21 October 2013
CryptoSeal Privacy Closes
https://privacy.cryptoseal.com/
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CryptoSeal Privacy Consumer VPN service terminated with immediate effect
With immediate effect as of this notice, CryptoSeal Privacy, our consumer
VPN service, is terminated. All cryptographic keys used in the operation
of the service have been zerofilled, and while no logs were produced (by
design) during operation of the service, all records created incidental to
the operation of the service have been deleted to the best of our ability.
Essentially, the service was created and operated under a certain understanding
of current US law, and that understanding may not currently be valid. As
we are a US company and comply fully with US law, but wish to protect the
privacy of our users, it is impossible for us to continue offering the CryptoSeal
Privacy consumer VPN product.
Specifically, the Lavabit case, with filings released by Kevin Poulsen of
Wired.com
(https://www.documentcloud.org/documents/801182-redacted-pleadings-exhibits-1-23.html)
reveals a Government theory that if a pen register order is made on a provider,
and the provider's systems do not readily facilitate full monitoring of pen
register information and delivery to the Government in realtime, the Government
can compel production of cryptographic keys via a warrant to support a
government-provided pen trap device. Our system does not support recording
any of the information commonly requested in a pen register order, and it
would be technically infeasible for us to add this in a prompt manner. The
consequence, being forced to turn over cryptographic keys to our entire system
on the strength of a pen register order, is unreasonable in our opinion,
and likely unconstitutional, but until this matter is settled, we are unable
to proceed with our service.
We encourage anyone interested in this issue to support Ladar Levison and
Lavabit in their ongoing legal battle. Donations can be made at
https://rally.org/lavabit We believe Lavabit is an excellent test case for
this issue.
We are actively investigating alternative technical ways to provide a consumer
privacy VPN service in the future, in compliance with the law (even the
Government's current interpretation of pen register orders and compelled
key disclosure) without compromising user privacy, but do not have an estimated
release date at this time.
To our affected users: we are sincerely sorry for any inconvenience. For
any users with positive account balances at the time of this action, we will
provide 1 year subscriptions to a non-US VPN service of mutual selection,
as well as a refund of your service balance, and free service for 1 year
if/when we relaunch a consumer privacy VPN service. Thank you for your support,
and we hope this will ease the inconvenience of our service terminating.
For anyone operating a VPN, mail, or other communications provider in the
US, we believe it would be prudent to evaluate whether a pen register order
could be used to compel you to divulge SSL keys protecting message contents,
and if so, to take appropriate action.
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