Netwar. Hacktivism. Technology. Cyberculture. Hypermedia. Cyber Marx. Seattle's People. Smarts Mobs. Hackers. Crypto. Open Source. Open Publishing. Copyleft. Linux Project. Cybercommunism. Security. Cyberwar. Infowar. Civil Rights. Political Participation. Swarming. Wireless Networks. Virtual Community. Social Capital. Commons. Mobile Community. Civic Engagement.
Presentation
I'm going to post a lot of stuff about the multitude's fight for globalized political participation and civil rights. It will be writen, perhaps, in many languages but english will prevail. Portuguese is my heart language. But english is the language of the Net. Then i'm writing in this heartless language to build a web. Spider web is the language of life, the ground where world is built. I hope that you enjoy the show.
Last Entries
& Linux World's Choice vs M$ & "Citizen Reporters" News & Microsoft PR Kills iLoo & Hack Weapons Against DDoS & IBM On-Demand Computing & Google Local Without Borders & iLoo Net Toilet Hoax & Oxblood on Bill Book Event & Big-dollar Bush Donors & Ottawa's Raed "Conspiracy" & Hawks Rules as Dominators & The War on David Nelson & Payphones turned to Wi-Fi & NEC's Mobilepro Handheld & iTunes Rocks Industry & DJ's Suspention: Dixie Chicks & MIT Out of Media Lab Asia & TV-Show Swapping Fuel EU Net & Wireless Secure Mobile Palm
Code Red
W America Scares the World W Short-Lived American Empire W The Network Is the Battlefield W "Shock & Awe" War Document W ICANN Holds World's Domains W Free News Only Blogged W States Extend DMCA W Students Accused for P2P W Patriot II Secret Draft W Government Open Fedex Pack W Massive Datamining System W Net Attack Task Force W Wireless Riot in Rio W Ripper Dies On-Line
Cool Pitch
@ Wireless Commons @ America's Free Wireless @ Asia's Wi-Fi Roaming @ Wireless Brokes TV Power @ Broadcasting Wi-fi to Cable @ Wireless Intelligent Nets @ Intel Wireless Speed Chip @ Centrino Wi-Fi Chip @ WiMax Supports Wi-Fi 802.16 @ Kapor Quits TIA's Groove @ Blogs Wins Reputation's War @ Blogs: New Net Platform? @ Supercomputer for a Day @ The New Deconomy @ Blogs by Phones @ Blogs in Business Strategy @ Dragon Eye: Kid's Dream @ Everyday Chaos Meaning @ Fast DNA Computer
Smartmobs' Netwar
@ Network to Social Movements @ Smart Mobs Wage Protest @ Global Grassroots Politics @ Activism in OL Games @ Hussein's Defeat Party @ Protesters: Out of Iraq! @ No Business Day at N.Y. @ Candlelight Vigil for Peace @ Kiesling Resign Against War @ Diplomat Resigns in Protest @ Garret: Davos Against War @ Zapatism Says "No!" to War @ City Councils Against War @ Anti-War Blog Stickers @ Virtual March Against War @ Poets Against War @ Dawnkins Anti-Bush @ McGovern's "Reason Why" @ Carter Against War @ Sen. Byrd's Speech @ Rooting Out Evil @ G7 Call for U.N. Action @ Japanese Wants U.N. on Iraq @ Japanese's War Opposition @ Jordanians Against War @ Yemenis Against War @ Poster for Peace
Empire's Cyberwar
W Bush's Pro War Spam W Powell Mocks Europe W Power Strugle on U.S. W Dangerous Clique's Tips W Prince of Darkness Resigns W Dubya`s Partner Promote War W Terror Laws Will Stay W U.S. Violence Over Protesters W U.S. Police Shoot Protesters W Arnett Fired and Hired W Bush Push Censor to Blogs W Hardcore Dubya W High Moral Must Kill Innocents W Violence Collapses Baghdad W Carnage in Baghdad W Waves of Refugees W "Rolling Victory" Is Enough W Al-Sahhaf Denied U.S. Control W Rumsfeld Denies War Delay W Resistence Stops Advancement W Missiles Attacks Over Press W U.S. Betray Kurds W Kurds Friendly Bombed W "Liberators" or "Killers"? W Friendly Fire on U.K. Soldiers W High Risk Strategy W Marines: Iraqis Are Cowards W Marines Want to Go Home W Iraq Resistence Slow Advance W Iraq Forces Apache Back W Russia Denies Sheltering W Jordanian Munitions Founded W Israel Reports Syrian Troops W Turkish Launchs Arab Axis W Egypt Elite Against U.S. W Syria Accuses U.S. on Civilians W Syria Open Borders to Fighters W Syria Call to Defend Iraq W Arab League: War is a Threat W Russia Trade Barbs Over Iraq W Shock & Awe Effects Photo W 800 Cruise Missiles' Rain W Opening the Gates of Hell W 3000 bombs in two days W MOAB Biggest Bomb W Nuke Bombers Goes to Guam W U.S. Harass U.N. Delegations W Intelligence AU Official Resigns W Email Order Bug on U.N. W Direct TV is Fox's Prize W MSNBC: Soldiers like NFL`s W Washington Spank Protesters W Protesters Database Admited W Protesters Are Terrorists W Making Protest a Crime W BBC Admits False Reportings W Arab Press Under Cyber Attack W Al Jazeera Under DDoS Attack W Bush Order Cyber-Attacks W Cyberattack Change War W US Government Warns Hackers W Global Internet's Crash
It's getting easier than ever to convince your customers, supervisors and employees that you're hard at work -- firing off e-mail messages and opening files on your office PC while you're really attending your kids' soccer game or sleeping in. Services like GoToMyPC.com enable users to manipulate their office computers by remote control -- even going so far as to move the cursor on the screen, open documents and print them on the networked office printer. E-mail timers allow workers to compose messages during the day and then queue them to be sent hours after they've gone to bed, giving the impression that they're up burning the midnight oil. Instant Message software can be reconfigured so that the "idle" message that pops up signaling inactivity is disabled, making users look perpetually available. And BlackBerry aficionados can change their settings to make on-the-road e-mail look like it came straight from the office PC. Psychologists call these activities "impression management," but other see signs of a disturbing trend: "If you're out playing golf, and you look like you've spent four hours in the office… If everybody does that, the company goes bankrupt," says Stuart Gilman, director of the Ethics Resource Center in Washington. A recent survey conducted by the Society for Human Resource Management found that 59% of HR professionals had personally observed employees lying about the number of hours they'd worked, and 53% said they'd seen employees lying to a supervisor, a jump of eight percentage points in six years.
received from NewScan Daily newslist. NewsScan Daily (FREE), a lively summary of information technology news writed by John Gehl and Suzanne Douglas. To subscribe, send email to Newscan. Copyright 2003. NewsScan Daily (R) is a publication of NewsScan Inc.
Sony's Next Generation Videogame: PlayStation Portable
Sony announced its latest salvo in the videogame wars: a small, lightweight videogame device called PlayStation Portable (PSP for short), which will hit the shelves toward the end of 2004 and will feature a 4.5-inch screen and a high-end processor for running games. The PSP will be capable of linking by wire to other PSPs, cell phones, PCs and Sony's PlayStation 2. Sony Computer Entertainment president Ken Kutaragi says the PSP will be "the Walkman of the 21st century."
received from NewScan Daily newslist. NewsScan Daily (FREE), a lively summary of information technology news writed by John Gehl and Suzanne Douglas. To subscribe, send email to Newscan. Copyright 2003. NewsScan Daily (R) is a publication of NewsScan Inc.
Online publishers are venturing into radio and television, a sure sign that digital media are going mainstream. This week Slate announced it will be working with National Public Radio to produce a daily radio show, and The Smoking Gun, a celebrity crime site, has plans to develop two half-hour shows for broadcast on Court TV. Meanwhile, Classmates.com is working with Twentieth Television to create a reality-TV show based on reuniting long-lost school buddies. "This is a sign that these companies have reached a certain amount of staying power and are trying to satisfy their audiences in new markets," says a Jupiter Research analyst. "Modern media companies must be in different mediums." Traditional media ventures have long since broadened their outreach, cranking out magazines and TV shows as well as Web sites, but the migration of Web enterprises toward TV and radio is a fairly new phenomenon. Several efforts by companies such as Pseudo.com and Digital Entertainment Network were cut short a couple of years ago by the technology bust, but Web entrepreneurs have high hopes for the latest efforts. "NPR's loyal audience and nationwide reach coupled with Slate's innovative delivery of news and information is the perfect marriage of radio and the Internet," says Slate publisher Cyrus Krohn.
received from NewScan Daily newslist. NewsScan Daily (FREE), a lively summary of information technology news writed by John Gehl and Suzanne Douglas. To subscribe, send email to Newscan. Copyright 2003. NewsScan Daily (R) is a publication of NewsScan Inc.
