Anybody know anything about this?  Sounds cool!

-david

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/06/12/world/12internet.html?_r=1

The Obama administration is leading a global effort to deploy “shadow” 
Internet and mobile phone systems that dissidents can use to undermine 
repressive governments that seek to silence them by censoring or 
shutting down telecommunications networks.
Multimedia

Slide Show
Technology for ‘Shadow’ Internet Networks

Graphic
Creating a Stealth Internet
The effort includes secretive projects to create independent cellphone 
networks inside foreign countries, as well as one operation out of a spy 
novel in a fifth-floor shop on L Street in Washington, where a group of 
young entrepreneurs who look as if they could be in a garage band are 
fitting deceptively innocent-looking hardware into a prototype “Internet 
in a suitcase.”

Financed with a $2 million State Department grant, the suitcase could be 
secreted across a border and quickly set up to allow wireless 
communication over a wide area with a link to the global Internet.

The American effort, revealed in dozens of interviews, planning 
documents and classified diplomatic cables obtained by The New York 
Times, ranges in scale, cost and sophistication.

Some projects involve technology that the United States is developing; 
others pull together tools that have already been created by hackers in 
a so-called liberation-technology movement sweeping the globe.

The State Department, for example, is financing the creation of stealth 
wireless networks that would enable activists to communicate outside the 
reach of governments in countries like Iran, Syria and Libya, according 
to participants in the projects.

In one of the most ambitious efforts, United States officials say, the 
State Department and Pentagon have spent at least $50 million to create 
an independent cellphone network in Afghanistan using towers on 
protected military bases inside the country. It is intended to offset 
the Taliban’s ability to shut down the official Afghan services, 
seemingly at will.

The effort has picked up momentum since the government of President 
Hosni Mubarak shut down the Egyptian Internet in the last days of his 
rule. In recent days, the Syrian government also temporarily disabled 
much of that country’s Internet, which had helped protesters mobilize.

The Obama administration’s initiative is in one sense a new front in a 
longstanding diplomatic push to defend free speech and nurture 
democracy. For decades, the United States has sent radio broadcasts into 
autocratic countries through Voice of America and other means. More 
recently, Washington has supported the development of software that 
preserves the anonymity of users in places like China, and training for 
citizens who want to pass information along the government-owned 
Internet without getting caught.

But the latest initiative depends on creating entirely separate pathways 
for communication. It has brought together an improbable alliance of 
diplomats and military engineers, young programmers and dissidents from 
at least a dozen countries, many of whom variously describe the new 
approach as more audacious and clever and, yes, cooler.

Sometimes the State Department is simply taking advantage of 
enterprising dissidents who have found ways to get around government 
censorship. American diplomats are meeting with operatives who have been 
burying Chinese cellphones in the hills near the border with North 
Korea, where they can be dug up and used to make furtive calls, 
according to interviews and the diplomatic cables.

The new initiatives have found a champion in Secretary of State Hillary 
Rodham Clinton, whose department is spearheading the American effort. 
“We see more and more people around the globe using the Internet, mobile 
phones and other technologies to make their voices heard as they protest 
against injustice and seek to realize their aspirations,” Mrs. Clinton 
said in an e-mail response to a query on the topic. “There is a historic 
opportunity to effect positive change, change America supports,” she 
said. “So we’re focused on helping them do that, on helping them talk to 
each other, to their communities, to their governments and to the world.”

Developers caution that independent networks come with downsides: 
repressive governments could use surveillance to pinpoint and arrest 
activists who use the technology or simply catch them bringing hardware 
across the border. But others believe that the risks are outweighed by 
the potential impact. “We’re going to build a separate infrastructure 
where the technology is nearly impossible to shut down, to control, to 
surveil,” said Sascha Meinrath, who is leading the “Internet in a 
suitcase” project as director of the Open Technology Initiative at the 
New America Foundation, a nonpartisan research group.

“The implication is that this disempowers central authorities from 
infringing on people’s fundamental human right to communicate,” Mr. 
Meinrath added.

