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March 31, 2006

Anti Bush Bumpersticker Causes Stupid Overreaction

firstamendmentcenter.org: news:


ATHENS, Ga. — A bumper sticker that takes a double-entendre dig at President Bush has landed a woman in trouble with the law.

Denise Grier, 47, of Athens was recently pulled over in suburban Atlanta's DeKalb County where she works as a nurse when a police officer spotted her bumper sticker that reads: "I'm Tired Of All The BUSHIT."

The officer who stopped her thought it was lewd, and she was cited for violating a state law prohibiting lewd or profane stickers and decals on vehicles.

Grier said the sticker is simply a political statement.

The Georgia Supreme Court ruled more than a decade ago that the law against lewd bumper stickers is unconstitutional, according to the American Civil Liberties Union.

Caribbean coral suffers record death

Caribbean coral suffers record death:


By Seth Borenstein

A one-two punch of bleaching from record hot water followed by disease has killed ancient and delicate coral in the biggest loss of reefs scientists have ever seen in Caribbean waters. Researchers from around the globe are scrambling to figure out the extent of the loss. Early conservative estimates from Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands find that about one-third of the coral in official monitoring sites has recently died.

"It's an unprecedented die-off," said National Park Service fisheries biologist Jeff Miller, who last week checked 40 stations in the Virgin Islands. "The mortality that we're seeing now is of the extremely slow-growing reef-building corals. These are corals that are the foundation of the reef ... We're talking colonies that were here when Columbus came by have died in the past three to four months."

March 26, 2006

Ooops!

CNN.com - 33 hurt in superjumbo safety drill - Mar 26, 2006:


HAMBURG, Germany (AP) -- Thirty-three people suffered minor injuries Sunday during a crucial evacuation drill for the new Airbus A380 superjumbo jet.

One man broke his leg and 32 other people suffered minor injuries during the exercise in which 853 people and 20 crew members from airline Lufthansa AG exited the plane on slides in a darkened hangar.

Aviation authorities mandate specific evacuation times for jet models, and the drill was a critical test for the jet, which will be the world's largest passenger model when it begins commercial service.

The double-deck A380 can hold as many 873 people, including crew.



Psycho Sensei is in NH

Updates may be relatively slow. I am up in NH on a family illness that is relatively serious. All well wishes and good thoughts are welcome. We are in a holding pattern currently while the doctors figure out the next step, so no prognosis is available at this time.

March 25, 2006

South Dakota Can't Stop ALL Abortions

Keep your ideas of morality off my body. Indian tribe says "stick it" to South Dakota's draconian idea.

Tribal leader rallies for abortion clinic on reservation:


Oglala Sioux Tribe President Cecelia Fire Thunder says a clinic on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation could provide abortions if South Dakota’s new abortion ban goes into effect.

“We’re working on it,” Fire Thunder said in a telephone interview Friday. “This is a free-choice issue. If I were in that situation, I’d want somewhere to go where I’d be taken care of.”

The new South Dakota law bans all abortions except to save the life of the mother — with no exceptions for rape or incest.

Fire Thunder said the state law would not apply to the reservation. “We’re a sovereign nation,” she said.

The new law is set to go into effect July 1, but a court challenge almost certainly will delay it, and opponents of the law are already gathering signatures to put it on the ballot in November.

Fire Thunder, in fact, is one of 15 co-leaders of the new South Dakota Campaign for Healthy Families, which on Friday announced a statewide campaign to overturn the new law.

South Dakota Attorney General Larry Long declined to comment on the proposal, saying he likely would have to write a description of the new law for ballots in November.

Long said that major crimes committed on reservations come under state jurisdiction if they are committed by non-Indians against non-Indians. Other major crimes fall under federal law.

You've GOT TO BE KIDDING!

ksl.com - Utah's Online Source for Local News & Information '99 Red Balloons' Video to Air for an Hour:


NEW YORK (AP) - They're kidding, right? VH1 Classic will present a full hour of the English and German music videos for the 1984 hit "99 Luftballons," aka "99 Red Balloons," by German rock group Nena.

The music video presentation, to air Sunday (2 p.m. EST), caps off the cable channel's "Pay to Play for Hurricane Katrina Relief," which raised over $200,000 for Mercy Corps, a humanitarian relief organization.

Viewers could request one video to be played on VH1 Classic for every $25 donation. For a $35,000 donation, they could select an hour's worth of music videos from the 1960s through the early 1990s.

However, one viewer chose something different for his allotted hour, requesting continuous playing of "99 Luftballons," said VH1 spokeswoman Maura Wozniak.

"99 Luftballons" is a Cold-War era protest song that tells the story of 99 red balloons floating into the air, triggering an apocalypse when the military sends planes to intercept them.

NSA Might Listen to Lawyer Calls

NSA Might Listen to Lawyer Calls:


Responding to questions from Congress, the Justice Department says confidential calls between doctors and patients or attorneys and clients are not off limits to NSA warrentless surveillance -- and such material can be used in court. It's all legal says DOJ.

March 23, 2006

St. Paul City Office Boots Easter Bunny - Yahoo! News

St. Paul City Office Boots Easter Bunny - Yahoo! News:


ST. PAUL, Minn. - The Easter Bunny has been sent packing at St. Paul City Hall.

>A toy rabbit, pastel-colored eggs and a sign with the words "Happy Easter" were removed from the lobby of the City Council offices, because of concerns they might offend non-Christians.

A council secretary had put up the decorations. They were not bought with city money.

St. Paul's human rights director, Tyrone Terrill, asked that the decorations be removed, saying they could be offensive to non-Christians.

But City Council member Dave Thune says removing the decorations went too far, and he wonders why they can't celebrate spring with "bunnies and fake grass."

Last Night's South Park

Sad and lame. Of course, they only had a short time to come up with something, but still, I think they could have done a better job. It was a bit funny listening to the obit about Chef's "fruity little club" that "scrambled his brains" and "took Chef from us." But the "Darth Chef" at the end was just a bit much.

I was disappointed. The child molestation angle was and is not funny. I don't like Scientology much either, but would not liken them to child molesters. They could have done so much better, like perhaps had Chef kidnapped by body thetans or space aliens of some kind, or even homeland security.

