DarkCyber for November 27, 2018, Now Available

November 27, 2018

DarkCyber for November 27, 2018, is now available at www.arnoldit.com/wordpress and on Vimeo at https://vimeo.com/302658825.

This week’s program covers four stories related to the Dark Web and specialized Internet services.

DarkCyber reports that another call for a backdoors to encrypted communications. Cyrus Vance, the Manhattan district attorney, emphasized that government mandated backdoors are the only solution to device encryption. DarkCyber provides a link to the government report which substantiates this statement. Australia has issued a similar statement. Even though encrypted devices can be broken open, the time and resources required are significant. With the growing number of mobile devices in use by bad actors, the number of phones requiring decryption has created an evidence backlog. Encrypted devices, therefore, pose a significant challenge to law enforcement and intelligence professionals.

The second story reveals that autonomous killer drone technology is advancing rapidly. An autonomous drone is able to find, fix, and finish a target. DarkCyber describes the Elbit Systems’ Skystriker device which is about 95 percent autonomous at this time. Full autonomous operation is within view.

Other countries are working on similar technology. DarkCyber identifies autonomous sea going devices which can neutralize a target without a human in the kill chain. DarkCyber’s view is that countries without autonomous warfighting will find themselves at a strategic disadvantage.

The third story reports that facial recognition allowed 130 victims of child abuse to be identified by Dutch authorities. Mug shot image recognition and matching can perform at an accuracy level of about 90 percent. However, facial recognition from real time video feeds like surveillance cameras pose a more difficult problem. Accuracy rates for video identification can dip below 60 percent. Nevertheless, facial recognition technology is advancing rapidly with innovations from such firms as Boeing, Verint, and NSO. Startups are making significant technical contributions as well. Innovations from Trueface, Kairos, and PointGrab are likely to yield advances in recognition accuracy. DarkCyber provides links to two sources of information about facial recognition systems. One of these documents is a General Accountability Office report about facial recognition within the US government.

The final story describes an off tune Dark Web weapons deal. Three young men in England thought that buying Glock 19 firearms via the Dark Web was a foolproof scheme. Their idea was to specify that the weapons were shipped inside of an amplifier for an electric guitar. US and UK authorities identified the contraband and placed a video camera in the parcel. When the men received their delivery, the event was captured on video. The investigation yielded cash and narcotics. The individuals are now serving eight years in prison. It is unlikely that the amplifier is delivering Elvis’ hit “Jailhouse Rock” to the felons.

DarkCyber appears each Tuesday on the blog Beyond Search and on Vimeo. Watch for new programs each week at www.arnoldit.com/wordpress.

Kenny Toth, November 27, 2018

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