Researchers at Stanford University have developed several techniques designed to make calculating Web page rankings, such as those used by the Google search engine, up to five times faster. Currently, the ranking algorithm used by Google can take several days to search and rank 3 billion Web pages. To speed up Google's Computing PageRank algorithm the Stanford team used three strategies. First, they employed "extrapolation" methods, which make some broad assumptions about the Web's link structure that aren't necessarily true, but do speed up the PageRank process. The results can then be refined using the original PageRank software. A second strategy involved an enhancement called "BlockRank," which eliminated the redundancy of ranking pages that all belong to the same Web site. Finally, the team used "Adaptive PageRank" to eliminate more redundancy caused by reprocessing Web pages that have been ranked early in the ranking procedure. "Further speed-ups are possible when we use all these methods," says Stanford graduate student Sepandar Kamvar. "Our preliminary experiments show that combining the methods will make the computation of PageRank up to a factor of five faster." The hope is that eventually Google's ranking mechanism could calculate personalized page rankings dictated by an individual's interests, or customized to a particular topic."
received from NewScan Daily newslist. NewsScan Daily (FREE), a lively summary of information technology news writed by John Gehl and Suzanne Douglas. To subscribe, send email to Newscan. Copyright 2003. NewsScan Daily (R) is a publication of NewsScan Inc.
Microsoft's Licensing and Weak Security: Linux World's Choice
In a new report called "A Look at Alternatives to Microsoft," the Gartner research firm says that governments throughout the world are encouraging departments and businesses to consider alternatives to support Linux, an increasingly popular alternative to Microsoft's Windows operating system. This development is taking place in China, Japan, Singapore, Malaysia, Australia, and several European and South American countries. Gartner says the attractiveness of Linux seems to be attributable to widespread perceptions that Microsoft insists on unattractive licensing arrangements and offers inadequate software protections against security breaches.
received from NewScan Daily newslist. NewsScan Daily (FREE), a lively summary of information technology news writed by John Gehl and Suzanne Douglas. To subscribe, send email to Newscan. Copyright 2003. NewsScan Daily (R) is a publication of NewsScan Inc.
South Korea's "Citizen Reporters" Account 80% News Coverage
The increasingly popular South Korean online news site ohmynews.com has more than 26,300 of its readers registered as "citizen reporters" who account for about 80% of the site news coverage (the rest of which is written by ohmynews's 38 professional writers and editors). The
mainstream press is critical of ohmynews's journalistic methods, but senior editor and founder Oh Yeon-ho says that his intention is to "say goodbye to 20th century journalism," by showing that every citizen can be a reporter. "We put everything out there and people judge the truth for themselves."
received from NewScan Daily newslist. NewsScan Daily (FREE), a lively summary of information technology news writed by John Gehl and Suzanne Douglas. To subscribe, send email to Newscan. Copyright 2003. NewsScan Daily (R) is a publication of NewsScan Inc.
Microsoft PR Kills UK MSN iLoo Portable Toilet Project
Microsoft and its public relations firm are now saying that what they themselves thought was a hoax (the development of the iLoo, a portable toilet complete with wireless keyboard and Internet access) actually was a real project of the company's MSN group in the UK. The original press release indicated that the iLoo would offer its users "a unique experience." An MSN product manager now says: " "We jumped the gun basically yesterday in confirming that it was a hoax and in fact it was not," said Lisa Gurry, MSN group product manager. "Definitely we're going to be taking a good look at our communication processes internally. It's definitely not how we like to do PR at Microsoft." In any event, whether really a hoax or really real, the project is now dead -- flushed, as it were.
received from NewScan Daily newslist. NewsScan Daily (FREE), a lively summary of information technology news writed by John Gehl and Suzanne Douglas. To subscribe, send email to Newscan. Copyright 2003. NewsScan Daily (R) is a publication of NewsScan Inc.
New Hack Weapons Boost Arsenal Against DDoS Attacks
Two graduate students from Carnegie Mellon University have proposed different ideas for defeating the dastardly denial-of-service attacks that can overwhelm and disable a vulnerable ISP. One suggestion, from Abraham Yaar, takes advantage of the unused bits in the headers of network traffic to establish a "data fingerprint" based on the route the information traveled through the network. If a server came under attack, network administrators could use the digital fingerprint to decide whether to block all traffic with the same fingerprint. The second proposal, presented by XiaoFeng Wang, suggests that servers use "puzzles" -- problems that occupy a certain amount of processing time to solve -- as a way to discourage any computer from sending too much mail at any one time. While a similar idea has been proposed before, Wang added an auction-like transaction to further allow legitimate traffic to win out over attacks. "Our mechanism enables each client to 'bid' for resources by tuning out the difficulty of the puzzles it solves and to adapt its bidding strategy in response to apparent attacks," says Wang.
received from NewScan Daily newslist. NewsScan Daily (FREE), a lively summary of information technology news writed by John Gehl and Suzanne Douglas. To subscribe, send email to Newscan. Copyright 2003. NewsScan Daily (R) is a publication of NewsScan Inc.
IBM is introducing a new line of mainframe computers humorously code-named T-Rex (getting back at critics who wrote mainframes off as dinosaurs) and more formally known as z990 systems. The z990 promises an increase of 40% in processing power over previous models, and lets customers turn processors on and off as the demand for processing fluctuates (and pay only for the processing actually used). It's part of IBM's strategy to offer on-demand computing.
Google is expanding its popular news service overseas, establishing local news search services in Canada, the U.K. and Australia. The new ventures will enable users to "track topics of local interest, as well as those from around the world," says Google co-founder Larry Page. At the same time, Google has begun staffing its New York office, with the goal of hiring 100 employees for what will become its East Coast headquarters. The timing of the announcement highlights Google's ascendance in the search market -- last week, rival Overture said it would be cutting 100 jobs (although Overture was quick to say its layoffs resulted from the need to integrate its recent acquisitions). Meanwhile, Overture CEO Ted Meisel says he anticipates strong growth in the coming year, and predicted the Internet search and paid listings market would soar to $15 billion a year by 2008.
received from NewScan Daily newslist. NewsScan Daily (FREE), a lively summary of information technology news writed by John Gehl and Suzanne Douglas. To subscribe, send email to Newscan. Copyright 2003. NewsScan Daily (R) is a publication of NewsScan Inc.
The iLoo, described in a press release last week as a portable toilet with wireless keyboard and an extending height-adjustable plasma screen in front of the seat, doesn't exist: it was just a joke. Microsoft says the hoax press release came from the company's MSN division in the U.K. and was not a "Microsoft-sanctioned communication." It all just goes to show that you can't believe what you read anymore, not even the toilet jokes.
received from NewScan Daily newslist. NewsScan Daily (FREE), a lively summary of information technology news writed by John Gehl and Suzanne Douglas. To subscribe, send email to Newscan. Copyright 2003. NewsScan Daily (R) is a publication of NewsScan Inc.
"So I went to the big road show last night [in Toronto], which was lots of fun. I was dressed in a casual yet fashionable sense and turned many heads when I went in. Then I did up my fly and wasn't bothered for the rest for the night.
Bill burst into tears when he saw me because he was so happy. It was very touching. Then I slapped him and told him to toughen up. He was fine almost immediately.
There were several zine authors, and a few bands at the event. Bill was first up. For those of you who aren't aware, Bill wrote his first novel called "Saugus To The Sea" and it is available NOW.
What was interesting about Bill's reading was that he didn't read. He showed slides. Many slides. Some had interesting stories behind them, and others had Bill's stories behind them. There was even a curious double exposed picture of Bill's mother reclining on a fortress-like wall with a disembodied hand clasping her thigh. I was strangely aroused. And after several more slides of restaurant interiors and a tree that Bill couldn't identify, it was all over. There was wild applause by a roomful of people who had been drinking beer for at least an hour."
Big-dollar Bush Donors Revealed in Court Documents
A network of big donors to George W. Bush called "the Pioneers" was far more extensive than previously known, producing perhaps half the record-smashing $100 million for his 2000 presidential race, court documents show.
While the Bush campaign initially made public a list of 226 members of the Pioneer network, there actually were more than 500, The Dallas Morning News and New York Times reported today.
As the president prepares for re-election, he is expected to tap the same network of wealthy donors to build what Bush advisers hope will be a $200 million campaign treasury.
Half of the Pioneers are from Texas. Among the previously undisclosed names are House Speaker Tom Craddick of Midland, Dallas Stars and Texas Rangers owner Tom Hicks, professional golfer Ben Crenshaw and Austin lobbyist Randy DeLay, brother of U.S. House Majority Leader Tom DeLay of Sugar Land.
