It's just like tasting a mountain.

Wednesday, February 13, 2008

Terrorists have officially won.

27BStroke6: "The Senate overwhelming voted Tuesday evening to legalize President Bush's warrantless wiretapping program and grant amnesty to the phone companies that helped out with the domestic spying..

The 68 to 29 vote is a major step in radically re-configuring 30 year-old limits on how the nation's spying services operate inside America's borders. The vote also deals a severe blow to civil liberties groups that are suing companies such as AT&T and Verizon for turning over millions of American's phone records to the government, and for helping the government wiretap American's phone and internet communications without a court order."


Sad. Predictable, but sad.


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posted by NL Staff at 19:40 | 0 comments links to this post

Wednesday, November 07, 2007

FBI data mines consumer grocery records for 'signs of terrorists'



CQ Politics: "Like Hansel and Gretel hoping to follow their bread crumbs out of the forest, the FBI sifted through customer data collected by San Francisco-area grocery stores in 2005 and 2006, hoping that sales records of Middle Eastern food would lead to Iranian terrorists.

The idea was that a spike in, say, falafel sales, combined with other data, would lead to Iranian secret agents in the south San Francisco-San Jose area. The brainchild of top FBI counterterrorism officials Phil Mudd and Willie T. Hulon, according to well-informed sources, the project didn’t last long. It was torpedoed by the head of the FBI’s criminal investigations division, Michael A. Mason, who argued that putting somebody on a terrorist list for what they ate was ridiculous — and possibly illegal.

A check of federal court records in California did not reveal any prosecutions developed from falafel trails. "


As 27BStroke6 points out - "It's not clear how the FBI got the records to sift through in the first place - did grocery stores volunteer the data or get served with national security letters or the dread Section 215 of the Patriot Act."

Not going to say we told you so...

Really.


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posted by NL Staff at 17:07 | 0 comments links to this post

Monday, August 06, 2007

So Democrats and Republicans both hate freedom after all...



27bStroke6: "A new law expanding the government's spying powers gives the Bush Administration a six-month window to install possibly permanent back doors in the nation's communication networks. The legislation was passed hurriedly by Congress over the weekend and signed into law Sunday by President Bush."

"In short, the law gives the Administration the power to order the nation's communication service providers -- which range from Gmail, AOL IM, Twitter, Skype, traditional phone companies, ISPs, internet backbone providers, Federal Express, and social networks -- to create possibly permanent spying outposts for the federal government."


Let the Noise to Signal ratio increase in 3...2...1... now. Not even going out on a limb to say that this infrastructure will absolutely be used in routine wholesale surveillance of US citizens, our actions, our thoughts, and our interconnections.

So the meta-theme is that people want freedom, and governments want control. Looks like we're well on our way to joining the ranks of nations we would have ridiculed as being 'not free' even 20 years ago.

Question: Why do we feel like the 'war on terrr' is merely a pretext? Why do those charged with preserving individual freedom seem driven to curtail it at every available opportunity? Republican. Democrat. Doesn't seem to matter. The motivations and actions of our elected representatives appear counter to what they should be as leaders of a free society.

Unless we're over that?


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posted by NL Staff at 11:04 | 0 comments links to this post

Friday, March 09, 2007

Total Information Awareness - more lives than a cat.



Washington Times: "Homeland Security officials are testing a supersnoop computer system that sifts through personal information on U.S. citizens to detect possible terrorist attacks, prompting concerns from lawmakers who have called for investigations.

The system uses the same data-mining process that was developed by the Pentagon's Total Information Awareness (TIA) project that was banned by Congress in 2003 because of vast privacy violations. "

" The ADVISE and TIA data-mining projects rely on personal data to track individual behavior and consumer transactions to develop computer algorithms that create a pattern that some behavioral scientists say can predict terrorist behavior. Data can include credit-card purchases, telephone or Internet details, medical records, travel and banking information"


Notice a pattern here? Aside from the academic and civil rights arguments against pervasive monitoring of pretty much everything, and aside from the 'bad science' behind this approach as a preventative security apparatus, we're seeing a pattern of disregard.. Executive branch starts it up, Legislative shuts it down. Executive branch moves it to another agency, gives it a new name. Legislative shuts it down. Ad infinitum.

It's a bad idea, open to massive abuse, inaccuracy, and is unlikely to be effective at much more than wasting time and money - at least in the 'war on terrrr'.. Human intelligence and traditional law enforcement is a better bet here.

