What is SecureDrop?
SecureDrop is an anonymity tool for journalists and whistleblowers. As a source, you can use our SecureDrop installation to anonymously submit documents to our organization. Our journalists use SecureDrop to receive source materials and securely communicate with anonymous contacts.
What should I know before submitting material through SecureDrop?
To protect your anonymity when using SecureDrop, it is essential that you do not use a network or device that can easily be traced back to your real identity. Instead, use public wifi networks and devices you control.
- Do NOT access SecureDrop on your employer's network.
- Do NOT access SecureDrop using your employer's hardware.
- Do NOT access SecureDrop on your home network.
- DO access SecureDrop on a network not associated with you, like the wifi at a library or cafe.
Got it. How can I submit files and messages through SecureDrop?
Once you are connected to a public network at a cafe or library, download and install the Tor Browser.
Launch the Tor Browser. Visit our organization's unique SecureDrop URL at 2600.securedrop.tor.onion. (The direct link is cy6wj77vryhcyh6go576hxycjz4wxlo4s5vevdinkw3armwzty5jozyd.onion.) Follow the instructions you find on our source page to send us materials and messages.
When you make your first submission, you will receive a unique codename. Memorize it. If you write it down, be sure to destroy the copy as soon as you've committed it to memory. Use your codename to sign back in to our source page, check for responses from our journalists, and upload additional materials.
As a source, what else should I know?
No tool can absolutely guarantee your security or anonymity. The best way to protect your privacy and anonymity as a source is to adhere to best practices.
You can use a separate computer you've designated specifically to handle the submission process. Or, you can use an alternate operating system like Tails, which boots from a USB stick and erases your activity at the end of every session.
A file contains valuable metadata about its source - when it was created and downloaded, what machine was involved, the machine's owner, etc. You can scrub metadata from some files prior to submission using the Metadata Anonymization Toolkit featured in Tails.
Your online behavior can be extremely revealing. Regularly monitoring our publication's social media or website can potentially flag you as a source. Take great care to think about what your online behavior might reveal, and consider using Tor Browser to mitigate such monitoring.
2600: The Hacker Quarterly retains strict access control over our SecureDrop equipment. The staff within our organization will be the only beings with access to SecureDrop submissions. We control the server that stores your submissions, so no other entities have direct access to the metadata or content of what you send us. In addition 2600.com does not actively log user traffic, IPs, or other personally identifiable data and thereby does not retain such information for any purpose ever.
Do not discuss leaking or whistleblowing, even with trusted contacts.