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John McAfee: 'Bad people are still after me' .
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The Scots-born software entrepreneur says hit men are on his tail
after a hasty exit from Belize but his focus is on warding off tech
companies’ all-seeing eye
John McAfee: ‘There are 10m waterproof phones in circulation. You have
teen girls frequently texting in the shower. While we’re speaking,
people are spying on teen girls.’
Photograph: Canadian Press/Rex Shutterstock
Deep in the heart of the Bible Belt, John McAfee, the tech
millionaire, eccentric and one-time fugitive, appears to have finally
settled down – in his way.
A few months shy of his 70th birthday, McAfee, as famous for his
plentiful eccentricities as the anti-virus software he created, is
living somewhat in the open again, this time in Lexington, Tennessee, a rustic and unassuming town with a population of less than 8,000.
Born in Scotland, raised in the US, McAfee had been living in
Portland, Oregon – a city that seemed a more obvious choice for a yoga
loving, gun-toting technocrat who had just fled Belize via Guatemala
amid a bizarre murder investigation. His woodsy property in the west
Tennessee countryside, though, ended up suiting him better. He’s happier
here, even if he still spins ominous stories of hit men on his trail.
“One never knows what the future holds,” McAfee tells the Guardian,
before admitting that he can’t see himself living anywhere else. “I have
friends here in Lexington. This is a beautiful small town. Neighborly.
But yes indeed – bad people are still after me.”
McAfee is still looking over his shoulder, even three years after he
fled Belize when officials named him as a “person of interest” in the
shooting death of his neighbor. McAfee, never formally charged, ducked
out of the country and spent part of his time on the lam while granting
media interviews, posting on his blog and sending emails, all of which
lent a bizarre twist to the flight of someone who was ostensibly hiding
from the law.
The computer security pioneer quickly introduced himself to the
town’s mayor and sheriff upon arrival in Lexington. He uses multiple
phones to throw off would-be trackers and says a neighbor recently told
him about seeing a black car driven by a man with a scar on his face.
That same McAfee gives the appearance of a man determined to live a much lower-wattage existence these days.
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He’s back to developing software, for example, much of it with a focus
on privacy. No longer living on the run, he’s also mentoring startups
and presenting himself as a security expert via appearances on news
outlets like Fox News and through high-profile speeches. He gave one
such presentation earlier this month in Las Vegas at the National
Association of Broadcasters annual conference, warning attendees how
porous and vulnerable smartphones have become, at times holding one
aloft from the stage as he spoke.
“Security is no longer in the hands of the data center staff,” he
said during the event. “People are watching you while you’re on the
phone.”
Meanwhile, McAfee also runs a software development company, Future
Tense Central, which shares space with a startup accelerator in Opelika,
Alabama, about a six-hour drive from Lexington.
When he’s not there or on the road, he can be found in the small-town
environs he now calls home, midway between Memphis and Nashville, in a
state whose house of representatives recently voted to make the Bible
its official book and where McAfee says he plans to spend the rest of
his life.
It’s a striking change of scenery for the entrepreneur who found
extraordinary success developing software to combat the first computer
viruses that had begun zipping around the globe. After starting McAfee
Associates out of his home in the 1980s McAfee’s fame and fortune rose
in tandem with his warnings – paranoia, some argued – about existential
threats to the digital grid.
A fugitive who fled Belize after his neighbor shot dead, John McAfee’s
image has combined a combustible mix of drink, drugs, women and guns.
Photograph: Internet
McAfee’s sometimes dystopian take on technology proved prescient
given all we now know thanks to the National Security Agency
whistleblower Edward Snowden. But there’s also another side to him, one
built on a combustible mix of drugs and drink, of harrowing moments like
the time he put a loaded Smith & Wesson to his head in front of a
Wired reporter and the image he presented of himself as the Hugh Hefner
of hacking. A few years ago, he released a video posted to YouTube that
explained how users can uninstall McAfee software featuring scantily
clad women, guns, “bath salts” and its star in a smoking jacket and
pyjamas.
More recently McAfee has emerged as a privacy advocate. He has
claimed, for example, to have information about who was behind the Sony
hack. “A lot of the things I’m working on now are focused on privacy and
personal power,” McAfee said. “People should take their power back. We
depend too much on governments and corporations for our personal lives.
“A lot of the things I’m working on now are focused on privacy and
personal power,” McAfee said. “People should take their power back. We
depend too much on governments and corporations for our personal lives.
“Think about this. There are 10 million waterproof phones in
circulation. You have teen girls frequently texting in the shower. App
developers these days – most of them aren’t companies like IBM or places
with audit controls and some measure of respectability. And they’re
asking permission to turn on the device’s camera, to read SMS messages
and on down the line. You’ve got to believe me – while we’re speaking,
people are spying on teen girls. And I know it’s actually happening.”
The views on privacy and security that inform his work and the
products his company is releasing generally skew a bit darker than
mainstream attitudes toward consumer products. He thinks the Apple Watch
is a “nightmare” from a privacy standpoint. He’s also skeptical about
connected devices in the home, considering them less as useful
technology than as one more entry point for a hacker to use to cause
harm.
“Game apps are the worst,” McAfee said. “They’re developed by a few
people, most of the time we don’t even know who they are, and they end
up with 100 million users. And virtually all apps that are free ask for
excessive permissions. Why? Because nothing in life is free. If they’re
giving it to you for free, they’re collecting your information. The vast
minority only use what they need. If you don’t need an app, don’t
download it.”
Except, of course, his company’s, which he insists most people do
need. The company’s website says it was founded by McAfee in 2013 and
that its focus is mobile and web applications designed to help users
take back control over their information and privacy.
John McAfee is transferred in an ambulance to the national police
hospital in Guatemala City on 6 December 2012, after fleeing Belize.
Photograph: Johan Ordonez/AFP
He says the company also has an encrypted email program that, at the time of this writing, it hadn’t released yet.
Beyond his company, McAfee has high praise for the Round House, the
Opelika startup space that represents his base of operations and where
he works with other fledgling startups.
“The objective is for everyone to work together here, and the teams
have come up with some astonishing products,” he said. “One has a
robotic hand which can be manufactured for $28 for people who’ve lost
fingers.” Privacy
is the issue, though, that really animates him. He turns frequently to a
now-famous statement by Google’s chairman, Eric Schmidt, to help make
his case. “If you have something that you don’t want anyone to know,
maybe you shouldn’t be doing it in the first place,” Schmidt told the
financial news channel CNBC in 2009 when asked if people should really
treat Google as a “trusted friend”.
“Most people don’t understand privacy,” McAfee says. “Google would
have you believe if you have nothing to hide, why should you care if
people know everything. But stop and imagine a world in which everyone
knows your every thought and every action. It would be chaos.
“When you first meet someone, you don’t divulge your deepest
secrets. If privacy doesn’t matter, would you be willing to give your
wallet to a total stranger and let them go through it and write down
everything they find inside? Then why on earth would we believe that if
we’re not doing anything wrong, we shouldn’t care if someone has our
information?”
McAffee’s own relationship to privacy is complicated. McAfee insists
repeatedly he’s not in hiding today, even if he has chosen to live far
from the madding crowd, but even if he wanted to keep a low profile
today, it wouldn’t work for long.
His life is being turned into a movie by Montreal-based production
company Impact Future Media. Its working title is Running in the
Background.
Firm founder and producer Francois Garcia tells the Guardian some
announcements related to the film will be made “in the near future”, but
due to contractual obligations no details about attached names,
distribution partners or dates can be disclosed yet.
For now, the real version of McAfee’s story, the one unfolding in the US heartland, will have to suffice.
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