityWeek .

Source: NSA Blocked 10 Billion Connections to Malicious and Suspicious Domains


Push Notifications and Spying

Nick here mentions that the government is using push notifications for spying purposes.


EU Root Certs Comming

Rob explains in this vid about root certs/PKI and Let’s Encrypt. The EU wants to have a root cert in all browsers and allow EU member states issue intermediate certs for their own country/terrorory.


The Internet Enabled Mass Surveillance. AI Will Enable Mass Spying.

Spying and surveillance are different but related things. If I hired a private detective to spy on you, that detective could hide a bug in your home or car, tap your phone, and listen to what you said. At the end, I would get a report of all the conversations you had and the contents of those conversations. If I hired that same private detective to put you under surveillance, I would get a different report: where you went, whom you talked to, what you purchased, what you did. Before the internet, putting someone under surveillance was expensive and time-consuming. You had to manually follow someone around, noting where they went, whom they talked to, what they purchased, what they did, and what they read. That world is forever gone. Our phones track our locations. Credit cards track our purchases. Apps track whom we talk to, and e-readers know what we read. Computers collect data about what we’re doing on them, and as both storage and processing have become cheaper, that data is increasingly saved and used. What was manual and individual has become bulk and mass. Surveillance has become the business model of the internet, and there’s no reasonable way for us to opt out of it. Spying is another matter. It has long been possible to tap someone’s phone or put a bug in their home and/or car, but those things still require someone to listen to and make sense of the conversations. Yes, spyware companies like NSO Group help the government hack into people’s phones, but someone still has to sort through all the conversations. And governments like China could censor social media posts based on particular words or phrases, but that was coarse and easy to bypass. Spying is limited by the need for human labor. AI is about to change that. Summarization is something a modern generative AI system does well. Give it an hourlong meeting, and it will return a one-page summary of what was said. Ask it to search through millions of conversations and organize them by topic, and it’ll do that. Want to know who is talking about what? It’ll tell you. The technologies aren’t perfect; some of them are pretty primitive. They miss things that are important. They get other things wrong. But so do humans. And, unlike humans, AI tools can be replicated by the millions and are improving at astonishing rates. They’ll get better next year, and even better the year after that. We are about to enter the era of mass spying. Mass surveillance fundamentally changed the nature of surveillance. Because all the data is saved, mass surveillance allows people to conduct surveillance backward in time, and without even knowing whom specifically you want to target. Tell me where this person was last year. List all the red sedans that drove down this road in the past month. List all of the people who purchased all the ingredients for a pressure cooker bomb in the past year. Find me all the pairs of phones that were moving toward each other, turned themselves off, then turned themselves on again an hour later while moving away from each other (a sign of a secret meeting). Similarly, mass spying will change the nature of spying. All the data will be saved. It will all be searchable, and understandable, in bulk. Tell me who has talked about a particular topic in the past month, and how discussions about that topic have evolved. Person A did something; check if someone told them to do it. Find everyone who is plotting a crime, or spreading a rumor, or planning to attend a political protest. There’s so much more. To uncover an organizational structure, look for someone who gives similar instructions to a group of people, then all the people they have r

Source: The Internet Enabled Mass Surveillance. AI Will Enable Mass Spying.


No more A/V?

Rob explains why he doesn’t a A/V.


The Pentagon is facing hard decisions about letting AI weapons kill

As the “Replicator” program ramps up, the U.S. military is facing some imminent questions on how to use AI weapons in war.

Source: The Pentagon is facing hard decisions about letting AI weapons kill


Secret White House Warrantless Surveillance Program

There seems to be no end to warrantless surveillance: According to the letter, a surveillance program now known as Data Analytical Services (DAS) has for more than a decade allowed federal, state, and local law enforcement agencies to mine the details of Americans’ calls, analyzing the phone records of countless people who are not suspected of any crime, including victims. Using a technique known as chain analysis, the program targets not only those in direct phone contact with a criminal suspect but anyone with whom those individuals have been in contact as well. The DAS program, formerly known as Hemisphere, is run in coordination with the telecom giant AT&T, which captures and conducts analysis of US call records for law enforcement agencies, from local police and sheriffs’ departments to US customs offices and postal inspectors across the country, according to a White House memo reviewed by WIRED. Records show that the White House has, for the past decade, provided more than $6 million to the program, which allows the targeting of the records of any calls that use AT&T’s infrastructure—­a maze of routers and switches that crisscross the United States.

Source: Secret White House Warrantless Surveillance Program