Tag Archives: EFF

EFF: Cisco sospenda il supporto alla repressione del governo cinese

Secondo la EFF Cisco systems avrebbe fornito al governo cinese un potente firewall utilizzato per il controllo della rete e la censura di particolari risorse.

Questo sistema denomitano “Great Firewall” permetterebbe al governo cinese di inibire l’accesso a specifiche risorse della rete, così ogni riferimento a Piazza Tiananmen e alla rivoluzione dei gelsomini sparisce dai risulati dei motori di ricerca ed anche l’accesso ai social network come Facebook viene inibito.

Chi come le scrittore dissidente cinese Du Daobin ha denunciato la situazione intentando una causa contro Cisco Systems si è visto arrivare una perquisizione a casa e la condanna a tre anni di reclusione per incitamento alla sovversione del potere statale.

L’EFF ha avviato una campagna per chiedere a Cisco di fermare il supporto alla repressione del governo cinese. E’ possibile partecipare a partire da questo link

l'immagine l'ho presa in prestito da qui
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EFF Campaign Increases the Number of Tor Relays by 13.4%

Articolo originale pubblicato sul sito della EFF
Watching the revolutions unfolding in the Arab world this springtime – and learning details first-hand from our friends on the ground – we at EFF struggled to find meaningful ways to support democratic activists and promote online freedom of expression. But we didn’t just want to lend a helping hand –we wanted to create a pathway so that anyone, anywhere in the world, could contribute to making the Internet more private and more resistant to censorship. From these discussions came our idea of launching the Tor Challenge.

We started the Tor Challenge with a simple goal: to launch 100 new Tor relays. Tor is software that individuals –including online activists in authoritarian regimes– can use to mask their IP addresses and proxy out to uncensored networks, helping them dodge network surveillance and elude online censorship. But Tor isn’t merely software – it’s also a network of volunteer computers, each donating bandwidth and acting as a router so that people can bounce their requests through the network, thereby obscuring their digital tracks.

We launched our campaign on May 31, 2011 –and within days surpassed our goal of 100 new relays. Today, we are closing the challenge after adding 549 new relays to the network. This includes:

Exit relays: 123
Middle relays: 299
Bridges: 127
Current bandwidth: 326,084 kb/s
Percentage of Tor network bandwidth: 5.77%

While some of the new relays were later taken offline, the majority of them stayed operational. The total number of public relays in the Tor network has increased by 13.4% during the course of our campaign.

There is an acute need for circumvention technologies in authoritarian regimes – and even activists in many would-be progressive societies may feel safer if they can avoid the electronic gaze of authorities. Jacob Appelbaum, a security researcher and advocate for the Tor Project, recently wrote:

The Tor Challenge is a phenomenal show of support for the Tor network and the network graphs show the results. The efforts expended by EFF supporters around the world have helped to continue the Tor network’s growth in a positive direction. Additionally, the educational efforts made by the EFF have similarly impacted the world; people everywhere understand the need for anonymity as well as how to use Tor to meet their needs in a practical manner.

While EFF’s Tor Challenge may have ended, individuals and organizations that want to create a more private Internet can still run Tor relays. And those who want to support Tor but aren’t tech-savvy can find an ally in TorServers.net, an organization based in Germany that provides technical assistance and support in running Tor relays.

Our gratitude goes out to the hundreds of individuals who set up relays and donated bandwidth to help strengthen the network. They are true defenders of online freedoms.

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TOR – Website History Movie

A visual history of Tor’s website through code commits

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The EFF Tor Challenge

La EFF lancia una campagna di supporto al progetto Tor:

Activists worldwide use Tor to protect their anonymity online and to circumvent Internet censorship. But they all rely on a limited number of user-provided “relays” to protect themselves and communicate with others. Internet users worldwide need your help to make the Tor network stronger and faster, so take the Tor Challenge today!

Tre semplici passaggi:

- Decidici in che tipo di Relay Tor vuoi gestire [cos'è un relay tor? - leggi le faq legali]

- Configura il tuo Relay Tor seguendo il tutorial video

- Comunica la creazione del nuovo Relay Tor

Buon anonimato a tutt* ;)

UPDATE: vincent (@vinzveg) has set up the exit relay v3labs. Link: www.v3-labs.info

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PGP Song

Dal sito della EFF questa divertente canzone folk di Leslie Fish sul PGP. Qui il testo

The G-men all are cryin’
And tearin’ out their hair,
‘Cause there’s a new cryptography
That’s shown up everywhere.
Nobody can break it,
However good they be.
Everybody’s PC got the PGP.

It guarantees who’s callin’
And just who gets the call.
If you ain’t got your code-word,
You can’t get in at all.
Oh, there ain’t nothin’ like it
To keep your privacy.
Half the world’s computers got the PGP.

There’s not a way to crack it,
Not in a hundred years.
All the spooks & wiretappers
Are cryin’ in their beers.
They can’t spy on E-mail
Here or oversea
When every home computer’s got the PGP.

Bless the man who made it,
And pray that he ain’t dead.
He could’ve made a million
If he’d sold it to the feds,
But he was hot for freedom;
He gave it out for free.
Now every common citizen’s got PGP.

So go say what you want to,
Of love or war or hate,
Kinky sex, or dirty words,
Or overthrow the state.
Nobody can stop you.
Speech is really free
When everybody’s PC got the PGP.

Ascolta:

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HTTPS ovunque

Dal blog di Autistici/Inventati:

EFFTOR project han rilasciato di recente una nuova estensione per Firefox che permette di visitare i siti in modalita’ crittata, ovvero le vostre richieste web verranno automaticamente provate in primis in httpS e se non fosse possibile avere la pagina in https ripetera’ la richiesta nel tradizionale protocollo in chiaro, ovvero in http.
Questa estensione dunque serve a proteggere la vostra navigazione da occhi indiscreti che potrebbero essere tra voi ed il sito che volete visitare, anche se va segnalato che molti siti non solo non prevedono la navigazione in https ma vi permettono anche l’autenticazione in http (ad esempio MySpace), lasciando aperta la possibilita’ di monitorarvi non solo durante la semplice navigazione del sito, ma anche di permettere a terze parti di rubarvi le credenziali.
Dunque il nostro invito e’ di provare questa estensione, perche’ troppo spesso ci sono indesiderate attenzioni su quello che facciamo in rete.

clicca per scaricare l'estensione per firefox

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iPhone cotto al sole d’estate

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