First Look Publishes Open Source Code To Advance Privacy, Security, and 
Journalism

By Micah Lee
@micahflee
Today at 4:24 PM

https://firstlook.org/theintercept/2015/05/27/first-look-publishes-code-redact-documents-create-warrant-canaries/

The Intercept and its publisher First Look Media strongly believe in the 
benefits of free and open source software — in part because we rely on such 
software every day. To keep our journalists and sources safe, we use secure 
communication tools like the data-encryption system GnuPG, the Off-the-Record 
secure messaging protocol, the SecureDrop communications platform, and the 
secure calling and texting app Signal. To publish on the web, we use the 
GNU/Linux operating system; the Apache web server; OpenSSL, a web encryption 
library; WordPress, the open-source blogging engine; and Piwik, which tracks 
web traffic. The list goes on.

We greatly appreciate the hard work of developers who give away their code to 
benefit the internet and the world. And today we’re excited to contribute back 
to the open source community by launching First Look Code, the home for our own 
open source projects related to privacy, security, data, and journalism. To 
begin with, First Look Code is the new home for document sanitization software 
PDF Redact Tools, and we’ve launched a brand new anti-gag order project called 
AutoCanary.

PDF Redact Tools

When The Intercept first launched, part of my job involved redacting documents 
from NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden before publishing them. Because we didn’t 
want to inadvertantly publish sensitive information we’d intended to redact — 
as no less cautious an institution than The New York Times once did — I 
developed PDF Redact Tools, a simple command-line program for Mac OS X and 
Linux that helps with redacting, stripping metadata, and sanitizing PDFs in 
preparation for publishing.

Read more about PDF Redact Tools on its new website.

AutoCanary

A warrant canary is a regularly published statement that a company hasn’t 
received any legal orders that it’s not allowed to talk about, such as a 
national security letter.

Canaries can help prevent web publishers from misleading visitors and prevent 
tech companies from misleading users when they share data with the government 
and are prevented from talking about it. One such situation arose — without a 
canary in place — in 2013, when the U.S. government sent Lavabit, a provider of 
encrypted email services apparently used by Snowden, a legal request to access 
Snowden’s email, thwarting some of the very privacy protections Lavabit had 
promised users. This request included a gag order, so the company was legally 
prohibited from talking about it. Rather than becoming “complicit in crimes 
against the American people,” in his words, Lavabit founder Ladar Levison, 
chose to shut down the service.

Warrant canaries are designed to help companies in this kind of situation. You 
can see a list of companies that publish warrant canary statements at Canary 
Watch. As of today, First Look Media is among the companies that publish 
canaries.

We’re happy to announce the first version of AutoCanary, a desktop program for 
Windows, Mac OS X, and Linux that makes the process of generating 
machine-readable, digitally-signed warrant canary statements simpler.

Read more about AutoCanary on its new website.

Email the author: [email protected]

--
It's better to burn out than fade away.

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