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by nickpsecurity
3778 days ago
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I specifically said it shouldn't be used to stop hackers. Let's continue anyway as there's a lesson here. "after other encryption software failed to work." Nothing else worked because all your recommendations were unusable. It was using Cryptocat because it might be private or doing open communications that wouldn't be private. There was also a time window. "Guess what happened right around June 2013?" They completed the meeting without the NSA getting shit. Greenwald got the data. Snowden escaped. Comms remained private until an NSA analyst discovered both the intercepted data and Decryptocat. It worked. Great story. Now, what app do you recommend for a future Greenwald that's so easy to correctly acquire and use that I could give my grandmother a 3-4 step flashcard and she get through it without help & minimum hassle? Cryptocat passed my granny test. Nothing else on a desktop did so far. |
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Script kiddies get their name because they only make use of easy-to-use tools written by knowledgable "hackers" that perform tasks that are vastly beyond the understanding of the kiddie. If your "secure communications" software doesn't stop a sophisticated passive adversary, it doesn't stop anyone, because a sophisticated adversary will inevitably release a point and drool tool that anyone can use to unscramble your data. [0]
> They completed the meeting without the NSA getting shit. ... Comms remained private until an NSA analyst discovered both the intercepted data and Decryptocat.
So, then the NSA did "get shit". They may not have gotten it in a timely manner, but they did get the plaintext of the conversation.
> Now, what app do you recommend for a future Greenwald...
TextSecure/Signal has been around since 2010. It walks you through the setup process, so no need for flashcards. Unlike Cryptocat, its crypto has stood up to scrutiny. It doesn't currently meet your "on a desktop" search criteria but:
1) It seems reasonable to expect that most journalists possess either an iOS or Android smartphone.
2) There is a Signal desktop client in development that's currently in population-limited beta testing. From what people tell me about how WhatsApp handles the interaction between its mobile clients and desktop client, Signal's desktop client is every bit as easy to use as WhatsApp's.
[0] Granted, Decryptocat likely has to be used by someone running code in the Cryptocat datacenters, but this does not invalidate my objection to your assertion.