11. Online Identity
Now we have all the tools and the competencies needed to navigate in
anonymity – please note
that I wrote navigate, and not interact! The mere
presence of TOR or any other technology in between doesn’t mean you’re totally
safe; conversely, this sense of protection may be a double-edged sword for your
real identity.
11.1 NEVER combine your identities
Regardless of the tasks you want to perform – whether in clearnet or
deepweb – you must be able to
separate your activities to avoid making
connections and creating a fingerprint (is this term familiar?) of your identity.
Leaving traces of your activities – email, bitcoin addresses, names, locations,
etc. – allows to create a more detailed profile of the person of interest. In case
someone manages to merge your two identities, they could double their
information about you.
Let’s
get back to Ross Ulbricht, the late Silk Road admin, a portal that once
allowed him – as well as many other people – to earn hundreds of thousands of
dollars in the illicit market. Do you know how he got caught? When Silk Road
was not famous yet, Ross was the first one asking across the clearnet if anybody
knew that market – as you know, people do that to spam their websites. Together
with
other evidence, that episode pointed to Ross Ulbricht’s identity (and
consequently to other gang members).
11.2 NEVER use the same data
Even children know that a password should never contain your data (birth
date, full name, location, etc.); you should instead use random alpha-numeric
characters, numbers, special symbols and any other random input. You can use
different programs, like
KeePassX
(integrated in Tails),
LastPass, 1Password and
others, to generate new passwords as well as store them with a master-key to
unlock them all.
Due to security reasons, NEVER use a single keyring to store the passwords
for your “normal” activities and those for the “alternate” ones altogether. As we
mentioned above, you should never combine your identities! Besides the cases
where you would expose yourself consciously, you must also consider the traces
you leave behind unknowingly:
-
IP
addresses
-
Passwords
-
Birth Date
-
Billing Information
-
Addresses and Locations
-
Pictures and Similar Avatars
-
Similar Contact Addresses
-
... anything that could point to you or even to your second/third/fourth
identity and so on...
11.3 Watch Out for your Habits
If you often use some sayings, a particular dialect
or Write Like This or
make noticeable or repeated spelling errors, to the point that they could identify
you with no doubt... do something about that!
Probably, you’ve already been told about these “peculiarities”; if you are
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: