Privacy for People Who Don't Show Their Navels
By JONATHAN D. GLATER

http://tinyurl.com/72mp3

IT may be easy to forget that there are people who want to remain anonymous
on the Web while the online world is full of those who happily post pictures
of themselves and their navels for all to see. But interest in software that
allows people to send e-mail messages that cannot be traced to their source
or to maintain anonymous blogs has quietly increased over the last few
years, say experts who monitor Internet security and privacy.

"People in the world are more interested in anonymity now than they were in
the 1990's," when the popularity of the Internet first surged, said Chris
Palmer, technology manager at the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a
nonprofit group in San Francisco dedicated to protecting issues like free
speech on the Web.

Increasingly, consumers appear to be downloading free anonymity software
like Tor, which makes it harder to trace visits to Web sites, online posts,
instant messages and other communication forms back to their authors. Sales
are also up at companies like Anonymizer.com, which among other things sells
software that protects anonymity.

"I get the feeling it's going up," said Roger Dingledine, Tor's project
leader. "But one of the features I've been adding recently," he said,
enhances anonymity protection by making it harder to count downloads of the
software. Still, the number of servers forming layers in the Tor network has
risen to 300 from 50 in the last year, Mr. Dingledine added.

A few reasons exist for the surge, which is hard to measure - it is nearly
impossible to track how many people have made themselves invisible online.
People who want to continue to swap music via the Internet but fear lawsuits
brought by the recording industry want to hide their identity. Some people
wish to describe personal experiences that could land them in jail. And some
Web authors share their thoughts about repressive regimes and face
government reprisal if they are caught.

"The more equipment is acquired and produced by a repressive regime, the
more important anonymity is," said Julien Pain, who heads the Internet
freedom desk for Reporters Without Borders, an advocacy group that supports
press freedom. The group has produced a guide,
www.rsf.org/rubrique.php3?id_rubrique=542, for bloggers trying to protect
their identities.

"We realized that bloggers were being arrested everywhere in the world," Mr.
Pain said. One blogger in Nepal, for example, may risk arrest with every
time he comments on the country's monarchy, he said.

"The problem is, you have on one side states with a lot of money," he said.
"On the other side, you have small businesses" and nongovernmental
organizations. Law enforcement or other government agencies have tremendous
legal and technological resources to discover the identities and locations
of people communicating online, though consumer software can make the task
more difficult.

Despite the increased interest in anonymity, software companies have moved
away from marketing products that protect identities, said Chris Jay
Hoofnagle, senior counsel and director of the Electronic Privacy Information
Center's office in San Francisco, a public research group that focuses on
privacy and free speech issues.

"When I came into this field, it was on the heels of the failure of a number
of companies that tried very hard to create privacy enhancing technologies,"
Mr. Hoofnagle said.

Now, though, people are more concerned about defenses that block unwanted
e-mail messages and hackers seeking to steal bank accounts, credit card
numbers or whole identities, said Alex Fowler, co-head of the national
privacy practice at PricewaterhouseCoopers.

"The visibility and awareness of these issues goes much deeper into the
general public than it did even five or six years ago," Mr. Fowler said.

Despite increased interest in anonymity and security, some providers of
online anonymity protection have not been able to turn their products into
successful businesses. People who want to communicate anonymously may not
want anyone to know that they have obtained software to do so, and some of
the available software is free, including the Java Anonymous Proxy
(anon.inf.tu-dresden.de/index_en.html).

Tor, first financed by the United States Department of Defense, received
support from the Electronic Frontier Foundation for a year, but the money
has run out, and Mr. Dingledine is working on the project unpaid and is
looking for sponsors.

Tor uses "onion routing," in which layers of servers separate computer users
from the Web sites they visit to hide a user's location. The software is
easily installed and operates in the background, simply adding icons in
Windows.

To make sure it is working, users can visit a site like www.showmyip.com and
verify that their Internet Protocol address has changed. If it has, the
software is working. The software may slow browsing, because Web pages must
be transmitted through various servers around the world to get to your
computer.

Software bundled with Tor, called Privoxy, prevents your computer from
automatically sending certain personal information to Web sites. It does not
block sites from finding existing cookies on the computer, so those sites
will still know you are you (but not where you are because of Tor), but it
does delete new cookies after rebooting.

Some companies that focused several years ago on anonymity now focus on
security, and rather than trying to sell sophisticated software to
consumers, they sell to Internet service providers like Verizon and
EarthLink, who in turn can promise customers protection from spam and hacker
attacks.

"Privacy is a concern, it just isn't mass market," said Hamnett Hill,
president and chief executive of Radialpoint, a Montreal company that
provides security services for Internet customers of BellSouth, Adelphia and
other companies. "One of the big enlightenments that we had at a certain
point is that people don't want to buy security software. They want peace of
mind."

Radialpoint used to offer software to protect identity. The idea was not
enough to carry the business, which is why the company no longer focuses on
such products. Of course, there still are businesses that sell software that
provides anonymity protection. For example, there is Anonymizer.com and
GhostSurf, which is sold by Tenebril (www.tenebril.com). And some companies
sell services to protect privacy in a way that is only tangentially related
to the Internet. PrivateTel, for example, offers to provide temporary phone
numbers for people who, say, post personal ads.

"The need to have a conversation and to complete the actual telephone call
and remain anonymous is what is the driving force," said Dan Kaluzny, the
company's chief executive.

More people who use the Internet know that if they disclose any personal
information online, they may receive a flood of unwanted marketing calls and
e-mail messages as a result, he said.



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