Correction: CHRISTOPHER Soghoian on U.S. Gov't Attitudes Toward Tor

2006-11-30 Thread George W. Maschke

Sorry, Mr. Soghoian's first name is Christopher, not Stephen.

--

University of Indiana graduate student Stephen Soghoian, against whom
the U.S. Government considered filing criminal charges stemming from an
airline boarding pass generator that he posted on-line, in the 28
November 2006 entry of his weblog,/ slight paranoia
,/ comments among other things, on
the attitude of federal investigators toward the Tor project:

   The Feds (at least those that I met) fundamentally disagree with me
   on many subjects - the role that researchers, academics, and common
   citizens take in studying, criticizing and pointing out the flaws in
   our security systems. I have been laying the groundwork for some Tor
    related research at Indiana University (pending
   approval from the University Counsel) - in fact, two of Tor's
   designers are visiting researchers at IU this year. It was made
   perfectly clear during the meeting that parts of the US government,
   at least the two represented at the meeting, strongly disapprove of
   Tor - and in particular, thought that research universities such as
   IU, MIT, Georgia Tech, Harvard and others
    have no business supporting such projects.




Stephen Soghoian on U.S. Gov't Attitudes Toward Tor

2006-11-30 Thread George W. Maschke
University of Indiana graduate student Stephen Soghoian, against whom 
the U.S. Government considered filing criminal charges stemming from an 
airline boarding pass generator that he posted on-line, in the 28 
November 2006 entry of his weblog,/ slight paranoia 
,/ comments among other things, on 
the attitude of federal investigators toward the Tor project:


   The Feds (at least those that I met) fundamentally disagree with me
   on many subjects - the role that researchers, academics, and common
   citizens take in studying, criticizing and pointing out the flaws in
   our security systems. I have been laying the groundwork for some Tor
    related research at Indiana University (pending
   approval from the University Counsel) - in fact, two of Tor's
   designers are visiting researchers at IU this year. It was made
   perfectly clear during the meeting that parts of the US government,
   at least the two represented at the meeting, strongly disapprove of
   Tor - and in particular, thought that research universities such as
   IU, MIT, Georgia Tech, Harvard and others
    have no business supporting such projects.



Tor Server on Live CD?

2006-09-15 Thread George W. Maschke
Considering the recent Tor server seizures in Germany, might it be 
desirable, from a privacy standpoint, to introduce a Tor "Live CD" that 
could be used to boot a PC in Linux and run a Tor server without writing 
any data to disk?