In the News Roundup, Dave Aitel (@daveaitel), Mark MacCarthy (@Mark_MacCarthy), and Nick Weaver (@ncweaver) and I discuss how French and Dutch investigators pulled off the coup of the year this April, when they totally pwned a shady “secure phone” system used by large numbers of European criminals. Nick Weaver explains that hacking the phones of Entrochat users gave the police access to big troves of remarkably candid criminal text conversations. And, I argue, it shows a flaw in the argument of encryption defenders who say that restricting Silicon Valley encryption will send criminals to less savory companies. That’s true, but sleazeball companies are inherently more prone to compromise, as happened here.
This week the EARN IT Act went from Washington-controversial to Washington consensus in the usual way. It was amended into mush. Indeed, there’s an argument that, by guaranteeing that nothing bad will happen to social platforms who adopt end-to-end encryption, the successful Leahy amendment actually makes e2e crypto more attractive than it already is under current law. That’s my view, but Mark MacCarthy still thinks the twitching corpse of EARN IT might cause harm by allowing states to adopt stricter liability for child sex abuse material. He also thinks that it won’t pass. I have ten bucks that says it will, and by the end of the year.
Dave Aitel, new to the news roundup, discusses the bad week TikTok had in its second biggest market. India has banned the app. And judging from some of the teardowns of the code, its days may be numbered elsewhere as well. Dave points to reports that Angry Birds was used to collect user information as well when it was at the height of its popularity. We wax philosophic about why advertising and not national security agencies are breaking new ground in building our Brave New World.
Mark once worked for a credit card association, so he’s the perfect person to comment on the next story, in which the founder of gab discovers that being labeled a “hate speech” platform won’t just get you boycotted by Silicon Valley but by the credit card associations as well. Once we’re in this vein, we mine it, covering Silicon Valley’s concerted campaign to make sure Donald Trump can’t possibly repeat 2016 in 2020. He’s been deplatformed at Twitch this week for something he said in 2016. And Reddit dumped his enormous subreddit for failure to observe its censorship rules – which I point out are designed to censor only people in “the majority.” I argue it’s time to defund the speech police.
Nick takes us to a remarkable Washington story. He thinks it’s about a questionable Trump administration effort to redirect $10 million in “freedom tools” funding from cryptolibertarians to Falun Gong coders. I point out that US government funds going to the cryptolibertarians were paying the salary of the notorious Jake Applebaum and buying tools like TAILS that have protected appalling sextortionist criminals. Really, taking the money away from those projects would be a good idea if all we did with it was to burn the bills on cold days to warm the homeless on the Mall.
Returning to This Week in Hacked Phones, Nick explains the latest “man in the middle” attack that works as soon as the phone user visits a website. Any website. Dave sets out the strikingly sophisticated and massive international surveillance system China is now aiming at Uighers all around the world. And Nick warns of two bugs that, if you haven’t spent the weekend fixing, may already be compromising your network.
In quick hits, I mock MIT for thinking that “pedophile” is a racial or ethnic slur but confess that its researchers must know more bad words than I do. What, I ask, is a c****e, anyway? If MIT was cheating on the number of asterisks, we have an idea, but that really is cheating. If you know, please don’t tweet the answer; send it to our email.
Download the 323rd Episode (mp3)
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