Christopher Soghoian is a Washington, DC based researcher, activist, blogger, and Ph.D. Candidate at Indiana University. He first gained notoriety in 2006 as the creator of a website that generated fake airline boarding passes. Since that incident, he has continued to engage in high-profile activism related to privacy and computer security. Between 2009 and 2010, he worked for the US Federal Trade Commission as the first ever in-house technical advisor to the Division of Privacy and Identity Protection. Soghoian is a Open Society Foundation fellow.
Soghoian, who holds British and US nationality, received a B.S. from James Madison University (Computer Science) and a Masters from the Information Security Institute of Johns Hopkins University (Security Informatics; May 2005). He defended his dissertation on government exploitation of, and reliance on, third party companies for security and electronic surveillance via a live stream on 1 May 2012.
On October 26, 2006, Soghoian created a website that allowed visitors to generate fake boarding passes for Northwest Airlines. While users could change the boarding document to have any name, flight number or city that they wished, the generator defaulted to creating a document for Osama Bin Laden.
DEF CON 22 - Christopher Soghoian - Blinding The Surveillance State
DEF CON 22 - Christopher Soghoian - Blinding The Surveillance State
DEF CON 22 - Christopher Soghoian - Blinding The Surveillance State
Blinding The Surveillance State
Christopher Soghoian Principal Technologist, American Civil Liberties Union
We live in a surveillance state. Law enforcement and intelligence agencies have access to a huge amount of data about us, enabling them to learn intimate, private details about our lives. In part, the ease with which they can obtain such information reflects the fact that our laws have failed to keep up with advances in technology. However, privacy enhancing technologies can offer real protections even when the law does not. That intelligence agencies like the NSA are able to collect records about every telephone call made in the Unit
8:19
Christopher Soghoian: Government surveillance — this is just the beginning
Christopher Soghoian: Government surveillance — this is just the beginning
Christopher Soghoian: Government surveillance — this is just the beginning
Privacy researcher Christopher Soghoian sees the landscape of government surveillance shifting beneath our feet, as an industry grows to support monitoring p...
43:06
Defcon 2010 - Your ISP and the Government Best Friends Forever - Christopher Soghoian.mov
Defcon 2010 - Your ISP and the Government Best Friends Forever - Christopher Soghoian.mov
Defcon 2010 - Your ISP and the Government Best Friends Forever - Christopher Soghoian.mov
Defcon 18.
15:28
Why Google won't protect you from big brother: Christopher Soghoian at TEDxSanJoseCA 2012
Why Google won't protect you from big brother: Christopher Soghoian at TEDxSanJoseCA 2012
Why Google won't protect you from big brother: Christopher Soghoian at TEDxSanJoseCA 2012
Dubbed the Ralph Nader for the Internet Age by Wired Magazine, Christopher Soghoian is a researcher and advocate focused on improving privacy protections for...
38:18
Christopher Soghoian, Next Generation Threats 2014
Christopher Soghoian, Next Generation Threats 2014
Christopher Soghoian, Next Generation Threats 2014
www.nextgenerationthreats.se
43:50
DEF CON 21 - Christopher Soghoian - Backdoors, Government Hacking and The Next Crypto Wars
DEF CON 21 - Christopher Soghoian - Backdoors, Government Hacking and The Next Crypto Wars
DEF CON 21 - Christopher Soghoian - Backdoors, Government Hacking and The Next Crypto Wars
Backdoors, Government Hacking and The Next Crypto Wars CHRISTOPHER SOGHOIAN PRINCIPAL TECHNOLOGIST, PRIVACY & TECHNOLOGY PROJECT, ACLU The FBI claims it is g...
30:59
Chris Soghoian's wake-up call on internet privacy
Chris Soghoian's wake-up call on internet privacy
Chris Soghoian's wake-up call on internet privacy
Digital Editor of The Economist Tom Standage interviews Christopher Soghoian, Principal Technologist and Senior Policy Analyst, Speech, Privacy and Technology Project, American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU). For more multimedia content from The Economist visit our website: http://econ.st/1o43q4j
99:50
DEF CON 20 - Christopher Soghoian - Can you track me now?
DEF CON 20 - Christopher Soghoian - Can you track me now?
DEF CON 20 - Christopher Soghoian - Can you track me now?
Can You Track Me Now? Government And Corporate Surveillance Of Mobile Geo-Location Data Christopher Soghoian Open Society Fellow, Open Society Foundations Be...
129:38
Civil Engnerring 2015 | Christopher Soghoian On The Growing Trade in Sofware Security Exploits
Civil Engnerring 2015 | Christopher Soghoian On The Growing Trade in Sofware Security Exploits
Civil Engnerring 2015 | Christopher Soghoian On The Growing Trade in Sofware Security Exploits
Our Website: http://www.sabay24.info
Civil Engnerring 2015 | Christopher Soghoian On The Growing Trade in Sofware Security Exploits
61:44
Christopher Soghoian on the Growing Trade in Software Security Exploits
Christopher Soghoian on the Growing Trade in Software Security Exploits
Christopher Soghoian on the Growing Trade in Software Security Exploits
Over the past year, the public has started to learn about the shadowy trade in software security exploits. Rather than disclosing these flaws to software ven...
56:11
SOUPS 2014 Keynote: Christopher Soghoian, "Sharing Blame for NSA's Dragnet Surveillance"
SOUPS 2014 Keynote: Christopher Soghoian, "Sharing Blame for NSA's Dragnet Surveillance"
SOUPS 2014 Keynote: Christopher Soghoian, "Sharing Blame for NSA's Dragnet Surveillance"
The Symposium on Usable Privacy and Security (SOUPS) 2014 was held in July 2014 at Facebook headquarters. Christopher Soghoian, principal technologist at the...
3:05
SOUPS 2014 Keynote: Christopher Soghoian, Sharing Blame for NSA's Dragnet Surveillance
SOUPS 2014 Keynote: Christopher Soghoian, Sharing Blame for NSA's Dragnet Surveillance
SOUPS 2014 Keynote: Christopher Soghoian, Sharing Blame for NSA's Dragnet Surveillance
Digital Editor of The Economist Tom Standage interviews Christopher Soghoian, Principal Technologist and Senior Policy Analyst, Speech, Privacy and Technolog.
The Symposium on Usable Privacy and Security (SOUPS) 2014 was held in July 2014 at Facebook headquarters. Christopher Soghoian, principal technologist at the.
Over the past year, the public has started to learn about the shadowy trade in software security exploits. Rather than disclosing these flaws to software ven.
Chris Soghoian discusses the approaching of tech companies by the FBI, CIA or NSA to deliberately include backdoor vulnerabilities or otherwise subvert secur.
34:49
Christopher Soghoian @ LIBE Committee Inquiry on Electronic Mass Surveillance of EU Citizens
Christopher Soghoian @ LIBE Committee Inquiry on Electronic Mass Surveillance of EU Citizens
Christopher Soghoian @ LIBE Committee Inquiry on Electronic Mass Surveillance of EU Citizens
How safe is our personal data in the hands of companies? Who can access our "secure data?" Hear those surprising answers and more from security and privacy researcher Christopher Soghoian.
About Chicago Ideas Week
Chicago Ideas Week is an annual seven-day celebration of ideas, innovation and community, aiming to become the platform for ideas, created for innovators, thinkers, doers. CIW's goal is to stimulate new initiatives and ventures, create new connections and collaborations, and establish a community of people who have the desire to achieve great things. Learn more: www.chicagoideas.com
DEF CON 22 - Christopher Soghoian - Blinding The Surveillance State
DEF CON 22 - Christopher Soghoian - Blinding The Surveillance State
DEF CON 22 - Christopher Soghoian - Blinding The Surveillance State
Blinding The Surveillance State
Christopher Soghoian Principal Technologist, American Civil Liberties Union
We live in a surveillance state. Law enforcement and intelligence agencies have access to a huge amount of data about us, enabling them to learn intimate, private details about our lives. In part, the ease with which they can obtain such information reflects the fact that our laws have failed to keep up with advances in technology. However, privacy enhancing technologies can offer real protections even when the law does not. That intelligence agencies like the NSA are able to collect records about every telephone call made in the Unit
8:19
Christopher Soghoian: Government surveillance — this is just the beginning
Christopher Soghoian: Government surveillance — this is just the beginning
Christopher Soghoian: Government surveillance — this is just the beginning
Privacy researcher Christopher Soghoian sees the landscape of government surveillance shifting beneath our feet, as an industry grows to support monitoring p...
43:06
Defcon 2010 - Your ISP and the Government Best Friends Forever - Christopher Soghoian.mov
Defcon 2010 - Your ISP and the Government Best Friends Forever - Christopher Soghoian.mov
Defcon 2010 - Your ISP and the Government Best Friends Forever - Christopher Soghoian.mov
Defcon 18.
15:28
Why Google won't protect you from big brother: Christopher Soghoian at TEDxSanJoseCA 2012
Why Google won't protect you from big brother: Christopher Soghoian at TEDxSanJoseCA 2012
Why Google won't protect you from big brother: Christopher Soghoian at TEDxSanJoseCA 2012
Dubbed the Ralph Nader for the Internet Age by Wired Magazine, Christopher Soghoian is a researcher and advocate focused on improving privacy protections for...
38:18
Christopher Soghoian, Next Generation Threats 2014
Christopher Soghoian, Next Generation Threats 2014
Christopher Soghoian, Next Generation Threats 2014
www.nextgenerationthreats.se
43:50
DEF CON 21 - Christopher Soghoian - Backdoors, Government Hacking and The Next Crypto Wars
DEF CON 21 - Christopher Soghoian - Backdoors, Government Hacking and The Next Crypto Wars
DEF CON 21 - Christopher Soghoian - Backdoors, Government Hacking and The Next Crypto Wars
Backdoors, Government Hacking and The Next Crypto Wars CHRISTOPHER SOGHOIAN PRINCIPAL TECHNOLOGIST, PRIVACY & TECHNOLOGY PROJECT, ACLU The FBI claims it is g...
