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Column How to protect your private data in a digital world

With Snowden, Prism and national security secrets in the news, it’s clear that technology has made privacy harder to ensure. Renaat Verbruggen gives a run down of how cryptography can protect your private information.

WHILE EDWARD SNOWDEN plays his own version of “Where in the world is Carmen Sandiego?”, it is worth considering what the implications of his revelations are for our own communications.

Last year I was lucky enough to read Privacy on the Line: The Politics of Wiretapping and Encryption by Whitfield Diffie (one of the pioneers of public-key cryptography) and Susan Landau (Sun Microsystems). The book traces the ongoing battle between the US and other governments’ need for surveillance and the individual’s right to privacy. The overarching point is that such increased surveillance can in fact lead to decreased security as a lapse such as Snowden allows access to a large range of data.

To quote from the book:

Telecommunications are intrinsically interceptable, and this interceptability has by and large been enhanced by digital technology. Communications designed to be sorted and switched by digital computers can be sorted and recorded by digital computers. Common-channel signalling, broadcast networks, and communication satellites facilitate interception on a grand scale previously unknown.

And their additional line:

Laws will not change these facts.

One example was given where a large group of Greek Ministers had all their communications tapped through a government  central service and the perpetrators are still unknown.

The importance of privacy

Well, so much for foresight, what about now?  The argument of whether privacy per se  is enshrined in law either in the US or Europe I can leave to the legal eagles. However, it is obvious that with legislation such as the Data Protection Act and the Katz case in the US there is an acknowledgement of the importance of privacy in personal communications.

In an Irish context, the work of the folk at digitalrights.ie should keep you up to date. On the US side EPIC (the Electronic privacy information center) have set up a petition signed by Diffie, Bruce Schneier and others to get the NSA to suspend collection of data as they view it illegal under current US law.

The normal discussion on privacy relates to private conversation between two people face to face, their privacy can be ensured by “moving away” from others so that they cannot be overheard. Telephone made such privacy harder to ensure as the possibility exists for an eavesdropper to intercept the conversation while in transit hence the wiretap. Privacy now requires that the line is tamper-proof, and thus expensive, or that the communication is sent in such a way that even though intercepted it will be unintelligible therefore encoded.

Data protection in the digital world

On a related issue the classic postal system ensures its privacy through the use of a sealed envelope while the envelope protects the contents from scrutiny it also ensures that attempts to open and access the contents can be spotted. This latter “tamper-proof” envelope is something not yet available in the digital world.

Technology has made such privacy harder to ensure but there are some excellent tools available which can help.

One way to view the issue is in terms of what is it that you would wish to keep secret, once that is established then an approach can be taken which can rely on encoding through cryptography those essential parts of your communication.

So starting at the base level, if you wish the contents of a message to be secret then that will involve a form of encryption using a key and a sharing some form of key with the person with whom you are conversing.

What methods can I use?

Methods such as PGP (Pretty Good  Privacy) developed by Phil Zimmermann back in 1991 have gained a lot of popularity world-wide and are incorporated in both commercial and open source solutions. It allows for encryption of both the message and files of data that are resident on disks. It is effective and in legal cases has normally required access to the passwords to be cracked.

In the UK this is now included within the RIPA act and such passwords have to be revealed.  If you intend using it make sure you get it from a reputable commercial vendor such as Symantec who acquired the PGP corporation in 2010, or open-source sites based around OpenPGP and use versions post 1996. Also it requires that you engage in a key management approach to authenticate your receivers.

So, that will allow the content of the mail to be secret. But what is not secret about this email is interesting and the so-called meta-data mentioned so much lately.

Are my emails safe?

Your email-address, your IP address, your route to your correspondent by email, your correspondent’s email address and their IP, plus the size of the email itself, are all visible. So it is clear who are communicating with, when, and to what extent…

The availability of such data is itself giving a lot of information to the eavesdropper.

So how do you prevent this meta-data from being revealed? One approach is the use of the TOR network. TOR (The Onion Router) works by taking each step of the route your data takes and encrypting it and then sending it to another Tor server. So your data hops from one secure Tor server to another.

This requires setting up a Tor server available from torproject.org and following the instructions for its use. Tor certainly works and makes the route private, however because it only bounces off other Tor sites it will make the process slower than normal. Tor can also be used for private browsing and has been made infamous through the so-called ‘dark net’ or hidden network of sites  available through Tor for nefarious activities.

One caveat: while Tor is making the route private, if a set of servers at an end-point is compromised then some data can indeed be revealed. This happened recently in Austria where a set of servers acting as Tor exit nodes were searched and found to contain illicit material and the Sys Admin for the servers was arrested and is pending trial.

