Tor Lashes Out at the Upcoming Changes to Rule 41

Tor has joined the fight to stop the governments hacking expansion. They are urging people to speak up, and fight the changes to Rule 41 which will take effect December 1st if no one does anything about it. So far, it seems that it’s just slithering its way to the finish line. Congress hasn’t even tried to stop it from happening.

The changes will enable the Department of Justice to hack computers and spy on people through one single warrant, no matter its jurisdiction. What this means is that if a judge issues a warrant in Washington, the government can conduct its search nationwide, on any and all computers it feels the need too.

The changes specifically state that computers that use technology to conceal its data, such as encryption, of tools like Tor, would fall into the range of the changes. This means all VPN users, Tor users, and any and all encryption and privacy software users will, almost 100% guaranteed will be spied on.

Thursday, Senator Ron Wyden said:

“If the Senate does nothing, if the Senate fails to act, what’s ahead for Americans is a massive expansion of government hacking and surveillance power.”

Wyden’s proposed bill is to prevent the proposed amendments to Rule 41 of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure from taking effect. He introduced the Stop Mass Hacking Act in May.

People who use Tor include Journalists, human rights workers, activists and people in oppressive countries. All of these and more will be in the firing line, if the new amendments are simply allowed to pass.

“The FBI will be permitted to hack into a person’s computer or phone remotely and to search through and remove their data. The FBI will be able to introduce malware into computers. It will create vulnerabilities that will leave users exposed,” The Tor Project said.

The case of the school teacher who possessed child porn downloaded from dark net is the case most are basing this off of. The FBI seized PlayPen in February last year and uploaded malware to its servers, so everyone who accessed the site would be tracked. This went on for two weeks. Yes, the FBI actually kept a child pornography website up for two additional weeks after seizing it’s servers. Various topics have popped up since then, accusing the FBI of actually fine tuning it so videos and pictures would download faster, thus luring in more pedophiles.

The FBI’s NIT, has been kept under closely guarded lock and key. Evidence has been gathered by the malware will not be allowed during the court case because the FBI refused to share any of the details regarding the NIT. Tor has been quite outspoken about the FBI giving up some information so they can patch the vulnerability that was exploited by the FBI’s deployment of said NIT.

Rule 41 will allow savvy law enforcement officials to seek those judges who don’t yet understand the tech. Some know that a back door for one good guy is eventually a back door for multiple bad guys. Many others do not. So some US officials can take advantage of this ignorance in order to expand their power. And since the FBI works for the Department of Justice, and the Department of Justice works for the White House, Rule 41 gives new surveillance power to Administrative branch of US government. New power over millions of people, that Congress never discussed or approved. People listen to the Tor community on issues of anonymity technology. But the threat to anonymity can be just as destructive when it comes because a small rules change, a bureaucratic sleight of hand- as when it comes through a attack on our software by a state intelligence agency. As Tor users, our threat model includes both, so our response as a community must also include both,” Tor developers said in a recent blog.

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