By Ryan Singel S
The government's new cyber-security "Manhattan Project" is so
secretive that a key Senate oversight panel has been reduced to writing
a letter to beg for answers to the most basic questions, such as what's
going on, what's the point and what about privacy laws.
The Senate Homeland Security committee wants to know, for example, what
is the goal of Homeland Security's new National Cyber Security Center.
They also want to know why it is that in March, DHS announced that
Silicon Valley evangelist and security novice Rod Beckstrom would
direct the center, when up to that point DHS said the mere existence of
the center was classified.
Those are just two sub-questions out of a list of 17 multi-part
questions centrist Sens. Joe Lieberman (I-Connecticut) and Susan
Collins (R-Maine) sent to DHS in a letter Friday.
In fact, although the two say they asked for a briefing five months ago
on what the center does, DHS has yet to explain its latest acronym.
The panel, noted it was pleased with the new focus on cyber security,
but questioned Homeland Security's request to triple the center's
cyber-security budget to about $200 million.
They cited concerns about the ... more »
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Wednesday, May 7
by
Publisher
on Tue 06 May 2008 09:14 PM AKDT
Monday, May 5
by
Publisher
on Sun 04 May 2008 08:16 PM AKDT
6-3 opinion on photo-ID law opens door for more privacy intrusions
Monday's Supreme Court decision upholding a harshly restrictive photo-ID requirement for voting deals a severe blow to people who value privacy and individuality. That's all of us, by the way. But it's future generations that will really pay the price, because they may grow up in a country whose governments and corporations will routinely track their movements, activities, likes, dislikes, opinions, resentments — just about everything they say or do. Monday's 6-3 court decision upholds a misbegotten Indiana law requiring voters to present photo IDs. But it opens the door wider for more sophisticated uses of photo IDs, such as facial biometrics for tracking your movements and buying habits. That's all in the near future, in part thanks to RFID tags (which I wrote about earlier in an item about Vegas casinos). My take is that once photo IDs are going to required for voting (and many states will now try to pass laws modeled after Indiana's), the government and corporations will have all sorts of tools to play with. The court decision blesses such attempts because Indiana's law was particularly intrusive. So go to the Electronic Privacy Information ... more »
by
Publisher
on Sun 04 May 2008 08:04 PM AKDT
By Brendan O'Neill
In the 1950s and 1960s, bunkers were a feature of many American suburban homes, populated by families fearful of the prospect of nuclear war. That threat has subsided, but now many reasonable people are stocking up on essential supplies in preparation for a new cataclysm. When you hear the word "survivalist", what image comes to mind? Perhaps you think of a gun-toting loner in Mid-West America, who lives in a shack surrounded by tinned food and emergency water supplies. Or maybe you think of end-of-the-world religionists retreating to a fortified camp with enough food and drink to last them until Judgement Day. But today there is a new breed of survivalist – and they're well-heeled, well-educated and more likely to wear an immaculately pressed suit than a camouflage flak jacket. Civilisation breakdown Barton M Biggs is about as far as you can get from the old John Rambo-style survivalist. Forget long, unkempt hair and a sweat-stained vest. Mr Biggs is a former chief global strategist for Morgan Stanley, who now runs the hedge fund Traxis Partners in New York. Yet in his latest book, Wealth, War and Wisdom, he suggests that all right-minded people should "assume the ... more » Saturday, April 26
by
Publisher
on Sat 26 Apr 2008 04:19 PM AKDT
Brussels - The European Union (EU) has no plans to abolish England,
officials in Brussels insisted after two British newspapers accused the
EU of wanting to "wipe England off the map."
"There are no secret plans to carve up the continent in a way that makes England disappear. There is no goal of creating a United States of Europe," a European Commission spokeswoman said. The comments came after two popular British tabloids, the Sun and the Daily Mail, celebrated the day of England's national saint, St George, by revealing the existence of "EU plots to carve up Britain." "Secret plans" drawn up in Brussels included maps "wiping out" England and the English name of the body of water separating Britain from Europe, "the English Channel," in favour of the unpatriotic "Channel Sea," the papers claimed. Reproductions of the maps provided by the newspapers divided Britain into "North Sea," "Atlantic" and "Trans-Manche" regions - the latter referring to the French name for the Channel, "la Manche." "The words 'England' and 'Britain' are left off official maps of each area," the Daily Mail stormed, accusing the British government of being "fully behind the project" nevertheless. But EU officials denied absolutely the existence ... more » Friday, April 25
by
Publisher
on Fri 25 Apr 2008 06:16 AM AKDT
Officials say automatic screening more accurate than checks by humans
Owen Bowcott The Guardian, Friday April 25 2008 About this articleClose This article appeared in the Guardian on Friday April 25 2008 on p1 of the Top stories section. It was last updated at 01:00 on April 25 2008. A face recognition system will scan faces and match them to biometric chips on passports. Photograph: Image Source/Getty Airline passengers are to be screened with facial recognition technology rather than checks by passport officers, in an attempt to improve security and ease congestion, the Guardian can reveal. From summer, unmanned clearance gates will be phased in to scan passengers' faces and match the image to the record on the computer chip in their biometric passports. Border security officials believe the machines can do a better job than humans of screening passports and preventing identity fraud. The pilot project will be open to UK and EU citizens holding new biometric passports. But there is concern that passengers will react badly to being rejected by an automated gate. To ensure no one on a police watch list is incorrectly let through, the technology will err on the side of caution and is ... more » |
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