Friday, November 24, 2006


News Item 7708 PayPal Phishers Use Malaysian Government Portal.

PayPal Phishers Use Malaysian Government Portal. Even secure sites were co-opted as zombies to distribute spam with scams. [PC World: Latest Technology News]
11:02:56 PM  PermaLink   / trackback []  

News Item 7707 Microsoft Sues Phishers.

Microsoft Sues Phishers. Crackdown on online fraud produces more than 100 legal actions in Europe, Middle East.  [PC World: Latest Technology News]
10:15:55 PM  PermaLink   / trackback []  

News Item 7706 Computer Misuse Act could ban security tools.

Computer Misuse Act could ban security tools.

Publishing software flaws now an offence?

The new Police and Justice Act, published today, could criminalise legitimate IT security activity. There are fears among security experts that changes it makes to the Computer Misuse Act will make it illegal to distribute some vital tools.

[The Register - Internet and Law: Digital Rights/Digital Wrongs]
9:55:08 PM  PermaLink   / trackback []  

News Item 7705 Report raises child index alarm.

Report raises child index alarm.

Protection measures could put children more at risk

The Foundation for Information Policy Research (FIPR) says that government policies designed to safeguard children could divert resources and create a surveillance culture where parents are sidelined.

[The Register - Internet and Law: Digital Rights/Digital Wrongs]
9:51:55 PM  PermaLink   / trackback []  

News Item 7704 UK child protection database 'misguided', critics warn.

UK child protection database 'misguided', critics warn.

Think of the children

UK government policies designed to safeguard kids might backfire by diverting valuable resources while creating a "culture of surveillance" where the role of parents is sidelined, according to a report for the Information Commissioner published on Wednesday.

[The Register - Internet and Law: Digital Rights/Digital Wrongs]
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News Item 7703 Home Office to grab for more CCTV power.

Home Office to grab for more CCTV power.

Plods not happy with law, ICO, or surveillance quality

The police and Home Office are to press for regulatory powers that will insist that every one of the 4.2 million CCTV cameras in Britain is upgraded so it can be deputised to gather police evidence and provide a vehicle for emerging technologies that will automatically identify people and detect if they are doing anything suspicious.

[The Register - Internet and Law: Digital Rights/Digital Wrongs]
9:41:59 PM  PermaLink   / trackback []  

News Item 7702 Congress unlocks US cellphones.

Congress unlocks US cellphones.

But censorware research is illegal, again

The US copyright office will permit mobile phone subscribers to unlock their phones, allowing them to be used by rival network providers.

[The Register - Internet and Law: Digital Rights/Digital Wrongs]
9:36:09 PM  PermaLink   / trackback []  

News Item 7701 Slashdot | The Great Firewall of Canada

 engtech writes "Canadian carriers Bell Aliant, Bell Canada, MTS Allstream, Rogers, SaskTel, Shaw, TELUS, and Videotron have all opted in to a blacklist, dubbed Project Cleanfeed Canada, provided by Cybertip.ca, the Canadian tip-line against child exploitation. The idea of having a national blacklist sends shivers down my spine. I'm a pessimist, I believe that any form of censorship will eventually be abused despite it's good intentions." --- Besides engtech's post on the subject, Dr. Michael Geist has some considered comments about this issue. From that post:  "Critics are quick to draw parallels to Internet censorship in countries such as China. However, those countries involve state-based content blocking, with no transparency or legal recourse. In fact, several democracies -- most notably Australia -- have established limited blocking rules, while British Telecom, the UK's largest ISP, voluntarily blocks child pornography as part of its CleanFeed program. Even with various legal safeguards, many Canadians would undoubtedly find the blocking of any content distasteful. Yet to do nothing is to leave in place an equally unpalatable outcome that silences those would speak out against unlawful hate speech for fear of personal harm."
9:30:37 PM  PermaLink   / trackback []  

News Item 7700 Hands off our bank data, Europe tells US.

