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-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- | |
Hash: SHA512 | |
Undercover communication | |
It should be obvious by now, that the only way to communicate | |
stealthily and securely is to avoid raising suspicion to the | |
level at which the authorities might consider it worthwhile | |
to put you under active surveillance (e.g., park a van with | |
TEMPEST equipment by your apartment). | |
It has long been my view that, if the authorities have enough information | |
on you to enable them to park a surveillance van outside your home, then | |
you have failed utterly, and the battle is already lost. | |
Notwithstanding that, I still had to laugh at the story posted in Slashdot | |
the other day about he kid who was being investigated who noticed that, when | |
searching for WiFi connections, one of the SSIDs was "FBI SURVEILLANCE VAN". | |
Moreover, the medium for such a communication must be the Internet, | |
since since it is the only publicly available medium that has seen | |
any serious development of anonymous and/or secure communication. | |
Agreed. | |
Let's go over some specific methods of clandestine information | |
exchange over the net: | |
Encrypted e-mail | |
Although apparently secure, this method puts the communicating | |
parties at great risk of detection. E-mail servers are centralized, | |
and accounts are easily associated with message transmission times | |
and locations. Once a single member of the communication network | |
becomes suspect, the whole network is immediately exposed. This | |
holds for all similar server-dependent protocols. | |
Encrypted email does not prevent traffic analysis; it merely prevents anyone | |
from trivially discovering the message contents. If you can be located, you | |
can be compelled to decrypt your messages, whether through legal threats or | |
the authorities simply beating the passphrase out of you -- so-called | |
"rubberhose cryptography". | |
The only way this can be avoided, is to periodically change one's encryption | |
sub-key. If the old encryption sub-keys are securely destroyed, then the | |
previous message traffic encrypted with those keys is not recoverable. Keys | |
can be changed according to one's level of paranoia -- weekly, bi-monthly, | |
monthly, quarterly, or randomly. | |
E-mail accessed exclusively over onion routing | |
This is a much better approach than just e-mail, but it is still | |
susceptible to traffic analysis, and to control of the communication | |
channel by an external party. | |
Agreed. | |
Usenet posts | |
This is a good approach to clandestine communication. Since Usenet | |
is a distributed system, traffic analysis is non-trivial, and | |
messages can be steganographically hidden inside innocent-looking | |
posts (e.g., SPAM) in some high-traffic unmoderated group. Many users | |
will read the message, oblivious to its true contents -- thus protecting | |
the message recipient from scrutiny. | |
While I agree that the distributed nature of Usenet makes traffic analysis | |
non-trivial, I completely disagree with the use of steganography to protect | |
your traffic. For starters, the authorities are not unaware of the existence | |
of steganography -- as such, it is really suitable only for rendering your | |
message traffic oblivious to the greater public. Also, by disguising it as | |
spam, it may be filtered-out by some news providers. | |
If you're going to secure your messages, then the best way to do so is to | |
use strong encryption. The best way to hide strongly-encrypted messages is | |
to post them to a newsgroup where strongly encrypted messages make-up | |
virtually all of the traffic in the group. If you're looking for such a | |
secure, high-traffic group, you really need look no further than | |
alt.anonymous.messages (a.a.m.) -- it was designed for this very purpose. | |
Furthermore, as I relate in the example case below, any real volume of PGP- | |
encrypted traffic in newsgroups other than alt.anonymous.messages /will/ be | |
noticed. | |
One of the most frequent uses for alt.anonymous.messages is as the target of | |
nymserver reply-blocks. Use of such reply-blocks renders any nymserver email | |
address untraceable, as the encrypted mail can be picked-up from any news- | |
server that carries alt.anonymous.messages. Furthermore, there are utilities | |
(e.g.aamfetch, available from sourceforge) that can be used to fetch all | |
