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Ukraine

Encryption Protects Ukrainians, Dissident Russians, and You

No class of governments can be trusted with access to people’s private communications.

J.D. Tuccille | 3.14.2022 8:30 AM

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After Russia's invasion of Ukraine, getting information through firewalls and past the eyes of censors has become a major concern for both Ukrainians and those Russians critical of Putin's regime. That encryption has emerged as an important tool should surprise exactly nobody who has paid any attention to the evolving efforts of activists, journalists, and private citizens to escape the notice of thuggish rulers. That's a lesson to take to heart not just for people overseas, but also here at home.

"Secure, encrypted communications give people the power to organize and access information that authoritarian regimes don't want seen," Sen. Ron Wyden (D–Ore.) tweeted March 3. "End-to-end encryption is life or death for people living in authoritarian countries like Russia, China, or Saudi Arabia."

Wyden deserves kudos for his consistent messaging on this issue. He's a rare political figure who champions privacy, recently criticizing legislative attacks on encryption as well as publicizing domestic surveillance by the CIA. (Unfortunately, he isn't so great on economic freedom, for which he's been called out by his own son.) The Oregon lawmaker went on to specify that users should be careful about which tools they use: "If a service isn't end-to-end encrypted by default, it isn't safe."

That advice applies most particularly to Telegram, which is enormously popular in eastern Europe in part because its founder, Pavel Durov, fled Russia to escape Putin's regime and was inspired to promote secure messaging technology. But many of its users misunderstand the app and think all of their online conversations are protected, when only "secret chats" enjoy end-to-end encryption. The Electronic Frontier Foundation publishes a guide to securely using Telegram.

Telegram's complexities sparked a vigorous discussion about the best way to keep information safe from prying eyes. That's a pressing concern for Ukrainian officials, journalists covering the war, Russians criticizing Vladimir Putin, and anybody engaged in potentially sensitive discussions and not entirely certain just whose boot might be on their throats in the near future. Signal enjoys a good reputation as an encrypted messaging app and has seen a surge in popularity, The Tor Project offered an online guide for defeating surveillance and censorship, and established services including Meta, which owns Facebook and Instagram, hustled to enable end-to-end encryption.

"If you need to communicate with a group and it is important that Telegram should not have access to the data or metadata surrounding these communications, move your communication to an alternative platform such as Signal (see our guides for Android and iOS), Wire, Threema, or WhatsApp," advised the EFF.

What is not in dispute is the absolute necessity of the "power to organize and access information that authoritarian regimes don't want seen" as Wyden put it. There's little doubt that Ukrainians organizing the defense of their country and the escape of their loved ones, Russians sounding off about their regime and seeking reliable news, and journalists covering the carnage need secure communications that can't be intercepted by prying eyes. That capability is also important for operations overseas seeking to get information to those embroiled in the conflict. Ironically, that includes media sponsored by governments with a history of hostility to private communications. The British government's BBC published instructions on using censorship-circumventing Psiphon and anonymity-enhancing Tor to get around Russian restrictions on foreign media. U.S. government-owned services encourage similar workarounds.

"Russia has imposed unprecedented censorship on our Russian-language news sites," advises Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty. "To continue accessing our reporting in Russian, readers in Russia can use a VPN, such as nthLink, which is a free solution supported by the Open Technology Fund. VPNs will also give them access to the blocked social media platforms.

It's helpful advice, but a bit jarring considering that these services belong to governments dedicated to monitoring and controlling the flow of information.

"The UK government and a coalition of charities are urging the British public to put pressure on Facebook not to introduce end-to-end encryption (E2EE) on its Messenger service," the BBC itself reported just weeks ago. "The public debate is likely to be fierce, as privacy campaigners and technology companies argue the system is needed to protect personal privacy and data security. And the battle is being watched closely around the world, as many governments are also keen to halt the spread of end-to-end encryption in its current form."

Among those governments keen to halt the spread of end-to-end encryption is the Russian government from which Telegram's Pavel Durov fled and around which western media now craft secure data connections. But it also includes the governments of Australia, Canada, India, Japan, New Zealand, the United Kingdom, and the United States. In 2020 they issued a joint statement insisting that "Particular implementations of encryption technology, however, pose significant challenges to public safety." The signatory governments called for encryption restrictions to save the children, which is the go-to justification for all-too-much authoritarian legislation. Kids are the excuse American lawmakers exploit to push the encryption curbs in the EARN IT Act, currently pending in Congress. 

