U.N. Agency Seeks Internet Anonymity Curbs

by Jordan Yerman | September 14, 2008 at 08:23 am
355 views | 14 Recommendations | 2 comments

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A United Nations agency is working on standards for tracing Internet traffic by IP address (physical location of originating transmissions), based on a proposal by the Chinese government. I may be straying into opinion here, but I consider it unwise for a body which represents such a wide array of nations to follow the lead of one of the more repressive regimes around.

 

Right off the bat, this proposal is at odds with US law, which protects anonymity in electronic transmissions, despite what the RIAA would prefer.

The U.S. National Security Agency is also participating in the "IP Traceback" drafting group, named Q6/17, which is meeting next week in Geneva to work on the traceback proposal. Members of Q6/17 have declined to release key documents, and meetings are closed to the public.

The potential for eroding Internet users' right to remain anonymous, which is protected by law in the United States and recognized in international law by groups such as the Council of Europe, has alarmed some technologists and privacy advocates. Also affected may be services such as the Tor anonymizing network.

"What's distressing is that it doesn't appear that there's been any real consideration of how this type of capability could be misused," said Marc Rotenberg, director of the Electronic Privacy Information Center in Washington, D.C. "That's really a human rights concern."

Nearly everyone agrees that there are, at least in some circumstances, legitimate security reasons to uncover the source of Internet communications. The most common justification for tracebacks is to counter distributed denial of service, or DDoS, attacks.

The U.S. National Security Agency is also participating in the 'IP Traceback' drafting group, named Q6/17, which is meeting next week in Geneva to work on the traceback proposal.
Not sure why the US is helping out on this one; I would think that a more appropriate message to Beijing would be, "If you want to try to control the Internet singlehandedly, you're on your own, and good luck with that". By the way, IP address resetting and spoofing can be easy and fun.

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SOLARLIFE
SOLARLIFE
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 12:27 on September 14th, 2008

jordan, I like this story. It's good stuff. Internet ID identifyer, well Big brother wants to know everything; You say up to now not in aplication ? It happend to me on a US website being greeted from my village, means my IP decoded displayed. I was surprised that this is already in work.

Rhonda J Mangus
Rhonda J Mangus
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 16:36 on September 14th, 2008

jordan, I like this story. It's good stuff.

This story was created over 3 months ago, the comment thread is now closed.

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SOLARLIFE
First Flagged at 12:27 PM, Sep 14, 2008 by SOLARLIFE
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