Lauren Weinstein's "Internet Freedoms" Interview
on "Coast to Coast AM" (2/17/2011)
Host: George Noory
(Early *DRAFT* Transcript)
Direct Link to Interview Audio (YouTube - Audio Only / ~30 minutes)
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- - - "Coast to Coast AM" Lauren Weinstein's "Internet Freedoms" Interview Host: George Noory February 17, 2011 (DRAFT Transcript v0.2 - Most recent update 2/23/11 - 08:45 PST) - - - GEORGE NOORY: From the city of angels off the pacific ocean good morning good evening wherever you may be across the nation around the world I'm George Noory and welcome to coast-to-coast a.m. the department of homeland security in an effort to clamp down on websites that host and advertise child pornography inadvertently shut down more than eighty four thousand innocent web sites across the internet the DHS announced the seizure of ten domain names of web sites that were believed to host or advertise child porn but one of those domains was actually a DNS server that managed hosting up to eighty four thousand separate and independent web sites now what does this all mean well in a moment we're going to talk with our expert Lauren Weinstein in a moment on coast-to-coast am and welcome back to coast-to-coast Lauren Weinstein has been involved with the development of the internet for decades Lauren is an expert regarding a wide range of privacy issues Lauren i can't believe this eighty four thousand websites accidentally shut down LAUREN WEINSTEIN: yeah that's probably the start of what's going to be a long, sad saga the way things are going. it wasn't just shut down it's actually better than that the sites actually got diverted to a DHS/ice web page that suggests that they were involved in the distribution of child pornography GEORGE: Ugh! LAUREN: you can imagine how businesses felt about their customers running into a page like that GEORGE: Ugh! LAUREN: that came to visit and this has been rectified now but there was really no apology which seems appropriate because there was no due process involved in the first place so why would you expect an apology, right? GEORGE: the dangerous part of all this Lauren is the ability to do this LAUREN: Yah. GEORGE: And shut these down LAUREN: This is a fundamental problem in the domain name system, it's a central point of control and failure and we're seeing more and more instances now where the US government by virtue of the fact that a lot of this infrastructure is based here and the companies that control the top level domains are based here they're just turning things off as you can imagine the rest of the world isn't really very pleased about that and there's those of us who feel that the domain name system actually needs to be completely replaced but obviously that's a very long-term problem the real irony here is that at the same time this is going on and the senate just within the last couple of days has been having hearings on what's called the combating online infringement and counterfeits act COICA which would greatly extend the government's power to shut down websites it started out as something to combat counterfeit pharmaceuticals counterfeit drugs but then it started having mission creep and now it's turned into an intellectual property protection system so that if a music music label or a movie studio was concerned it would give them a way to turn off sites very quickly and at the same time the FBI was testifying today that they want the ability to have access to the encryption keys for virtually all encrypted communications so it's all happening at the same time, and along with this we have had for example secretary of state Clinton just again within the last few days giving a speech about internet freedoms. how the rest of the world needs to have internet freedoms complaining about how Egypt turned off their Internet we all know that story very recently with all the events in Egypt the government here wants basically the same ability to turn off the us internet GEORGE: isn't it strange they're talking out of both ends of their mouths LAUREN: a little bit of hypocrisy there perhaps GEORGE: Lauren, how close is this possibility of truly having the kill switch? LAUREN: to disrupt the internet here would be much more complicated than doing it in Egypt just because you have more providers and more routes. more connectivity. but if you think about it, the concentration of isps in this country, is such that most people, the vast majority of people are the customers of just a handful of very large isps Verizon, at&t, Comcast, time warner, so on. if you go to them and say hey national security, turn off you would be able to do a lot of disruption probably with a relatively few phone calls in an hour GEORGE: A lot of us use the internet almost all the time explain to us how this works, kinda take us through, you know I'm beginning to envision is there like a central building someplace in this country where everything goes through and if you clip that, everything shuts down? how does this all work? LAUREN: well the internet by definition is a network of networks that's how it's defined and by and large these networks are talking to each other independently, but the thing is you have to have those junctions where they interconnect and those are places of vulnerability those places were one network connects to another network GEORGE: now how many places are there? LAUREN: there's quite a few of them. and they operate with something called the border gateway protocol which is used to route messages, in fact that's