CARVIEW |
![]()
Wed 2025-10-01
Mon 2025-09-29
Sun 2025-09-28
Sat 2025-09-27
Fri 2025-09-26
Thu 2025-09-25
Bundler belongs to the Ruby community Tue 2025-09-23
Mon 2025-09-22
Sun 2025-09-21
Sat 2025-09-20
Fri 2025-09-19
Tue 2025-09-16
Mon 2025-09-15
Search
Archives
2024
12 11 10 09 08 07 06 05 04 03 02 01
2023
2022
2021
2020
2019
2018
2017
2016
2015
2014
2013
2012
2011
2010
2009
2008
2007
2006
2005
2004
2003 One good site
MDN
Nelson Minar
Blog licensed under a Creative Commons License
|
One of the great failures of the Internet era has been giving up on end-to-end encryption. PGP dates back to 1991, 22 years ago. It gave us the technical means to have truly secure email between two people. But it was very difficult to use. And in 22 years no one has ever meaningfully made email encryption really usable. A big part of the problem is the architecture of Internet services. Most of us host our email on a third party server like Gmail or Lavabit or whatever. That makes true end-to-end encryption very difficult. Instead we have to trust our hosting service with access to our email, and as we find the government can compel them to rat you out (or simply break in). We do have SSL/HTTPS, the only real end-to-end encryption most of us use daily. But the key distribution is hopelessly centralized, authority rooted in 40+ certificates. At least 4 of those certs have been compromised by blackhat hackers in the past few years. How many more have been subverted by government agencies? I believe the SSL Observatory is the only way we’d know. The cypherpunks movement foresaw all of this surveillance risk. It outlined principles and technologies to protect individuals from both evil hackers and overreaching governments. It failed to actually implement it. originally a Metafilter
comment
In your heart you know it’s flat I love this phrase, the motto of the Discordian Flat Earth Society (early source). It neatly characterizes the problem of so much common sense knowledge, intuition, wisdom. Of course we know the Earth is flat; just look at it! The older I get, the less patience I have with woo-woo people who praise intuition and folk wisdom. From child killing anti-vaccination superstition to muddled thinking about the dangers of cell towers, GMO foods, and nuclear power to the simple underinvestment in discovering how the universe actually works. In the words of Neil deGrasse Tyson, “The good thing about science is that it’s true whether or not you believe in it.” |