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August 30, 2007

I love these silly tricks :-)

Palladium-Item - www.pal-item.com - Richmond, Indiana:


HILLIARD, Ohio — A high school student who tricked football fans from a crosstown rival school into holding up squares of construction paper at a stadium that together spelled out, "We Suck,'' was suspended for the prank, students said.

Kyle Garchar, a senior at Hilliard Davidson High School in suburban Columbus, said he spent about 20 hours over three days plotting the trick, which was captured on video and posted on the video-sharing Web site YouTube.

Garchar said he was inspired by a similar prank pulled by Yale students in 2004, when Harvard fans were duped into holding up cards with the same message.

At the end of the video, Garchar wryly thanks the 800 parents, staff and alumni from Hillard Darby High School who raised the cards at the start of the third quarter during last Friday's game played at Crew Stadium, home of Columbus' Major League Soccer team.

"It couldn't have been done without you,'' reads the closing frame of the video, which had been viewed more than 4,400 times by Thursday.

Garchar, 17, first went to Crew Stadium to take a picture of the seats. Then he created a grid to plan how the message would be spelled out once fans in three sections held up either a black or white piece of construction paper.

Directions left on stadium seats instructed fans to check that the number listed on their papers matched their seat numbers. Darby supporters were told the message would read "Go Darby.''

"It was tedious,'' Garchar said. "I didn't really think it was going to work.''

But it did, and everyone at Hilliard Davidson has been talking about the trick, said Jordan Moore, a junior.

"That was the ultimate in-your-face,'' he said. "I think it was ingenious.''

Davidson Principal John Bandow had told students he expected them to show sportsmanship at Friday's football game, which Darby won 21-10 in the first meeting between the two schools.

Bandow called Garchar to his office Monday morning, and gave him three days of in-school suspension and also banned him from participating in school activities for a semester, students said. Two other students who helped organize the trick received the same punishment.

Hilliard schools spokeswoman Michelle Wray couldn't confirm the students' punishment today because the Federal Education Rights and Privacy Act forbids the release of student disciplinary information.

But Jen Trimmer, 17, one of the students involved in the prank, said the suspensions for the three students began Wednesday and were to end Friday.

"We weren't expecting it to be such a severe punishment,'' she said today. "We just thought it was all in good fun.''

Stephen Bell, a Darby freshman, was at the stadium but missed the big moment.

"It was sneaky, knifing and down right clever,'' he said Wednesday. "But we'll get them back.''

August 28, 2007

Har har....it's just Q having fun again....

Boffins bend space and time to measure neutron star:


Einstein shouts 'told you so' though tear in space-time


Astronomers have caught three neutron stars in the act of distorting space-time, just as Einstein predicted. Bendy space-time has been seen around black holes before, but this is the first time astronomers have seen it around any other body.…



August 26, 2007

Dumbass of the day....

FOXNews.com - Passenger Arrested After Trying to Open Door During Flight - Local News | News Articles | National News | US News:


Police and Transportation Security Administration staff met Flight 514 after the plane landed in New York City and took the man into custody, said Frontier spokesman Joe Hodas.
Hodas said the man, whose name was not released, would not have been able to open the door even if he had not been subdued. "You need special training to open the door," he said.
There were 128 passengers and five crew members on the plane, Hodas said.
Passenger Bobby Vigil of Estes Park told KUSA-TV in Denver that the man had been acting strangely. Vigil said he and other passengers helped a flight attendant tie the man to his seat with duct tape.
"The whole rest of the flight, all the way in, he was yelling and trying to bite the tape, and they ended up restraining him with an extra lap belt," said Vigil.

August 25, 2007

Rapture is STILL not an exit strategy

Not so fast, Christian soldiers - Los Angeles Times:


Maybe what the war in Iraq needs is not more troops but more religion. At least that's the message the Department of Defense seems to be sending.

Last week, after an investigation spurred by the Military Religious Freedom Foundation, the Pentagon abruptly announced that it would not be delivering "freedom packages" to our soldiers in Iraq, as it had originally intended.

What were the packages to contain? Not body armor or home-baked cookies. Rather, they held Bibles, proselytizing material in English and Arabic and the apocalyptic computer game "Left Behind: Eternal Forces" (derived from the series of post-Rapture novels), in which "soldiers for Christ" hunt down enemies who look suspiciously like U.N. peacekeepers.

The packages were put together by a fundamentalist Christian ministry called Operation Straight Up, or OSU. Headed by former kickboxer Jonathan Spinks, OSU is an official member of the Defense Department's "America Supports You" program. The group has staged a number of Christian-themed shows at military bases, featuring athletes, strongmen and actor-turned-evangelist Stephen Baldwin. But thanks in part to the support of the Pentagon, Operation Straight Up has now begun focusing on Iraq, where, according to its website (on pages taken down last week), it planned an entertainment tour called the "Military Crusade."

Apparently the wonks at the Pentagon forgot that Muslims tend to bristle at the word "crusade" and thought that what the Iraq war lacked was a dose of end-times theology.

In the end, the Defense Department realized the folly of participating in any Operation Straight Up crusade. But the episode is just another example of increasingly disturbing, and indeed unconstitutional, relationships being forged between the U.S. military and private evangelical groups.

Take, for instance, the recent scandal involving Christian Embassy, a group whose expressed purpose is to proselytize to military personnel, diplomats, Capitol Hill staffers and political appointees. In a shocking breach of security, Defense Department officials allowed a Christian Embassy film crew to roam the corridors of the Pentagon unescorted while making a promotional video featuring high-ranking officers and political appointees. (Christian Embassy, which holds prayer meetings weekly at the Pentagon, is so entrenched that Air Force Maj. Gen. John J. Catton Jr. said he'd assumed the organization was a "quasi-federal entity.")