"End-to-end encryption is life or death for people living in authoritarian countries like Russia, China, or Saudi Arabia," Wyden warned in promoting the technology. But as Ukrainians know, sometimes authoritarianism comes across the border without an invitation. The Canadian government's recent attacks on lockdown protesters show that supposedly free countries can slip into authoritarianism with little warning. And we're still trying to figure out the full import of the CIA's domestic spying program years after Edward Snowden warned us of earlier snooping.

"The CIA's surveillance program is reminiscent of the mass surveillance programs conducted by the NSA, though the details released thus far paint a disturbing picture of potential wide-scale violations of people's privacy," the EFF noted last month. "To start, the CIA program has apparently been conducted outside the statutory reforms and oversight of the intelligence community instituted after revelations by Edward Snowden in 2013."

There's no class of governments that can be trusted with access to people's private communications since the folks making the rules might change or turn out to be much less trustworthy than previously imagined. Privacy has to be protected for everybody because we don't know ahead of time when it will be most necessary. Encryption should be enhanced and made more available precisely because government officials are made unhappy when we shield our information from their prying eyes.

The Rattler is a weekly newsletter from J.D. Tuccille. If you care about government overreach and tangible threats to everyday liberty, this is for you.

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NEXT: Greenwashing Borders

J.D. Tuccille is a contributing editor at Reason.

UkraineEncryptionRussiaVladimir PutinPrivacyInvasion of Privacy
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  1. Jerryskids   3 years ago

    Encryption should be enhanced and made more available precisely because government officials are made unhappy when we shield our information from their prying eyes.

    If you think government officials are unhappy at citizens being able to keep things secret from them, you should see how pissed off Big Tech executives get.

    1. Salted Nuts   3 years ago

      You think Big Tech is pissed, wait until you see AOC.

      No, she hasn't bit into a lemon recently, she's just happy to see you.

      1. daveca   3 years ago

        I know what else she hasnt bit into recently....or Psaki...

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        2. The Encogitationer   3 years ago

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      3. Vexatious   3 years ago

        She ain’t gettin’ fucked right by that beta cuck dbag she dares. He needs to get his bitch under control.

  2. Salted Nuts   3 years ago

    Gee, it's so nice that we live in a nation where we can speak freely on any platform on any subject.

    America is nothing at all like these communist or totalitarian regimes that spy on their citizens, impose social credit scores or demonize, debank and demonetize anyone who contradicts official narrative.

    We're so free, we can even call for the death of world leaders on social media! Well, one, anyway. But all the totally trustworthy people agree he deserves it, and they have been such a guiding beacon of sane, reasonef policy during these dark pandemic times we were lucky to live through.

    If we were that kind of budding banana republic, surely we'd merit a token mention in the esteemed TooSilly's obligated weekly Russian bashing.

    1. Ersatz   3 years ago

      my sarcasm detector just spontaneously combusted!
      thanks alot!

    2. daveca   3 years ago

      OK then! Back to Wheres Waldo !

      That screaming alarm is the ' everythings OK' alarm...

      https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=7vIjBtdEQRE

  3. Salted Nuts   3 years ago

    Can someone further explain to me how the pregnant Ukrainian mother bombed by Putin story went?

    Because the new news is that she died of a crushed pelvis shortly after the bombing. But...

    Marianna Podgurskaya not only descended the stairs unassisted, she was able to clean the blood off her and arrange her hair for the best shot on the stretcher as she laid sideways on her "crushed pelvis." By latest family reports, she and her baby girl (delivered through a "crushed pelvis" shortly after the bombing) are alive and well.

    https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/europe/ukraine-beauty-blogger-mariupol-hospital-attack-b2033714.html

    1. Salted Nuts   3 years ago

      Ssssoooo mmmmaaaannnnnnyyyy lllliiiieeeeessssssss.

      If RussiaManBad is real, why am I only seeing amateur actresses, heavily edited drone footage and literally clips from movies broadcast under the guise of a Russian incursion?