how Egypt turned off their internet. they basically deleted the routing table entries GEORGE: But there is not a single building where everything goes through? LAUREN: not that I know of and given the technology of the internet i don't believe that exists but, effectively the DNS, the domain name system we were talking about just a minute ago is so concentrated that if you just went to basically VeriSign, VeriSign controls the registry for dot com that's a big one they're going to control many many more there's probably going to be a vast explosion of top-level domains now primarily to enrich the the domain owners GEORGE: It's going to also go now to .CO, right? LAUREN: There already is a .CO. Within the next within the next couple months ICANN, which is in charge of top-level domains at least the generic ones are distributed, is set to approve a whole new system with potentially hundreds maybe thousands of these I'm very much opposed to this. I think it's just a money making for what i call the domain industrial complex now. GEORGE: Right. LAUREN: And I think it's primarily going cause confusion for consumers. A lot of people don't want it to happen you're going to have litigation up the kazoo either from people who say this domain makes it easier to do censorship or I didn't get control of this domain, I wanted all the money from that domain. It's going to be ... The lawyers are going to do well. GEORGE: Now a company like goddaddy.com LAUREN: Yah. GEORGE: How do they interact with all of this? What do they do? LAUREN: Go Daddy is a registrar GEORGE: So you go on there with a name they check it they put it up there on their site right away whether it's available or not if it's available you pay for right LAUREN: Yeah and they pay a portion of what you pay at least in theory to the registry that holds the data that's involved in that name GEORGE: And they're just a go-between? LAUREN: They're the point of contact for the consumer. They're the ones you would pay the money to. You don't normally pay the money directly to the registry GEORGE: All right. Lauren That's a simplification but it's close enough for jazz. So you have a lot of people in the food chain of this who want to make money on this and every time there's a new top-level domain that's issued what you have is everybody that wants to protect their name feeling obligated to register their domain name in all of these new ones because does Disney want there to be a disney.gay? I don't know. But there's a lot of talk now that there's going to be a dot-gay domain a dot-ex-ex-ex domain. there's a lot of controversy about dot-ex-ex-ex from all sides as you can imagine GEORGE: Huh. LAUREN: All these different ones and everyone who has a trademark sort of feels like they're being held to the wall by an Al Capone operative it's like an old protection racket right? Hey, if you don't pay us someone is going to take your name. GEORGE: That's right. You need some protection here! LAUREN: Yeah. Same thing. It's really a perfect storm that's occurring now and we're seeing these symptoms we're seeing like ICE taking the 84,000 down and then saying oops - sorry about that! But really seriously you know that I'm not an alarmist GEORGE: No I know. LAUREN: I try to be level-headed about these things I try to take it from a technical standpoint but I have never been so concerned then about this COICA "Coica" legislation. Because what it's trying to do is it's trying to criminalize not only content on the Internet and remember you're talking about GEORGE: And who decides what is criminal and what isn't? LAUREN: Well the thing about this legislation is is that it basically eliminates most due process basically it's like just getting a quick court order very simple it's not like there's a trial or anything first to determine I mean it's obvious that's how they managed to take down 84,000 just with a snap of a finger. GEORGE: Who would make this decision? LAUREN: You would have prosecutors going to a judge you would have those kinds of entities going to a judge and saying we declare the FBI is very much involved now in and the department of justice is being very involved in intellectual property protection so we've sort of conflated issues of security and safety with protecting movies and music GEORGE: Hold on for a second Lauren I want to talk more with you about this and we'll open up the phone lines as well Lauren Weinstein our special guest as we talk about shutting down the Internet on coast-to-coast a.m. GEORGE: so you're concerned though Lauren, you really are. you're not one who is an alarmist as you said but you're concerned about this LAUREN: yeah, and what's particularly worrisome is that this new set, this whole array of attacks on internet freedoms are bipartisan. these things are coming out of committee in some cases unanimously all the democrats all the republicans It's a very very nightmarish kind of scenario. for those of us who have built up the Internet over many many years to see this happening and I'll give you another example of what's occurring here that could change the Internet in ways that most people couldn't even imagine part of the legislation that's being pushed now in the last few days even is to essentially criminalize not only certain kinds of material on the internet but linking to that material there's a big push now to say that if google for example has a link to something that has been declared to be illicit rightly or wrongly, that google could be held responsible for that GEORGE: Wow. LAUREN: and that