Viewing 40 posts - 1 through 40 (of 174 total)
  • Web Surveillance – put it down son, put it down…
  • Kryton57
    Full Member

    A quick lunch time scan and I can’t believe this hasn’t been done yet…

    Are you not outraged that the government will be able to see – without permission – all the Prawns and other content you’ve visited, PLUS all of the apps you’ve used?

    Massive invasion of privacy IMO, pushing people back to the Littlewoods catalogue… Obvs… 8) 😕

    fasthaggis
    Full Member

    loddrik
    Free Member

    Don’t see the problem. If you’re not doing anything you shouldn’t, why worry? If it’ll help catch the bad guys, paedophiles and terrorists (and would be’s) then it doesn’t worry me whatsoever.

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    Pigface
    Free Member

    It is intrusive and unnecessary.

    jekkyl
    Full Member

    loddrik – Member
    Don’t see the problem. If you’re not doing anything you shouldn’t, why worry? If it’ll help catch the bad guys, paedophiles and terrorists (and would be’s) then it doesn’t worry me whatsoever.

    yup you’re right but what about if in the future the government isn’t the nice ‘democratic’ one we have today? what if they want to snoop on you for other reasons other than illegal activity, things which you might consider fine? and you’ve already given away all your internet privacy back in 2015/16. What then?

    lemonysam
    Free Member

    Don’t see the problem. If you’re not doing anything you shouldn’t, why worry?

    I’d have nothing to worry about legally if they installed a camera in my bathroom but I’d still object to them doing so.

    WorldClassAccident
    Free Member

    If you’re not doing anything you shouldn’t, why worry?

    Because the people who are doing the watching are not all saints. Some of them turn out to be baddies too.

    Sometimes the baddies are clever enough to get the information from the good guys.

    Sometimes…

    … oh can’t be bothered.

    Ask why there has to be a police complaints process?

    The police will not bother you unless you are doing something wrong and when they do deal with you it will always be perfectly legal, totally scrupulous and regardless of your ethnicity, religion or social attitudes…

    Can anyone think of any examples where the police ‘may’ have misbehaved and abused or misused their powers?

    wwaswas
    Full Member

    I think this largely sums it up for me.

    It’s not what they might do with this type of information now, it’s who they might hand/sell/lose it to in the future and what may also be collected using this law in the future and what might be done with it once they have it.

    There’s no need for the state to have access to this information about every citizen via an API into each ISP with no judicial involvement, not independent oversight.

    scaled
    Free Member

    It’s a government IT project, I don’t think i’ll be getting worried quite yet

    Pigface
    Free Member

    Don’t see the problem. If you’re not doing anything you shouldn’t, why worry? If it’ll help catch the bad guys, paedophiles and terrorists (and would be’s) then it doesn’t worry me whatsoever.

    IMO That is just a rubbish argument, do you have curtains in your house or do you let everyone see what you are doing?

    lemonysam
    Free Member

    It’s a government IT project, I don’t think i’ll be getting worried quite yet

    Not really, it’s forces your ISP to keep the records. Those ISPs with unblemished data security records will now be sitting on one of the greatest collections of personal data ever assembled.

    brassneck
    Full Member

    Best bit on the radio this morning was the government spokesman flying off on a huge tangent about IS coordinating attacks via What’s App. Which this wouldn’t help with in the slightest. Even as an example it’s pretty flawed.

    I’m pretty unclear on the Wilson doctrine now too – I’m assuming it’s to prevent governments of the day gathering intel on opposition MPs, but I’m uncomfortable that the House gets special treatment outside the House itself.

    brassneck
    Full Member

    Those ISPs with unblemished data security records will now be sitting on one of the greatest collections of personal data ever assembled.

    Well, apart from Facebook Public posts 😀

    I can’t think of an ISP I trust to be secure enough to hold this. There will be a leak sooner or later.

    footflaps
    Full Member

    It is completely stupid legislation, any criminal with any basic IT will use Tor or a VPN to another country and route out from there (and be completely untraceable), so really this legislation is about watching everyone else (ie not terrorists and not organised crime).

    WorldClassAccident
    Free Member

    I seem to rem,ember people getting pretty irate when a few newspapers did secret surveillance and they only ever publish what is ‘in the public interest’.

    Does this mean that people trust politicians* more than journalists?

    *Or more accurately, secret people who may work for governments and the same secret people remain even when the government changes.

    gatsby
    Free Member

    I think it’s a great idea. Only last week, I was watching this ace video where 4 dwarfs tied a bald woman to a Mies van der Rohe day bed and then a fat man ‘tarmacked’ her chest while she laughed like a hysterical hyena. While this was going on, a chimp dressed as a Policeman fapped one off whilst chained to a fiberglass Venus de Milo.