The Pentagon's inspector general recently released a report recommending unspecified "corrective action" for those officers who appeared in the video for violating Defense Department regulations. But, in a telling gesture, the report avoided any discussion of how allowing an evangelical group to function within the Defense Department is an obvious violation of the establishment clause of the 1st Amendment.

The extent to which such relationships have damaged international goodwill toward the U.S. is beyond measure. As the inspector general noted, a leading Turkish newspaper, Sabah, published an article on Air Force Maj. Gen. Peter Sutton, who is the U.S. liaison to the Turkish military -- and who appeared in the Christian Embassy video. The article described Christian Embassy as a "radical fundamentalist sect," perhaps irreparably damaging Sutton's primary job objective of building closer ties to the Turkish General Staff, which has expressed alarm at the influence of fundamentalist Christian groups inside the U.S. military.

Our military personnel swear an oath to protect and defend the Constitution, not the Bible. Yet by turning a blind eye to OSU and Christian Embassy activities, the Pentagon is, in essence, endorsing their proselytizing. And sometimes it's more explicit than that.

That certainly was the case with Army Lt. Gen. William "Jerry" Boykin, deputy undersecretary of Defense for intelligence. The Pentagon put him in charge of the hunt for Osama bin Laden and Al Qaeda in 2003. The same year, Boykin was found to be touring American churches, where he gave speeches -- in uniform -- casting the Iraq war in end-times terms. "We're in is a spiritual battle," he told one congregation in Oregon. "Satan wants to destroy this nation . . . and he wants to destroy us as a Christian army." The story wound up in newspapers, magazines and on "60 Minutes." And, of course, it was reported all over the Muslim world. The Pentagon reacted with a collective shrug.

American military and political officials must, at the very least, have the foresight not to promote crusade rhetoric in the midst of an already religion-tinged war. Many of our enemies in the Mideast already believe that the world is locked in a contest between Christianity and Islam. Why are our military officials validating this ludicrous claim with their own fiery religious rhetoric?

It's time to actively strip the so-called war on terror of its religious connotations, not add to them. Because religious wars are not just ugly, they are unwinnable. And despite what Operation Straight Up and its supporters in the Pentagon may think is taking place in Iraq, the Rapture is not a viable exit strategy.

Michael L. Weinstein, founder of the Military Religious Freedom Foundation, wrote "With God on Our Side: One Man's War Against an Evangelical Coup in America's Military." Reza Aslan, author of "No god but God: The Origins, Evolution, and Future of Islam," is on the MRFF advisory board.


When DRM goes nuts....via Boing Boing

Microsoft WGA servers down; all XP and Vista installs being marked as counterfeit:


Xeni Jardin:

BB reader David McBride says,

DRM bites again: the Microsoft Windows Genuine Advantage servers (which every XP and Vista install phones home to) all failed sometime earlier today.

The result? Every single Windows XP and Vista installation -- except possibly those with volume license keys -- is being marked as counterfeit when it tries to check in. Installations which are flagged as counterfeit switch to a "reduced functionality mode" which results in features like Aero and DirectX being disabled.

So far, the only public response from Microsoft has been indirectly via their technical support forums, where a user has posted the following snippet from an email he received from MS's technical support address:

Thank you for your response.

I’m sorry to inform you that the Windows Genuine server might be down for few days. I have escalate the issue to our Genuine team, kindly try to validate again on Tuesday 28 Aug 2007.

Thank you for contacting Microsoft Technical Support.

Link

August 24, 2007

Ya know....sometimes you get what you deserve

Paying For Your Own Funeral - August 24, 2007:


AUGUST 24--Mike Nifong, the disgraced Duke rape case prosecutor was sent the below bill today by the North Carolina State Bar for the costs associated with the hearing that resulted in him losing his law license. The fees, which total $8897.71, range from $3000.00 for court reporter services to $43.17 for postage and $4.16 in sale tax. But in what might sting even more than when his dog ate his law license, Nifong will have to come up with the $2523.05 it cost for the disciplinary hearing commission to take his own deposition. The money is due at the bar's Raleigh office within 90 days.

This wasn't a good day to give up sniffing glue

Glue fumes lead to plane emergency:


The pilot of a FedEx plane declared an emergency Thursday morning as he was approaching University Park Airport, reporting that he had fumes in the cockpit and hazardous materials on board. The plane landed safely and the pilot, who was not identified, was not hurt.

The pilot first reported the problem to air traffic controllers in New York, when his small cargo plane was 20 to 30 minutes away from University Park Airport, said airport Associate Director Ed Foster. The county was notified at 8:05 a.m., when the plane was 15 minutes out.

The airport responded at Level 3, its highest level, because of the presence of hazardous materials -- a paint inhibitor used in mixing paint and a strong glue for human bones used in medical procedures. The bone glue was the source of the fumes, Foster said.

Firefighters, police and other emergency personnel -- including Penn State's hazardous materials crew -- responded to the airport. Emergency responders reported lingering fumes in the plane.

Foster said a parcel of up to two cubic feet in size contained 10 to 12 boxes of the bone cement, but one box was not sealed tightly so that fumes were able to escape.

He said the Cessna 208B -- a fixed-wing, single-engine plane registered to Federal Express in Memphis, Tenn. -- was directed to a spot on an old and unused runway to be checked out.

FedEx spokeswoman Sally Davenport said the feeder plane -- which FedEx uses to get to small airports -- departed from Pittsburgh early Thursday morning bound for Johnstown Airport, but bad weather in Johnstown-Cambria County forced it to divert to University Park Airport.

She said the pilot, whom she said she could not identify, followed standard operating procedures by declaring an emergency upon detecting fumes in the cockpit. She said the pilot is employed by Wiggins Airways.

A spokeswoman for Wiggins, a New Hampshire-based company that operates a fleet of feeder airplanes for FedEx, refused to identify the pilot and said the company would have no comment.

Davenport said it is the shipper's responsibility to ensure hazardous materials are packaged safely. She said FedEx will investigate the parcel packaging. She refused to identify the shipper.

