Beast System: Laying The Foundation Of The Beast

Re: Schools can fingerprint children without parental consent

VegasGuy said:
Big deal on fingerprinting kids.

Why big deal on fingerprinting kids? The ironic thing is biometrics always starts at the least invasive level: fingerprints and generally gets a "who cares" response. Where does the information go? And if it goes somewhere, then why does anybody have the right to transfer your information, especially if you're just a child who isn't a criminal? To be honest, unless it's absolutely necessary (not a want but a need), kids shouldn't be fingerprinted anyways. And since I've yet to find any information on why this information on children is needed, all this hoopla is nothing more than an unnecessary want. And I'm wondering why they want it (beyond the common reasons, which seem so-so).
 
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Microchips becoming the latest medical accesory

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Microchips becoming the latest medical accesory

It's a technology that's already being used on millions of pets in America. Now, microchips are being implanted in human beings as well and this week in Las Vegas, the procedure is being performed on dozens of people attending a medical convention.

The implants are inserted into the arm. The tiny computer chips can help doctors get important medical information. The chips are incredibly small and are implanted just under the skin.

The chips that are used in dogs and cats contain information that can identify the animal if it gets lost. In the case of humans, the chips provide a link to a computer database that gives doctors instant access to a patient's complete medical history.

All this week at the Las Vegas Convention Center, health care professionals are having the chips surgically implanted.

Not everyone is ready to have a micro chip in their body, and the people who run the company called Verichip understand that some people are afraid that the technology could be used to track their behavior, or turn them into some sort of futuristic computer controlled being.

"That's complete Sci-Fi," said Marc Poulshock, Verichip.*"There's no*GPS on it at all."

Only one doctor in the Las Vegas area is actively performing the implants, and he says there are many reasons why he believe's the device can help save a patient's life.

"If they've been in a car accident, or if the person has allergies, the chip will lead you to that data," said Dr. Darin Brimhall.

The procedure leaves a small, temporary scar, and after that, the chip is so small, it virtually disappears into the body. The current cost for patents to have the chip implanted runs between $200 and $300.

One idea for the chips is to implant them in*U.S. Military personnel so*that soldiers injured in the field can be quickly and accurately identified.

According to the makers of the chip, ten hospitals and emergency rooms in Las Vegas have agreed to begin using the devices that scan for the implants.
 
Beer fingerprints to go UK-wide

Beer fingerprints to go UK-wide

The government is is funding the roll out of fingerprint security at the doors of pubs and clubs in major English cities.

Funding is being offered to councils that want to have their pubs keep a regional black list of known trouble makers. The fingerprint network installed in February by South Somerset District Council in Yeovil drinking holesy is being used as the show case.

"The Home Office have looked at our system and are looking at trials in other towns including Coventry, Hull & Sheffield," said Julia Bradburn, principal licensing manager at South Somerset District Council.

Gwent and Nottingham police have also shown an interest, while Taunton, a town neighbouring Yeovil, is discussing the installation of fingerprint systems in 10 pubs and clubs with the systems supplier CreativeCode.

Bradburn could not say if fingerprint security in Yeovil had displaced crime to neighbouring towns, but she noted that domestic violence had risen in Yeovil. She could not give more details until the publication of national crime statistics to coincide with the anniversary of lax pub licensing laws on 24 November.

She was, however, able to say that alcohol-related crime had reduced by 48 per cent Yeovil between February and September 2006.

The council had assumed it was its duty under the Crime and Disorder Act (1998) to reduce drunken disorder by fingerprinting drinkers in the town centre.

Some licensees were not happy to have their punters fingerprinted, but are all now apparently behind the idea. Not only does the council let them open later if they join the scheme, but the system costs them only £1.50 a day to run.

Oh, and they are also coerced into taking the fingerprint system. New licences stipulate that a landlord who doesn't install fingerprint security and fails to show a "considerable" reduction in alcohol-related violence, will be put on report by the police and have their licences revoked.

Offenders can be banned from one pub or all of them for a specified time - usually a period of months - by a committee of landlords and police called Pub Watch. Their offences are recorded against their names in the fingerprint system. Bradburn noted the system had a "psychological effect" on offenders.

She said there had been only been two "major" instances of alcohol-related crime reported in Yeovil pubs and clubs since February. One was a sexual assault in a club toilet.

The other occurred last Friday when an under-18 Disco at Dukes nightclub got out of hand after the youngsters had obtained some alcohol from elsewhere. A fight between two youngsters escalated into a brawl involving 435 12-16 year olds

A major incident is when 15 police attend the scene, said Bradburn. She was unable to say how many minor incidents there had been but acknowledged that fights were still occurring in the streets of Yeovil.

The Home Office paid for Yeovil's system in full, with £6,000 of Safer, Stronger Communities funding.

Bradburn said the Home Office had paid her scheme a visit and subsequently decided to fund similar systems in Coventry, Hull and Sheffield.

The Home Office distanced itself from the plans. It said it provided funding to Safer, Stronger Communities through the Department for Communities and Local Government's Local Area Agreements. How they spent the money was a local decision, said a HO spokeswoman.
 
Schools tracking students electronically

Schools tracking students electronically

Up to one hundred Australian schools are electronically tracking students to tackle truancy.

Under the system, reported by Fairfax, students swipe a card to register their arrival at school and at classes.

Roles are checked and parents are notified automatically about any unexplained absences by computer-generated letter, email or SMS.

The swipe cards also record late arrivals and early leavers.

Parents can request an instant print-out of their child's attendance.

The Student Attendance Monitoring System (SAMS) Period by Period software was introduced to NSW schools this year.

Sydney principal Rob Laidler said there had been an improvement in absenteeism after introducing the system at his Loyola Senior High School in Mount Druitt.

"The technology allows us to pick it up more quickly than in the past," he told Fairfax.

"Parents and Citizens president Di Giblin welcomed the technology if it was used constructively.

"As long as the school is using the information to engage students in learning, it would have a positive outcome."
 
In new child ID database, the eyes have it

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In new child ID database, the eyes have it

LAPORTE -- Nine-year-old Alexia Zarantonello spent her Friday morning becoming the first child in Indiana to enroll in the state’s first-ever child identification database.

Alexia, LaPorte County Sheriff Jim Arnold’s granddaughter, described the record-breaking experience as exciting.

“I feel good about it because I’m the first person,” she said while her sister Olivia, 5, registered.

The two girls registered in the Children’s Identification and Location Database (CHILD) -- a program identifying children through scanning the iris of the eye, which doesn’t change throughout adulthood.

Arnold, along with U.S. Rep. Chris Chocola, R-Bristol, officially launched the database Friday morning at a press conference at the LaPorte County Sheriff’s Department, making Indiana one of 25 states to install CHILD.

Chocola presented Arnold with a $24,681 check in August for the technology.

“This is a much more satisfying part of the process,” Chocola said following the press conference, “to actually see the tools that will help our children.”

Chocola hailed Arnold’s foresight in the two-year project.

“It’s a great leadership example for the state,” he said.

Scanning the iris took some five minutes and will hold a child’s identity information forever. The database would be able to identify a missing child in three to five seconds, said Susan Carpenter, development officer for Biometric Intelligence and Identification Technologies, the company that offers the database.

The database also has capabilities of tracking former felony inmates and registering and locating sex offenders.
 
Big Brother sees Internet as up for grabs

Big Brother sees Internet as up for grabs

The European Union--Big Brother, Europe style--is making a move to kill the Internet.