    I was interrupted by Mrs G halfway through and had to delete my browser history and I can’t for the life of me find it again.

    It would be great if someone somewhere had a record of it, dying to know what happened!

    barkm
    Free Member

    Don’t see the problem. If you’re not doing anything you shouldn’t, why worry? If it’ll help catch the bad guys, paedophiles and terrorists (and would be’s) then it doesn’t worry me whatsoever.

    This has been done to death, but the problem with this argument is ‘they’ define the ‘shouldn’t’ bit. Which is why it is a problem.

    That said, I think the ship has sailed, there’s a whole generation now who have no idea the value of the personal data they are literally giving away, every single day, for free 🙂
    So it’s about the right time for the authorities to start asking for a piece of the action.

    I pay for the internet connection to my house. But anybody visting my house can access the internet through my connection.

    The ISP can only keep records of what is accessed through that connection, not who is accessing it.

    To be used as evidence in a criminal case the prosecution would have to link website accessed to the individual. I can’t see how they could do that easily.

    Or can some of you IT people enlighten me?

    lemonysam
    Free Member

    It would be great if someone somewhere had a record of it, dying to know what happened!

    Was that not a summary of one of the Monday Night Pub Rides?

    Kryton57
    Full Member

    IMO That is just a rubbish argument, do you have curtains in your house or do you let everyone see what you are doing?

    Its not even that. As a risk of being risque, do you really know the age of that <enter gender here> “actor” you are watching one handed?

    I’m serious, as much as you try to be above board and legal, you could easily be caught out, as many of us have by accidentally receiving NSFW images on our work laptops when googling something proper.

    Now imagine the Internet police found a pedo who’d visited the same site, then widened the search to see who else has done the same…

    hugo
    Free Member

    I use a VPN to watch UK TV as I live abroad.

    I’ve got to say that I also now leave it always switched on, and when/if I moved back to the UK I’d keep the £6 a month subscription…

    Funnily enough without this new law I probably wouldn’t do that!

    footflaps
    Full Member

    To be used as evidence in a criminal case the prosecution would have to link website accessed to the individual. I can’t see how they could do that easily.

    That’s what you think, but when you’re in the dock at the Old Bailey and they’re showing the jury a list of all the terrorist sites you’ve supposedly accessed you might not feel so secure……

    E.g. DNA evidence (in particular statistics) has been abused in loads of serious cases and people who had a 1 in 15 chance (or higher) of a random match have been convicted with the Jury told there was less than 1 in 60 million chance they were innocent just because they didn’t understand conditional probability.

    footflaps
    Full Member

    I use a VPN to watch UK TV as I live abroad.

    I use Tor to access Torrent sites as all the UK ISPs have to block them by law. I could teach a 5 year old how to avoid this new legislation in about 30 seconds, it’s so easy to circumvent….

    For any 5 year olds on here, have a look at https://www.torproject.org/

    deadlydarcy
    Free Member

    I think I might sink a few quid into shares in VPN companies. Any publicly for sale?

    HoratioHufnagel
    Free Member

    Can someone explain how a VPN helps??
    Surely you are accessing the VPN through your ISP so they’ll be seeing that data too?
    Or is it all encrypted?
    But doesn’t the snoopers charter mention something about the government being able to access encrypted data?

    That’s what you think, but when you’re in the dock at the Old Bailey and they’re showing the jury a list of all the terrorist sites you’ve supposedly accessed you might not feel so secure……

    You’re quite right, I wouldn’t feel very secure. But that doesn’t mean the prosecution would have a leg to stand on nor does it mean this government have actually thought this legislation through.

    Or alternatively

    I use Tor to access Torrent sites as all the UK ISPs have to block them by law.

    “So Mr FootFlaps, we have all this other circumstantial evidence that you are plotting a terrorist atrocity. Funnily enough, we can’t access your web history because you are using Tor. Add that to all the other “evidence” we have and it begins to look pretty damming.”

    hugo
    Free Member

    I use Tor to access Torrent sites

    Same out here, also a use for a VPN.

    I could teach a 5 year old how to avoid this new legislation in about 30 seconds

    This is why it’s so stupid and clearly aimed at trawling for information in order to target/profile people.

    And the 12 month limit? Give me a break. If the info is freely available then GCHQ are keeping it for ever even if the ISPs aren’t.

    footflaps
    Full Member

    A VPN is normally an encrypted link through an insecure public network to a known secure 3rd party where you either access local data or get routed back out into the internet. Used to avoid government surveillance eg if you’re a western business person in China, the Chinese Government will be reading all your email / documents so its pretty standard to VPN back to the home HQ office etc.