Hopefully the rest if the season is better than this episode. Matt and Trey might have been pissed because Comedy Central caved and didn't show the Closet episode, and therefore might have used this crappy episode to get back at them, but we may never know because they were told not to talk about it. Well feh :-).

March 22, 2006

FAA Reportedly Dismissed Moussaoui Concern

WTOP: FAA Reportedly Dismissed Moussaoui Concern:


ALEXANDRIA, Va. (AP) - A manager at an Arizona flight school that trained one of the Sept. 11 pilot-hijackers testified at the Zacarias Moussaoui trial Wednesday that she called the Federal Aviation Administration with concerns over his qualifications for a pilot license, but her concerns were dismissed by an FAA official.

Margaret Chevrette, manager at the flight school, was testifying in the death-penalty trial of Moussaoui, who has confessed to being an al-Qaida terrorist.

It was the second time this week jurors heard witnesses testify that people in positions of authority in the federal government responded either slowly, negatively _ or not at all _ to warnings about a possible a possible terrorist attack.

Chevrette said that the school's student, Hani Hanjour, lacked adequate English skills to gain his pilot's license. An FAA official responded to her concerns by suggesting that Hanjour could use an interpreter even though mastery of English is a requirement for a pilot.

Chevrette said that when the Sept. 11 attacks occurred, she knew Hanjour must have been involved.

"I remember crying all the way to work knowing our company helped to do this," she said.

More on selling our tax information

CNN.com - Don't blindly sign on the dotted line - Mar 21, 2006:


WASHINGTON (AP) -- Taxpayers not paying attention to the forms prepared for them by commercial tax preparers could find their personal financial information being sold more widely to data brokers and marketers.

The Internal Revenue Service is proposing to alter some privacy protections that consumer groups say would allow tax preparers greater leeway to sell personal financial information from the documents or even copies of the return itself.

The IRS has scheduled a hearing for April 4 on the proposal, part of a package of revisions the agency says are designed to safeguard information. One, for example, would require written taxpayer consent before a tax firm sends a return overseas for processing.

March 21, 2006

IRS plan would allow sale of tax data to marketers

Interesting. After having been on the receiving end of many IRS blunders (some of which cost considerable amounts of money), I can only hope that if they decide they're going to make such sensitive personal information public, that we can sue them for libel when they mess up.

IRS plan would allow sale of tax data to marketers:

PHILADELPHIA -- The Internal Revenue Service is quietly moving to loosen the once-inviolable privacy of federal income-tax returns.

If it succeeds, accountants and other tax-return preparers for the first time would be able to sell information from individual returns -- or even entire returns -- to marketers and data brokers.

The change is in a set of proposed rules the Treasury Department and the IRS published in the Dec. 8 Federal Register, where the official notice labeled them "not a significant regulatory action."

IRS officials portray the changes as housecleaning needed to update outmoded regulations adopted before it began accepting returns electronically. The proposed rules, which would become effective 30 days after a final version is published, would require a tax preparer to obtain written consent before selling tax information.

Critics call the changes a dangerous breach in personal and financial privacy. They say the requirement for signed consent would prove meaningless for many taxpayers, especially those hurriedly reviewing stacks of documents before a filing deadline.

"The normal interaction is that the taxpayer just signs what the tax preparer puts in front of them," said Jean Ann Fox of the Consumer Federation of America, one of several groups fighting the changes. "They think, 'This person is a tax professional, and I'm going to rely on them.'

"Criticism of the proposal also came from U.S. Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill. In a letter March 14 to IRS Commissioner Mark Everson, Obama warned that, once in the hands of third parties, tax information could be resold and handled under even looser rules than the IRS sets, increasing consumers' vulnerability to identity theft and other risks.

The IRS announced the proposal in a news release the day before the notice was published, headlined: "IRS Issues Proposed Regulations to Safeguard Taxpayer Information."

The announcement did not mention potential sales of tax information.

IRS spokesman William M. Cressman said, "The heart of this proposed regulation is about the right of taxpayers to control their tax return information. The idea is to emphasize taxpayer consent and set clear boundaries on how tax return preparers can use or disclose tax return information."

CNN.com - 'South Park's' Chef back -- but not Hayes - Mar 21, 2006

CNN.com - 'South Park's' Chef back -- but not Hayes - Mar 21, 2006:


The tenth season of "South Park" will launch Wednesday with a new episode titled "The Return of Chef!", marking the "triumphant homecoming" of lusty school cafeteria cook James "Chef" McElroy to the show, the network said in a statement.

Hayes, 63, himself a follower of Scientology, surprised producers a week ago by announcing he was leaving the series because he objected to its "inappropriate ridicule" of religion, though he made no reference to the show's spoof of Scientology last fall.

Two days later, Comedy Central abruptly pulled a scheduled repeat of that episode, titled "Trapped in the Closet." Sources close to the show said the rerun was canceled after Cruise threatened to boycott promotion of his upcoming film, "Mission: Impossible III," for sister studio Paramount Pictures. \

South Park petition: No, Tom Cruise, censorship is not awesome!

South Park petition: No, Tom Cruise, censorship is not awesome!:


Xeni Jardin:

Supporters of South Park who've launched a web petition and protest-letter campaign say:

Comedy Central suddenly switched out episodes of South Park -- replacing the previously-scheduled "Trapped in the Closet" without any explanation. According to a friend of mine (secretary for a certain company that owns Comedy Central), Tom Cruise has blackmailed the company into not showing the episode, which portrays him as a homosexual and his religion (Scientology) as a cult.

Update: Lord (Xenu) knows why they chose to use Geocities to host the petition and informational site, but it's down due to bandwidth overage now. Try this alternate site for the petition. Alternate Link.

From Hollywood Interrupted:

"Sources from inside Paramount and South Park Studios report that parent company Viacom pulled last night's scheduled repeat of the high-rated "Trapped in the Closet" episode after the humorless Scientologist movie star Tom Cruise threatened to cancel all publicity for Mission Impossible 3 if Comedy Central aired the episode that satirizes Scientology and mocks his sexuality again. Not only is this the first time that the South Park creators have been officially censored in their ten hit seasons with Comedy Central, Viacom officials also reportedly ordered Matt Stone and Trey Parker not to discuss the reason why their episode was cancelled."