30:59
Chris Soghoian's wake-up call on internet privacy
Chris Soghoian's wake-up call on internet privacy
Chris Soghoian's wake-up call on internet privacy
Digital Editor of The Economist Tom Standage interviews Christopher Soghoian, Principal Technologist and Senior Policy Analyst, Speech, Privacy and Technology Project, American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU). For more multimedia content from The Economist visit our website: http://econ.st/1o43q4j
99:50
DEF CON 20 - Christopher Soghoian - Can you track me now?
DEF CON 20 - Christopher Soghoian - Can you track me now?
DEF CON 20 - Christopher Soghoian - Can you track me now?
Can You Track Me Now? Government And Corporate Surveillance Of Mobile Geo-Location Data Christopher Soghoian Open Society Fellow, Open Society Foundations Be...
129:38
Civil Engnerring 2015 | Christopher Soghoian On The Growing Trade in Sofware Security Exploits
Civil Engnerring 2015 | Christopher Soghoian On The Growing Trade in Sofware Security Exploits
Civil Engnerring 2015 | Christopher Soghoian On The Growing Trade in Sofware Security Exploits
Our Website: http://www.sabay24.info
Civil Engnerring 2015 | Christopher Soghoian On The Growing Trade in Sofware Security Exploits
61:44
Christopher Soghoian on the Growing Trade in Software Security Exploits
Christopher Soghoian on the Growing Trade in Software Security Exploits
Christopher Soghoian on the Growing Trade in Software Security Exploits
Over the past year, the public has started to learn about the shadowy trade in software security exploits. Rather than disclosing these flaws to software ven...
56:11
SOUPS 2014 Keynote: Christopher Soghoian, "Sharing Blame for NSA's Dragnet Surveillance"
SOUPS 2014 Keynote: Christopher Soghoian, "Sharing Blame for NSA's Dragnet Surveillance"
SOUPS 2014 Keynote: Christopher Soghoian, "Sharing Blame for NSA's Dragnet Surveillance"
The Symposium on Usable Privacy and Security (SOUPS) 2014 was held in July 2014 at Facebook headquarters. Christopher Soghoian, principal technologist at the...
3:05
SOUPS 2014 Keynote: Christopher Soghoian, Sharing Blame for NSA's Dragnet Surveillance
SOUPS 2014 Keynote: Christopher Soghoian, Sharing Blame for NSA's Dragnet Surveillance
SOUPS 2014 Keynote: Christopher Soghoian, Sharing Blame for NSA's Dragnet Surveillance
Digital Editor of The Economist Tom Standage interviews Christopher Soghoian, Principal Technologist and Senior Policy Analyst, Speech, Privacy and Technolog.
The Symposium on Usable Privacy and Security (SOUPS) 2014 was held in July 2014 at Facebook headquarters. Christopher Soghoian, principal technologist at the.
Over the past year, the public has started to learn about the shadowy trade in software security exploits. Rather than disclosing these flaws to software ven.
Chris Soghoian discusses the approaching of tech companies by the FBI, CIA or NSA to deliberately include backdoor vulnerabilities or otherwise subvert secur.
34:49
Christopher Soghoian @ LIBE Committee Inquiry on Electronic Mass Surveillance of EU Citizens
Christopher Soghoian @ LIBE Committee Inquiry on Electronic Mass Surveillance of EU Citizens
Christopher Soghoian @ LIBE Committee Inquiry on Electronic Mass Surveillance of EU Citizens
How safe is our personal data in the hands of companies? Who can access our "secure data?" Hear those surprising answers and more from security and privacy researcher Christopher Soghoian.
About Chicago Ideas Week
Chicago Ideas Week is an annual seven-day celebration of ideas, innovation and community, aiming to become the platform for ideas, created for innovators, thinkers, doers. CIW's goal is to stimulate new initiatives and ventures, create new connections and collaborations, and establish a community of people who have the desire to achieve great things. Learn more: www.chicagoideas.com
53:51
Hayden-Soghoian Debate: Privacy vs. Intelligence Collection
Hayden-Soghoian Debate: Privacy vs. Intelligence Collection
Hayden-Soghoian Debate: Privacy vs. Intelligence Collection
GEN(R) Michael Hayden
Former Director, Central Intelligence Agency
Former Director, National Security Agency
Dr. Christopher Soghoian
Principal Technologist, ACLU
“Privacy and Transparency versus Intelligence Collection Capabilities: What Takes Precedence?"
April 20th, 2015
On the first of June, Section 215 of the PATRIOT Act will expire. Should Congress provide a “clean” and unqualified reauthorization of this law, which would permit the government to continue bulk collection of Americans; telephony metadata? Part of the controversy surrounding this program is that it was based on a “secret” interpretation of the law, or at least one that
47:59
Christopher Soghoian -- The Growing Trade in Software Security Exploits
Christopher Soghoian -- The Growing Trade in Software Security Exploits
Christopher Soghoian -- The Growing Trade in Software Security Exploits
56:07
Christopher Soghoian: Governments subvert trust - ITWEB SECURITY SUMMIT 2014
Christopher Soghoian: Governments subvert trust - ITWEB SECURITY SUMMIT 2014
Christopher Soghoian: Governments subvert trust - ITWEB SECURITY SUMMIT 2014
The US government believes it can go to any tech company, and demand information that would ultimately destroy the company, for example if the company had pr...
17:42
DEF CON 17 - Christopher Soghoian - Manipulation and Abuse of the Consumer Credit Reporting Agencies
DEF CON 17 - Christopher Soghoian - Manipulation and Abuse of the Consumer Credit Reporting Agencies
DEF CON 17 - Christopher Soghoian - Manipulation and Abuse of the Consumer Credit Reporting Agencies
Manipulation and Abuse of the Consumer Credit Reporting Agencies Christopher Soghoian This talk will present a number of loopholes and exploits against the s...
43:50
Christopher Soghoian Backdoors
Christopher Soghoian Backdoors
Christopher Soghoian Backdoors
I created this video with the YouTube Video Editor (http://www.youtube.com/editor)
6:40
CIS Cybersecurity Series (Part 1) - Christopher Soghoian
CIS Cybersecurity Series (Part 1) - Christopher Soghoian
CIS Cybersecurity Series (Part 1) - Christopher Soghoian
Centre for Internet and Society presents its first installment of the CIS Cybersecurity Series. http://cis-india.org/internet-governance/blog/cis-cybersecuri...
13:57
F2C 2013 7.3 Christopher Soghoian -- Why won't my cellco do Android security updates?
F2C 2013 7.3 Christopher Soghoian -- Why won't my cellco do Android security updates?
F2C 2013 7.3 Christopher Soghoian -- Why won't my cellco do Android security updates?
F2C: Freedom to Connect Conference 2013 on Mar 5 2013 Session 7 Part 3: Why won't my cellco do Android security updates? Speaker: Christopher Soghoian, ACLU ...
28:35
Keynote: NSA Director Talks Cybersecurity and Privacy
Keynote: NSA Director Talks Cybersecurity and Privacy
Keynote: NSA Director Talks Cybersecurity and Privacy
While speaking at an annual conference of hacker and cybersecurity experts on Wednesday morning, National Security Agency head Gen. Keith Alexander was ...
General Keith Alexander, Director of the National Security Agency (NSA) and Commander of the U.S. Cyber Command tells the TIA 2013 audience how he ...
Jacob Appelbaum - 2 Hour Talk in India Q&A; on Drone Attacks, CypherPunks & Alternate Systems In this talk in Bangalore, India, Jacob Appelbaum talks ...
The Symposium on Usable Privacy and Security (SOUPS) 2014 was held in July 2014 at Facebook headquarters. Christopher Soghoian, principal technologist ...
(Truthstream Media.com) I
60:32
Snowden, Soghoian and Wizner at SXSW = 10 March 2014
Snowden, Soghoian and Wizner at SXSW = 10 March 2014
Snowden, Soghoian and Wizner at SXSW = 10 March 2014
(no echo) http://leaksource.info/2014/03/10/a-virtual-conversation-with-edward-snowden-sxsw-03-10-2014/ Edward Snowden at the SXSW speaking with Christopher ...
DEF CON 22 - Christopher Soghoian - Blinding The Surveillance State
Blinding The Surveillance State
Christopher Soghoian Principal Technologist, American Civil Liberties Union
We live in a surveillance state. Law enforcement and intelligence agencies have access to a huge amount of data about us, enabling them to learn intimate, private details about our lives. In part, the ease with which they can obtain such information reflects the fact that our laws have failed to keep up with advances in technology. However, privacy enhancing technologies can offer real protections even when the law does not. That intelligence agencies like the NSA are able to collect records about every telephone call made in the United States, or engage in the bulk surveillance of Internet communications is only possible because so much of our data is transmitted in the clear. The privacy enhancing technologies required to make bulk surveillance impossible and targeted surveillance more difficult already exist. We just need to start using them.
Christopher Soghoian is a privacy researcher and activist, working at the intersection of technology, law and policy. He is the Principal Technologist with the Speech, Privacy and Technology Project at the American Civil Liberties Union. Soghoian completed his Ph.D. in 2012, which focused on the role that third party service providers play in facilitating law enforcement surveillance of their customers.
Blinding The Surveillance State
Christopher Soghoian Principal Technologist, American Civil Liberties Union
We live in a surveillance state. Law enforcement and intelligence agencies have access to a huge amount of data about us, enabling them to learn intimate, private details about our lives. In part, the ease with which they can obtain such information reflects the fact that our laws have failed to keep up with advances in technology. However, privacy enhancing technologies can offer real protections even when the law does not. That intelligence agencies like the NSA are able to collect records about every telephone call made in the United States, or engage in the bulk surveillance of Internet communications is only possible because so much of our data is transmitted in the clear. The privacy enhancing technologies required to make bulk surveillance impossible and targeted surveillance more difficult already exist. We just need to start using them.
Christopher Soghoian is a privacy researcher and activist, working at the intersection of technology, law and policy. He is the Principal Technologist with the Speech, Privacy and Technology Project at the American Civil Liberties Union. Soghoian completed his Ph.D. in 2012, which focused on the role that third party service providers play in facilitating law enforcement surveillance of their customers.
published:07 Jan 2015
views:1069
Christopher Soghoian: Government surveillance — this is just the beginning
Privacy researcher Christopher Soghoian sees the landscape of government surveillance shifting beneath our feet, as an industry grows to support monitoring p...