Treat email like a postcard

Any other solutions? Close to home CertiVox is a company who provide two-factor authentication that they call M-point. This uses simple short PINs and some contact details and removes the need for password storage. It is a solution based on a very strong encryption technique known as elliptic curve cryptography and offers a free community based service without support or a commercial licensing agreement with support.

So that is a brief, incomplete run through of some current approaches. The only advice I would offer is treat email like a postcard and only write what you don’t mind being read. If you go down the encryption route be careful of your passwords because with good systems they are one way and cannot be recovered from the disk.

My favourite story on this was told by a security consultant who was changing jobs and decided to encrypt all his previous personal work for his former employer. He then duly went for his holiday break and returned with no memory of his password except that it had something to do with Britney Spears. Data secured – forever!

Renaat Verbruggen is a lecturer in the School of Computing in DCU. He is also the Chair of M.Sc. in Security and Forensic Computing.

Read: Snowden applies for asylum in Ireland… and 18 other nations>

Read: Row over US ‘bugging’ of EU offices>

Read: Civil liberties groups claim PRISM breaches international human rights>

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15 Comments
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    Mute Slap'stick Ireland
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    Nov 23rd 2012, 6:10 PM

    Dirty savage, 8 years not enough!

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    Mute Creamy Hamstrings
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    Nov 23rd 2012, 7:13 PM

    I ask this as a serious question. Would the general public agree with chemical castration for men who do something like this?

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    Mute Joan Featherstone
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    Nov 23rd 2012, 7:17 PM

    I would Creamy! Your name in certain circumstances is a bit…well

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    Mute Creamy Hamstrings
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    Nov 23rd 2012, 7:21 PM

    You need to watch more family guy joan…although that might only confirm your suspicion..

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    Mute Howard Cooley
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    Nov 23rd 2012, 8:03 PM

    Totally disagree with the chemicals. Knife much better and I am serious.

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    Mute Buckwheat MacMillan
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    Nov 23rd 2012, 8:18 PM

    How could she have been a teenager for 9 years?

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    Mute James Ó Cianáin
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    Nov 23rd 2012, 9:52 PM

    I would vote YES!

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    Mute Martin St John
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    Nov 24th 2012, 7:26 AM

    Rape is about violence ! Not just self-gratafacation ? I think boiled slowly in hot oil might surffice?

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    Mute Sean Beag
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    Nov 23rd 2012, 6:23 PM

    8 years for raping a child. Sometimes the law just seems so inadequate

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    Mute Eileen Gabbett
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    Nov 23rd 2012, 6:13 PM

    Horrible excuse for a man . Dirty rapist 8 years is not enough.

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    Mute Declan Byrne
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    Nov 23rd 2012, 7:08 PM

    No punishment is great enough for ruining a innocent life .

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    Mute Creamy Hamstrings
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    Nov 23rd 2012, 7:14 PM

    Agreed, but I could think of a few that I’d like to try out.

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    Mute Biggins31
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    Nov 23rd 2012, 6:56 PM

    8 years!
    Should be at least double that for each person he brutalised.

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    Mute Oh boy
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    Nov 23rd 2012, 6:53 PM

    But at least he is serving a life sentence in daily life when he gets out.

    His life will be an absolute misery! Probably worse than being inside!

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    Mute Paul M. Barrett
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    Nov 23rd 2012, 7:51 PM

    I wonder what goes through the minds of judges when they pass light sentences of eight years for such a monstrous act , when the prosecutors asked for 10 to 12 years? Is it misplaced compassion or are they completely out of touch. Child rapists should be given a life sentence. I’d have no problem with castration either.

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    Mute John Coole
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    Nov 23rd 2012, 8:51 PM

    Ll fine calling for life for rape , but think about this- why would a rapist leave his victim alive to bear witness against him when he would get a lesser sentence if he kills her.
    By giving severe sentences for rape increases the potential for MURDER, think about that if ur sister or daughter does not come on time.

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    Mute John Coole
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    Nov 23rd 2012, 8:52 PM

    Sorry come home on time.

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    Mute Amy Booth
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    Nov 23rd 2012, 8:09 PM

    Pedophiles, rapists and child molesters or any kind should be locked up for life, and have there basic human rights taken away because they aren’t human, they should be given, basic food and little to no time out side there cells !!

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    Mute Martin St John
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    Nov 25th 2012, 10:08 AM

    How about we place a rat on their tummy and seal with a metal helmet ! How do u think the rat will find it’s way out????