Hands off our bank data, Europe tells US.

Secret subpoenas threaten stability - EC

Exclusive The European Commission is set to call for an immediate halt on the illegal transfer of financial information to the United States Treasury.

[The Register - Internet and Law: Digital Rights/Digital Wrongs]
9:16:23 PM  PermaLink   / trackback []  

News Item 7699 EFF sues US over passenger data.

EFF sues US over passenger data.

Tell us more

The US Government faces a lawsuit demanding information about the controversial programme which forces airlines to disclose information about European travellers to the US.

[The Register - Internet and Law: Digital Rights/Digital Wrongs]
9:13:15 PM  PermaLink   / trackback []  

News Item 7698 Slashdot | Trusted or Treacherous Computing?

 theodp writes "Just because Richard Stallman is paranoid doesn't mean Microsoft's not out to get you. For a hint about the possible end-game of Microsoft's Trusted Computing Initiative, check out the patent application published Thanksgiving Day for Trusted License Removal, in which Microsoft describes how to revoke rights to render based on 'who the user is, where the user is located, what type of computing device or other playback device the user is using, what rendering application is calling the copy protection system, the date, the time, etc.' So much for Microsoft's you-should-have-control assurances."
9:01:19 PM  PermaLink   / trackback []  

News Item 7697 Risk managers baulk at ID cards risk management post.

Risk managers baulk at ID cards risk management post.

Ooh, too risky...

Experienced risk management professionals seem reluctant, for some strange reason, to sign up with the Identity & Passport Service for a job risk-managing the ID cards programme. Too risky? Well, if that's what they reckon, they're the people you'd expect to know.

[The Register - Internet and Law: Digital Rights/Digital Wrongs]
7:18:15 PM  PermaLink   / trackback []  

News Item 7696 Cellphone Surveillance.

Cellphone Surveillance.

There has been a spurt of media attention paid to the privacy and surveillance concerns of GPS enabled cellphones:

I don't have a lot of time to comment right now, but this excerpt from the New Standard article sums up much of my concern:

Koroknay-Palicz also sees long-term consequences of this monitoring.

"If we raise kids with no expectation of privacy, then they're going to become adults and voters and people of influence in society with no expectation of privacy," he said. "All the expectations of privacy are going to be eroded by the population of adults who grew up with no privacy and don't see the problem with trading away privacy."

Coney of EPIC agreed that parents are buying the "safety and security" sales pitch without evaluating the bigger picture, including who else has access to the tracking data.

"A parent might think this is a means to know where their child is," Coney told TNS, "but it also may be recorded and retained by the person or the entity that provides the service, and they may use it for their own purposes, because there are no laws out there to... prohibit that from happening."

[michaelzimmer.org]
7:15:48 PM  PermaLink   / trackback []  

News Item 7695 In Love with Geotagging.

In Love with Geotagging.

The New York Times recently extolled the virtues of using GPS in digital cameras and camera cellphones to [base "]geotag[per thou] photos with the location at which they were taken:

[sigma]advocates of geotagging, like Stewart Butterfield, co-founder of the photo-sharing Web site Flickr, contend that linking pictures to maps can lend a new dimension to photography. For one thing, it can help people make some sense of the mounds of photos accumulating on their hard drives.

[OE][base ']The value may not be immediately apparent. But 10 years from now, nobody who[base ']s geotagging their photos is going to regret it,'[base '] Mr. Butterfield said. [OE][base ']Most people have just one or two or three iconic photos of their grandparents. Now people are going to have tens of thousands of photos, and when that happens, every little bit of context helps.'[base ']

Abstent from the discussion, however, are concerns over privacy, data-mining and the levels of surveillance enabled by these tools. My next project[sigma]

[michaelzimmer.org]
7:12:34 PM  PermaLink   / trackback []  

News Item 7694 Tracking Devices on Milwaukee Police Cars Blocked.

Tracking Devices on Milwaukee Police Cars Blocked.