County Administrator Tim Boyde said the emergency response did reveal a small glitch: Although the airport never closed, emergency response vehicles traveled across the operating runway on the assumption that it was closed.

"We realize that's something that needs to be incorporated into the training" for emergency responders, Boyde said.

So much for "fair use" eh?

World's biggest theater chain pressured prosecutor to charge teen...:


Xeni Jardin:

... for capturing 20 seconds of "Transformers" on her Canon Powershot, so she could share a video snippet with her kid brother. David Kravetz at Wired News blogs:

Arlington County's top prosecutor, Richard E. Trodden, tells THREAT LEVEL he was pressured by Regal Entertainment Group, the world's largest movie exhibitor, to prosecute a 19-year-old Virginia woman for filming 20 seconds of Transformers.

"What they were saying, 'Could you get her to admit that it wasn't right.' They wanted to make sure the message gets out," Trodden said in a telephone interview Wednesday. "This was kind of trying to address the concerns of the theater people, and the fact that it was not an outrageous crime."

Trodden, pictured [here], said he spoke with Randy Smith, Regal's general counsel. Messages left for Smith at the company's Knoxville, Tennessee headquarters were not immediately returned.

Jhannet Sejas, 19, pleaded guilty last week in Arlington County General District Court to one misdemeanor count of filming a motion picture in a movie house owned by Regal Cinemas. The statute, like the 37 others nationwide sponsored by the motion picture industry, deems filmgoers guilty for filming a "portion" or a "portion thereof" of a movie.

Link.


August 23, 2007

Controller Errors At Memphis Raise Concerns

Controller Errors At Memphis Raise Concerns:


Six operational errors over six days at the Memphis Air Route Traffic Control Center last week were due to fatigue and training errors caused by inadequate staffing, according to the National Air Traffic Controllers Association (NATCA). "Memphis Center was authorized by the FAA to have 354 controllers on staff for a safe staffing level," NATCA said in a news release on Tuesday. "Currently, there are 249 fully certified controllers staffing six areas 24 hours a day, seven days a week. These same controllers are also responsible for the on-the-job training for the 63 trainees." FAA spokeswoman Laura Brown told AVweb that the "authorized staffing" numbers cited by NATCA are out of date. "We have new staffing ranges, and 244 to 298 is the staffing range for that facility," she said.

Ok...just WTF?

So here we are, occupying a Muslim country, and playing games about blowing away the 'Antichrist'? Why would anyone think that it's an ok thing to send religious games to troops? Of course, this was going to be CHRISTIAN religious games, and you can be certain those of other faiths blowing away unbelievers would not even have been considered.

ACSBlog: The Blog of the American Constitution Society: News Round-up: Religion, Spy Satellites, Death Penalty, National Security:


ABC News reported "Plans by a Christian group to send an evangelical video game to U.S. troops in Iraq were abruptly halted yesterday by the Department of Defense after ABC News inquired about the program." (H/T Religion Clause) From RC:

The Department of Defense has stopped plans by a Christian evangelical group to send soldiers in Iraq a video game in which Christian believers fight the Antichrist in the Battle of Armageddon.

I find this highly amusing - Go to the link to see the chart

Think Progress » SURVEY: Daily Show/Colbert Viewers Most Knowledgable, Fox News Viewers Rank Lowest:


A new study by the Pew Research Study shows that viewers of the Daily Show and the Colbert Report have the highest knowledge of national and international affairs, while Fox News viewers rank nearly dead last:

Despite significant technology shifts, however, Pew found that “today’s citizens are about as able to name their leaders, and are about as aware of major news events, as was the public nearly 20 years ago.”

The results about Fox News echo findings of previous surveys. In 2003, University of Maryland researchers studied the public’s belief in three false claims — that Iraq possessed WMD, that Iraq was involved in 9/11, and that there was international support for the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq.

The researchers stated, “The extent of Americans’ misperceptions vary significantly depending on their source of news. Those who receive most of their news from Fox News are more likely than average to have misperceptions.” Fox News viewers were “three times more likely than the next nearest network to hold all three misperceptions.”

Serious blast from the past....

George Wallace's Shooter to Be Released:


BALTIMORE (AP) - The man who shot Alabama Gov. George Wallace during a 1972 presidential campaign stop, leaving him paralyzed and out of the race, will be released from prison this year, an official said Thursday.

Arthur Bremer is scheduled for release Dec. 16 but likely will be out earlier as he continues to accumulate credits for good behavior and for working as a prison clerk, said Rae Sheeley, a case management specialist at the Maryland Correctional Institute-Hagerstown, where Bremer is being held.

Bremer was sentenced to 53 years in prison for shooting Wallace and three bystanders at a campaign stop in Laurel, Md., on May 15, 1972.

He has served 35 years of that sentence and turns 57 years old this week.

A bullet lodged in Wallace's spine, leaving his legs paralyzed, and he was forced to abandon his presidential bid. Wallace was elected to two more terms as Alabama's governor before his death in 1998.

Hopefully he'll get MORE than 7 years in jail....

AOL ID thief faces 7 years | The Register:


A 23 year-old faces up to seven years imprisonment after pleading guilty to targeting AOL members via an elaborate and long running phishing scam.

Michael Dolan, formerly of West Haven, Connecticut and North Miami Beach, Florida, admitted stealing names, credit card details and social security numbers from AOL members. He pleaded guilty this week to one count of conspiracy to commit fraud and one count of aggravated identity theft as part of a plea bargaining agreement with US prosecutors.

From 2002 until 2006, Dolan used unspecified software to steal AOL screen names from chat rooms. He then sent Trojan horse malware disguised as electronic greeting cards from Hallmark to these prospective marks. The malicious software prevented users with infected machines from logging onto their accounts without giving out personal information, including credit card numbers and social security details. Dolan and his partners in crime used this harvested data to make fraudulent online purchases. The details were also used to make up counterfeit cards which were used to steal money from ATMs and make purchases at petrol stations and the like.