they would have to censor their own links to prevent people from finding the material that has been declared to be illicit or otherwise undesirable now imagine what this means in an international context we're talking about u.s. laws here but the internet is international so that kind of situation is terrible. what this basically does this has to do with the digital millennium copyright act the DMCA it established what's called the safe harbor which said that if materials put on the net and a website was notified that the material was infringing in some way for example on valid copyright the site had to remove it but what's happened now is a lot of the intellectual property holders and unfortunately much of this is Hollywood and the music industry which has really gotten control over the process they're saying that's not good enough they want to be able to preemptively stop these things from being posted now imagine what that would mean for, not just google search listings, but imagine what that would mean for something like YouTube GEORGE: Oh, it would wipe them out! LAUREN: Completely decimate it. And this is not theoretical. This is not hypothetical. This is, these are concepts now that are being pushed in a bipartisan manner by Congress right now, into law, and there's virtually no one in congress to stand up and say, hey, maybe internet freedoms are more important. GEORGE: Why not? Why not? LAUREN: I think because there's not viewed as being a lot of political cost to doing this. and remember you go to where the lobbying dollars are coming from right? GEORGE: Yeah. LAUREN: but the hypocrisy of this going on at the same time that we're being critical of China and Egypt and making speeches about Internet freedoms it's like something out of a Kafka novel. it's just a complete mind-bender but this is all real. it's all happening and for technologists like me it's a nightmare coming true. GEORGE: Let's go to the phones. Let's go to Skype auburn, Alabama Julio's with us hi Julio CALLER: Hey how are you guy's doing this evening? GEORGE: Good. LAUREN: Hi. CALLER: Ah, thanks. I just got off a seventeen hour bus ride from mccoll, Illinois, so this is the first thing I'm doing listening to you guys i got a question I'm a broadcasting major and I've been doing a lot of studying on the FCC and i know that they have no legal authority to control the internet cable or satellite for that matter so what can we the people do to you know wake up others about the FCC and their power by decree basically this breaking all the rules here how can we educate people about what the FCC can and can't do LAUREN: you're barking up the wrong tree. to be honest with you I mean it can be argued from a legal standpoint the statutory authority of the FCC but the FCC is small potatoes in all of this. You're kinda referring to the net neutrality battle, GEORGE: Um hmm. LAUREN: I'm in favor of of net neutrality because it has nothing to do with censorship it has to do with making sure that ISPs treat everybody fairly but if you want to talk censorship if you want to talk nightmares look at this other legislation look at what congress is doing. don't worry about the FCC. that just vanishes into the distance in terms of importance when you look at congress looking to fundamentally change internet freedoms in a way that would give all the power to very powerful moneyed interests and take them away from all the consumers that is where people should be focusing their attention right now. GEORGE: all right, thanks Lauren. Let's go to bill in Toronto Canada hey bill welcome to the program LAUREN: Hi Bill. CALLER: Oh good morning gentleman. Thank you for taking my call. I have a few few questions two of them are really quick and the third one is more of a comment on what I am noticing here in Canada with censorship So my first question is, when your DNS provider blocks a site so say you do abc.com and nothing comes up where it says it says it's forbidden or something because they've put in a block can you still get to that site with using the ip address if you knew it LAUREN: Yeah. all else being equal the answer is yes. and in fact and that's why some of us are looking at alternatives not just to get around that but whole different ways of structuring the way you reach sites the DNS can be bypassed. CALLER: OK so here's my second question which is really quick and then I have the comment I want to make do you know of a program that's already available and if it isn't maybe somebody could write one or maybe one of the other listeners could call in and let us all know is there a program that could take all of your URLs lnk files that you have stored of all of your websites and convert like read into it go on the internet and go to each site get the real ip address and add it to the name at the end of the link. if not it would be a great program to write. i don't know how to program but LAUREN: such things exist but they're of limited utility generally generally because ip addresses are not necessarily static in that way. they can change depending on where you are, they can change day to day as servers come online and offline so it's actually much more complicated than that but the principle is sound at least theoretically CALLER: OK. so my one quick comment is that Australia has already implemented internet censorship a couple years ago and what I'm noticing here in Canada for example i use a proxy server so that I can mask my ip and avoid a lot of problems that can happen when people get your ip address so I go to