oh dear. He helped the government combat crime and nuisance style offenses. Clearly in collusion.
On Sun, Apr 6, 2014 at 12:20 PM, <tpb-cry...@laposte.net> wrote: > > Message du 06/04/14 17:41 > > De : "staticsafe" > > On 4/6/2014 10:40, tpb-cry...@laposte.net wrote: > > >> Message du 04/04/14 20:09 > > >> De : "Eric Mill" > > >> Along with Cloudflare's 2014 plan to offer SSL termination for free, > and > > >> their stated plan to double SSL on the Internet by end of year, the > barrier > > >> to HTTPS everywhere is dropping rapidly. > > >> > > > > > > I agree that putting https everywhere is great, but Cloudflare's > founders are tightly linked with the US-intelligence community. That fact > alone kind of kills any claims they make about data security within their > service. > > > > Source for this please? > > > > Is it so painful to do your own homework? > > "Matthew Prince, Lee Holloway, and Michelle Zatlyn created CloudFlare in > 2009.[1][2] They previously worked on Project Honey Pot." - > http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CloudFlare > > "[...] the project organizers also help various law enforcement agencies > combat private and commercial unsolicited bulk mailing offenses and overall > work to help reduce the amount of spam being sent [...]" - > http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Project_Honey_Pot > > That's just for starters, you can dig more and find more. It is > interesting that the history of the founders themselves is no longer > exhibited in cloudflare.com website as it was years ago. > > > As an American company, there is nothing preventing Cloudflare from > receiving NSLs and having to shut up about them. What use is a system that > you can't trust like this? > > You can say "oh, but they go after the bad guys, spammers". But that > doesn't limit it to spammers neither do we know who are the so called bad > guys, since that is decided by American secret laws, made by secret courts, > that issue secret orders. > > No trust to American companies, less even trust to American companies that > promise any kind of data security. Better no security than a false sense of > it. > > Sorry. > _______________________________________________ > cryptography mailing list > cryptogra...@randombit.net > http://lists.randombit.net/mailman/listinfo/cryptography >