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Youtube Security

YouTube Bans Content 'Showing Users How To Bypass Secure Computer Systems' 128

Kody Kinzie from the Null Byte YouTube channel on Tuesday said YouTube banned a video he made about launching fireworks over Wi-Fi for the 4th of July. According to YouTube's Community Guidelines, you are not allowed to post content "showing users how to bypass secure computer systems or steal user credentials and personal data." Doing so will apparently result in a strike. The Register notes that this written policy "first appears in the Internet Wayback Machine's archive of web history in an April 5, 2019 snapshot."

"I'm worried for everyone that teaches about infosec and tries to fill in the gaps for people who are learning," Kinzie said on Twitter. "It is hard, often boring, and expensive to learn cybersecurity." Security professionals like Tim Erlin, VP of product management and strategy at cybersecurity biz Tripwire, also finds the policy questionable. "Google's intention here might be laudable, but the result is likely to stifle valuable information sharing in the information security community," he said. "In cybersecurity, we improve our defenses by understanding how attacks actually work. Theoretical explanations are often not the most effective tools, and forcing content creators onto platforms restricted in distribution, like a paid training course, simply creates roadblocks to the industry. Sharing real world examples brings more people to the industry, rather than creating more criminals."
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YouTube Bans Content 'Showing Users How To Bypass Secure Computer Systems'

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  • by presidenteloco ( 659168 ) on Wednesday July 03, 2019 @05:23PM (#58869564)
    Fixed that for you.

    Seriously though. Clearly these computer systems are not in any meaningful sense secure if a youtube video can explain how to bypass the security.
    • by msauve ( 701917 )
      But, think of all the illiterates unable to read or write, who are now prevented from learning or teaching infosec.
  • by Anonymous Coward

    That's ridiculous. Banning knowledge is stupid.

    Banning showing people how to use it with the explicit purpose of doing evil, sure.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday July 03, 2019 @05:26PM (#58869576)

    What does building a system to launch fireworks using a trigger transmitted over a wireless network have to do with bypassing secure computer systems? Or is it because the word "hacking" was used to refer to cobbling a technological system together as a hobby, or did the project use some part of the 802.11 protocol in an unorthodox way? Are the likes of DefCon and Black Hat conference talks now forbidden? Or is this just another policy that will be arbitrarily and non-uniformly applied to smaller channels?

    • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday July 03, 2019 @06:02PM (#58869736)

      It's not the fireworks video that got banned. They were going to upload the fireworks video, but found they could not due to a strike from an earlier video talking about a Wi-fi vulnerability.

      (Yeah, I was a bit confused on that point too)

  • Then 'How to save taxes', 'How to make a gun', ...

    We can't have the plebs know the stuff that is destined for their betters.
    Information is wasted on them.
    Apparently.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      They've more or less already banned videos about making guns, bombs though seem to be ok: https://bearingarms.com/tom-k/2018/04/03/youtube-banned-gun-making-videos-yet-still-allows-bomb-making-ones/

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Why does it always stop at what Google wants to do? Or Facebook? Or Microsoft?

    Are all of us worthless slackers who are utterly unable to create proper alternatives to these things? Why isn't it happening in this world where everyone pretends as if anyone can reach anyone at any time? If it's so easy, why aren't there tons of such alternatives? There's not a single one.

    • There are tons of alternatives. That nobody uses and less even know exist.
      Like that terribly insecure bitchute or "will ban you for the same nonreasons youtube will" vimeo or the "stuck in the 90s codecs" daily motion.

    • Are all of us worthless slackers who are utterly unable to create proper alternatives to these things? Why isn't it happening in this world where everyone pretends as if anyone can reach anyone at any time? If it's so easy

      It's entirely because people are too lazy or incapable of hosting their own servers with an RSS feed.

      why aren't there tons of such alternatives? There's not a single one.

      There are tons. Set up your own server with an RSS feed. It's easy to do. The reason you haven't done it is because you are lazy. It costs money, but only $5 a month unless you have tons of friends.

    • Big Brother Google and Faceboot just buy out any serious up and coming competition.

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

      Plus, all the "startups" in Surveillance Valley are owned by the same handful of inbred upper class "venture capitalist" twits. Obviously they all collude - and not just for wage fixing.

  • by SuperKendall ( 25149 ) on Wednesday July 03, 2019 @05:29PM (#58869590)

    I think I'll make a video showing a cat breaking into a computer system...

    What will you do YouTube? WHAT WILL YOU DO?

    • by antdude ( 79039 )

      YouTube's computer system!