Among the others are Washington lobbyist Haley Barbour and Hollywood movie producer Jerry Weintraub.
Although each Pioneer pledged to raise $100,000 for the Bush campaign, some produced three to five times that amount.
The star of the blog "Where is Raed?" is part of an anti-Western conspiracy
"Salam Pax" is rising as one of the media stars in postwar Iraq. He began blogging from Baghdad well before the war, and has come back sporadically since. (He calls his blog "Where is Raed?") He is the darling of fellow bloggers in the West, who light up with links whenever he appears on the Web. He has been written about in the New Yorker magazine and elsewhere, and his jottings copied into the Guardian in the Britain. Not bad for a person whose very existence has been skeptically queried. And who does a superb job of covering his traces, creating fresh firewalls around himself in the very moments when he appears to be giving his identity away.
I am quite certain he exists. That isn't the scandal. He has a family and a history and even a real-life name. But without compromising sources, and thus endangering lives, including Salam's own, one may discover a great deal about him from carefully reading his blog, and following obvious leads from there.
Salam is the scion of a senior figure from Iraq's Baathist nomenclature. He was brought up at least partly in Vienna, which is the OPEC headquarters; his father was therefore an oilman, and possibly a former head of Iraq's OPEC mission. Another clue is a hint that his grandfather was an Iraqi tribal chief, from which I infer that his father was one of the Iraqi tribal chiefs that Saddam Hussein rewarded for loyalty, outside the Tikrit clan.
Salam has an easy familiarity not only with the upscale Baghdad in which he has been living, and which he selectively describes through the jaded eyes of a true insider, but also with most Western fashions and things. This is what gives him his plausibility to Western readers. He drops many hints that he is a homosexual, suggesting reckless candour. (I'm inclined to doubt these.) His English is superb and colloquial. He has those Tariq Aziz qualities. There are nightmares in his background, but the foreground is smooth, charming, self-confident, man of the world -- tending involuntarily to smugness. He can tell you anything, and seems to enjoy putting on the show.
He refers casually to pseudonymous friends, who are also children of the deposed Baathist elect. They all know their way around but, unlike their parents, have never carried the weight of responsibility. They were of a class, but not yet fully in it -- products of a very luxurious bubble. Or perhaps Salam himself or any one of them was directly employed by Mr. Saddam's very extensive, and in places quite sophisticated, network of Soviet-modelled spy and disinformation networks -- we cannot know yet.
What we can know, just by reading his blog, is that this Salam is up to no good. He is spreading "inside views" of the new Iraq, not only to the blogosphere, but directly among the journalists still encamped at the Meridian (formerly Palestine, formerly Meridian) hotel. Not the "embeds" who've gone home after remarkable learning experiences, but those "hacks" not yet transferred to the next breaking news story, and so still kicking around this mysterious city of Baghdad, trying to figure out what's happening without exposing themselves overmuch to danger.
And they lap it up. They depend on translators and guides to show them around, and seem only partially aware that the people who've come forward to provide them with these services are almost all unemployed former Baath regime officials. (They trust them because they speak English so well.)
Political Struggle is Between "Dominators" and "Conciliators"
Dominators rule
by Michael Krepon
Forget hawks and doves. The post–Cold War political struggle is between “dominators” and “conciliators.” Right now, thanks especially to Osama bin Laden, those who believe U.S. national security lies in raw military power, not cooperative agreements, are in control.
The Cold War battles between hawks and doves are history. The new fault line in U.S. national security strategy is between “dominators” and “conciliators.” Both groups can be easily caricatured.
Dominators believe in leading by example, not by consensus or building coalitions. They are unapologetic about the primacy of U.S. power and the ineffectuality of treaties. Conciliators are protective of treaties by nature. They seek to devalue weapons of mass destruction—by example, by multilateral diplomacy, and by strengthening arms control regimes. Conservative columnist Charles Krauthammer has described the differences between the two groups as those who believe in power pitted against those who believe in paper.
Thanks to Osama bin Laden, dominators now rule the roost in Washington. The terrorist attacks against the World Trade Center and the Pentagon gave President George W. Bush, Vice President Dick Cheney, and Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld wide latitude to implement their preferred remedies. Notwithstanding the close division on Capitol Hill between Republicans and Democrats, U.S. national security policy is now heavily lopsided toward power projection and away from treaty regimes and preventive diplomacy.
The resulting imbalance is not sustainable. By elevating preemption from a military option to a doctrine, the administration has made coalition-building increasingly difficult. And the more the Bush administration wages war, the harder it will become to recruit followers.
Power-projection capabilities, combined with the celebration of triumphant American values, constitute far too narrow a base on which to maintain U.S. diplomatic leadership. The hubris reflected in the Bush administration’s National Security Strategy invites not just the scorn of diplomatic historians, but also a serious reckoning ahead. Overreaching will eventually generate a corrective balance, which could come at considerable cost. When military options are strengthened at the expense of other instruments of national protection, lives are unnecessarily placed at risk. Battles against proliferators cannot be truly won when treaties embodying disarmament norms are scorned or systematically weakened.
David Nelson, could you step aside for a few moments?
The War on David Nelson
by Margie Boule
If your name is David Nelson you can expect to be hassled, delayed, questioned and searched before being allowed to board aircraft anywhere in the United States for the foreseeable future.
Since the horrific attacks on Sept. 11, 2001, the federal Transportation Security Administration has, without any public announcement, created a two-tiered list of names "to protect our aviation system," says Nico Melendez, the agency spokesman for the West Coast, who is based in Los Angeles.
The name David Nelson apparently is on one of those lists.
"There is a 'no-fly' list," he says. "That's people who cannot fly, period," because they've been determined to be or are suspected of being "a threat to civil aviation or to national security."
Details about the list are "considered sensitive security information and cannot be released to the public," Nico says, but the Wall Street Journal suggests there are about 300 names on the "no-fly" list.
There's another list that Nico calls the "selectees list." Might as well call them "suspectees." This is a much larger list of names, accumulated, Nico says, from information obtained from intelligence agencies and the airlines. These folks may be allowed to fly but only after they're intensely scrutinized by airline, law enforcement and security personnel.
People whose names are on the two lists undergo what is not a routine security screening, in which you're asked to remove your shoes or empty your pockets. This week 18 men named David Nelson, all residents of Oregon, confirmed they have been repeatedly delayed at airport counters and security checkpoints in the last year or so.
Take the February experience of Dave Nelson of Salem, a lobbyist whose largest client is the Oregon Seed Council. Dave often travels for business, sometimes accompanying the governor on trade missions. "We were on our way to a trade show in Atlanta," Dave says, "trying to use the auto-check-in for baggage. We punched in our information, and the computer wouldn't accept it."
Dave and his wife, Leah, stood in line until an agent was available at the Delta counter. "We gave him our info, and he kept punching on his computer for about 10 or 15 minutes. . . . Then he says, 'I have to go in the back room.' He took off, and we stood there another 10 minutes. I asked L1 another clerk to find out where he'd gone."
After more waiting, they were told a supervisor was being sought. "Nobody would tell us what was going on," Dave says. "It's been 30 or 35 minutes by now. Finally the guy came out and said, 'You'll have to talk to the cop behind you.' We turned around, and there's a security guy." Dave says the officer told him there was a list of suspicious people, "and you're on the list."
Dave was asked for I.D. and turned over his driver's license. "They called downtown and ran a criminal check, and I was clean. Then the counter clerk had to call national Delta and get permission for me to go on the airplane. We were now pretty close to takeoff time." Dave and his wife were issued tickets, but again at the gate Dave was thoroughly frisked, searched and identified.
At the airport in Atlanta on the way back, the same thing happened. "The woman punched in my name and said, 'Oh, no, Mr. Nelson . . .' "
received from Nettime. Nettime is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets. More info e-mail Nettime.
Verizon Communications, following the lead of Bell Canada, is planning to install WiFi terminals in payphones located in busy urban areas, according president Lawrence Babbo. "All of our payphone people have already told us (that the phones would make good wireless access points.) That will probably be the vehicle we use, probably in Manhattan." Verizon already offers WiFi equipment to its DSL customers, and last November began offering WiFi connectivity to small and medium-sized businesses. Bell Canada has been testing the concept at payphones in Toronto and Montreal, and several independent phone companies are interested in following suit.
received from NewScan Daily newslist. NewsScan Daily (FREE), a lively summary of information technology news writed by John Gehl and Suzanne Douglas. To subscribe, send email to Newscan. Copyright 2003. NewsScan Daily (R) is a publication of NewsScan Inc.
