- cross-posted to:
- technology@lemmy.zip
Chinese hackers (Salt Typhoon) penetrated the networks of US broadband providers, and might have accessed the backdoors that the federal government uses to execute court-authorized wiretap requests. Those backdoors have been mandated by law—CALEA—since 1994.
Refering to a story published by the Wall Street Journal, security expert Bruce Schneier writes “that the attack wasn’t against the broadband providers directly, but against one of the intermediary companies that sit between the government CALEA requests and the broadband providers”.
"For years, the security community has pushed back against these backdoors, pointing out that the technical capability cannot differentiate between good guys and bad guys. And here is one more example of a backdoor access mechanism being targeted by the “wrong” eavesdroppers."
- CanadaPlus ( @CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.org ) 26•1 month ago
Shocking. /s
No current technology can distinguish between good guys and bad guys. There’s like a pervasive ideological discomfort with that basic fact. You see it again and again on every regulation debate.
I get what you mean by highlighting that no current technology can distinguish between good and bad guys, but I feel there will never be a technology that can do that. A backdoor can easily be used by your government/law enforcement to suppress people and eliminate freedoms, even if there may have been best initial intentions for such a backdoor. This is a fundamentally human -rather than a technological- issue.
- CanadaPlus ( @CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.org ) 9•1 month ago
but I feel there will never be a technology that can do that.
That’s my best guess too, but someone could plausibly argue otherwise. I just went with something undisputable that still illustrates the main point.
- borari ( @borari@lemmy.dbzer0.com ) 3•1 month ago
Here I’ve built software that can detect the difference between good guys and bad guys, it uses Artificial Intelligence.
- CanadaPlus ( @CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.org ) 6•1 month ago
I mean, that’s what it would have to be, right? OP probably thinks it’s impossible because GAI is impossible. I think it’s likely impossible because there’s no moral system that’s both totally specific and which we could all agree on, even roughly.
Either way, a good guy detector is far off at the very least, and we’re going to have to struggle for the cause of good, whatever that may be, the old fashioned political way.
- Ð Greıt Þu̇mpkin ( @PhlubbaDubba@lemm.ee ) 3•1 month ago
Mother of god if someone actually tried to push that I would run for office for the explicit purpose of killing it dead and loudly vilifying the dumbfuck who thought of it into never making anything again.
- JaymesRS ( @JaymesRS@literature.cafe ) English23•1 month ago
Wait, you mean doors work for other people too?
- sunzu2 ( @sunzu2@thebrainbin.org ) 3•1 month ago
Got down voted for this on another thread…
Better question… Who gave chinaman the keys that only should belong to our dearest spooks
- JaymesRS ( @JaymesRS@literature.cafe ) English2•1 month ago
That was probably for the extremely outdated and racist use of “chinaman”. Even if you were using like Florida Man, it’s still a good word to avoid.
- sunzu2 ( @sunzu2@thebrainbin.org ) 1•1 month ago
Didn’t use the term there but on the side note lol
Next you gonna tell me I should not hurt the federal agents feels too
Glowies got feelings, mate 🤡
- some_guy ( @some_guy@lemmy.sdf.org ) 15•1 month ago
Schneier is one of the two security experts I have in my RSS feeds, the other being Brian Krebs. Bruce Schneier is a smart guy.
- Barry Zuckerkorn ( @BarryZuckerkorn@beehaw.org ) 8•1 month ago
Though a superhero, Bruce Schneier disdains the use of a mask or secret identity as ‘security through obscurity’.
- borari ( @borari@lemmy.dbzer0.com ) 5•1 month ago
I have one degree of personal separation from Brian Krebs, it makes me feel way cooler than it probably should lol.
Me too :-)