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View Full Version : The Surveillance-Free Day (Part I)




phill4paul
07-29-2013, 08:26 AM
http://nymag.com/daily/intelligencer/2013/07/surveillance-free-day-part-i.html


For the next 24 hours, I’m going to try to live completely surveillance-free. I will foil Chinese hackers and the NSA with encrypted texts and VPN tunnels. I will find ways to buy things online without giving away any personal information and communicate via smartphone without producing metadata. Also, I will wear a funny-looking hat with small lightbulbs in it that will protect me from being caught on camera. With expert help and a spy’s toolkit, I will attempt to stick to my normal routine for an entire day, but without leaving behind a trail of data for the government – or anyone else – to collect.


Long article but worth the read...

Of interest:


My favorite anti-surveillance hack of the day has nothing to do with either my phone or my laptop, though. It’s a red baseball hat that I outfitted with infrared LEDs, and wired to a pair of 9-volt batteries, following instructions I found online. Most surveillance cameras operate on the infrared spectrum. And to the naked eye, my hat's LEDs will look like nothing. But on infrared cameras, they'll drown my face and render me unrecognizable. I'll just appear as a ball of light.

and this...


Both Jon and Gary pointed out one of the central paradoxes of my day – that, by downloading Tor and HideMyAss, by paying for software in Bitcoin, wrapping my phones in foil, and by turning my head into a giant glowing orb, I’m effectively asking to be put on a terrorist watch list. It’s the digital equivalent of hanging a big “I’M SKETCHY” sign around my neck. And as I browse through my morning news sites, using my Icelandic internet connection and my Tor browser, I can’t shake the feeling that black helicopters are already circling overhead.

ClydeCoulter
07-29-2013, 08:54 AM
Or, you could just remove the battery from the phone, buy local with cash, unplug the xbox, unplug the computer from the internet, etc... for 24 hours.

pcosmar
07-29-2013, 09:11 AM
Or, you could just remove the battery from the phone, buy local with cash, unplug the xbox, unplug the computer from the internet, etc... for 24 hours.

I just walk out to the barn. ;)

http://signsofpatriotism.com/shop/images/uploads/WHAT_HAPPENS_IN_THE_BARN_BLACK.JPG

Matthew5
07-29-2013, 09:24 AM
Or, you could just remove the battery from the phone, buy local with cash, unplug the xbox, unplug the computer from the internet, etc... for 24 hours.

I believe the point was to attempt to operate as normally as possible while being surveillance free. It shows the ridiculous lengths one must go through to remain unwatched.

Anti Federalist
07-29-2013, 09:25 AM
Both Jon and Gary pointed out one of the central paradoxes of my day – that, by downloading Tor and HideMyAss, by paying for software in Bitcoin, wrapping my phones in foil, and by turning my head into a giant glowing orb, I’m effectively asking to be put on a terrorist watch list. It’s the digital equivalent of hanging a big “I’M SKETCHY” sign around my neck. And as I browse through my morning news sites, using my Icelandic internet connection and my Tor browser, I can’t shake the feeling that black helicopters are already circling overhead.
This... "Blanks" will not be tolerated.

Origanalist
07-29-2013, 10:50 AM
http://signsofpatriotism.com/shop/images/uploads/WHAT_HAPPENS_IN_THE_BARN_BLACK.JPG
:eek:

phill4paul
07-29-2013, 10:53 AM
I just walk out to the barn. ;)

http://signsofpatriotism.com/shop/images/uploads/WHAT_HAPPENS_IN_THE_BARN_BLACK.JPG


A locals barn has "Trespassers will be shot on SITE" painted on the side. I don't think it was a misspelling. :D

Origanalist
07-29-2013, 10:54 AM
Fuck the snoopers, literal scumbags........

https://i.chzbgr.com/maxW500/7675158016/h0E81BEA6/

coiler101
07-31-2013, 06:27 AM
"For the next 24 hours, I’m going to try to live completely surveillance-free. I will foil Chinese hackers and the NSA with encrypted texts and VPN tunnels."
What a long article! Though I appreciate the author's efforts to put it together, there are some flaws in it. First, VPN tunnel (http://invisibler.com/what-is-vpn/) refers to the dedicated, encrypted connection between your computer and the VPN server; anything travels inside is encrypted. However, traffics from the VPN server to the Internet may not be encrypted at all. In most cases, data is collected before it even gets to the VPN server. Second, if the VPN server is tapped, it will have traffic logs (which sites u visited and when). I won't go too detailed about Hidemyass, you can google "hidemyass logs" or read it here: (http://vpnverge.com/truths-about-hidemyass/#logging-issue). Tor was originally a US Navy project then released to various "hackers". How much can you trust it? Encrypted texts may work, but it depends on where the key is; What if the key is on the server? If the server can use the key to encrypt your data, the server can decrypted it as well.