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Signal’s Katherine Maher Problem
City Journal ^ | May 6, 2024 | Christopher F. Rufo

Posted on 05/08/2024 9:30:37 AM PDT by Twotone

The encrypted-messaging service Signal is the application of choice for dissenters around the world. The app has been downloaded by more than 100 million users and boasts high-profile endorsements from NSA leaker Edward Snowden and serial entrepreneur Elon Musk. Signal has created the perception that its users, including political dissidents, can communicate with one another without fear of government interception or persecution.

But the insider history of Signal raises questions about the app’s origins and its relationship with government—in particular, with the American intelligence apparatus. Such a relationship would be troubling, given how much we have learned, in recent years, about extensive efforts to control and censor information undertaken by technology companies, sometimes in tandem with American government officials.

First, the origin story. The technology behind Signal, which operates as a nonprofit foundation, was initially funded, in part, through a $3 million grant from the government-sponsored Open Technology Fund (OTF), which was spun off from Radio Free Asia, originally established as an anti-Communist information service during the Cold War. OTF funded Signal to provide “encrypted mobile communication tools” to “Internet freedom defenders globally.”

Some insiders have argued that the connection between OTF and U.S. intelligence is deeper than it appears. One person who has worked extensively with OTF but asked to remain anonymous told me that, over time, it became increasingly clear “that the project was actually a State Department-connected initiative that planned to wield open source Internet projects made by hacker communities as tools for American foreign policy goals”—including by empowering “activists [and] parties opposed to governments that the USA doesn’t like.” Whatever the merits of such efforts, the claim—if true—suggests a government involvement with Signal that deserves more scrutiny.

The other potential problem is the Signal Foundation’s current chairman of the board, Katherine Maher, who started her career as a U.S.-backed agent of regime change. During the Arab Spring period, for instance, Maher ran digital-communications initiatives in the Middle East and North Africa for the National Democratic Institute, a largely government-funded organization that works in concert with American foreign policy campaigns. Maher cultivated relationships with online dissidents and used American technologies to advance the interests of U.S.-supported Color Revolutions abroad.

Maher then became CEO of the Wikimedia Foundation in 2016, and, earlier this year, was named CEO of National Public Radio. At Wikipedia, Maher became a campaigner against “disinformation” and admitted to coordinating online censorship “through conversations with government.” She openly endorsed removing alleged “fascists,” including President Trump, from digital platforms, and described the First Amendment as “the number one challenge” to eliminating “bad information.”

According to the insider, a woman named Meredith Whittaker, who became president of the Signal Foundation in 2022, recruited Maher to become board chair because of their mutual connections to OTF, where Maher also serves as an advisor, and to nonprofits such as Access Now, which “defends and extends the digital rights of users at risk around the world,” including in the Middle East and North Africa. Whittaker, like Maher, is highly ideological. She previously worked in a high position at Google and organized left-wing campaigns within the company, culminating in the 2018 “Google Walkout,” which demanded MeToo-style sexual harassment policies and the hiring of a chief diversity officer.

So what does all this mean for American users—including conservative dissidents—who believe that Signal is a secure application for communication? It means that they should be cautious. “Maher’s presence on the board of Signal is alarming,” says national security analyst J. Michael Waller. “It makes sense that a Color Revolutionary like Maher would have interest in Signal as a secure means of communicating,” he says, but her past support for censorship and apparent intelligence connections raise doubts about Signal’s trustworthiness. David Heinemeier Hansson, creator of the popular Ruby on Rails web-development framework, agrees, saying that it had “suddenly become materially harder” to trust the Signal Foundation under Maher’s board leadership.

For those who believe in a free and open Internet, Maher’s Signal role should be a flashing warning sign. As she once explained, she abandoned the mission of a free and open Internet at Wikipedia, because those principles recapitulated a “white male Westernized construct” and “did not end up living into the intentionality of what openness can be.” The better path, in her view, is managed opinion, using, alternately, censorship and promotion of dissent—depending on context and goal—as the essential methods.