The creators have yet to comment, but Comedy Central has offered this explanation:

"In light of the events of earlier this week, we wanted to give Chef an appropriate tribute by airing two episodes he is most known for."

THINK ABOUT IT: What if everyone that was offended by an episode by an episode of South Park -- or any other satire -- could suddenly have an episode taken out of circulation? There wouldn't be a lot of show left...

We have to teach Tom that censorship is wrong!

Link to petition, and to video of the banned episode. (Thanks, sekrit Hollywood informant!).


France OKs bill opening iTunes, iPod | MacMinute News

France OKs bill opening iTunes, iPod | MacMinute News:


French lawmakers approved an online copyright bill today that would require Apple to open the proprietary format behind its iTunes music store and iPod players, reports the Associated Press. "The draft law -- which also introduces new penalties for music pirates -- would force Apple Computer Inc., Sony Corp. and others to share proprietary copy-protection technologies so that rivals can offer compatible services and players," notes the story. French lawmakers approved the bill 296-193. The Senate must now debate and vote on the new legislation, which is expected to begin in May.

March 20, 2006

Hopefully our friends in Australia are ok

CNN.com - Cyclone hits Australia 'like atomic bomb' - Mar 20, 2006:


CAIRNS, Australia (AP) -- Metal roofs littered streets, wooden houses were reduced to splinters, banana plantations were stripped bare -- all victims of the most powerful cyclone to lash Australia's east coast in decades.

Amazingly, there were no fatalities and only 30 people suffered minor injuries as cyclone Larry pounded northeastern Queensland state early Monday with winds gusting to 290 kilometers per hour (180 mph). Damage was expected to run into hundreds of millions of dollars.

Hardest hit was Innisfail, a farming city of 8,500 people 100 kilometers (60 miles) south of the tourist city of Cairns.

"It looks like an atomic bomb hit the place," Innisfail mayor Neil Clarke told Australian television. "It is severe damage. This is more than a local disaster, this is a national disaster." (Watch how Larry tore into the Australian coast -- 2:10)

Illegal radio broadcasts interfering with airline pilots in Miami: South Florida Sun-Sentinel

Illegal radio broadcasts interfering with airline pilots in Miami: South Florida Sun-Sentinel:


MIAMI -- Pilots coming and going from Miami International Airport are getting an earful of something unexpected: Hip-hop tunes from a pirate radio station.

The music comes on a pair of frequencies from a station that calls itself Da Streetz.

>Authorities traced the signals to a large radio antenna on tower mounted on a nearby warehouse in a Miami suburb, but did not find a radio transmitter or disc jockey.

And Da Streetz remains on the air, interfering at times with communications between pilots and the control tower.

``It's intermittent. Not all day, everyday,'' said Kathleen Bergen, a Federal Aviation Administration spokeswoman. ``But clear communication between air control and the pilots is a critical part of flying.''


Confused lawyers threaten Neil Gaiman

Confused lawyers threaten Neil Gaiman:


Cory Doctorow:

Crazy, confused "lawyers" from the San Diego firm of Branfman and Associates claiming to represent the creators of the "Attack of the Killer Tomatoes" movies have sent a threatening letter to Neil Gaiman, claiming that he linked to their site (he didn't) and that doing so is illegal (it isn't).

Neil is doing what everyone should do when they get dumb lawyer-letters: posting the letter so that everyone can laugh at these lawyers and reduce the chances that anyone will be scared off by one of their letters and so that anyone who thinks of hiring these lawyers can see how clueless and dopey they are.

We have noted that the link from your website to the our (sic) client's website fot ATTACK OF THE KILLER TOMATOES has not been authorized by Four Square and is therefore in violation of certain trademark, copyright and unfair competition laws. In particular, your actions violate the Lanham Act (15 USC 1051 et. seq.) and the Copyright Act (17 USC 101 et. seq.).

Link

(Thanks, Neil!)


ADIZ Prompts Airport Expansion

ADIZ Prompts Airport Expansion:


It's a general rule that if there are losers there must be winners and Cambridge-Dorchester County Airport in Maryland is planning to take full advantage of the challenges faced by its neighbors. The airport is just outside the Washington Air Defense Identification Zone (ADIZ) and traffic counts have been up considerably since the imposition of the complication-inducing restrictions at other airports. Operations increased by about 15 percent last year, largely due to an influx of recreational pilots skirting the zone. Now the local county council is hoping to attract charter operations by lengthening the runway.

Tiger Awaiting Further Investment

Tiger Awaiting Further Investment:


The Catch-22 that often afflicts capital-intensive businesses like aircraft manufacturers has apparently affected production at Tiger Aircraft. The Martinsburg Journal reported last week that the company needs more money from its investors to ramp up production and meet demand for the sporty touring aircraft first made by Grumman in the 1970s. The West Virginia plant has been making airplanes since 2002 but in December of 2005 it laid off eight of 28 employees despite a fat order book. "Right now I have the biggest backlog (of customers) in the company's history," President Gene Criss said. But without another cash infusion, Tiger can't boost production to meet the demand. "It takes money to make money," Criss said. He said he expects things to turn around in the next few months.

Boing Boing: Shakespeare's "Shall I compare thee to a summer's day?" as code

Boing Boing: Shakespeare's "Shall I compare thee to a summer's day?" as code:


Shakespeare's "Shall I compare thee to a summer's day?" as code
Here's William Shakespeare's Sonnet 18 ("Shall I compare thee to a summer's day?") converted into the programming language ActionScript:
// Sonnet 18: Shall I compare thee to a summer's day?
// by William Shakespeare
// ported to ActionScript 2.0 by Satori Canton
//
// Original poem can be viewed at:
// http://plagiarist.com/poetry/915/
var summer:Object = {};
var thee:Object = {};

summer.name = "Summer Day";
thee.name = "Thee";

summer.lovelyness = 9;
thee.lovelyness = 10;

summer.temperature = 98;
thee.temperature = 98.6;

summer.lease = new Date(2006, 7, 31).getTime() - new Date(2006, 5, 1).getTime();
thee.lease = new Date(2042, 6, 12).getTime() - new Date(1970, 8, 25).getTime();

summer.complexion = 0xFFCC33;
thee.complexion = 0xFFCCCC;

Ever Wonder WHY Adware and Spam Remains Successful?

