A 'Trustworthy' Social Network For The Occupy Movement: Even If They Build It, Can They Ever Trust It?
from the weakest-link-in-the-chain dept
The role of technology in the wave of protests that swept the world last year is a matter of debate. While some claim that social networks and mobile phones allowed protesters to organize themselves with an unprecedented speed and efficiency, others have seen their role as marginal – or even counterproductive, since these same technologies also allow governments to monitor events with greater ease than in pre-Internet days.
One group aligned with the Occupy movement is situated somewhere in the middle. That is, it recognizes the important role that technology can play, but sees increasing problems with today's social media. The solution, they believe, is to create a new social network specifically aimed at helping protest movements scale up their activities by linking like-minded people around the world:
What we need, at this point, is a platform that allows us to radically democratize our global organizational efforts. In addition to the local squares, we now need a global square where people of all nations can come together as equals to participate in the coordination of collective actions and the formulation of common goals and aspirations. For this reason, we call upon the revolutionary wizkids of the world to unite and assist in the development of a new online platform – The Global Square – that combines the communicative functions of the existing social networks with the political functions of the assemblies to provide crucial new tools for the development of our global movement.
The same post has an interesting list of requirements for such a system, which will be open source. That's certainly wise, since it will allow volunteers to contribute, but it does raise the question: why not use one of the existing open source social networks like identi.ca, elgg, or – perhaps the best-known example – Diaspora?
One of the key differences of the proposed social network from those is the central importance of trust, as this feature on The Global Square in Wired explains:
One challenge that all of the new efforts face is a very difficult one for non-centralized services: ensuring that members are trustworthy. That’s critical for activists who risk injury and arrest in all countries and even death in some. To build trust, local and international networks will use a friend-of-a-friend model in Knutson and Boyer’s projects. People can’t become full members on their own as they can with social networks like Twitter, Facebook and Google+.
Although that sounds fine in theory, recent events in the UK suggest that it might not help much in practice. A year ago, the Guardian broke a story about a police officer there who, for seven years:
lived deep undercover at the heart of the environmental protest movement, travelling to 22 countries gleaning information and playing a frontline role in some of the most high-profile confrontations
Nor was this an isolated case, as another Guardian story reported:
Five of the seven undercover police officers in the protest movement who have been exposed so far have admitted having or have been alleged to have had sexual relationships with activists they were keeping under surveillance, despite claims by senior police officers that this was banned.
It seems unlikely that employing the "friend-of-a-friend" approach to trust would have kept many of them out of the network.
In fact it's hard to see how any social network technology can get around the problem that undercover agents will always find a way to subvert trust systems by exploiting their weakest points: other people. That means that the real challenge facing The Global Square is not technical – how to keep out spies - but social: how to cope with the fact that you can't.
Follow me @glynmoody on Twitter or identi.ca, and on Google+
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Filed Under: occupy, protests, social networks
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This also allows a public record of events to be created, which can only serve to strengthen the movement, as well as placate and inform critics who haven't yet grasped that we are all in this together.
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That is a comment of such staggering naivety in the context of repressive regimes gathering intelligence on dissidents that I can only assume that you are a copper. Having [Gadaffi|Assad|Insert dictator]'s secret police be able to trace all your relationships puts your and other people's lives in danger. Even in "democratic" countries people are likley to be arrested, raided be denied job opportunities and so on because of state subservience on social networks.
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Re:
Diaspora seems to be a pretty good alternative for Facebook. I guess we need to check the existing options and check which are more 'protest' friendly.
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What is naive is the belief that 'secrecy' can solve the problems on this scale. Sure it might help to overthrow the current regime more quickly, but without transparency the systems of corruption will reproduce themselves and we'll be back where we started. (Meet the new boss, same as the old boss) Secrecy is like cheating on a test, it may get you the passing grade, but you've still lost because you didn't learn the lesson.
The only way to break the cycle is to not make the same mistakes that got us into this mess in the first place.
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Speed
It is not possible to run a secure system without rampant paranoia and always doubting your friends. The best option is to establish an open organization and command structure and then to use speed to beat the opposition.
Like have all member's cell phone numbers. Then on the day of action use both a new phone and new SIM to SMS them all calling them to arms at X place only 30 to 60 mins meeting time away.
The protesters win this one when people turn up how and when they can from several directions. The opposition have a much harder time assembling a large enough team and to outfit them all with equipment and plans in such a short time.
Better yet they can assemble teams to complete certain tasks like to barricade roads to delay progress in their plans to break up the protesters. They can do a lot of preparation ahead of time and the key part is always mass assembly on very short notice. Occupy Wall Street could have worked much better had this occurred.
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Re: Speed
Where is 4Chan in the wave of these blackouts and movements against SOPA/PIPA?
Or are they silent because of letting us handle it ourselves?
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Re: Re: Speed
There are of course many other protest groups and currently I am sorry for them what with the current snow and ice.
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Even the Hells Angels was infiltrated
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Re: Even the Hells Angels was infiltrated
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Re: Re: Even the Hells Angels was infiltrated
Double and triple, even quadruple redundancy.
The protesters edge is; they out number the authorities significantly. You have sacrifice a few pawns.
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By their very structure, trust systems are top-down, based on a "trusted" authority. The US Department of Defense official DEFINITION of a "trusted system" is one that can BREAK your security systems. Trusted systems are inherently authoritarian. That authority may be a government, it may be a central part of an organization, like Microsoft, or Linux, or your company's network admin, but they are all authoritarian.
What is needed is a security system that does not rely on trust. Such a system would rely instead on reputations that would change dynamically based on a continual evaluation of their demonstrated past behavior and on one's own policies and prejudices.
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Two Systems
The other system is the difficult one. It is for planning and executing operations. This is the one that needs to be secure from authorities. I think a sneaker-net style is the way to go with this, as no amount of Tor or any trust based, or for that matter relationship based system will keep out a determined adversary. Even this has the issue of potential infiltration, because it too would be relationship based, at the very least. They might consider a several to many relationship (broadcast from multiple instigator emitters).
BTW, the first system should not practice censorship as the original Occupy Wall Street system did. I tried to post a longer comment, which was rejected out of had, and the temerity to call me a jerk for trying. Too bad. They may not have agreed with everything I said, but they are poorer for not having heard it.
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