this post was submitted on 16 Sep 2024
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Privacy
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Why do you think the NSA is targeting you?
NSA is infamous for illegal and unconstitutional mass surveillance.
Why do you think the NSA isn't targeting you?
Because your actual threat is most likely passive government surveillance rather than targeted attacks?
How is it not both? Passive government surviellence can lead to targeted attacks.
Yeah, but the powerful, expensive exploits are not spent on average people - they're for the important targets.
It isn’t that the NSA is going to target us, it’s that they could target us.
I genuinely believe the NSA et al is targeting those who attempt to avoid all targeting more than the average person. It's difficult to avoid being tracked, it's nearly impossible to additionally blend in with an unsuspicious façade. Might as well become a secret agent if you're capable of avoiding the NSA's gaze.
Crowdstrike didn't target anyone either. Yet, a mistake in code that privileged, resulted in massive outages. Intel ME runs at even higher privileges, in even more devices.
I am opposed to stuff like kernel level code, exactly for that reason. Mistakes can be just as harmful as malice, but both are parts of human nature. The software we design should protect us from ourselves, not expose us to more risk.
There is no such thing as a back door that "good guys" can access, but the bad guys cannot. Intel ME is exactly that, a permanent back door into basically every system. A hack of ME would take down basically all cyber infrastructure.