Kunde inte låta bli. Var tvungen att kolla om någonting intressant avhandlades på Jaiku inatt. Det gjorde det. Där diskuterades vad terrorister (och media som vill säkra sitt källskydd) kan göra för att undvika att deras e-post och telefonsamtal avlyssnas av FRA (om nu lagen skulle gå igenom).
Det visar sig att det finns en hel del som går att göra. Intressantast är nästan kommentaren om varför riksdagen tror att just terrorister är så dumma att de skulle använda sig av okodad kommunikation när de planerar terrordåd.
http://jonatan.jaiku.com/presence/37696354
Man kan ju obstruera också…
Jag kunde inte låta bli att fundera över hur man bäst kan ställa till det för FRA (som ju redan avlyssnar och scannar en massa kommunikation). Det bästa jag kan komma på är att jag sätter upp en mail action i min GMail som skickar allting som ser ut som spam vidare till en oanvänd mailbox som står på en server i Sverige och som genast skickar tillbaka den till Gmail där jag genast slänger alla inkommande mail som skickas från just den mailboxen. Om jag lägger till några hyggligt slumpmässigt valda men misstänkta ord i slutet av varje mail så skulle ju detta innebära att bara min mailkommunikation skulle belasta FRA-servrarna med uppåt 10000 mail om dagen.
Så här skulle kedjan gå.
- Någon av mina svenska e-postadresser får ett spam-mail.
- Detta skickas (liksom all annan e-post) vidare till GMail.
- GMail försöker stuva undan spam-mailet i Spam-arkivet.
- En mail action hoppar in, och skickar vidare till en adress som t.ex. mail snabel-a nerpsammad.se efter att ha lagt till en sidfot med några kluriga ord om bröllop, kärkraftverk, fest, bilbomb och annat smarrigt i sidfoten.
- Servern som läser av all mail för domänen nerspammad.se lägger också till några väl valda stoppord i sidfoten och skickar omgående tillbaka mailet till GMail som
- kastar bort mailet utan att titta på det.
Om jag räknar rätt borde de flesta spam-mail passera sveriges gränser fyra gånger på detta sätt och dessutom bli skummare och skummare för varje gång. Möjligen kunde man lägga in ytterligare några mailkonton i loopen och även blanda in Hotmail och Yahoo mail för att riktigt röra till det.
Någon som har fler goda idéer för hur vi ska möta upp ifall riksdagen röstar fel på onsdag?

Inlägg (RSS)
Att skicka runt en massa mail mellan oskyldiga mailservrar är kanske lite elakt. Om nu försvaret så hemskt gärna vill läsa all epost är det väl enklare att helt enkelt forwarda alla mail som kan tänkas innehålla känslig information (aka spam) till tex registrator@defence.ministry.se eller annan lämplig adress.
How to organise a major terrorist scare
By Gavin Gatenby, Possum News Network
15 August 2006
How easy is it to organise a major terrorist scare like the one that’s
currently gridlocking the world’s airports? Dead easy. If you follow a
few simple points you can panic the populace and stampede the media with
virtually no risk of getting caught. All it takes is a little
confidence. Here’s a simple “how-to” for aspiring top-level spooks:
1. The politicians don’t want to know
Have confidence that the government really doesn’t want to know what it
is you’re getting up to, as long as the effect benefits them. By their
very nature, secret police intelligence and espionage organizations
operate in secret and often do, “in the national interest”, illegal
things or stuff which ordinary folk would regard as grossly unethical –
things that would embarrass the government if they were to be exposed.
If anything goes wrong the politicians want to be able to “plausibly
deny” they were involved. This relationship hands enormous,
uncontrolled, power to your small, ultra-secretive, self-governing elite
clustered at the top of the nation’s security “service”. Your colleagues
are invariably drawn from the upper reaches of the political and
economic elite and of course you know better than anybody what’s in “the
national interest” and you have a God-given right to rule. Breaking
ranks and talking isn’t in your colleagues’ class nature.
2. Keep things on a need-to-know basis
Keep your security organization compartmentalised and discourage
specialist sections from talking to each other. You can plausibly plead
security reasons for this. Make sure all information gets passed up the
line to your small group at the top who compile and “assess” the overall
threat and decide when to act. Thus you control the “narrative” and the
timing of the scam. The foot soldiers may shake their heads and wonder
at some of the things you come up with, but they’ll be in no position to
contradict you. And if they do, it’s a very serious offence. It’ll ruin
their careers and could land them a very long stretch in gaol.
3. At the right time, get the president or prime minister involved
When you’ve decided on the optimum time for your security scare and
sorted out who your “plotters” will be, it’s important to involve the
head of the government. He’ll want to broadcast to the nation, taking
credit for keeping the people safe from the terrible plot. He’ll
automatically be followed by the leaders of the mainstream opposition
parties, all eager to prove their credibility, responsibility and
patriotism. As soon as you’ve made the official line clear, the media
and the state apparatus will fall into line.
