Edit: Changed “the government” to “governments”

I mean, people say use end to end encryption, VPN, Tor, Open Source Operating System, but I think one thing missed is the hardware is not really open source, and theres no practical open source alternative for hardware. There’s Intel ME, AMD PSP, so there’s probably one in phones. How can people be so confident these encryption is gonna stop intelligence agencies?

  • Swordgeek@lemmy.ca
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    3 days ago

    We don’t.

    We really really don’t.

    Consider the attack that Israel carried out this fall by detonating walkie-talkies and pagers. This wasn’t just some illicit code in the firmware or hardware, they managed to hijack the supply chain and hide literal bombs in commercially-produced handheld devices!

    Bottom line: If you do not directly control the production chain from chip design and fab to end-user software, you can never be sure.

    40 years ago, the legendary Ken Thompsonand Dennis Ritchie accepted the Turing Award for creating Unix. Thompson’s acceptance speech Reflections on Trusting Trust pointed out this same fundamental security flaw.

    I encourage everyone to read the article, and spread it as widely as possible. It is terrifying and accurate, nearly half a century later.

  • Skyrmir@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    Every phone has a radio with remote root access controlled by a security key that is supposedly only in the hands of the manufacturer. A manufacturer that could be forced to give up that key, and forced not to tell anyone they had done so.

    At least with a PC you can control the physical access to transmission, giving you a way to possibly audit before send, and physically control all input.

    The reality is that any large scale communication network will be breached by the controlling government, or it will be shut down. If you want actually secure communication, you have to do it by broadcasting in the clear using an unbreakable cypher that’s been physically passed on.

    • ERROR: Earth.exe has crashed@lemmy.dbzer0.comOP
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      2 days ago

      you have to do it by broadcasting in the clear using an unbreakable cypher that’s been physically passed on.

      Time for One Time Cipher?

      Very impractical, but unbreakable, assuming no one else got a copy of the key, and its destroyed after a single use.

      Dice rolls for code generation.

      Take that, big gov!

  • slazer2au@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    It’s not just back doors. All governments will have a group of people who’s job is to find security vulnerabilities in OS and use them to attack other nations.

    If Wanacry rings a bell the you might be aware that the Eternal Blue exploit was the infection vector which was originally designed by the NSA and leaked by a hacking group. Only after the leak did the NSA tell Microsoft how it worked and it was patched.

  • Nurse_Robot@lemmy.world
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    4 days ago

    We will never have a way of knowing for sure. There are stories of government agencies famously requesting backdoor access to Apple devices, seemingly because they can’t get in otherwise, and Apple refusing, however they end up getting access on their own eventually. But who knows how much of that is even true? Government agencies are historically manipulative when it comes to public narrative, so anything made public by them should be taken with a hefty grain of salt

  • kadup@lemmy.world
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    4 days ago

    We know they do, actually.

    All US companies provide the NSA with backdoors. All modern AMD and Intel CPUs have the ability to run remote code signed by their manufacturer and snoop into memory.

    Put the two things together and now you know.

    • Ephera@lemmy.ml
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      4 days ago

      I’m not aware of us knowing that they provide backdoors vulnerabilities to the NSA. If US companies have data, then they’re legally obliged to make it available to the NSA (PATRIOT and CLOUD Act). The NSA may also separately develop backdoors (e.g. EternalBlue). But that the NSA coerces US companies to actively attack their customers, is news to me.

        • Ephera@lemmy.ml
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          4 days ago

          Hmm, I just realized that “backdoors” in my previous comment had somewhat of a double-meaning. They do provide the NSA access to data that they have on their servers. In that sense, a backdoor exists, which is also what this PRISM article confirms.

          But knowingly integrating vulnerabilities and making these available to the NSA for attacking customer devices, that is another shtick entirely. And I’m not finding anything in that article that says so (although I only read the parts that seemed relevant).

          • underwire212@lemm.ee
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            4 days ago

            Yes this is something I’m more interested in learning as well. Data access to servers by adversaries can be largely mitigated with E2E encryption and VPN use so that even if, for example, the NSA wanted data on certain servers, unless they had an encryption key, would be largely meaningless (unless metadata wasn’t encrypted). We largely know that if LE wants data, they can get a court order to hand it over.

            What I’d like to know is if there has been any evidence of “hardware” backdoors like what you now describe. I haven’t been able to find evidence of any successful attempts by major agencies/corporations, but I guess part of a successful attempt involves the public not knowing that it exists.

            My threat model has me using an iPhone with Lockdown Mode & Advanced Data Protection enabled. I am wondering if I need to reassess my model to potentially go for the Pixel with GrapheneOS.

            According to my research, the iPhone with these specific settings for reducing attack surface and encrypting everything that gets put onto servers is more than enough for myself (admittedly a pretty stringent threat model). But would also like to hear what others think.

