John McAfee's New Product Aims To Make Internet Users Virtually Untraceable
John McAfee, the eccentric technology mogul who faked
a heart attack during his time at a Guatemalan detention center after
fleeing from Belizean police for the alleged murder of his neighbor, may still be most famous for his namesake anti-virus software.
Though McAfee has severed any connection between himself and McAfee Security, he's not yet ready to leave the tech world behind.
WHAT TO KNOW
- John McAfee spoke about his new company, Future Tense Central, at a conference last Saturday
- The company's first product, D-Central, is a hardware/app combo that aims to make Internet users untraceable
- McAfee expects to have a prototype ready in six months
Speaking at the C2SV conference in Silicon Valley on Saturday, McAfee revealed his plans for a new company called Future Tense Central.
The company's first product is D-Central, a hardware/software package
still in development that aims to make any of its users anonymous and
untraceable -- a product that could tap into the wariness of Americans
in the wake of the National Security Agency data mining scandal.
"We don't have much [security] anymore, and certainly not in the online
world," he said at Saturday's talk. "If you can give me just any small
amount of information about yourself, I promise you, within three days, I
can turn on the camera on your computer at home and watch whatever
you're doing."
When asked by an audience member what he would do if the U.S. government
wouldn't allow the kind of private communication afforded by his new
product, McAfee didn't mince words.
"It's quite possible the federal government will not allow me to sell
this product, too," McAfee told the audience. "But the federal
government is not the world. I mean, if that happens, I will swallow it
and I will sell it in England, and if I can't sell it there, I'll sell
it in Japan, I'll sell it in China, I'll sell it in Russia, I'll go to
the Third World. This is coming and it can't be stopped."
McAfee said D-Central isn't an attempt to create another type of Internet.
Instead, D-Central combines many different pieces of technology into a
single hardware/app package, compatible with both mobile devices and
PCs.
From one point of view, it resembles a wireless router. "The device has a
range of about three blocks in the city or a quarter of a mile out in
the country," said McAfee. But instead of broadcasting a Wi-Fi signal
that people use to access the Internet quickly, it broadcasts
information that the device's owner wishes to declare public.
However, McAfee emphasized that while the information is in the public
domain, the device owners' identities are not. "D-Central doesn't know
who you are," said McAfee. "Every few minutes, [the device] changes its
identification. There is simply no way to tell who is doing what, when
or where."
He predicted that his Future Tense Central should have a prototype ready
in six months and that the final product will less than $100. He also
predicts that D-Central will sell. "I believe that anyone will want
one," he said. "Anyone who's concerned about privacy, anyone who's
concerned about security."
McAfee did not immediately respond to ABC News' request for comment.
"There is simply no way to tell who is doing what, when or where." |
Dan Pulcrano, the principal organizer of C2SV, said that McAfee had been
dropping hints about his new company, but that he didn't foresee this
type of announcement. "With John McAfee, you never know what to expect,"
he told ABC News. "It could be some goofy entertainment stunt or
something serious."
Pulcrano said that it's good timing on McAfee's part to announce
D-Central this past weekend. "It's clear that there is movement now
towards individual privacy and to find a way to deal with NSA," he said.
"McAfee is smart enough to see that niche and use his celebrity status
to promote his product over others."
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