The information that one is missing a kidney, makes occasional trips to Cleveland, and prefers Colgate toothpaste in no way susses out criminal or terrorist intent. It's all noise, no signal. But it's a great tool for traditional crimes, drug crimes, etc - that happens to bypass due process protections and thresholds for probable cause. (you know, one or two foundational Constitutional amendments...)

It's also a great way to keep tabs on affiliations, dissidents and those who disagree with the those in power. Opinion crimes.

It's just a question of 'what kind of society do we want'... What freedoms do we value? And even if we trust the party in power not to abuse the systems, what about your least favorite party? Going through mail, monitoring phone calls, tracking behaviors. Not to mention insiders... individuals with searchable access to every fact on everyone. Bah.








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posted by NL Staff at 11:01 | 0 comments links to this post

Justice Dept.: FBI Misused Patriot Act

AP: "The FBI improperly and, in some cases, illegally used the USA Patriot Act to secretly obtain personal information about people in the United States, a Justice Department audit concluded Friday.

And for three years the FBI has underreported to Congress how often it forced businesses to turn over the customer data, the audit found.

FBI agents sometimes demanded the data without proper authorization, according to the 126-page audit by Justice Department Inspector General Glenn A. Fine. At other times, the audit found, the FBI improperly obtained telephone records in non-emergency circumstances."


No big surprise here. Law enforcement has a job to do, and will use whatever tools are available to them to do so. The problem is a policy level issue, and is a good example of the need for checks and balances between branches of government -- back to the framer's intent to prevent abuses of individual rights. This is likely just the tip of the iceberg.


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posted by NL Staff at 10:55 | 0 comments links to this post

Wednesday, February 07, 2007

House introduces bill to require ISPs to monitor, archive everything forever



CNet: "All Internet service providers would need to track their customers' online activities to aid police in future investigations under legislation introduced Tuesday as part of a Republican 'law and order agenda.'

Employees of any Internet provider who fail to store that information face fines and prison terms of up to one year, the bill says. The U.S. Justice Department could order the companies to store those records forever."

"Because there is no limit on how broad the rules can be, Gonzales would be permitted to force Internet providers to keep logs of Web browsing, instant message exchanges, or e-mail conversations indefinitely."

"That broad wording also would permit the records to be obtained by private litigants in noncriminal cases, such as divorces and employment disputes. That raises additional privacy concerns, civil libertarians say."


It's a given that this is a bad idea for several reasons - from 'this completely guts the notion of personal privacy' to 'the law of unintended consequences'. While surely a boon for storage companies, it pretty much sucks for everyone else.

1. Tremendous privacy implications for individuals, small business, anyone using an ISP for any reason.


2. Giant cyber-criminal target (crack, mine, build profiles for spearphishing, compromise unencrypted passwords, find legal but extortable information, etc)


3. Will trap data of normal people and do exactly zero to trap info on criminals (who are using encryption, other people's connections, blah blah)


4. IP and behavioral data doesn't prove identity or intent. Functionally useless. (see Splunk'd AOL Search Info, wardriving, RIAA/MPAA dragnets, log poisoning and rewriting, etc.)


So how do people (law enforcement, divorce lawyers, lawyers) access the traffic? where is it stored? how is it secured? how does one review the data for accuracy? will slightly different system-times wrongly implicate individuals based on timestamps and IPs ? (See 'DHCP for Dummies). How do we treat wifi hotspots? Open home and business wifi access points? Rogue ISP employees? Worms, botnets and malware infected computers (and whatever they might do)? Compromised law enforcement logins? We could do this all night.


It's retarded, impractical, an abhorrent breach of privacy, and dangerous for everyone.


On the plus side, maybe this will finally negate the 'net neutrality' argument (treating different bits differently) as users start using Tor, anonymizers, tunneling to Russian VPNs, etc. to encrypt all traffic - leaving nothing for ISP logs to grab or interpret. Maybe this is a good thing.


This is the litmus test for "do everyday people value their own privacy - and is the government still of, by, and for the people"...


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posted by NL Staff at 21:01 | 0 comments links to this post

Tuesday, January 30, 2007

FBI conducting multi-year internet porn study



ZDNet: "The FBI appears to have adopted an invasive Internet surveillance technique that collects far more data on innocent Americans than previously has been disclosed."

