Il gestore dell'ex servizio di posta sicura Lavabit racconta di come l'F.B.I. ed i giudici gli impedirono di difendersi efficacemente in aula alle richieste di compromettere la sicurezza del proprio servizio per permettere loro di intercettare le comunicazioni di Edward Snowden e di come il suo caso differisca da quello che attualmente coinvolge Apple nel caso di San Bernardino.
Testo originale: http://www.metzdowd.com/pipermail/cryptography/2016-March/028669.html
[Cryptography] Lavabit's and Snowden's Solos
As the sysop I feel qualified to clarify. I don't keep up with this list as closely as I should, so Mr Young, thank you for pointing me to this thread.
Ray, your right. The two cases are similar. They both seek to defeat the encryption used to protect data at rest. They differ in that the Lavabit case relied upon a surveillance order under the PRTT statue, and a search warrant issued in accordance with the SCA. The Apple case relies on a writ of assistance issued under the AWA. They differ technologically in that the Lavabit case involved a MitM attack to capture the password during login, while the Apple case involves disabling login controls to facilitate a brute force attack.
Because both cases involve what I call "extraordinary assistance," I co-authored an amicus brief in support of Apple. The lawyers changed the definition of ordinary assistance at the last second, so I'm including the correct one here:
We contend this request is extraordinary because it seeks to compel the use, modification, or disclosure of confidential intellectual property, such as source code or encryption keys, which belongs to an innocent third party. In contrast, ordinary assistance requests seek access to, or the surrender of data in possession of a third party that has been created by the investigative target, or generated as a byproduct of the target’s actions.
There is a short "background section" in the amicus brief which discusses the Lavabit case, and how it differs. That said, with only 7 days to write it, we didn't include everything I wanted to say. Namely a discussion of cyber weapons, non-repudiation, and compelled felonious conduct. If this case continues onto a round two, I'm hoping to expand upon what we said this round. If your interested in what we did write, see here for a summary, plus a few pithy comments that were censored (by the lawyers):
https://www.facebook.com/KingLadar/posts/10156672763765038
Or for the full brief:
http://lavabit.com/files/Lavabit.Amicus.Brief.20160303.pdf
https://cryptome.org/2016/03/usg-apple-102-105.pdf
All of that said, the government did try to cite the Lavabit case as a precedent in their reply brief. See footnote #9, page 22 (or page 30 in the PDF), which reads:
For the reasons discussed above, the FBI cannot itself modify the software on Farook’s iPhone without access to the source code and Apple’s private electronic signature. The government did not seek to compel Apple to turn those over because it believed such a request would be less palatable to Apple. If Apple would prefer thatcourse, however, that may provide an alternative that requires less labor by Apple programmers. See In re Under Seal, 749 F.3d 276, 281-83 (4th Cir. 2014) (affirmingcontempt sanctions imposed for failure to comply with order requiring the company to assist law enforcement with effecting a pen register on encrypted e-mail content whichincluded producing private SSL encryption key).
I found this citation so misleading that I decided to write a little statement about it. Namely, the appellate court never addressed the substantive question of whether the FBI can seize keys. The court ruled that I waived my right to appeal (which is impossible, since a careful reading of the facts would show I never had a chance to make the objection they contend I should have). Because they ruled on the waiver issue, they explicitly avoid any discussion of the lawfulness of extraordinary assistance. If you want to read my full statement, see:
https://www.facebook.com/KingLadar/posts/10156714933135038
As you probably picked up on, what Ray wrote below, while it captures the gist of things, isn't quite right on a few details. I made my comments inline.
On 3/16/2016 3:02 PM, Ray Dillinger wrote:
Lavabit received an order asking IIUI to enable the FBI to access a single account. The operator, fearing that their motive might be persecution and vengeance rather than prosecution and justice, took less than 48 hours to consult with an attorney. Consulting with an attorney, as a constitutionally guaranteed right, seems reasonable to me.