a cafe that provides free wifi and they use a company's services called opendns which you've probably heard of now what they do is they have a category called proxies servers and anonymity identification and any site that they have on their list which is almost all of them they block so that means you can't have internet privacy when you are in one of these cafes because they've blocked all access to those things can you make a comment on that? LAUREN: anytime there's public access, public access has become a major concern to those who want to restrict internet access and one of the ways that will probably be approached in the future is another legislative thrust that's occurring right now here in the us which is a trusted identities system that is being promoted this is as a way to enhance online purchases of such by tying her internet identities to your government issued identities like your social security number here in the us for example. But there are those of us that feel very strongly that that kind of system would rapidly suffer mission creep GEORGE: Oh yeah. That's dangerous. LAUREN: and end up being pretty much a requirement to use a vast array of sites so if you're forced to identify yourself to access the internet ultimately it's not going to matter where you're doing it from they're going to know who you are anyway. GEORGE: let's go to Harrisburg Pennsylvania first-time caller Scott you're on. CALLER: Mr. Noory. GEORGE: hello CALLER: How are you doing? GEORGE: Good Scott, thanks. CALLER: yeah, my question is a few days before they reinstated the patriot act or extended it at my library the internet service went down for the whole county there's about a dozen libraries and i was wondering if they're possibly doing collecting data on certain you know on certain things that you checkout LAUREN: Naw. They're more likely running Microsoft software. And it does things like that all the time on its own. seriously those kinds of failures are almost always just technical failures of the systems anything at higher levels is not going to be so obvious GEORGE: Nothing sinister there, huh? LAUREN: Yeah, very unlikely. GEORGE: All right, let's go to Idaho Falls. Bill, your turn on coast to coast. go ahead bill. CALLER: good evening gentlemen LAUREN: Hi there. CALLER: I'm sorry I didn't get on the beginning of this i didn't catch the name of your guest GEORGE: Lauren Weinstein CALLER: oh well glad to make your acquaintance, sir i wanted to ask you. i was involved pretty early on in the internet and also representing my site and we got a class B address by calling somebody at USC, it was that long ago. LAUREN: wow. CALLER: but anyway i wanted to ask why, the vision I had for DNS evolving was that it would be a deeper structure for instance for airlines you would have something like delta dot air dot com and united dot air dot com or something similar LAUREN: Um hmm. CALLER: and so you would have an authority for air and authority for and it would be spread it would be deeper cause the search times would be more optimum and I was wondering why it didn't evolve that way and the second question that you might be interested in answering a long time ago there was a standard called international standards organization open systems interconnect ISO/OSI LAUREN: Um hmm. CALLER: and i experimented with that for awhile at that behest of my employer and it was a disaster but why didn't ISO/OSI, that was the official line for a long time and x.400 mail was the official line for a long time in government departments why was ISO/OSI largely a failure? except for the directory standard? LAUREN: yeah okay i can i can answer both of those those pretty quickly in terms of DNS addresses that it was envisioned at one point that it would be more of a hierarchical structure basically the commercial forces of domain names altered that that's my opinion dot com addresses became so valuable in and of themselves and now domain addresses generally that people wanted to have that top-level domain address and it made the addresses that were deeper in less valuable because they were seen as second-class or third-class addresses i think that's the short answer to that. the OSI model is actually kind of interesting x.400 and all of that and i basically say that that died the death of committee at one time the federal government here was actually mandating i mean that the existing system the tcp/ip system that we use now was going to be replaced by OSI type systems at least by the federal government it just never happened. the reason was that they were arguing continuously about the standards for OSI and tcp/ip just worked and the fact that it worked allowed more and more people to use it and as the arpanet became the internet and as the internet commercialized tcp/ip became so embedded in the infrastructure that it was just success through technology whereas OSI was failure through committee GEORGE: You know Lauren we are so dependent on the internet now and wireless communications everybody out there is twittering, facebook, social networking what happens when it goes down? LAUREN: well I think we saw an example of that in Egypt that's something that has long been theorized and we saw the practical effect of an entire country being cut off the internet and apparently internet resources disrupted within the country also to a very large extent and it's very dramatic the financial losses to Egypt from that are enormous I've seen all kinds of different numbers but we're talking many tens of millions of dollars at