"The latest move to kill off online freedom and the spread of information comes in the form of proposed EU legislation that would prevent users from uploading any form of video, whether that be a hard hitting political documentary film or your friends goofing around with diet coke and Mentos." (Alex Jones Infowars, Oct. 20,2006).

"Personal websites would have to be licensed as a "television-like service". Once again the reasoning behind such legislation is said to be in order to set minimum standards on areas such as hate speech and the protection of children."

The European Kill the Net move coincides with FBI Director Robert Mueller's call on Internet service providers to record their customers' online activities, a move that anticipates a fierce debate over privacy and law enforcement coming to Washington next year.

"Terrorists coordinate their plans cloaked in the anonymity of the Internet, as do violent sexual predators prowling chat rooms," Mueller said in a speech at the International Association of Chiefs of Police conference in Boston.

If only the FBI could catch more terrorists like the ever-elusive Adnan el Shukrijumah who keeps slipping their dragnet and bring to justice the sexual predators taking children.

Detractors are already calling for the FBI and Company to go after the already "known" pedophiles, druglords and terrorists among America's elected politicians.

They say that EU intervention will do nothing to protect children or prevent hate speech.

"Unless you judge protecting children to be denying them access to anything that is not government regulated or you assume hate speech to be the criticism of government actions and policy," according to Alex Jones.

While the activists are first off the mark in fighting to keep the Internet safe from government intervention, messing with the well-trodden Information Highway of the Masses is bound to reverberate from every corner of the Global Village.

Politics has already taken a huge toll on average Internet users in countries like China, where people continue to be imprisoned all for posting anti-government messages online.

Cutting the ease with which the information can be disseminated through the worldwide web is bound to create a revolution for any government that dares to try it.

"We have previously highlighted the trouble we have had with censorship from Google Video who reset viewing totals for Terror Storm from hundreds of thousands of views on several different video versions back down to zero for each one," says Jones. "This seemingly stalled the viral spread of the film for a while.

"However, the proposed EU legislation dwarfs any Google censorship as it would kill off Video/You Tube as a project before it even started."

Politics on the Internet has protected former President Bill Clinton from having his record on catching international terrorists thrown onto the Net and banned pundit Michelle Malkin from YouTube.

As Jones points out, "the latest proposed directive is another in a long line of draconian legislative procedures that seek to totally centralize and regulate the spread of information and ideas.

"Anyone in Europe can already be arrested and possibly extradited under the European arrest warrant, which passed into law in 2002. This supercedes national law and means that anyone could be arrested for expressing an opinion deemed to be illegal in another EU country."

No facet of society would be free in the exchange of ideas, including the fairytale world children have traditionally been nurtured on. The BBC has reported that under such laws people who distribute stories about fictional children's hero Biggies or the Old Testament could be criminalized under the guise of anti-racism legislation.

Powerbrokers on both sides of the ocean now see the Internet as a commodity up for grabs. It has so far survived all attempts by the EU's twin sister, the United Nations.

The Internet has even survived Apple adviser and Google board member Al Gore, who has boasted of being its main architect.

Meanwhile, if the ambitious EU gets its way, the main advantage of the Net will be lost for life's long suffering little people: More politicians are finding out that if there is one place you can't hide from it's the Internet.
 
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Why Bush's NSA Wire tapping is defeated by VoIP Networks

Bush claims he needs NSA wire tapping to break up terrorist networks but terrorists are not using the phone network Bush is tapping. They are using private voice over IP internet phones (VoIP) that can't be tapped. This video explains how it works.

Why Bush's NSA Wire tapping is defeated by VoIP Networks

<embed style="width:400px; height:326px;" id="VideoPlayback" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" src="http://video.google.com/googleplayer.swf?docId=-8493098426180726284&hl=en" flashvars=""> </embed>
 
Re: Why Bush's NSA Wire tapping is defeated by VoIP Networks

One,

Does the wifi signal travel over the airwaves? If so, it is absolutely interceptable.
I definitely do not support eavesdropping on civilian conversations and I believe
there are legal means to eavesdrop on terrorists communications (if not, then I
feel certain that a "legal" means can be devised). But I would bet the farm that
NSA not only knows how to intercept the kind of comms the gentleman in the
video describes, but it is probably actively doing so. Of course, the NSA won't
be acknowledging that capability anytime soon -- probably because its intercepts
border (or are) illegal on the one hand, and it doesn't want to alert would be users
on the other.

QueEx
 
I believe Wi-Fi does go over the airwaves. It's the encryption that protects it. I'm not aware of any major terrorists being caught lately over the NSA plan here in the US. So these VoIP phones seem to be working for the time being. And considering that guy is using a fairly cheap phone in the video, it makes me want to study the other models to see what would happen if he used better VoIP phones instead.
 
I don't think we can judge the effectiveness of NSA's and the rest of the intel network's work on the basis of Media Event - Breaking News announcements. I believe the "Real" work and success stories happen down in the trenches and barely get a bleep, if that, in the media. Thats why I was a bit surprised that the Administration made such a big deal over the so-called revelation to terrorists that we are intercepting their calls. Hell, that wasn't real news; they (the terrorists) knew their satphones were being tracked, why wouldn't they have assumed calls into the U.S. over conventional means were being monitored as well? Hence, in my opinion, making a big issue of the disclosure that phones were being monitored was probably more "Political" than anything else -- that is, the Administration making its detractors (democrats) sound weak on terrorism and not capable of protecting the American people. Everybody and their brother assumed that phones were being tapped anyway.

The guy in the video might be right, they can't be intercepted. I just seriously doubt that.

QueEx
 
RFID Credit Cards Get Hacked

RFID Credit Cards Get Hacked

Researchers have shown that names, credit card numbers and other data can be skimmed off a contactless card with the holder's knowledge.

The New York Times reports that a team of scientists in the RFID Consortium for Security and Privacy (RFID-CUSP) were able to read the names, credit cards and expiration dates of recently issued credit cards using radio frequency identification transponders to enable customers to pay without swiping their cards (see Researchers See Privacy Pitfalls in No-Swipe Credit Cards). Is the news a setback for the credit-card industry? For the RFID industry? For both?

The truth is that security is not a one-size-fits-all proposition. If I have $10,000 in jewelry and cash in my house, it doesn't make sense to spend $200,000 on a state-of-the-art safe, motion sensors, lasers and other gizmos found in your typical Mission Impossible film. Similarly, if I have $1 million in valuables in my house, it doesn't make sense to spend $2,000 on a simple burglar alarm.

Banks issuing the RFID-enabled credit cards decide the level of security they need on the card, based on the threat of fraud, the cost of security features on the card and the effect on transaction times. You don't want to use such heavy encryption that a transaction takes too long to make a contactless card worth using.

Credit-card industry executives quoted in the Times article point out that there are other security measures, besides those built into the card, in place to prevent fraud, such as software that detects suspicious purchases. They obviously believe these to be adequate, given the potential threat.

The researchers are exposing the vulnerabilities of these cards to raise awareness before people with less altruistic motives abuse them. That's fair. The credit-card industry might not react until there is a problem, but no one can say it wasn't warned.

Richard Smith, an independent security consultant with whom I correspond, points out that a switch on the card would solve the security problem. (The idea has already been patented.) Only when a person turned a card on would the data on it be vulnerable to skimming. That would likely be only when you are making a transaction, and your contactless card would be no more vulnerable than a magstripe card would be when you hand it to a waiter at a restaurant.

