Hello, Thank you for coming We're gonna give a talk about and gonna give a technical overview of tails. That's kurono, intrigeri and I am BitingBird We are all tails contributors in different fields. I don't do technical things, intrigeri is one of the oldest tails contributors and kurono contributes since three years now Tails is the acronym of the-amnesic-incognito-life-system And there is the nice url, where you can have all the information. It's a life operating system. It works on almost any computer - except ARM And it boots from a dvd or a usb stick and theoretically from sdcard too, but it doesn't work very well. The focus of our new distribution is privacy and anonymity. It allows the user to use the internet anonymously. And also, when there is censorship, to circumvent it. All the connections to the internet go with tor, which is an anonymization network. That's the first big feature of tails. And the second one is that there is no trace on the computer you are using so after you used it nobody can see that you've used the computer. If somebody would grab your computer and search files they would not know, what you have done. Unless you ask for it explicitly <????> We have also a lot of data producing tools because some users use it to write books, articles, video and such things. They want to be able to create such documents without being traced. We have a very good report, not from our users, actually from the people we are suppused to protect them against. The NSA says, that it's a pain in the ass. When the NSA says you're making their life harder somehow you're doing something right. [klapping, laughing] I guess you can imagine who's the famous tails user who gave us access to the documents where they say that There is also Bruce Schneier who says he uses tails so, not bad. So, what are our goals? We took a stance in the beginning of tails that it was not really common back then to have usability as a security feature because "ubergeeks" where already able to have secure communication. We think that privacy is not an individual matter. It's a collective matter. Everybody needs to have privacy and new users and non geek users had no way to get access to this. The tools existed but they had no user interface or they where rally hard to configure. So, we designed a system that gives a quite good level of security with a quite good level of usability. Lots of the time people ask us, why we don't include more security features. We have to make a balance between usability and security. Because if it's really secure but nobody can use it then it doesn't bring anything. It makes security accessible for most people. Another important point in our project is to have a very small delta to our upstream. Our main upstream is Debian and we try to not to diverge to much from it. Because the more you do things differently the more work you have to maintain.