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Big Brother IS watching you! Our wireless carriers hand over data from millions of users per year. How can we protect ourselves?

By Dan NosowitzPosted 07.11.2012 When it came to light that law enforcement has issued millions of annual requests/demands to the wireless carriers (AT&T, Verizon, etc) to hand over user data, we all got a little concerned. Our carriers know everything about us, and according to findings by Rep. Markey (D-MA), "Information shared with law enforcement includes data such as geolocation information, content of text messages, wiretaps, among others."

But! We have weapons. Here are some tricks to help protect your privacy.

THEY CAN SUBPOENA YOUR TEXT MESSAGESThe basic idea: you can encrypt your text messages so even if they're handed over to, you know, whoever, they won't be readable. It's password protection, really.

iOS: Your friends will hate you, but Encrypt SMS is a good tool for iOS. It costs a buck, and will encrypt your text message with AES-256 security, the same basically unbreakable encryption used by Julian Assange to protect his [url=http://www.popsci.com/technology/article/2010-12/how-secure-julian-assanges-thermonuclear-insurance-file]"thermonuclear" insurance file[/url]. Both you and the recipient have to have this app installed, and the messages themselves are password-protected. This should protect you from unwanted spying from your carrier.

Android: Android is easier, or more paranoid, maybe. WhisperSys makes an app calledTextSecure that'll lock your texts right up, caching them only locally on your phone.

THEY CAN TAP YOUR PHONE CALLSLaw enforcement has also been after the content of phone calls. Turns out you can encrypt those too, though not quite as easily.

iOS: The big player here is CellCrypt, which is really designed for government use more than consumer use (they have a hefty yearly fee, for example). Also, if you are paranoid, you might note that CellCrypt is cuddly with Verizon. You could try Kryptos instead, which also has AES-256 encryption and costs only $10 per month extra.

Android: WhisperSys also makes an app called RedPhone, which encrypts your phone calls end-to-end. Pretty sweet!

THEY CAN SEE EVERYTHING ON THE NETWORK...So don't use the network! You can use Wi-Fi for most communications, especially if you live in a city with lots of hotspots. Of course, that comes with its own headaches--Wi-Fi hotspots are very easily hacked--but at least you won't be dealing with the carriers. And given that the carriers seem okay with giving "tower dumps"--basically, all of the info from one tower, which could mean the data from thousands of users--it could only help your privacy to stay away from those towers.

Apple's iMessage, which communicates between Apple devices, uses a data connection that is not routed through your carrier's servers the way SMS texting is. It'll take advantage of Wi-Fi if you're on a Wi-Fi network, which is a good thing to do whenever it's available--it's much harder for your wireless carrier to monitor (or, less scarily but more annoyingly, to wildly overcharge for) Wi-Fi use. BlackBerry Messenger, which has its own encryption, is similar--although its encryption doesn't work when the police seize your phone.

You could try a VoIP option to replace your carrier-monitored phone calls, but those are not always more secure. TextPlus and Talkatone, for iOS, Android, and Windows Phone, all set you up with a new number/address and allow you to make phone calls and send text messages over a data network like Wi-Fi. But! According to their privacy policies, they also store your messages and usage history, and will hand over that data if needed--just like the carriers. So encryption is really more important here than which service you use. CSipSimple is a VoIP app with much more intense security--it sets up its own container for the call, while apparently not interfering with the actual content of the call at all.

THEY CAN TELL WHERE YOU AREOne of the scariest bits of information carriers (and thus law enforcement) has access to is your precise location, which can be gotten both from precise GPS coordinates and from tower triangulation--figuring out where you are based on how strong your signal is from each of several towers. This causes well-deserved freakouts every once in awhile. There are ways to keep your phone from knowing where you are, though. Both iOS and Android have fairly simple ways to opt out of location tracking in the settings.

Android: Go to Settings, then Location Services. Uncheck all of the boxes.

iOS: Go to Settings, then Privacy, then Location Services. Unswitch all of the switches.

The problem is that both Android and iOS keep your location cached on your device, which could be bad if anyone every confiscates it. If you root your Android device or jailbreak your iOS device, you can find apps to get rid of all that data. Lifehacker recommends Location Cache for Android and Untrackerd for iOS.

Once that's all taken care of, perhaps you'd like to go old-school with an offline map? Galileo is a decent one for iOS, and Android users can just use the offline version of the built in Google Maps. Or they can try one of several others, like MapDroyd.

And, of course, you can just throw your phone into airplane mode when you're not using it to prevent it from gathering any data.

