At long last, the ybti org-group has finalized the "vision paper", which we
committed ourselves to produce at the end of 30C3's #youbroketheinternet
workshop. (see txt attached.)

Meanwhile, the name "youbroketheinternet" sticks and therefore, we are referring
to the project as "ybti", which can be easily pronounced in German as well as in
English.

Below is ybti's vision aimed at addressing potential supporters and the public
at large. Currently, we are trying to find more projects, who are willing to
support the vision in order to give it more weight in the eyes of those, who are
not able to judge on technical grounds.

At present, we see ybti's mission in fostering a discourse amongst
FLOSS-projects that intend to reengineer the internet. It is our intention to
define an API, which allows for secure message/data distribution mechanisms as a
free and open alternative to internet's first generation RFCs. If this API would
exist it can be used by independent projects to realize applications on top of
it, of course. At the same time, this API would allow for a plurality of
independent transport mechanism implementations for the wide range of existing
platforms.

~bit



Redesigning the Internet for the 21st Century

Our vision is to fundamentally redesign the way how data is routed, transmitted 
and handled on the Internet in order to provide private, confidential and 
censorship-resistant means of communication for billions of users.

This project, supported by Wau Holland Foundation, was born out of our 
dissatisfaction with the technological status quo of the Internet. It is time 
to get rid of legacy technologies with fundamental design flaws that enable the 
widespread exploitation of sensitive data for purposes of mass surveillance, 
cyber crime and economic espionage.

We are an international, interdisciplinary group of experts with years of 
experience in fields such as distributed systems and cryptography. Together, we 
aim at realizing a new Internet architecture that enables informational 
self-determination and truly serves the needs of free and democratic societies.

_Design Principles_

Data security is at the core of our technical approach. It is not sufficient to 
only secure the contents of communications. We also want to prevent the 
systematic collection of commmunication profiles (metadata), as the analysis of 
the social graph of a population poses a particular threat to democracy.

Our concept for a new Internet is based on the following design principles:

* ubiquitous end-to-end encryption, removing the necessity to trust any third 
parties that might access our data while it is being transmitted or stored

* obfuscation of transmission patterns, preventing the analysis of social 
relations, behavior patterns and topical interests of the participants in a 
network

* decentralized authentication mechanisms, removing the necessity to trust 
centralized certification authorities that can be compromised

* multicast technology, because we need to interconnect billions of users 
without the need for centralized server farms

* distributed data flow and storage, making bulk collection of data 
economically unattractive

* consistent use of free and open software, putting the system under permanent 
public scrutiny and giving users control over their computation

Beyond the application of cutting-edge security standards, our concept 
emphasizes scalability and usability. We want to establish an attractive 
technological platform for applications and commercial services that can be 
used by large user bases worldwide.

Using a modular approach, we are integrating existing best practices and 
results from the scientific community to build a coherent system.

_Development Plan_

Our aim is to provide alternatives to unsafe technologies for all relevant 
modes of communication that are popular with Internet users today. To this end 
we came up with the following roadmap, which is a scenario based on our current 
knowledge of activities. This list is definitely not cast in stone and we are 
eager to hear your comments and suggestions:

_Phase 1 (within 2 years)_

* Secure business transactions by means of decentralized authentication for web 
services as an alternative to TLS/SSL (HTTPS), X.509 (certification system)

* Server-based confidential one-to-one and group telephony as an alternative to 
Skype, Flash telephony, telephone, VoIP

* Instant one-to-one and group messaging as an alternative to Facebook chat, 
Whatsapp, IRC, XMPP/Jabber

* Anonymized distributed data storage as an alternative to Cloud based apps, 
unencrypted servers

* Integration of anonymous browsing as an alternative to Tor, I2P

_Phase 2 (within 5 years)_

* Asynchronous one-to-one messaging with attachments as an alternative to 
Facebook mail, simple e-mail functions

* Asynchronous mailing lists for group collaboration with distributed storage 
as an alternative to advanced e-mail functions, Facebook groups, message 
boards, Dropbox

* Distributed web, multimedia and streaming services as an alternative to 
Websites, Podcasting, Youtube, Content Delivery Networks (CDN)

* Distributed social networking platform as an alternative to Facebook, Google 
Plus, Diaspora

* Audio and video group communication as an alternative to Google Hangouts, 
Skype conferencing, telephone and VoIP conferencing

* Decentralized news distribution as an alternative to Reddit, Google news

* Anonymous, taxable payments as an alternative to Visa, Paypal, Bitcoin

_Phase 3 (long-term)_

* Decentralized, censorship resistant search engine as an alternative to Google 
search, Yahoo search, Microsoft Bing

* Migration to public key based routing as an alternative to BGP, OSPF

* Free and open hardware as an alternative to proprietary processors and 
peripherals (Intel, AMD)

[email protected]

_This vision is shared by_

wauland.de, GNUnet.org, secushare.org

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