NEC will launch its MobilePro 900 in the next couple of weeks, pitching the high-end handheld to niche markets such as hospitals and businesses with dispersed sales forces. The MobilePro 900 is the latest "tweener" device aimed at users who need the mobility of a handheld combined with the power of a laptop. Like a mininotebook, the 1.8-pound MobilePro 900 features a keyboard almost as large as those found on regular notebooks and an 8.1-inch screen. "Doctors like the PDA layout, but they found they had a high attrition rate with PDAs because everybody drops them," says a NEC marketing director. Unlike tablet PCs or the upcoming mini-PCs, NEC's device does not contain a built-in hard drive, and it runs Windows CE rather than a full-fledged PC operating system, but it features a longer battery life than its tablet-style counterparts -- up to eight hours on a single charge or five hours when connected to a WiFi network. The MobilePro 900 will be priced at $899.
received from NewScan Daily newslist. NewsScan Daily (FREE), a lively summary of information technology news writed by John Gehl and Suzanne Douglas. To subscribe, send email to Newscan. Copyright 2003. NewsScan Daily (R) is a publication of NewsScan Inc.
The success of Apple's newly launched iTunes Music Store has drawn the attention of potential rivals, who will go head-to-head with the popular service when Apple extends it to Microsoft-based PCs at the end of this year. Among the contenders are pressplay and MusicNet, backed by the major record labels; Listen.com's Rhapsody; Musicmatch; FullAudio; and Echo, a music venture backed by Best Buy, Borders Group, Virgin Entertainment Group and others. In addition, AOL plans to introduce a pay-per-download service late this year and Amazon and MSN also are exploring the possibility. "Everyone in the music industry, and the film industry, and others, are looking at Apple and saying, 'Oh my God,'" says Warner Music Group executive VP Paul Vidich. "There's no question it has sparked new interest." Part of the allure of Apple's iTunes is the flexible arrangements CEO Steve Jobs negotiated with the record labels, which enable users to move their 99-cent songs to an unlimited number of portable iPod players, and burn as many as 10 identical CDs containing the same playlist. It's anticipated that many of the competing services will try to duplicate this flexibility, although Apple concedes it will be difficult to match the simplicity and elegance it's achieved with its own hardware and operating system. Meanwhile, several potential online-music players are staying on the sidelines for now. "Apple's success in the Mac environment hasn't yet proven that this is a real business with decent margins," says Yahoo VP Dave Goldberg. "If it is, a lot of major players will get into the space."
received from NewScan Daily newslist. NewsScan Daily (FREE), a lively summary of information technology news writed by John Gehl and Suzanne Douglas. To subscribe, send email to Newscan. Copyright 2003. NewsScan Daily (R) is a publication of NewsScan Inc.
Country station KKCS has suspended two disc jockeys for playing the Dixie Chicks, violating a ban imposed after the group criticized President Bush.
Lead singer Natalie Maines told a British newspaper she was "ashamed that the president of the United States is from Texas."
"We pulled their music two months ago, and it's been a difficult decision because how can you ignore the hottest group in country music," station manager Jerry Grant said.
He said there has been discussion about whether to reinstate the music, but the DJs, Dave Moore and Jeff Singer, became impatient.
"They made it very clear that they support wholeheartedly the president of the United States. They support wholeheartedly the troops, the military. But they also support the right of free speech," Grant said.
The station has received a couple of hundred calls and 75 percent favored playing the music.
Rural Wireless Made MIT Pulls Out of Media Lab Asia
As the result of disagreements with India's new minister of education over the focus and management of Media Lab Asia's research projects, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology is withdrawing from the collaboration it began in 2001 with India's information technology ministry. The disputes have been both philosophical and bureaucratic: the new minister, Arun Shourie, has been unhappy that the lab's salary structure does not follow that of the Indian civil service, and he apparently also disagrees with MIT's focus on developing rural wireless networks and building speech interfaces to make information more accessible to illiterate people. MIT Media Laboratory director Nicholas Negroponte said the dissolution of the relationship "will certainly make us think," because "90% of what happened was driven by the change of minister, very much outside of our control." Media Lab Asia will probably continue the use of that name, since MIT has never trademarked the term 'Media Lab'.
received from NewScan Daily newslist. NewsScan Daily (FREE), a lively summary of information technology news writed by John Gehl and Suzanne Douglas. To subscribe, send email to Newscan. Copyright 2003. NewsScan Daily (R) is a publication of NewsScan Inc.
The proliferation in European broadband Internet access is fueling a new trend -- TV-show swapping -- which enables European viewers to catch the latest U.S. sitcoms just days after they first air, rather than waiting months for a local network to broadcast them. Jacqueline Hurt, a lawyer specializing in media law, says, "Until now, the effect of the Internet on TV and film has been small because of the speed issues involved in downloading. But with the increased uptake of broadband, and if the quality was acceptable, then this could be a big issue for broadcasters and program-makers… The value of a program to broadcasters will go down if the program is readily available on the Internet." But broadcasters remain largely unaware of the threat. Yinka Adegoke, deputy editor of New Media Age magazine, says: "No one I know in the industry is aware of it and it is just not on the agenda… If this goes from being a niche activity to the mainstream it will be virtually impossible to stop. This is exactly what happened to the music industry. Once the genie is out of the bottle you can't put it back in." The range of shows available for downloading currently is focused on the most popular U.S. programs, such as "Friends" and "The West Wing," and programs with loyal fan bases, such as science fiction.
received from NewScan Daily newslist. NewsScan Daily (FREE), a lively summary of information technology news writed by John Gehl and Suzanne Douglas. To subscribe, send email to Newscan. Copyright 2003. NewsScan Daily (R) is a publication of NewsScan Inc.
Palm in Motion: Wireless Connectivity and Secure E-Mail
PalmSource, the software subsidiary of PDA market leader Palm, has forged an alliance with Research in Motion (RIM), maker of Blackberry devices, to make wireless data connectivity and secure e-mail available to Palm OS licensees. Palm has also cut a deal with RIM rival Good Technology, which will enable Palm to make available Good's
communications software and services on the Palm OS. The market for handhelds was down 20% in 2002, but PalmSource CEO David Nagel says a recent survey of 500 companies indicates that 90% of IT managers plan to spend as much as 15% more on IT this year than last year.
received from NewScan Daily newslist. NewsScan Daily (FREE), a lively summary of information technology news writed by John Gehl and Suzanne Douglas. To subscribe, send email to Newscan. Copyright 2003. NewsScan Daily (R) is a publication of NewsScan Inc.
Gates on Microsoft's New Security System: Use it or Don't it
Microsoft's Bill Gates thinks people should have no fears about the company's new hard-wired security technology -- but reminds them that they don't have to use it unless they want to: "This is a mechanism that if people want to use, for example, to protect medical records, they can use it. It's a lot of work to do this stuff, and we think consumers will want those privacy guarantees. If they don't want them, then fine, ask me about our other work.'' Chipmakers Intel and AMD are working on the hardware aspects of the technology, which will provide the creators or owners of digital content a very high level of control over that content, allowing it to be viewed only by trusted employees or paying customers, and locking out snoops and vandals. Microsoft is calling its technology "Next Generation Secure Computing Base."
received from NewScan Daily newslist. NewsScan Daily (FREE), a lively summary of information technology news writed by John Gehl and Suzanne Douglas. To subscribe, send email to Newscan. Copyright 2003. NewsScan Daily (R) is a publication of NewsScan Inc.
Google, the world's most-used search engine, is now able to instantly search more than 3 billion Web pages about virtually any subject, and quantity has become quality: "Google is altering social and business habits -- from dating to hiring," in the words of one analyst. Journalist Stewart Alsop, who writes about technology, says: "I didn't used to need to do this, but now I can't work effectively without being able to 'Google' someone.'' Examples of Google's new importance: One in three Americans online has searched on the name of a personal acquaintance into a search engine, and one in four had done a "vanity Google'' (typing one's own name into the search box to see what comes up). But as its global dominance grows, more and more people have been questioning Google on issues such as fairness and privacy. ) O'Reilly & Co. president Tim O'Reilly, who publishes computer- and Internet-focused books, says: "There are a lot of people who certainly worry about a Google backlash, if it gets too powerful, and Lynn Wedel, a frequent Google user, worries: "There's too much information, and it's too easy to find. I didn't know all these things were in the databases.'' People often find that their marathon finish times, club memberships and high school reunion photos online, because a friend, family member or organization has posted the information. Ben Edelman, a fellow a fellow at the Berkman Center for Internet and Society at Harvard Law School, warns: "They are, after all, free to do what they want to. But make no mistake about it, if people aren't happy, Google could face regulation. People will want to pass a law.''
received from NewScan Daily newslist. NewsScan Daily (FREE), a lively summary of information technology news writed by John Gehl and Suzanne Douglas. To subscribe, send email to Newscan. Copyright 2003. NewsScan Daily (R) is a publication of NewsScan Inc.
