Revelations about PRISM, a US government  program that harvests data on the Internet, has sparked concerns about  privacy and civil rights violations. But has there ever been real  privacy and security on the WWW?
 Demonstrators hold posters during a demonstration  against the US Internet surveillance program of the NSA, PRISM, at  Checkpoint Charlie in Berlin, Germany, ahead of US President Barack  Obama’s visit to the German capital.
IMAGINE a time before  email, when all your correspondence was sent through the post. How would  you feel if you knew that somebody at the post office was recording the  details of all the people you were corresponding with, “just in case”  you did something wrong?
I think quite a few of you would be upset about it.
Similarly,  some Americans are furious over revelations made about a system called  PRISM. In the last few weeks, an allegation has been made that the US  government is harvesting data on the Internet by copying what travels  through some of its Internet Service Providers.
The US Director  of National Intelligence has said that PRISM “is not an undisclosed  collection or data mining program”, but its detractors are not convinced  that this doesn’t mean no such program exists.
I think there are mainly two kinds of responses to this revelation: “Oh my God!” and “What took them so long?”.
The  Internet has never really been secure. Because your data usually has to  travel via systems owned by other people, you are at their mercy as to  what they do with it. The indications are that this is already being  done elsewhere.
Countries such as China, India, Russia, Sweden  and the United Kingdom allegedly already run similar tracking projects  on telecommunications and the Internet, mostly modelled on the US  National Security Agency’s (unconfirmed) call monitoring programme. For  discussion, I’ll limit myself for the moment to just emails – something  that most people would recognise as being private and personal.
I  find many people are surprised when I tell them that sending email over  the Internet is a little bit like sending your message on a postcard.  Just because you need a password to access it, doesn’t mean it’s secure  during transmission.
The analogy would be that your mailbox is  locked so only you can open it, but those carrying the postcard can read  it before it reaches its final destination. Of course, there are ways  to mitigate this. One has to be careful about what one put in emails in  the first place. Don’t send anything that would be disastrous if it were  forwarded to someone else without your permission.
You could  also encrypt your email, so only the receiver with the correct password  or key could read it, but this is difficult for most end users to do.  (For those interested in encrypting emails, I would recommend looking at  a product called PGP.)
The analogy holds up for other Internet  traffic. It’s easy to monitor, given enough money and time. And as easy  as it is for the Good Guys to try to monitor the Bad Guys, it’s just as  easy for the Bad Guys to monitor us hapless members of the public.
But  who do we mean by the Bad Guys? Specifically, should the government and  law-enforcement agencies be categorised as ‘Bad Guys’ for purposes of  privacy? Generally, the line oft quoted is “if you have nothing to hide,  then you have nothing to worry about”.
Yet, I think we all  accept that there should be a fundamental right to privacy, for  everybody from anybody. An interesting corollary to being able to  express your thoughts freely is that you should also be able to decide  when and how you make them public.
The fault in relying on  organisations that say “trust us” isn’t in the spirit of their  objectives, but in how the humans in them are flawed in character and  action.
An example quoted regularly at the moment is how the FBI  collected information about Martin Luther King because they considered  him the “most dangerous and effective Negro leader in the country”.
One  way of defining the boundaries are by codifying them in laws. For  example, the Malaysian Personal Data Protection Act prohibits companies  from sharing personal data with third parties without the original  owner’s consent.
However, this law explicitly does not apply to  the federal and state governments of Malaysia. Another clause indicates  that consent is not necessary if it is for the purpose of  “administration of justice”, or for the “exercise of any functions  conferred on any person by or under any law”.
In relation to the  revelations of PRISM, several questions come to mind: Can Internet  traffic (or a subset of it) be considered “personal data”? Is it  possible for government agencies to collect and store such data without  your consent?
And if so, what safeguards are there to ensure that  this personal data is accurate, is used correctly and is relevant for  storage in the first place?
This should be a sharp point of  debate, not just in terms of which of our secrets the government can be  privy to, but also of which of the government’s information should be  readily accessible by us.
True, there is so much data out there  that analysing it is not a trivial task. However, companies such as  Google are doing exactly that kind of work on large volumes of  unstructured data so that you can search for cute kittens. The  technology is already on its way.
Perhaps I am being  over-cautious, but it seems a bit fantastical that people can know your  deepest and darkest secrets by just monitoring a sequence of 1’s and  0’s. But, to quote science fiction author Phillip K. Dick, “It’s strange  how paranoia can link up with reality now and then”.
> Logic  is the antithesis of emotion but mathematician-turned-scriptwriter Dzof  Azmi’s theory is that people need both to make sense of life’s vagaries  and contradictions. Speak to him at star2@thestar.com.my.
Related post:
US Spy Snowden Says U.S. Hacking China Since 2009
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Showing posts with label PRISM. Show all posts
Showing posts with label PRISM. Show all posts
Sunday, June 23, 2013
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