The FBI originally served the PRTT order around 5pm on June 28th, a Friday. After a 2-3 hour discussion with the agents, the meeting ended with me telling them I needed to consult with an attorney, as I was "uncomfortable with providing the SSL/TLS private key, and didn't know what my obligations under the law were." That very same night I received an order to compel, issued by a magistrate judge, which ordered me to provide all of the necessary "technical assistance" to "decrypt the data." Since the order (and statue) made no mention of the SSL/TLS private key, I emailed the FBI asking for them to provide a written description of what "technical assistance" they required. They never provided the description I asked for. I wouldn't get the written demand for another 2 weeks, and it arrived in the form of a subpoena (which I was later excused from, and as such didn't include in the description above). While I waited for the FBI to get back to me I began my search for a lawyer.
Since the following week included July 4th, it ended up taking be about a week to find a qualified lawyer. She was referred to me by the EFF, and such understood the relevant statues and case law. It wasn't until I consulted with her that I understood the PRTT statue only provided the authority to collect metadata, as the agents implied it provided the authority to collect everything on the wire. I subsequently read the statue, and it listed "signalling information" as one of the items they could collect. Without a lawyer, and based on the FBI agent's description, I incorrectly assumed that meant the "signal to noise ratio," where the signal represents all of the information. When it became clear that actually was a reference to the DTMF tones sent over a phone line, and they were only authorized to receive metadata, I did try to work with them for a solution that would provide a technological guarantee"they only collected the authorized metadata on the account(s) authorized by the court.
It's worth noting my custom mail server was probably the only one on the planet that didn't write out the required metadata to a log file. As such I proffered several possible solutions, which I can discuss at length later if anyone is interested. All were rejected. Amongst the reasons the DoJ came back with were a) they didn't trust me, b) my estimate for costs if I implemented the logging was unreasonable, and c) my proposal didn't provide them with real time access. Note I also discussed a situation whereby they provided the equipment and I configured it (with there help) and we each held onto half of the password. While I didn't like the idea because it would be hard to know if there was a backdoor, it was quickly rejected as well.
Whether you believe the FBI really only wanted metadata probably hinges on whether you believe a prosecutor would lie in court. It might be worth noting there was also a search warrant issued for the source code, the encrypted user data, and the encrypted user keys. Data that was largely worthless without the user password. All of that said, I can prove the (now), that the prosecutor made a significant and material misrepresentation to the court which would have changed things had I been able to prove it at the time. Since I haven't discussed this publicly yet, I'll save it for another day. What I have discussed publicly is how many immaterial misrepresentations the DoJ made about me. Including my favorite, which insinuated I tried to avoid service by fleeing out the backdoor of my 5th floor apartment. It was one of two times I laughed during the whole ordeal. I really wish I could fly, or crawl on walls, but alas I'm only human.
What Ray is probably referring to is the approximately 48 hours I had between when I found out my first attorney couldn't represent me in Virginia the following week (she was based in San Francisco). In that gap I interviewed a dozen plus lawyers, but didn't find a good match (cost, knowledge, strategy, etc) in time. I asked for more time, but was denied. Hence I showed up pro se (if I hadn't they would have sought a bench warrant for my arrest and dragged me to Virginia in handcuffs). I was finally able to find an attorney the morning of my hearing, but not in time for them to make it to court. I hired him that afternoon, and he had a week to prepare a defense. Notably, he wasn't given transcripts of my pro se appearance until our appeal was due.
He may or may not have voluntarily provided access to that account - we'll never know, because by the time he had finished consulting an attorney the FBI had, apparently because of his less than instant compliance, made a completely intolerable demand instead for the keys to the entire site. That would have enabled covert, real-time access to the communications of subscribers who were specifically purchasing the service of privacy. Deprived of the ability to sell what his subscribers were buying, he shut the business down rather than engage in fraud or the provision of pretended services.
