diff --git a/article.txt b/article.txt index 3a052fed8..3412b7420 100644 --- a/article.txt +++ b/article.txt @@ -1 +1,326 @@ -Building..c8c41c4a18675a74e01c8a20e8a0f662 \ No newline at end of file +Audience: General, people who stumble upon gnu.org + 1924+/-395 words english + 1028+/-395 words instead? + 755 words rahisibhasha + stab at french +Version: 2019-05-29 + + +######################################### + +大云墙 (Dà Yún qiáng) +大きな雲壁 (Ookina Kumo kabe) +The Great Cloudwall + +by Jeff Cliff + +essistensa una reason you go to + +######################################### + + + +There is a reason that none of your favourite work has appeared on Tor since early 2016[15]. +That reason has lead to the discovery of a threat to the operation of the World Wide Web. + +Prerequisites: +- The JavaScript Trap[47] +- Understanding that Google is not to be trusted[45][46] +- Nick Szabo: "Trusted Third Parties are Security Holes"[44][48] + +Cloudflare is a network service for turing tests its users use against visitors, which means that it frustrates attempts +by users of its users to develop software to interact with their websites[3]. +This might seem strange at first - why would you need a program to access a web resource? +But there's many things that work on the web like this, including RSS, streaming, chat, podcasts, and anti-virus definitions[57][58] which +are completely broken by a CAPTCHA appearing mid stream[11]. +"We humans don't make HTTP requests, our machines to do it for us." +This makes clear what is really being tested here - whether or not you have the right software stack in between you and +Cloudflare. + +This is not hypothetical: Cloudflare is currently attempting to dictate which browsers users of their "protected" +websites may use[60]. + +{{expand}} + +Your right to use Free Software in this stack is at risk and could disappear at any moment. + +It also is extracting free labor from website users[35], in effect tricking humans into acting like robots in order to +pass a test designed to see whether or not they are a robot. Worse, this labor is being used to train[62] Google's artificial intelligence, a very +poor candidate for "friendly AI"[36]. Given unfriendly AI is an existential[43] risk[42] to mankind, avoiding this +should be among the highest of priorities. + +This software stack includes human language: the CAPTCHAs are in English, leaving non-English speakers around the world +at a disadvantage[13]. Attempts to fix this are bound by the fact that they also leak language information to +Cloudflare[21]. + +Furthermore, they use Google's reCaptcha for their turing test/"proof you are a human" challenge and Google is known as a part of NSA's PRISM surveillance project so they expose their website visitor's data to PRISM data collection. + +On its own, this is terrible bad but it's also worth pointing out how the reCAPTCHAs work. It isn't by whether or not you +click on the correct icon (though that is a factor too) but also collect: + +> mouse movement, its slightness and straightness +> page scrolls +> time intervals between browser events +> keystrokes +> click location history tied to user fingerprint +> device information +> All these criteria are stored in the browser’s cookie and are processed by Google’s servers +> It should be emphasized that there is DARPA technology to identify people by mouse movements and typing ​ +[23] + +This collection of data is likely illegal in regions where privacy is taken seriously (like the EU)[24]. + +It is frustrating even when it works because you have to fill out 20 captchas on the off-chance that you succeed one time in +twenty. So this is 95% censorship and 5% wasting users' time[5]. + +More important, though, is that it starts to form a ratchet for web browser technology; the captchas are upgraded all the +time and if you use an older browser, you risk being left behind even when it works. + + +*How Cloudflare Threatens You* + +"When you fetch a page from a website that is served from Cloudflare, JavaScript has been injected on-the-fly into that +page by Cloudflare. And they also plant a cookie that brands your browser with a globally-unique ID. This happens even if +the website is using SSL and shows a cute little padlock in your browser" [10] + +- Cloudflare tracks you +Even if your traffic is protected from onlookers, Cloudflare itself can see your traffic[6] because they are a MITM[14][31]. +In addition, if Cloudflare[53] has intercepted your traffic(MITM), so has the NSA[33]. +"If a site uses Cloudflare, then the browser lock icon is a false promise."