THE FAIL-SAFEDrive over the Manhattan Bridge at night on a weekday. Heave your phone into the East River. Buy a beeper, and only use pay phones. Never use the same pay phone twice. Congratulations, you are safe.




PHOTO CAPTION: This is a secure phone




http://www.popsci.com/node/63597/?cmpid=enews071212&spPodID=020&spMailingID=4641750&spUserID=OTc5ODE4MTQ3NQS2&spJobID=278173842&spReportId=Mjc4MTczODQyS0


Added: Jul-16-2012 Occurred On: Jul-11-2012
By: Hitler_Is_Amazing
In:
Science and Technology
Tags: surveillance, police state, cell phones
Location: United States (load item map)
Marked as: approved
Views: 1977 | Comments: 19 | Votes: 1 | Favorites: 3 | Shared: 0 | Updates: 0 | Times used in channels: 1
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  • Well, as long as you're not doing anything criminal and affecting or endangering your life or the lives of others, you shouldn't care and neither should anyone else. Next.

    Posted Jul-16-2012 By 

    (3)

  • I don't give a toss.. if they wanna read my boring text messages, and look through my junk mail they can.. and they're welcome to all the awesome porn I have on my phone too.

    Posted Jul-16-2012 By 

    (2)

  • HA H AHA HA too fucking late--everything you say or do on your
    smartphone is collected by the government in a center near Denver.
    We a free people are totally fucked--fucked in the ass by big GOV

    Posted Jul-16-2012 By 

    (0)

  • THEY CAN TELL WHERE YOU AREOne of the scariest bits of information carriers (and thus law enforcement) has access to is your precise location

    But why would they WANT to know where I am?

    Posted Jul-16-2012 By 

    (0)

  • They do lots of wiretapping and email reading. Little is legal. They are beyond the law in a secret closed door atmosphere.

    Posted Jul-16-2012 By 

    (0)

  • I've found some of the tracking software in my operating systems to be helpful when I am trying to find my way around or a good place to eat. I find it hard to believe the feds want to waste tax-dollars investigating that sort of information. I see it as a more likely benefit to advertisers who can use it to better target their markets.

    Posted Jul-16-2012 By 

    (0)

  • News flash people. First, the NSA has had all communications tapped since there was an NSA. Two, any encription you use is child's play for NSA to read.

    Posted Jul-16-2012 By 

    (0)

  • Just an aside: Although not an indictment of AES256, Assange's own security measures proved unreliable:

    http://www.zdnet.com/blog/btl/wikileaks-insurance-file-decrypted-names-of-informants-exposed/56553

    Posted Jul-16-2012 By 

    (0)

    • @NotJim

      At the very end of that article.....

      Update: In a tweet, the @wikileaks says: "WikiLeaks 'insurance' files have not been decrypted. All press are currently misreporting. There is an issue, but not that issue."

      Posted Jul-16-2012 By 

      (1)

    • @ommadawn

      Hoho. I stopped reading too soon!

      Posted Jul-16-2012 By 

      (0)

    • @NotJim

      I was disappointed to read it too. Hate the self-appointed 'righteousness' of wikileaks to try to put themselves above the law.

      Reckless narcissists.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Narcissism

      Posted Jul-16-2012 By 

      (1)

    • @ommadawn

      Yep. I'm convinced that Assange is dishonestly using his supposed fear of being handed over to the US to avoid answering for his crimes in Sweden.

      As far as any credible information goes, there's no such plan afoot; Sweden can be expected to put him through the process and then let him go.

      But I do nonetheless hope the US gets its hands on him. He's a proven flight risk and would therefore fester in jail while enduring a trial that would end in near-certain conviction. The Feds More..

      Posted Jul-16-2012 By 

      (0)

    • @NotJim

      To be fair, I think the Sweden charges are made up. An excuse to get him back to Sweden and then extradited from there on different 'real' charges.

      It's obvious that at some point his organisation handled and published highly sensitive material.

      Spies and diplomacy make the World go round and mainly keep it safe.

      To blindly appoint yourself above international law is stupid and reckless.

      Still gonna be very hard to nail him tho.

      House arrest for a few decades whilst dragging the l More..

      Posted Jul-17-2012 By 

      (0)

  • Thats why we not have cell phone to use every day, only for emeergensies is the cell phone to be used.

    Posted Jul-16-2012 By 

    (0)

  • Right, someone reads every boring message and listens to every stupid phone call.
    If you are not talking about blowing up something or child porn or some crap it just goes right on into the trash.

    Posted Jul-16-2012 By 

    (0)