I've heard a lot of people on the left argue that Tor is likely backdoored because it was created by the U.S. Navy for spies to communicate and is still funded by the government. Yasha Levine has written a lot about this:
- https://surveillancevalley.com/blog/tor-files
- https://thebaffler.com/salvos/the-crypto-keepers-levine
He also appeared in TrueAnon episode 50 to talk about this.
On the other hand, a lot of people in the crypto and tech community disagree with this. They believe that Tor is not backdoored for one or both of the following reasons:
- Tor is open-source and has been audited.
- The U.S. Government would never do such a thing.
They also point to a leaked NSA presentation from 2007 that admits the NSA can't deanonymize Tor users.
What are your thoughts?
Yeah, I wasn't trying to say they were the same, merely remarking on the scale of what they have access to. Hiding a needle in a haystack is a great technique, but it's important to remember our opponents do still pretty much have access to all the hay.
Fair enough, but I think the main way the authorities find hidden services is by hacking the server (over a Tor connection) and then having it ping them in Langley on the clearnet, something that's pretty trivial for any state-level actor. And I thought it was worth clarifying the point about hidden services because this is a point of confusion for most people regarding how Tor actually works.
Oh yeah, you're probably right. If I remember correctly from the Snowden dumps, the Alphabets keep a whole bunch of sweet 0 Days.