I don't think the exposing of potential vulnerabilities of these cards is a huge black eye for the credit-card industry or for the RFID industry. Millions of people won't suddenly have their credit-card numbers exposed to thieves the way they do when someone hacks a bank's database or an employee loses a laptop with the card numbers on it. But it is likely that these vulnerabilities will need to be addressed as the technology becomes more mature and criminals start figuring out ways to abuse it.
 
The beginning of the end of hard cash

The beginning of the end of hard cash

RESPONDING to a recent rash of robberies, Salisbury House, that most Winnipeg of culinary institutions, has declared it no longer wants your paper money after 10 p.m. Would-be robbers are thus advised to arrive before then.
Seriously, what happens when Sal's gets robbed at 9:30? Will they scale back the cash ban another hour? What if there's a hold-up during lunch hour? Will they move to refuse cash altogether?

Call me old-fashioned, but I'm a cash-only sort of fellow. I don't have a credit card or an ATM card. I like to see my money disappear when I spend it.

Thus it'll be interesting to see what happens the next time I roll in with a case of the midnight munchies and ravage a Three Cheese Double Nip plate. The process cheddar, mozza, and swiss will still be warm in my belly when the staff gets stuck with my handwritten IOU for $7.49 plus tax.

There are a number of reasons I don't pay for things via debit card or credit card. My financial institution does not need to know I'm addicted to energy drinks or that I occasionally buy a copy of British Vogue. When, instead of handing over the cash, I swipe the stripe, the expenditure seems less tangible than when I have to part with my paper. Thus I end up spending more. Moreover, most banks apply service charges to debit card transactions. It's bad enough the government taxes everything I buy -- I would rather my bank didn't as well. Thus I scissored my debit card years ago and have never regretted doing so.

Should a business be permitted to refuse legal tender? I think not. Cash rules, or at least it used to, and the currency of the Bank of Canada should be respected by all merchants open to the public. Actually, despite my general distaste for government regulation, I would prefer to see a federal law mandating that businesses must accept cash payments. To discriminate against cash-holders is a disgraceful practice.

While I sympathize with Salisbury House for being a frequent target of crime, have they ever heard of a drop safe? Seems to work for 7-Eleven. Regardless, during the recent robbery at Sal's Fermor Avenue and St. Anne's Road location, the robbers, according to a Winnipeg Police Service news release, "allegedly went from person to person, physically assaulting them and taking their money." That is, they robbed not only the restaurant, but the restaurant patrons themselves, à la Pulp Fiction. How would a no-cash policy have prevented this? Will Salisbury House next insist that customers' wallets be empty in order for them to receive service?
Salisbury House has set an alarming precedent. I can't help wondering, What's the next step? How many other businesses will hop on the no-cash bandwagon? How many will refuse cash payments completely? Most importantly, what will that mean for the thousands of Winnipeggers, and out-of-towners, who, like myself, value their privacy, or just prefer to pay with paper?

As far as those cash-resistant merchants are concerned, we can go to Hades, or take our business elsewhere -- to soon-to-be increasingly scarce cash-friendly merchants. There will be diminishing room for stubborn holdouts in this brave new world of commerce. If you don't like your every transaction tracked and recorded into a database, too bad. You'll need an ATM card or a credit card to be a legitimate member of society.

Sal's has taken a step down a slippery slope at the bottom of which customers will be paying via thumbscan or microchip implant. Think I'm exaggerating? Go to Japan, where ATM withdrawals require a biometric palm-print scan. Or check out a company called Applied Digital Solutions, which touts the "secure payment" applications for its skin-implantable VeriChip -- a product the company is currently pitching to the U.S. military for its entire armed forces as a replacement for their dog tags.

Even contemplating such a future seems ickier than a plate of Sal's Liver & Onions sided with overcooked frozen veggies and rehydrated mashed potatoes. Or even a present when, after ordering my meal, my server tells me, "Your money's no good here."
 
China moves towards "real name system" for blogs

China moves towards "real name system" for blogs

The Internet Society of China has recommended to the government that bloggers be required to use their real names when they register blogs, state media said on Monday, in the latest attempt to regulate free-wheeling Web content.

The society, which is affiliated with the Ministry of Information Industry, said no decision had been made but that a 'real name system' was inevitable.

"A real name system will be an unavoidable choice if China wants to standardise and develop its blog industry," the official Xinhua news agency quoted the Internet Society's secretary general, Huang Chengqing, as saying.

"We suggest, in a recent report submitted to the ministry, that a real name system be implemented in China's blog industry," Huang said.

China has already imposed some controls on Internet chatter about politically sensitive subjects, which often goes far beyond what is permissible in the country's traditional state-run media.

Last year, the Ministry of Information Industry issued regulations on Internet news content that analysts said was aimed at extending rules governing licensed news outlets to blogs and Internet-only news sites.

Participation in university on-line discussion groups has also been restricted to students.

Bloggers anonymously disseminating untrue information on the Internet brought about a negative influence on society, the Xinhua report said.

Under the proposed rule, users would be required to register under their real name to open a blog but would still be allowed to write under a pseudonym.
 
Passport police wipe smiles off applicants' faces

Passport police wipe smiles off applicants' faces

Little girl and public enemy #1 both snubbed

A nine-year-old girl had her half term holiday cancelled because her teeth were showing in her passport photograph, reported The Sun newspaper.

Alys Edwards paid a last minute visit to the passport office to renew her passport with her parents in Peterborough, but was told that a photograph with teeth would overload the machine that read it.

Digital photographs have been stuck on the first generation biometric passports so computers can compare them to databases of people wanted by the police.

But the systems have not been programmed to understand that little girls are more likely to smile in photographs than plant bombs on aeroplanes.

The Identity and Passport Service (IPS) also shredded the travel plans of their sometime nemesis - Simon Davies of campaign group Privacy International.

Davies has been fighting for people's privacy against state schemes like Identity Cards and biometric passports for some 20 years. Last year, he was labelled privacy enemy #1, and claimed the government was trying to sully his name after being identified as one of many contributors to an academic report that was critical of the ID Card scheme.

On Monday he, like the Edwards', was told he couldn't renew his passport - this time it was a London office and this time it was because an inch of laminate covering the data page of his passport had come free.

As a consequence, instead of renewing, he would have to apply for a new passport, the IPS staff said. IPS staff didn't bat an eyelid after being shown newspaper clippings with his photo and other proof of his identity.

Moments earlier Davies had been the centre of a disturbance that had three security guards run to his attention. A wasp had taken to the air round his head while he was standing at the counter. The staff scattered, while the guards tried to swipe the wasp.

Davies told The Register he had been suspected of bringing the wasp into the office. His plans to speak at a UN conference on internet governance next Monday have also been cancelled.
 
California shoppers, Schwarzenegger is watching you

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California shoppers, Schwarzenegger is watching you

LOS ANGELES, California (AP) -- Gin or vodka? Ford or BMW? Perrier or Fiji water? Does the car you buy or what's in your fridge say anything about how you'll vote?

Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger's campaign thinks so.

Employing technology honed in President Bush's 2004 victory, the Republican governor's re-election team has created a vast computer storehouse of data on personal buying habits and voter records to identify likely supporters. Campaign officials say the operation is the largest of its kind in any state, at any time.

Some strategists believe consumer information can reveal a voter's politics even better than a party label can.

"It's not where they live, it's how they live," said Josh Ginsberg, the Schwarzenegger campaign's deputy political director.