one's messages from alt.anonymous.messages making it impossible to determine | |
precisely what messages are being retrieved. | |
Nymserver accounts are setup/maintained by sending specially-constructed | |
email messages to the nymserver. If these messages are sent via a chain of | |
mixmaster remailers, even the nymserver operator cannot determine who owns | |
a particular nymserver account, even if they were to start keeping logs, | |
perhaps at the insistence of the authorities. If one uses a randomly-chosen | |
chain of mixmaster remailers, then it is not possible to the authorities to | |
compromise the remailers you are using -- in order to trace you, they would | |
have to effectively compromise the entire mixmaster network. | |
Accordingly, the only way a nymserver account holder can then be traced is | |
through their reply-block associated with the account. If the reply block | |
points to alt.anonymous.messages (a.a.m.), then the authorities will reach | |
a dead-end. They will not be able to trace the nym account owner, nor will | |
they be able to read their message traffic. | |
Now, you might ask: "Just how secure is this setup?" | |
You'd be surprised at just how effective it is -- it was enough to thwart a | |
combined investigation by the FBI and the Australian Federal Police (AFP), | |
the Queensland Police Service (QPS), Europol, Interpol, The Department of | |
Internal affairs New Zealand, and the Toronto Police Service. | |
Let me tell you a little story.... | |
In just a few days, it will be exactly 3 1/2 years ago, that the American | |
Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), the Australian Federal Police (AFP) | |
and the Australian Queensland Police Service announced the existence of | |
"Operation Achilles" which led to the breakup of what they claimed was one | |
of the largest child pornography rings uncovered up to that time. | |
The individuals comprising this pedophile ring called themselves "the group" | |
and they believed themselves untouchable, beyond the reach of the police. | |
(For many of them, -- one-half to two-thirds, depending on which affidavit | |
you believe -- this did, indeed, turn out to be the case. This includes the | |
ringleader, who is known by the handle Yardbird.) | |
The number of persons reportedly involved varied -- one affidavit stated | |
that there were 61 persons involved, another 45, and yet another 48. All in | |
all, there were 22 persons arrested: 2 in the UK, 4 in Germany, 2 in | |
Australia, and 14 in the U.S. | |
The FBI podcast, "Inside the FBI" states that the number of persons involved | |
was 60, of which 22 were positively identified. You can listen to the podcast | |
and read the transcript at the following URL: | |
https://www.fbi.gov/news/podcasts/inside/operation-achilles.mp3/view | |
Another superb source of information is the so-called "Castleman Affidavit"-- | |
this affidavit was used to justify the arrest of group member Daniel Castleman. | |
The Castleman affidavit explains the group's methodology (or modus operandi) | |
in detail. | |
It can be seen at: http://www.rep-am.com/newsdocuments/affidavit.pdf | |
Another good source of information is: | |
http://www.policyb.org/downloads/Operation_Achilles.pdf | |
Depending on which affidavit you believe, only about 1/3 to 1/2 of the | |
alleged members of this pedophile ring were ever identified and apprehended. | |
As I said earlier, the alleged leader of this ring used the nic "Yardbird". | |
Yardbird made a re-appearance on Usenet in both 2009 and 2010 on the date | |
corresponding to the first and second anniversaries of the busts in 2008. | |
His intent was to show that he was still free, and to answer people's | |
questions. | |
One of the most important things Yardbird stated were that everyone in the | |
group who used Tor and remailers remained free, while those who relied on | |
services such as Privacy.LI were arrested and convicted. | |
Yardbird further commented that several members of the group, including his | |
second-in-command Christopher Stubbings (Helen) and Gary Lakey (Eggplant) | |
were Privacy.LI users -- in fact he stated that they used it for everything. | |
(Helen is currently serving a 25-year sentence in the UK, while Eggplant is | |
serving life in an Arizona prison.) | |
Eggplant literally became notorious because of his constant promotion of | |
Privacy.LI -- he continually boasted that he could not be caught because | |
