Facebook announced
that it's introducing an experimental new feature that lets users add
OpenPGP public encryption keys to their profiles so that Facebook can
encrypt the email notifications it sends them.
From the post:
Whilst Facebook seeks to secure connections to your email provider with TLS, the stored content of those messages may be accessible as plaintext (with attachments) to anyone who accesses your email provider or email account.
To enhance the privacy of this email content, today we are gradually rolling out an experimental new feature that enables people to add OpenPGP public keys to their profile; these keys can be used to "end-to-end" encrypt notification emails sent from Facebook to your preferred email accounts.
PGP is a form of end-to-end encryption for email that could be the answer to one computer security's longest standing problems.It's a great idea but unfortunately almost nobody does it. Those who
do though have tended to favour something compatible with OpenPGP.
Users who use PGP to encrypt their email have two keys. One is a
private key that they keep to themselves and the other is a public key
that's given to anyone who wants to send them encrypted mail.
Messages are encrypted using the public key but they can only be
decrypted using the private key. So long as you keep your private key
private anyone can send you an end-to-end encrypted email that only you
can read.
If you want to know more about OpenPGP technology an introduction to PGP is available from the Electronic Frontier Foundation.With anti-surveillance, kill-that-damn-Patriot Act
fever rising, both US and UK governments and law enforcement agencies
have been gnashing their teeth over strong encryption, given that it
scrambles communications for those who don't have the correct key to
decrypt them.
For example, Apple and Google both annoyed US law enforcement by
updating their mobile devices to have encryption turned on by default - a move that went "too far," FBI Director James Comey said.
With OpenPGP, Facebook aligns itself with all those annoying tech
companies opting for strong encryption on their users' communications.
In October, Facebook also launched a .onion address to enable users to connect via the anonymised Tor network.By the way, if you want to know what Tor is and if you should use it, Lifehacker has an article that might come in handy.
Facebook also turned on https by default
for all Facebook users in 2013, enabling them to automatically encrypt
their communications with Facebook and preventing hackers and attackers
from sniffing sensitive data while using unencrypted WiFi hotspots.
With OpenPGP now in test mode - it was gradually rolling out as of
Monday - users will be able to update their own public key with a
desktop browser, through their contact preferences account tab.
Facebook is also looking into the possibility of public key management on mobile devices somewhere down the line.
Users may also choose to share OpenPGP keys from their profile, with or without enabling encrypted notifications.
0 comments:
Post a Comment