Cipherspace

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Cipherspace (also spelled cypherspace) is the encrypted (and often pseudonymous or fully anonymous) equivalent to cyberspace. Examples of cipherspaces include Freenet, I2P, and some anonymous mail-forwarding services. Another Example would be TOR hidden services.

According to its advocates, it should be impossible to know the actual identity of anyone in cipherspace. Therefore, it would be impossible to impose any censorship and to enforce any law. Because of that, they assert that concepts like copyright would be unenforceable inside cipherspace. Some doubt the possibility of complete anonymity, citing that real networks need access to external resources, which tend to be trackable. However these doubts overlook the use of such technologies as VPNs - Virtual Private Networks, which can anonymize traffic and make the user impossible to identify.[citation needed]

Critics of the cipherspace argue that such a "digital zone" can not be legally validated and would need to become illegal, as anonymity is both antisocial and protective for any kind of illegal acts, including terrorist ones. As an answer to this, the Cybersecession Project promotes a radically new map of the cyberspace, where cypherspace vs. cyberspace is paralleled to human mind vs. human body.


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