FC: Anonymity researchers present new ways to cloak your identity

From: Declan McCullagh (declanat_private)
Date: Fri Apr 27 2001 - 08:21:45 PDT

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    http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,43355,00.html
    
       You Can Hide From Prying Eyes
       By Declan McCullagh (declanat_private)
       2:00 a.m. April 27, 2001 PDT
       
       PITTSBURGH, Pennsylvania -- It's a refrain so common it's
       unremarkable: Privacy is dead on the Net, and being able to shield
       your identity online is about as likely as winning the lottery. Twice.
       
       Just don't tell that to the researchers who gathered this week for the
       fourth Information Hiding Workshop, an event that's on the front lines
       of the pitched battle over anonymity vs. traceability.
       
       These roughly 100 scientists, engineers, and mathematicians don't want
       you to have to rely on the law to shield your online identity from
       prying eyes. After all, laws can change, some countries lack legal
       protection, and even websites you trust may surreptitiously leak
       information or suffer security breaches.
       
       Instead, they believe, anonymity-enhancing technologies should allow
       you to not hand over personal information in the first place: Call it
       the minimalist approach to privacy.
       
       On Thursday, Ulf Moeller, a researcher at Zero Knowledge Systems in
       Montreal, described the company's ongoing efforts to improve its
       Freedom product, which provides privacy-protected Web surfing and
       e-mail.
       
       He said that while Freedom is relatively speedy and not vulnerable to
       denial-of-service attacks, it is somewhat more prone to "traffic
       analysis."
       
       No, he's not talking about counting cars on highways. He means that
       someone who wanted to know if Alice is sending e-mail to Bob would --
       through something like the FBI's Carnivore system -- intercept
       messages that leave Alice's computer and arrive at Bob's.
    
       [...]
    
    
    
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