White House Fight to Block the Release of Official Report on 9/11
The Secrets of September 11
by Michael Isikoff and Mark Hosenball
The White House is battling to keep a report on the terror attacks secret. Does the 2004 election have anything to do with it?
Even as White House political aides plot a 2004 campaign plan designed to capitalize on the emotions and issues raised by the September 11 terror attacks, administration officials are waging a behind-the-scenes battle to restrict public disclosure of key events relating to the attacks.
At the center of the dispute is a more-than-800-page secret report prepared by a joint congressional inquiry detailing the intelligence and law-enforcement failures that preceded the attacks -- including provocative, if unheeded warnings, given President Bush and his top advisers during the summer of 2001.
The report was completed last December; only a bare-bones list of "findings" with virtually no details was made public. But nearly six months later, a "working group" of Bush administration intelligence officials assigned to review the document has taken a hard line against further public disclosure. By refusing to declassify many of its most significant conclusions, the administration has essentially thwarted congressional plans to release the report by the end of this month, congressional and administration sources tell NEWSWEEK. In some cases, these sources say, the administration has even sought to "reclassify" some material that was already discussed in public testimony -- a move one Senate staffer described as "ludicrous." The administration's stand has infuriated the two members of Congress who oversaw the report -- Democratic Sen. Bob Graham and Republican Rep. Porter Goss. The two are now preparing a letter of complaint to Vice President Dick Cheney.
Graham is "increasingly frustrated" by the administration's "unwillingness to release what he regards as important information the public should have about 9-11," a spokesman said. In Graham's view, the Bush administration isn't protecting legitimate issues of national security but information that could be a political "embarrassment," the aide said. Graham, who last year served as Senate Intelligence Committee chairman, recently told NEWSWEEK: "There has been a cover-up of this."
Graham's stand may not be terribly surprising, given that the Florida Democrat is running for president and is seeking to use the issue himself politically. But he has found a strong ally in House Intelligence Committee Chairman Goss, a staunch Republican (and former CIA officer) who in the past has consistently defended the administration's handling of 9-11 issues and is considered especially close to Cheney.
"I find this process horrendously frustrating," Goss said in an interview. He was particularly piqued that the administration was refusing to declassify material that top intelligence officials had already testified about. "Senior intelligence officials said things in public hearings that they [administration officials] don't want us to put in the report," said Goss. "That's not something I can rationally accept without further public explanation."
Unlike Graham, Goss insists there are no political "gotchas" in the report, only a large volume of important information about the performance and shortcomings of U.S. intelligence and law-enforcement agencies prior to September 11.
And even congressional staffers close to the process say it is unclear whether the administration’s resistance to public disclosure reflects fear of political damage or simply an ingrained "culture of secrecy" that permeates the intelligence community -- and has strong proponents at the highest levels of the White House.
The mammoth report reflects nearly 10 months of investigative work by a special staff hired jointly by the House and Senate Intelligence Committees and overseen by Eleanor Hill, a former federal prosecutor and Pentagon inspector general. Hill's team got access to hundreds of thousands of pages of classified documents from the CIA, FBI, National Security Agency and other executive-branch agencies. The staff also conducted scores of interviews with senior officials, field agents and intelligence officers. (They were not, however, given access to some top White House aides, such as national-security adviser Condoleezza Rice or other principals like Secretary of State Colin Powell or Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld.) The team's report was approved by the two intelligence committees last Dec. 10. But because the document relied so heavily on secret material, the administration "working group," overseen by CIA director George Tenet, had to first "scrub" the document and determine which portions could be declassified.
More than two months later, the working group came back with its decisions -- and some members were flabbergasted. Entire portions remained classified. Some of the report -- including some dealing with matters that had been extensively aired in public, such as the now famous FBI "Phoenix memo" of July 2001 reporting that Middle Eastern nationals might be enrolling in U.S. flight schools -- were "reclassified." Hill has since submitted proposed changes to the working group, pointing out the illogic of trying to pull back material that was already in the public domain. But officials have indicated the "review" process is likely to drag on for months -- with no guarantees that the "working group" will be any more amenable to public disclosure.
A U.S. intelligence official cited international distractions as at least one reason for the delays. "In case you hadn't noticed, there have been two wars going on," the official said. The official added: "We're working this [report] to try to get it out without putting lives at risk and without endangering sources and methods." Asked why the working group was refusing to permit disclosure of material that had already been made public, the official said: "Just because something had been inadvertently released, doesn't make it unclassified."
The administration’s tough stand, some sources say, doesn't augur well for the National Commission on Terrorist Attacks -- which is conducting its own investigation into the events of 9-11. Already, flaps have developed on that front, as well. When one commissioner, former congressman Tim Roemer, last week sought to review transcripts of some of the joint inquiry's closed-door hearings, he was denied access -- because the commission staff had agreed to a White House request to allow its lawyers to first review the material to determine if the president wants to invoke executive privilege to keep the material out of the panel's hands.
"I think it's outrageous," says Roemer, who plans to raise the matter at a commission hearing this week. But a commission staffer says he expected the White House review to be finished by the end of the week, and it was unclear whether the president's lawyers would try to invoke executive privilege -- a stand that would almost certainly provoke a major legal battle with the panel.
The tensions over the release of 9-11 related material seems especially relevant -- if not ironic -- in light of recent reports that the president’s political advisers have devised an unusual re-election strategy that essentially uses the story of September 11 as the liftoff for his campaign. The White House is delaying the Republican nominating convention, scheduled for New York City, until the first week in September 2004 -- the latest in the party's history. That would allow Bush's acceptance speech, now slated for Sept. 2, to meld seamlessly into 9-11 commemoration events due to take place in the city the next week.
Some sources who have read the still-secret congressional report say some sections would not play quite so neatly into White House plans. One portion deals extensively with the stream of U.S. intelligence-agency reports in the summer of 2001 suggesting that Al Qaeda was planning an upcoming attack against the United States -- and implicitly raises questions about how Bush and his top aides responded. One such CIA briefing, in July 2001, was particularly chilling and prophetic. It predicted that Osama bin Laden was about to launch a terrorist strike "in the coming weeks," the congressional investigators found. The intelligence briefing went on to say: "The attack will be spectacular and designed to inflict mass casualties against U.S. facilities or interests. Attack preparations have been made. Attack will occur with little or no warning."
The substance of that intelligence report was first disclosed at a public hearing last September by staff director Hill. But at the last minute, Hill was blocked from saying precisely who within the Bush White House got the briefing when CIA director Tenet classified the names of the recipients. (One source says the recipients of the briefing included Bush himself.) As a result, Hill was only able to say the briefing was given to "senior government officials."
Experiencing the Taste of Patriot Act in the Dinner
Patriot Raid
by Jason Halperin
Two weeks ago I experienced a very small taste of what hundreds of South Asian immigrants and U.S. citizens of South Asian descent have gone through since 9/11, and what thousands of others have come to fear. I was held, against my will and without warrant or cause, under the USA PATRIOT Act. While I understand the need for some measure of security and precaution in times such as these, the manner in which this detention and interrogation took place raises serious questions about police tactics and the safeguarding of civil liberties in times of war.
That night, March 20th, my roommate Asher and I were on our way to see the Broadway show "Rent." We had an hour to spare before curtain time so we stopped into an Indian restaurant just off of Times Square in the heart of midtown. I have omitted the name of the restaurant so as not to subject the owners to any further harassment or humiliation.
We helped ourselves to the buffet and then sat down to begin eating our dinner. I was just about to tell Asher how I'd eaten there before and how delicious the vegetable curry was, but I never got a chance. All of a sudden, there was a terrible commotion and five NYPD in bulletproof vests stormed down the stairs. They had their guns drawn and were pointing them indiscriminately at the restaurant staff and at us.
"Go to the back, go to the back of the restaurant," they yelled.
I hesitated, lost in my own panic.
"Did you not hear me, go to the back and sit down," they demanded.
I complied and looked around at the other patrons. There were eight men including the waiter, all of South Asian descent and ranging in age from late-teens to senior citizen. One of the policemen pointed his gun point-blank in the face of the waiter and shouted: "Is there anyone else in the restaurant?" The waiter, terrified, gestured to the kitchen.
The police placed their fingers on the triggers of their guns and kicked open the kitchen doors. Shouts emanated from the kitchen and a few seconds later five Hispanic men were made to crawl out on their hands and knees, guns pointed at them.
After patting us all down, the five officers seated us at two tables. As they continued to kick open doors to closets and bathrooms with their fingers glued to their triggers, no less than ten officers in suits emerged from the stairwell. Most of them sat in the back of the restaurant typing on their laptop computers. Two of them walked over to our table and identified themselves as officers of the INS and Homeland Security Department.