[14] +"The short version, a rhetorical question: Would you trust a key escrow regime, in which an “authorized” entity was +entrusted with the potential to decrypt all communications at will? If not, why would you trust a de facto mass decryption +chokepoint at which many communications are actually decrypted?"[34] +In other words, + +- They are in a position to track, tap, and link Internet activity across a wide range of sites. [14] + +- Cloudflare frustrates accessibility efforts[25][27][36]: +"CAPTCHA remains the most problematic item indicated by respondents" +Cloudflare is one of the largest, if not the largest source of unconsensual CAPTCHAS, making them quite possibly the +biggest impediment in accessibility efforts worldwide. + +- Cloudflare makes using Tor frustrating by making efforts to become anonymous more difficult and making it more likely +that people will use non-Tor connections for some or all of their web browsing. The problem is getting worse with time. +[13] + +- It's not just Tor[19] but Tor users are the biggest group of people who've noticed it and are organizing against it so +far. + +- In particular, the model of Project Honeypot depends on one IPv4 address, meaning one person. As IPv4 addresses become +scarce, more and more ISPs (and whole countries[22]) are forced to use higher and higher levels of NAT. The result is that +the kinds of treatment of Tor users by Cloudflare starts to be not just for Tor, but for all web users. "Tor is just being +slightly ahead of what the IPv4 Internet is going to look like pretty soon." +The next time a large group wakes up, millions of websites might be down (including critical ones) across a whole +continent. This has actually happened already. [49] + +"It was made clear in the Snowden leaks that GCHQ, the NSA, etc. would like people to stop using Tor so I am sure they are +very happy to see CF make general web browsing difficult and frustrating for ordinary users." [12] + +- Worse, Cloudflare makes using Tor *dangerous* because enabling JavaScript and images to deal with their system makes it +likely that some people will enable JavaScript and images on other websites, which, even if Cloudflare wasn't threatening +them, would. [9] + +- Cloudflare is capable of tracking users of its websites, and initial looks into its JavaScript/CAPTCHA seems to bear out +that they are doing so. + +- Cloudflare can target individual users with JavaScript malware; since you typically wind up enabling their JavaScript +to use websites, you fall into their trap. Because they track users, are giving, individualised code, and work directly +with the US government/DHS, there's no reason why they can't tailor attacks to specific users. + +- Even if they aren't doing it yet, they are at any point one US government administration, one vulture capital funding +purchase[26], or one internally rogue element away from executing JavaScript code on hundreds of millions of people's +computers a "highly attractive" target[7] with no oversight. The code CAPTCHA itself protects attempts to detect such +things from happening. + +- The way that Cloudflare is constructed means that even by accident, billions of people can be analyzed by their +government[51] and have their access limited or completely cut off at the government's whim. + +*Background : How Cloudflare threatens the web* + +- Cloudflare is a MITM for the whole web + +- As of 3 years ago 10% of the top 25,000 websites used Cloudflare[2] +- A billion people in china are restricted by the Great Firewall[8]. Anyone who goes so far as to circumvent that must then +deal with the "Great Cloudwall" for accessing the open internet. + +- This is not just an individual problem, but fundamentally threatens the ecosystem of the web. +Cloudflare is breaking the open internet one site at a time. The web is massively resilient - we can do without Stack +Overflow, GNU.org or even Google but when a significant enough portion of websites use a single provider, there starts to +be a systematic risk that if that single provider goes down, all of the websites behind it will be inaccessible. Worse, you +won't be allowed to access it unless you have the right kind of US government approved credential, contingent, perhaps, on +running software only they approve of. + +It is becoming a single point of failure for the internet. [39] + +Right now, there are alternative sources for, for example, the US constitution[17]. It is not unthinkable that Cloudflare +is getting big enough to threaten even that. + +{FIX ME - make section clearer} +"A.1 sometimes there are necessary websites for some degree of necessary. Government websites, public service, etc. How +long until those are behind the "Great Cloudwall"? +B: Not long. Our service is competitive and convenient. If public service websites choose to use our service for awesome +DDoS protection, it's their choice."