Privacy researcher Christopher Soghoian sees the landscape of government surveillance shifting beneath our feet, as an industry grows to support monitoring p...
Dubbed the Ralph Nader for the Internet Age by Wired Magazine, Christopher Soghoian is a researcher and advocate focused on improving privacy protections for...
Dubbed the Ralph Nader for the Internet Age by Wired Magazine, Christopher Soghoian is a researcher and advocate focused on improving privacy protections for...
Backdoors, Government Hacking and The Next Crypto Wars CHRISTOPHER SOGHOIAN PRINCIPAL TECHNOLOGIST, PRIVACY & TECHNOLOGY PROJECT, ACLU The FBI claims it is g...
Backdoors, Government Hacking and The Next Crypto Wars CHRISTOPHER SOGHOIAN PRINCIPAL TECHNOLOGIST, PRIVACY & TECHNOLOGY PROJECT, ACLU The FBI claims it is g...
Digital Editor of The Economist Tom Standage interviews Christopher Soghoian, Principal Technologist and Senior Policy Analyst, Speech, Privacy and Technology Project, American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU). For more multimedia content from The Economist visit our website: http://econ.st/1o43q4j
Digital Editor of The Economist Tom Standage interviews Christopher Soghoian, Principal Technologist and Senior Policy Analyst, Speech, Privacy and Technology Project, American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU). For more multimedia content from The Economist visit our website: http://econ.st/1o43q4j
published:03 Oct 2014
views:2093
DEF CON 20 - Christopher Soghoian - Can you track me now?
Can You Track Me Now? Government And Corporate Surveillance Of Mobile Geo-Location Data Christopher Soghoian Open Society Fellow, Open Society Foundations Be...
Can You Track Me Now? Government And Corporate Surveillance Of Mobile Geo-Location Data Christopher Soghoian Open Society Fellow, Open Society Foundations Be...
Over the past year, the public has started to learn about the shadowy trade in software security exploits. Rather than disclosing these flaws to software ven...
Over the past year, the public has started to learn about the shadowy trade in software security exploits. Rather than disclosing these flaws to software ven...
The Symposium on Usable Privacy and Security (SOUPS) 2014 was held in July 2014 at Facebook headquarters. Christopher Soghoian, principal technologist at the...
The Symposium on Usable Privacy and Security (SOUPS) 2014 was held in July 2014 at Facebook headquarters. Christopher Soghoian, principal technologist at the...
Digital Editor of The Economist Tom Standage interviews Christopher Soghoian, Principal Technologist and Senior Policy Analyst, Speech, Privacy and Technolog.
The Symposium on Usable Privacy and Security (SOUPS) 2014 was held in July 2014 at Facebook headquarters. Christopher Soghoian, principal technologist at the.
Over the past year, the public has started to learn about the shadowy trade in software security exploits. Rather than disclosing these flaws to software ven.
Chris Soghoian discusses the approaching of tech companies by the FBI, CIA or NSA to deliberately include backdoor vulnerabilities or otherwise subvert secur.
Digital Editor of The Economist Tom Standage interviews Christopher Soghoian, Principal Technologist and Senior Policy Analyst, Speech, Privacy and Technolog.
The Symposium on Usable Privacy and Security (SOUPS) 2014 was held in July 2014 at Facebook headquarters. Christopher Soghoian, principal technologist at the.
Over the past year, the public has started to learn about the shadowy trade in software security exploits. Rather than disclosing these flaws to software ven.
Chris Soghoian discusses the approaching of tech companies by the FBI, CIA or NSA to deliberately include backdoor vulnerabilities or otherwise subvert secur.
published:14 Mar 2015
views:0
Christopher Soghoian @ LIBE Committee Inquiry on Electronic Mass Surveillance of EU Citizens
How safe is our personal data in the hands of companies? Who can access our "secure data?" Hear those surprising answers and more from security and privacy researcher Christopher Soghoian.
About Chicago Ideas Week
Chicago Ideas Week is an annual seven-day celebration of ideas, innovation and community, aiming to become the platform for ideas, created for innovators, thinkers, doers. CIW's goal is to stimulate new initiatives and ventures, create new connections and collaborations, and establish a community of people who have the desire to achieve great things. Learn more: www.chicagoideas.com
How safe is our personal data in the hands of companies? Who can access our "secure data?" Hear those surprising answers and more from security and privacy researcher Christopher Soghoian.
About Chicago Ideas Week
Chicago Ideas Week is an annual seven-day celebration of ideas, innovation and community, aiming to become the platform for ideas, created for innovators, thinkers, doers. CIW's goal is to stimulate new initiatives and ventures, create new connections and collaborations, and establish a community of people who have the desire to achieve great things. Learn more: www.chicagoideas.com
published:07 Mar 2013
views:596
Hayden-Soghoian Debate: Privacy vs. Intelligence Collection
GEN(R) Michael Hayden
Former Director, Central Intelligence Agency
Former Director, National Security Agency
Dr. Christopher Soghoian
Principal Technologist, ACLU
“Privacy and Transparency versus Intelligence Collection Capabilities: What Takes Precedence?"
April 20th, 2015
On the first of June, Section 215 of the PATRIOT Act will expire. Should Congress provide a “clean” and unqualified reauthorization of this law, which would permit the government to continue bulk collection of Americans; telephony metadata? Part of the controversy surrounding this program is that it was based on a “secret” interpretation of the law, or at least one that was not readily apparent from a plain reading of the statutory language. Going forward, is it possible to have some meaningful form of public discussion about intelligence collection programs without compromising sources and methods? What kind of metrics can and should be used to measure the value of a domestically focused collection program?
GEN(R) Michael Hayden
Former Director, Central Intelligence Agency
Former Director, National Security Agency
Dr. Christopher Soghoian
Principal Technologist, ACLU
“Privacy and Transparency versus Intelligence Collection Capabilities: What Takes Precedence?"
April 20th, 2015
On the first of June, Section 215 of the PATRIOT Act will expire. Should Congress provide a “clean” and unqualified reauthorization of this law, which would permit the government to continue bulk collection of Americans; telephony metadata? Part of the controversy surrounding this program is that it was based on a “secret” interpretation of the law, or at least one that was not readily apparent from a plain reading of the statutory language. Going forward, is it possible to have some meaningful form of public discussion about intelligence collection programs without compromising sources and methods? What kind of metrics can and should be used to measure the value of a domestically focused collection program?
published:04 May 2015
views:172
Christopher Soghoian -- The Growing Trade in Software Security Exploits
The US government believes it can go to any tech company, and demand information that would ultimately destroy the company, for example if the company had pr...
The US government believes it can go to any tech company, and demand information that would ultimately destroy the company, for example if the company had pr...
Manipulation and Abuse of the Consumer Credit Reporting Agencies Christopher Soghoian This talk will present a number of loopholes and exploits against the s...
Manipulation and Abuse of the Consumer Credit Reporting Agencies Christopher Soghoian This talk will present a number of loopholes and exploits against the s...
Centre for Internet and Society presents its first installment of the CIS Cybersecurity Series. http://cis-india.org/internet-governance/blog/cis-cybersecuri...
Centre for Internet and Society presents its first installment of the CIS Cybersecurity Series. http://cis-india.org/internet-governance/blog/cis-cybersecuri...
F2C: Freedom to Connect Conference 2013 on Mar 5 2013 Session 7 Part 3: Why won't my cellco do Android security updates? Speaker: Christopher Soghoian, ACLU ...
F2C: Freedom to Connect Conference 2013 on Mar 5 2013 Session 7 Part 3: Why won't my cellco do Android security updates? Speaker: Christopher Soghoian, ACLU ...
While speaking at an annual conference of hacker and cybersecurity experts on Wednesday morning, National Security Agency head Gen. Keith Alexander was ...
General Keith Alexander, Director of the National Security Agency (NSA) and Commander of the U.S. Cyber Command tells the TIA 2013 audience how he ...
Jacob Appelbaum - 2 Hour Talk in India Q&A; on Drone Attacks, CypherPunks & Alternate Systems In this talk in Bangalore, India, Jacob Appelbaum talks ...
The Symposium on Usable Privacy and Security (SOUPS) 2014 was held in July 2014 at Facebook headquarters. Christopher Soghoian, principal technologist ...
(Truthstream Media.com) In the background, a secret war is underway, apparently purging a circle of hackers, whistleblowers a
Keynote: NSA Director Talks Cybersecurity and Privacy
Keynote: NSA Director Talks Cybersecurity and Privacy
While speaking at an annual conference of hacker and cybersecurity experts on Wednesday morning, National Security Agency head Gen. Keith Alexander was ...
General Keith Alexander, Director of the National Security Agency (NSA) and Commander of the U.S. Cyber Command tells the TIA 2013 audience how he ...
Jacob Appelbaum - 2 Hour Talk in India Q&A; on Drone Attacks, CypherPunks & Alternate Systems In this talk in Bangalore, India, Jacob Appelbaum talks ...
The Symposium on Usable Privacy and Security (SOUPS) 2014 was held in July 2014 at Facebook headquarters. Christopher Soghoian, principal technologist ...
(Truthstream Media.com) In the background, a secret war is underway, apparently purging a circle of hackers, whistleblowers a
Keynote: NSA Director Talks Cybersecurity and Privacy
Keynote: NSA Director Talks Cybersecurity and Privacy
published:09 Jun 2015
views:2
Snowden, Soghoian and Wizner at SXSW = 10 March 2014
(no echo) http://leaksource.info/2014/03/10/a-virtual-conversation-with-edward-snowden-sxsw-03-10-2014/ Edward Snowden at the SXSW speaking with Christopher ...
(no echo) http://leaksource.info/2014/03/10/a-virtual-conversation-with-edward-snowden-sxsw-03-10-2014/ Edward Snowden at the SXSW speaking with Christopher ...
Take Action: https://www.aclu.org/immunity4snowden More information: https://www.aclu.org/nsa-surveillance Edward Snowden speaks about privacy and technology...