least and probably much more ultimately. and people had to resort, they were resorting to other mechanisms. they were using cell-phones and such until the cell-phone networks were cut off also so we're kind of the victim of our own success to an extent here because we've created these tremendous marvelous communication infrastructures that do have ways of being disrupted GEORGE: It will happen one day. Whether it's done by government or done technically and there's some kind of mishap. It will happen. LAUREN: I've had people say to me that the government would never do that here because it would be so disruptive economically. I actually think that that's a false assumption. I think that if the government feels that it's threatened for whatever reason i think attempting to control communications will come first and economic considerations will come second. i might be wrong about that, I actually hope I'm wrong about that, but human nature being what it is i think that's a probable outcome if we ever end up in that place. GEORGE: No, I think you're absolutely right. let's go to Diane in spencer Wisconsin. east of the rockies. had some problems in Wisconsin today hi Diane go ahead. CALLER: hi. I want to thank for your show and for all the people that you have on GEORGE: you are welcome CALLER: excellent show I so love listening to you OK, my question is now since you're talking about the government and how they can come in and turn the computer off or they can look into your information i have nothing that's illegal as far as any of the stuff that you can get in trouble for but I'm very much into police information because I have taken the class and I really enjoy that kind of stuff as far as GEORGE: Crime. So you like to look at that stuff right? CALLER: Yeah. Yeah. And I did work with a missing persons group at one time and always interested in what's going on as far as that and also ufo information I'm very much into that I happen to have, I like to collect the information if you're going along and you wanna remember a certain website you turn around a year or to later and you forget about it GEORGE: Sure. so you're concerned that they may say, all right Diane, what are you doing with all these things? CALLER: Right. can you get in trouble? LAUREN: Well, the short answer is that would depend on what sort of information you have CALLER: Oh no no no. LAUREN: if everything you have is public information public domain information then you're not likely to get into trouble in the current environment GEORGE: I mean have you broken a law Lauren if you collect information on serial killers because you're fascinated with their minds? CALLER: right. LAUREN: No. No. But, the way things are these days, if you ever found yourself in trouble you might find some smart prosecutor after doing forensic analysis of your computer saying look at this person -- look at this stuff. GEORGE: Exactly. LAUREN: an obvious mental issue here! this happens all the time now when there are crimes they go in forensically and if they see a history of looking at certain sorts of information that doesn't necessarily mean that that person is a criminal but that kind of information may be presented to a court may affect prosecutions and can have a negative effect GEORGE: Good point. let's take one more call Steve in Niagara falls Canada let's squeeze you in here Steven go ahead CALLER: oh great. long time listener first time caller GEORGE: thank you CALLER: great to be on the show LAUREN: hi CALLER: I just want to say that I think the internet as we know it today won't even look like it looks today in ten years time i think it's changing rapidly and you had mentioned that the government of Egypt had managed to shut down the internet through erasing the routing tables LAUREN: Basically, yeah. CALLER: I was just kind of curious how that would be possible considering if they're using border gateway protocol most of the routing tables are dynamically learned and they're just going to repopulate again. LAUREN: Oh you can kill them. You can definitely kill them you can pull them out you can make sure that they don't come back for Egypt it was very very straightforward it would be tougher for the us just because of scale. I suspect if I was going to do it I would do it a different way here, and if I can figure out a way to do it there's other people who could not only figure out a way to do it but there's probably plans somewhere to try to take control in some way if a national security matter was declared. and again there's legislation pending that's put under that cybersecurity banner that is specifically designed to give federal authority presidential control to declare that under certain conditions certain parts of the internet or possibly the entire internet this is something that's argued, could be shut down in some way whether it's done through border gateway protocol whether it's done by calling the isps and saying pull your plugs, one way or another if the government wants to do it given the concentration of resources we have the way that so few isps are the isps for so many people it wouldn't be at all impossible to cause major disruptions on the internet very quickly if the government chose to do so GEORGE: Lauren you are a wealth of information my friend you're like a walking internet all by yourself. thank you. we'll be in touch Lauren Weinstein our special guest this hour. - - -Lauren's Blog Entry Regarding This Interview (Including Link to Interview Audio)
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