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posted by janrinok on Wednesday August 03 2016, @03:53PM   Printer-friendly
from the AC's-dream dept.

Tails Linux 2.5 is out (Aug 2, 2016).

Tails is a live system that aims to preserve your privacy and anonymity. It helps you to use the Internet anonymously and circumvent censorship almost anywhere you go and on any computer but leaving no trace unless you ask it to explicitly.

It is a complete operating system designed to be used from a DVD, USB stick, or SD card independently of the computer's original operating system. It is Free Software and based on Debian GNU/Linux.

Tails comes with several built-in applications pre-configured with security in mind: web browser, instant messaging client, email client, office suite, image and sound editor, etc

= Announcements:
https://tails.boum.org/news/version_2.5/index.en.html
https://twitter.com/Tails_live/status/760516381905448968
https://mailman.boum.org/pipermail/amnesia-news/2016-August/000110.html
https://twitter.com/torproject/status/760516806587117568

[Continues...]

Useful links:


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  • (Score: 2) by butthurt on Thursday August 04 2016, @01:19AM

    by butthurt (6141) on Thursday August 04 2016, @01:19AM (#383865) Journal

    OpenBSD has the same problem as Linux: it distributes non-free, sourceless firmwares.

    You may be right--I haven't personally checked. Do you recall which driver it is that has the binary blob? A 2006 On Lamp article said:

    OpenBSD attempts to convince vendors to release documentation and often reverse-engineers around the need for blobs. OpenBSD remains blob-free.

    --http://www.onlamp.com/pub/a/bsd/2006/04/27/openbsd-3_9.html [onlamp.com]

    [...] it [is] crazy to suppose these blobs are spyware-free.
    [...]
    My advice to privacy seekers, stick with free+libre software.

    The blobs, as I said, are loaded only on hardware that requires them. If we choose hardware that doesn't require loadable firmware or a closed-source driver, that hardware may instead have closed-source firmware that is burned into a ROM; it too may harbour malware. The Talos Secure Workstation [raptorengineering.com] comes with "schematics and libre (fully open and auditable) firmware" but is costly. Richard Stallman uses an old Thinkpad [stallman.org] with an open-source BIOS; it may well have non-free firmware in ROM.

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  • (Score: 2) by melikamp on Thursday August 04 2016, @01:56AM

    by melikamp (1886) on Thursday August 04 2016, @01:56AM (#383882) Journal

    For OpenBSD, see /etc/firmware/atu-license in base. The word "blob" has no strict meaning, and OpenBSD people seem to use to mean main CPU binary, hence their claim is OK, while they still distribute non-free, sourceless software. Actually. if you look at Atmel license carefully, it says that you cannot distribute in source, so reverse-engineering is pointless.

    What you say about device use is true, and we all make compromises and even RMS uses other people's spy-phones. What RMS doesn't do is he doesn't distribute non-free, sourceless privacy software to others, while telling them it is the state of the art.