4. “Prove that we lie”
Always remember: it’s breathtakingly easy to claim you’ve “thwarted”
something horrible and almost impossible for sceptics to prove that you
haven’t. This applies especially if you “thwart” the plot in its early
stages. Invariably you’re acting against individuals from a group that’s
already been demonised and will be scared to speak up or fight back. The
majority will be inclined to give you the benefit of the doubt.
Questioning the government in a time of “national emergency” isn’t an
easy gig.
5. Don’t worry, they’ll all play their part
Complex conspiracies involving lots of people are entirely unnecessary.
All that’s needed is for your close knit, unaccountable group to order
those lower down the chain to act on “information received”. They don’t
even have to know what the information was. They just have to know the
addresses to raid and who to arrest. When they do, they’re sure to find
some political or religious literature, or something on the hard drives,
or some household chemicals that will, under the circumstances you’ve
created, look suspicious. If you’re using agents provocateur, they’ll be
able to plant “evidence” and report suspicious conversations to “sex-up”
the case. Of course, details will never be available officially or in a
verifiable form, but fragments and hints of purported “evidence” can be
leaked to selected journalists (see below).
6. Feed the chickens
Keep information in official news releases to an absolute minimum.
There’s a plausible excuse for this: more information will harm ongoing
investigations and might prejudice the case when it gets to court. In
place of any hard attributable facts, provide a steady stream of small
leaks “under condition of anonymity” to selected journalists from
politically reliable mainstream news organizations. These people are
carefully selected for political conservatism and journalistic
“responsibility”. Even if they weren’t, they need a story and they’re
totally reliant on you for one. It doesn’t matter if the leaked details
are outrageously illogical. Even if they’re suspicious of the story,
your contacts will run it rather than lose a scoop. In this way you’ll
establish an unofficial official narrative that most members of the
public will be inclined to accept as something like the truth. They’ve
already been conditioned by the media attack-dogs to thoroughly distrust
the group from which your victims come so they’ll figure that if the
charges are a fit-up the victims are probably guilty of something and it
would be prudent to put them away.
7. Politicians who aren’t 100 per cent with you are friends of terrorists
No politician enjoys being attacked as “irresponsible” or accused of
being unpatriotic or soft on terrorists. Very few will dare question the
allegations in case they’re proved wrong. Most are venal politics
junkies making a very good living doing something they enjoy. It’s safer
for them to join the chorus condemning terrorism and congratulating you
on your vigilance. With any luck, some politicians will show their
credentials by loudly criticising you for not acting sooner and more
ruthlessly. Those few who are troubled will probably just say nothing.
8. Don’t worry about proving links to real terror groups
Once upon a time, not so long ago, it was felt necessary to show that
your local “terrorist cell” was recruited by, and in communication with,
al-Qaeda, or some group with actual form some time in the
not-too-distant past. This requirement brought its own problems, since
evidence of the links often failed to convince, or, worse still,
unearthed shady figures with a track record of collaboration with the
CIA or MI6 or Mossad.
It’s still a good idea to hint at such links but it isn’t de rigueur
because the problem disappeared with the happy invention of the
“spontaneously-forming, self-activating” (SFSA) terror cell theory in
the aftermath of the 7/7 London bombings. According to the SFSA theory,
terrorists don’t have to be recruited or trained. Wherever any three
integrated, happy, and successful young Muslim men get together to
discuss politics or religion or even just to play cricket, they
spontaneously decide to set up a do-it-yourself terror cell. They scour
the internet for recipes for powerful but highly unstable explosives
made from sports drinks, peroxide, hair gel, acetone and baby formula.
Without outside direction they select targets and decide the day. All
you need to “prove” conspiracy was that they met, discussed politics and
had in their possession common household chemicals, fizzy drinks and a
mobile phone. It doesn’t matter if their conversations show nothing
explicit. Just say they were talking in code. If you can show at least
one of them has travelled overseas, that’s a plus. If not, assert that
they “investigated” booking airline tickets or showed an interest in
travelling overseas.
The SFSA theory not only relieves you of having to prove connections to
international terror groups, there’s a bonus: it also increases public
fear. Any group of young Muslims kicking a ball around in the park is
actually planning to blow up trains. Or airliners. Anything you do to
these people is likely to be “overlooked”, if not vocally supported by
patriotic simpletons.
9. It doesn’t really matter if a court finds them innocent
Your victims won’t get their day in court for months, maybe years, and
if you’ve organised things well, you’ll be operating under laws that
ensure that the public and your tame media are prevented from reporting
key details or even excluded from court altogether. By the time your
victims get to court, the scare you used them to create will have done
its job. Even if your victims are found innocent, that fact will get
little press attention from a media who are embarrassed by their role in
such an obvious scam, and anyway, the accused terrorists’ acquittal will
be lost in the next big scare.
Good luck, and have fun.