    I use them everyday to access ISP’s core networks (our customers) so I can see what’s going in. The encryption is needed so someone sniffing my traffic can’t see how to access and potentially shut down (or steal data from) our customers….

    nickc
    Full Member

    somewhatslightlydazed opined: “So Mr FootFlaps, we have all this other circumstantial evidence that you are plotting a terrorist atrocity.

    yeah, more like, “No you can’t see the evidence and neither can your Lawyer, and we’ll lock you up regardless…”

    DrJ
    Full Member

    footflaps
    Full Member

    So Mr FootFlaps, we have all this other circumstantial evidence that you are plotting a terrorist atrocity

    I’d wager 99.9% or Tor traffic is piracy related and the other 0.1% is organised crime.

    There will be probably also be about 0.000001% terrorist and 0.00001% ‘oppressed’ people accessing banned websites like bbc.co.uk from China or N. Korea etc

    wwaswas
    Full Member

    Anyone who believes that Tor or VPN Traffic can’t be surveilled (is that a word) is deluded.

    The thing with this new legislation is that if you visit any known masking type sites you’ll immediately be on the list of suspicious individuals

    footflaps
    Full Member

    Anyone who believes that Tor or VPN Traffic can’t be surveilled (is that a word) is deluded.

    Tor has known weaknesses, but it takes a lot of resource to crack it and they have to compromise the exit node which is hard to do (as there are 1000s).

    VPNs are bullet proof if you use strong enough encryption, however if your end node is compromised they can just see what goes in/out of the tunnel.

    The best compromise of Tor was a Trojan Horse attack, a Russian hacker operated an exit node and put a trojan horse wrapper around any exe file downloaded via that Node, which then installed on the victim’s PC. Didn’t crack the encryption but was a clever way of attacking the users anonymously.

    loddrik
    Free Member

    I’m sure there are millions like me who just don’t care. Doesn’t bother me a jot that people can see what I look at or who I message. I suspect anyone who looked into me would see how boring I am and quickly fall asleep. Furthermore, I don’t plan on doing anything that would initiate ‘the man’ looking into my life. Let them look, I couldn’t care less tbh.

    We live in one of the most stable democracies in the world and its been that way for a long time, the chances of the UK becoming North Korea are remote in the extreme. A people who say this is the first step down that road are talking utter bollox.

    footflaps
    Full Member

    We live in one of the most stable democracies in the world and its been that way for a long time

    Which makes the case for draconian mass surveillance very weak!

    wwaswas
    Full Member

    VPNs are bullet proof if you use strong enough encryption, however if your end node is compromised they can just see what goes in/out of the tunnel.

    e.g.

    AMERICAN AND BRITISH spies hacked into the internal computer network of the largest manufacturer of SIM cards in the world, stealing encryption keys used to protect the privacy of cellphone communications across the globe, according to top-secret documents provided to The Intercept by National Security Agency whistleblower Edward Snowden.

    https://theintercept.com/2015/02/19/great-sim-heist/

    07 Jan 2015
    VPNs are not as safe as first thought

    The US National Security Agency (NSA) attacks on virtual private networks (VPNs) and the encryption protocols used by chat services such as Skype do not spell the end of online privacy, according to security experts.

    News that the NSA’s specialist Office of Target Pursuit maintains a team of engineers dedicated to cracking the encrypted traffic of VPNs broke in German newspaper Der Spiegel at the end of December.

    The report showed a slide from a 2010 NSA presentation proving that the agency has developed exploits for many of the most commonly used VPN encryption techniques.

    These include Secure Shell, Internet Protocol Security (IPSec), and Secure Socket Layer.

    http://www.v3.co.uk/v3-uk/analysis/2388913/nsa-efforts-to-crack-vpn-encryption-not-the-end-of-the-world

    I’ll stop channeling JHJ now but those are the first couple of articles on this subject I cam across that seemed to be at the less, errm, paranoid end of the spectrum.

    bencooper
    Free Member

    The thing with this new legislation is that if you visit any known masking type sites you’ll immediately be on the list of suspicious individuals

    The way to counter that is for everyone to start using VPNs. You, me, my daughter watching Peppa Pig on Netflix, everyone. All the time.

    Kryton57
    Full Member

    Peppa Pig

    Hey! Keep it clean…

    D0NK
    Full Member

    I suspect anyone who looked into me would see how boring I am and quickly fall asleep.

    well give us your dropbox, email, facebook etc account details and I’ll have a quick nosey, check you aren’t doing anything I disapprove of. Like you said I’m sure there’s nothing of interest so no harm in it eh?

    I have a pen and paper handy, fire away….

    nickc
    Full Member

    although the obvious thing about all of this, is that it pretty much confirms that Snowdon was right on the money when he suggested that mass surveillance was not only possible, but happening…

Viewing 40 posts - 1 through 40 (of 174 total)

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