CDT Report Identifies Large Corporate Adware Funders:


Large well-respected companies are helping to fund the virulent spread of unwanted and potentially harmful "adware" by paying for advertisements generated by those programs, a new report by CDT finds. In "Following the Money: How Advertising Dollars Encourage Nuisance and Harmful Adware and What Can be Done to Reverse the Trend," CDT details how -- through a complicated network of intermediaries -- major advertisers pay to have their products and services advertised though pop-ups and other ads generated by unwanted advertising software or "adware." The report dissects the financial relationships behind those arrangements and identifies a number of mainstream companies that advertise through one particularly unscrupulous adware distributor.

Chef didn't quit according to friends

And the great conspiracy begins!

Chef didn't quit according to friends:


United States: Various news sources recently reported that Isaac Hayes had quit South Park in protest at the Scientology episode. Well, his friends are suspicious, and voiced their fears to Roger Friedman, a journalist who also knows the singer.



Isaac Hayes did not quit South Park. My sources say that someone quit it for him.




I can tell you that Hayes is in no position to have quit anything. Contrary to news reports, the great writer, singer and musician suffered a stroke on Jan. 17. At the time it was said that he was hospitalized and suffering from exhaustion...




...Friends in Memphis tell me that Hayes did not issue any statements on his own about South Park. They are mystified.




Isaac’s been concentrating on his recuperation for the last two and a half, three months, a close friend told me.




Hayes did not suffer paralysis, but the mild stroke may have affected his speech and his memory. He’s been having home therapy since it happened.




That certainly begs the question of who issued the statement that Hayes was quitting South Park now because it mocked Scientology four months ago. If it wasn’t Hayes, then who would have done such a thing?


Chef's Quitting ControversyFox News, 20th March 2006.



Additional tags: , , .



March 19, 2006

The Sun Online - News: Mickey the mouse trip

The Sun Online - News: Mickey the mouse trip:


A DORMOUSE called Mickey got high after nibbling at the stash of cannabis his student owner hid in his cage.
Police raided the 22-year-old suspected drug dealer’s flat — and found the pot after noticing Mickey lying on his back.

“He was very stoned,” a cop in Mellrichstadt, Bavaria, Germany, said. Mickey is recovering.

March 18, 2006

Fifty-seven per cent of American...

Gee. Perhaps I should find a personal reason for cutting these people off, or otherwise not giving ground to them. What fun.

Asinine Fifty-seven per cent of American...:


Fifty-seven per cent of American drivers say they have "personal reasons" for not using their turn signals, including a breathtaking seven per cent who say not using them "adds excitement" to driving

Finally, someone is protecting families of fallen vets

Imagine losing a loved one to the War in Iraq. I'm personally against the war and think it's an awful thing, but those who have died in this war deserve the utmost respect, as do their families. Imagine saying goodbye to your loved one at his or her funeral, and having screaming protesters telling you how God hates your loved one and how they deserved to die?

Finally, some are banding together to protect the families from the lunatics lead by "Rev." Phelps and his hate mongers. They are protecting funerals from the psychotic spotlight hogs bent on kicking those who are already down "in Jesus' name."

More power to those who try to save the families from further pain.

The Hutchinson News, Hutchinson, Kans. | Local News:


According to Terry "Darkhorse" Houck, the Patriot Guard Riders formed in Kansas when a few friends in Mulvane heard members of Westboro Baptist Church, Topeka, were planning to protest the funeral of a soldier killed in Iraq. Church members oppose an army that represents a country that accepts homosexuality.

"This isn't a motorcycle gang," he said. "You don't even need to have a motorcycle or know what one is to belong. It's the patriotic thing to do. A lot of the people come in cars with flags."

MPAA/RIAA/BSA: No breaking DRM, even if it's killing you (literally!)

MPAA/RIAA/BSA: No breaking DRM, even if it's killing you (literally!):


Cory Doctorow:

The BSA, MPAA and RIAA have officially objected to a proposal to let the public break DRM that "threatens critical infrastructure and endangers lives." They argue that if it becomes legal to break DRM that could kill you that it might harm their business:

In order to protect their ability to deploy this dangerous DRM, they want the Copyright Office to withhold from users permission to uninstall DRM software that actually does threaten critical infrastructure and endanger lives.

Link

(via EFF Minilinks)


March 17, 2006

Ways not to get a job at the CIA...

Amusing Ways not to get a job at the CIA...:


Ways not to get a job at the CIA: Tell the guard that God sent you, and then assume a fighting stance when he says go away

Dumbass Car thief participates in Bring ...

Dumbass Car thief participates in Bring ...:


Car thief participates in Bring Your Child to Work Day. Child gets to see police participate in Bring Your Daddy to Jail Day

ADIZ-Busting Pilot Plans Flight School Chain

Great. Now some idiot who "learned" how to fly from another idiot who couldn't read a sectional chart wants to teach others how to fly? Problem is, some people are stupid enough to believe his ridiculous claim that there isn't enough structure and will actually pay the fool money. Here's hoping he flunks his CFI tests.

ADIZ-Busting Pilot Plans Flight School Chain:


If you believe that it's best to learn from the mistakes of others, Troy Martin has a deal for you. If the name rings a bell it's because the 37-year-old was at the center of one of the most infamous navigational miscues in general aviation history. He was in the left seat of a Cessna 150 when he and Hayden L. "Jim" Scheaffer came within a mile or so of the White House in May 2005. Martin, a student pilot at the time, said the incident showed him that there are big holes in pilot training, holes his company, Martin Aviation Group, hopes to fill with what he says is his new approach to teaching people to fly. "There's just not a lot of structure today with how people learn to fly," he told the Lancaster, Penn., Sunday News, adding that there should be more government oversight to ensure pilots stay sharp.