The Invisible Web

In an anonymous office building on L Street in Washington, four unlikely 
State Department contractors sat around a table. Josh King, sporting 
multiple ear piercings and a studded leather wristband, taught himself 
programming while working as a barista. Thomas Gideon was an 
accomplished hacker. Dan Meredith, a bicycle polo enthusiast, helped 
companies protect their digital secrets.

Then there was Mr. Meinrath, wearing a tie as the dean of the group at 
age 37. He has a master’s degree in psychology and helped set up 
wireless networks in underserved communities in Detroit and Philadelphia.

The group’s suitcase project will rely on a version of “mesh network” 
technology, which can transform devices like cellphones or personal 
computers to create an invisible wireless web without a centralized hub. 
In other words, a voice, picture or e-mail message could hop directly 
between the modified wireless devices — each one acting as a mini cell 
“tower” and phone — and bypass the official network.

Mr. Meinrath said that the suitcase would include small wireless 
antennas, which could increase the area of coverage; a laptop to 
administer the system; thumb drives and CDs to spread the software to 
more devices and encrypt the communications; and other components like 
Ethernet cables.

The project will also rely on the innovations of independent Internet 
and telecommunications developers.

“The cool thing in this political context is that you cannot easily 
control it,” said Aaron Kaplan, an Austrian cybersecurity expert whose 
work will be used in the suitcase project. Mr. Kaplan has set up a 
functioning mesh network in Vienna and says related systems have 
operated in Venezuela, Indonesia and elsewhere.

Mr. Meinrath said his team was focused on fitting the system into the 
bland-looking suitcase and making it simple to implement — by, say, 
using “pictograms” in the how-to manual.

In addition to the Obama administration’s initiatives, there are almost 
a dozen independent ventures that also aim to make it possible for 
unskilled users to employ existing devices like laptops or smartphones 
to build a wireless network. One mesh network was created around 
Jalalabad, Afghanistan, as early as five years ago, using technology 
developed at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Creating simple lines of communication outside official ones is crucial, 
said Collin Anderson, a 26-year-old liberation-technology researcher 
from North Dakota who specializes in Iran, where the government all but 
shut down the Internet during protests in 2009. The slowdown made most 
“circumvention” technologies — the software legerdemain that helps 
dissidents sneak data along the state-controlled networks — nearly 
useless, he said.

“No matter how much circumvention the protesters use, if the government 
slows the network down to a crawl, you can’t upload YouTube videos or 
Facebook postings,” Mr. Anderson said. “They need alternative ways of 
sharing information or alternative ways of getting it out of the country.”

That need is so urgent, citizens are finding their own ways to set up 
rudimentary networks. Mehdi Yahyanejad, an Iranian expatriate and 
technology developer who co-founded a popular Persian-language Web site, 
estimates that nearly half the people who visit the site from inside 
Iran share files using Bluetooth — which is best known in the West for 
running wireless headsets and the like. In more closed societies, 
however, Bluetooth is used to discreetly beam information — a video, an 
electronic business card — directly from one cellphone to another.

Mr. Yahyanejad said he and his research colleagues were also slated to 
receive State Department financing for a project that would modify 
Bluetooth so that a file containing, say, a video of a protester being 
beaten, could automatically jump from phone to phone within a “trusted 
network” of citizens. The system would be more limited than the suitcase 
but would only require the software modification on ordinary phones.

By the end of 2011, the State Department will have spent some $70 
million on circumvention efforts and related technologies, according to 
department figures.

Mrs. Clinton has made Internet freedom into a signature cause. But the 
State Department has carefully framed its support as promoting free 
speech and human rights for their own sake, not as a policy aimed at 
destabilizing autocratic governments.

That distinction is difficult to maintain, said Clay Shirky, an 
assistant professor at New York University who studies the Internet and 
social media. “You can’t say, ‘All we want is for people to speak their 
minds, not bring down autocratic regimes’ — they’re the same thing,” Mr. 
Shirky said.

He added that the United States could expose itself to charges of 
hypocrisy if the State Department maintained its support, tacit or 
otherwise, for autocratic governments running countries like Saudi 
Arabia or Bahrain while deploying technology that was likely to 
undermine them.