      Why, with all our technology, with the fucking radiation sniffing spyplanes, with Elon Musk beaming Starlink in to millions of cell phones - with all this, why do I keep finding out that what MSM is pushing is fabricated? Why the fuck would you NEED to?

      Why was the "NYT reporter" an ex-affiliate for years, and why was he killed by Russians at a Ukrainian checkpoint?

      I post this genuinely not knowing what the hell is going on any more.

      1. Enjoy Every Sandwich   3 years ago

        One suspicion I have is that the Putin = Hitler narrative isn't quite having the desired effect. You know, the one that says this is 1939 all over again and if the U.S. doesn't act we'll have Russian tanks rolling through Warsaw, Berlin, Paris, London, and Washington D.C. before you know it (although if Putin is stupid enough to want Washington D.C. he's welcome to it, he'll end up regretting that).

        But since the Russians seem to be having trouble making headway in Ukraine that narrative falls flat so the PTB need a better one.

        1. Salted Nuts   3 years ago

          I heard Putin is worse; Hitler never killed German nationals when he was getting all genocidey.

          Also: on Saturday the CCP expressly warned foreign powers not to intervene in any military action involved in capturing Taiwan.
          This is the same day we saw missile/rocket attacks on US targets in Iraq, launched from Iran, where nuclear negotiations have faltered and enrichment has progressed.

          It's not like we have a shortage of genuine adversaries and allies in need right now, but the WEF has got to get its bangs for the bucks.

          1. Enjoy Every Sandwich   3 years ago

            I heard Putin is worse; Hitler never killed German nationals when he was getting all genocidey.

            Yeah, not only do they go for ludicrous historical analogies, they can't even get the basic facts right.

            1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   3 years ago

              But facts get in the way of emotional narratives designed for simple minds. Also probably racist.

              1. Nardz   3 years ago

                Amazing thread with some (possibly) first hand accounts from foreign volunteers

                https://twitter.com/MogTheUrbanite/status/1503207784334204928?t=NNiNtyEVSPDoTRw4BvWDqw&s=19

                Aftermath footage from the missile attack on barracks of some of the volunteers.

                Looks like some Redditors got made into chutney

                [Thread]

                1. Salted Nuts   3 years ago

                  I'm gonna get a tan line from the facepalming this year.

                2. Vexatious   3 years ago

                  My mother has a friend in Canada that has bitten off on some conspiracy theory that Russia didn’t attack Ukraine, and The Who,e thing is staged. As history has shown, millions of people can keep such a big secret.

                  Has anyone else heard this shit?

        2. Earth-based Human Skeptic   3 years ago

          A side thought: if D.C. deserves to be a state, then it would be fitting to see it become a New Russian Soviet state.

          1. Vexatious   3 years ago

            It’s already largely populated by authoritarian Marxists. So it wouldn’t be much of a transition.

        3. daveca   3 years ago

          Theyre so ' not making headway' that theyre reduced to blindly firing rockets on women and children.

          Which us what will happen if they ever attack Washingturd DC.

          / sarc off

          1. Enjoy Every Sandwich   3 years ago

            D.C. would welcome Putin with open arms, and if they don't he can always promise them "free" stuff. No artillery needed.

      2. Illocust   3 years ago

        To be blunt, twitter has trained many reporters to pass things along without verifying them, as long as the reporter agrees with the underlying motive.

        It's getting to the point where you don't want the media to be on your side, because they are so incompetent they make you look like you are maliciously spreading false information.

        1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   3 years ago

          Joornalism is hard! (But not as hard as math.)

        2. daveca   3 years ago

          They aren't reporters.

          Reporters have access to the scene.

          These Internet Assclowns are just sociopathic manipulators making Schiff up out of ninth- hand information following a Left- Prog template.

          1. Vexatious   3 years ago

            Schiff doesn’t exist. He’s really an ostrich and four muskrats stuffed into a suit.

        3. Nardz   3 years ago

          So has the State Department

          1. Salted Nuts   3 years ago

            Beat me to it.

