Dear Reader,
We call on the relevant parties to reveal what systems have been
weakened so that they can be repaired, and to create a proper system of
oversight with well-defined public rules that clearly forbid weakening
the security of civilian systems and infrastructures. The statutory
Intelligence and Security Committee of the House of Commons needs to
investigate this issue as a matter of urgency. In the modern information
age we all need to have complete trust in the basic infrastructure that
we all use.
Yours
Prof. Kenneth Paterson,
Prof. Mark Ryan,
Prof. Peter Ryan,
Prof. Vladimiro Sassone,
Prof. Steve Schneider,
Prof. Nigel P. Smart,
Dr Eerke Boiten, Dr George Danezis, Dr Jens Groth, Dr Feng Hao.
The first set of publications based on Edward Snowden’s files were
concerned with surveillance of internet communication happening more
indiscriminately and on a much larger scale than previously thought.
The more recent publications, presenting the systematic undermining of
cryptographic solutions and standards, are the cause of much more
substantial worry. As some of the leading UK researchers in the field of
cryptography and computer security we feel compelled to comment on the
recent revelations.
The UK and US governments recently dramatically increased the funding
available to various agencies to help protect our countries against
Cyber Attack. Such attacks are now commonplace on both corporations, and
individuals. We now all rely on cryptography to secure our mobile
phones, credit cards, internet communications etc. and because of this
we welcome the government’s prioritization of this area in an era of
fiscal squeeze. As researchers in security we understand that the NSA
and GCHQ are tasked with conducting operations for purposes of national
security.
However, the documents released show that NSA and GCHQ worked to weaken
international cryptographic standards, and to place "backdoors" into
security products; such backdoors could of course be potentially
exploited by others than the original creators. One of the prime
missions of the security services is to protect citizens and
corporations from Cyber Attack. By weakening cryptographic standards, in
as yet undisclosed ways, and by inserting weaknesses into products which
we all rely on to secure critical infrastructure, we believe that the
agencies have been acting against the interests of the public that they
are meant to serve. We find it shocking that agencies of both the US and
UK governments now stand accused of undermining the systems which
protect us. By weakening all our security so that they can listen in to
the communications of our enemies, they also weaken our security against
our potential enemies.
Yours
Prof. Kenneth Paterson,
Prof. Mark Ryan,
Prof. Peter Ryan,
Prof. Vladimiro Sassone,
Prof. Steve Schneider,
Prof. Nigel P. Smart,
Dr Eerke Boiten, Dr George Danezis, Dr Jens Groth, Dr Feng Hao.
Update: US security researchers have now announced their own open letter
ReplyDeletehttp://masssurveillance.info/