The idea is an outgrowth of techniques that businesses have long used to find new customers. Using publicly available data, the Bush campaign in 2004 knew voters' favorite vacation spots, religious leanings, the music and magazines they liked, the cars they drove.

Few people might realize how much information is publicly available, for a price, about their lifestyles. Companies collect and sell consumer information they buy from credit card companies, airlines and retailers of every stripe.

Using microtargeting, as the practice is known, Bush's campaign teased out supporters in swing states such as Ohio. Schwarzenegger -- whose political operation is run by two Bush veterans, campaign manager Steve Schmidt and strategist Matthew Dowd -- is ripping a page from that book.

The governor appears headed for victory, and campaign officials already credit the system with driving up support.

Republicans also hope microtargeting will drive up turnout in states with tight congressional races.

Similarly, a coalition of unions and other left-leaning groups called America Votes is using consumer records to help find Democratic supporters in several states. The Democratic National Committee is employing consumer data to try to boost turnout.

The California Democratic Party -- which heads the statewide turnout operation for Schwarzenegger's rival, state Treasurer Phil Angelides, and other party candidates -- has been gathering consumer information as well.

But Schwarzenegger and national Republicans appear to be making more elaborate use of such data.

Angelides campaign manager Cathy Calfo charged that the governor's camp is "using it as a system to manipulate people and allow a candidate that has no specific message to tell different people different things."

Moreover, some argue that analysis of consumer preferences is overrated when voters are focused on issues such as the Iraq war.

"No amount of microtargeting is going to save Republicans," said California Democratic Party adviser Bob Mulholland.

Schwarzenegger's turnout operation is bankrolled with up to $25 million and staffed by 60 people backed by volunteers. The microtargeting is central to the operation.

The Schwarzenegger campaign has stockpiled millions of names, phone numbers and addresses with consumer preferences, voting histories and other demographic information. The information allows the campaign to target a household with phone calls, mailings and visits from volunteers, with the message tailored to issues the resident is believed to care about.

In simplest terms: A homeowner who drives a Volvo, reads The New Yorker and shops at Whole Foods Market is likely to lean Democratic. A pickup driver with a hunting or fishing license who reads Time magazine probably leans right.

"For a long time in California, the thesis has been that television advertising by itself drives voter turnout. That, in fact, is not the case," Schmidt said. "What drives voters is person-to-person contact."
 
Free speech online 'under threat'

Free speech online 'under threat'

Bloggers are being asked to show their support for freedom of expression by Amnesty International.

The human rights group also wants web log writers to highlight the plight of fellow bloggers jailed for what they wrote in their online journals.

The organisation said fundamental rights such as free speech faced graver threats than ever before.

The campaign coincides with the start of a week-long UN-organised conference that will debate the future of the net.

Watching words

"Freedom of expression online is a right, not a privilege - but it's a right that needs defending," said Steve Ballinger of Amnesty International. "We're asking bloggers worldwide to show their solidarity with web users in countries where they can face jail just for criticising the government."

Mr Ballinger said the case of Iranian blogger Kianoosh Sanjari was just one example of the dangers that some online writers can face. Mr Sanjari was arrested in early October following his blogging about conflicts between the Iranian police and the supporters of Shia cleric Ayatollah Boroujerdi.

Amnesty wanted bloggers to publicise cases such as this, said Mr Ballinger, and to declare their backing for the right to free speech online.

The human rights group is also taking its campaign to the Internet Governance Forum (IGF) - a group set up by the UN to act as a debating body for national net policies. The first big meeting of the IGF takes place in Athens from 30 October to 2 November.

"The Internet Governance Forum needs to know that the online community is concerned about free expression online and willing to stand up for it," said Mr Ballinger.

Many governments were using technology to suppress the free flow of information among their citizens, said Mr Ballinger.

"People have been locked up just for expressing their views in an email or a website," he said. "Sites and blogs have been shut down and firewalls built to prevent access to information."

Hi-tech firms such as Yahoo and Google have been criticised for the help they have given to nations such as China which works hard to monitor online discussion.

In May 2006, Amnesty International started a campaign that aimed to expose the ways that governments use the net to quash dissent. Co-ordinated via the Irrepressible.info website, the campaign asks websites to use an icon displaying text from censored sites.

Pledges gathered from those backing this campaign will be presented at the IGF.
 
Nicaragua bans all abortions

Nicaragua bans all abortions

Nicaragua has passed a law banning all abortions, even for rape victims and women who risk dying in childbirth, in a move backed both by conservative and left wing politicians eager to win Catholic votes a week before a presidential election.

Under the new law, which will go into effect in 30 days unless it is vetoed by President Enrique Bolanos, doctors who carry out abortions on rape victims or women who could die at childbirth will face a four-to-eight-year jail sentence. The women will face the same penalty.

Nicaragua's powerful Roman Catholic Church and the ruling Liberal Party had promoted the bill and 25 members of the left-wing Sandinista party joined conservatives to approve it, although some sent their aides to cast the vote rather than do it themselves.

The party's 13 other lawmakers stayed away from the session, where the bill was passed in a 52-0 vote.

Only two other Latin American countries, Chile and El Salvador, have a similar blanket ban.

Hundreds of people protested outside the National Assembly in the capital, Managua, on Wednesday night, saying the law would be a death sentence for the some 400 women who suffer ectopic pregnancies in Nicaragua each year. In an ectopic pregnancy, a fertilised egg develops outside the uterus.

"They are forcing women and girls to die. They are not pro-life, they are pro-death," said protester Xiomara Luna.

Human rights groups warned the new law would encouraging illegal abortion which already takes a heavy toll in Nicaragua.

The Sandinista leader, Daniel Ortega, a former Cold War foe of the United States, was thought to have fallen into line to avoid alienating church leaders ahead of the Nov 5 election.

The latest polls suggest Mr Ortega, who led a 1979 revolution and fought a civil war against US-backed Contra rebels throughout the 1980s, may make a comeback although it is not certain he will win in the first round of voting.

When Mr Ortega was in power, his government reaffirmed the right to terminate pregnancies resulting from rape or incest, or if three doctors stated a woman's life was at risk.
 
Smart surveillance systems may soon detect violent behavior

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Smart surveillance systems may soon detect violent behavior

If implanting employees with RFID chips violates practical HR policies, and rolling out eagle-eyed drones to monitor defensive behaviors seems a bit too intrusive, researchers at the University of Texas in Austin are hoping its smart surveillance system can lend a hand in detecting that pent-up rage.

The "computer vision system" can reportedly analyze human movements as they occur, and distinguish between "friendly behaviors such as shaking hands, and aggressive actions like punching, pushing," or launching pocket rockets. The hope is that this creation will make the oh-so-platitudinal jobs of security guards even less demanding by alerting those on duty of violent fits automatically, curing the problem of sleeping through a battle royale in the east parking deck.

Developers created the baseline by breaking down CCTV films and "examining the interplay of different clusters of pixels in order to classify interactions between individuals." The aptly-dubbed "semantic analysis" allows the software to assign a probability that a particular activity (like exchanging trade secrets) is being observed.

While the current system has been "80 percent" accurate in testing, a computer vision guru at the University of Leeds, UK claims that it needs a bit of refinement before loosed in security bunkers, but it could probably thrive when keeping watch over those sure-to-be-tumultuous Wii demo kiosks.
 
Banks facing fines ove ID thefts

Banks facing fines over ID thefts

Several leading banks may be facing unlimited fines over allegations that they dumped confidential customer account details in bin bags on streets.

The information watchdog, Richard Thomas, told the Times that he had received "highly disturbing evidence."

