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Georgia Prosecutors Stoke Fears Over Use Of Encrypted Messengers And Tor

from the prosecutorial-fud dept

In an indictment against Defend the Atlanta Forest activists in Georgia, state prosecutors are citing use of encrypted communications to fearmonger. Alleging the defendants—which include journalists and lawyers, in addition to activists—in the indictment were responsible for a number of crimes related to the Stop Cop City campaign, the state Attorney General’s prosecutors cast suspicion on the defendants’ use of SignalTelegramTor, and other everyday data-protecting technologies.

“Indeed, communication among the Defend the Atlanta Forest members is often cloaked in secrecy using sophisticated technology aimed at preventing law enforcement from viewing their communication and preventing recovery of the information” the indictment reads. “Members often use the dark web via Tor, use end-to-end encrypted messaging app Signal or Telegram.”

The secure messaging app Signal is used by tens of millions of people, and has hundreds of millions of global downloads. In 2021, users moved to the nonprofit-run private messenger en masse as concerns were raised about the data-hungry business models of big tech. In January of that year, former world’s richest man Elon Musk tweeted simply “Use Signal.” And world-famous NSA whistle-blower Edward Snowden tweeted in 2016 what in information security circles would become a meme and truism: “Use Tor. Use Signal.”

Despite what the bombastic language would have readers believe, installing and using Signal and Tor is not an initiation rite into a dark cult of lawbreaking. The “sophisticated technology” being used here are apps that are free, popular, openly distributed, and widely accessible by anyone with an internet connection. Going further, the indictment ascribes the intentions of those using the apps as simply to obstruct law enforcement surveillance. Taking this assertion at face value, any judge or reporter reading the indictment is led to believe everyone using the app simply wants to evade the police. The fact that these apps make it harder for law enforcement to access communications is exactly because the encryption protocol protects messages from everyone not intended to receive them—including the users’ ISP, local network hackers, or the Signal nonprofit itself.

Elsewhere, the indictment hones in on the use of anti-surveillance techniques to further its tenuous attempts to malign the defendants: “Most ‘Forest Defenders’ are aware that they are preparing to break the law, and this is demonstrated by premeditation of attacks.” Among a laundry list of other techniques, the preparation is supposedly marked by “using technology avoidance devices such as Faraday bags and burner phones.” Stoking fears around the use of anti-surveillance technologies sets a dangerous precedent for all people who simply don’t want to be tracked wherever they go. In protest situations, carrying a prepaid disposable phone can be a powerful defense against being persecuted for participating in first-amendment protected activities. Vilifying such activities as the acts of wrongdoers would befit totalitarian societies, not ones in which speech is allegedly a universal right.

To be clear, prosecutors have apparently not sought to use court orders to compel either the defendants or the companies named to enter passwords or otherwise open devices or apps. But vilifying the defendants’ use of common sense encryption is a dangerous step in cases that the Dekalb County District Attorney has already dropped out of, citing “different prosecutorial philosophies.”

Using messengers which protect user communications, browsers which protect user anonymity, and employing anti-surveillance techniques when out and about are all useful strategies in a range of situations. Whether you’re looking into a sensitive medical condition, visiting a reproductive health clinic with the option of terminating a pregnancy, protecting trade secrets from a competitor, wish to avoid stalkers or abusive domestic partners, protecting attorney-client exchanges, or simply want to keep your communications, browsing, and location history private, these techniques can come in handy. It is their very effectiveness which has led to the widespread adoption of privacy-protective technologies and techniques. When state prosecutors spread fear around the use of these powerful techniques, this sets us down a dangerous path where citizens are more vulnerable and at risk.

Republished from the EFF’s Deeplinks blog.

Filed Under: , , , ,
Companies: signal, telegram, tor

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Comments on “Georgia Prosecutors Stoke Fears Over Use Of Encrypted Messengers And Tor”

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24 Comments
Anonymous Coward says:

Alleging the defendants—which include journalists and lawyers, in addition to activists—in the indictment were responsible for a number of crimes related to the Stop Cop City campaign, the state Attorney General’s prosecutors cast suspicion on the defendants’ use of Signal, Telegram, Tor, and other everyday data-protecting technologies.

This… this is like claiming someone washes their hands after using the restroom. Or locks their doors when they go out.

Clearly an indication of monstrous people. /s

Anonymous Coward says:

using technology avoidance devices such as Faraday bags

I would recommend more use of faraday bags for everyone. Well actually I would recommend not owning devices that are hostile to you. But barring that ability. Faraday bags are a good step. And they should be a normal thing to have and use. Furthermore I would say the ability to refuse to leak information about oneself is enshrined in the fourth amendment.

This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.

Anonymous Coward says:

kl

Faraday bags are not a crime to possess or use

Burner phones are not illegal either.

With one policy that the combined 6 flags/cedar fair now has about posting anything you film to YouTube I will need a burnrr phone

Filming on a ride is not against the rules, just pslosting it

Where do I get a burner phone? I can crrate another YouTube account using a burner phone and VPN so I cannot be traced if I do want to post.

With vpn and Tor combined I cannot be traced.

Pay for admission with cash, no cards or checks meaning no bank trailil

And finally put my license plates up in the window where their reader cameras cannot read it

In the various Canadian, Mexican , and us States where their parks are there are no laws making it illegal to put my plates inside my windows to evade alpr cameras

These Canadian, Mexican, and us States have no laws that make it illegal to put your plate in front abd back windows

Quebec
Ontario
Mexico, Estado De
California
Michigan
Arizona
Texas
Colorado
Georgia
Virginia
North Carolina
South Carolina
Kentucky
Louisiana
Oklahoma
Missouri
Pennsylvania
Maryland
Massachusetts
Illinois

I mention Louisiana because they just might try to revive six flags over new Orleans

There are no laws in any of those Canadian, Mexican,or US states that make it illegal to put your plates up in your windows to foil reader cameras

As long as the plates can be read by human eyeballs that is all matters.

Even if I do not film I value my privacy and intend to use them

Dusbet also uses alprs only because a few bad apples caused a brawl in one of their parks

There is also no law in Florida against putting your plates in your windows to evade alpr cameras

Stephen T. Stone (profile) says:

Re: By all means, keep giving up those data points.

Okay, so let’s add 2:41pm East Coast Time to the list of times of when you’ve posted, which we can eventually add to the data points of “knowledge of technology” and “significant high odds of being male”. You also try to vary up your usage of English with random capitalization, lack of punctuation, and various misspellings; this suggests either that English isn’t your first language or you’re trying to hide a more fluent knowledge of English, but I’d have to reëxamine your older posts to see which one could be true.

That One Guy (profile) says:

'How dare you have curtains on your bedroom window, open those up right now!'

Encryption is just privacy for digital matters, so when police try to vilify encryption and the methods to use it it’s important to emphasize that what they’re actually throwing fits over and trying to eliminate is the idea that the public should ever have real privacy and the ability to act and/or speak without someone looking over their shoulder.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

Except it’s not just the police doing it. Everyone from the IRS to Home Depot to Rotten Tomatoes is against web anonymity, and it doesn’t seem to be causing them any difficulty. Even the IETF, who claimed “pervasive monitoring is an attack“, often blocks Tor; a fresh installation of Tor Browser usually works, but try downloading that RFC with wget.

I guess when one’s an early adopter of curtains, one’s likely to be vilified for it.

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