On Tue, Mar 22, 2011 at 11:23 AM, Joe Btfsplk <joebtfs...@gmx.com> wrote: > Why would any govt create something their enemies can easily use against > them, then continue funding it once they know it helps the enemy, if a govt > has absolutely no control over it? It's that simple. It would seem a very > bad idea. Stop looking at it from a conspiracy standpoint & consider it as > a common sense question.
I hesitated in responding because it's just so easy to run of an infinite series of explanations. While any particular reason might not actually be valid, there are enough plausible ones that your argument of inconceivability can not be support. E.g. Because governments are not monolithic entities, because people don't have perfect foresight, because the benefit to your interests can outweigh the benefit against your interests, and communications technology arguably disproportionally benefits larger groups. Interests outweighed: Funding something like TOR may be the most cost effective way to achieve a particular end. In particular, a US government only anonymity network would likely not be very useful ("I don't know who this is, but it's a fed"). Regardless of it helping the enemy too, it can still be a net win to support. Not monolithic entities: If you have an organizational unit charged with accomplishing X they will work to accomplish X. Sometimes they may work so hard at it that stop another unit from accomplishing Y, even if Y was more important to the overall mission. This happens frequently in all kinds of large organizations. No perfect foresight: It's not always obvious to everyone that some move may turn net negative in the future. E.g. the US supporting the Taliban. (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taliban#United_States) Larger groups: If just you and I want to communicate with secrecy we can do so without something like TOR— we can send coded messages hidden in innocuous usenet posts or Wikipedia articles. The value of a network is related more to the square of its communicating members. If you're the bigger party it can help you more than it helps your smaller enemies. _______________________________________________ tor-talk mailing list tor-talk@lists.torproject.org https://lists.torproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/tor-talk