23:12
News Organizations and Digital Security: Interview with Edward Snowden
News Organizations and Digital Security: Interview with Edward Snowden
News Organizations and Digital Security: Interview with Edward Snowden
Introduced by Trevor Timm, executive director, Freedom of the Press Foundation; joined by Christopher Soghoian, principal technologist and senior policy analyst, Speech, Privacy & Technology Project, ACLU. See more at http://www.rcfp.org/EncryptNews
60:32
Edward Snowden Q&A; 3.10.2014
Edward Snowden Q&A; 3.10.2014
Edward Snowden Q&A; 3.10.2014
Edward Snowden interview with Christopher Soghoian and Ben Wizner at the SXSW. The ACLU was involved with this discussion with Mr. Snowden. For those of you ...
43:06
Defcon 18 - Your ISP and the Government Best Friends Forever - Christopher Soghoian
Defcon 18 - Your ISP and the Government Best Friends Forever - Christopher Soghoian
Defcon 18 - Your ISP and the Government Best Friends Forever - Christopher Soghoian
23:07
Ed Snowden keynote at #EncryptNews
Ed Snowden keynote at #EncryptNews
Ed Snowden keynote at #EncryptNews
Edward Snowden answers questions from Trevor Timm and Christopher Soghoian at an event on digital security in news organizations sponsored by Freedom of the Press Foundation, Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press and Open Technology Institute. Filmed Friday, November 7th, 2014.
435:29
TrustyCon - Live from San Francisco.
TrustyCon - Live from San Francisco.
TrustyCon - Live from San Francisco.
The Trustworthy Technology Conference, live from the Metreon in San Francisco. 4:05 - Welcome to TrustyCon - Alex Stamos and Cindy Cohn 15:27 - The Talk I Was Going to Give at RSA - Mikko...
58:06
The Alyona Show: In Case You Missed It - Full Show 12/06/10
The Alyona Show: In Case You Missed It - Full Show 12/06/10
The Alyona Show: In Case You Missed It - Full Show 12/06/10
Chairman of the Fed Ben Bernanke was sounding very confident in his abilities to stop inflation in an interview on 60 minutes but we can't help to wonder if ...
13:54
1- Soghoian Crump Soltani Wizner Speak at DefCon video by Sarah Cortes
1- Soghoian Crump Soltani Wizner Speak at DefCon video by Sarah Cortes
1- Soghoian Crump Soltani Wizner Speak at DefCon video by Sarah Cortes
http://www.cctvcambridge.org/sarah_cortes
Can You Track Me Now? Government And Corporate Surveillance Of Mobile Geo-Location Data. Defcon 20 Computer Hacker conference, Las Vegas, Nevada
https://www.defcon.org/html/defcon-20/dc-20-speakers.html#Soghoian
Our mobile phones and apps systematically collect and store comprehensive historical lists of our locations and our travels. Advertising and marketing companies extract and interpret these lists for use in their information-gathering networks, effectively turning our phones into 24/7 location tracking devices. Because this information is readily available to the government, law enforcement
11:20
2- Soghoian Crump Soltani Wizner Speak at DefCon video by Sarah Cortes
2- Soghoian Crump Soltani Wizner Speak at DefCon video by Sarah Cortes
2- Soghoian Crump Soltani Wizner Speak at DefCon video by Sarah Cortes
Can You Track Me Now? Government And Corporate Surveillance Of Mobile Geo-Location Data. Defcon 20 Computer Hacker conference, Las Vegas, Nevada
https://www.defcon.org/html/defcon-20/dc-20-speakers.html#Soghoian
Our mobile phones and apps systematically collect and store comprehensive historical lists of our locations and our travels. Advertising and marketing companies extract and interpret these lists for use in their information-gathering networks, effectively turning our phones into 24/7 location tracking devices. Because this information is readily available to the government, law enforcement agencies now have unparalleled access to kn
11:25
Christopher "moot" Poole: The case for anonymity online
Christopher "moot" Poole: The case for anonymity online
Christopher "moot" Poole: The case for anonymity online
http://www.ted.com The founder of 4chan, a controversial, uncensored online imageboard, describes its subculture, some of the Internet "memes" it has launche...
30:15
Talking Stick - Chris Soghoian - Reigning in Our Surveillance Society
Talking Stick - Chris Soghoian - Reigning in Our Surveillance Society
Talking Stick - Chris Soghoian - Reigning in Our Surveillance Society
Talk by Chris Soghoian, Principal Technologist with the ACLU’s Speech, Privacy, and Technology Project on “Reigning in Our Surveillance Society” recorded March 11th at Town Hall Seattle.
28:34
Pt 1-Soghoian Crump Soltani Wizner Speak at DefCon video by Sarah Cortes
Pt 1-Soghoian Crump Soltani Wizner Speak at DefCon video by Sarah Cortes
Pt 1-Soghoian Crump Soltani Wizner Speak at DefCon video by Sarah Cortes
http://www.cctvcambridge.org/sarah_cortes Can You Track Me Now? Government And Corporate Surveillance Of Mobile Geo-Location Data. Defcon 20 Computer Hacker ...
42:51
TrustyCon 2014 - The Laws and Ethics of Trustworthy Technology
TrustyCon 2014 - The Laws and Ethics of Trustworthy Technology
TrustyCon 2014 - The Laws and Ethics of Trustworthy Technology
Marcia Hofmann and Christopher Soghoian presenting "The Laws and Ethics of Trustworthy Technology" from TrustyCon 2014 held on February 27, 2014 in San Francisco, California.
https://www.trustycon.org
55:59
Is There Any More Privacy in the World? VICE Podcast 010
Is There Any More Privacy in the World? VICE Podcast 010
Is There Any More Privacy in the World? VICE Podcast 010
The VICE Podcast is a weekly discussion which delves inside the minds of some of the most interesting, creative, and bizarre people within the VICE universe....
228:27
EP LIBE #EPinquiry 18 December 2013
EP LIBE #EPinquiry 18 December 2013
EP LIBE #EPinquiry 18 December 2013
European Parliament, LIBE Committee Inquiry on Electronic Mass Surveillance of EU Citizens, 18 December 2013. Part 1: IT Means of protecting privacy - Mr Bar...
Take Action: https://www.aclu.org/immunity4snowden More information: https://www.aclu.org/nsa-surveillance Edward Snowden speaks about privacy and technology...
Take Action: https://www.aclu.org/immunity4snowden More information: https://www.aclu.org/nsa-surveillance Edward Snowden speaks about privacy and technology...
Introduced by Trevor Timm, executive director, Freedom of the Press Foundation; joined by Christopher Soghoian, principal technologist and senior policy analyst, Speech, Privacy & Technology Project, ACLU. See more at http://www.rcfp.org/EncryptNews
Introduced by Trevor Timm, executive director, Freedom of the Press Foundation; joined by Christopher Soghoian, principal technologist and senior policy analyst, Speech, Privacy & Technology Project, ACLU. See more at http://www.rcfp.org/EncryptNews
Edward Snowden interview with Christopher Soghoian and Ben Wizner at the SXSW. The ACLU was involved with this discussion with Mr. Snowden. For those of you ...
Edward Snowden interview with Christopher Soghoian and Ben Wizner at the SXSW. The ACLU was involved with this discussion with Mr. Snowden. For those of you ...
Edward Snowden answers questions from Trevor Timm and Christopher Soghoian at an event on digital security in news organizations sponsored by Freedom of the Press Foundation, Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press and Open Technology Institute. Filmed Friday, November 7th, 2014.
Edward Snowden answers questions from Trevor Timm and Christopher Soghoian at an event on digital security in news organizations sponsored by Freedom of the Press Foundation, Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press and Open Technology Institute. Filmed Friday, November 7th, 2014.
The Trustworthy Technology Conference, live from the Metreon in San Francisco. 4:05 - Welcome to TrustyCon - Alex Stamos and Cindy Cohn 15:27 - The Talk I Was Going to Give at RSA - Mikko...
The Trustworthy Technology Conference, live from the Metreon in San Francisco. 4:05 - Welcome to TrustyCon - Alex Stamos and Cindy Cohn 15:27 - The Talk I Was Going to Give at RSA - Mikko...
Chairman of the Fed Ben Bernanke was sounding very confident in his abilities to stop inflation in an interview on 60 minutes but we can't help to wonder if ...
Chairman of the Fed Ben Bernanke was sounding very confident in his abilities to stop inflation in an interview on 60 minutes but we can't help to wonder if ...
http://www.cctvcambridge.org/sarah_cortes
Can You Track Me Now? Government And Corporate Surveillance Of Mobile Geo-Location Data. Defcon 20 Computer Hacker conference, Las Vegas, Nevada
https://www.defcon.org/html/defcon-20/dc-20-speakers.html#Soghoian
Our mobile phones and apps systematically collect and store comprehensive historical lists of our locations and our travels. Advertising and marketing companies extract and interpret these lists for use in their information-gathering networks, effectively turning our phones into 24/7 location tracking devices. Because this information is readily available to the government, law enforcement agencies now have unparalleled access to knowledge of where you are, where you've been, and through inference, who you are.
In this panel, tech experts Christopher Soghoian and Ashkan Soltani, alongside Catherine Crump, staff attorney with the ACLU's Project on Speech, Privacy, and Technology, will present a briefing on the current technological and legal landscape of location data tracking. The panelists will explore how consumer location tracking efforts weave a story about the systemic privacy vulnerabilities of smart phones and the legal ways in which law enforcement has been able to hitch a ride. The panel will be moderated by the Director of the ACLU's Project on Speech, Privacy, and Technology, Ben Wizner.
Christopher Soghoian is a Washington, D.C. based Open Society Fellow, a Graduate Fellow at the Center for Applied Cybersecurity Research, and a Ph.D. Candidate in the School of Informatics and Computing at Indiana University. Soghoian's research is focused on the topic of tech privacy, including both consumer issues and government surveillance. He has used the Freedom of Information Act and other investigative techniques to shed light on the scale of and methods by which the U.S. government spies on mobile cell phones and this work has been cited by the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals and featured on the Colbert Report.
Twitter: @csoghoian
http://www.dubfire.net/, http://paranoia.dubfire.net/
Ben Wizner is the Director of ACLU's Speech, Privacy & Technology Project, which is dedicated to protecting and expanding the First Amendment freedoms of expression, association, and inquiry; expanding the right to privacy and increasing the control that individuals have over their personal information; and ensuring that civil liberties are enhanced rather than compromised by new advances in science and technology. He has litigated numerous cases involving civil liberties abuses, including challenges to government watchlists and Internet censorship. He has appeared regularly in the media, testified before Congress, and traveled several times to Guantanamo Bay to monitor military commission proceedings. Ben is a graduate of Harvard College and New York University School of Law.