I explained that we were just eating dinner and asked why we were being held. We were told by the INS agent that we would be released once they had confirmation that we had no outstanding warrants and our immigration status was OK'd.
In pre-9/11 America, the legality of this would have been questionable. After all, the Fourth Amendment to the Constitution states: "The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated; and no warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched and the persons or things to be seized."
"You have no right to hold us," Asher insisted.
"Yes, we have every right," responded one of the agents. "You are being held under the Patriot Act following suspicion under an internal Homeland Security investigation."
Reason for War? "Global Show of U.S. Power and Democracy"
by John Cochran
White House Officials Say Privately the Sept. 11 Attacks Changed Everything
To build its case for war with Iraq, the Bush administration argued that Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destruction, but some officials now privately acknowledge the White House had another reason for war — a global show of American power and democracy.
Officials inside government and advisers outside told ABCNEWS the administration emphasized the danger of Saddam's weapons to gain the legal justification for war from the United Nations and to stress the danger at home to Americans.
"We were not lying," said one official. "But it was just a matter of emphasis."
Officials now say they may not find hundreds of tons of mustard and nerve agents and maybe not thousands of liters of anthrax and other toxins. But U.S. forces will find some, they say. On Thursday, President Bush raised the possibility for the first time that any such Iraqi weapons were destroyed before or during the war.
If weapons of mass destruction were not the primary reason for war, what was? Here's the answer officials and advisers gave ABCNEWS.
The Sept. 11, 2001, attacks changed everything, including the Bush administration's thinking about the Middle East — and not just Saddam Hussein.
Senior officials decided that unless action was taken, the Middle East would continue to be a breeding ground for terrorists. Officials feared that young Arabs, angry about their lives and without hope, would always looking for someone to hate — and that someone would always be Israel and the United States.
Europeans thought the solution was to get a peace agreement between Israel and the Palestinians. But American officials felt a Middle East peace agreement would only be part of the solution.
The Bush administration felt that a new start was needed in the Middle East and that Iraq was the place to show that it is democracy -- not terrorism -- that offers hope.
Sending a Message
Beyond that, the Bush administration decided it must flex muscle to show it would fight terrorism, not just here at home and not just in Afghanistan against the Taliban, but in the Middle East, where it was thriving.
Officials deny that Bush was captured by the aggressive views of neo-conservatives. But Bush did agree with some of their thinking.
"We made it very public that we thought that one consequence the president should draw from 9/11 is that it was unacceptable to sit back and let either terrorist groups or dictators developing weapons of mass destruction strike first at us," conservative commentator Bill Kristol said on ABCNEWS' Nightline in March.
The Bush administration wanted to make a statement about its determination to fight terrorism. And officials acknowledge that Saddam had all the requirements to make him, from their standpoint, the perfect target.
Other countries have such weapons, yet the United States did not go to war with them. And though Saddam oppressed and tortured his own people, other tyrants have done the same without incurring U.S. military action. Finally, Saddam had ties to terrorists -- but so have several countries that the United States did not fight.
But Saddam was guilty of all these things and he met another requirement as well -- a prime location, in the heart of the Middle East, between Syria and Iran, two countries the United States wanted to send a message to.
That message: If you collaborate with terrorists, you do so at your own peril.
Officials said that even if Saddam had backed down and avoided war by admitting to having weapons of mass destruction, the world would have received the same message; Don't mess with the United States.
< my comment > What a lovely message! It was a wonderfull experience had received it. Now we know how U.S. government spell the word "post". The way was used to make the message goes don't "missil" anyone. I only wasn't very sure about what was said: it was "it is democracy -- not terrorism -- that offers hope", or "don't mess with the United States"? Beyond the doubts the amazing message comes to all in the same "scumbag" box office. < /comment >
Attackers Pitch Grenades to Avenge Wednesday Deaths
Grenade Injures 7 U.S. Soldiers in Iraq
by Charles J. Hanley
Attackers lobbed two grenades into a U.S. Army compound Thursday, wounding seven soldiers just hours after the Americans had fired on Iraqi protesters in the street outside, a U.S. intelligence officer reported.
The incident - the latest in a series of clashes and deadly shootings involving U.S. troops in Fallujah - came as President Bush prepared to address to the American public from a homeward-bound aircraft carrier, declaring that major combat in Iraq is finished.
None of the injuries to soldiers of the 3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment in Fallujah was life-threatening, said Capt. Frank Rosenblatt.
The troops inside the walled compound - a former police station - opened fire on men fleeing the area, but no one was captured or believed hit, said Rosenblatt, whose 82nd Airborne Division is handing over control of Fallujah to the Armored Cavalry. Officers said the attackers' identities were unknown.
The attack, at 1 a.m. Thursday, came after soldiers in the compound and in a passing Army convoy opened fire Wednesday on anti-American demonstrators massed outside. Local hospital officials said two Iraqis were killed and 18 wounded.
American officers said that barrage was provoked when someone fired on the convoy from the crowd.
Wednesday's march was to protest earlier bloodshed Monday night, when 16 demonstrators and bystanders were killed and more than 50 wounded, according to hospital counts. In that clash, an 82nd Airborne company, whose members said they were being shot at, fired on a protest outside a school occupied by U.S. soldiers.
Some Fallujah residents said they had heard relatives of victims vow to avenge Wednesday's shootings - and many in the city have declared they want the American troops to leave.
After a week back, I’ve managed to get some sleep in, say “hey” to a few friends, put up some picture pages (part one and part two) and try to take stock of the aftermath of this war. This is difficult, however, as the urban environment of New York City is so alien to the experiences of the past month that it might as well be a different planet. It doesn’t help that I’m still stepping gingerly around the East Village (residual fear of landmines), looking for sniper positions on the skyscrapers and marveling that people aren’t all carrying AK-47s.
But that’s nothing compared to what the Iraqi people have had to go through, and what they’re facing. To a certain degree, the same goes for the people of America who, it may be, were lied to about the reasons for this war.
In northern Iraq, a military chemical-analysis team said today that a cache of barrels and two mobile laboratories found near the village of Bayji were most likely not used for chemical warfare purposes, countering earlier reports from an Army officer at the site.
For New York Times columnist Tom Friedman, this is no biggie. “We do not need to find any weapons of mass destruction to justify this war,” he wrote this weekend. “That skull, and the thousands more that will be unearthed, are enough for me.” He was referring to a graphic and affecting photo the Times ran on its front page on Friday. This is the same man who wrote on Feb. 19:
I am also very troubled by the way Bush officials have tried to justify this war on the grounds that Saddam is allied with Osama bin Laden or will be soon. There is simply no proof of that, and every time I hear them repeat it I think of the Gulf of Tonkin resolution. You don’t take the country to war on the wings of a lie. (Emphasis added.)
Friedman wasn’t talking so much about WMD in that earlier column, but the point remains the same. In matters of starting wars, you better have the moral high ground, and you don’t get there by climbing a ladder of falsehoods.
For people wholly supportive of the war, however, the tonic of triumphalism is sweet indeed. Many are now saying “I told you so” to those of us who opposed it. A reader — I can’t find the email now — asked some months ago if I would change my mind on the war if it was proven that Iraq was developing weapons of mass destruction. I answered that no, I wouldn’t, since I didn’t — and don’t — believe that the war was about WMD or an evil tyrant but about realpolitik plans for projecting American power into the Middle East. My response to this reader is to flip the question: “Do you still think this war was necessary since it may very well turn out that there are no WMD to be found?”
(Mind you, I’m sure the U.S. will find some cache of chemicals or a few warheads, but President Bush repeatedly invoked a clear and present danger to the survival of the United States as a justification for war. A few dozen litres of mustard gas or even VX does not strike me as justification for shredding the U.N. Charter, demolishing NATO, harming further the United States’ image abroad and increasing the risk of terrorism at home.)
Still, some very real good occurred from the toppling of Saddam. There is no doubt the future of Iraq will be much, much brighter without him. The war was prosecuted fairly well with relatively low civilian casualties, there was no urban warfare and at least some Iraqis in the Arab parts of the country cheered the U.S’s entry into Baghdad. (The Kurds were, naturally, ecstatic, but the warm welcome I received should not be taken as indicative of the mood of the country as a whole. Many, many Arabs are angry over what happened to their country and the Kurds are ready to bolt from Iraq if they get the chance.) But the aftermath of the war could be more damaging to American interests and the Iraqi people. U.S. soldiers today fired into a crowd of civilian protesters at Falluhaj, about 30 miles west of Baghdad. The director of the local hospital said 13 people were killed and 75 injured. This is the third such incident such as this, with the other two occurring in Mosul.
