Pissed Off Google Security Guys Issue FU To NSA, Announce Data Center Traffic Now Encrypted
from the keep-at-it dept
So far, one of the biggest stories of the Snowden NSA leaks, by far, is the revelation that the NSA was infiltrating the private data links between Google and Yahoo data centers (and, it seems likely, other companies as well). Google had clearly suspected this, as it had been reported earlier that they were scrambling to encrypt those data links. As you may recall, the original Washington Post article also noted that two Google engineers who were shown the NSA's slides "exploded in profanity" and anger at the NSA.It would appear that this sentiment is pretty common across Google's security team, and they're displaying their anger on Google Plus -- but also announcing that all that data is now encrypted. When the news first broke, security engineer Brandon Downey expressed reasonable anger about the news:
Fuck these guys.On Tuesday, the Washington Post revealed a few more slides showing more details of the NSA's infiltration of private data links between data centers. In response to that, another security engineer, Mike Hearn, announced that all the traffic shown in those slides is now encrypted, along with his own "fuck you" to the NSA and GCHQ:
I've spent the last ten years of my life trying to keep Google's users safe and secure from the many diverse threats Google faces.
[...] But after spending all that time helping in my tiny way to protect Google -- one of the greatest things to arise from the internet -- seeing this, well, it's just a little like coming home from War with Sauron, destroying the One Ring, only to discover the NSA is on the front porch of the Shire chopping down the Party Tree and outsourcing all the hobbit farmers with half-orcs and whips.
I now join him in issuing a giant Fuck You to the people who made these slides. I am not American, I am a Brit, but it's no different - GCHQ turns out to be even worse than the NSA.Of course, some people might reasonably question the idea that Google is "little people" here. And, while it's good to see Google staffers furious about this, it remains to be seen if Google will actually do more about this. A lawsuit against the US government for hacking into its network seems called for. And, potentially against Level 3 as well, given that it appears Level 3 provided much of the dark fiber Google was using -- and the company gave a giant "if the government comes to us, we can't talk about it" response, that hinted strongly towards "the government came to us and had us tap Google's private links."
We designed this system to keep criminals out. There's no ambiguity here. The warrant system with skeptical judges, paths for appeal, and rules of evidence was built from centuries of hard won experience. When it works, it represents as good a balance as we've got between the need to restrain the state and the need to keep crime in check. Bypassing that system is illegal for a good reason.
Unfortunately we live in a world where all too often, laws are for the little people. Nobody at GCHQ or the NSA will ever stand before a judge and answer for this industrial-scale subversion of the judicial process. In the absence of working law enforcement, we therefore do what internet engineers have always done - build more secure software. The traffic shown in the slides below is now all encrypted and the work the NSA/GCHQ staff did on understanding it, ruined.
Hopefully, we'll start to see that employee anger over this turn into much more: including better privacy tools for users and using Google's political pull to fight the NSA in DC as well.
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Filed Under: datacenters, encryption, engineers, nsa, nsa surveillance, security
Companies: google, level 3
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So...
(Assuming they aren't already anyway, they do tend to lash out at critics fairly randomly)
I'm guessing a week, tops, personally.
*According to classified rulings by classified courts on classified interpretations of laws of course, 'cause public laws are the tools of terrorists don't you know! /s
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Re: So...
I'm actually happy all this has happened, as it has gotten me to think about how I do the back-end stuff too. Protecting the front-end left me with an M&M security model...soft chewy center with a hard shell. Even though my back-end was limited to lo0, and never touched the net, I am now working to encrypt all of my lo0 traffic. It increases latency, but in the long run, if the state can do it, it is only a short matter of time before bad-guys figure out how to do the same.
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Re: Re: So...
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Insiders
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Re:
Government is the real anomaly. Using other peoples money to buy things they don't understand if they need, and then having no accountability when things go wrong. Sound like a teenager.
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Gee, just like that, added multi-GB/S encryption.
But does provide a PR story. So far as it goes in railing at criminals, that's fine, so long as no one believes that Google is/was so ignorant or then/now so "outraged".
Remember, Google is secretive as NSA. They won't even tell us about barge plans, 'cause a showroom is too secret for the public to ever know about...
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Re: Insiders
This limits the number of insiders who have unrestricted access, and limits the damage the rest of the insiders do. If Google plays their cards right (harder to do, but possible), no insider will have unrestricted access.
This increases the NSA's costs and makes it harder for them to do pervasive passive monitoring. Which is a good thing, since it forces them to target their resources at evildoers, instead of just invading the privacy of everyone.
The point is not to make things impossible for the NSA. The point is to make them harder.
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Re: Gee, just like that, added multi-GB/S encryption.
Anyone who believes this is just the kind of trusting utterly unquestioning fool that con men -- and intelligence operatives -- just LOVE.
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Re: Re: Gee, just like that, added multi-GB/S encryption.
From the same place that your beloved *IAA organizations get their statistics data on "piracy" and "theft." What is YOUR evidence that the numbers and claims they make are valid? They can't be trusted any further, in like manner.
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NOW you have. The biggest criminals are in government.
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The word’s meant to shock people, and coming from Google reps, that should shock everyone.
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Hey Google: Fuck You. Karma strikes again.
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Re: So...
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Re: Re: So...
That's what they're talking about, encrypting traffic over those channels. If you can't trust the channel's encryption (IPV6 is not encryption) then encrypt the data going over the channel.
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the real question is, will the average citizen do anything about this?
the answer to that question is: no
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difficulty: show your work
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Karma hasn't even kicked in yet. It's still itemising the charges. Mafiaa cunt.
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Huh. Didn't Google develop a ContentID system and a easy DMCA notice system on their own dime? I don't recall any artists, label or movie studios chipping in any cash for that.
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When did this turn in to a copyright story and at what point in time did google ever help any artists being exploited?
You always forget that the people who exploit the artists the most are the big labels/studios/publishers that are represented by the AA's and who you so vehemently defend.
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What you Gov going to do about it when your Apple and your Windows and all that other good stuff says a big FUCK YOU to you.
How you going to shut down what the World depends on !!!
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Re: Re:
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But what about the DCMA?
Go get 'em!
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Re: So...
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Re: Re: Insiders
The point is to make it cost prohibitive.
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Google IS the NSA, how difficult is that to understand ?
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Re: Google IS the NSA, how difficult is that to understand ?
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waiting
The DOJ, as shown by their recent history is no doubt obviously about to pursue the NSA to their demise for abuses under the CFAA.
Oh.
Maybe not.
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Re: Re: Re: Insiders
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Re: Re: So...
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And the record labels and movie studios couldn't give two fucks about artists being exploited via their one-sided contracts and fraudulent accounting practices. Seems those poor artists can't catch a break from anyone!
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Translation
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Snowdon x 50,000 = Google
And how exactly am I protected by Google's privacy policy which seems to say you can take my text,images,location,contacts,voice and exploit it in any way you want. Which in a public company always ends up being the highest bidder.
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Angrynet
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The NSA Does NOT Own the Infrastucture
Level3, ATT, Verizon, Google ... they are the arm of surveillance.
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A Nice goole PR but google joined PRISM
so google and the NSA siting on a tree and kissing since then
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Re: Re: So...
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Fiber Mascara
http://www.twilashstore.com/
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rosagail
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