Catherine Crump is a Staff Attorney with the ACLU's Speech, Privacy and Technology Project. She specializes in free speech and privacy litigation, particularly regarding the impact of new technologies on First and Fourth Amendment rights. Crump recently organized a nationwide public records investigation that found local police departments regularly tracking citizens through their cell phones without warrants. The project was featured in myriad news outlets, including The New York Times, The Washington Post, and MSNBC. She is also litigating a series of cases challenging the government's claim that it can legally track the location of people's cell phones without a warrant. Crump has been counsel of record for several ACLU amicus briefs in important cases involving technological surveillance, including United States v. Jones, the Supreme Court case heard last term ruling that the GPS tracking of vehicles constitutes a search. Crump is a non-residential fellow at the Stanford Center for Internet and Society, a 2004 graduate of Stanford Law School, and a 2000 graduate of Stanford University.
Twitter: @catherinencrump
Ashkan Soltani is an independent researcher and consultant focused on privacy, security, and behavioral economics. He has more than 15 years of experience as a technology consultant and has published three major reports on the extent and means of data tracking: "KnowPrivacy: The Current State of Web Privacy, Data Collection, and Information Sharing," "Flash Cookies and Privacy," and "Flash Cookies and Privacy II." His work highlights the prevalence and practice of tracking online, including the use of specific technologies designed to circumvent consumer privacy choices online. He has served as a staff technologist in the Division of Privacy and Identity Protection at the Federal Trade Commission and also worked as the primary technical consultant on the Wall Street Journal's What They Know series, investigating Internet privacy and online tracking.
Twitter: @ashk4n
Sarah Cortes- Copyright Licensed under Creative Commons- BY-SA 2012
http://www.cctvcambridge.org/sarah_cortes
Can You Track Me Now? Government And Corporate Surveillance Of Mobile Geo-Location Data. Defcon 20 Computer Hacker conference, Las Vegas, Nevada
https://www.defcon.org/html/defcon-20/dc-20-speakers.html#Soghoian
Our mobile phones and apps systematically collect and store comprehensive historical lists of our locations and our travels. Advertising and marketing companies extract and interpret these lists for use in their information-gathering networks, effectively turning our phones into 24/7 location tracking devices. Because this information is readily available to the government, law enforcement agencies now have unparalleled access to knowledge of where you are, where you've been, and through inference, who you are.
In this panel, tech experts Christopher Soghoian and Ashkan Soltani, alongside Catherine Crump, staff attorney with the ACLU's Project on Speech, Privacy, and Technology, will present a briefing on the current technological and legal landscape of location data tracking. The panelists will explore how consumer location tracking efforts weave a story about the systemic privacy vulnerabilities of smart phones and the legal ways in which law enforcement has been able to hitch a ride. The panel will be moderated by the Director of the ACLU's Project on Speech, Privacy, and Technology, Ben Wizner.
Christopher Soghoian is a Washington, D.C. based Open Society Fellow, a Graduate Fellow at the Center for Applied Cybersecurity Research, and a Ph.D. Candidate in the School of Informatics and Computing at Indiana University. Soghoian's research is focused on the topic of tech privacy, including both consumer issues and government surveillance. He has used the Freedom of Information Act and other investigative techniques to shed light on the scale of and methods by which the U.S. government spies on mobile cell phones and this work has been cited by the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals and featured on the Colbert Report.
Twitter: @csoghoian
http://www.dubfire.net/, http://paranoia.dubfire.net/
Ben Wizner is the Director of ACLU's Speech, Privacy & Technology Project, which is dedicated to protecting and expanding the First Amendment freedoms of expression, association, and inquiry; expanding the right to privacy and increasing the control that individuals have over their personal information; and ensuring that civil liberties are enhanced rather than compromised by new advances in science and technology. He has litigated numerous cases involving civil liberties abuses, including challenges to government watchlists and Internet censorship. He has appeared regularly in the media, testified before Congress, and traveled several times to Guantanamo Bay to monitor military commission proceedings. Ben is a graduate of Harvard College and New York University School of Law.
Catherine Crump is a Staff Attorney with the ACLU's Speech, Privacy and Technology Project. She specializes in free speech and privacy litigation, particularly regarding the impact of new technologies on First and Fourth Amendment rights. Crump recently organized a nationwide public records investigation that found local police departments regularly tracking citizens through their cell phones without warrants. The project was featured in myriad news outlets, including The New York Times, The Washington Post, and MSNBC. She is also litigating a series of cases challenging the government's claim that it can legally track the location of people's cell phones without a warrant. Crump has been counsel of record for several ACLU amicus briefs in important cases involving technological surveillance, including United States v. Jones, the Supreme Court case heard last term ruling that the GPS tracking of vehicles constitutes a search. Crump is a non-residential fellow at the Stanford Center for Internet and Society, a 2004 graduate of Stanford Law School, and a 2000 graduate of Stanford University.
Twitter: @catherinencrump
Ashkan Soltani is an independent researcher and consultant focused on privacy, security, and behavioral economics. He has more than 15 years of experience as a technology consultant and has published three major reports on the extent and means of data tracking: "KnowPrivacy: The Current State of Web Privacy, Data Collection, and Information Sharing," "Flash Cookies and Privacy," and "Flash Cookies and Privacy II." His work highlights the prevalence and practice of tracking online, including the use of specific technologies designed to circumvent consumer privacy choices online. He has served as a staff technologist in the Division of Privacy and Identity Protection at the Federal Trade Commission and also worked as the primary technical consultant on the Wall Street Journal's What They Know series, investigating Internet privacy and online tracking.
Twitter: @ashk4n
Sarah Cortes- Copyright Licensed under Creative Commons- BY-SA 2012
published:28 Jul 2012
views:843
2- Soghoian Crump Soltani Wizner Speak at DefCon video by Sarah Cortes
Can You Track Me Now? Government And Corporate Surveillance Of Mobile Geo-Location Data. Defcon 20 Computer Hacker conference, Las Vegas, Nevada
https://www.defcon.org/html/defcon-20/dc-20-speakers.html#Soghoian
Our mobile phones and apps systematically collect and store comprehensive historical lists of our locations and our travels. Advertising and marketing companies extract and interpret these lists for use in their information-gathering networks, effectively turning our phones into 24/7 location tracking devices. Because this information is readily available to the government, law enforcement agencies now have unparalleled access to knowledge of where you are, where you've been, and through inference, who you are.
In this panel, tech experts Christopher Soghoian and Ashkan Soltani, alongside Catherine Crump, staff attorney with the ACLU's Project on Speech, Privacy, and Technology, will present a briefing on the current technological and legal landscape of location data tracking. The panelists will explore how consumer location tracking efforts weave a story about the systemic privacy vulnerabilities of smart phones and the legal ways in which law enforcement has been able to hitch a ride. The panel will be moderated by the Director of the ACLU's Project on Speech, Privacy, and Technology, Ben Wizner.
Christopher Soghoian is a Washington, D.C. based Open Society Fellow, a Graduate Fellow at the Center for Applied Cybersecurity Research, and a Ph.D. Candidate in the School of Informatics and Computing at Indiana University. Soghoian's research is focused on the topic of tech privacy, including both consumer issues and government surveillance. He has used the Freedom of Information Act and other investigative techniques to shed light on the scale of and methods by which the U.S. government spies on mobile cell phones and this work has been cited by the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals and featured on the Colbert Report.
Twitter: @csoghoian
http://www.dubfire.net/, http://paranoia.dubfire.net/
Ben Wizner is the Director of ACLU's Speech, Privacy & Technology Project, which is dedicated to protecting and expanding the First Amendment freedoms of expression, association, and inquiry; expanding the right to privacy and increasing the control that individuals have over their personal information; and ensuring that civil liberties are enhanced rather than compromised by new advances in science and technology. He has litigated numerous cases involving civil liberties abuses, including challenges to government watchlists and Internet censorship. He has appeared regularly in the media, testified before Congress, and traveled several times to Guantanamo Bay to monitor military commission proceedings. Ben is a graduate of Harvard College and New York University School of Law.
Catherine Crump is a Staff Attorney with the ACLU's Speech, Privacy and Technology Project. She specializes in free speech and privacy litigation, particularly regarding the impact of new technologies on First and Fourth Amendment rights. Crump recently organized a nationwide public records investigation that found local police departments regularly tracking citizens through their cell phones without warrants. The project was featured in myriad news outlets, including The New York Times, The Washington Post, and MSNBC. She is also litigating a series of cases challenging the government's claim that it can legally track the location of people's cell phones without a warrant. Crump has been counsel of record for several ACLU amicus briefs in important cases involving technological surveillance, including United States v. Jones, the Supreme Court case heard last term ruling that the GPS tracking of vehicles constitutes a search. Crump is a non-residential fellow at the Stanford Center for Internet and Society, a 2004 graduate of Stanford Law School, and a 2000 graduate of Stanford University.
Twitter: @catherinencrump
Ashkan Soltani is an independent researcher and consultant focused on privacy, security, and behavioral economics. He has more than 15 years of experience as a technology consultant and has published three major reports on the extent and means of data tracking: "KnowPrivacy: The Current State of Web Privacy, Data Collection, and Information Sharing," "Flash Cookies and Privacy," and "Flash Cookies and Privacy II." His work highlights the prevalence and practice of tracking online, including the use of specific technologies designed to circumvent consumer privacy choices online. He has served as a staff technologist in the Division of Privacy and Identity Protection at the Federal Trade Commission and also worked as the primary technical consultant on the Wall Street Journal's What They Know series, investigating Internet privacy and online tracking.
Twitter: @ashk4n
Sarah Cortes- Copyright Licensed under Creative Commons- BY-SA 2012
Can You Track Me Now? Government And Corporate Surveillance Of Mobile Geo-Location Data. Defcon 20 Computer Hacker conference, Las Vegas, Nevada
https://www.defcon.org/html/defcon-20/dc-20-speakers.html#Soghoian
Our mobile phones and apps systematically collect and store comprehensive historical lists of our locations and our travels. Advertising and marketing companies extract and interpret these lists for use in their information-gathering networks, effectively turning our phones into 24/7 location tracking devices. Because this information is readily available to the government, law enforcement agencies now have unparalleled access to knowledge of where you are, where you've been, and through inference, who you are.