  • by Anonymous Coward

    It's not a secure fucking system if you can fucking bypass its security, now is it? Kid sister encryption depends on no-one telling your kid sister how it works.

  • Security (Score:4, Insightful)

    by sanf780 ( 4055211 ) on Wednesday July 03, 2019 @05:33PM (#58869616)
    I watched some locksmith opening locks, telling me how crap they are. Are these ones in jeopardy too?
    • by iTrawl ( 4142459 )

      If it's the Lock Picking Lawyer, who says he's a real civil lawyer [reddit.com], then if YouTube start taking his videos down he might have something to tell them, and he might have friends to help too.

      I'm not a lawyer of any kind except armchair, but I would present this ridiculous situation to a court: I "secure" my property with yarn. Guy B makes a video about how insecure yarn is. I ask YouTube to take the video down because it tells people how to break my security. Fully expecting the court or the opposing lawyer t

    • by Mashiki ( 184564 )

      I watched some locksmith opening locks, telling me how crap they are. Are these ones in jeopardy too?

      Probably. In some countries learning how to open locks without a license is criminal, and being in possession of "lock breaking tools" is criminal(equivalent to a 2yr+ felony in the US) even if it's for personal use, even if it's used in a hobby.

      Just wait until they start upgrading the laws so that driving around with a laptop is criminal. Because some of the easiest ways to steal cars today is to emulate or hijack the key FOB.

  • by phantomfive ( 622387 ) on Wednesday July 03, 2019 @05:37PM (#58869634) Journal
    Watch the drama. It will keep you distracted from everything that matters.

    Sincerely,
    Big Brother
  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by Zak3056 ( 69287 )

      The reason people go to YouTube is the availability of knowledge at 30 or so frames per second. (As a picture is worth a thousand words, watching a 2 - 3 minute YouTube video is like reading a document with a length of several thousand words.)

      I come up with between 3.6 and 5.4 million words, using that formula. :)

  • It's really that simple: If explaining how a security measure works scares you, then your system already is insecure.

    But I guess this is all not actually about security, but about teaching the citizens a lesson in obedience.
  • by fustakrakich ( 1673220 ) on Wednesday July 03, 2019 @05:45PM (#58869672) Journal

    They are helping other services gain market share. It's good for diversification so that nobody can get too big and powerful.

    • by Agripa ( 139780 )

      They are helping other services gain market share.

      Based on what happened with SubscribeStar, they have that loophole covered.

  • limiting knowledge makes us weaker not stronger.
  • Difference? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by duke_cheetah2003 ( 862933 ) on Wednesday July 03, 2019 @06:07PM (#58869756) Homepage

    I watch a lot of bosnianbill and lockpickinglawyer. They teach us how to defeat all kinds of physical locks, via bypass, picking, or other means.

    There's other locking picking channels, too. I'm no picker, I just enjoy watching the content.

    So where's the line? Why is defeating computer security a strike, but physical security defeats is perfectly ok?

    Please make sense?

    • by jythie ( 914043 )
      While I strongly disagree with youtube, I can see at least one major difference.. picking locks is a physical activity that requires taking the risk of actually being at the location and doing things. A lot of these computer hacks are anonymous and opportunistic, much less risk for the often anonymous attacker. Lockpicking also has a pretty common harmless use case, most people pick it up for fun or for accessing their own property. Electronic intrusion though is more commonly about getting into other p
    • I love Lockpickinglawyer (not so much of Bosnian, even though I have family in Bosnia). The man is a genius. Strangely though, the videos I enjoy the most are the ones where he uses the Ramset.

    • by EvilSS ( 557649 )
      I'm sure they will be along for them too, they just haven't got around to it yet.
    • "Please make sense?"

      It makes perfect sense. If you think of it as a boot stomping on a human face. A boot worn by a methed-out psychopath who can't decide if he is the vengeful Old Testament God himself, or just a nice friendly dude who likes cat videos.

  • by davecb ( 6526 ) <davecb@spamcop.net> on Wednesday July 03, 2019 @06:16PM (#58869806) Homepage Journal

    I used to run Trusted Solaris 7, and it was a B2 subset. The stuff they're calling secure (meaning B2 and above) isn't secure, it barely makes C1.

    In case you were wondering, "A" means the same as A on an exam: pretty darned good confidentiality, but a bit on the theoretical side. "B" is what good students get, "C" is a bare pass, and "D" is "don't even apply for that job" (;-))

    No-one, including the NSA, uses this standard any more, because it's too hard to meet. That's why a contract sysadmin can walk out with the crown jewels on a thumb drive (;-))

  • If a system can be bypassed then it's not secure. This is tautological.