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    Mute Jim McGourty
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    Nov 23rd 2012, 9:10 PM

    He should get a bullet. Simple as that.

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    Mute Robert Smith
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    Nov 23rd 2012, 11:16 PM

    i think we’ve become too politically correct.there is 7billion people on this planet and money is tight,so bugger it just put him down(with a cheap medicine)along with others who do this type of thing.REALLY why can’t they just do it?

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    Mute Gavan Smith
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    Nov 24th 2012, 2:07 AM

    the above comment from robert smith was actually posted by me gavan smith.we use the same computer and it was logged onto robert smith’s facebook page by accident

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    Mute Liz Carr
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    Nov 24th 2012, 12:09 AM

    I have no idea why a certain length sentence is given to people who do this. So if after 8 years, he still has these urges, he has done his time so let him out? People like this should be given a sentence to pay for what they have done but be held for as long as necessary after that time for rehabilitation. If that can’t be achieved then they should choose chemical castration or life in a facility. I thought the whole point of laws, courts and jail was not only to punish people when they have committed a crime but was to keep society safe.

    The whole point of punishment to fit the crime is lost on the judicial system and it needs to reflect the times. There is so many reports like this one that surely the whole system needs to be looked at. I’m not for a second suggesting that this is a new crime and it wasn’t being committed in the past but now that there is plenty of research done on this type of offender and their likelihood of reoffending it seems a crime in itself not to devise a sentence that is suitable.

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    Mute Deborah Byrne
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    Nov 24th 2012, 12:22 AM
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    Mute Mark Noonan
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    Nov 23rd 2012, 11:46 PM

    Death

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    Mute Waffler Towers
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    Nov 24th 2012, 12:44 AM

    I presume the last sentence is a typo?

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    Mute mason richard john
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    Nov 24th 2012, 4:38 AM

    Perhaps it is worth considering …..by undermining the traditional values/foundations of society…this is what you get…fer pities sake ….you liberals…fer pities sake….whatever next…

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    Mute Martin St John
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    Nov 24th 2012, 5:35 PM

    Mason change your name. I suggest Manson? You deranged creep!!

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    Mute Mason Richard John
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    Nov 24th 2012, 10:22 PM

    …..@ Martstjon…Before pressing submit…best you think about what you are saying …clearly must explain to the uneducated amongst us ….back when yer man were a boy homosexual acts were considered criminal…by making such depravity acceptable the foundations of respectability …of society were weakened…it is sugested this contributed …by degrees to the perverse amongst us thinking “well if homosexualiy is acceptable..all forms of self gratification must be OK” …thus society saw the behaviour of such as the French Tennis coach and the American Football coach take place and continue to this day..when the liberals amongst us condone same gender marriages…the adoption of the young by these people…how long will it be before the act of the pedophile will become acceptable ….along with incest…take it further ….cannibalism…..break the rules expect the unexpected…rules were made in sociey for well founded reasons…break them and the flood gates are opened….you cant have your cake and eat it …..Do you now understand? …..consider, before abusing others….

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    Mute mason richard john
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    Nov 25th 2012, 1:52 AM

    ….it is pointless coming up with all these medieval ways of dealing with people who are socially unacceptable….we have to ask ourselves why people do such….what is happening to respectable behaviour…It be suggested that the Liberal..”progressives” in our midst….by condoning that which in the past was totally unacceptable….suggest to those unable to quell socially unacceptable desires….that self gratification of any form needs no restraint…This may be seen in film/ staged performance/ art /literature/ www sites/ magazines/popular music lyrics….Possibly alright for the minority seen as “we’ll balanced” a totally subjective notion…dependent on who/what/where you are….That said overall…most people are generally uneducated unable to form an opinion if it is against the trend the so called “progressive” mindset…..This fear of being rebuked by fellow man leads us down the avenue of “anything goes” the erosion of standards of civilisation… as the majority would like to see it ….As a teacher of Humanities KS9 to KS12…it is with dismay the notions of young minds are so easily influenced by the popular media….No the answer is not known! other than to discourage rather than encourage that which is felt to be unacceptable….

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    Mute mason richard john
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    Nov 25th 2012, 7:14 AM

    @mason…typos…homosexuality…well….

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    Mute mason richard john
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    Nov 25th 2012, 7:19 AM

    @mason …young people…are seen to be so easily influenced…..

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    Mute mason richard john
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    Nov 25th 2012, 1:56 AM

    …@MartStJohn….an apology for your abuse will be graciously accepted….courtesy costs nothing …perhaps a little loss of face…which does nobody any harm….

    1
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