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Re: Ejovi sueing the Japanese Govt for Censorship
From: Ejovi Nuwere <ejovin () gmail com>
Date: Mon, 22 Nov 2004 09:56:11 -0500
Hi, Some background. My work for was Nagano Prefecture not Soumushou which is the national government. Nagano hired me to test their deployment of Juki. The purpose was to verify that the network was safe for its residents to use. I've never done any work with Soumushou. The results of my test lead Nagano to believe that the network was not safe for use, though they suspected it before my test. I have an NDA with Nagano that prevents me from discussing technical details of their network environment. However my report was made public by Nagano and was distributed widely to the media with my name omitted. In comes PacSec. Nagano had no objections to me discussing the results that were made public and identifying myself. The majority of my presentation was suggestions on how the network in general could be improved and a inside look into the difficulties in performing the test. Its not every penetration test where you have switch cars and check into hotels under false names to avoid the media. Soumushou, Nagano, the Japanese auditors I performed the test with and a group of lawyers were given the contents of my presentation one month before the conference. The issue is, one hour before my presentation Soumushou told the Japanese organizers (who are government contractors) to cancel my event because they didnt want me talk about Juki. And herein lies the problem. My website is down now but the facts of the events that have occured are all available online. Hope this helps to clarify things. You can see the slides that Soumushou did not want me to present and decide for yourself how deadly they were: http://www.monkey.org/~joewee/Juki.ppt http://www.monkey.org/~joewee/Juki_JPN.ppt On Mon, 22 Nov 2004 05:38:50 -0800, wirepair <wirepair () roguemail net> wrote:
http://www.techworld.com/security/news/index.cfm?newsid=2662 "Ejovi Nuwere, chief technology officer of SecurityLab Technologies, is suing the government for violation of his freedom of speech under Article 21 of the Japanese Constitution. It is the first of its kind in Japan, according to his lawyer. Nuwere claims that officials of Japan's Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications (MIC) forced him to abandon a presentation he was due to give earlier this month on security issues related to Japan's online citizen registry network, called Juki Net." So lemme get this straight, he does an audit for the Japanese government, then he's barred for presenting the results of the audit? Does this seem kind of odd to anyone else? Personally I would be pretty upset if a former auditor of a company i worked for tried to present the results of the assessment. At least in America, (and every audit I've ever done) some form of an NDA is required. So basically I could be sued if I pulled something like this. Which I agree with completely... If he just ruined my chances of working for a security firm in Japan I will be Very Very Upset. -wire -- Visit Things From Another World for the best comics, movies, toys, collectibles and more. http://www.tfaw.com/?qt=wmf _______________________________________________ Dailydave mailing list Dailydave () lists immunitysec com https://lists.immunitysec.com/mailman/listinfo/dailydave
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Current thread:
- Ejovi sueing the Japanese Govt for Censorship wirepair (Nov 22)
- Re: Ejovi sueing the Japanese Govt for Censorship Ejovi Nuwere (Nov 22)
- Re: Ejovi sueing the Japanese Govt for Censorship Gadi Evron (Nov 22)