He is investigating alleged lapses by the Royal Bank of Scotland, Halifax, HSBC, Natwest and Post Office, it said.

The British Bankers Association said it was normal practice to dispose of confidential information securely.

It said this was done using specialist rubbish collection teams.

Mr Thomas told the newspaper he is considering enforcement action which could result in unlimited fines.

He said banks advised people to be careful with personal information and to do things such as shred everything because of identity theft was a "growing problem".

"If the banks themselves are being careless with the information, that seems to me to be wholly unacceptable," he said.

Mr Thomas said among the findings in bin bags were bank statements, loan applications which had been turned down and paying-in slips.

It comes after BBC investigators found customer names, addresses and account details when rifling through discarded rubbish.

The team, from BBC One's Watchdog, warned that the information could be used by criminals to steal clients' identities.

Mr Thomas said he would look into their findings, the team said.
 
Junk-mail company tracks staff by satellite

Junk-mail company tracks staff by satellite

The humble leaflet drop has taken a high-tech turn, writes Nick O'Malley.

IT USED to be such a simple job.

The 14-year-old girl would pick up the pamphlets at a warehouse in Artarmon and deliver them around Lane Cove.

Not any more. One Saturday recently she turned up at the warehouse to find that she would have to strap a global positioning system around her waist.

Her employers would be able to track every step she took, ensuring not only that she visited every house she was paid to, but that she followed the route devised by management to save time, and that she did the deliveries within the set time frame. Instead she quit.

By the end of next month every delivery person, or "walker", handing out flyers in Sydney for PMP, the country's largest distributor of unaddressed mail, will be tracked by satellite.

The walker who spoke to the Herald, and who did not want to be named, said she felt as though her employers did not trust her.

"My parents think it's stupid. They think it's bad that a tracking device has to be issued just for delivering pamphlets," she said.

The secretary of Unions NSW, John Robertson, is so angered by the use of GPS to track workers that he has called for the NSW Government to amend the Workplace Surveillance Act to have it outlawed.

"It's outrageous that the first experience a child has of earning a dollar is to be treated like a criminal," he said.

The State Government recently announced a move to track serious offenders with similar GPS technology when they are released from prison.

The president of the NSW Council for Civil Liberties, Cameron Murphy, said the move was a "disgraceful attack on people's right to basic privacy at work".

He said overseas groups feared such technology could be misused, giving predators detailed information on the whereabouts of vulnerable children. "People deserve to be treated with more trust and respect," he said.

In a sign that PMP expected some staff to leave, the information package given to the walkers with the tracking devices - chirpily titled "GPS is here!" - included a resignation form.

"Under the process I feel I no longer wish to walk for PMP Distribution and herewith terminate my position," it says.

However, the company's managing director, Brian Evans, said most walkers supported the move.

"The professional people who do this job are happy they can now prove they have done a good job," he said.

Mr Evans said PMP was the first business in the world to use GPS technology in this manner and that it allowed the company to demonstrate to its customers that all their pamphlets were delivered on time.

He said new processes were introduced in tandem with the GPS that included completing and sorting the pamphlets for the walkers.

"We've cut the amount of time it takes to do their job by 40 per cent and we are still paying the same rate," he said.
 
School Safety Drill Upsets Some Parents

School Safety Drill Upsets Some Parents

WYOMING, Mich. (AP) -- A school safety drill that included police officers in riot gear with weapons has caused concern among some parents who say it was too realistic and frightened some students.

Police in the western Michigan community of Wyoming entered two classrooms at Lee Middle and High School on Thursday and announced there was a threat to the school, The Grand Rapids Press reported.

Students, who were unaware police were conducting a drill, were taken from the classroom into the halls, patted down by officers and asked what they had in their pockets, the newspaper said.

"Some of these kids were so scared, they just about wet their pants," said Marge Bradshaw, a parent with four children in Godfrey-Lee Schools. "I think it's pure wrong that the students and parents were not informed of this."

Officers wore protective gear, including vests and helmets, and carried rifles that were unloaded and marked with colored tape to indicate they were not live weapons, the newspaper said.

Diana Silva, a parent of an eighth-grade student, said the drill went too far.

"My child was with his face to the wall in the hallway of the high school," Silva said. "I certainly don't want anything like this happening to my child."

Principal David Britten said students weren't told ahead of time to make the drill as realistic as possible. Teachers were informed moments before it took place, he said.

"I think this is the best way to do it," Britten said. "We're not looking to scare anyone, but we want a sense of urgency."

But Wyoming Police Chief James Carmody said his officers were not aware students and parents were not told. He said his department will mandate that parents be notified ahead of time in the future.

"The purpose was to show how we will evacuate the classroom, not to assault the classroom," Carmody said.
 
Britons 'could be microchipped like dogs in a decade

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Britons 'could be microchipped like dogs in a decade

Human beings may be forced to be 'microchipped' like pet dogs, a shocking official report into the rise of the Big Brother state has warned.

The microchips - which are implanted under the skin - allow the wearer's movements to be tracked and store personal information about them.

They could be used by companies who want to keep tabs on an employee's movements or by Governments who want a foolproof way of identifying their citizens - and storing information about them.

The prospect of 'chip-citizens' - with its terrifying echoes of George Orwell's 'Big Brother' police state in the book 1984 - was raised in an official report for Britain's Information Commissioner Richard Thomas into the spread of surveillance technology.

The report, drawn up by a team of respected academics, claims that Britain is a world-leader in the use of surveillance technology and its citizens the most spied-upon in the free world.

It paints a frightening picture of what Britain might be like in ten years time unless steps are taken to regulate the use of CCTV and other spy technologies.

The reports editors Dr David Murakami Wood, managing editor of the journal Surveillance and Society and Dr Kirstie Ball, an Open University lecturer in Organisation Studies, claim that by 2016 our almost every movement, purchase and communication could be monitored by a complex network of interlinking surveillance technologies.

The most contentious prediction is the spread in the use of Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) technology.

The RFID chips - which can be detected and read by radio waves - are already used in new UK passports and are also used the Oyster card system to access the London Transport network.

For the past six years European countries have been using RFID chips to identify pet animals.

Already used in America

However, its use in humans has already been trialled in America, where the chips were implanted in 70 mentally-ill elderly people in order to track their movements.

And earlier this year a security company in Ohio chipped two of its employees to allow them to enter a secure area. The glass-encased chips were planted in the recipients' upper right arms and 'read' by a device similar to a credit card reader.

In their Report on the Surveillance Society, the authors now warn: "The call for everyone to be implanted is now being seriously debated."

The authors also highlight the Government's huge enthusiasm for CCTV, pointing out that during the 1990s the Home Office spent 78 per cent of its crime prevention budget - a total of £500 million - on installing the cameras.

There are now 4.2 million CCTV cameras in Britain and the average Briton is caught on camera an astonishing 300 times every day.

This huge enthusiasm comes despite official Home Office statistics showing that CCTV cameras have 'little effect on crime levels'.

They write: "The surveillance society has come about us without us realising", adding: "Some of it is essential for providing the services we need: health, benefits, education. Some of it is more questionable. Some of it may be unjustified, intrusive and oppressive."

Yesterday Information Commissioner Richard Thomas, whose office is investigating the Post Office, HSBC, NatWest and the Royal Bank of Scotland over claims they dumped sensitive customer details in the street, said: "Many of these schemes are public sector driven, and the individual has no choice over whether or not to take part."

"People are being scrutinised and having their lives tracked, and are not even aware of it."

