On 2021-08-27 at 18:35 +, Стефан Васильев via Gnupg-users wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I have not checked again, but can tell you from the past that they
> check what web browser you are using, because when you use an anti-
> fingerprint add on for your browser and it generates a User Agent
> string with
l0f4r0 wrote:
Hi Stefan, all,
Oops, I think I wanted to react sooner but didn't visibly...
8 mai 2021, 15:12 de stefan.vasi...@posteo.ru:
l0f4r0 wrote:
I don't use ProtonMail so I can't say.
But otherwise you have Tutanota (no phone number required):
https://tutanota.com/blog/posts/anonym
Hi Stefan, all,
Oops, I think I wanted to react sooner but didn't visibly...
8 mai 2021, 15:12 de stefan.vasi...@posteo.ru:
>> l0f4r0 wrote:
>>
>>> I don't use ProtonMail so I can't say.
>>>
>>> But otherwise you have Tutanota (no phone number required):
>>> https://tutanota.com/blog/posts/anony
Ryan McGinnis wrote:
For what it's worth if you're gung-ho about our heroine using a public library
computer or something and you can't stego some info into an image for one of
the image boards because you don't have any tech of your own in that country,
then using a OTP to publicly post some
For what it's worth if you're gung-ho about our heroine using a public library
computer or something and you can't stego some info into an image for one of
the image boards because you don't have any tech of your own in that country,
then using a OTP to publicly post something to a pastebin that
This will work too and doesn't care about the type 😁
https://youtu.be/wb3Xa1h_RqM
On 5/4/2021 9:47 AM, Robert J. Hansen via Gnupg-users wrote:
Modern harddisks don't allow that anymore. Should I assume that
"low-level format" in this case means something like
dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/sdX
[put
Maybe
for i in {1..9} ; do dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/sdX ; done
just to be careful
Or /dev/urandom as if= value
On Mon, May 3, 2021, 11:14 Johan Wevers wrote:
> On 03-05-2021 15:39, Robert J. Hansen via Gnupg-users wrote:
>
> > and gave her drives a low-level format.
>
> I remember from the stone
On 08.05.2021 15:04, Stefan Vasilev via Gnupg-users wrote:
Hi,
thanks! I already found a solution by using an .onion based email
provider,
with clearnet usage support. Super simple registration, where the user
only
supplies a username and a password. Nothing more. :-)
Regards
Stefan
Th
Am 08.05.2021 um 15:04 schrieb Stefan Vasilev via Gnupg-users:
l0f4r0 wrote:
Hi,
8 mai 2021, 00:58 de gnupg-users@gnupg.org:
Alice is no complete moron, because she can't register a free
ProtonMail account
without a phone. Or did she missed there an anonymous registration
procedure
wh
l0f4r0 wrote:
Hi,
8 mai 2021, 00:58 de gnupg-users@gnupg.org:
Alice is no complete moron, because she can't register a free ProtonMail account
without a phone. Or did she missed there an anonymous registration procedure
which works?
I don't use ProtonMail so I can't say.
But otherwise yo
Hi,
8 mai 2021, 00:58 de gnupg-users@gnupg.org:
> Alice is no complete moron, because she can't register a free ProtonMail
> account
>
> without a phone. Or did she missed there an anonymous registration procedure
>
> which works?
>
I don't use ProtonMail so I can't say.
But otherwise you have
Protonmail only requires a phone number to send a verification “are you a real
human” SMS if the IP you are registering from is a source of previous abuse.
So, like, don’t use a VPN when you do it.
Or if you’re worried about it, make the account back in your safe country
before you travel to
Ryan McGinnis wrote:
Alice is an idiot if she’s trying to defeat nation-state adversaries
and be a thrifty shopper at the same time, but even so, in most places
a laptop isn’t going to be cheaper than a cheap mobile phone.
You really want Alice to use some public library computer for some
re
Alice is an idiot if she’s trying to defeat nation-state adversaries and be a
thrifty shopper at the same time, but even so, in most places a laptop isn’t
going to be cheaper than a cheap mobile phone.