Pilot Says He Was A Passenger In Crash Plane and His Dog Ate His Homework Too

Pilot Says He Was A Passenger In Crash Plane:


An Ohio flight instructor says the NTSB is wrong to assume that just because he was the only one aboard a plane with the proper credentials that he was the pilot in command. Matthew Sullivan, 24, of Dublin, Ohio, was sitting in the right front seat of a Bonanza when it crashed a mile short of Rock Hill/York County Airport in South Carolina in July. "I was strictly a passenger," Sullivan told the Rock Hill Herald. There were two other pilots on board, including the owner of the plane, and both died in the crash. The owner, Dr. Bill Coulman, sat in the back and Eric Johnson, whom Sullivan understood to be an experienced ex-military pilot, was in the left seat. But it was an IFR flight and only Sullivan held the instrument rating. He's also an instructor. And the story could be much more complicated.

Russian pilots protest bill to allow downing of hijacked planes

Russian pilots protest bill to allow downing of hijacked planes:


[JURIST Europe] Russian civil aviation pilots have drafted an address to President Vladimir Putin expressing concern over a provision in a new anti-terrorism bill allowing for the shooting-down of hijacked planes. The bill was passed last month [JURIST re

March 16, 2006

DHS scores F on cybersecurity report card | CNET News.com

DHS scores F on cybersecurity report card | CNET News.com:


The U.S. Department of Homeland Security earned failing marks in an annual computer security report card released Thursday by a congressional oversight committee.

That means the federal agency tasked with principal responsibility for the nation's cybersecurity has now received a grade of "F" from the U.S. House of Representatives Committee on Government Reform for three straight years--in other words, every year of its young existence.

It's not alone. Of the 24 departments on the scorecard (click for PDF), seven others, including Energy, Agriculture, Veterans Affairs, State, and Defense, also received failing marks for 2005. The scores for both Defense and State had hovered above passing-- at D and D+, respectively--in 2004. The overall grade across all government agencies was D+, unchanged from last year.

The shortcomings were little surprise but are nonetheless "appalling," said Gene Spafford, a Purdue University computer science professor who has long been urging greater cybersecurity research and more development dollars. He served on a presidential advisory committee that released a scathing report last year called "The Cyber Security Crisis: A Failure of Prioritization."

Google wins a court battle | CNET News.com

Google wins a court battle | CNET News.com:


In a legal win for Google, a federal judge dismissed a lawsuit filed by a writer who claimed the search giant infringed on his copyright by archiving a Usenet posting of his and providing excerpts from his Web site in search results.

The lawsuit was filed by Gordon Roy Parker, also known as Ray Gordon, who publishes his writings under the business name of Snodgrass Publishing Group. Parker, of Philadelphia, also posted a chapter of one of his e-books on the Usenet bulletin board network, a collection of thousands of discussion forums called newsgroups.

In his 2004 lawsuit against Google, Parker alleged that the search giant violated copyright law by automatically archiving a copy of his posting on Usenet and by providing excerpts from his Web site in search results.

However, the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania ruled on Friday that under case law, Google's activities, akin to those of an Internet Service Provider, do not constitute infringement (click for PDF of court documents).

March 15, 2006

Peacock family rethinking baby Drew's name

Peacock family rethinking baby Drew's name:


Piracy is as Piracy Does - JSQ

Piracy is as Piracy Does:

Interesting note here about how the MPAA is blaming piracy for 9% less revenues last year. Why is it always piracy? maybe Lucas is right; maybe the era of the blockbuster is over. If so, blaming the customers for demonstrating a market need for something else delivered differently won't solve the motion picture industry's malaise.

Me, I did go see Peter Jackson's blockbusters, but precious few others. There are good Hollywood films out there. I saw Crash twice: once on an airplane and once on a DVD I bought. I never considered going to a movie theater to see it. Why put up with talkative audience, overpriced drinks, and the possibility of being arrested for carrying a cell phone that can record movies?

The Internet is not the problem with movies. The big risk the motion picture industry is facing is in sticking too long with a business model that is outdated.

-jsq


It wasn't just windy on the ground....

WTOP: Northwest Says Passengers Were Ill, Not Injured:


CHANTILLY, Va. - There were no injuries aboard a plane that was diverted to Dulles Airport Wednesday. Northwest Airlines says three passengers who were taken to a hospital were ill.

Flight 230 was headed from Detroit to Reagan National Airport but landed instead at Dulles Airport shortly after 4 p.m.

The Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority says three people from the plane were taken to Reston Hospital.

He did not know the nature of the illnesses.

A statement from the airline says the plane landed at Dulles due to weather conditions in the D.C. area.

The National Weather Service had a wind advisory in effect for the Washington region until about 3:30 p.m. Wednesday, and said winds gusting to 40 miles-per-hour were expected through sunset.

CNN.com - One really long runway for rent -- call NASA - Mar 15, 2006

CNN.com - One really long runway for rent -- call NASA - Mar 15, 2006:


CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida (AP) -- For rent: 15,000-foot runway. Aircraft hangar included. Affordable. Historic. Scenic Florida location.

That's how a classified advertisement might read if NASA advertised its plan to make some money on the long air strip normally used by space shuttles.

As the shuttle program shuffles to its close in 2010, the pristine runway will be used less and less. No reason it should sit empty -- especially with commercial space flight about to take off.

"We've invited companies to test drive the shuttle landing facility," said Jim Ball, the NASA official who is spearheading private business ventures at Kennedy. "The key No. 1 thing we wish to demonstrate is that the Kennedy Space Center is willing to support missions other than space."

CDT Endorses Bill to Protect Political Speech Online

CDT Endorses Bill to Protect Political Speech Online:


CDT is urging Congress to pass a bill that would protect the rights of online political speakers, without creating large new loopholes in campaign finance law. Introduced by Reps. Charles Bass (R-N.H.) and Tom Allen (D-Maine), H.R. 4900 exempts the vast majority of bloggers and other individual Internet speakers from burdensome reporting requirements. In an opinion piece published in Roll Call, CDT argues that 4900 -- which was based on a CDT proposal -- is more complete than a competing measure addressing the same issue. The House is expected to take up the issue this week.

Judging the judge's Google leanings | News.blog | CNET News.com

Judging the judge's Google leanings | News.blog | CNET News.com:


A federal judge this week granted a partial victory to the federal government in its quest to get Google to turn over search results.

U.S. District Judge James Ware said he would likely give the Justice Department access to a portion of Google's index of Web sites, but not to its users' search terms. The Justice Department is looking for the data to help it back its case in a pending trial over an antipornography law.