      • Venator@lemmy.nz
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        3 days ago

        modern AMD and Intel CPUs have the ability to run remote code signed by their manufacturer and snoop into memory.

        If US companies have data, then they’re legally obliged to make it available to the NSA (PATRIOT and CLOUD Act).

        The key used to sign the remote code could be considered data that they’re legally obliged to make available to the NSA? 🤷😅

        That said, the lengths they had to go to for stuxnet kinda implies it’s still not super easy to do, but I guess maybe they were using older cpus that don’t have the signed code vulnerability? 🤷

  • Strayce@lemmy.sdf.org
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    4 days ago

    We don’t. The point is to reduce attack surface relative to target value. People use a VPN for piracy, for example, not because it’s totally secure, but because rights holders generally aren’t going to bother going after a single person when they’d have to go thru a VPN provider as well. OTOH someone doing it on clearnet is being logged by their ISP and the data is right there. OTOOH, the three letter agencies are absolutely going to bother if they have a tip that you’re doing something really dangerous to the status quo.

    TL;DR: It’s like IRL security. If somebody really wants your shit, they’ll find a way to get it. The point is to make it generally not worth it.

    • ERROR: Earth.exe has crashed@lemmy.dbzer0.comOP
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      I think they were more like Verizon and other carriers logging metadata. Google and Apple, in their server side services. And the government has physically tapped internet cables. HTTP was not widespead at the time, and corporations were (either forced, or willingly) co-operating with authorities for mass surveillance. Also, most devides had no encrption for data at rest. You know, that type of thing.

      I don’t think the snowden leaks ever said anything about a hardware backdoor outside of targetted attacks (Correct me if I’m wrong). So it was widely understood post-snowden era that using an open source OS + encryption for both at rest and communications would be good enough for non-targeted attacks.

      But my question asks if governments could be listening to everyone as a mass surveillance non-targeted attack, via hardware backdoors

      • Valmond@lemmy.world
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        3 days ago

        If they listen to everyone, it would show up in some way, using power and bandwidth. Even using like steganography wouldn’t hide it very well IMO. One exception being windows ofc 😅 where they spy on you for sure already.

        Wasn’t it that mega share guy (king dotcom or something) that figured out his PC was compromised because his ping skyrocketed on CS-GO?

  • Sylvartas@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    3 days ago

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intel_Management_Engine

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AMD_Platform_Security_Processor

    If I was a government intelligence agency I’d probably sell my soul to get access to these…

    I get that they have legitimate use cases for corporations, but why are there virtually no consumer grade CPUs without that stuff ? Surely they would be less expensive and no one would miss the features on their home computers.

  • bizarroland@fedia.io
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    4 days ago

    Okay so here’s my take on it not that anybody asked.

    There are likely back doors in all computerized Networked devices.

    There is likely some identifying information being sent back to random servers from a myriad of places.

    That being said, you are not worth the time to directly observe.

    Most likely, all of this data goes into a large database where they analyze trends and look for people that are outside of various tolerance zones.

    Other than that, all of your data is just noise, grist for the grist Mill.

    It is only when you become a person of interest who is worth devoting the time to directly analyze that these risks escalate to the point where you should have concern about it.

    99.9999% of us are just not important enough to pay attention to.

  • nothacking@discuss.tchncs.de
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    4 days ago

    There’s no way to check the whole thing, but you can totally pick a component and reverse engineer it, which is something people do quite a bit. When spying is found, it’s usually a private company doing it.

    The NSA doesn’t care about your search history, but advertisers do. (and the government ever did, they’ll just call up google)

  • LordCrom@lemmy.world
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    4 days ago

    I’ve worked for the government. They had me managing 78 full AWS accounts for various departments. Me, 1 guy. And I had to explain basics of tech to everybody in charge of the cloud accounts.

    Our gov can barely manage itself, let alone some next level tech on millions of devices and keep track of it all. They couldn’t even get me a new mouse without 2 forms, 1 online ticket, and 2 levels of approvals.

  • NeoNachtwaechter@lemmy.world
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    4 days ago

    A few years ago they had rerouted shipments from Cisco to the NSA and then forward to the intended recipients. Not just a few parcels, but truckloads.

  • lurch (he/him)@sh.itjust.works
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    4 days ago

    If the government wants to snoop, they can just get a Certificate Authority in the boat and MITM whoever they want.

    In my region there are laws that telecoms have to provide a way to let the government snoop, but the government doesn’t use it without probable cause.

    Some people think a VPN will protect them, because the provider doesn’t log, but all the government needs is the VPN keys and they can intercept all traffic between the VPN and the user and log it themselves.

    • abbadon420@lemm.ee
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      4 days ago

      …the g9verenment doesn’t use it without probably cause YET.

      The way politics are going lately, that might all change in an instant. Not that there’s anything you or I can do about it. I’m not trying to fearmonger here, just that you shouldn’t be putting any Qurans or Communist manifestos on your Onedrive account, that’s all. Be mindful.