"Such a technique is broader and potentially more intrusive than the FBI's Carnivore surveillance system, later renamed DCS1000. It raises concerns similar to those stirred by widespread Internet monitoring that the National Security Agency is said to have done, according to documents that have surfaced in one federal lawsuit, and may stretch the bounds of what's legally permissible." On Monday, a Justice Department representative would not immediately answer questions about this kind of surveillance technique.

"What they're doing is even worse than Carnivore," said Kevin Bankston, a staff attorney at the Electronic Frontier Foundation who attended the Stanford event. "What they're doing is intercepting everyone and then choosing their targets."



Only a matter of time before the needle-stack makers legislate full data retention at ISPs.. First for the 'war on terr-r', then 'for the children', and later .. well, it will be too late to matter because they won't care what you think. ISP costs go up due to massive storage requirements, innocent Americans will have ALL internet surfing, communications, etc. stored for later perusal by law enforcement, divorce lawyers, the RIAA/MPAA or anyone else who can hack a massively distributed database.

Meanwhile, terrorists and others are unaffected as the needlestack gets larger. But it's not really about that. It's about control. And in the end, the government has the shiny new law enforcement tool they wanted. We're sure it will be useful, but at what cost to the rest of us? And what happens to checks, balances, the fourth amendment, etc. If anything will spur consumer adoption of encryption and Tor-like objects, this will be it.

Stay tuned.



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posted by NL Staff at 09:57 | 0 comments links to this post

Monday, January 29, 2007

Brittain planning cottage industry around "crowdporn" cameras



The Sun Online: "As part of the most shocking extension of Big Brother powers ever planned here, lenses in lampposts would snap “naked” pictures of passers-by to trap terror suspects.

The proposal is contained in leaked documents drawn up by the Home Office and presented to PM Tony Blair’s working group on Security, Crime and Justice. But the prospect of the State snooping on individuals’ most private parts is certain to spark national fury. And officials are battling to find a way of dealing with that reaction."

"Officials have agreed one solution would be to allow only women to monitor female subjects — although they admit this would be “very problematic” in crowds... “Privacy is an issue because the machines see through clothing.”"

"Cops would also get the power to build a database of everyone in the land. Three-dimensional CCTV pictures would be coupled with records of people’s mobile phones and even their travel cards to get details of their movements and habits. Facial recognition systems to help track individuals’ movements are also being considered."


And UK parents want some perv behind a government camera looking through their children's clothes because....?




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posted by NL Staff at 12:25 | 1 comments links to this post

Thursday, January 25, 2007

Gonzales dislikes freedom, America



SF Chronicle: "One of the Bush administration's most far-reaching assertions of government power was revealed quietly last week when Attorney General Alberto Gonzales testified that habeas corpus -- the right to go to federal court and challenge one's imprisonment -- is not protected by the Constitution."

"Gonzales acknowledged that the Constitution declares "habeas corpus shall not be suspended unless ... in cases of rebellion or invasion the public safety may require it.'' But he insisted that "there is no express grant of habeas in the Constitution.''

Specter was incredulous, asking how the Constitution could bar the suspension of a right that didn't exist -- a right, he noted, that was first recognized in medieval England as a shield against the king's power to dispatch troublesome subjects to royal dungeons."


This isn't about technical accuracy; it's about intent. And Gonzales' intent is painfully clear.



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posted by NL Staff at 09:02 | 2 comments links to this post

Thursday, January 18, 2007

RIAA goes after mix-tapes



New York Times: "Now DJ Drama is yet another symbol of the music industry’s turmoil and confusion. On Tuesday night he was arrested with Don Cannon, a protege. The police, working with the Recording Industry Association of America, raided his office, at 147 Walker Street in Atlanta. The association makes no distinction between counterfeit CDs and unlicensed compilations like those that DJ Drama is known for. So the police confiscated 81,000 discs, four vehicles, recording gear, and “other assets that are proceeds of a pattern of illegal activity,” said Chief Jeffrey C. Baker, from the Morrow, Ga., police department, which participated in the raid."

"The compilations produced by DJ Drama and his protégés are known as mixtapes, though they appear on CDs, not cassettes. Mixtapes have become a vital part of the hip-hop world. They are often the only way for listeners to keep up with a genre that moves too quickly to be captured on albums."


Not sure what's more disturbing -- that the RIAA doesn't understand the influence of mixtapes in helping to 'make' the next hot hip-hop artists, or that swat teams are raiding homes in what should be a civil matter... Argh.



