USB dead drop

One of Aram Bartholl's USB dead drops

A USB dead drop is a USB device installed in a public space. For example, a USB flash drive might be mounted in an outdoor brick wall and fixed in place with fast concrete.[1] The name comes from the dead drop method of espionage communication. The devices can be regarded as an anonymous, offline, peer-to-peer file sharing network.

An early USB dead drop network of five devices was started in October 2010 in Brooklyn, New York City, by Berlin-based artist Aram Bartholl,[2][3] a member of New York's Fat lab art and technology collective. A similar "deadSwap" system has been run in Germany since 2009.[4]

Members of the public are invited to drop or find files on a dead drop by directly plugging their laptop into the USB stick in the wall to share files and data. It is possible to use smartphones and tablet computers by using a USB on the go adaptor.

Each dead drop is installed empty except two files:[5] deaddrops-manifesto.txt,[6] and a readme.txt file explaining the project.[7]

Benefits and drawbacks

Benefits

Drawbacks

Publicly and privately available points give anyone the ability to save and transfer data anonymously and free of charge. Such offline networks are vulnerable to the following examples of threats:

Dead drops in nature

In 2013, the web site instructables published text and video about how to make a USB dead drop in natural resources such as trees and rocks.[5]

Wireless dead drop

Wireless dead drops are also being created.[8][9][10] The PirateBox, designed in 2011, is the best known.

See also

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 6/20/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.