    Fraudsters hawking systems as secure when they're not could be banned for actually attempting a crime with real victims.

    Remember when Microsoft announced XP's release marked the end of insecure Windows? That was out-and-out fraud. Proving the fraud is entirely just.

    It's time for centralized content platforms to die.

  • Crypto, DRM, what's next? OS? Classic computer games? Firewalls that block ads
    Expected censorship to stop at politics, different nations laws and German history?

    Once the censorship starts the freedom to talk about tech is just another topic to move to better video-sharing website.
    • by Misagon ( 1135 )

      Videos on how to bypass DRM to make classic computer games work have already been taken down.

      • Videos on how to bypass DRM to make classic computer games work have already been taken down.

        And the people pretending not to know this already, were probably previously defending the takedowns because "copyright owners"

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        Looking at their channel, a lot of hacking videos are still up: https://www.youtube.com/channe... [youtube.com]

        It seems like it's the usual YouTube bumbling, unable to consistently apply the rules or in anything like a reasonable and sane manner.

        Worst part is they probably don't even want to, it's just that advertisers noticed some "hacking" videos and started complaining.

    • by jythie ( 914043 )
      Yep. Time to bring back the kiddy porn!

      Censorship is always a balancing act, there is no 'start' or 'end', and it isn't a slippery slope starting at whatever arbitrary point an individual feels impacts them.
  • For those that thought Google would stop at censoring people they didn't like (I am looking at you AmiMojo) time to eat your crow.
  • In just a few short years, Google (Yes, Alphabet will always be GoOgLe to me) has become pretty much exactly what the evil dystopian sci-fi future corporation is supposed to aspire to, and this is just the sort of thing you should expect them to do. Pretty much from here on out.

    Now that we have an entire generation trained on "Just watch a tutorial on youtube, it's all there." to do anything more involved than changing the batteries in the smart-TV remote, they (Alphabet) can now reliably decide not only wh

  • Lately it seems like the Google Nazis running YouTube have gone power mad. They've just fallen in love with censorship. Maybe Alphabet finally succeeded at firing every last person who still believed in freedom of speech.

    What exactly IS still allowed on YouTube? Cat videos? Or have the Google Nazis running decided kittens are "offensive" or "dangerous" too now?

    At this pace, by the end of the year shitty megacorp advertisements will be the only content left on YouTube.

    The time has come. We must no longer al

  • His video on "tracertee" (as he speaks it, helping educate those lesser noobs of us out there) is incredibly informative, please I beg you google, keep it around!

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]

  • by Anonymous Coward

    After my generation effectively obtained the freedom of information (through tools such as wikipedia or youtube), current generations seem to be keen on closing it again based on some ill-defined notion of political correctness that goes far beyond the respect of law (it's one thing to ban kiddie porn, and another to fight "fake news"). And it's not just corporations and nation-states doing it, countless politically-active individuals are putting a shoulder to curtailing my ability to see what other people

    • Wikipedia and YouTube are radically different examples, only one of which gets to your point. Wikipedia is licensed to share and fully downloadable; one can make their own encyclopedia based on Wikipedia's articles if one so chooses (this is even proven to work without the pictures and movies, see the old Wikireader for an example—it's a portable device used to read cached Wikipedia articles offline).

      YouTube is not entirely downloadable, and not entirely licensed to share. Even if both Wikipedia and Y

    • This.

      I am so sad that everything we have learned over the past 200 years is for naught. :(

      Might as well start practicing paying obeisance to King George again. It is for our own good.

  • by sad_ ( 7868 )

    write a blogpost about it, you can go much more in depth on the topic there and it is easier to learn from as well (no pause rewind, forward, play, pause rewind needed).

  • I'm glad the video has been return to YouTube so I can find out how to make a networked explosives setter-offer device. I can see great fun in the office space
  • The people who want to use this data for nefarious purposes are smart enough to find it somewhere else. The people who just want to get into their own computer, however, are fucked.

    Thanks, Google! Now I see why you love DRM so much.

  • You honestly think YouTube is doing this to protect someone from being exploited after he sees a video telling someone else how to hack? Please. What they try to protect is their advertisers who get pissed that their ads for their Internet of Trash crap get shown right at videos where someone uses the IT equivalent of a paperclip to unlock their "highly sophisticated door lock".

    (Guess whose video got deleted, too, by the way...)

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