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Showing posts with label Tor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tor. Show all posts

4/12/18

Electronic communications: go European and benefit from stricter personal privacy laws

Have you ever wondered  what happens to your e-mail data on servers owned by popular e-mail servers like Gmail, Yahoo, Outlook Earthlink, or other non-European based communication companies.

But here is the good news. It is called the European mode, and you don't have to be a European to benefit from the far stricter European personal privacy laws, and other regulations imposed on how companies make use of your personal data.

Here are two companies you might want to look intom if you want a secure European based e-mail account.

ECLIPSO

PROTON MAIL

In this context  FREENET  and  TOR , are also recommended networks, specially if you live in, or visiting a country where there is censorship, interception of electronic communications, and control over what you are allowed to see or not over the Internet.

It certainly is worth to look into, and best of all, they come for free, if you don't require their "premium" services.

EU-Digest 

10/4/13

Encrypted networks: Secret NSA documents show campaign against Tor encrypted network - by Barton Gellman, Craig Timberg and Steven Ric

On Nov. 1, 2007, the National Security Agency hosted a talk by Roger Dingledine, principal designer of one of the world’s leading Internet privacy tools. It was a wary encounter, akin to mutual intelligence gathering, between a spy agency and a man who built tools to ward off electronic surveillance.

According to a top secret NSA summary of the meeting, Dingledine told the assembled NSA staff that his service, called Tor, offered anonymity to people who needed it badly — to keep business secrets, protect their identities from oppressive political regimes or conduct research without revealing themselves. To the NSA, Tor was offering protection to terrorists and other intelligence targets.

Beginning at least a year before Dingledine’s visit, the NSA had mounted increasingly successful attacks to unmask the identities and locations of Tor users, according to documents provided by former agency contractor Edward Snowden.

In some cases, the NSA has succeeded in blocking access to the anonymous network, diverting Tor users to insecure channels. With a tool called MJOLNIR — the name of the hammer used by Thor, the Norse god of thunder — it has been able to monitor and control the paths of communications that are supposed to be chosen randomly as they pass through Tor. Another operation, called MULLENIZE, can “stain” anonymous traffic as it enters the Tor network, enabling the NSA to identify users as it exits.

Read more: Secret NSA documents show campaign against Tor encrypted network - The Washington Post