Singapore Government Hackers Love to Hack Teo En Ming's Computers, Smartphones, and Internet Online Accounts
Teo En Ming
teo.en.ming at gmail.com
Wed Aug 12 07:43:00 UTC 2015
On Sun, Aug 9, 2015 at 9:19 PM, <silver.bullet at zoho.com> wrote:
> On Sun, 9 Aug 2015 13:20:14 +0100, Colin Law wrote:
>>On 9 August 2015 at 12:57, <silver.bullet at zoho.com> wrote:
>>> On Sun, 9 Aug 2015 12:20:32 +0100, Colin Law wrote:
>>>>I begin to think you are a politician as I cannot get a simple yes/no
>>>>answer :) I asked
>>>
>>> It's because we reply to the mail of the other at the same time. We
>>> reply to older mails.
>>
>>Yes, you are right. Sorry.
>>
>>>
>>> The problem is the nature of "trust".
>>>
>>> In the end it's a philosophical question, that can't be answered by a
>>> simple yes or no.
>>>
>>> From a technically point of view, it's already harder for a
>>> government to redirect to faked ISO and checksum download sites and
>>> at the same time to redirect every possibility to share a valid
>>> public key.
>>>
>>> They need to redirect all key servers, they even need to redirect to
>>> a faked, edited mailing list archive without to much delay.
>>>
>>> With this mail to the list, I could post a good public key, somebody
>>> else could provide a good public key to validate other public keys
>>> in a different way somewhere else. The government needs to get
>>> control about the whole Internet. This is impossible!
>>>
>>> No government has absolutely control over the Internet!
>>> OTOH while you most likely could find a way to validate ownership of
>>> public keys, there's most likely no a way to trust everything
>>> provided by Ubuntu, even if you should trust the Canonical owner and
>>> all package maintainers. They can't verify the complete source code
>>> they use to provide their packages.
>>>
>>> In the end you need to trust the community, other humans, yourself.
>>
>>Understood. Thanks.
>
>
> Most likely the OP can trust the public key downloaded from a key
> server. Governments usually pay coders to add backdoors into security
> relevant code. Sure, it's all hearsay, e.g.
> http://slashdot.org/story/10/12/15/004235/FBI-Alleged-To-Have-Backdoored-OpenBSDs-IPSEC-Stack ,
> but this is more effective and more likely happens, than trying to
> redirect official web pages of major Linux distributions and trying to
> spread bad public keys. It would cause too much attention as soon as a
> bad key attract attention and soon or later several bad keys would fail
> validation by other public keys.
No wonder the Singapore Government led by Prime Minister Lee Hsien
Loong was able to hack into my Windows 8.1 64-bit operating system
with Norton Internet Security 2014 installed. There's a backdoor!!!
I am wondering if the Singapore Government has managed to hack into my
Windows 10 Home 64-bit operating system with ZoneAlarm Free Firewall
installed. Is there a backdoor in Windows 10?
Yours sincerely,
Subtle Denial of Medical Treatment by the Singapore Government for Mr.
Teo En Ming (Zhang Enming)
Link: https://www.scribd.com/doc/258700156/Subtle-Denial-of-Medical-Treatment-by-the-Singapore-Government-for-Mr-Teo-En-Ming-Zhang-Enming
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