How I Would Make the OS a Man-in-the-Middle -- Rob Braxman Approach

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  • Опубліковано 10 жов 2023
  • The intent to scan content to counter end-to-end encryption is no longer theoretical with the passing of the UK Online Safety Bill.
    How would the OS makers then build in client-side scanning? Let's tackle a theoretical project to do this on your favorite operating system (Windows, MacOS, iOS, Android).
    This would be how I would do it.
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 106

  • @dwmca1620

    That's a very interesting, and thorough, top level description for this situation. Thank you, Rob.

  • @subiesojourner777

    I switched to Linux 4+ years ago and never looked back.

  • @user-ey1vc5qu6k

    Always pumping out the moat sensible stuff worth watching on UA-cam.Youre THE MAN Rob.

  • @2117david

    ❤Thank you Rob . Thank you 🙏

  • @edithdriver2094

    Time to go back to face to face communication and written on paper sealed letters ?

  • @StupidusMaximusTheFirst

    Security and privacy is a very complicated matter. I think of it like a long chain, and it only takes one broken link to make the whole chain useless. Yes, the OS itself can be a MITM. But so can the hardware itself. Almost all hardware is proprietary and cannot be investigated for hidden surveillance capabilities or loopholes. I think completely open source OSes are the safest in theory, but OSes are really complicated, you can still hide surveillance loopholes, even in Linux. This can be found in theory, but who is gonna go over such a massive complicated code and look for those? Maybe AI can help here. Open source hardware is also the solution to combat surveillance. The new Risk-V is open source. Sure there still will be govs or manufacturers planting their own surveillance in there, but all those are always eventually discovered, so hopefully we will get some credible manufacturers and single out the dodgy ones. There also needs to be serious consequences for privacy/surveillance offenders, so the rest think again when they get those ideas. I live in such a European country where they became a dodgy surveillance haven - no consequences for them. The US is also the biggest offender in the world - again, no consequences.

  • @somewhere6

    Good presentation

  • @henrycarlson7514

    So Wise , Thank You

  • @00Klingon

    What about binary blobs located both in some GPU drivers (Nvidia) and in the BIOS on most Linux systems? It really seems that there may be surveillance capabilities that could potentially transcend the OS entirely.

  • @jimvellios1426

    very good intro and explained well.

  • @vlogulsibian

    We must take the actions necessary and take over it

  • @2117david

    ❤Thank you Rob , All that is hidden will be revealed, All bull shit government’s on Mother Earth be removed now. Bring in the new young generation of Truth ❤ Love 💕 and Light everyone. Thank you 🙏

  • @Ishvires

    Great video Rob, thanks. Can you please do your research and then video of the project called Yggdrasil-go ? Would be interested in your thoughts

  • @simonmaersk

    I have asked you this before, but are you not concerned about hardware-based scanning at all? I know it's not a concern at this point, but don't you think it might become a reality in the near future, as governments start passing laws about client-side scanning?

  • @mwngw
    @mwngw  +2

    Any updates on the Brax3 release date?

  • @furzkram

    That's why I still use KAV, but only with the core file scanning turned on.

  • @corail53

    The majority of folks have no idea what any of this stuff means so when a government says it's for "insert scare tactic of the day" most folks will just go along in apathy and vote on stupid single issue concepts that really don't mean a lot while rights get eroded. What needs to happen is that all of this needs to be broken down into the simplest terms and marketed in simple terms so the everyday person can understand what is at stake. We know the end result of what these policies will do yet we barrel towards them because we allow them to.

  • @migeletaratantzi2638

    Installing windows11 on a laptop, doing the updates... I couldn't skip to notice that my inserted flash drive started flashing like crazy for a long-long time (on the updating screen). It was too long, for minutes, or tens of minutes.... Now what could that be ?! :D I guess I had lucky not having stuff that they don't like on it.. like guns and shit

  • @jw4659
    @jw4659  +1

    "Google safety net is embedded in Chrome". So does this mean that Google Safety Net is also embedded in any browser based on Chromium? That is, browsers like Brave and Vivaldi would also have Google Safety Net embedded in them also?

  • @rickinmi

    I have little experience using linux. I did some light messing around with Unix decades ago on a powerbook using an IBM chipset (pre-intel).