You really want Alice to use some public library computer for some reason, but
I am going t
Ryan McGinnis wrote:
Sounds like you're having to trust some kind of tech from the country you're
going to, so with that in mind:
Buy burner phone and SIM with cash from some place where normal people buy
phones and SIMs with cash. Install Signal. Done
For identification, have some code wo
Sounds like you're having to trust some kind of tech from the country you're
going to, so with that in mind:
Buy burner phone and SIM with cash from some place where normal people buy
phones and SIMs with cash. Install Signal. Done
For identification, have some code word that will be the firs
I have literally never in my life seen any meaningful use case for the OTP
after about 1974.
It's not part of a sensible discussion. :)
On May 4, 2021 4:46:31 PM CDT, vedaal via Gnupg-users
wrote:
>Or, for the really paranoid ;-)you can have random data on a read-only
>mini cdrom,and use it as
Or, for the really paranoid ;-)you can have random data on a read-only
mini cdrom,and use it as an OTP, and throw it into a garbage
incinerator afterwards.
If you are up against adversaries where this is necessary,this methods
may ultimately not help ...
=
On 5/4/2021 at 1:19 PM, "Ingo Klöcker
On Dienstag, 4. Mai 2021 18:47:50 CEST Robert J. Hansen via Gnupg-users wrote:
> For modern SSDs I generally recommend a single pass with random data:
>
> dd if=/dev/urandom of=/dev/foo bs=1M
>
> (Don't forget the blocksize [bs] parameter; it can improve speed
> significantly.)
>
> This is enoug
Modern harddisks don't allow that anymore. Should I assume that
"low-level format" in this case means something like
dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/sdX
[puts on forensics professional hat]
Good question! The tl;dr of it is that the technique to wipe a hard
drive will vary according to the kind of t
Neal Stephenson's novel Cryptonomicon is excellent. I strongly
recommend it to anyone who enjoys reading & is interested in crypto.
Part of the plot involves a cipher that operates a bit like RC-4,
permuting an array, but the array is a deck of cards.
https://www.schneier.com/academic/solitaire/
Sandy Harris wrote:
Ralph Seichter via Gnupg-users wrote:
* Stefan Vasilev via Gnupg-users:
How would you solve this task?
With Alice having to rely on cryptography she can do in her head?
Some shift cipher and carrier pigeons. :-)
Neal Stephenson's novel Cryptonomicon is excellent. I stro
Ralph Seichter via Gnupg-users wrote:
>
> * Stefan Vasilev via Gnupg-users:
>
> > How would you solve this task?
>
> With Alice having to rely on cryptography she can do in her head?
> Some shift cipher and carrier pigeons. :-)
Neal Stephenson's novel Cryptonomicon is excellent. I strongly
recomm
On 03-05-2021 15:39, Robert J. Hansen via Gnupg-users wrote:
> and gave her drives a low-level format.
I remember from the stone age (end 1980's begin 90's) that you could
low-level format a disk with the DOS command debug by calling some BIOS
routine by assembler routines.
Modern harddisks don'
r...@sixdemonbag.org wrote:
I have dealt with a similar problem in real life, as a real problem
with real people.
We created a custom Linux environment, burned it to Blu-Ray, and Alice
crossed the border with her Linux environment tucked into her CD player.
On the other side she acquired a
Ralph Seichter wrote:
* Stefan Vasilev via Gnupg-users:
How would you solve this task?
With Alice having to rely on cryptography she can do in her head?
Well, so to speak, this would be an option in the future.
Some shift cipher and carrier pigeons. :-)
Ha ha, but she needs to do that ove
I have dealt with a similar problem in real life, as a real problem with real
people.
We created a custom Linux environment, burned it to Blu-Ray, and Alice crossed
the border with her Linux environment tucked into her CD player.
On the other side she acquired a laptop, Blu-Ray drive, and USB d
* Stefan Vasilev via Gnupg-users:
> How would you solve this task?
With Alice having to rely on cryptography she can do in her head?
Some shift cipher and carrier pigeons. :-)
-Ralph
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