Privacy.LI did not keep logs, and they were located outside of U.S. | |
jurisdiction. | |
I pointed out to anyone who would listen that services such as Privacy.LI | |
were for /privacy/ -- not for anonymity. In an ideal situation, one needs | |
both to be private as well as anonymous. Essentially, what Privacy.LI | |
supplied was a type of VPN service, providing an encrypted tunnel for data | |
to travel between two endpoints--the customer's computer being one endpoint, | |
while the Privacy.LI servers provided the other. While there was a degree of | |
privacy, there was NO anonymity at all--so it really didn't come as a | |
surprise that Privacy.LI's customers were among those arrested. It is also | |
worthy of note that Privacy.LI earned a 2005 entry in cryptographer Bruce | |
Schneier's "doghouse" as I pointed out more than once. | |
See: http://www.schneier.com/blog/archives/2005/07/the_doghouse_pr.html | |
As I pointed out repeatedly, NO service operator is going to go to prison to | |
protect the identity of his customers -- every last one of them will roll | |
over on you, if given the opportunity. | |
You might ask, "How was the existence of 'the group' discovered?" | |
Simple. Through one of the oldest investigative techniques of all -- the | |
informer. The Australian police arrested a man on totally unrelated child | |
pornography charges -- presumably as part of a plea deal, he revealed the | |
existence of 'the group' and handed over a PGP public/private keypair and | |
password. | |
Now, it is worthy of note that the Department of Internal Affairs of New | |
Zealand had earlier informed the Australian police of the existence of PGP- | |
encrypted traffic in a number of Usenet newsgroups. | |
These messages, from users with handles like "Big Block" and Subject: lines | |
like "New Car Contracts" were rather odd, to say the least. I also noticed | |
some of these--it was quite clear that there were a group of people | |
communicating in private, but obviously there was no way to determine /who/ | |
was communicating, or /what/ they were communicating about. | |
If the Australian police had not had a lucky break, by arresting one of the | |
members of the group on totally unrelated child pornography charges, they | |
would, in all likelihood, /still/ be in the dark about what was going on. | |
Having acquired from the informer the current group PGP public/private | |
keypair, and its passphrase meant that the police could assume this group | |
member's identity, and furthermore, read all the encrypted traffic posted by | |
members of the group. | |
So it was that Constable Brenden Power of the Queensland Police Service used | |
this assumed identity from August 31, 2006 through December 15, 2007. | |
Constable Power spent almost 18 months working out of FBI HQ in Washington, | |
DC while working on this case. | |
In many ways, this case was unprecedented. No similar pedophile ring had | |
ever previously employed the types of security measures that this group did; | |
also unprecedented was the information provided by the informant, who gave | |
the police the tools needed to infiltrate the group--without the informant's | |
help, they could _never_ have succeeded. | |
Once the group was penetrated, the police were able to take advantage of a | |
few factors: | |
1) They had the informant's computer, with all its email, PGP keys and the | |
like. This provided a history, which made it easier to continue the | |
impersonation. | |
2) By the time it was penetrated, the group had been operating for about 5 | |
years. By this time, the group had jelled into a community -- people were | |
familiar with each other, they often let their guards down, and would | |
sometimes reveal tidbits of personal information. This is especially the | |
case when they thought their messages were secure, and beyond the ability | |
of the police to intercept--they would say things that they would *never* | |
say in the open. | |
So, as you can see, the group was pretty much an of open book to the police; | |
they were completely and thoroughly penetrated. Despite that, however, the | |
majority of the group were _still_ able to remain at large, and were neither | |
positively identified nor arrested. | |
This is due to the privacy tools (i.e. tor, nymservers, remailers) that were | |
employed. Even with everything else being an open book, those using these | |
tools still managed to elude capture. | |
By now, you're probably thinking, "Why is he going on about pedophiles?" | |
