November 27, 2006 (5:20 PM EST)
Software Will Let Users Dodge Government Internet Censorship
By K.C. Jones,
SOURCE W/LINKS:
Developers from the University of Toronto plan to release
software this week that will allow residents in restrictive
countries to gain uncensored Internet access through friends'
and family members' home computers.
The Citizen Lab at the Munk Centre for International Studies
announced Sunday that it will release psiphon, a "human rights
software project," under General Public License, by Friday. The
system, part of the lab's CiviSec Project, is funded by the Open
Society Institute.
It is not entirely bulletproof, but developers say it will be
difficult for censors to identify and block psiphon.
People in free countries can install the free open source
software and turn their home computers into "psiphonodes," or
personal, encrypted servers. The psiphonode administrator can
create and manage user accounts so friends and relatives can log
in from censored countries. The encrypted connection allows
people in restrictive countries to go to the administrators'
unique Web addresses, login with usernames and passwords
provided by administrators, and surf the Web.
The people living under censorship (the software developers call
them psiphonites) never make a direct connection to Web sites
through their own computers. The Web site operators cannot see
users' information, though administrators can see everything the
psiphonite does.
The psiphon Web site, which provides the software, doesn't have
to be operative for the software to work. In other words, even
if a censoring regime blocks access to the psiphon Web site,
people in restrictive countries can access the wide open Web
through their friends' and family members' computers.
The provider or administrator must have his or her computer up
and running for people in other countries to access it. The open
source software alerts administrators when their own network
information changes so they can give psiphon users their new Web
address.
Developers hope to distribute the software through social
networks, allowing each administrator to create a network based
on personal trust. If the provider only gives his or her
computer address to a few trustworthy people, it will be
difficult for censoring governments to identify and block his or
her psiphon server, developers said.
However, censoring governments could catch on to the use of
censor-bypassing software if officials infiltrate an
administrator's social network and detect an encrypted
connection to a home computer in another country. Developers
urge verification through manual key certificate fingerprint
identification to prevent man-in-the-middle attacks.
Developers said the software could be used to edit blogs,
although it is primarily for Web browsing. It cannot be used for
chat or VoIP. It works with Windows and Linux operating systems.
Programmers are working on a Mac version.
The psiphon Web site contains a warning that bypassing
censorship may be against the law and users should seriously
consider the risks and potential consequences.
It may be interesting to see how the system goes over in China,
where officials claim that, despite studies showing otherwise,
they have trouble with access, not deliberate Internet
restrictions.
http://www.techweb.com/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=196513593&cid=RSSfeed_TechWeb
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Open Society Institute.
http://www.soros.org/
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UPDATE: THE CASE AGAINST RUMSFELD, GONZALES AND OTHERS
— FILED IN GERMANY ON NOVEMBER 14, 2006
http://www.btcnews.com/btcnews/other_pdf/Background_Brief_on_German_Case.html