Here's something a little unexpected...Wonder what people here may
htink.

http://www.bbc.com/news/technology-28526021

28 July 2014 Last updated at 08:15 ET Share this pagePrint
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Russia offers $110,000 to crack Tor anonymous network

Edward Snowden
Tor has been used by the whistleblower Edward Snowden

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Russia has offered 3.9m roubles ($110,000; £65,000) in a contest
seeking a way to crack the identities of users of the Tor network.

Tor hides internet users' locations and identities by sending data on
random paths through machines on its network, adding encryption at each
stage.

The Russian interior ministry made the offer, saying the aim was "to
ensure the country's defence and security".

The contest is only open to Russians and proposals are due by 13 August.

Applicants must pay 195,000 roubles to enter the competition, which was
posted online on 11 July and later reported by the tech news site Ars
Technica.

Earlier this month, Russia's lower house of parliament passed a law
requiring internet companies to store Russian citizens' personal data
inside the country.

Russia has the fifth-largest number of Tor users with more than 210,000
people making use of it, according to the Guardian.

US-funded network
Tor was thrust into the spotlight in the wake of controversy resulting
from leaks about the National Security Agency and other cyberspy
agencies. Edward Snowden, the whistleblower who revealed the internal
memos and who now has asylum in Russia, uses a version of Tor software
to communicate.

Documents released by Mr Snowden allege that the NSA and the UK's GCHQ
had repeatedly tried to crack anonymity on the Tor network.

Tor was originally set up by the US Naval Research Laboratory and is
used be people who want to send information over the internet without
being tracked.

It is used by journalists and law enforcement officers, but has also
been linked to illegal activity including drug deals and the sale of
child abuse images.

In its 2013 financial statements, the Tor Project - a group of
developers that maintain tools used to access Tor - confirmed that the
US Department of Defense remained one its biggest backers.

The DoD sent $830,000 (£489,000) to the group through SRI
International, which describes itself as an independent non-profit
research centre, last year.

Other parts of the US government contributed a further $1m.

Those amounts are roughly the same as in 2012.


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