It's unclear how much Dolan and his unidentified cohorts made via the scam.

The scheme was unearthed after an investigation involving West Haven Police Department and US ISP EarthLink’s abuse team. Following his guilty plea, Dolan faces up to five years in jail for fraud and a further mandatory two years imprisonment for aggravated ID theft. He also faces probation following his release and fines of up to $250,000. A sentencing hearing before US District Judge Alvin W. Thompson is scheduled for 14 November.

Dolan's previous form counted against him. Dolan was put on probation for two years in May 2004 after pleading guilty to hacking offences. He failed to keep appointments with his probation officer, made numerous trips out of Connecticut without permission, including at least one trip overseas. Dolan was jailed for nine months in April 2006 for violating the terms of his probation.

DVD piriates are obviously vicious criminals....

Parking Spot Fight: Man Stabs Driver With Screwdriver:


SILVER SPRING, Md. - One man is repeatedly stabbed with a screwdriver. The other faces assault charges. The two were arguing over a parking spot.
Here's what police say happened in the 900 block of Bonifant Street in Silver Spring.

Edward Banya, 42, of Hyattsville, saw the 28-year-old Silver Spring man parked in a spot, it appeared the man was ready to pull out. Police say Banya thought the driver was slow to leave the spot.

The driver, whose identity the police have not released, was waiting for someone.

The two men started arguing. Banya grabbed a screwdriver and stabbed the man over and over again in the hand and torso, police say. The wounds, according to Montgomery County Police spokesman Officer Rodney Barnes, were superficial. The man was released from the hospital Tuesday night.

Police charged Banya with first-degree assault and reckless endangerment. He also faces copyright offenses after police found thousands of pirated DVD movies in his car.

August 22, 2007

What? A patent could be invalid? *boggle*

EFF Challenges Bogus Patent on Internet Subdomains:


Illegitimate Patent Used to Threaten Website Hosting Companies

San Francisco - The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) is challenging a bogus patent on Internet subdomains that has been used to threaten small businesses and innovators.

Ideaflood, a self-proclaimed "intellectual property holding company," used this illegitimate patent to demand payment from website hosting companies that offer virtual, personalized subdomains -- like "action.eff.org" for the parent domain "eff.org." But in a reexamination request filed with the United States Patent and Trademark Office (PTO) today, EFF and Rick Mc Leod of Klarquist Sparkman, LLP show that the method Ideaflood claims to have invented was well known before the patent was issued. In fact, website developers were having public discussions about how to create these virtual subdomains on an Apache developer mailing list for more than a year before Ideaflood made its patent claim.

"This illustrates how an open-source project can establish a public record of technology development and thwart invalid patents," said EFF Senior Staff Attorney Jason Schultz. "The public discussions on the Apache and other mailing lists have shown that Ideaflood's patent claims were without merit and that the patent should be revoked before it causes any more damage to innovation on the Internet."

The companies that Ideaflood threatened include Freehomepage.com, T35 Hosting, and LiveJournal, a social networking site where each of its three million users have their own subdomain. The patent has since been reassigned to a company called Hoshiko, LLC.

"Our patent system is intended to encourage innovation, not damage it by encroaching on the public domain," said Rick Mc Leod, who drafted EFF's petition. "Unfortunately, in recent years the PTO has been deluged with applications, making it difficult to determine whether many patents should be issued or rejected. When a 'bad' patent targets something as ephemeral as the Internet, it can be even more difficult to get that patent invalidated. Fortunately, a diligent, prior art searcher sent us a key reference."

The challenge to the Ideaflood patent is part of EFF's Patent Busting Project, which combats the chilling effects that bad patents have on public and consumer interests. So far, the project has killed one bogus patent and requested the reexamination of two others.

For the full reexamination request:
http://www.eff.org/patent/wanted/ideaflood/reexam/ReqReexam_746.pdf

For more on EFF's Patent Busting Project:
http://www.eff.org/patent

Contacts:

Jason Schultz
Senior Staff Attorney
Electronic Frontier Foundation
jason@eff.org

Rick Mc Leod
Klarquist Sparkman, LLP
rick.mcleod@klarquist.com


FCC Must Protect Innovation, Privacy in e911 Rulemaking

FCC Must Protect Innovation, Privacy in e911 Rulemaking:


CDT, the Electronic Frontier Foundation and Sun Microsystems this week urged the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to be cautious in considering an "automatic" location requirement for VoIP providers for use during e911 emergency calls. In comments filed today with the FCC, the groups noted that while the e911 system is a vital part of our public safety net, VoIP services are unable to provide "automatic" location information (without user input), and a requirement that they do so would harm innovation and competition. The comments also cautioned that some proposed solutions to address the VoIP location requirement would destroy users' privacy.

Ok folks...does this make any sense?

I can't board a plane without ID, but my daughter can? She can also fly across the country with a one way ticket paid in cash, and when I track her down she doesn't have to come home? But I'd better not try to bring an open water bottle on board, and certainly must part with my tweezers. WTF?

Airline, TSA allow minor to fly south without permission:


JUNEAU, Alaska -- A 15-year-old Juneau girl was allowed to board a jet and fly south to Seattle without her parents' permission.

Elise Pringle says she wants Alaska Airlines and the Transportation Safety Administration to reconsider their policies after her daughter left to meet a boyfriend in North Carolina whom she met over the Internet.

Pringle awoke Wednesday and learned her daughter was missing. The girl nearly a week earlier had purchased a $733 one-way ticket with cash at the Juneau International Airport. On Wednesday, she was able to board a plane without identification.

"I thought, unbeknownst, that my child would not only have to have permission, but I thought she would have to have identification at the very least," Pringle said.



According to policies at the airport, children between 13 and 17 may board a plane without identification or parental permission.

"It's been a nightmare," Pringle said. "This has been an absolute nightmare and I didn't believe in my wildest dreams that this could happen."