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posted by NL Staff at 19:19 | 0 comments links to this post

Thursday, January 04, 2007

Bush says feds can open mail without warrant

The Seattle Times: "President Bush quietly has claimed sweeping new powers to open Americans' mail without a judge's warrant."


Slippery slope has become an open shaft.

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posted by NL Staff at 12:31 | 0 comments links to this post

Tuesday, October 17, 2006

Bush suspends habeas corpus, right to counsel, legalizes torture



CNN: "-- President Bush signed legislation Tuesday authorizing tough interrogation of terror suspects and smoothing the way for trials before military commissions, calling it a 'vital tool' in the war against terrorism.

Bush's plan for treatment of the terror suspects became law just six weeks after he acknowledged that the CIA had been secretly interrogating suspected terrorists overseas and pressed Congress to quickly give authority to try them in military commissions."

""The president can now, with the approval of Congress, indefinitely hold people without charge, take away protections against horrific abuse, put people on trial based on hearsay evidence, authorize trials that can sentence people to death based on testimony literally beaten out of witnesses, and slam shut the courthouse door for habeas petitions,""

..."The legislation also says the president can "interpret the meaning and application" of international standards for prisoner treatment, a provision intended to allow him to authorize aggressive interrogation methods that might otherwise be seen as illegal by international courts."


...so the rule is that if you want to 'disappear' someone, anyone, unfriendly to the administration, simply call them a terror suspect.

What could possibly go wrong?


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posted by NL Staff at 12:00 | 0 comments links to this post

Wednesday, September 13, 2006

Senate Committee approves pervasive NSA surveillance of US Citizens without warrants



Wired News:: "A bill radically redefining and expanding the government's ability to eavesdrop and search the houses of American citizens without court approval passed a key Senate committee Wednesday, and may be voted on by the full Senate as early as next week.

By a 10-8 vote, the Senate Judiciary Committee approved S.2453, the 'National Security Surveillance Act,' which was co-written by the committee's chairman Senator Arlen Specter (R-Penn) in concert with the White House."


Lovely. Any chance this will be killed?


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posted by NL Staff at 17:26 | 0 comments links to this post

Wednesday, August 02, 2006

Bush seeks to eliminate need for pesky 'courts', 'due process' and 'constitution'...

Washington Post: "A draft Bush administration plan for special military courts seeks to expand the reach and authority of such 'commissions' to include trials, for the first time, of people who are not members of al-Qaeda or the Taliban and are not directly involved in acts of international terrorism, according to officials familiar with the proposal.

The plan, which would replace a military trial system ruled illegal by the Supreme Court in June, would also allow the secretary of defense to add crimes at will to those under the military court's jurisdiction. The two provisions would be likely to put more individuals than previously expected before military juries, officials and independent experts said.

The draft proposed legislation, set to be discussed at two Senate hearings today, is controversial inside and outside the administration because defendants would be denied many protections guaranteed by the civilian and traditional military criminal justice systems.

Under the proposed procedures, defendants would lack rights to confront accusers, exclude hearsay accusations, or bar evidence obtained through rough or coercive interrogations. They would not be guaranteed a public or speedy trial and would lack the right to choose their military counsel, who in turn would not be guaranteed equal access to evidence held by prosecutors."


The implications and potential for abuse here are monstrous.

Subverting the courts, the constitution, and allowing government to pick anyone at random (or anyone who disagrees) off the street, sequester them, charge them with secret crimes using secret evidence, secret witnesses, without counsel, appeal, the right to face their accuser, see evidence or defend themselves in any meaningful way... Carried out by military courts on a civilian population.

Without hyperbole, this is the "justice" system of every evil and repressive regime throughout the world and throughout history - and exactly the kind of thing the founders of this country sought to protect the People from when they signed the Declaration of Independence and framed the US Constitution and Bill of Rights.

As regular readers know, we're not for or against any particular political party -- but we are 100% behind the principals of freedom, capitalism, individualism, personal accountability and the rights, guarantees and laws that safeguard them.

By the evidence of their actions and abuses, the body of their writings, opinions and policies presented before us, we have to conclude that the current administration and high-level advisors are against freedom, against justice, and against the founding principals of the United States of America.

Quick refresher course for those who have forgotten: these are worth reading or rereading...

The text of the Declaration of Independence
The text of the US Constitution
The text of the Bill of Rights

Are our elected officials, regardless of party, living up to their responsibilities?

Are we?


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posted by NL Staff at 19:31 | 0 comments links to this post