Massachusetts Software Council’s Open Source Special Interest Group

I attended the Massachusetts Software Council’s Open Source Special Interest Group “kickoff” meeting today. I went for 2 reasons, 1) I am developing a training system using open source software and 2) Dan Bricklin, the developer of VisiCalc for the Apple series of micro computers was a primary sponsor and panel member and I had never met him. If you do not know the history of the micro computer world, I offer you this VisiCalc to Basketball analogy. Dan Bricklin scored 70 points and made the gaming winning basket from half court, while being tripled teamed, to win both the NCAA and the NBA championships. It was a very interesting event and there were quite a few high powered executives and developers in the audience and on the panels. For more information on the event, you can go here

http://oss-sig.softwaregarden.com/blogs/oss-sig/

This group was knowledgeable, experienced and successful. Questions and responses were lively and engaging, well, except once.

Someone asked in effect

” Who is looking after the security of our software infrastructure. What is being done to help us manage the trust-ability of our software.”

The question was not answered or commented upon.

Assurance party in Hungary

The second Hungarian Assurance Party is to be held on July 08th in Budapest, between 20.00 and 21.00 local time. Please, have a look at or send an email to cacert@cacert.org.hu for more information.

2005 Annual General Meeting

CAcert AGM has come and gone uneventfully this year. The meeting minutes are now online http://www.cacert.org/meetings/20050703.txt

Points of Interest:

New board for the 2005-06 financial year elected unapposed due to low amount of nominations:

Duane Groth – President
Mark Lipscombe – Vice President
Tina Kubota – Secretary
Ryan Verner – Ordinary Member
Matthew Asham – Ordinary Member

The meeting was ajourned for up to next 2 weeks to have the financial summary made available due to events beyond our control.

Conference Report – Linuxtag 2005

Ralf sent in this report about his recent results from LinuxTag 2005…


LinuxTag 2005 was again a great success for CAcert. We, Philipp ‘Sourcerer’ and I, supported by Eric ‘Nox’, Michael ‘MiGri’ and some others assured approx. 700 people. First time, we wore (self-made V0.1) T-shirts to represent the CI of CAcert.

As a direct result of LT assurance the 3000 assurer barrier has been broken!

As super-assurers, Phillipp and I ‘only’ usually issued 120 points and encouraged the applicants to get to the full points by doing cross-assurances near by our booth so we could answer upcoming questions.

For applicants in ‘underdeveloped areas’ 😉 we issued full 150 and aske to bring some friends around to be assured so they can spin the web of trust in their region.

Usually the identity was pre-checked and the form was marked by an assurer’s aid (Eric, Migri, Steffen, …) and the assured by one of the super assurers.

Now and then, Philipp vanished for hours to the other (.com-)conference hall and built contacts to ‘Them’.

To applicant’s with an existing account the points were issued right at the booth (I had an OpenVPN tunnel to my home based network, of course secured by CAcert certificates) and all the others were asked to create their account as soon as possible.

By today, the pile of unprocessed forms is reduced to approx. 40, all of these got more than 3 reminder emails. Maybe thos mails get lost as false positives in a spam filter or thos applicants changed their mind.

So this is the end of my first entry to the blog. Please excuse typos or strange phrases. This is NOT my native language and school was ages ago 😉

Cheers,

Ralf.

P.S. Good news! For Europe, I mangaged to persuade Petra from www.kernelconcepts.de to offer high-quality CAcert T-shirts at a good price ( evend reduced if you order by CAcert-cert signed mail 😉 plus shipping. See details at http://wiki.cacert.org/wiki/t-shirts

Mozilla drops Open in favour of Smoke Filled Rooms

Things are slowly coming out about what happened a month ago in New York city, and my initial questions still go unanswered, many excuses are being spun but very few answers are given freely, and this is really disappointing coming from the Mozilla guys.

Mozilla touts, like many open source projects that being open and free is a major benefit to society, yet they then have the hide to turn round and conspire with commercial interests behind close door for what we’re being told will be the benefit of the internet.