Google had resisted the subpoena for search data (unlike some of its competitors), saying that the data would not be relevant and that the request would put consumers' privacy at risk.

The case afforded the blogosphere plenty of opportunity for outrage: People were angry with the government, with Google and with the judge.

Group Under Surveillance for Anti War Stance

So, the tip of the iceberg? Here we have a case of the "we are only watching known terrorists" being proven patently false. Since when does a political viewpoint amount to "being a known terrorist?" So why are the American people not railing against this type of crap?

Documents show FBI spied on anti-war group - The Olympian - Olympia, Washington:


WASHINGTON — An FBI counterterrorism unit monitored — and apparently infiltrated — a peace group in Pittsburgh that opposed the invasion of Iraq, according to internal agency documents released Tuesday.

The disclosure raised new questions about the extent to which federal authorities have been conducting surveillance operations against Americans since the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.

Previous revelations include FBI monitoring of environmental and animal rights organizations, scrutiny of anti-war organizations by a top-secret Pentagon program and eavesdropping by the National Security Agency on domestic communications without court authorization.

Federal officials insist that the efforts are legal, although the Pentagon has admitted that the top-secret TALON program mistakenly retained in its database reports on scores of anti-war protests and individuals as part of an effort to identify threats against defense facilities and personnel.

The documents released Tuesday were obtained by the American Civil Liberties Union under the Freedom of Information Act. They showed that the Joint Terrorism Task Force of the FBI’s Pittsburgh office conducted a secret investigation into the activities of the Thomas Merton Center beginning as early as Nov. 29, 2002, and continuing as late as March 2005.

William J. Crowley, a spokesman for the FBI’s Pittsburgh office, said that the monitoring of the center was legal and related to an ongoing investigation. He didn’t provide any details of the probe. He said that when the FBI found no link between its investigation and the center, it ended the surveillance.

The ACLU contends the documents are the first to “show conclusively” that an anti-war group was targeted for “its anti-war views.”


Very Scary for Bird Caretakers

If you have pet birds, it's pretty damn scary to think that a rampant virus roaming around the world might infect and kill them. And we aren't even sure what precautions to take against it to protect our feathered friends. And that's without even thinking about it mutating to humans.

CNN.com - Deadly bird flu strain hits Sweden - Mar 15, 2006:


STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP) -- The European Union's reference laboratory has confirmed Sweden's first outbreak of the deadly H5N1 strain of bird flu, Swedish authorities said Wednesday.

Experts in neighboring Denmark feared the disease had spread there, too, after a wild bird was found to be infected with an H5 subtype of bird flu. Further tests were needed to confirm it was H5N1.

CNN.com - College paper's editor fired over Mohammed  cartoons - Mar 15, 2006

CNN.com - College paper's editor fired over Mohammed  cartoons - Mar 15, 2006:


CHAMPAIGN, Illinois (AP) -- An editor who chose to publish caricatures of Prophet Mohammed in the University of Illinois' student-run newspaper last month has been fired, the paper's publisher announced Tuesday.

Acton H. Gorton was suspended, with pay, from The Daily Illini days after the Feb. 9 publication of the cartoons, which sparked Muslim protests around the world after they first appeared in a Danish newspaper.

At the time, Daily Illini publishers said the action was taken against Gorton not for publishing the cartoons, but for failing to discuss it with others in the newsroom first.

The Illini Media Co. board of directors, which comprises students and faculty, voted unanimously to fire the editor after a review "found that Gorton violated Daily Illini policies about thoughtful discussion of and preparation for the publication of inflammatory material," according to a statement.

Busted: debit card crime ring linked to OfficeMax breach

Busted: debit card crime ring linked to OfficeMax breach:


Xeni Jardin:

Snip from CNET report:

Law enforcement officials in New Jersey have arrested 14 people in connection with a crime spree that has forced banks across the nation to replace hundreds of thousands of debit cards. The suspects, all U.S. citizens, are accused of using stolen credit and debit card information to produce counterfeit cards that were used to make fraudulent purchases and withdrawals from card-holder accounts, Hudson County Prosecutor Edward DeFazio said. Most of the arrests were made during the past two weeks.

Some of the stolen credit card information came from the office-supply chain OfficeMax and other businesses, DeFazio told CNET News.com on Monday. "We had cooperation from the security people from many victimized businesses," he said.

Link



Encrypted VOIP from PGP creator Zimmermann: Zfone

Encrypted VOIP from PGP creator Zimmermann: Zfone:


Xeni Jardin:

Over on Slashdot, CmdrTaco shares timely and exciting news for law-abiding Americans who don't care for involuntary three-way calls with the NSA (it's big news for anyone in the world who likes to keep private conversations private):

Philip Zimmermann, creator of PGP wrote in to tell me about Zfone, his new system for encrypting any SIP VoIP voice stream. His first release is Mac & Linux only. I tested it with him using Gizmo as our client and it was pretty trivial to use. While it should work on most any SIP compatible VoIP client, he hopes that clients like OpenWengo and Gizmo will incorporate Zfone directly into the UI. Zfone has no centralization, and has been submitted to the IETF. He hasn't yet determined a license, but he believes strongly in releasing source code for all encryption products. A windows client is forthcoming.

Link.

ETA on a Windows XP release: mid-April. And on philzimmermann.com, Philip explains: 

I think it's better than the other approaches to secure VoIP, because it achieves security without reliance on a PKI, key certification, trust models, certificate authorities, or key management complexity that bedevils the email encryption world. It also does not rely on SIP signaling for the key management, and in fact does not rely on any servers at all. It performs its key agreements and key management in a purely peer-to-peer manner over the RTP packet stream. It interoperates with any standard SIP phone, but naturally only encrypts the call if you are calling another Zfone client. This new protocol has been submitted to the IETF as a proposal for a public standard, to enable interoperability of SIP endpoints from different vendors. 

 Link. (Thanks, Jake Appelbaum!)



9th Circuit: 'Bong Hits 4 Jesus' Banner Was Free Speech

9th Circuit: 'Bong Hits 4 Jesus' Banner Was Free Speech:


An Alaska teen who held up a sign reading "Bong Hits 4 Jesus" when the Olympic torch relay passed by his school in 2002 has won a court battle over whether his sign was an expression of free speech. The principal of Juneau-Douglas High School suspended Joseph Fredrick, then 18, for 10 days, saying the banner violated school anti-drug policies. Fredrick sued the school but lost in federal district court. But on Friday, a three-member panel of the 9th Circuit overturned the lower court order.

