U.S. Defense Department, NSA did not get
Tor user data
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[August 06, 2014]
By Joseph Menn
LAS VEGAS (Reuters) - The U.S. Department
of Defense did not receive personal data on users of Internet privacy
service Tor through a government-funded project to detect
vulnerabilities, a Defense spokeswoman told Reuters on Tuesday.
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"This particular project was focused on identifying
vulnerabilities in Tor, not to collect data that would reveal
personal identities of users," said Defense Department spokeswoman
Lieutenant Colonel Valerie Henderson, adding that the National
Security Agency also did not receive data.
The project was conducted by two researchers at Carnegie-Mellon
University's Software Engineering Institute with funding from the
Defense Department.
She did not rule out the FBI or other agencies obtaining the data.
The FBI and Carnegie-Mellon declined to comment.
Funded in large part by other arms of the government, Tor hides the
Internet protocol addresses of users by routing their traffic
through multiple layers of volunteered servers.
In a note last week on Tor's website, Tor Project leader Roger
Dingledine said the service had identified computers on its network
that had been quietly altering Tor traffic for five months in an
attempt to unmask users connecting to what are known as "hidden
services," which include drug bazaars and whistleblower sites.
Dingledine said it was likely the attacking computers, which were
removed on July 4, had operated on behalf of the Software
Engineering Institute team.
He warned then that "users who operated or accessed hidden services
from early February through July 4 should assume they were
affected."
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Dingledine said the physical locations where the hidden services
were housed could have been exposed, although probably not which
content was viewed by a visitor.
In an email to Reuters, Dingledine said that Carnegie-Mellon had
stopped cooperating and would not share more information about the
effort.
The researchers had planned to describe their work at the Black Hat
security conference that begins Wednesday in Las Vegas but the
university canceled the talk amid the controversy.
(Reporting by Joseph Menn in Las Vegas; Editing by Lisa Shumaker)
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