He has also voiced his concern about the consequences of companies, or Government agencies, building up too much personal information about someone.

He said: "It can stigmatise people. I have worries about technology being used to identify classes of people who present some kind of risk to society. And I think there are real anxieties about that."

Yesterday a spokesman for civil liberties campaigners Liberty said: "We have got nothing about these surveillance technologies in themselves, but it is their potential uses about which there are legitimate fears. Unless their uses are regulated properly, people really could find themselves living in a surveillance society.

"There is a rather scary underlying feeling that people may worry that these microchips are less about being a human being than becoming a barcoded product."
 
Pentagon boosts 'media war' unit

Pentagon boosts 'media war' unit

The US defence department has set up a new unit to better promote its message across 24-hour rolling news outlets, and particularly on the internet.

The Pentagon said the move would boost its ability to counter "inaccurate" news stories and exploit new media.

Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld said earlier this year the US was losing the propaganda war to its enemies.

On Monday, Vice-President Dick Cheney said insurgents had increased attacks in Iraq to sway the US mid-term polls.

The Bush administration does not believe the true picture of events in Iraq has been made public, the BBC's Justin Webb in Washington says.

The administration is particularly concerned that insurgents in areas such as Iraq have been able to use the web to disseminate their message and give the impression they are more powerful than the US, our correspondent says.

'Correcting messages'

The newly-established unit would use "new media" channels to push its message and "set the record straight", Pentagon press secretary Eric Ruff said.

"We're looking at being quicker to respond to breaking news," he said.

"Being quicker to respond, frankly, to inaccurate statements."

A Pentagon memo seen by the Associated Press news agency said the new unit would "develop messages" for the 24-hour news cycle and aim to "correct the record".

The unit would reportedly monitor media such as weblogs and would also employ "surrogates", or top politicians or lobbyists who could be interviewed on TV and radio shows.

Mr Russ said the move to set up the unit had not been prompted either by the eroding public support in the US for the Iraq war or the US mid-term elections next week.

'War of ideas'

Mr Rumsfeld said earlier this year that he was concerned by the success of US enemies in "manipulating the media".

"That's the thing that keeps me up at night," Mr Rumsfeld said.

On Monday, US Vice President Dick Cheney also made reference to the use of media, suggesting insurgents had increased their attacks and were checking the internet to keep track of American public opinion.

"It's my belief that they're very sensitive of the fact that we've got an election scheduled and they can get on the websites like anybody else," Mr Cheney told Fox News.

"There isn't anything that's on the internet that's not accessible to them. They're on it all the time. They're very sophisticated users of it."

Mr Cheney's comments came as American forces suffered one of the highest death tolls in October - more than 100 troops killed - since the war began in 2003.

President Bush has said recently that terror groups were trying to influence public opinion in the US, describing their efforts as the "war of ideas".
 
Growing DNA database 'turning Britain into a nation of suspects'

Growing DNA database 'turning Britain into a nation of suspects'

One in four men could soon be included on the national DNA database which is helping to turn Britain into a nation of suspects, an expert group has warned.

The database has been established with little or no public consultation but over the past 10 years has collected DNA profiles on more than 3.5 million people, including 24,000 children and youths under the age of 18.

Britain stores the most extensive DNA database on its population in the world, yet the public has never been properly consulted on it, said Professor Sir Bob Hepple, chairman of the Nuffield Council on Bioethics, an independent think tank.

"There are many concerns about the way in which the database is developing. It is increasing at the rate of 40,000 profiles a month but there are no restrictions in this country. It's all at the discretion of chief constables," Sir Bob said.

Everyone who has ever been arrested by the police, even if they are not charged, is obliged to provide a DNA sample for the national database, which also includes victims of crime and others who have volunteered a sample to help a criminal investigation.

Once someone has agreed to provide a DNA sample to the database they have no automatic right to have it removed or destroyed at a later date.

This is not the case in some other countries, said Carole McCartney, a lecturer in criminal law at Leeds University who sits on the Nuffield Council's working group on the DNA database. "Police powers in this country to take DNA samples are unrivalled internationally. We didn't have any legislation to establish the DNA database and it's not been debated in Parliament," Dr McCartney said.
During a recent visit to the Forensic Science Service, which operates the database for the Home Office, Tony Blair said that he would like the national DNA database extended still further, with no restrictions on its size.

Sir Bob said that this implies that the Prime Minister would be happy to see every citizen's DNA profile being stored on the database. "The cost would be enormous but there is also the deeper question - instead of being a nation of citizens we become a nation of suspects," Sir Bob said.

With this in mind, the Nuffield Council on Bioethics has launched a consultation exercise to investigate the attitude of the general public, as well as interested parties, towards the national DNA database.

"We want to hear the public's views on whether storing the DNA profiles of victims and suspects who are later not charged or acquitted is justified by the need to fight crime," Sir Bob said.

The database is heavily biased to certain groups in society, such as ethnic minorities and the young. A third of black males in England and Wales are on the database, he said.

"Certain groups such as young males and ethnic minorities are over-represented on the database, and the Council will be asking whether this potential for bias in law enforcement is acceptable," he said.
 
Shouting teen shot with stun gun, dies next day

Shouting teen shot with stun gun, dies next day

JERSEYVILLE, Illinois (AP) -- A teenager carrying a Bible and shouting "I want Jesus" was shot twice with a police stun gun and later died at a St. Louis hospital, authorities said.

In a statement obtained Tuesday by The Associated Press, police in Jerseyville, about 40 miles north of St. Louis, said 17-year-old Roger Holyfield would not acknowledge officers who approached him and he continued yelling, "I want Jesus."

Police tried to calm the teen, but Holyfield became combative, according to the statement. Officers fired the stun gun at him after he ignored their warnings, then fired again when he continued struggling, police said.

Holyfield was flown to St. Louis' Cardinal Glennon Hospital after the confrontation Saturday; he died there Sunday, police said.

An autopsy was planned for Tuesday.

The statement expressed sympathy to Holyfield's family but said city and police officials would not discuss the matter further.

Calls Tuesday to Jerseyville Police Chief Brad Blackorby were not immediately returned. The department has been using stun guns for about five months, according to the statement.

In a report released in March, international human rights group Amnesty International said it had logged at least 156 deaths across the country in the previous five years related to police stun guns.

The rise in deaths accompanies a marked increase in the number of U.S. law enforcement agencies employing devices made by Taser International Inc. of Scottsdale, Arizona. About 1,000 of the nation's 18,000 police agencies used Tasers in 2001; more than 7,000 departments had them last year, according to a government study.

Police had used Tasers more than 70,000 times as of last year, Congress' Government Accountability Office said.

Amnesty International has urged police departments to suspend the use of Tasers pending more study. Taser International said the group's count was flawed and falsely linked deaths to Taser use when there has been no such official conclusion.

The city of St. Louis also drew unwanted attention for crime this week when it was named the most dangerous U.S. city by Morgan Quitno Press. The ranking looked only at crime within St. Louis city limits, not its metro area.
 
Alarm as innocent people fill DNA database

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Alarm as innocent people fill DNA database

The Government today denied that it was trying to create a "nation of suspects" amid growing concern about the threat to civil liberties from the growth of the national DNA database.

DNA forensics pioneer Sir Alan Jeffries warned that the database - which stores DNA profiles of more than three million people - was being used for purposes for which it was not originally intended.

Jeffries comments coincided with the launch of a public consultation exercise on the use of the database by the Nuffield Council on Bioethics.

