Paid performance-tor option?

Arrakis arrakistor at gmail.com
Wed Aug 20 20:13:34 UTC 2008


mplsfox02,

This study was performed by Privacy International,
as far as I am aware. I think it best to forget how
they decided to color code the map, and just look
at the numbers inside the columns.

It would also be of interest in how they went about
acquiring their data, and what the standards were.

For the specifics, we are interested in those columns
I pointed out, as those are directly related to
internet privacy. The rest are areas that are outside
the scope of our threat model.

Arrakis



mplsfox02 at sneakemail.com wrote:
> 
> Arrakis:
> 
>> mplsfox02 at sneakemail.com wrote:
>>>
>>> macintoshzoom:
>>>
>>>> Sorry, just re-reading my post, I am partially wrong, JONDONYM
>>>> (formerly JAP) is still running its main nodes from "compromised"
>>>> countries.
>>>
>>> There are no "compromised" or "safe" countries as there is no hostile or
>>> friendly network. Any concepts based on such assumptions are doomed.
> 
>> You may care to take a look at this, specifically the
>> 5th, 7th, 8th, and 9th columns. Not all countries are
>> equal, especially when those countries to data
>> interception and data retention themselves.
>>
>> http://www.privacyinternational.org/article.shtml?cmd%5B347%5D=x-347-559597
>>
> 
> Thanks for the link. That does not contradict to what I said. Who did
> this study? I cannot rely my security concept on some human estimates.
> It's interesting, though. There are differences, but no country is "dark
> green" or even "cyan". This study is more a journalistic than a
> scientific one, since the information it is based on is not always
> comparable and does not represent all the characteristics that are
> important for privacy. Maybe Greece is just better in hiding the breaches?
> 
> 



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