Alaska Airlines has an "unaccompanied minor service" required for passengers 5 to 12 years old who travel without a guardian, said spokeswoman Amanda Tobin Bielawski. The program requires an escort to the departure gate and guardian contact information, she said.

The airline offers the same service for children between 13 to 17 - if the ticket purchaser requests it, Bielawski said.

The ticket agent has the discretion to determine if a child appears to be in the age group required to participate in the unaccompanied minor service, Bielawski said.

"We don't have any age restriction for purchasing a ticket," she said.

TSA spokeswoman Jennifer Peppin said airline passengers 18 and older are required to present photo identification before boarding. Travelers 17 and younger need only a boarding pass.

"What type of photo identification does a 15-year-old have?" Peppin said.

TSA agents thoroughly screen all passengers, she said.

"Our responsibility is through the screening process," Peppin said. "It sounds like the child had a boarding pass, so that would not raise a red flag for us."

A minor without photo identification purchasing a ticket with cash and without parental consent should have raised a red flag somewhere, Pringle said.

"How are we supposed to protect our children when Alaska Airlines can just fly them out of here?" she said. "There is a precedent that needs to be set."

Pringle learned her daughter had purchased a ticket and was trying to leave town. Family members arrived at the airport trying to stop the girl from leaving. Airline employees refused to give them any of the girl's flight information, she said.

"They knew my daughter was on that plane but they would not remove my daughter from that plane," she said. "I did not authorize my daughter to leave Juneau."

"Under our policy, we do not release information of our passengers to members of the public who might call us," Bielawski said. People have attempted to acquire passenger information under false pretenses in disconcerting ways, she said.

The policies jeopardized her daughter's safety, Pringle said.

After her daughter's flight left Juneau, Pringle contacted Port of Seattle police. She provided gave them her daughter's social networking Web site log-in information and password, which provided a recent photograph and more information about the girl's online boyfriend.

Sea-Tac Airport spokesman Perry Cooper said the Port of Seattle police were able to find the girl at the gate of her connecting flight.

"They spoke with her and convinced her to get on the phone and talk with her mother," Cooper said.

Pringle's difficulties continued, however.

"They found her, and here's your catch: Not only was my daughter transported across state lines without my authorization and without identification ... they said she has to volunteer to come home," Pringle said.

Because the teenager was considered an unreported runaway, police were unable to detain her, Cooper said. However, officers helped persuade her daughter to return to Juneau that evening.

Pringle said she had to pay roughly $400 for an Alaska Airlines ticket to return her child Wednesday night. With the initial ticket, she and her husband are out nearly $1,200, she said.

Pringle said she wants to save her daughter from a life of destructive behavior and has filed theft charges against her. The girl was in juvenile court Friday and remanded to the Johnson Youth Center, she said.

Pringle said she is determined to let parents know that their children can get on a plane without permission or identification. A law needs to be put in place to protect children from unnecessarily putting themselves in harm's way, she said.

"I'm beside myself," Pringle said. "We have a risk to our children in this town and nationwide."

Well flaming DUH!

Just Add Water: Boy Fries Himself with Hot Hot Xbox 360 - Kotaku:


Dumb, dumb, dumb. Apparently, a 14 year-old North Carolina boy was almost killed trying to keep his Xbox 360 from overheating. According to local news, the boy's mother found her son unconscious after he attempted to submerge the console in a pan of water. "When I left to go next door he was playing a game but when I got back he was laying on his back on the floor and unconscious," she said. The console, wrapped in plastic and tape, was still plugged in. The kid has read online that he could keep his 360 from over heating by cooling its power supply. By the time the ambulance showed up, the boy had regained consciousness. Thankfully, when the ambulance arrived, the boy had regained his senses. He was rushed to a nearby hospital and suffered small burns on his hand and foot. Kids remember: No matter what the internet says, electricity and water are NOT friends. They're not even on speaking terms.

August 21, 2007

Come on, Woz... you could have come up with a better excuse than THAT...

Woz Admits To Speeding Ticket For 104 MPH In Prius - TechNow News Story - KNTV | San Francisco:


Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak admits that he was speeding in his Prius-hybrid.

Wozniak said he got a ticket for going 104 miles per hour on Interstate 5 earlier this year, according to the San Jose Mercury News.
A judge did not buy his excuse that he was used to the kilometer speeds used overseas, and fined him about $700.

Wozniak said he was surprised by how smooth the car sailed at high speeds.

He does he not recommend those speeds -- his 55 miles per gallon dropped to between 31 and 37 miles per gallon at 104 miles per hour.

Something to think about....from CopyFight

Apple's Patent App and More on the Sad State:


Last week I commented on the sad state of patent effects on interface design work. Commenters to that entry pointed out that concerns over treble damages for willful infringement, concerns over having employees deposed in patent investigations, and the potential costs of infringement defenses all make it perfectly sensible for companies to shut people up in boxes of ignorance so there's no chance they might be exposed to patent information.

I seem to recall that the original purpose of patents, as written into the US Constitution, was to promote the progress of science. If someone can explain to me how forcing people to be ignorant of what's going on in their field of work promotes progress I'd be grateful. Because to me this is just exactly the opposite of the effects we ought to be getting. Paul Sherman, another professional in the user experience (UX) field, has a combination history and rant on his blog, talking about what this means for those of us who work particularly on the visible portions of software - the interfaces and interactions people have with them.

Now, because I don't particularly care for being shut up in an intellectual blank box, I want to talk about United States Patent Application 20070177803, Apple's Multi-Touch Gesture Dictionary patent application. If you don't want to read the full application, MacNN has a very good summary of many of the main claims and drawings.