Earlier this month the Prime Minister Tony Blair said that he wanted to see the details of as many people as possible stored on the database, insisting those who had not done anything wrong had nothing to fear.

However Sir Alan said he was concerned that it now covered large numbers of people who had never been convicted of any crime.

"The real concern I have with the UK - and we have per capita by far the biggest database here - is what I see as a sort of mission creep," he told the BBC Radio 4 Today programme.

"When the database was initially established it was to database DNA from criminals so that if they reoffended they could be picked up.

"There are now hundreds of thousands of entirely innocent people now populating that database, people who have come to the police's attention as a result of being charged with a crime but subsequently released.

"My view is that that is discriminatory."

His comments were echoed by shadow home office minister Damian Green, who accused ministers of allowing the database to expand without proper checks.

"They have not decided to target for instance criminals, particularly, perhaps, people who were previously convicted," he told BBC Radio 4's The World at One.

"They are just collecting the samples almost at random - anyone connected with a crime, witnesses and so on, people who are accused and then acquitted.

"If it means that millions of people are on the database when they are completely innocent of any crime and never likely to commit any crime, then they can reasonably ask the question, why is the Government keeping this information on me?"

Liberal Democrat home affairs spokesman Nick Clegg also accused ministers of ignoring civil liberties concerns.

"I really don't know why the Government is so keen to run totally roughshod over what are perfectly reasonable, legitimate concerns about the overuse and possible abuse of the database," he said.

Home Office Minister Tony McNulty acknowledged the need for a wider public debate on the issue, but stressed that there were "very strong safeguards" on the use of the information stored on the database.

"I don't think it is about creating a nation of suspects. More often than not, hits on the database are used to exclude people, evidence of whose presence is at a crime scene, rather than otherwise," he told The World at One.

I think on balance the public will be reassured by the successes we have had with the database, rather than the concerns about breaching privacy, but it is a matter of balance."

Tony Lake, Chief Constable of Lincolnshire Police and chairman of the National DNA Database Strategy Board, also defended its operation.

He said that DNA from people previously arrested but not charged had been matched to more than 3,000 crime scenes, including 37 murders and 90 rapes.

But while he insisted that it it was "perfectly reasonable" to ask witnesses and others to voluntarily put their DNA on the database, he admitted he was "personally uncomfortable" that they could not later change their minds.

He also said the number of young black men on the database was "disproportionately high" but that that was an issue over the use of stop-and-search powers.
 
'Big Brother' state is reality in Britain says report

'Big Brother' state is reality in Britain says report

London - Whether you are lying in bed, pushing your supermarket trolley or cruising along the motorway - Big Brother is watching you, according to a report that claims that Britain is the 'most spied upon nation' in the world.

Just 22 years after George Orwell predicted that 1984 would mark the fictional arrival of the total surveillance state, Britons are faced with the reality of 'round-the clock surveillance,' according to the report published by Britain's Information Commissioner.

'Two years ago, I warned that we were sleepwalking into a surveillance society, today I fear that we are in fact waking up to a surveillance society that is already all around us,' Commissioner Richard Thomas said.

'This is science, not science fiction,' he added.

Thomas and the group of academics who compiled the study are calling for a comprehensive public debate about the limits of supervision in a democratic state.

'We can't turn the clock back, but it's important to point out some of the dangers,' said Thomas.

'In Eastern Europe, old-fashioned surveillance was used to keep people in check. We need to be reminded that we must not go too far.'

It was time also to stop and reflect on the 'electronic footprints' left daily by millions through the use of store or credit cards, mobile phones, the internet or satellite navigation systems.

The combination of 4.2 million CCTV cameras in Britain - one for every 14 people -, biometrics, databases and tracking technologies were all part of a 'broader exploration to track movements and behaviours of millions of people in both time and space.'

Already, Britain had more surveillance cameras and looser laws on privacy and data protection than any other industrialized western country, the report said.

A person in Britain can be captured on up to 300 cameras each day, the report detailed.

A world league table puts Britain bottom of the list of western democratic countries, alongside with Russia, for the protection of individual privacy.

The two worst-ranking countries in the 36-nation survey are China and Malaysia.

While Thomas concedes that surveillance has proved an effective weapon against terrorism and crime, it is the report's prediction of an uncontrolled expansion of even more sophisticated monitoring systems that concerns him most.

According to the report, by 2016 shoppers may be scanned as they enter stores, schools could bring in cards allowing parents to monitor what their children eat, and jobs may be refused to applicants who are seen as a health risk, based on biometric and psychological tests.

It also predicts that older people will feel increasingly isolated as relatives use cameras and sensors to check up on them without paying a visit.

'Invisible surveillance', such as the increased use of Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAV's), scanners in store doorways or miniature cameras embedded in lampposts is what worries the academics who wrote the report.

People had to ask themselves whether they would be 'comfortable' with unmanned spy planes hovering in the sky, or every mile they drive being monitored through electronic road toll systems, they suggested.

'Unfortunately, the dominant modes of surveillance expansion in the 21st century are producing situations where distinctions of class, race, gender, geography and citizenship are currently being exacerbated and institutionalized,' the report concluded.
 
Electronic Vote Machine Security

Professor Avi Rubin demonstrates how electronic vote machines can be compromised.

Electronic Vote Machine Security

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9/11 response blamed for intrusion on U.S. privacy

9/11 response blamed for intrusion on U.S. privacy

LONDON (AP) — Germany and Canada are the best defenders of privacy and Malaysia and China the worst, an international rights group said in a report released Wednesday.

Britain was rated as an endemic surveillance society, at no. 33, just above Russia and Singapore on a ranking of 37 nations' privacy protections by London-based Privacy International.

The United States did only slightly better, at no. 30, ranked between Israel and Thailand, with few safeguards and widespread surveillance, the group said.

Efforts to quash terrorism have eroded individual privacy protections since the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks in New York City, Washington, D.C., and Pennsylvania, human rights activists have warned. Governments around the world have imposed security and immigration legislation that invades people's private lives, they say.

In the United States, President Bush's administration has come under fire for its warrantless domestic wiretapping program, which monitors international phone calls and e-mails to or from the United States involving people suspected by the government of having terrorist links.

The New York Civil Liberties Union says there has been a staggering increase in surveillance of lawful activities with little concern for the civil liberties implications, said executive director Donna Lieberman.

In 1998, the union conducted a survey of video surveillance in Manhattan and found more than 2,300 cameras in use. Last year, a similar study found more than four times that number in just 20% of Manhattan, Lieberman said.

S. Arutchelvan, a Malaysian activist based in Kuala Lumpur, said privacy has not been sufficiently protected since the government stepped up efforts over the past five years to track down suspected Islamic militants, dozens of whom have been detained without trial.

"We believe there has been encroachment on privacy, such as the tapping of phones and other methods through telecommunications, in the name of fighting terrorism," Arutchelvan said.

Chinese legal activist Xu Zhiyong said strict Internet controls have resulted in fewer protections for Internet users in China.

The Communist government has set up an extensive surveillance and filtering system to prevent Chinese people from accessing material considered obscene or politically subversive.

Lawyers and academics raised awareness of privacy violations in China after a 2003 incident in which a couple was detained in the northwestern Shaanxi province for possession of pornographic videos.

"In the past few years, authorities have been making some positive changes to respect the privacy of individuals," Xu said. "But when it comes to the Internet, the government feels it must supervise users and that results in less privacy protection."