[36] + +- Cloudflare has already started down the slippery slope[52] of censoring websites. If they didn't have a stranglehold on +people accessing the internet, it would not be a problem. They are big enough that censorship from Cloudflare is starting +to be a systematic exclusion from the political process. + +"Cloudflare is perfect: it can implement censorship on the fly without anyone getting wise to it!"[40] + +- DNS[39]: given that they have become so systematically powerful, the next step to cementing their power is to attack +DNS. Their 1.1.1.1 DNS server, like Google's 8.8.8.8, is marketed to people so that Cloudflare will still be able to see +you're going to them even if you don't interact with websites "protected" by them. It gives them even more data to track you +with. + +*Background : Where does Cloudflare come from?* + +Cloudflare comes from a project called "Project Honey Pot"[61], originally intended to track online fraud and abuse. + +"What was Project Honey Pot? +'A service that positions itself as some kind of a grassroot-y anti-spam registry, but in reality seems to be a pro- +corporate law enforcement tool with the specific aim of entrapping and prosecuting spammers/phishing scammers in a way +that’s friendly to the marketing industry.'" + +The US Department of Homeland Security approached the developers in 2007-8[1][36] for access to their data and they have +been working with the US government[54] and law enforcement ever since[1]. + +On HTTP GET requests: + +Cloudflare has a history of shutting down open DNS and open NTP servers. + +"It would be great if they allowed GET requests - for example - such requests should not and generally do not modify server +side content. They do not do this - this breaks the web in so many ways, it is incredible. Using wget with Tor on a website +hosted by CF is... a disaster. Using Tor Browser with it - much the same. These requests should be idempotent according to +spec, I believe." + +{FIX ME - "critical of it"?} +Cloudflare has a history of closing tickets that are critical of it without actually resolving the issue[29][30][32] + +"Cloudflare is based in a country with secret courts, secret police, and secret prisons that are above the law - and this +secret government has characterized Cloudflare's data as extremely valuable"[28] +"The CEO says, "Cloudflare's strength lies in the DATA it collects -- not in its CODE.'"[28] +"The U.S. federal government is a Cloudflare customer."[28] +"Cloudflare has never stated that a government agency did not install wiretapping equipment or software on the same +premises as a Cloudflare server."[28] +"Cloudflare has never indicated that the architecture of its content distribution network is resistant to warrantless +mass surveillance."[28] +"Cloudflare has given the Chinese government unprecedented censorship capability."[28] +"Cloudflare has no intention to shut down as Lavabit did in order to protect the user from unlawful surveillance."[28] +"Some Cloudflare customers are paying over 1 million dollars per year for an undisclosed service."[28] + +*"But Cloudflare is really necessary, the web is a nasty place"* + +- The more of the web is held within Cloudflare, the more pressure will be on websites not behind Cloudflare +- As of 2016, by Cloudflare's own data, Tor was not as bad as normal internet connections. +- People: "But we need Cloudflare to protect us from DDoS.” + Cloudflare: "That’s a nice site you have there. It would be a shame, such a shame, if anything happened to it. Why don’t + you let us decrypt all your TLS sessions[59] so we can protect you?"[14] + +*I heard Cloudflare is working with Tor and all is good now?* + +- Just because you can't see the problem doesn't mean it's not there. + +- This is not true. Their websites still CAPTCHA their users, same as ever, and news agencies across the political spectrum +screwed up stories about how the 'problem is fixed'. [18] + +- It's actually worse, though[17], if we couldn't see it[60] - it was easy to get a lot of riled up Tor users to understand +that Cloudflare was their adversary. It's a lot harder to convince people who are not blocked from their websites, today, +why giving systematic control over the world wide web might be a bad thing tomorrow. + +"Right now, Cloudflare says it monitors nearly 1/5 of all Internet visits. An astounding claim for a company most people +haven’t even heard of"[40] + +- But they are now doing more to track users and threaten the anonymity of Tor users. + +- Cloudflare is one of a couple of large network providers that are capturing the vast majority of digital communications, +effectively creating private networks the size of the modern internet that are competitive with and not subject to the +same kinds of scrutiny and regulation as the internet[58]. + +*What if we shut down Cloudflare and migrate all websites out of them?