"Pedophiles are disgusting! They should all be shot!" | |
Leaving aside my personal feelings about pedophiles, I brought up this case | |
as an example for several reasons: | |
1) Child pornography is a serious crime in virtually every jurisdiction. | |
As this example demonstrates, police will work together, even across | |
national boundaries, to investigate these crimes. They are willing | |
to invest considerable time, manpower and money in pursuit of these | |
suspects. The only other crimes which usually merit this type of | |
approach are drug/gun-running or terrorism. The level of effort | |
expended in pursuing this group can be seen in that even FBI | |
executive assistant director J. Stephen Tidwell was involved. | |
Normally one would not expect FBI personnel that highly placed | |
to be involved -- this shows the level of importance placed on | |
this particular investigation. (A year or so after the busts, | |
Yardbird himself expressed astonishment that the FBI would | |
consider his group such a priority.) | |
2) This case is the only one that I'm aware of, where suspects were | |
using sophisticated tools like PGP, Tor, anonymous remailers and | |
nymservers. | |
3) This case underscores the effectiveness of these tools even against | |
well-funded, powerful opponents like the FBI, Europol, and Interpol. | |
(N.B.: FWIW, those who were caught used either inappropriate and/or | |
ineffective tools and techniques to protect themselves. | |
4) I fully understand most people's disgust at the types of crimes/ | |
criminals being discussed here. That said, it is important to | |
remember that one simply cannot design a system that provides | |
protection for one class of people, but denies it for another. | |
You can't, for example, deploy a system that provides privacy/ | |
anonymity for political dissidents, or whistle blowers, and yet | |
denies it to pedophiles -- either *everyone* is safe, or NO ONE | |
is safe. This may not be palatable, but these are the facts. | |
Final Thoughts | |
============== | |
While this case shows the strengths of the current technologies, it | |
nevertheless underscores that the human element cannot be disregarded. It | |
must continually be borne in mind that the weakest element in /any/ security | |
system is the human element. This has been true since before Sun Tzu wrote | |
his immortal treatise, The Art of War about 2500 years ago. It is, in fact, | |
for this reason that Sun Tzu is still studied in military academies to this | |
very day. It is not for nothing that Sun Tzu devoted an entire chapter in | |
his seminal work to the use of spies. | |
As we have seen, infiltration is still a highly effective tactic. The group | |
was particularly susceptible to this, as the members were unknown to each | |
other, by deliberate design. If someone were to be apprehended, they could | |
be forced to turn over PGP private keys, passphrases, etc. These can then be | |
used by the authorities to PGP-sign messages, which normally would be taken | |
as proof that the messages in question are genuine and untampered-with. This | |
is likely what happened in the case of the group. | |
Traditionally, espionage cells have been made up of only a handful of persons, | |
each known to the other -- the idea behind this was to limit the damage in | |
the case of the cell being either penetrated or exposed. | |
The only types of organizations that cannot be penetrated by the authorities | |
are those close-knit, bound by blood or other kinship ties. The only possible | |
recourse for the authorities in these cases is to try to turn someone on the | |
inside against his fellows. | |
Baal <[email protected]> | |
PGP Key: http://wwwkeys.pgp.net:11371/pks/lookup?op=get&search=0x1E92C0E8 | |
PGP Key Fingerprint: 40E4 E9BB D084 22D5 3DE9 66B8 08E3 638C 1E92 C0E8 | |
Retired Lecturer, Encryption and Data Security, Pedo U, Usenet Campus | |
- -- | |
Sed quis custodiet ipsos Custodes?" -- "Who will watch the Watchmen?" | |
-- Juvenal, Satires, VI, 347. circa 128 AD | |
If you accept that freedom of speech is important, then you are going to | |
have to defend the indefensible. -- Neil Gaiman | |
He that would make his own liberty secure must guard even his enemy from | |
oppression. | |
-- Thomas Paine | |
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ZWmLQbkdgyhkRAOOIMPFWXC0+WKcy6A+xuK0bEyb7ZaJz0ibKAeo0BOgD+IqwlQ= | |
=/sG0 | |
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