Shadow Cellphone System

In February 2009, Richard C. Holbrooke and Lt. Gen. John R. Allen were 
taking a helicopter tour over southern Afghanistan and getting a 
panoramic view of the cellphone towers dotting the remote countryside, 
according to two officials on the flight. By then, millions of Afghans 
were using cellphones, compared with a few thousand after the 2001 
invasion. Towers built by private companies had sprung up across the 
country. The United States had promoted the network as a way to 
cultivate good will and encourage local businesses in a country that in 
other ways looked as if it had not changed much in centuries.

There was just one problem, General Allen told Mr. Holbrooke, who only 
weeks before had been appointed special envoy to the region. With a 
combination of threats to phone company officials and attacks on the 
towers, the Taliban was able to shut down the main network in the 
countryside virtually at will. Local residents report that the networks 
are often out from 6 p.m. until 6 a.m., presumably to enable the Taliban 
to carry out operations without being reported to security forces.

The Pentagon and State Department were soon collaborating on the project 
to build a “shadow” cellphone system in a country where repressive 
forces exert control over the official network.

Details of the network, which the military named the Palisades project, 
are scarce, but current and former military and civilian officials said 
it relied in part on cell towers placed on protected American bases. A 
large tower on the Kandahar air base serves as a base station or data 
collection point for the network, officials said.

A senior United States official said the towers were close to being up 
and running in the south and described the effort as a kind of 911 
system that would be available to anyone with a cellphone.

By shutting down cellphone service, the Taliban had found a potent 
strategic tool in its asymmetric battle with American and Afghan 
security forces.

The United States is widely understood to use cellphone networks in 
Afghanistan, Iraq and other countries for intelligence gathering. And 
the ability to silence the network was also a powerful reminder to the 
local populace that the Taliban retained control over some of the most 
vital organs of the nation.

When asked about the system, Lt. Col. John Dorrian, a spokesman for the 
American-led International Security Assistance Force, or ISAF, would 
only confirm the existence of a project to create what he called an 
“expeditionary cellular communication service” in Afghanistan. He said 
the project was being carried out in collaboration with the Afghan 
government in order to “restore 24/7 cellular access.”

“As of yet the program is not fully operational, so it would be 
premature to go into details,” Colonel Dorrian said.

Colonel Dorrian declined to release cost figures. Estimates by United 
States military and civilian officials ranged widely, from $50 million 
to $250 million. A senior official said that Afghan officials, who 
anticipate taking over American bases when troops pull out, have 
insisted on an elaborate system. “The Afghans wanted the Cadillac plan, 
which is pretty expensive,” the official said.

Broad Subversive Effort

In May 2009, a North Korean defector named Kim met with officials at the 
American Consulate in Shenyang, a Chinese city about 120 miles from 
North Korea, according to a diplomatic cable. Officials wanted to know 
how Mr. Kim, who was active in smuggling others out of the country, 
communicated across the border. “Kim would not go into much detail,” the 
cable says, but did mention the burying of Chinese cellphones “on 
hillsides for people to dig up at night.” Mr. Kim said Dandong, China, 
and the surrounding Jilin Province “were natural gathering points for 
cross-border cellphone communication and for meeting sources.” The 
cellphones are able to pick up signals from towers in China, said Libby 
Liu, head of Radio Free Asia, the United States-financed broadcaster, 
who confirmed their existence and said her organization uses the calls 
to collect information for broadcasts as well.

The effort, in what is perhaps the world’s most closed nation, suggests 
just how many independent actors are involved in the subversive efforts. 
 From the activist geeks on L Street in Washington to the military 
engineers in Afghanistan, the global appeal of the technology hints at 
the craving for open communication.

In a chat with a Times reporter via Facebook, Malik Ibrahim Sahad, the 
son of Libyan dissidents who largely grew up in suburban Virginia, said 
he was tapping into the Internet using a commercial satellite connection 
in Benghazi. “Internet is in dire need here. The people are cut off in 
that respect,” wrote Mr. Sahad, who had never been to Libya before the 
uprising and is now working in support of rebel authorities. Even so, he 
said, “I don’t think this revolution could have taken place without the 
existence of the World Wide Web.”


Reporting was contributed by Richard A. Oppel Jr. and Andrew W. Lehren 
from New York, and Alissa J. Rubin and Sangar Rahimi from Kabul, 
Afghanistan.
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