In terms of the complexity here, it is quite substantial, and for the lay person to cache all the multi-layered exploits in their head is unexpected. It's disgustingly complex and multi pronged ex-filtration of data that has no bounds.
This industry is 1000 years ahead of the common UNIX neck beard / basement dweller type who probably owns no more than $10,000 worth of kit, but uses that kit on orders of magnitude more advanced levels than the catalog presented here.
If it is the case that 'they' are 1000 years ahead of us in terms of ex-filtration and their budget is apparently limitless, then this allows the citizen to dream of many strategies to avoid, overcome, and render such ex-filtration useless.
One strategy which I will announce (a public one I will give away because bragging in public forums is apparently safe) is to compartmentalize a digital life. A frustratingly common motif is the "Person A stores their life on their phone" and thus we have a central store of data about person A.
Bad OPSEC, you cry? Well the lay person is not familiar with spycraft terms like OPSEC and such a term has only flourished in use in recent times because of Snowden. Infact a great many spycraft terms have gained widespread use, like OSINT for example, which were so rare, that you would be red-flagged as a spy if you searched for those terms, or were using them in everyday conversation.
All that is needed is for the lay person to acknowledge that unless a spy-vs-spy tactic is employed, then it really is a disgusting grab fest for all one's data. Annoyingly this can lead to arms-race type scenarios where a citizen attempts to 'beef up' their digital life, and the cost can be substantial, and potentially turning citizens into digital Winston Smiths, which is never good, and the surveillance can be said to have failed.
Compartment-ed computing is but one of a whole cornucopia of techniques and strategies to reverse the Panopticon on itself though...
This industry is 1000 years ahead of the common UNIX neck beard / basement dweller type who probably owns no more than $10,000 worth of kit, but uses that kit on orders of magnitude more advanced levels than the catalog presented here.
If it is the case that 'they' are 1000 years ahead of us in terms of ex-filtration and their budget is apparently limitless, then this allows the citizen to dream of many strategies to avoid, overcome, and render such ex-filtration useless.
One strategy which I will announce (a public one I will give away because bragging in public forums is apparently safe) is to compartmentalize a digital life. A frustratingly common motif is the "Person A stores their life on their phone" and thus we have a central store of data about person A.
Bad OPSEC, you cry? Well the lay person is not familiar with spycraft terms like OPSEC and such a term has only flourished in use in recent times because of Snowden. Infact a great many spycraft terms have gained widespread use, like OSINT for example, which were so rare, that you would be red-flagged as a spy if you searched for those terms, or were using them in everyday conversation.
All that is needed is for the lay person to acknowledge that unless a spy-vs-spy tactic is employed, then it really is a disgusting grab fest for all one's data. Annoyingly this can lead to arms-race type scenarios where a citizen attempts to 'beef up' their digital life, and the cost can be substantial, and potentially turning citizens into digital Winston Smiths, which is never good, and the surveillance can be said to have failed.
Compartment-ed computing is but one of a whole cornucopia of techniques and strategies to reverse the Panopticon on itself though...