• @V0lD@lemmy.world
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      31 year ago

      Tbf to foobar, that should still give a falsifiable and testable data-difference if you are willing to alter your behaviour around experimentation for an extended period of time

      Though, there are always more ways to hide traffic

    • @FooBarrington@lemmy.world
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      -11 year ago

      Again: Which you could easily see by looking at the amount of traffic sent after unmuting, unless you believe that Amazon secretly found an infinite compression algorithm they use only in muted Echo devices.

      You understand that sending more information means more traffic? Unless - as I stated - they found a perfect compression algorithm, you’d be able to tell.

      • @CoggyMcFee@lemmy.world
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        61 year ago

        I’m a little confused as to why you are being so condescending. Every time you say “this is so simple if you do X”. And then I say “what about Y?” And then you’re like “that’s obvious too, just do Z” and kind of insulting me, even though you did not account for it in your prior comment. And it becomes less trivial with each additional test.

        Your first method involves simply checking if there is any traffic after muting. Your revised method involves additionally checking if there is any traffic for some period of time after muting (how long?). And now your third method involves doing the first two things as well as gathering data on the average amount of traffic in your requests generally and deciding whether subsequent traffic during requests after muting for an unspecified amount of time is significantly large enough to conclude it is sending information acquired during muting.

        But if they send it a little bit at a time, or they just leak a small portion of it occasionally in some requests, I think it would be very challenging to conclude definitively one way or the other.

        I’m actually aware that there is no infinite compression algorithm, so you don’t need to keep saying that. And to be honest it just makes you look like you are lacking imagination because it’s not the only way to make detection difficult as illustrated by my responses.

        • @FooBarrington@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          I’m a little confused as to why you are being so condescending. Every time you say “this is so simple if you do X”. And then I say “what about Y?” And then you’re like “that’s obvious too, just do Z” and kind of insulting me, even though you did not account for it in your prior comment. And it becomes less trivial with each additional test.

          I’m writing the way I do because you’re bringing up points that are incredibly easy to disprove as if they’re some kind of gotcha. “They might store the data” seems like a good point until you remember that even that stored data has to be transmitted at some point. How would you have me reply to these non-arguments?

          Your first method involves simply checking if there is any traffic after muting.

          Because it’s sufficient to prove that the device doesn’t just not respond. That was the initial point I was replying to. Why do I have to find any possible counter-arguments when they weren’t brought up?

          Your revised method involves additionally checking if there is any traffic for some period of time after muting (how long?).

          Yes, because it’s sufficient to disprove the additional point you brought up. Just do it until the heat death of the universe if you want to be sure. You’re the one theorizing they might store the data locally. Create a full hypothesis, and I can tell you how to disprove it.

          And now your third method involves doing the first two things as well as gathering data on the average amount of traffic in your requests generally and deciding whether subsequent traffic during requests after muting for an unspecified amount of time is significantly large enough to conclude it is sending information acquired during muting.

          You make it sound like “gathering data on the average amount of traffic in your requests generally” is complicated, and like you don’t already have the data from the previous two points.

          But if they send it a little bit at a time, or they just leak a small portion of it occasionally in some requests, I think it would be very challenging to conclude definitively one way or the other.

          And you could still see this through statistical analysis.

          I’m actually aware that there is no infinite compression algorithm, so you don’t need to keep saying that. And to be honest it just makes you look like you are lacking imagination because it’s not the only way to make detection difficult as illustrated by my responses.

          It’s the only way your points make full sense. It’s a simple truth of the universe that transmitting more information requires transmitting more information. The only way to get around this is the aforementioned infinite compression algorithm. Any other method is detectable through statistical means.

          • @CoggyMcFee@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            It was never supposed to be a “gotcha”, it’s just the obvious question that arises based on what you said. I didn’t think my ideas were clever. Your thesis when you started this thread was that there was an easy way to be sure that the mute is real, and you gave it. You sound like a person who simply can’t stand to just say “oh right, I misspoke” or even just “ah yes, I oversimplified”, so you act like obviously everything I bring up was implied all along, with a touch of rudeness as punishment. Even though, again, your point about there needing to be a zero-compression algorithm made it seem like there was nothing else left to account for, even though there was.

            I would not be surprised at all if there is a way to detect with high confidence whether the mute does what it should, and for all I know that has been done. I was really just wanting to hear what I was missing by bringing up the obvious questions that a non-security expert like me would wonder. It seemed like it couldn’t be as straightforward as you said, and through your responses in fact it isn’t. You really have to ask yourself what you were even trying to accomplish with posting on this topic at all based on your reaction to those very simple, non-threatening questions.

            • @FooBarrington@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              It was never supposed to be a “gotcha”, it’s just the obvious question that arises based on what you said.

              And I gave the obvious answers to those obvious questions.

              I didn’t think my ideas were clever. Your thesis when you started this thread was that there was an easy way to be sure that the mute is real, and you gave it.

              Sorry, but that’s a mis-representation. Somebody said “Also muting it probably doesn’t stop it listening, it just stops its response.”, and I replied to that with a simple way to show it’s not the case. I didn’t bring in a thesis, I brought up a counter-argument.

              You sound like a person who simply can’t stand to just say “oh right, I misspoke” or even just “ah yes, I oversimplified”, so you act like obviously everything I bring up was implied all along, with a touch of rudeness as punishment.

              You’re free to show me where I went wrong, but I don’t see it. Somebody said “what if A?”, and I responded “it can’t be A due to X”. Then you came in “what if B?”, I said “it can’t be B due to Y”. Then you came in again and I responded again. Where did I supposedly oversimplify or mis-speak? People kept bringing up hypotheses, and I kept bringing up counter-arguments.

              Even though, again, your point about there needing to be a zero-compression algorithm made it seem like there was nothing else left to account for, even though there was.

              Yes, if someone makes a different argument, previous counter-arguments won’t fit. Seems pretty obvious?

              I would not be surprised at all if there is a way to detect with high confidence whether the mute does what it should, and for all I know that has been done. I was really just wanting to hear what I was missing by bringing up the obvious questions that a non-security expert like me would wonder.

              And I gave you answers for your “obvious questions”. It would help a lot if you formulate your questions as questions. You formulated them as arguments, to which I replied with counter-arguments.

              It seemed like it couldn’t be as straightforward as you said, and through your responses in fact it isn’t. You really have to ask yourself what you were even trying to accomplish with posting on this topic at all based on your reaction to those very simple, non-threatening questions.

              The answers to the questions you brought up are as straightforward as I said. The answer to other questions isn’t as straightforward, because I didn’t answer those questions.

          • @finn_der_mensch@discuss.tchncs.de
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            -11 year ago

            When there isn’t any stored data to be sent, they could easily send fake/random data in requests though. So then it’s not detectable if data is stored and sent or not. How would you make up for that?

            • @FooBarrington@lemmy.world
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              31 year ago

              That’s actually a good point! Random data is unlikely since it would be noticable due to differences in size of the compressed traffic (random data doesn’t compress), but fake data would not be distinguishable from just looking at traffic.

              Luckily there are still things you can do, like analyzing the firmware itself (especially when you can inject your MitM proxy cert). It has been done before, and it’s reasonable to assume such a technique would have been found by security researchers by now.