Engadget, among others, has a snippy view of the application, claiming that Apple's motivation is to "own" this form of keyboard-less interaction with devices. In particular this patent appears not to be about a specific dictionary or language - which are generally regarded as unpatentable - but rather about software and methods for using a large gesture dictionary and allowing meanings to be assigned in context-sensitive ways to different gestures in the dictionary. The application is laden with phrases like "for example" and "in one embodiment" that seem to be attempting to separate the methods claimed in the patent from any particular implementation.

In addition, the patent application incorporates by reference eight other granted patents or applications in process. This particular application has garnered some attention but it doesn't seem to be unique - it seems to be part of a process of Apple generating IP in this area. As with many of these things, there's a large bucket of prior art and it's not clear what, if any, of that art will be considered relevant. To my knowledge, nobody has yet tried implementing what I would call a gesture dictionary service that can be drawn on by multiple applications; all the implementations I know of embed the gestural language directly.

So in summary, I think some of the people up in arms would do well to read the application carefully and not treat this one application as anything hugely different from what has been going on in the industry for at least the last 15 years.

(Full disclosure: I did my Master's Thesis some years ago in the area of coverbal natural gesture, and studied a bit about gesture languages at that time.)


Sometimes you get away with lying on your resume....for a time anyway

Fake Qantas engineer flies the coop - Breaking News - National - Breaking News:


A man worked on Qantas planes for 12 months while posing as a senior engineer before management became suspicious about his credentials, a Qantas official says.

The engineer joined the company in 2002 and worked at a level appropriate to his qualifications, but he won a promotion to a more senior position last year on the basis of forged certificates.

It was not until July this year that his superiors became suspicious.

The man, now wanted by Australian Federal Police (AFP), was posing as a licensed aircraft maintenance engineer, but when Qantas checked his records it found he had not passed critical exams needed to work in that role.

David Cox, Qantas executive general manager of engineering, said the man was a qualified aircraft maintenance engineer but for 12 months worked above his rank.

He said this was a "very serious matter" but a "one-off".

"One manager became suspicious of his qualifications and found they didn't stack up," Mr Cox told AAP.

There was a subsequent meeting between Qantas management and the engineer, but that was the last time they spoke to or saw him.

"Qantas has checked everything he has worked on and it checked out. He was not some bloke off the street.

"We are comfortable that the work he did was pretty safe," Mr Cox said.

On specific tasks dual certification was required, with a second engineer required to sign off the completed task as a safeguard, he said.

"We've checked everyone else working as a Qantas engineer, and their qualifications are all above board," Mr Cox said.

An AFP spokeswoman confirmed police were investigating a matter brought to them by Qantas, but would not comment more specifically.

So, how many more cronies are waiting in the wings?

You truly have to wonder. Seems to me that our pal Dubya just appointed his bestest pals to well paid positions within the government, and hoped that their incompetence would never be tested by events. We saw it with "Brownie" and it looks like it may be the case with the head of mine safety as well. How many more are there that we'll only find out about when there's another tragedy?

Federal mine safety official's credentials questioned - ABC4.com:


SALT LAKE CITY (ABC 4 News) - The families of the Crandall Canyon miner's aren't the only ones raising questions about the handling of the rescue effort.

Many news organizations and blogs are also now asking questions about the governments role and the man chosen to lead the rescue effort, Mine and Health Safety Administrator, Richard Stickler.

Sunday, the questions that had been whispered about for days, the miner's families themselves finally made public.

Sonny Olsen, families spokesperson said, "We are at the mercy of the officials in charge and their so-called experts."

Increasing attention is now being paid to Stickler, the federal government's main mine man.

Stickler used to be a mining executive who - according to various media reports - ran mines which had several fatalities and "...an incident rate that was often twice the national average."

Also coming to light, is the fact that Stickler's nomination to head the mine administration was twice rejected by congress and rejected when republicans were still in charge.
Rejected reportedly by senators who were concerned about Stickler's safety record when he operated mines.
After his nomination was twice rejected by the Senate, President Bush gave Richard Stickler the mine safety job with a recess appointment.
That's a presidential appointment made when congress is not in session.
Finally, congressional investigations and hearings are now expected to look at a key provision of federal mining law, one which requires the U.S. Government to be the main communicator when an accident occurs.
ABC News now notes it took the mine safety administration two days to take public control of the Crandall Canyon Mine.
ABC also adds, "Others were irate that [mine owner Bob] Murray was allowed to publicly predict success and contradict MSHA itself while agency officials quietly looked on."
And even though Richard Stickler does have considerable mining experience, he is now acquiring a new not-so-favorable nickname.
Among many bloggers, he is now being referred to as the "new Brownie."
That in reference to Michael Brown who headed FEMA during Hurricane Katrina.

August 20, 2007

Gee, we were SO protected once again!

Diabetic rushed to hospital after airline seizes insulin - ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation):


A diabetic man needed emergency care after airline security confiscated his needles and insulin on a flight from Norway to Australia.

Writing in the Medical Journal of Australia, intensive care physician George Skowronski says the 55-year-old developed a life-threatening condition because of the build-up of acids caused by a lack of insulin.

The condition can lead to a coma but the man finally received emergency treatment after being met by an ambulance and taken to Sydney's St George Hospital.

Professor Skowronski says diabetic travellers need to have a doctor's letter and prescriptions and proper packaging if they want to take medical supplies on board flights.

Hopefully this will chill all comment spam... but likely not

Spamford Wallace Gets Sued Yet Again:


If there were a lifetime achievement award for losing lawsuits for being annoying, Sanford Wallace would be a shoo-in. Fifteen years ago, his junk faxing was a major impetus for the TCPA, the law outlawing junk faxes. Later in the 1990s, his Cyber Promotions set important legal precedents about spam in cases where he lost to Compuserve and AOL. Two years ago, he lost a suit to FTC who sued his Smartbot.net for stuffing spyware onto people's computers. And now, lest anyone think that he's run out of bad ideas, he's back, on the receiving end of a lawsuit from MySpace... More...

