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une conversation sur la technologie, les droits humains, et la liberté en ligne, présentée par le projet Tor
PrivChat est une série d'événements organisés afin de récolter des dons pour le projet Tor. Grâce au PrivChat, nous vous apporterons des informations importantes liées à ce qui se passe dans le domaine de la technologie, des droits de l'homme et de la liberté de l'internet en réunissant des experts pour une discussion avec notre communauté.
Chapitre 5 - Protection contre Pegasus
Chaque année, les gouvernements, les forces de l'ordre, les armées et les entreprises investissent des milliards de dollars dans la création et l'achat de logiciels espions malveillants. Ces logiciels sont conçus pour s'infiltrer silencieusement dans le système d'un utilisateur et permettent aux attaquants d'en visualiser le contenu sans être détectés.
Cette année, le projet Pegasus a révélé que les utilisateurs de ce type de logiciel espion, connu sous le nom de Pegasus et construit par le groupe NSO, avaient ciblé les téléphones appartenant à des milliers de personnes dans plus de 50 pays, notamment des chefs d'entreprise, des hommes politiques, des journalistes et des militants des droits humains.
Dans cette édition du PrivChat, rejoignez Likhita et Etienne Maynier d'Amnesty International et John Scott-Railton de Citizen Lab pour discuter :
Roger Dingledine, Co-Founder of the Tor Project, will join us as our host and moderator.
Roger Dingledine is president and co-founder of the Tor Project, a nonprofit that develops free and open source software to protect people from tracking, censorship, and surveillance online. He works with journalists and activists on many continents to help them understand and defend against the threats they face. Roger was chosen by the MIT Technology Review as one of its top 35 innovators under 35, he co-authored the Tor design paper that won the Usenix Security "Test of Time" award, and he has been recognized by Foreign Policy magazine as one of its top 100 global thinkers.
Likhita works as a Researcher and Adviser for Amnesty International's Technology and Human Rights Programme. At present, she is involved in researching targeted surveillance and internet shutdowns. She has researched online hate speech against women and minority populations in India. Previously, she also researched and exposed challenges faced by human rights defenders in India and worked extensively on hate crimes in the country. Likhita holds a master's degree in Human Rights and Humanitarian Action from Sciences Po.
Etienne Maynier (he/him) is an activist and researcher who investigates the impact of targeted surveillance on NGOs and human rights defenders. He is currently working as Technologist in the Amnesty International's Security Lab doing technical research.
John Scott-Railton is a Senior Researcher at Citizen Lab (at The University of Toronto). His work focuses on technological threats in civil society, including targeted malware operations, cyber militias, and online disinformation. His greatest hits include a collaboration with colleague Bill Marczak that uncovered the first iPhone zero-day and remote jailbreak seen in the wild, as well as the use of Pegasus spyware to human rights defenders, journalists, and opposition figures in Mexico, the UAE, Canada, and Saudi Arabia. Other investigations with Citizen Lab colleagues include the first report of ISIS-led malware operations, and China's "Great Cannon," the Government of China's nation-scale DDoS attack. John has also investigated Russian and Iranian disinformation campaigns, and the manipulation of news aggregators such as Google News. John has been a fellow at Google Ideas and Jigsaw at Alphabet. He graduated with a University of Chicago and a Masters from the University of Michigan. He is completing a Ph.D. at UCLA. Previously he founded The Voices Projects, collaborative information feeds that bypassed internet shutdowns in Libya and Egypt. John's work has been covered by Time Magazine, BBC, CNN, The Washington Post, and the New York Times.
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