March 14, 2006

Angel Flight Pilot and Pax Killed in California

CNN.com - Crash kills former game show host, wife - Mar 13, 2006:


SANTA MONICA, California (AP) -- A former TV game show host and his wife were killed Monday morning when their small plane crashed into Santa Monica Bay, authorities said. Rescue crews were searching for a third person also aboard the plane.

The bodies of Peter Tomarken, 63, host of the hit 1980s game show "Press Your Luck," and his wife, Kathleen Abigail Tomarken, 41, were identified by the Los Angeles County coroner's office.

The plane was on its way to San Diego to ferry a medical patient to the UCLA Medical Center, said Doug Griffith, a spokesman for Angel Flight West, a nonprofit which provides free air transportation for needy patients.

Fairfax Supervisors in Line for 27% Raise

My taxes went up over 20% and they're getting a raise? Seems a bit off, eh?

Fairfax Supervisors in Line for 27% Raise:


Fairfax's county executive yesterday proposed giving his bosses, members of the County Board of Supervisors, a 27 percent raise starting in 2008 after the next election.

NOOOOO! This is AWFUL!

Soul singer Isaac Hayes quits "South Park" - Yahoo! News:


LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Soul music veteran Isaac Hayes, the voice of the libidinous character Chef on the satiric cable TV cartoon "South Park," said on Monday he was leaving the show, citing its "inappropriate ridicule" of religion.
"There is a place in this world for satire, but there is a time when satire ends and intolerance and bigotry toward religious beliefs and others begins," Hayes said in a statement issued through his spokesman in New York.
Hayes, 63, a follower of the Church of Scientology, did not mention a "South Park" episode that aired last fall poking fun at Scientology and some of its celebrity adherents, including actor Tom Cruise.>
Rather, the statement said the show's parody of religion is part of what Hayes sees as a "growing insensitivity toward personal spiritual beliefs" in the media generally, including the recent controversy over a Danish cartoon depiction of the Muslim Prophet Mohammad.
The soul singer, who became the first black composer to win an Academy Award for best song with his theme to the film "Shaft," said he formally asked to be released from his contract with "South Park," on the Comedy Central cable channel.
A spokesman for the Viacom Inc.-owned network said producers of the show and its creators, Trey Parker and Matt Stone, had agreed to not to "enforce" Hayes' contract.

America’s Blinders

I've often thought that much of America indeed is wearing blinders; unable or unwilling to seek out differing opinions, references for things they read, etc. This was kind of thrown at me on a mailing list in which someone posted yet another version of yet another Internet hoax. When I suggested that perhaps people check the validity of things before posting them to lists, I was told that this was silly, and basically instead we should get riled up and take action whether or not it is something "real." This brought to mind much of what is happening across Europe with people rioting and demonstrating over things that aren't what they first may appear.

So, I offer the below article to those who will research its validity before believing every word :-)

America’s Blinders:


America’s Blinders
By Howard Zinn, April 2006

Now that most Americans no longer believe in the war, now that they no longer trust Bush and his Administration, now that the evidence of deception has become overwhelming (so overwhelming that even the major media, always late, have begun to register indignation), we might ask: How come so many people were so easily fooled?



Proposed New Jersey Laws Would Chill Free Speech

Proposed New Jersey Laws Would Chill Free Speech:


EFF and Other Groups Call for Bills' Withdrawal

San Francisco - A diverse coalition of companies, public interest organizations, and legal scholars, including the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), craigslist, Public Citizen, the US Internet Industry Association (USIIA), the Center for Democracy and Technology (CDT) and Professors Lyrissa C. Barnett Lidsky and Jennifer M. Urban, sent an open letter today to three New Jersey assemblymen, urging them to withdraw their support from two bills designed to eliminate anonymous online speech.

Assembly bills A1327 and A2623 would require Internet service providers to record users' identities and reveal them in any claim of defamation. While aimed at curbing online bad actors, the bills instead run afoul of the First Amendment—which protects the right to speak anonymously—as well as a federal law designed to protect speech in online fora. The bills would require identification of an online poster before the facts were resolved, leading to a flood of unsubstantiated claims designed simply to unmask online speakers.

"Protecting anonymity is vital to maintaining the diversity of viewpoints on the Internet," said EFF Staff Attorney Kurt Opsahl. "Keeping online debates robust enables democracy, even if it allows name-calling and strongly worded opinions about political figures."


The open letter calls for Assemblymen Peter J. Biodi, Wilfredo Caraballo, and Upendra J. Chivukula not to waste taxpayer resources in defending these bills that will inevitably be struck down in court. New Jersey courts are already handling claims of defamation online in a careful and constitutionally appropriate manner, balancing a speaker's anonymity rights with the merits of the plaintiff's claim. The well-established standard in New Jersey and elsewhere for deciding whether to order the identification of anonymous defendants has functioned well to separate ill-founded lawsuits from cases in which identification is appropriate.

As evidence of this balanced approach, the open letter points to the cases available for review on a web site maintained by the Cyberslapp Coalition—several of whose members signed the open letter—at www.cyberslapp.org. The Cyberslapp web site provides briefs, evidence, and opinions from nearly four dozen "John Doe" cases in which the standard has been discussed and applied. The site, which permits search both by keyword and by state of decision, is provided free of charge as a resource for litigants on both sides of Doe disputes.

For the full text of the open letter:
http://eff.org/Privacy/Anonymity/NewJerseyLetter.pdf

The Cyberslapp Coalition:
http://www.cyberslapp.org

Contact:

Kurt Opsahl
Staff Attorney
Electronic Frontier Foundation
kurt@eff.org


So, What Do You Think?

What do you think of the new look for Psycho Sensei? Like it? Like the old one better? Don't care? Spit out your thoughts in comments.

March 13, 2006

firstamendmentcenter.org: commentary

firstamendmentcenter.org: commentary:


Let me tell you about a truly unhealthy relationship. The symptoms are well-documented: One partner skulks about suspiciously, distrustful, secretive, evasive, conversing with others out of earshot, making important decisions unilaterally, spying on the other partner, retaliating in anger when questioned or challenged.