GPS systems installed on Milwaukee Police squad cars to help dispatchers track officers[base '] whereabouts have recently been found covered with foil, rendering them useless and the cars invisible to monitoring. The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reports:

A Milwaukee police captain was walking through the District 7 garage over the summer when he noticed something wasn[base ']t right about the satellite tracking antenna on the back of a squad car.

A closer look revealed that the small square global positioning system antenna was wrapped in aluminum foil.

Capt. Donald Gaglione called the radio shop and confirmed what he suspected: Foil disables the expensive GPS, essentially making the car invisible to dispatchers.

A check revealed that an antenna on a second car also was wrapped in foil. Gaglione ordered that every car be checked at the start of every shift and during patrols, according to department e-mails obtained by the Journal Sentinel under the state open records law.

Deputy Chief Dale Schunk, in charge of the patrol division, responded quickly.

[base "]This sabotage of our equipment will not be tolerated,[per thou] Schunk wrote in an e-mail to all his commanders. He ordered that every district begin checks and that he be personally notified of other incidents.

The GPS trackers are part of an $18 million radio and communications upgrade the department has been installing since 2004. The department has added the GPS systems on about 25% of the department[base ']s roughly 650 squad cars.

Dispatchers use the system to track the location of squad cars so they can send them more quickly to calls and to rush help if an officer is down.

Officers have quietly talked about GPS being used as a way for internal investigators to build cases against them. Assistant Chief Leslie Barber was fired two years ago after investigators put a GPS on his car and found that he was living outside Milwaukee.

Department officials downplayed the foil incident as a one-time problem that hasn[base ']t resurfaced. Chief Nannette Hegerty called it a [base "]non-issue.[per thou]

Asked why an officer might disable the device, Hegerty said, [base "]I don[base ']t know. Don[base ']t ask me why some of the officers do what they do.[per thou]

Aldermen reacted with outrage.

[base "]Are you serious? Officers are doing it themselves?[per thou] Common Council President Willie Hines said. [base "]It is ridiculous incidents like this that bring the entire department under fire. . . . That is what you expect of kids, very immature kids.[per thou]

Ald. Joe Davis said the incident shows the need for the Fire and Police Commission, which received two investigators in the most recent budget, to closely monitor police.

[base "]This type of act by law enforcement is unconscionable,[per thou] Davis said. [base "]When we are looking for truth and integrity, what we are getting is unethical behavior.[per thou]

My friends in discourse analysis would have a field day with this, noting how resistance to workplace surveillance is considered [base "]sabotage[per thou] and [base "]unethical.[per thou]

I[base ']m heading to Milwaukee today for the Thanksgiving holiday. I[base ']ll drop off some extra tin foil at the local precinct[sigma]

[michaelzimmer.org]
7:06:07 PM  PermaLink   / trackback []  

News Item 7693 Copyright Office grants 6 exemptions for circumventing DRM.

Copyright Office grants 6 exemptions for circumventing DRM.

The Copyright Office today granted 6 exemptions to 17 USC § 1201(a)(1), effective for the next three years, that allow end-users to circumvent technological protection measures in order to make noninfringing uses of certain works.

Two of the exemptions are particularly noteworthy. They are:

1. Audiovisual works included in the educational library of a college or universityâo[dot accent]s film or media studies department, when circumvention is accomplished for the purpose of making compilations of portions of those works for educational use in the classroom by media studies or film professors.

6. Sound recordings, and audiovisual works associated with those sound recordings, distributed in compact disc format and protected by technological protection measures that control access to lawfully purchased works and create or exploit security flaws or vulnerabilities that compromise the security of personal computers, when circumvention is accomplished solely for the purpose of good faith testing, investigating, or correcting such security flaws or vulnerabilities.

This represents a substantial shift in the Copyright Office[base ']s interpretation of Section 1201. (More after the break.)

read more

[Public Knowledge - Policy Blog]
6:58:26 PM  PermaLink   / trackback []