If you don’t mind saying, can you say if you are a US citizen? (Probably)
Do you work on an open source project like TOR? Do you think they do that because you do development? I’d love if we build a profile of who they actively perform hardware attacks on. They likely repeat this on categories of people (TOR devs, employees at CAs, etc.). Even if you can give a vague category (crypto-currency vs open source file system encryption, etc.) That one lady on twitter was a TOR dev. I’d love us to deduce as many patterns as possible, so those people can be incredibly diligent. Best, -Bryan Bryan Starbuck | [email protected] On Jul 19, 2014, at 5:25 PM, coderman <[email protected]> wrote: > On Sat, Jul 19, 2014 at 5:20 PM, Bryan Starbuck <[email protected]> > wrote: >> I like buying a computer in a surprise visit to an apple store or a store >> that sells windows computers. > > > agreed; on site ad-hoc cash purchases the best procurement technique. > not infallible by any means, but at least avoids some known problems > like this amusing scenario. > > (shipments from the Seattle Amazon warehouse to Kansas before delivery > to Oregon was also funny.) > > > repeat for emphasis: > - keep chain of custody of sensitive hardware at all times > - never procure or ship through mail. at one point, priority same day > air would get a pass, but even this no longer suitable. > > > best regards,