This is what’s going on right now between American citizens and their government. It is not a relationship that Oprah or Dr. Phil can fix. But it must be fixed. Until both partners in this relationship are restored to equal footing, democracy suffers.

As in all dysfunctional relationships, communication is the problem. Over the last few years, the information flow between the government and the public has become increasingly torturous. When voters and taxpayers seek access to government information, they usually are in for an ordeal and disappointment. When federal officials share information voluntarily, it often has a whiff of politics accompanying it.

Compulsory and centralised - UK picks hardest sell for ID cards

Compulsory and centralised - UK picks hardest sell for ID cards:


Study finds scheme design hits public's hot buttons

Collateral Damage And Public Relations

Collateral Damage And Public Relations:


DC Pilots, a well-connected and media-savvy online association of those most directly affected by the ADIZ and other Washington-area flying challenges, was the first to notice the transcript's absence. From there, word spread quickly until AOPA was motivated by the event to file a Freedom of Information request to have the transcript (the whole thing) put "back in public view." AOPA President Phil Boyer is shouting his disdain from the rooftops. "How ridiculous can you get?" Boyer said. "These were public meetings covered by the news media. Nothing was said that wasn't already in the more than 21,000 written comments. Do they honestly think security information was disclosed during the public meetings?" As of Friday, it seems the TSA doesn't.

What We're (Not) Allowed To Say In Public

What We're (Not) Allowed To Say In Public:


If there was one speaker at the meeting who stood out in the minds of those attending, it was Lt. Cmdr. Tom Bush, a Navy F/A-18 pilot from Oceana Naval Air Station who regularly flies his Mooney to Washington on Navy business. It's possible that Lt. Cmdr. Bush (no relation) has some insights or operational experience that give him a more holistic view of the ADIZ, but, speaking as a private citizen at the hearing, even he didn't appear to give away any state secrets. He did offer some quotable comments ("Freedom and security are polar opposites, and I am not willing to give up my freedom for the sake of terrorists") but NORAD seems to have focused its attention on his more tangible calculation, as presented to the meeting, that while on an approved approach to Dulles, he could make a turn and have his Mooney over the White House in four minutes.

March 12, 2006

Supreme Court Profiles

Supreme Court Profiles:


Remember the ruling that ended the policy of male-only U.S. military academies? Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg wrote it. The ruling that struck down the Communications Decency Act? She wrote that one, too. Check out my profile of Justice Ginsburg, the...

An Issue Quite Close to Home

As blogging becomes more and more prevalent, and more individuals are putting voice to their thoughts and opinions, this issue is coming up again and again. In my case, an associate brought to management the political and religious content of my blogs, and was concerned that potential clients would be offended, despite the fact that I keep much of my personal life separate from the professional.

With great power comes great responsibility. Now that we (the individuals who choose to blog) are usurping the role of the media as a preferred method for obtaining news and information, we have to realize that more than just our small circle of friends who think we're cool are going to read our words. Some, especially when non-standard opinions are professed, will become "offended" or otherwise outraged. They may then try to silence the message, by threatening (or actually terminating) your job, by writing to the administrators of your blog (if that isn't you), or sometimes by DMCA takedowns, etc.

We have to be ready for these consequences. Unfortunately, there are still those who feel threatened by opposing views or different religions, and they may play "dirty" in attempts to get them removed from the eyes of the impressionable masses. Some of us have the luxury of fighting back. Others do not. Govern yourselves accordingly.

Bloggers: Use caution | News.blog | CNET News.com:


AUSTIN, Texas--Laina Dawes and Elaine Liner are pretty sure they were fired for blogging. It's not 100 percent certain, of course, because no one ever told them so officially, but the evidence seems solid.

Dawes, who used to work in a Toronto law firm, and Liner, who was an adjunct professor at Southern Methodists University, were two of the panelists for "We got naked, now what" at the South by Southwest conference here Saturday.

The talk was a frank discussion of how bloggers who write about both their personal and private lives can navigate the waters of honesty and disclosure and still remain employed.

Thus, Dawes and Liner were the poster children on display for what can go wrong, even when bloggers attempt to discuss issues in their lives and related to their jobs under the cover of anonymity, as both had done.

One lesson: people can figure out who you are, even if you think you're being clever and writing under a pseudonym. That's what happened to Dawes and Liner, as both said their bosses somehow discovered their identities as they wrote about race issues and criticisms of SMU, respectively.



A peek into the future

Quite the interesting thing. Years ago, before the formation of ICANN, when the intellectual property cartel was fighting to keep the Internet to themselves, the Domain Name Rights Coalition along with other enlightened groups and individuals, argued that the Internet is the greatest marketplace of ideas ever created. For the first time, the voice of the individual could achieve as much recognition as the voice of powerful publishers. This concept, over 10 years later, is still frightening the cartel, but it is catching on. The revolution is in progress, and there's no stopping it.

A peek into the future:


From politics to movie-making, from NASA to NASCAR, exciting new changes are occurring -- and so is the very process of innovation. For one thing, corporations and universities no longer dominate the world of new ideas. Instead, we're living in an age of individual innovation spurred on by the Internet as well as a form of group project best represented by resources like Wikipedia, the online encyclopedia that is edited by the masses instead of an elite cadre of professional editors.

This is significantly cool

I really like this.... Finally someone has done some aggregating of nifty stuff and put together this lovely blog called Strange New Products. Have at it.

The importance of privacy hits home to the CIA

In a world where privacy is being worn away by the very government that these agents work for (as well as by corporations who use our private information to make their fortunes), it is of little wonder that things that should remain secret are easily found.

BBC NEWS | World | Americas | Internet blows CIA agents' cover:


The Chicago Tribune says it has compiled a list of 2,653 CIA employees, just by searching the internet.
The newspaper said it gathered the information from online services that compile public data, that any fee-paying subscriber can access.

It did not publish the names, at the CIA's request. Many of the agents are believed to be covert. The paper also located two dozen "secret" facilities.

A CIA spokeswoman admitted the internet had scuppered some of its methods.

"Cover is a complex issue that is more complex in the internet age," said Jennifer Dyck.

As if risking your life isn't bad enough...