    2. Spiritus Mundi   3 years ago

      The woman who died was not the beauty blogger. She was the brunette on the stretcher. The blogger was the blonde who walked out.
      https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-10593177/Ukraine-war-Russia-reopens-evacuation-routes-besieged-cities.html

      1. Salted Nuts   3 years ago

        Brunette that looks awfully like the dirty blonde... Could be so, but I've seen that image paired with the other consistently before this as one woman, now become two, as well as two other identities associated with her.

  4. Enjoy Every Sandwich   3 years ago

    "Buh...buh...but insurrectionists!!!"

  5. daveca   3 years ago

    Not this false meme again! ( and again...and again...)

    This BS meme has floated in and out for years.

    It pretends theres encryption available to the Public that Gummit dont already have the keys to. False.

    Or don't already have spy agencies with massive decryption capabilities to decode.

    It also falsely pretends that NSA and a host of other un Constitutional spy Agencies dont capture and store everything going across the net with capability a/o intent to decode it.

    And that other nations with advanced cyber warfare capacity cant also do that.

    Then it ignores the dozen(s) of corporations helping them do it.

    This BS is just clickbait.

    A similar lie us the VPN myth where tech- ignorant are fooled into thinking they cant be IDed by their Last Mile connection.

    Another internet safety lie was the ObamaScare online website. " Secure connection" they crowed, while lying thru their teeth.

    I did a fake registration up to the very last step of actually ' sending' the info. I tracked the other hidden websites as leeches attached to my browser session.

    There were THIRTEEN other websites including Goog, Fbook, Akamai etc that were not needed to go thru the sites processes as proven by the fact I could do the whole process while blocking these leeches andcthe site worked fine.

    ANY of those parasites can read the screen or keyboard memory. Or more exactly, anyone using them can.

    In real news, asking Creepy Joe to send planes to Poland should not be happening. Congress should direct it. Joes a vegetable.

    1. James K. Polk   3 years ago

      I can say authoritatively that you are idiot, and almost everything you've written here is incorrect.

      1. subpatre   3 years ago

        Well .... he got Biden's mental status right.
        Doesn't that count for something?

  6. Earth-based Human Skeptic   3 years ago

    Our government officials are recommending encryption for private citizens becuz freedom? Color me skeptical.

    1. daveca   3 years ago

      Da Gummit are ' behind us' ll the way.

      Pete Buttigeg style.

      1. Vexatious   3 years ago

        Buttgag is still taking maternity leave until his rectum gets it’s shape back.

  7. daveca   3 years ago

    Encryption protects no one.

    Anonymity and hopping dynamic IP connections with unregistered devices does.

  8. Nardz   3 years ago

    https://twitter.com/billroggio/status/1503108143353679874?t=iTdExeckzqAvPvRgP8gPfA&s=19

    1) The Ukrainian military is training young men for three days, and putting them on the front lines. There is just no way you can teach a person how to be a soldier in 3 days, and expect him to survive what is to come.
    [Link]

    2) Some quotes from the @BBC article: "I got used to my gun. I learned how to shoot and how to act in the battle, also many other things that will be very crucial in the fight with the Russians."

    3) "I feel much more confident than I was before, because we get enough knowledge in tactics, in martial arts, in tactical medicine and in how to do something on the battlefield."
    Let's be clear, you cannot become even moderately proficient in any of those tasks in 3 days.

    4) Also, there is more to being a soldier than the most basic of training. How will they react under fire? Can they fight as a unit and maintain unit cohesion when the bullets, rockets, and artillery fly? Etc.

    5) Again, the Russians are clearly having their own tactical problems. This @BBC article highlights a very serious manpower & training problem for the Ukrainians.

    1. Salted Nuts   3 years ago

      Some of these kids probably have never even been laid yet.

      1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   3 years ago

        Where are all the patriotic Ukrainian supermodels?

        1. Vexatious   3 years ago

          On billionaires yachts?

  9. Utkonos   3 years ago

    Russian Orthodox Church in Amsterdam Announces Split With Moscow
    https://share.newsbreak.com/nynhz5q5

  10. PimClieff   3 years ago

    Unfortunately, I am one of those users who now constantly have to use a VPN in order to at least get different information about the events that are happening now. I used to use VPN services too, but the search for a good VPN has never been as relevant as it is now. I found ExpressVPN on https://en.vpnwelt.com/ and it's been a lifesaver for me because many other VPNs just don't work.

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