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Guardian: Secure, Private, Anonymous Telephone built on Google Android

Project URL: 
http://nathanialfreitas.s3.amazonaws.com/Guardian022709.pdf
Short Project Overview: 

While mobile phones have been heralded as a powerful new tool for poticial activists, human rights advocates and public health initiaves around the globe, they are a step backwards when it comes to personal liberty, anonymity and safety. Google Android's open-source mobile telephony platform provides a foundation on which a new type of phone that cloaks its user and their data, both on the device itself and as it communicates around the world.

Detailed Project Overview: 

You can review a detailed presentation on this concept here: http://nathanialfreitas.s3.amazonaws.com/Guardian022709.pdf

Last year, I ran the global communications network for Students for a Free Tibet's campaign at the Beijing 2008 Olympics. Over seventy people had decided to travel to Beijing to take visible action, sacrificing their own personal liberty and safety for a cause they believed in. This included organizers, media spokespeople, documenting bloggers/videobloggers/photographers and the actual protesters themselves. In addition to the teams in Beijing, SFT also worked to get all of the information possible out from the ongoing uprising inside of Tibet. 

Beyond the Tibet cause, there are many compelling stories about the power of mobile phones in human rights causes. However, there are almost as many stories of how the authorities use these same phones against the people.

The common question in both of these scenarios ("free" people traveling into an authoritarian state and citizens of the state trying to find some freedom within) was how everyone could have their voices heard, and communicate safely, security and effectively with the outside world. How SMS messages be sent with vital information without that same message being used to reveal or incriminate someone? How can the amazing power of these tiny mobile computing devices be fully realized, while at the same time not being used against them by the power of the who usually runs or at least monitors all mobile phone communication. While great strides have been made in Internet-based security, privacy and anonymity, the same can't be said for our telephones. This project gives power to regular people to own and control their mobile phones without being afraid they are their own worsed enemy.

Existing mobile security products show promise, but are out of date, not good enough or too expensive. A movement is already underway to create custom versions of Android for a wide variety of phones and purposes.... we just need to tap into that!

What should a secure, private, anonymous phone offer?

  • Hidden / Invisible
    Simple / Automatic Public Key Mgmt
    Secure Inst Msg and SMS / MMS / Email
    User Auth / Biometrics
    Anonymous & Private Mobile Web Browsing
    Secure / Anonymous VOIP Telephony
    Encypted / Remote Storage
    Instant Erase / Remote Poison Pill 

All security functions must be hidden with the standard operating system.

How we'll make it happen: 

- Launch an official, public project in order to recruit open-source developers, supporters and potential users and funders
- Recruit the top open-source Android kernel hackers, app developers
- Find pilot project partners to test and validate technology in the field
- Create a strong brand around the project, like TorProject.org has

 

What else have you done in this area?: 

(Future) Fall 2009: Adjunct Professor at NYU Interactive Telecommunication Program - "Social Activism with Mobile Technology"

2008: TwitterVoteReport & NPR Inauguration Report iPhone and Android application clients (released as open-source gReporter software application: http://openideals.com/greporter/)

2007 - 2008: Director of Digital Operations, Students for a Free Tibet - Beijing 2008 Olympics Campaign = designed and implemented

2005 - 2008: variety of mobile oriented advocacy projects and open-source media distribution and communication software (https://ion.dev.java.net/)

2004: Anti-RNC 2004 Text Messaging Loop Manager

2001 - 2004: Senior Technical Product Manager, Palm, inc.

1998 - 2001: Founder/CTO, ThinAirApps, mobile software platform

 

Is there a video that helps describe your Project? If so, enter the embed code here: 
Project RSS Feed: 
http://openideals.com/feed/
Organization supporting your Project, if any: 
Students for a Free Tibet
Supporting Organization URL: 
http://studentsforafreetibet.org
City: 
New York
State/Region: 
NY
Country: 
United States
Does your Project have financial support?: 
No
Is the impact area of your Project global?: 
Yes
Type of expertise needed: 
Technical Expertise
Description: 

I need to support additional engineering expertise from members of the Android platform development community, as well as resources for the Internet security community, specifically, The Tor Project and GPG.

Type of expertise needed: 
Policy/Program Expertise
Description: 

In general, I need someone to help find and coordinate seed efforts for the results of this work. I need to work with organizations such as Witness, Human Rights Watch and Human Rights in China to design a strategy for the distribution of this software to the countries in which they work and focus. I also need to work with any organization, such as Reports without Borders and Medicins Sans Frontier, to develop programs for use by their teams.

Sustainability (financial) Model: 

Comparable commercial products for secure telephone sell for $500 to $3000 per handset. While all of this work will be released as open-source for free use by anyone with a compatible phone, commercial, pre-configured phones could easily be sold for a good profit. Service work around building secure mobile communications infrastructure is also a viable source of income and revenue.

Identified Obstacles: 
  • Need to recruit specific known members of the Android and security development communities
  • Need to have the support of the Google Android project
  • Need to have access to different mobile phone hardware and mobile carrier networks for testing

 

Project Milestones: 
  • Implement specific individual secure applications by Fall 2009
  • Deliver a complete functioning alpha by the end of 2009
  • Deliver a public beta by spring 2010 that can be used on any Android-compatible phone 
  • Find organizations and individuals for trial use - spring 2010
  • Release to the public - summer 2010

Sponsors

  • Microsoft
  • Yahoo
  • Business Objects
  • Raincity Studios
  • Mozilla Foundation
  • Ready Talk
  • .
  • Adobe
  • Linden Lab
  • Network For Good
  • Wild Apricot
  • Stanford Social Innovation Review
  • L'Atelier North America
  • The Panelist
  • Good
  • Fora.tv
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