I’m not sure about anyone else but my memory isn’t that bad that I’ve forgotten how US commercial interests don’t do anything unless it will effect their bottom line, either for increased profits, or due to regulatory disputes planning to inflict fines or other restrictions that will hurt their bottom line. This is highlighted only too well in the current SPF vs Sender ID debate, Microsoft as usual came in late to the game thinking, “we’ve missed another boat, what the hell do we do now?”. What they came up with, was a small variation of SPF then turned round and requested a patent on their “innovation”!

Microsoft then did what Microsoft always does, turned round and tried to inflict their “invention” on us, but it was no olive branch, it was a thorny stem with no rose on the end, basically they have and are still trying to take control of email via a patented invention that does very little more then what SPF does, in fact they are still trying to push through their “invention” by brute force. Since the MADRID task force collapsed due to lack of consensus, Microsoft has a solution lacking mass adoption, so they are planning to mark any email being sent to their domains as junk that don’t support (or properly support) Sender ID.

So anyway back to the current story, basically Mozilla hasn’t learnt from history and they actually think they will be able to do more good then harm from closed door talks then what happened with MADRID. I doubt anyone will claim the internet could be where it is without open standards, and open discussions preceding before that, hell CAcert thrives based on open discussions, there are a lot of smart people out there with a lot of good ideas and we’d be mad to simply ignore them.

However this is exactly what the Mozilla guys have done, and in the process alienated a lot of smart specialists in the area they are trying to define, the end result will be that we all suffer, and a very good example of where this has happened in the past is with Wifi security (this is after all how CAcert begun, bad Wifi security needing something else to protect information), basically cryptography experts weren’t consulted openly and we ended up with something basically a waste of time that can be cracked in minutes, so tell me how those closed door talks helped society exactly.

Ian from FinancialCryptography has some more information on the topic on his blog as well, which is well worth the read. https://www.financialcryptography.com/mt/archives/000514.html

Assurance party in Hungary

The first Hungarian Assurance Party is to be held on June 29th in Budapest, between 13.00 and 14.00 local time. Please, have a look at or send an email to cacert@cacert.org.hu for more information.

CH.Zurich – Assurance Event at ETH Zurich

On Thursday the 23rd there will be an assurance event at the bqm cafe. 3 35 Point Assurers will be On-Site allowing you to become an Assurer in no time.

Location: http://www.bqm.li/
Either we have a table there or signs will be put up to guide you to the table.

Conference – Linuxtag 2005

http://www.linuxtag.de June 22-25, Karlsruhe, Germany. There will be a booth in the “Community” area where you can be assured.

Up coming trip…

For anyone in the San Francisco area I’ll be stuck at the San Francisco airport from when I clear customs on the 8th of July (some time about 8pm or 9 depending on how late/early the flight is), until I need to board/clear security for the connecting flight at about 11:30pm (flight isn’t till 12:30am), so if anyone wants to be assured/have coffee/whatever I’m guessing I’ll be pretty bored by that point and welcome anyone wanting a chat, as I’ll have been on planes/in airports for about 24 hours prior… Feel free to Contact Me

Yet another high profile data leak

Hot on the heals of last weeks package loss in transit by Citibank, comes the announcement that 40 MILLION credit card numbers have been leaked by a cracker getting into CardSystems Solutions, a third party processing company of credit cards.

So I must ask once more, why do supposedly open source browser vendors keep spreading FUD that we are such a risk, when clearly 6 weeks running the US banking industry has gotten black eye after black eye with horrifically escalating breaches of private and financial information.

I’ll propose my question again, how can any CA breach be even on par with a major browser security breach. Bugs are patched and people are encouraged to upgrade, and life goes on every day, why are SSL certificates treated in such religious and completely incorrect notions of the real world we live in. Fair enough things may have started out much differently but that isn’t the reality we live in today or for the next 5 years to come.

The short version is SSL started out as a solution looking for a problem, and along came a few commercial CAs thinking they could rake in millions if not billions by doing annual ID checks, in the end they had to settle for protecting link layer security and selling snake oil about what was really being protected, after all the latest example proves time and time again the biggest risk and problem is protecting end points, and NOT the link layer.

So please tell me again why are we such a threat!?