Privacy International tracks surveillance and privacy violations by governments and corporations, said director Simon Davies. It studied the reach of governments in their use of video surveillance in private locations, workplace monitoring and identity protection, among other areas.

"The aim is not to humiliate the worst-ranking nations, but to demonstrate that it is possible to maintain a healthy respect for privacy within a secure and fully functional democracy," Davies said.
 
Homeland Security Creates Terrorism Score for Travelers

Homeland Security Creates Terrorism Score for Travelers

ents will know with a newly announced Automated Targeting System, a data mining system which will use the Treasury's watch list (.pdf), data provided to it by the airlines, your I-94 form and other data sources to compute your terrorism risk when you cross the border.

The data -- which includes all the information you give to an airline such as medical conditions, frequent flier number, special meal requests, home and email addresses, payment information and your travel agent's names -- will be held for up to 40 years. The data can be shared with any government agency or local law enforcement agency for civil or criminal matters, and can even be shared with foreign governments as data to test other data-mining programs, even ones not related to border security.

What happens if you have a name that's similar to a suspected terrorist or drug smuggler.? Conceivably, you could have your car torn apart every time you drive to Canada or have a blue-gloved agent checking your anus for dope every time you go to Cancun.

But surely, you'll be able to remedy such mistakes using the Privacy Act, which prevents secret databases? Actually, no.

From the Federal Register notice:

Since this system of records may not be accessed, generally, for purposes of determining if the system contains a record pertaining to a particular individual and those records, if any, cannot be inspected, the system may not be accessed under the Privacy Act for the purpose of contesting the content of the record.

I wonder if Customs and Border Patrol will rename their "Know Before You Go" page "Know Before You Go That We Know and You Can't".
 
Watching You

WATCHING YOU

It's Britain in 2016 when cameras and microchips control daily life

By Antonia Hoyle

BRITAIN is the most monitored society in the Western world, we have once again been reminded. And how.

The minute I get out of bed, the microchip in my arm tells my kettle to boil, my bath to run and my electric car to warm up.

I start the vehicle with a fingertip - it needs to scan my prints before it will run.

And I dare not exceed the speed limit, or the chip in the car will inform a police computer. Welcome to Britain, November 2016. Welcome to an age in which every step you take is watched.

Back in November 2006, the Government's Information Commissioner, the man responsible for safeguarding our privacy, voiced concern at the increasingly pervasive "surveillance society all around us".

Richard Thomas pointed out there were 4.2 million CCTV cameras - one for every 14 people - with the average person captured on more than 300 screens a day. In 2016, that seems like small fry.

His report warned that hi-tech scanners, tags and microscopic cameras would mean that in just a decade's time none of us would be able to go unnoticed again.

Now, as I drive to work watching one of his successors on my in-car HDTV repeating the same fears, I reflect on how accurate Mr Thomas was. I know, for instance, that it's pointless removing the chip in my vehicle as overhead spy planes will report any speeding to the authorities anyway.

As I enter the congestion zone, now in place in every UK city, there's no need to worry about paying the £210 charge - it's automatically deducted from my bank..

There are benefits to all this, as I am reminded when my local council calls me on my videophone at lunch time.

My son has stopped eating vegetables at school. They know because the electronic card he uses to pay for them records his choice of meals.

I head to a high street shop. There aren't many these days as almost everyone buys online. As I enter, a holographic ad flashes up on a screen exactly at my eye level.

The virtual shopgirl is urging me to buy a blouse like my other ones, only better. The advertising firm knows I'm tempted because it knows everything about me.

A chip in my trousers told it my size, likes, dislikes and buying habits as soon as I came in. For a virtual shopgirl she's being really attentive. But then she knows I've just been paid and how much I have in my bank.

She shouldn't have such details as, strictly speaking, they are confidential. But in the hi-tech Britain of 2016, information like this is so valuable - and so easily leaked.

THERE'S no need to use my credit card to pay for the blouse. I simply swipe my sleeve against a digital reader and the chip in my arm sends a signal to my bank.

Back at work, I have to stand in front of another hi-tech reader which scans my face before letting me in. At my computer, gone are old-fashioned passwords. Instead it scans my iris before I can log on.

Then I try to hire a nanny. But the agency says hundreds of women on its books are unsuitable. They had gone to their GPs complaining of depression, but their medical records have been secretly passed on. Millions are in the same boat, their DNA and other details stored on file despite having committed no crime.

Before starting a job, everyone must go through extensive biometric tests.

And it's pointless trying to hide the fact you beat a drug habit 15 years ago or have a family history of cancer.

Your employer probably has those details anyway and may decide they are sufficient not to hire you.

The wealthy, of course, get around this and hire expensive data management firms to safeguard their details.

The rest of us are not so lucky. My husband, for instance. I suspect he has a mistress, which he denies.

But all I had to do was visit Google and type: "What was Simon doing on January 28 at 3.35pm?" to learn he was in her bed. That's ever-present cameras for you. As I leave work, cameras in lampposts recreate a 3-D image of the street and my face to send to police. There has been a spate of thefts and they need to ensure I am not a suspect.

As I near home, the chip in my arm sends signals about my body to my thermostat. Knowing I'm a bit chilly, it turns the heating up a degree.

Back in my living room, I turn on a camera to talk to Mum 200 miles away.

I KNOW her knee is playing up, thanks to a sensor embedded in her that has sent signals to my computer and her carer's.

Mum would rather see me in person but it's so difficult finding the time.

I switch on the TV and a list of my favourite shows pops up. That's because I've programmed them into my microchip and don't need to channel surf with the remote any more.

Nor do I have to go shopping. My fridge's computer knows when I'm low on food and orders from the supermarket, which brings it to my door.

Then it's bedtime. I don't need to set an alarm as my microchip senses my brain activity and tells my clock radio when to wake me up.

When it does, the Prime Minister is on, saying things are far better now we know one another's every move. Of course he's right. Isn't he?
 
Biometric ID database set for global takeover

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Biometric ID database set for global takeover

A global database to monitor travellers entering and leaving the European Union and the United States is being tested in Britain and America. The project for the US Department of Homeland Security would create a global identity database using biometric identification such as digital fingerprinting. People involved in the trial say it could be extended to include countries such as Canada.

Troy Potter, biometrics manager for the US Department of Homeland Security’s border control programme, told The Business: “Early stage discussions about what we should be doing to make biometric information sharing happen are currently taking place between like-minded countries such as Britain and other European Union members.”

The task of checking the biometric data of hundreds of millions of European and American citizens is enormous. The trials will establish whether it is technically feasible to build such a network.

An industry source said governments in Britain and France were likely to demand a share of the huge hardware and software contracts were the project to go ahead.

Matt Howell, vice president for justice, security and defence at Capgemini, said: “The project would be very significant in financial terms. Biometric technology is itself so sophisticated, it will inevitably drive up costs. Added to this is the extra cost associated with network security, which would be of paramount importance.”

Howell added: “The project is entirely feasible in technical terms. The real stumbling blocks are governance and civil liberties issues, which are taken extremely seriously by the European Union.” It has not been determined which forms of biometric identification would be best suited to border control. Most systems use an easily identifiable part of the body, such as a fingertip or eye. But these methods do not work when the subject has an injury. A less intrusive and speedier form of identification could use digital cameras to match an instant shot of a traveller to the global database.

“Biometric identification refers to digital fingerprinting and also potentially to other techniques such as iris recognition and digital photos,” explained Potter.
 
London and Big Brother

London and Big Brother

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Big Brothers' data bases

Big Brothers' data bases

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