See above, but yes, my desire to consult an attorney led to an instant order to compel. And yes, I was unwilling to compromise the integrity of the system, and found it even more abrasive because I wouldn't have been allowed to tell anyone what happened. Hence the decision to shutdown after an abbreviated court battle.
Then as now, the FBI made a demand for access so broad in scope, burdensome to provide, or contrary to the basic principles of the party from whom it was demanded, as to be offensive.
The major distinction as far as I can tell is that Apple has the money to hire a herd of lawyers and fight it in court, and Lavabit didn't.
Largely true. In an interesting twist, one of the lawyers I consulted during the 48 hour period is now representing Apple, but I couldn't afford him, and because of the secrecy, could broadcast a call for help. That meant even though I was aware of a couple cyber law mailing lists, I could ask for help pro bono, or seek the money to cover the cost of a proper defense. The fact that we were only given a week, and my lawyer wasn't a specialist made things even harder.
Over the last 2.5 years I've certainly gained a lot of knowledge about the relevant laws which would have been helpful at the time, and will be if/when I ever relaunch. It's also why I decided to submit the amicus.
If Lavabit had fought the demand in court and lost (very likely given its meager legal budget and the infamy of the single account that the FBI originally demanded access to) it would have established a precedent which the FBI would now be trying to leverage in further cases. So the decision by Lavabit to shut down rather than have a court battle was probably the only available way to avoid the creation of a harmful precedent. Leaving the arena means you don't win, but it also means denying victory to your opponent.
I did fight things out in court. It just occurred in secret, and while a proper description would require the use of vulgarity, I'll summarize by saying I was railroaded. The length of time between when I received the PRTT order, and when I was found in contempt (ex parte) was about 5 weeks. For comparison the median time between filing and disposition of a civil contempt charge in federal court during 2013 was 6 months.
The contempt charge levied a fine of 5K a day for each day I didn't turn over the keys. So I shutdown the system and turned over the keys. Technically I complied after being held in contempt, but because the system was shut down, prevented them from using (or at least minimized the damage).
After raising money from the public I appealed the contempt charge. As I mentioned above the appellate court ignored the question and claimed I waived my right to the appeal because we didn't object to both of the legal ground cited in the contempt charge. What they ignore is that the order they are referring to was issued on a Friday, which read for "the reasons stated in the governments brief," and I was found in contempt the following Monday ex parte. Because the government included an argument in their brief that was never discussed in court, and ran contrary to comments the judge made in session, the appellate court claimed we never objected to it. That said, ask yourself, did we even have time to understand what had just happened, and make the objection? Even then, my lawyer asked to make an oral objection to the contempt charge, but was denied. Presto facto, a non-appealable contempt charge is created.
Like I stated in the beginning, the ruling on waiver means no precedent was set.
In much the same way the FBI now seeks a precedent in the Apple case, and in much the same way, compelling compliance with their order seems more important to them than the data from the single instance that the case is ostensibly about.
Definitely true. There are a number of ways, albeit difficult, which would allow them to extract the data if meant that much to the investigation. What the government wants is a public piece of case law they can use in the future (in secret) to compel a number of even nastier things from Apple. Like an OTA update to an encrypted device which steals the key for your favorite messaging app right out of the device's memory.
So I have to wonder if an attempt to replace the precedent they planned to get from a Lavabit case, which they failed to obtain because it never came to court, may be part of what motivates the FBI in its battle over the Apple case.
What they sought from me, legally, wouldn't have allowed them to compel what they want from Apple. But it might have applied to the WhatsApp case (I haven't read those briefs yet). That said, both cases flow from the same sense of entitlement. As in, we are entitled to everyone's plain text data, and if Congress won't give it to us, we'll use our 27.1 billion dollar budget, and army of 100K lawyers to take it in court. Your tax dollars at work.
Of course if they had that Lavabit precedent, they would certainly be using it against Apple right now.
They tried. See my statement linked to in the intro.
L~
P.S. I haven't run this email by my lawyers, but I think everything I said is unsealed and public already.