Let's see how Westlaw and Lexis handle THIS :-)

"A Quest To Get More Court Rulings, Online and Free":


NY Times: "A Quest to Get More Court Rulings Online, and Free"

"The domination of two legal research services over the publication of federal and state court decisions is being challenged by an Internet gadfly who has embarked on an ambitious project to make more than 10 million pages of case law available free online.

The project is the latest effort of Carl Malamud, an activist who founded public.resource.org in March, with the broad intent of building “public works” accessible via the network, and with the specific plan to force the federal government to make information more publicly accessible."

The history of HylerLaw, here.


August 19, 2007

The mind just boggles...

Healthcare Advocates -- The Incredible "Lawyers as Hackers" Case:


You may have read about the unusual case where a law firm was sued for going to the Internet Archive and printing out some pages it found there, to use as evidence in a case.
They won the case, but then they were accused by the loser of copyright infringement, "hacking" or a violation of the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act, and violating the DMCA by bypassing a robots.txt file.

The case is Healthcare Advocates v. Harding, Earley Folley & Frailey et al. In its Second Amended Complaint [PDF], Healthcare Advocates alleged that the Harding firm violated their copyright rights in four specific ways: by unlawfully displaying archived screenshots and viewing the images returned by the Wayback Machine on their computers in their offices. Yes. For real. It's in the complaint, paragraph 79. The second copyright infringement, according to Healthcare was that the firm unlawfully reproduced the archived images by knowingly storing copies of the screenshots onto their computer hard drives. That turned out to be false in any case, because the paralegal temp that did the work didn't save anything to the hard drive. She only printed out whatever she found.

The third alleged violation was that the firm unlawfully reproduced copyrighted images by printing paper copies of the archived screenshots off of their computers. And finally, paragraph 82 alleges that the firm unlawfully distributed copies of the screenshots to their co-counsel in the lawsuit it won. Oh, and they were accused of spoliating evidence, because they didn't preserve cache files. Poor Internet Archive got dragged into the litigation for a while, too.

Can you believe this? Healthcare Advocates, the plaintiff, had set up a robots.txt file to block the public from viewing their old website pages, you see, but for some reason it didn't work for a few days, and so the defendant law firm was able to view and print out legacy pages from Wayback for a client in litigation with Healthcare. Their reward for this normal and simple act was a very persistent and complicated lawsuit.

Last month, the defendant law firm finally won a motion for summary judgment, dismissing all of the plaintiffs' claims, including the claims for copyright infringement. Here's the judge's memorandum and order [PDF]. I'll provide it as text also.

Now there is more news about the case. The victorious defendant law firm has just asked the court to order the plaintiffs to pay its legal fees and costs. It's a whopping $161,461.50 for the former and $9,348.60 for the latter. You can read the memorandum of law [PDF] asking for the fees and costs to be reimbursed.

August 18, 2007

"Made a bad decision" - understatement?

Man Caught with Gun at BWI Airport:


LINTHICUM, Md. - The federal Transportation Security Administration has confirmed that a Virginia man was arrested with a concealed handgun and ammunition at BWI Marshall Airport this month.
The incident wasn't publicly announced when it happened on August first. But an account was later posted on the TSA Web site.

The TSA says the behavior of the arrested man was consistent with that of a terrorist before an attack. But Maryland Transportation Authority police spokesman Corporal Jonathan Green says there were no indications the suspect was involved in terrorism or "feeling out" airport security.

Green says the department did not regard the incident as a "major arrest." He says Thomas Slackie, 45, of Falls Church, "made a bad decision and got caught." ---

And people wonder why I'm anti death penalty....

How many judges treat criminal cases like this? Public defenders have dozens of cases every week that they have to prepare and bring to trial (or plea bargain out because they don't have the resources to actually go to trial). This judge expected the defense lawyers to have their cases ready within a day. Is this really the fair trial that the Constitution provides? Speedy perhaps but hardly fair. And before you say "they can always appeal," appeals cost money too, and you can't appeal findings of fact, only procedure.

National lawyers group condemns Portage County judge for arresting public defender - Cleveland Metro News – The Latest Breaking News, Photos and Stories from The Plain Dealer:


Kent -- A controversial Portage County judge has drawn the ire of national and state lawyers associations because he ordered the arrest of a county public defender.

Judge John Plough ordered sheriff's deputies Wednesday to take Assistant Public Defender Brian Jones into custody because he was not prepared to go to trial. He was held five hours before he was released on bond.

This is the second time Plough has ordered the arrest of a public defender, said Dennis Lager, the county's chief public defender. He said Plough also threatened to take similar action twice in 2006.

In each case, Lager said, Plough expected the lawyers to go to trial within a day or so of being assigned to the cases.

Carmen Hernandez, president of the Washington, D.C.-based National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers, issued a formal statement Friday condemning the judge's action.

Earlier this year, Plough did the same thing to Assistant Public Defender Robin Bostick.

Lager said there are two decisions from Ohio appeals courts stating that it is wrong for a lawyer to go to trial unprepared merely to avoid a contempt proceeding.

"We have an ethical and legal duty to represent our clients competently and effectively," Lager said.

Plough already is under the scrutiny of the Ohio Supreme Court because a Portage County Common Pleas judge sent the high court a detailed list of complaints about his conduct. In May Judge Laurie Pittman wrote the court, saying that Plough is "making a mockery of justice."

Pittman noted Bostick's arrest, said Plough intimidates defendants without lawyers into entering guilty pleas, fails to keep adequate records of his trials and often ignores jailed defendants' legal right to speedy trials.

Pittman's letter said lawyers, judges and court personnel were reluctant to file formal complaints against Plough for fear of retaliation.

Lager said earlier this year that his office's standing policy is to insist on jury trials in Plough's court because of the belief that Plough will not be fair to defendants if he hears the trials without a jury.

Lager said Friday that the Ohio Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers also has offered to help defend Jones against Plough's contempt proceeding.

The matter is set for a hearing Friday at 3:30 p.m.