Trigger-happy troops, Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld’s cavalier attitude toward the rape of a nation’s cultural history — with journalists and soldiers taking part — as well as disturbing but totally unconfirmed stories I was told by troops about atrocities committed by U.S. forces against prisoners all point to one thing: the need for a skeptical and close examination of America’s role in a post-war Iraq.
This examination is not going to come from the networks, obviously. CNN’s news head Eason Jordan, already facing criticism for the arguably morally bankrupt policy of not reporting Saddam’s thuggery in exchange for 12 years of access, revealed to Howard Kurtz on “Reliable Sources” last week that the retired military personnel used on air were all approved by the Pentagon! (L.A. Times, registration req.) “I went to the Pentagon myself several times before the war started and met with important people there and said, for instance, at CNN, ‘Here are the generals we’re thinking of retaining to advise us on the air and off about the war,’” he said. “And we got a big thumbs-up on all of them. That was important.” Cozy arrangement, there.
By and large, the television reports were uniformly awful, in my opinion, with a rah-rah patriotism that television excels at. Print reporters were better, however, with critical reports and unfiltered quotes from troops, including New York Times reporter Dexter Filkins quoting a sergeant as saying he shot an Iraqi woman because “the chick got in the way.”
This criticism is not to take away from the courage of the reporters in the field. I was a chicken and mainly stayed away from the rough stuff so I don’t include myself in that previous sentence. Twelve journalists died in this war, out of about 1,500 covering it. None of those 12 people had to be there; they chose to be there. Their motivations, I’m sure, ranged from the noble dedication to the story and the people of Iraq to the base lust for glory and a collection of war stories. Most likely it was a combination of both. I am including myself here and speaking from personal experience.
So what comes next? For Iraq, no one knows. President Bush says the U.S. will install democracy but that doesn’t include a Shi’a-led Islamic state — a wise choice, even if it does leave the United States open to hypocrisy. We’ll see to what degree democracy really does come to the new Iraq. But I know this: The American people, in whose name this war was waged, need to hold this administration’s feet to the fire. It’s obviously too late to stop this war, but we as a democratic nation still have a responsibility to make the aftermath as beneficial to the Iraqi people as possible now that it’s over. That means that corporate cronyism that seems to be the preferred method for awarding lucrative rebuilding contracts needs to be protested — loudly. Any backsliding on democratic actions or a disconnect between administration actions and rhetoric have to be combatted as vigorously possible.
The anti-war crowd would be criminally irresponsible if it just washes its hands of the matter and considers the battle to halt military action in Iraq a failed cause and moves onto the next cause celebre. And if the pro-war people think they now have a right to say, “We told you this war would go well,” they damn well also have a responsibility to hold the people they supported to their word. It’s time for them, the “winners” in the “Should we go to war or shouldn’t we?” debate, to put up or shut up.
I personally don’t plan on sitting back and letting things just happen, on letting Iraq slip from the consciousness of an easily distracted people. I’m working on a book proposal examining the three acts of this drama — build up, the war itself and its aftermath. I’ll be returning to Iraq as soon as possible to research the rebuilding and to explore those disturbing stories I heard. Most important, I’ll be keeping the voices of the Iraqi people front and center, something the mainstream media tend not to do.
"And when you look at the way war critics -- from the Dixie Chicks to Tom Daschle -- have been savaged by conservatives, it feels as if some people want to use this war to create a multiparty democracy in Iraq and a one-party state in America."
Intelligence agencies accuse Bush and Blair of distorting and fabricating evidence in rush to war
The case for invading Iraq to remove its weapons of mass destruction was based on selective use of intelligence, exaggeration, use of sources known to be discredited and outright fabrication, The Independent on Sunday can reveal.
A high-level UK source said last night that intelligence agencies on both sides of the Atlantic were furious that briefings they gave political leaders were distorted in the rush to war with Iraq. "They ignored intelligence assessments which said Iraq was not a threat," the source said. Quoting an editorial in a Middle East newspaper which said, "Washington has to prove its case. If it does not, the world will for ever believe that it paved the road to war with lies", he added: "You can draw your own conclusions."
UN inspectors who left Iraq just before the war started were searching for four categories of weapons: nuclear, chemical, biological and missiles capable of flying beyond a range of 93 miles. They found ample evidence that Iraq was not co-operating, but none to support British and American assertions that Saddam Hussein's regime posed an imminent threat to the world.
On nuclear weapons, the British Government claimed that the former regime sought uranium feed material from the government of Niger in west Africa. This was based on letters later described by the International Atomic Energy Agency as crude forgeries.
On chemical weapons, a CIA report on the likelihood that Saddam would use weapons of mass destruction was partially declassified. The parts released were those which made it appear that the danger was high; only after pressure from Senator Bob Graham, head of the Senate Intelligence Committee, was the whole report declassified, including the conclusion that the chances of Iraq using chemical weapons were "very low" for the "foreseeable future".
On biological weapons, the US Secretary of State, Colin Powell, told the UN Security Council in February that the former regime had up to 18 mobile laboratories. He attributed the information to "defectors" from Iraq, without saying that their claims – including one of a "secret biological laboratory beneath the Saddam Hussein hospital in central Baghdad" – had repeatedly been disproved by UN weapons inspectors.
On missiles, Iraq accepted UN demands to destroy its al-Samoud weapons, despite disputing claims that they exceeded the permitted range. No banned Scud missiles were found before or since, but last week the Secretary of State for Defence, Geoff Hoon, suggested Scuds had been fired during the war. There is no proof any were in fact Scuds.
Some American officials have all but conceded that the weapons of mass destruction campaign was simply a means to an end – a "global show of American power and democracy", as ABC News in the US put it. "We were not lying," it was told by one official. "But it was just a matter of emphasis." American and British teams claim they are scouring Iraq in search of definitive evidence but none has so far been found, even though the sites considered most promising have been searched, and senior figures such as Tariq Aziz, the former Deputy Prime Minister, intelligence chiefs and the man believed to be in charge of Iraq's chemical weapons programme are in custody.
Robin Cook, who as Foreign Secretary would have received high-level security briefings, said last week that "it was difficult to believe that Saddam had the capacity to hit us". Mr Cook resigned from the Government on the eve of war, but was still in the Cabinet as Leader of the House when it released highly contentious dossiers to bolster its case.
One report released last autumn by Tony Blair said that Iraq could deploy chemical and biological weapons within 45 minutes, but last week Mr Hoon said that such weapons might have escaped detection because they had been dismantled and buried. A later Downing Street "intelligence" dossier was shown to have been largely plagiarised from three articles in academic publications. "You cannot just cherry-pick evidence that suits your case and ignore the rest. It is a cardinal rule of intelligence," said one aggrieved officer. "Yet that is what the PM is doing." Another said: "What we have is a few strands of highly circumstantial evidence, and to justify an attack on Iraq it is being presented as a cast-iron case. That really is not good enough."
Glen Rangwala, the Cambridge University analyst who first pointed out Downing Street's plagiarism, said ministers had claimed before the war to have information which could not be disclosed because agents in Iraq would be endangered. "That doesn't apply any more, but they haven't come up with the evidence," he said. "They lack credibility."
Mr Rangwala said much of the information on WMDs had come from Ahmed Chalabi's Iraqi National Congress (INC), which received Pentagon money for intelligence-gathering. "The INC saw the demand, and provided what was needed," he said. "The implication is that they polluted the whole US intelligence effort."
Facing calls for proof of their allegations, senior members of both the US and British governments are suggesting that so-called WMDs were destroyed after the departure of UN inspectors on the eve of war – a possibility raised by President George Bush for the first time on Thursday.
This in itself, however, appears to be an example of what the chief UN weapons inspector Hans Blix called "shaky intelligence". An Iraqi scientist, writing under a pseudonym, said in a note slipped to a driver in a US convoy that he had proof information was kept from the inspectors, and that Iraqi officials had destroyed chemical weapons just before the war.
U.S. Troops Kill 13 Iraqi Protesters in a Peaceful Demonstration
U.S. troops shot dead 13 Iraqis and wounded dozens taking part in a demonstration west of Baghdad, witnesses said on Tuesday -- an incident sure to inflame anger and fuel anti-American sentiment.
U.S. military officials said the soldiers opened fire on a crowd of Iraqi demonstrators late on Monday in Falluja, 30 miles outside Baghdad, but witnesses told Reuters the protesters were unarmed. [...]
In Falluja, hospital director Ahmed Ghanim al-Ali said 13 people had been killed and at least 75 wounded in Monday's shooting. There were widely conflicting accounts of what had happened, but protesting Iraqis were demanding that U.S. troops leave a local school they were using as a barracks.
U.S. Lt. Christopher Hart said between 100 and 200 chanting people approached his men, who opened fire after two gunmen with rifles appeared on a motorcycle and started shooting. He put the Iraqi death toll at between seven and 10.