In this panel, tech experts Christopher Soghoian and Ashkan Soltani, alongside Catherine Crump, staff attorney with the ACLU's Project on Speech, Privacy, and Technology, will present a briefing on the current technological and legal landscape of location data tracking. The panelists will explore how consumer location tracking efforts weave a story about the systemic privacy vulnerabilities of smart phones and the legal ways in which law enforcement has been able to hitch a ride. The panel will be moderated by the Director of the ACLU's Project on Speech, Privacy, and Technology, Ben Wizner.
Christopher Soghoian is a Washington, D.C. based Open Society Fellow, a Graduate Fellow at the Center for Applied Cybersecurity Research, and a Ph.D. Candidate in the School of Informatics and Computing at Indiana University. Soghoian's research is focused on the topic of tech privacy, including both consumer issues and government surveillance. He has used the Freedom of Information Act and other investigative techniques to shed light on the scale of and methods by which the U.S. government spies on mobile cell phones and this work has been cited by the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals and featured on the Colbert Report.
Twitter: @csoghoian
http://www.dubfire.net/, http://paranoia.dubfire.net/
Ben Wizner is the Director of ACLU's Speech, Privacy & Technology Project, which is dedicated to protecting and expanding the First Amendment freedoms of expression, association, and inquiry; expanding the right to privacy and increasing the control that individuals have over their personal information; and ensuring that civil liberties are enhanced rather than compromised by new advances in science and technology. He has litigated numerous cases involving civil liberties abuses, including challenges to government watchlists and Internet censorship. He has appeared regularly in the media, testified before Congress, and traveled several times to Guantanamo Bay to monitor military commission proceedings. Ben is a graduate of Harvard College and New York University School of Law.
Catherine Crump is a Staff Attorney with the ACLU's Speech, Privacy and Technology Project. She specializes in free speech and privacy litigation, particularly regarding the impact of new technologies on First and Fourth Amendment rights. Crump recently organized a nationwide public records investigation that found local police departments regularly tracking citizens through their cell phones without warrants. The project was featured in myriad news outlets, including The New York Times, The Washington Post, and MSNBC. She is also litigating a series of cases challenging the government's claim that it can legally track the location of people's cell phones without a warrant. Crump has been counsel of record for several ACLU amicus briefs in important cases involving technological surveillance, including United States v. Jones, the Supreme Court case heard last term ruling that the GPS tracking of vehicles constitutes a search. Crump is a non-residential fellow at the Stanford Center for Internet and Society, a 2004 graduate of Stanford Law School, and a 2000 graduate of Stanford University.
Twitter: @catherinencrump
Ashkan Soltani is an independent researcher and consultant focused on privacy, security, and behavioral economics. He has more than 15 years of experience as a technology consultant and has published three major reports on the extent and means of data tracking: "KnowPrivacy: The Current State of Web Privacy, Data Collection, and Information Sharing," "Flash Cookies and Privacy," and "Flash Cookies and Privacy II." His work highlights the prevalence and practice of tracking online, including the use of specific technologies designed to circumvent consumer privacy choices online. He has served as a staff technologist in the Division of Privacy and Identity Protection at the Federal Trade Commission and also worked as the primary technical consultant on the Wall Street Journal's What They Know series, investigating Internet privacy and online tracking.
Twitter: @ashk4n
Sarah Cortes- Copyright Licensed under Creative Commons- BY-SA 2012
published:28 Jul 2012
views:311
Christopher "moot" Poole: The case for anonymity online
http://www.ted.com The founder of 4chan, a controversial, uncensored online imageboard, describes its subculture, some of the Internet "memes" it has launche...
http://www.ted.com The founder of 4chan, a controversial, uncensored online imageboard, describes its subculture, some of the Internet "memes" it has launche...
Talk by Chris Soghoian, Principal Technologist with the ACLU’s Speech, Privacy, and Technology Project on “Reigning in Our Surveillance Society” recorded March 11th at Town Hall Seattle.
Talk by Chris Soghoian, Principal Technologist with the ACLU’s Speech, Privacy, and Technology Project on “Reigning in Our Surveillance Society” recorded March 11th at Town Hall Seattle.
published:15 Mar 2015
views:44
Pt 1-Soghoian Crump Soltani Wizner Speak at DefCon video by Sarah Cortes
http://www.cctvcambridge.org/sarah_cortes Can You Track Me Now? Government And Corporate Surveillance Of Mobile Geo-Location Data. Defcon 20 Computer Hacker ...
http://www.cctvcambridge.org/sarah_cortes Can You Track Me Now? Government And Corporate Surveillance Of Mobile Geo-Location Data. Defcon 20 Computer Hacker ...
Marcia Hofmann and Christopher Soghoian presenting "The Laws and Ethics of Trustworthy Technology" from TrustyCon 2014 held on February 27, 2014 in San Francisco, California.
https://www.trustycon.org
Marcia Hofmann and Christopher Soghoian presenting "The Laws and Ethics of Trustworthy Technology" from TrustyCon 2014 held on February 27, 2014 in San Francisco, California.
https://www.trustycon.org
published:07 Mar 2014
views:29
Is There Any More Privacy in the World? VICE Podcast 010
The VICE Podcast is a weekly discussion which delves inside the minds of some of the most interesting, creative, and bizarre people within the VICE universe....
The VICE Podcast is a weekly discussion which delves inside the minds of some of the most interesting, creative, and bizarre people within the VICE universe....
European Parliament, LIBE Committee Inquiry on Electronic Mass Surveillance of EU Citizens, 18 December 2013. Part 1: IT Means of protecting privacy - Mr Bar...
European Parliament, LIBE Committee Inquiry on Electronic Mass Surveillance of EU Citizens, 18 December 2013. Part 1: IT Means of protecting privacy - Mr Bar...
DEF CON 22 - Christopher Soghoian - Blinding The Surveillance State
Blinding The Surveillance State
Christopher Soghoian Principal Technologist, American Civ...
published:07 Jan 2015
DEF CON 22 - Christopher Soghoian - Blinding The Surveillance State
DEF CON 22 - Christopher Soghoian - Blinding The Surveillance State
Blinding The Surveillance State
Christopher Soghoian Principal Technologist, American Civil Liberties Union
We live in a surveillance state. Law enforcement and intelligence agencies have access to a huge amount of data about us, enabling them to learn intimate, private details about our lives. In part, the ease with which they can obtain such information reflects the fact that our laws have failed to keep up with advances in technology. However, privacy enhancing technologies can offer real protections even when the law does not. That intelligence agencies like the NSA are able to collect records about every telephone call made in the United States, or engage in the bulk surveillance of Internet communications is only possible because so much of our data is transmitted in the clear. The privacy enhancing technologies required to make bulk surveillance impossible and targeted surveillance more difficult already exist. We just need to start using them.
Christopher Soghoian is a privacy researcher and activist, working at the intersection of technology, law and policy. He is the Principal Technologist with the Speech, Privacy and Technology Project at the American Civil Liberties Union. Soghoian completed his Ph.D. in 2012, which focused on the role that third party service providers play in facilitating law enforcement surveillance of their customers.
published:07 Jan 2015
views:1069
8:19
Christopher Soghoian: Government surveillance — this is just the beginning
Privacy researcher Christopher Soghoian sees the landscape of government surveillance shif...
Christopher Soghoian: Government surveillance — this is just the beginning
Christopher Soghoian: Government surveillance — this is just the beginning
Privacy researcher Christopher Soghoian sees the landscape of government surveillance shifting beneath our feet, as an industry grows to support monitoring p...
Why Google won't protect you from big brother: Christopher Soghoian at TEDxSanJoseCA 2012
Why Google won't protect you from big brother: Christopher Soghoian at TEDxSanJoseCA 2012
Dubbed the Ralph Nader for the Internet Age by Wired Magazine, Christopher Soghoian is a researcher and advocate focused on improving privacy protections for...
DEF CON 21 - Christopher Soghoian - Backdoors, Government Hacking and The Next Crypto Wars
DEF CON 21 - Christopher Soghoian - Backdoors, Government Hacking and The Next Crypto Wars
Backdoors, Government Hacking and The Next Crypto Wars CHRISTOPHER SOGHOIAN PRINCIPAL TECHNOLOGIST, PRIVACY & TECHNOLOGY PROJECT, ACLU The FBI claims it is g...
Digital Editor of The Economist Tom Standage interviews Christopher Soghoian, Principal Te...
published:03 Oct 2014
Chris Soghoian's wake-up call on internet privacy
Chris Soghoian's wake-up call on internet privacy
Digital Editor of The Economist Tom Standage interviews Christopher Soghoian, Principal Technologist and Senior Policy Analyst, Speech, Privacy and Technology Project, American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU). For more multimedia content from The Economist visit our website: http://econ.st/1o43q4j
published:03 Oct 2014
views:2093
99:50
DEF CON 20 - Christopher Soghoian - Can you track me now?
Can You Track Me Now? Government And Corporate Surveillance Of Mobile Geo-Location Data Ch...
DEF CON 20 - Christopher Soghoian - Can you track me now?
DEF CON 20 - Christopher Soghoian - Can you track me now?
Can You Track Me Now? Government And Corporate Surveillance Of Mobile Geo-Location Data Christopher Soghoian Open Society Fellow, Open Society Foundations Be...
Christopher Soghoian on the Growing Trade in Software Security Exploits
Christopher Soghoian on the Growing Trade in Software Security Exploits
Over the past year, the public has started to learn about the shadowy trade in software security exploits. Rather than disclosing these flaws to software ven...
SOUPS 2014 Keynote: Christopher Soghoian, "Sharing Blame for NSA's Dragnet Surveillance"
SOUPS 2014 Keynote: Christopher Soghoian, "Sharing Blame for NSA's Dragnet Surveillance"
The Symposium on Usable Privacy and Security (SOUPS) 2014 was held in July 2014 at Facebook headquarters. Christopher Soghoian, principal technologist at the...
