On the Internet, no one knows if you are a dog

From time to time we hear or read endless talks about Internet freedom, privacy and data protection, hackers threatening the universe, demonic police officers (names we do not say or point to Internet) that protect us, for bad wolves and unprotected Redskaps.

The idea for the article came after the news about the capture of a top security researcher from Kaspersky.Russian authorities arrested Ruslan Stoyanov, one of Kaspersky Lab's leading security researchers, with accusations of betrayal.

According to a Russian report of the Kommersant newspaper, Stoyanov was arrested in December, along with Sergei Mikhailov, Head of Russian Security Intelligence (FSB) intelligence department (FSB).Internet

Of course, the company reports that Stoyanov was arrested for activities he had prior to joining the company, and therefore the charges against that employee do not include Kaspersky Lab.

In this case, we see cooperation of the secret services of Russia with a leading security researcher. The subject of cooperation is and will remain unknown.

Really, what are the limits of the Internet and who sets them? What is a secure internet and by what criteria do we define it? Who is the protector and who is the offender? Are there visible visible signs that make the roles distinct? Is there freedom? Is there absolute privacy? In the above philosophical questions there are various opinions translated in a way that suits the one who utters them.

An example of convenient answers to what is freedom and secure Internet is the case of "Elder Pastitsiou."

The Three-member Court of First Instance of Athens sentenced the "Elder" or Filippos Loizos as he is known, to ten months in prison with suspension, for insulting religion on an ongoing basis. Let us remind you that the prosecution for insulting the uncles (by the then commander of the DIE Sfakianakis Manolis) was brought against him after a question in the Parliament of the ex-prisoner for setting up a criminal organization, Chrysaugitian member of parliament, Christos Pappa.

The case actually started in September 2012 when Pappas had submitted the question for the satirical page Elder Pastitsios. In his question he stated that: "the user insults, mocks and tries to humiliate the holy form of Greek Orthodoxy, Elder Paisios."

His arrest had provoked and continues to provoke very strong reactions on the Internet.

The announcement by the Human Rights Defenders in Greece underlined that:

"the decision shows that the , a fundamental pillar of social coexistence in a democratic rule of law, is being questioned not only by the constitutional enemies of democracy but by its state-appointed patrons. "

(The Hellenic League for Human Rights is the oldest non-governmental organization for the protection of human rights in Greece.) The Union was originally founded by 1936, chaired by Alexander Svolos and dissolved by the dictatorship of 4 August 1953 was renamed.)

But there are worse:

Let's recall the case where the FBI captured the largest website child pornography in the world, Playpen, and started running it on government servers for 13 days trying to trap pedophiles with malicious software. With malicious software known to law enforcement and network investigational technique (NIT), they tried to penetrate TORs of users who had access to the site through Dark Web.

There is no doubt that any child abuse (let alone sexual) is one of the worst crimes, but the way the FBI handled the case is equally alarming. Imagine that the Federals allowed these sites to work with the victims, indicating the pretext of the investigation.

On a web we want to be bound by the law, and to be safe, the FBI itself is committing the same crime as the criminals behind the rails.

In this case we should ask ourselves whether the facilitation of sexual abuse of children deserves to capture 100 of some alleged pedophiles and, of course, glory to the "defenders" of justice.

When in 1993 the now famous cartoon by Peter Steiner was published in the "New Yorker" with the caption "In I nobody knows if you're a dog” didn't make that much of an impression. It was still the beginning of the Internet and many did not know what it was referring to.Internet

Over time, it became a slogan, a play (Nobody Knows Ima Dog by Alan David Perkins), the subject of sociological research (Morahan-Martin and Schumacher, 2000) on the anonymous online presence of cowards, shy, phobic or even abnormal people, as well as about the phenomenon of "internet parenthesis" (posing as a person of another gender, age or status) by David Trend.

He was also mentioned in the book "The Road Ahead" by Bill Gates.

The Internet pioneer described the symbolism of this cartoon in one sentence () John Gilmore: «σημαίνει ότι ο Κυβερνο it will be liberating, because gender, breed, age, appearance, even "dogness" are absent there."

This, of course, is one aspect of anonymity on the Internet that acts freely, protects privacy, makes it possible to personally confess or channel valuable information that the media do not dare to publish. They are often the only source of news from countries with totalitarian and non-liberal regimes. It is a democratic revolution.

Anonymity, along with the ease of publishing (even a dog can set up a blog), has brought about the biggest change in publicity since the invention of typography. Every citizen, at a cost of a few euros a month, can become a "publisher of himself" and have access to thousands or even millions of readers. He can also participate in discussion groups (fora and chat), in meeting places or in places of parallel life (such as Second Life) without revealing his identity.

The other side of the same coin is the negative:
Anonymity facilitates irresponsible gossip, slander, online gossip, threats and insults. Not to mention cybercrime - which is also usually based on anonymity.

Although it is often inflated by the media (like everything new), it is today a reality:

From the hacker who breaks the secrets s of the Pentagon as the robber who opens bank accounts or steals credit cards. Not to mention other criminal behaviors that are strengthened by anonymity, such as the pedophile, the neo-Nazi, the terrorist, but also, as we saw above, by the Authorities themselves.

Why on the Internet no one knows if you are a dog.

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Written by giorgos

George still wonders what he's doing here ...

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