We’re entering a dangerous period in political technology, and Maher is in the thick of it. Under her ideology, “Internet freedom” is a tactic, not a principle, and “fighting disinformation” means speech suppression, including here at home. When people tell you who they are, believe them.


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: accessnow; casssunstein; christopherfrufo; christopherrufo; colorrevolution; colorrevolutions; davidhansson; disinformation; googlewalkout; internetfreedom; jmichaelwaller; katherinemaher; meredithwhittaker; otf; rubyonrails; signal; signalfoundation

1 posted on 05/08/2024 9:30:37 AM PDT by Twotone
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To: Twotone

Any online service is not secure. Period.


2 posted on 05/08/2024 9:32:33 AM PDT by MeganC ("Russians are subhuman" - posted by Kazan 8 March 2024)
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To: Twotone

A few years ago, a friend was telling me about Signal and that I should sign up. My response was, “If they’re telling you that it can’t be tracked, isn’t that kind of a red flag that you’re being tracked? Tell you what… if you have anything super-secret to tell me, call me and we’ll go for a walk without our phones.”


3 posted on 05/08/2024 9:49:50 AM PDT by ponygirl (Stay gold.)
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To: Twotone
My forty year career in telecommunications allowed me to know there is no such thing as secure encryption.   For the record, in the USAF I operated TS NSA crypto gear.   This puts my understanding into overdrive.
4 posted on 05/08/2024 9:54:51 AM PDT by higgmeister (In the Shadow of The Big Chicken! )
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To: ponygirl

I always thought that Signal was a government operation; directly or indirectly.

It’s value is against commercial espionage of the ordinary sort - what kind of car you want to buy, what hospital you frequent, what family strife you may have, and so on.

For political dissent against the government.. it is not so useful.

C.W.


5 posted on 05/08/2024 9:55:44 AM PDT by colderwater
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To: Twotone

Regardless of his politics, Chomsky wrote about this practice in “Manufacturing Consent” over 30 years ago. There’s no reason to think it’s not happening here.


6 posted on 05/08/2024 9:56:44 AM PDT by Bob Wills is still the king (Just a Texas Playboy at heart)
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To: higgmeister

Frequency hopping spread-spectrum is almost impossible to compromise.


7 posted on 05/08/2024 10:22:31 AM PDT by Signalman (I am not a snob. Ask anyone who matters.)
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To: Twotone

Is Telegram better?


8 posted on 05/08/2024 10:27:37 AM PDT by montag813
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To: montag813

I figure it really doesn’t matter. The powers that be know my opinion by now. ;-)


9 posted on 05/08/2024 10:29:23 AM PDT by Twotone
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To: Twotone

The real story is not about Signal (which I use), it is about Katherine Maher. Read the City Journal articles about her and think about it every time you use Wikipedia.


10 posted on 05/08/2024 11:26:31 AM PDT by steve86 (Numquam accusatus, numquam ad curiam ibit, numquam ad carcerem™)
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To: Signalman
Frequency hopping spread-spectrum is almost impossible to compromise.

I see you were a ditty bopper in the real war.   The USAF Security Service ditty boppers trained on the floor below us at Keesler.

I haven't had any experience with frequency hopping spread-spectrum but it seems like it would be a little messy to manage in a real world situation.   I guess now-a-days moving up in the GHz bands, transmissions might be cleaner.

11 posted on 05/08/2024 11:45:57 AM PDT by higgmeister (In the Shadow of The Big Chicken! )
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To: MeganC

I suspect the CIA/FBI “leaked” the app in order to have full real time access to these peoples’ communications.


12 posted on 05/08/2024 1:38:28 PM PDT by arthurus ( covfefe Bi)
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To: Signalman

Unless FBI has the templates and now has full access to unguarded communications with these “dissidents.”


13 posted on 05/08/2024 1:40:22 PM PDT by arthurus ( covfefe Pd)
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To: arthurus

Yes, give people a false sense of security and then see what they say.


14 posted on 05/08/2024 2:29:59 PM PDT by MeganC ("Russians are subhuman" - posted by Kazan 8 March 2024)
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