NSA Data Center and The Deep Web?!?!

aknight3

Moderator
for people wondering about whether or not they can or cannot read or messages on silk road....in order to de-crypt a PGP message (given that your code is big enough) it would take them more time than since the universe began. i think this is still one safe way of doing it, although with quantuum computing i think we are just around the corner to where they may be able to crack it someday soon.
 

ChesusRice

Well-Known Member
for people wondering about whether or not they can or cannot read or messages on silk road....in order to de-crypt a PGP message (given that your code is big enough) it would take them more time than since the universe began. i think this is still one safe way of doing it, although with quantuum computing i think we are just around the corner to where they may be able to crack it someday soon.
My guess is they cracked it before it even rolled out
 

nontheist

Well-Known Member
Well Obama's regime has already used its power to shut down Lavabit because they couldn't get access to members emails. So you can assume if they don't have access it's going to be shut down.
 

aknight3

Moderator
My guess is they cracked it before it even rolled out
unfortunatley this is prob. true, there was a rumor they arrested the maker of PGP and told him if he didnt build an indetectible back-door into the algorithym they would put him away for ever on fake charges..

im not saying this is fact, but it is a rumor and i wouldnt be surprised if it was true.
 

karousing

Well-Known Member
at least there are no hacker groups able to shut down the internet for all of the usa as a little shut the fuck up and stop policing everybody.
 

Doer

Well-Known Member
I recently stumbled upon a magazine article on the new NSA Data Center in Utah! In the article, they explain how this new MASSIVE spy center will store each and every text, call, email, web search etc. inside 100,000 sq. ft. of servers, cables, and storage! In total 900,000 sq. ft of technical support, and administration! Anyway... they also mention that the NSA is most interested in decrypting and tracking information used on the deep web (Silk Road, BlackMarket Reloaded, The Armory etc.)! Can they really do this??? This is far to much of an invasion of privacy! Feel free to share your input!

:peace: and :leaf:
Can they, technically? Oh Yes. And there has been the govt level, Internet 2 for a long time. They learned their lesson with I=1. We are not on it. This not IPv6 btw, something else and I really have no idea.

Tuned instant lasers comms for all we know.
 

echelon1k1

New Member
Can they, technically? Oh Yes. And there has been the govt level, Internet 2 for a long time. They learned their lesson with I=1. We are not on it. This not IPv6 btw, something else and I really have no idea.

Tuned instant lasers comms for all we know.
hey d it is IPv6 over a passive optical network in a secure environment. Bandwidth hovers around 10 GigE these days so the amount of data you can transmit is phenomenal.

According to this DOD memo the US switched over to IPv6 as early as 2003... http://www.defense.gov/news/Jun2003/d20030609nii.pdf

http://www.fibersensys.com/component/zoo/category/secure-passive-optical-networks-pon-gpon-and-epon
 

Doer

Well-Known Member
Yeah, Tor is one of the most useful programs that SWIM uses. It makes (almost) any drug there is available to anyone who wants them, through bitcoins. Bitcoins are an untraceble, virtual currency that are stored in untraceble BTC wallets. Tor is basically used to disguise the users IP address making it near impossible to track.

:peace: and :leaf:
And there is an open auction for bitcoin. About $98 today.
 

Doer

Well-Known Member
My win8 laptop has a v6 address it gets from the Comcast modem. It looks like a MAC address with xx:yy:zz type format.

I suppose my company is going to v6 at some point.

I think we use it for super fast disk access now.
 

Doer

Well-Known Member
Really? Do deeply secure, Optical Fiber Channel, high bandwidth, broadly redundant, virtual, distributed, storage pools in the Petabyte range, count?

What is the dumbest thing you ever said?
 

echelon1k1

New Member
For some perspective on the NSA' data storage capacity;

How Much Information Is There in the World?

In 2007, humankind successfully sent 1.9 zettabytes of information through broadcast technology such as televisions and GPS. That’s equivalent to every person in the world reading 174 newspapers every day. - See more at: http://news.usc.edu/#!/article/29360/How-Much-Information-Is-There-in-the-World
Blueprints Of NSA's Ridiculously Expensive Data Center In Utah Suggest It Holds Less Info Than Thought

Kahle estimates each rack would be capable of storing 1.2 petabytes of data. Kahle says that voice recordings of all the phone calls made in the U.S. in a year would take up about 272 petabytes, or just over 200 of those 10,000 racks.
 
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