* + +We're probably going to have the same problem with another company very soon. Just as when suddenly Microsoft no longer had +a monopoly on software, we didn't get rid of the problem of proprietary software, there's a couple of problems that, if we +don't solve them, something like Cloudflare is roughly inevitable as a consequence: + +*Cloudflare DNS* + +"DNS[50] is around, servers are insecure, proper end-to-end crypto isn't the norm hence MITM goes unnoticed, anonymity is an edge case, routing lacks built-in resiliency to disruption, we're always going to have actors building a business model around cobbling together superficial, overapproximating mitigations."[20] + +*Mozilla and Cloudflare* + +"At least for browsing with Firefox, because Mozilla has partnered up with Cloudflare and will resolve the domain names +from the application itself via a DNS server from Cloudflare based in the United States. Cloudflare will then be able to +read everyone's DNS requests." +Sharing DNS requests with Cloudflare represents mozilla having a security hole, straight to the Cloudflare (and probably: +the NSA). + +*What can you do?* + +Learn more about Cloudflare and make sure the people around you know about Cloudflare. Use Tor by default to be more +exposed to the blocks. Go to the anti-Cloudflare collaboration repository[41] and make sure websites you use aren't +"protected", and if they are, contact the people who run the website requesting that they no longer use Cloudflare. Get +involved! + + +References + +[1] crimeflare. Is CloudFlare a honey pot? https://web.archive.org/web/20170721161127/http://www.crimeflare.us/honeypot.html +[2] ioerror. Issues with corporate censorship and mass surveillance. https://trac.torproject.org/projects/tor/ticket/18361#comment:15 +[3] ioerror. Issues with corporate censorship and mass surveillance. https://trac.torproject.org/projects/tor/ticket/18361#comment:21 +[5] ioerror. Issues with corporate censorship and mass surveillance. https://trac.torproject.org/projects/tor/ticket/18361#comment:28 +[6] ioerror. Issues with corporate censorship and mass surveillance. https://trac.torproject.org/projects/tor/ticket/18361#comment:30 +[7] ioerror. Issues with corporate censorship and mass surveillance. https://trac.torproject.org/projects/tor/ticket/18361#comment:32 +[8] ioerror. Issues with corporate censorship and mass surveillance. https://www.bloomberg.com/quicktake/great-firewall-of-china +[9] ioerror. Issues with corporate censorship and mass surveillance. https://trac.torproject.org/projects/tor/ticket/18361#comment:51 +[10] crimeflare. Is CloudFlare a honey pot? https://web.archive.org/web/20170721161127/http://www.crimeflare.us/honeypot.html +[11] ioerror. Issues with corporate censorship and mass surveillance. https://trac.torproject.org/projects/tor/ticket/18361#comment:59 +[12] ioerror. Issues with corporate censorship and mass surveillance. https://trac.torproject.org/projects/tor/ticket/18361#comment:66 +[13] mikeperry. The Trouble with CloudFlare. https://blog.torproject.org/trouble-cloudflare +[14] nullius. Block Global Active Adversary Cloudflare. https://trac.torproject.org/projects/tor/ticket/24351#comment:8 +[15] Unknown. Google+ https://plus.google.com/105395547687614433866/posts/G9nnQBnLtjp +[16] Unknown. Google+ https://plus.google.com/105395547687614433866/posts/XnQryQ7hR9G +[17] msmach. Cloudflare Ends CAPTCHAs For Tor Users https://it.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=12641622&cid=57348584 +[18] msmach. Cloudflare Ends CAPTCHAs For Tor Users https://it.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=12641622&cid=57388544 +[19] ioerror. Issues with corporate censorship and mass surveillance. https://trac.torproject.org/projects/tor/ticket/18361#comment:90 +[20] ioerror. Issues with corporate censorship and mass surveillance. https://trac.torproject.org/projects/tor/ticket/18361#comment:112 +[21] ioerror. Issues with corporate censorship and mass surveillance. https://trac.torproject.org/projects/tor/ticket/18361#comment:132 +[22] ioerror. Issues with corporate censorship and mass surveillance. https://trac.torproject.org/projects/tor/ticket/18361#comment:141 +[23] ioerror. Issues with corporate censorship and mass surveillance. https://trac.torproject.org/projects/tor/ticket/18361#comment:147 +[24] ioerror. Issues with corporate censorship and mass surveillance. https://trac.torproject.org/projects/tor/ticket/18361#comment:160 +[25] ioerror. Issues with corporate censorship and mass surveillance. https://trac.torproject.org/projects/tor/ticket/18361#comment:175 +[26] ioerror. Issues with corporate censorship and mass surveillance. https://trac.torproject.org/projects/tor/ticket/18361#comment:183 +[27] ioerror. Issues with corporate censorship and mass surveillance. https://trac.torproject.org/projects/tor/ticket/18361#comment:231 +[28] ioerror. Issues with corporate censorship and mass surveillance. https://trac.torproject.org/projects/tor/ticket/18361#comment:236 +[29] ioerror. Issues with corporate censorship and mass surveillance. https://trac.torproject.org/projects/tor/ticket/18361#comment:255 +[30] gk. Cloudflare breaks loading the chat. https://trac.torproject.org/projects/tor/ticket/23141 +[31] nullius. Block Global Active Adversary Cloudflare. https://trac.torproject.org/projects/tor/ticket/24351#comment:20 +[32] nullius. Block Global Active Adversary Cloudflare. https://trac.torproject.org/projects/tor/ticket/24351#comment:44 +[33] nullius. Block Global Active Adversary Cloudflare. https://trac.torproject.org/projects/tor/ticket/24351#comment:52 +[34] nullius. Block Global Active Adversary Cloudflare. https://trac.torproject.org/projects/tor/ticket/24351#comment:60 +[35] nullius. Block Global Active Adversary Cloudflare. https://trac.torproject.org/projects/tor/ticket/24321#comment:13 +[36] Anonymous. Cloudflare philosophy. https://codeberg.org/crimeflare/cloudflare-tor/src/master/cloudflare-philosophy.md +[37] Peter O'Shaughnessy. Screen Reader User Survey Results #7. https://toot.cafe/@peter/99398584471715976 +[39] ungeich. A new feature in Firefox https://blog.ungleich.ch/en-us/cms/blog/2018/08/04/mozillas-new-dns-resolution-is-dangerous/ +[40] Yasha Levine. iSucker: Big Brother Internet Culture http://exiledonline.com/isucker-big-brother-internet-culture/ +[41] Anonymous. The Great Cloudwall. http://codeberg.org/crimeflare/cloudflare-tor +[42] lesswrong wiki. Unfriendly artificial intelligence https://wiki.lesswrong.com/wiki/Unfriendly_artificial_intelligence +[43] Ben Harack. What is an existential risk? https://www.visionofearth.org/future-of-humanity/existential-risks/what-is-an-existential-risk/ +[44] Nick Szabo. Twitter http://twitter.com/nickszabo4 +[45] FSF. Google's Software is Malware https://www.gnu.org/proprietary/malware-google.en.html +[46] Richard Stallman. Reasons not to use Google https://stallman.org/google.html +[47] Richard Stallman. The JavaScript Trap https://www.gnu.org/philosophy/javascript-trap.html +[48] Nick Szabo. Trusted Third Parties are Security Holes. 2001. https://nakamotoinstitute.org/trusted-third-parties +[49] slashgeek. CloudFlare is ruining the internet (for me) https://www.slashgeek.net/2016/05/17/cloudflare-is-ruining-the-internet-for-me/ +[50] Hamid Sarfraz. How likely is it that CloudFlare is an NSA operation? https://www.quora.com/How-likely-is-it-that-CloudFlare-is-an-NSA-operation/answer/Hamid-Sarfraz +[51] Karthik Balakrishnan. Airtel is sniffing and censoring CloudFlare’s traffic in India and CloudFlare doesn’t even know it. https://medium.com/@karthikb351/airtel-is-sniffing-and-censoring-cloudflares-traffic-in-india-and-they-don-t-even-know-it-90935f7f6d98 +[52] http://pleroma.oniichanylo2tsi4.onion/notice/1563 +[53] StopMITMInt. Add an option to stop trusting Cloudflare certificate https://github.com/mozilla-mobile/focus-android/issues/1743#issuecomment-351555735 +[54] goody2shoes. Block Global Active Adversary Cloudflare https://lists.torproject.org/pipermail/tor-talk/2018-January/043889.html +[55] EFF. The Crypto Wars https://www.eff.org/document/crypto-wars +[56] http://forums.clamwin.com/viewtopic.php?t=4915 +[57] November 2018 Archives by thread http://lists.clamav.net/pipermail/clamav-users/2018-November/thread.html +[58] https://www.itu.int/en/ITU-T/Workshops-and-Seminars/20181218/Documents/Geoff_Huston_Presentation.pdf +[59] Thorin-Oakenpants. let's talk about our little buddy cloudflare. https://github.com/ghacksuserjs/ghacks-user.js/issues/310#issuecomment-351913412 +[60] ghost. What do you think about Cloudflare? https://github.com/privacytoolsIO/privacytools.io/issues/374#issuecomment-460413259 +[61] Unspam Technologies, Inc. https://projecthoneypot.org/ +[62] TechRader. Captcha if you can: how you’ve been training AI for years without realising it https://www.techradar.com/news/captcha-if-you-can-how-youve-been-training-ai-for-years-without-realising-it \ No newline at end of file