SOUPS 2014 Keynote: Christopher Soghoian, Sharing Blame for NSA's Dragnet Surveillance
Digital Editor of The Economist Tom Standage interviews Christopher Soghoian, Principal Te...
published:14 Mar 2015
SOUPS 2014 Keynote: Christopher Soghoian, Sharing Blame for NSA's Dragnet Surveillance
SOUPS 2014 Keynote: Christopher Soghoian, Sharing Blame for NSA's Dragnet Surveillance
Digital Editor of The Economist Tom Standage interviews Christopher Soghoian, Principal Technologist and Senior Policy Analyst, Speech, Privacy and Technolog.
The Symposium on Usable Privacy and Security (SOUPS) 2014 was held in July 2014 at Facebook headquarters. Christopher Soghoian, principal technologist at the.
Over the past year, the public has started to learn about the shadowy trade in software security exploits. Rather than disclosing these flaws to software ven.
Chris Soghoian discusses the approaching of tech companies by the FBI, CIA or NSA to deliberately include backdoor vulnerabilities or otherwise subvert secur.
published:14 Mar 2015
views:0
34:49
Christopher Soghoian @ LIBE Committee Inquiry on Electronic Mass Surveillance of EU Citizens
How safe is our personal data in the hands of companies? Who can access our "secure data?"...
published:07 Mar 2013
Christopher Soghoian: Security & Surveillance
Christopher Soghoian: Security & Surveillance
How safe is our personal data in the hands of companies? Who can access our "secure data?" Hear those surprising answers and more from security and privacy researcher Christopher Soghoian.
About Chicago Ideas Week
Chicago Ideas Week is an annual seven-day celebration of ideas, innovation and community, aiming to become the platform for ideas, created for innovators, thinkers, doers. CIW's goal is to stimulate new initiatives and ventures, create new connections and collaborations, and establish a community of people who have the desire to achieve great things. Learn more: www.chicagoideas.com
Take Action: https://www.aclu.org/immunity4snowden More information: https://www.aclu.org/nsa-surveillance Edward Snowden speaks about privacy and technology...
News Organizations and Digital Security: Interview with Edward Snowden
Introduced by Trevor Timm, executive director, Freedom of the Press Foundation; joined by ...
published:22 Nov 2014
News Organizations and Digital Security: Interview with Edward Snowden
News Organizations and Digital Security: Interview with Edward Snowden
Introduced by Trevor Timm, executive director, Freedom of the Press Foundation; joined by Christopher Soghoian, principal technologist and senior policy analyst, Speech, Privacy & Technology Project, ACLU. See more at http://www.rcfp.org/EncryptNews
published:22 Nov 2014
views:16
60:32
Edward Snowden Q&A; 3.10.2014
Edward Snowden interview with Christopher Soghoian and Ben Wizner at the SXSW. The ACLU wa...
Edward Snowden interview with Christopher Soghoian and Ben Wizner at the SXSW. The ACLU was involved with this discussion with Mr. Snowden. For those of you ...
Edward Snowden answers questions from Trevor Timm and Christopher Soghoian at an event on ...
published:11 Nov 2014
Ed Snowden keynote at #EncryptNews
Ed Snowden keynote at #EncryptNews
Edward Snowden answers questions from Trevor Timm and Christopher Soghoian at an event on digital security in news organizations sponsored by Freedom of the Press Foundation, Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press and Open Technology Institute. Filmed Friday, November 7th, 2014.
published:11 Nov 2014
views:106
435:29
TrustyCon - Live from San Francisco.
The Trustworthy Technology Conference, live from the Metreon in San Francisco. 4:05 - Welc...
The Trustworthy Technology Conference, live from the Metreon in San Francisco. 4:05 - Welcome to TrustyCon - Alex Stamos and Cindy Cohn 15:27 - The Talk I Was Going to Give at RSA - Mikko...
The Alyona Show: In Case You Missed It - Full Show 12/06/10
The Alyona Show: In Case You Missed It - Full Show 12/06/10
Chairman of the Fed Ben Bernanke was sounding very confident in his abilities to stop inflation in an interview on 60 minutes but we can't help to wonder if ...
1- Soghoian Crump Soltani Wizner Speak at DefCon video by Sarah Cortes
http://www.cctvcambridge.org/sarah_cortes
Can You Track Me Now? Government And Corporate ...
published:28 Jul 2012
1- Soghoian Crump Soltani Wizner Speak at DefCon video by Sarah Cortes
1- Soghoian Crump Soltani Wizner Speak at DefCon video by Sarah Cortes
http://www.cctvcambridge.org/sarah_cortes
Can You Track Me Now? Government And Corporate Surveillance Of Mobile Geo-Location Data. Defcon 20 Computer Hacker conference, Las Vegas, Nevada
https://www.defcon.org/html/defcon-20/dc-20-speakers.html#Soghoian
Our mobile phones and apps systematically collect and store comprehensive historical lists of our locations and our travels. Advertising and marketing companies extract and interpret these lists for use in their information-gathering networks, effectively turning our phones into 24/7 location tracking devices. Because this information is readily available to the government, law enforcement agencies now have unparalleled access to knowledge of where you are, where you've been, and through inference, who you are.
In this panel, tech experts Christopher Soghoian and Ashkan Soltani, alongside Catherine Crump, staff attorney with the ACLU's Project on Speech, Privacy, and Technology, will present a briefing on the current technological and legal landscape of location data tracking. The panelists will explore how consumer location tracking efforts weave a story about the systemic privacy vulnerabilities of smart phones and the legal ways in which law enforcement has been able to hitch a ride. The panel will be moderated by the Director of the ACLU's Project on Speech, Privacy, and Technology, Ben Wizner.
Christopher Soghoian is a Washington, D.C. based Open Society Fellow, a Graduate Fellow at the Center for Applied Cybersecurity Research, and a Ph.D. Candidate in the School of Informatics and Computing at Indiana University. Soghoian's research is focused on the topic of tech privacy, including both consumer issues and government surveillance. He has used the Freedom of Information Act and other investigative techniques to shed light on the scale of and methods by which the U.S. government spies on mobile cell phones and this work has been cited by the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals and featured on the Colbert Report.
Twitter: @csoghoian
http://www.dubfire.net/, http://paranoia.dubfire.net/
Ben Wizner is the Director of ACLU's Speech, Privacy & Technology Project, which is dedicated to protecting and expanding the First Amendment freedoms of expression, association, and inquiry; expanding the right to privacy and increasing the control that individuals have over their personal information; and ensuring that civil liberties are enhanced rather than compromised by new advances in science and technology. He has litigated numerous cases involving civil liberties abuses, including challenges to government watchlists and Internet censorship. He has appeared regularly in the media, testified before Congress, and traveled several times to Guantanamo Bay to monitor military commission proceedings. Ben is a graduate of Harvard College and New York University School of Law.
Catherine Crump is a Staff Attorney with the ACLU's Speech, Privacy and Technology Project. She specializes in free speech and privacy litigation, particularly regarding the impact of new technologies on First and Fourth Amendment rights. Crump recently organized a nationwide public records investigation that found local police departments regularly tracking citizens through their cell phones without warrants. The project was featured in myriad news outlets, including The New York Times, The Washington Post, and MSNBC. She is also litigating a series of cases challenging the government's claim that it can legally track the location of people's cell phones without a warrant. Crump has been counsel of record for several ACLU amicus briefs in important cases involving technological surveillance, including United States v. Jones, the Supreme Court case heard last term ruling that the GPS tracking of vehicles constitutes a search. Crump is a non-residential fellow at the Stanford Center for Internet and Society, a 2004 graduate of Stanford Law School, and a 2000 graduate of Stanford University.
Twitter: @catherinencrump
Ashkan Soltani is an independent researcher and consultant focused on privacy, security, and behavioral economics. He has more than 15 years of experience as a technology consultant and has published three major reports on the extent and means of data tracking: "KnowPrivacy: The Current State of Web Privacy, Data Collection, and Information Sharing," "Flash Cookies and Privacy," and "Flash Cookies and Privacy II." His work highlights the prevalence and practice of tracking online, including the use of specific technologies designed to circumvent consumer privacy choices online. He has served as a staff technologist in the Division of Privacy and Identity Protection at the Federal Trade Commission and also worked as the primary technical consultant on the Wall Street Journal's What They Know series, investigating Internet privacy and online tracking.
Twitter: @ashk4n
Sarah Cortes- Copyright Licensed under Creative Commons- BY-SA 2012
published:28 Jul 2012
views:843
11:20
2- Soghoian Crump Soltani Wizner Speak at DefCon video by Sarah Cortes
Can You Track Me Now? Government And Corporate Surveillance Of Mobile Geo-Location Data. D...
published:28 Jul 2012
2- Soghoian Crump Soltani Wizner Speak at DefCon video by Sarah Cortes
2- Soghoian Crump Soltani Wizner Speak at DefCon video by Sarah Cortes
Can You Track Me Now? Government And Corporate Surveillance Of Mobile Geo-Location Data. Defcon 20 Computer Hacker conference, Las Vegas, Nevada
https://www.defcon.org/html/defcon-20/dc-20-speakers.html#Soghoian
Our mobile phones and apps systematically collect and store comprehensive historical lists of our locations and our travels. Advertising and marketing companies extract and interpret these lists for use in their information-gathering networks, effectively turning our phones into 24/7 location tracking devices. Because this information is readily available to the government, law enforcement agencies now have unparalleled access to knowledge of where you are, where you've been, and through inference, who you are.
In this panel, tech experts Christopher Soghoian and Ashkan Soltani, alongside Catherine Crump, staff attorney with the ACLU's Project on Speech, Privacy, and Technology, will present a briefing on the current technological and legal landscape of location data tracking. The panelists will explore how consumer location tracking efforts weave a story about the systemic privacy vulnerabilities of smart phones and the legal ways in which law enforcement has been able to hitch a ride. The panel will be moderated by the Director of the ACLU's Project on Speech, Privacy, and Technology, Ben Wizner.
Christopher Soghoian is a Washington, D.C. based Open Society Fellow, a Graduate Fellow at the Center for Applied Cybersecurity Research, and a Ph.D. Candidate in the School of Informatics and Computing at Indiana University. Soghoian's research is focused on the topic of tech privacy, including both consumer issues and government surveillance. He has used the Freedom of Information Act and other investigative techniques to shed light on the scale of and methods by which the U.S. government spies on mobile cell phones and this work has been cited by the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals and featured on the Colbert Report.