"Our soul and our blood we will sacrifice to you martyrs," mourners in Falluja chanted as they buried their dead at a cemetery while U.S. helicopters flew overhead.
"It was a peaceful demonstration. They did not have any weapons," said local Sunni Muslim cleric Kamal Shaker Mahmoud.
A U.S. officer at the scene, Lt. Col. Eric Nantz, said the bloodshed occurred after people in the crowd fired into the air, making it hard to tell if his men were under threat.
"There was a lot of celebratory firing ... last night," Nantz said, noting Monday was Saddam's 66th birthday.
"There were a lot of people who were armed and who were throwing rocks. How is a U.S. soldier to tell the difference between a rock and a grenade?"
It was the third deadly shooting incident between Iraqis and U.S. troops in the past two weeks, fueling resentment and anger at the Americans' continuing presence in Iraq after toppling Saddam.
In the northern city of Mosul, 10 Iraqis were killed when U.S. Marines opened fire on protesters earlier this month, although again the Americans said they were only returning fire.
U.S. officers seeking to restore order in the aftermath of Saddam's fall said 3,000 to 4,000 extra troops and military police would go to Baghdad in the next 10 days to boost security in the capital.
Apple Computer launched its iTunes Music Store on Monday in a move that CEO Steve Jobs called "a major milestone in the evolution of the real digital music age. We believe in the future of music." iTunes offers 200,000 downloadable songs for 99 cents apiece and is the first industry-endorsed online music service to forgo subscription fees in favor of a "pay-per-download" business model. Jobs said the real draw for music fans will be the easy-to-use interface and high-quality files available at the iTunes Music Store. "Using current piracy services is very frustrating. It takes you 15 minutes to find and download a song of reasonable quality that doesn't have the last four seconds cut off or a break in the middle. We offer super-fast, high-quality downloads with pristine encoding. You certainly can't get that on any other service -- pirate or legal."
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there's no way to do this gracefully, so I won't even try. I'm going to just hunker down for some really impressive extended flaming, and my asbestos underwear is firmly in place, and extremely uncomfortable.
I want to make it clear that DRM is perfectly ok with Linux!
There, I've said it. I'm out of the closet. So bring it on...
I've had some private discussions with various people about this already, and I do realize that a lot of people want to use the kernel in some way to just make DRM go away, at least as far as Linux is concerned. Either by some policy decision or by extending the GPL to just not allow it.
In some ways the discussion was very similar to some of the software patent related GPL-NG discussions from a year or so ago: "we don't like it, and we should change the license to make it not work somehow".
And like the software patent issue, I also don't necessarily like DRM myself, but I still ended up feeling the same: I'm an "Oppenheimer", and I refuse to play politics with Linux, and I think you can use Linux for whatever you want to - which very much includes things I don't necessarily personally approve of.
The GPL requires you to give out sources to the kernel, but it doesn't limit what you can _do_ with the kernel. On the whole, this is just another example of why rms calls me "just an engineer" and thinks I have no ideals.
[ Personally, I see it as a virtue - trying to make the world a slightly better place _without_ trying to impose your moral values on other people. You do whatever the h*ll rings your bell, I'm just an engineer who wants to make the best OS possible. ]
In short, it's perfectly ok to sign a kernel image - I do it myself indirectly every day through the kernel.org, as kernel.org will sign the tar-balls I upload to make sure people can at least verify that they came that way. Doing the same thing on the binary is no different: signing a binary is a perfectly fine way to show the world that you're the one behind it, and that _you_ trust it.
And since I can imaging signing binaries myself, I don't feel that I can disallow anybody else doing so.
Another part of the DRM discussion is the fact that signing is only the first step: _acting_ on the fact whether a binary is signed or not (by refusing to load it, for example, or by refusing to give it a secret key) is required too.
But since the signature is pointless unless you _use_ it for something, and since the decision how to use the signature is clearly outside of the scope of the kernel itself (and thus not a "derived work" or anything like that), I have to convince myself that not only is it clearly ok to act on the knowledge of whather the kernel is signed or not, it's also outside of the scope of what the GPL talks about, and thus irrelevant to the license.
That's the short and sweet of it. I wanted to bring this out in the open, because I know there are people who think that signed binaries are an act of "subversion" (or "perversion") of the GPL, and I wanted to make sure that people don't live under mis-apprehension that it can't be done.
I think there are many quite valid reasons to sign (and verify) your kernel images, and while some of the uses of signing are odious, I don't see any sane way to distinguish between "good" signers and "bad" signers.
Comments? I'd love to get some real discussion about this, but in the end I'm personally convinced that we have to allow it.
Btw, one thing that is clearly _not_ allowed by the GPL is hiding private keys in the binary. You can sign the binary that is a result of the build process, but you can _not_ make a binary that is aware of certain keys without making those keys public - because those keys will obviously have been part of the kernel build itself.
So don't get these two things confused - one is an external key that is applied _to_ the kernel (ok, and outside the license), and the other one is embedding a key _into_ the kernel (still ok, but the GPL requires that such a key has to be made available as "source" to the kernel).
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Nineteen Jailed Because Publish DTV Cards Design Secrets
Student Confesses to Violation of Trade Secret Law
University of Chicago student Igor Serebreyany is pleading guilty to charges of putting secret documents about DirecTV's anti-piracy technology on the Internet, in violation of the federal Economic Espionage Act of 1996, which prohibits anyone from disclosing trade secrets for economic benefit. He theoretically faces penalties of up to 10 years in prison and a $250,000 fine, but has negotiated a deal under which his prison sentence would be no more than one year. The documents described details about the design and architecture of DirectTV cards.
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Movie Studios and Record Labels Only Idea: Sue them All
Ruling Forces Entertainment Industry to Rethink Strategy
Friday's ruling exonerating Grokster and StreamCast of charges of violating copyright laws will force the entertainment industry to broaden its battle against Internet piracy on three fronts: the courts, in Congress and in the marketplace. In addition to appealing the most recent ruling, the movie studios and record labels may start suing individuals who trade copyrighted files. One music label president, who spoke on condition of anonymity, says the ruling leaves industry no choice: "It makes them [consumers] angrier, but we have no other path right now. It's ridiculous what we're doing, but we have so few options." The industry is also lobbying Congress for stricter anti-piracy laws, and at the same time must find a way to give consumers a compelling alternative to piracy: "The most effective way to combat unlicensed sites is to offer licensed services with reasonable consumer rules at attractive prices," says a digital media analyst at Raymond James. "This attempt to enforce prohibition is a failure." The fact that many of the illegitimate sites are polluted with viruses, pop-up ads and low-quality files creates an opportunity for industry to offer a high-quality, hassle-free online service, he adds.
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MPAA and RIAA Defeated on Federal Demands to Illegalize P2P Software
Grokster and Streamcast: we Didn't Do it
A federal judge has ruled that two Internet music services that offer peer-to-peer software used by millions of people to share copyrighted music illegally are not themselves guilty of copyright infringement. The judge's reasoning was that, since the technology is also used for many perfectly legal purposes, the two services should not be held responsible in those cases when it happens to be used for illegal purposes. The ruling will be appealed. The music industry insists that the two services, Grokster and StreamCast, are overwhelmingly used by people to exchange copyrighted material, and that legal uses are insignificant. Many industry analysts predict that the industry will soon have to change fundamentally and begin providing inexpensive, easy-to-access music over the Internet.
Much of Wilson's ruling hung on the technological differences between Napster and the newer, decentralized file-swapping services.
Napster's service opened itself to liability for its users' actions by actively playing a role in connecting people who were downloading and uploading songs--a little like a physical swap meet provides the facilities for people exchanging illegal material, the judge said. By contrast, Grokster and Streamcast distributed software to people and had no control over what their users did afterwards, Wilson said.
When users search for and initiate transfers of files using the Grokster client, they do so without any information being transmitted to or through any computers owned or controlled by Grokster," Wilson wrote. "Neither Grokster nor StreamCast provides the site and facilities" for direct infringement. "If either defendant closed their doors and deactivated all computers within their control, users of their products could continue sharing files with little or no interruption."
It didn't matter that the companies were aware generally of copyright infringement happening using their software, Wilson added--they would have to know of specific instances of infringement and be able to do something about it, to be liable for those users' actions.
Friday's decision is likely to send shock waves throughout the copyright and technology communities, which have adjusted slowly over the last year to the notion that file-trading services such as these were mostly likely illegal. Technology companies have complained that the repeated lawsuits have stifled innovation, but many also have begun to move forward in alliances with authorized music--and film-distribution services.
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Received also from Politech. POLITECH -- Declan McCullagh's politics and technology mailing list. You may redistribute this message freely if you include this notice. To subscribe to Politech. This message is archived and Declan McCullagh's photographs are here.