Kazakhstan now start intercepting citizens’ web traffic to protect them from cyber threats.
Kazakhstan now start intercepting citizens’ web traffic to
‘protect them from cyber threats’ The Kazakhstan government has started to
intercept all HTTPS traffic from all devices within its borders effective July
17, reports ZDNet. Local net service suppliers (ISPs) are threatened by the
govt. to force their voters to put in a state-authorized certificate on all
devices, and all browsers. This certificate allows the Kazakhstan government to
decrypt HTTPS internet traffic, view its contents, and then re-encrypt it with
the certificate once again before it is sent to its destination, making it easy
for the Kazakhstan government to surveil its citizens’ online activities. While
the government says only internet users in Kazakhstan‘s capital of Nur-Sultan
will have to install the certificate, it appears users from across the nation
are said to be blocked from accessing the internet until they installed the
certificate. Local ISP Kcell, for example, has put up a new page instructing
users on how to install the Qaznet Trust Certificate, stating “it will help
protect the information systems and data, as well as detect hacker and
cyber-attacks of the Internet fraudsters on the country’s information space,
private and banking sector, before they can cause damage.” “Customers failing
to install Security Certificate on their mobile devices may face technical
limitations when accessing certain websites,” it adds. The Kazakhstan
government and local ISPs are positioning the certificate as beneficial to
citizens, government agencies and companies by protecting them from cyber
threats. But the development has raised privacy concerns about
man-in-the-middle (MITM) certificate schemes. According to Reclaim the Net,
“this isn’t the first time the Kazakhstan government has attempted to force its
citizens to install a government-issued root certificate which decrypts their
HTTPS internet traffic.” In 2015, the country’s government ordered its citizens
to install a certificate but ultimately had to go back on its plans after
multiple organizations sued the Kazakhstan government, citing fears that the
certificates would weaken the security of the country’s internet traffic. If
its citizens want to avoid being spied on, they’ll have to rally similar
efforts to push back against this ruling right quick.
Citizens should take action
ReplyDeleteyes i think so sir
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