Twitter: @csoghoian
http://www.dubfire.net/, http://paranoia.dubfire.net/
Ben Wizner is the Director of ACLU's Speech, Privacy & Technology Project, which is dedicated to protecting and expanding the First Amendment freedoms of expression, association, and inquiry; expanding the right to privacy and increasing the control that individuals have over their personal information; and ensuring that civil liberties are enhanced rather than compromised by new advances in science and technology. He has litigated numerous cases involving civil liberties abuses, including challenges to government watchlists and Internet censorship. He has appeared regularly in the media, testified before Congress, and traveled several times to Guantanamo Bay to monitor military commission proceedings. Ben is a graduate of Harvard College and New York University School of Law.
Catherine Crump is a Staff Attorney with the ACLU's Speech, Privacy and Technology Project. She specializes in free speech and privacy litigation, particularly regarding the impact of new technologies on First and Fourth Amendment rights. Crump recently organized a nationwide public records investigation that found local police departments regularly tracking citizens through their cell phones without warrants. The project was featured in myriad news outlets, including The New York Times, The Washington Post, and MSNBC. She is also litigating a series of cases challenging the government's claim that it can legally track the location of people's cell phones without a warrant. Crump has been counsel of record for several ACLU amicus briefs in important cases involving technological surveillance, including United States v. Jones, the Supreme Court case heard last term ruling that the GPS tracking of vehicles constitutes a search. Crump is a non-residential fellow at the Stanford Center for Internet and Society, a 2004 graduate of Stanford Law School, and a 2000 graduate of Stanford University.
Twitter: @catherinencrump
Ashkan Soltani is an independent researcher and consultant focused on privacy, security, and behavioral economics. He has more than 15 years of experience as a technology consultant and has published three major reports on the extent and means of data tracking: "KnowPrivacy: The Current State of Web Privacy, Data Collection, and Information Sharing," "Flash Cookies and Privacy," and "Flash Cookies and Privacy II." His work highlights the prevalence and practice of tracking online, including the use of specific technologies designed to circumvent consumer privacy choices online. He has served as a staff technologist in the Division of Privacy and Identity Protection at the Federal Trade Commission and also worked as the primary technical consultant on the Wall Street Journal's What They Know series, investigating Internet privacy and online tracking.
Twitter: @ashk4n
Sarah Cortes- Copyright Licensed under Creative Commons- BY-SA 2012
published:28 Jul 2012
views:311
11:25
Christopher "moot" Poole: The case for anonymity online
http://www.ted.com The founder of 4chan, a controversial, uncensored online imageboard, de...
Christopher "moot" Poole: The case for anonymity online
Christopher "moot" Poole: The case for anonymity online
http://www.ted.com The founder of 4chan, a controversial, uncensored online imageboard, describes its subculture, some of the Internet "memes" it has launche...
Talking Stick - Chris Soghoian - Reigning in Our Surveillance Society
Talk by Chris Soghoian, Principal Technologist with the ACLU’s Speech, Privacy, and Techno...
published:15 Mar 2015
Talking Stick - Chris Soghoian - Reigning in Our Surveillance Society
Talking Stick - Chris Soghoian - Reigning in Our Surveillance Society
Talk by Chris Soghoian, Principal Technologist with the ACLU’s Speech, Privacy, and Technology Project on “Reigning in Our Surveillance Society” recorded March 11th at Town Hall Seattle.
published:15 Mar 2015
views:44
28:34
Pt 1-Soghoian Crump Soltani Wizner Speak at DefCon video by Sarah Cortes
http://www.cctvcambridge.org/sarah_cortes Can You Track Me Now? Government And Corporate S...
Pt 1-Soghoian Crump Soltani Wizner Speak at DefCon video by Sarah Cortes
Pt 1-Soghoian Crump Soltani Wizner Speak at DefCon video by Sarah Cortes
http://www.cctvcambridge.org/sarah_cortes Can You Track Me Now? Government And Corporate Surveillance Of Mobile Geo-Location Data. Defcon 20 Computer Hacker ...
TrustyCon 2014 - The Laws and Ethics of Trustworthy Technology
Marcia Hofmann and Christopher Soghoian presenting "The Laws and Ethics of Trustworthy Tec...
published:07 Mar 2014
TrustyCon 2014 - The Laws and Ethics of Trustworthy Technology
TrustyCon 2014 - The Laws and Ethics of Trustworthy Technology
Marcia Hofmann and Christopher Soghoian presenting "The Laws and Ethics of Trustworthy Technology" from TrustyCon 2014 held on February 27, 2014 in San Francisco, California.
https://www.trustycon.org
published:07 Mar 2014
views:29
55:59
Is There Any More Privacy in the World? VICE Podcast 010
The VICE Podcast is a weekly discussion which delves inside the minds of some of the most ...
Is There Any More Privacy in the World? VICE Podcast 010
Is There Any More Privacy in the World? VICE Podcast 010
The VICE Podcast is a weekly discussion which delves inside the minds of some of the most interesting, creative, and bizarre people within the VICE universe....
IBM announced today it has struck a deal to bring its Watson cognitive computing platform to a variety of industries in Middle Eastern and African countries. Watson is best known as the computer system that autonomously vanquished the world’s best Jeopardy players during a highly publicized competition in 2011... Financial details of the arrangement were not disclosed ... Sign Up. [Photo. Clockready via ]. ....
14 July 2015Last updated at 13.31 BST. World powers have reached a deal with Iran on limiting its nuclear activity in return for the lifting of international economic sanctions. US PresidentBarack Obama said that with the deal, "every pathway to a nuclear weapon is cut off" for Iran. His Iranian counterpart, Hassan Rouhani, said it had reached a "new level" in Iran's relations with the world. Read more ... ....
WASHINGTON. Nasa's New Horizons probe has settled one of the most basic questions about Pluto - its size. Mission scientists have found Pluto to be 2,370 kms in diameter, somewhat larger than many prior estimates. Images acquired with the Long Range Reconnaissance Imager (LORRI) aborad New Horizon probe were used to make this determination ... "The size of Pluto has been debated since its discovery in 1930 ... ....
Baahubali (Bahubali) Movie which was released on Friday recorded a huge collection of Rs. 190 crore in 4 days. Baahubali Movie which was released on Friday shows bumper collection and 3rd day collection crossed Rs 160 crore. Its first day collection was over Rs. 50 crore which shatters all previous records making it high performer movie in box-office. Baahubali Movie entered in the 100 crore club in just two days ...First day. Over 50 crore ... ....
We are allowed to sell only to friendly countries.” ... ... “We think they get court orders, and we have even seen a few, but the applications don’t really describe how the software works, or how they will get it onto the target’s device,” ChristopherSoghoian, Principal Technologist at the American Civil Liberties Union, told WIRED in an encrypted chat ... And there have never been any congressional hearings on the topic,” Soghoian continued....
ChristopherSoghoian, principal technologist at the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), says he has downloaded a cache of company invoices in an effort to better understand which governments Hacking Team sold its products to ...Soghoian admits that it's possible the leaked documents have been tampered with in some way, but says his gut feeling is that they are largely authentic....
Mikael Thalen. Infowars.com. July 5, 2015... Our network security staff hard at work while 5 MB/s is transferred out of our internal network through his computer ... “By the looks of it, Hacking Team has been stonewalling a 1-year UN investigation of the sale of their tech to Sudan,” noted ChristopherSoghoian, Principal Technologist and SeniorPolicyAnalyst with the ACLU ... — ChristopherSoghoian (@csoghoian) July 6, 2015....
help, we're being attacked! pic.twitter.com/i2mWW2gqr9. — Hacked Team (@hackingteam) July 6, 2015...ChristopherSoghoian, principal technologist of the ACLU, says that a preliminary analyst of the Torrent’s contents suggests that Hacking Team included among their customers nations such as South Korea, Kazakhstan, Saudi Arabia, Oman, Lebanon, and Mongolia ... ....
In responding to China's massive hack of federal personnel data, the government may have run afoul of computer security again ... The notice continued. ... Despite the fixes, OPM's credibility may suffer still ... "Even when they try to clean it up, they're getting it wrong," ChristopherSoghoian, principal technologist for the American Civil Liberties Union, said of OPM's response to the data breach ... It'sCybersecurity101." ... ....
Daniel Rigmaiden. See Also. Over the last year the world has learned a lot about a jarring surveillance technology ... A new radio interview, however, has tracked down the man who first discovered the clandestine technology ... Finally, the prisoner contacted the American Civil Liberties Union’s ChristopherSoghoian, who ultimately helped illuminate the public about what Stingray is and how it was being used by authorities ... Recommended For You....
In fact, many federal employees received cybersecurity training telling them to not do such things as opening links and downloading attachments ... The hackers could wise up and send their own set of fake identity protection e-mails and get into your computers all over again." ... "Even when they try to clean it up, they’re getting it wrong," said the ACLU’s ChristopherSoghoian to the Post ... It’s cybersecurity 101." ... Recommended For You ... Life ... ....
The popular password manager app LastPass just admitted to being hacked, and security experts are responding. The question at hand is ... The ACLU’s principal technologist ChristopherSoghoian responded in kind. ... — ChristopherSoghoian (@csoghoian) June 15, 2015. Here, Soghoian is saying that plain-text reminders that logically lead people to remembering their passwords ae more hackable and problematic than password managers as a whole ... ....
End-to-end encryption is the mot du jour when it comes to digital privacy. In layman's terms it means that when you send a message from your computer, it is encrypted from the moment you sent it until the moment it is received ...Apple says it uses end-to-end encryption ... The American Civil Liberties Union's principal technologist ChristopherSoghoian seized this opportunity....
A rare interview with Snapchat tech executives about a transparency report, a bug bounty program, a third-party app ban…and apologies. The last 12 months have been pivotal for Snapchat, the four-year-old messaging service known for making its posts disappear ... A spokesperson says it succinctly ... “This is the responsible way to deploy a messaging service in 2015,” says ChristopherSoghoian, principal technologist of the ACLU ... Twitter ... ....