The EU is poised to pass a sweeping new regulation, eIDAS 2.0. Buried deep in the text is Article 45, which returns us to the dark ages of 2011, when certificate authorities (CAs) could collaborate with governments to spy on encrypted traffic—and get away with it. Article 45 forbids browsers from enforcing modern security requirements on certain CAs without the approval of an EU member government. Which CAs? . Specifically, the CAs that were appointed by the government, which in some cases will be owned or operated by that selfsame government. That means cryptographic keys under one government’s control could be used to intercept HTTPS communication throughout the EU and beyond. This is a catastrophe for the privacy of everyone who uses the internet, but particularly for those who use the internet in the EU. Browser makers have not announced their plans yet, but it seems inevitable that they will have to create two versions of their software: one for the EU, with security checks removed, and another for the rest of the world, with security checks intact. We’ve been down this road before when export controls on cryptography meant browsers were released in two versions: strong cryptography for US users and weak cryptography for everyone else. It was a fundamentally inequitable situation, and the knock-on effects set back web security by decades. Read what LinuxSecurity.com Founder and Linux Security expert Dave Wreski has to say about the implications of this proposed regulation in a new LinkedIn update. . Investigating the impact of Article 45 on digital safety and personal data protection for online users within the European Union framework.. Web Security Regulations, Certificate Authorities EU, Privacy Encryption Laws, Internet Governance Compliance. . Brittany Day
The group overseeing internet addresses is scrambling to balance the privacy of website owners and the right to know who is behind online pages.. The nonprofit Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) began a weeklong meeting Monday focused on the fate of the public Whois database, which shows contact information for those who own websites.. ICANN convenes an essential conference aimed at harmonizing the privacy of website proprietors with the accessibility of Whois data to the public.. Whois Privacy, Internet Governance, Privacy Regulations, ICANN Meetings. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
The Internet Architecture Board (IAB) has issued a sweeping directive . The statement also leaves unaddressed what will be inevitable howls of protest from the law enforcement and national security sectors, whose surveillance activities have long motivated those pushing for ubiquitous encryption.. The Internet Standards Committee advocates for robust encryption practices, even in light of possible opposition from security forces.. Data Privacy, Encryption Standard, Internet Architecture, Security Policy. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
There's one piece of blowback that isn't being discussed -- aside from the fact that Snowden killed the chances of a liberal arts major getting a job at the DoD for a decade -- and that's how the massive NSA surveillance of the Internet affects the US's role in Internet governance.. But there are unintended consequences of the NSA scandal that will undermine U.S. foreign policy interests -- in particular, the "Internet Freedom" agenda espoused by the U.S. State Department and its allies. The link for this article located at Schneier on Security is no longer available. . The unforeseen effects of NSA surveillance have deeply impacted U.S. foreign relations and its pursuit of internet freedoms, shaking global trust in American digital services. Internet Policy, Government Surveillance, Digital Rights. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
There. That The link for this article located at Wired is no longer available. . ThatThe link for this article located at Wired is no longer available.. there, thatthe, article, located, wired, longer. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
The federal government's unprecedented practice of confiscating internet domain names in secret court proceedings took a new and ominous turn last week when it resulted in the closure of as many as 84,000 website addresses.. The power grab came last Friday, when the mooo.com, an address a service called Free DNS used to resolve more than user 84,000 websites was unceremoniously suspended at the registrar level. Sites that relied on mooo.com soon displayed a banner that said the domain name had been seized by the Immigration and Customs Enforcement, the main investigative arm of the US Department of Homeland Security. The banner went on to include this creepy nugget: The link for this article located at The Register UK is no longer available. . The power grab came last Friday, when the mooo.com, an address a service called Free DNS used to res. federal, government's, unprecedented, practice, confiscating, internet, domain, names, secret. . Alex
Isn't he in jail now or very shortly? The bloke behind Pirate Bay wants to set up an alternative to the domain name outfit ICANN. Peter Sunde says that he has been suspicious of ICANN for a long time. ICANN is the non-profit corporation is tasked with managing both the IPv4 and IPv6 Internet Protocol address spaces as well as handling the management of top-level domain name space including the operation of root nameservers. . However Sunde said that he has lost a domain in the past and it was taken without any consultation. Instead the organisation relied on information from recording industry group IFPI to change the domain ownership. He has put out a Tweet to create a competing root server - The link for this article located at fudzilla is no longer available. . Sara's initiative to develop a rival web hosting solution arises from prior experiences of service interruption with major providers.. Domain Management, ICANN Alternative, DNS Alternatives, Internet Governance. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
The Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers on Tuesday condemned the practice of redirecting Internet users to a third-party Web site or portal when they misspell a Web address and type a domain name that does not exist.. Rather than return an error message for DNS requests for nonexistent domains, some DNS operators send back the IP address of another domain, a process known as NXDOMAIN substitution. The target address is often a Web portal or information site. The link for this article located at Network World is no longer available. . Rather than return an error message for DNS requests for nonexistent domains, some DNS operators sen. internet, corporation, assigned, names, numbers, tuesday, condemned, practice, redirec. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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