[tor-teachers] Questions and notes from BBC interview

Zachary Zebrowski zak.zebrowski at gmail.com
Thu Jul 13 01:22:15 UTC 2017


Kenneth,

Just with respect to the ww2 reference, it was done in ww2 as well (source:
https://www.cia.gov/library/center-for-the-study-of-intelligence/kent-csi/vol3no1/html/v03i1a10p_0001.htm
)...  There is an excellent book on the U.K. Side of the war called between
silk and cyanide - a code makers war, by Leo marks, on the subject which
talks about some of the techniques used, both defensive and offensive.

Zak

On Wed, Jul 12, 2017 at 9:02 PM Kenneth Freeman <kencf0618 at riseup.net>
wrote:

>
>
> On 07/10/2017 04:55 PM, isis agora lovecruft wrote:
> > Hi all,
> >
> > Attached are the questions for the BBC radio interview I did last Friday,
> > and my notes on answering them, in the event that this could somehow
> prove
> > useful to someone else in the future.
>
> Good stuff.
>
> Regarding the forensic analysis of typing patterns, telegraph operators
> back in the day could recognize each other by their "fist" alone. Dunno
> is this was used for signal analysis during WWI, but it seems likely...
>
> The National Science Foundation contributes to the Tor Foundation. I'm
> sure they have excellent scientific reasons for doing so, but I've never
> come across an explanation.
>
> I always remark whilst discussing exit nodes that you are neither
> legally nor ethically liable for criminal usage, anymore than you are
> for drunk drivers -your taxes pay for both the road network and the
> anonymity network. (Of course, running a Tor exit requires some legal
> boilerplate, but it's basically a public relations issue, not a legal
> issue.)
>
> Unfortunately Wikipedia is heavy-handed regarding Tor because of the
> abuse it enables. That's their protocol, and I don't know how to parse
> it or how to have your bona fides presented. That said, I have included
> the shift to Rust.
>
> Many thanks for your work.
>
>
>
> _______________________________________________
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>
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