Plough could not be reached for comment.

Don't forget to give those safety briefings EVERY time you fly with a passenger

Mother Saved Daughter From Submerged Plane - News Story - WCVB Boston:


LEWISTON, Maine -- A desperate mother took matters into her own hands as her 5-year-old daughter was trapped in an overturned float plane -- she grabbed a rescuer's goggles and plunged into the water herself to free the child.
Beth Lamberson of North Yarmouth was credited with saving her daughter from drowning after the plane flipped, killing the 69-year-old pilot.
The dramatic details were contained in a preliminary report by the National Transportation Safety Board on the Aug. 4 crash in Kezar Lake.

Lamberson, her husband and their two children had gone for a sightseeing trip with pilot Joseph Soleri when the Cessna float plane flipped while landing, apparently when the wheels on the pontoons caught the water, the NTSB report said.
"As the airplane touched down on the water, they felt like it skipped and immediately went over on the nose in a (somersault)," according to the report. "The cabin filled with water immediately, and it got dark and quiet."
Beth Lamberson escaped the overturned float plane with her 3-year-old son, Kyle, through a back exit. Her husband, Kevin Lamberson, kicked out the windshield to escape. But 5-year-old Lauren remained strapped in her seat behind the cockpit.
One of the people who arrived on the scene dived into the water and found Lauren strapped in her seat, but he couldn't free her, the report said.
"The mother took the goggles, saying that she knew how to release the seat belt, and proceeded to go down and get her daughter," the report said.
The report credited Soleri's safety briefing for the family's ability to escape. Thanks to the briefing, Lamberson knew how to work the latch to free her daughter, who was taken to the Maine Medical Center for treatment.
"Joe took the time to review emergency evacuation procedures with us prior to takeoff, as every pilot should, and that is what saved the lives of the three of us in the rear seats," the Lamberson family said in a statement.
While the Lamberson family is happy that their 5-year-old was released from the hospital and will soon start kindergarten, there was mourning for Soleri, an experienced pilot and longtime manager of the town's Eastern Slopes Regional Airport.
"Joe Soleri was a highly respected pilot who took his responsibilities very seriously when he took to the sky. We would never have entrusted our family to a less accomplished or careful man," the family said.

Secret court seeks briefing on wiretap orders

Secret court seeks briefing on wiretap orders:


The Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, the designated monitor of government wiretapping that reaches globally, has asked the federal government to react to a private group's plea for access to that Court's recent secret orders on eavesdropping. The American Civil Liberties Union on Aug. 8 formally moved for public release of orders on the scope of international eavesdropping authority (see this earlier post). On Friday, the ACLU made public the Court's two-page order asking for further briefing A download link to the briefing order can be found here.

The call for briefing, dated Friday, called the ACLU motion "an unprecedented request that warrants further briefing." The government was told by file a response in two weeks, by Aug. 24, and to supply the ACLU with a copy -- censored, if necessary, to exclude secret material. The ACLU was given until Sept. 14 to reply.

The order was signed by the FIS Court's Presiding Judge, U.S. District Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly of Washington, D.C.

The Court did not release the order itself. Ordinarily, that tribunal operates entirely in secret; usually, its proceedings involve only one side -- the government, as it seeks approval for foreign intelligence wiretapping. The ACLU's news release (found here) describing the briefing order did not indicate whether it had asked for permission to release the briefing order -- which obviously contained no secrets.


August 17, 2007

Feds pay $80,000 to couple arrested for wearing Bush protest T-shirts

Feds pay $80,000 to couple arrested for wearing Bush protest T-shirts:


Mark Frauenfelder:

On July 4, Nicole and Jeffery Rank attended President Bush's speech at the West Virginia State Capitol. They were handcuffed, arrested and charged with trespassing for wearing anti-Bush T-shirts. They sued the federal government. Yesterday they settled their suit for $80,000.

The front of their homemade T-shirts had a picture of Bush and the international "no" symbol over his face. The back of Nicole's shirt read "Love America, Hate Bush." The back of Jeffery Rank's T-shirt read "Regime Change Starts at Home."

"This settlement is a real victory not only for our clients but for the First Amendment," said Andrew Schneider, executive director of the ACLU of West Virginia. "As a result of the Ranks' courageous stand, public officials will think twice before they eject peaceful protesters from public events for exercising their right to dissent."

Link

(Thanks,

Virtual Tours Guy!)


Your tax dollars at work...

U.S. diplomat accused of anti-Arab comments retires - Yahoo! News:


WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A U.S. diplomat accused of having said "the only good Arab is a dead Arab" in a voice mail left with an Arab-American group has retired from the government, the State Department said on Thursday.

The diplomat, Patrick Syring, was accused of having made abusive, intimidating and racist comments in e-mails and voice mails to employees of the Arab American Institute, a Washington group that promotes Arab-American interests.

The State Department declined comment on the legal case against Syring, which was outlined in an indictment filed at a U.S. federal court on Wednesday, but said the diplomat had decided to retire.

Syring is alleged to have made the comments in a series of e-mails and voice mails to officials the Arab American Institute, including its president James Zogby, when Israel was at war with Lebanese Hezbollah guerrillas in July 2006.

"The only good Lebanese is a dead Lebanese. The only good Arab is a dead Arab. Long live the IDF. Death to Lebanon and death to the Arabs," Syring said in a voice mail recorded at the institute on July 17, 2006. IDF stands for Israel Defense Forces -- the Israeli military.

"Fuck the Arabs and Fuck James Zogby and his wicked Hizbollah brothers. They will burn in hellfire on this earth and in the hereafter," he wrote in an e-mail to Zogby and another institute employee on the same day.

The voice mails and e-mails, which were sent from a personal e-mail address, were quoted in the indictment. Syring served as a U.S. diplomat in the Middle East and most recently worked in Human Resources at the State Department.

He stands accused of violating U.S. law on federally protected rights and of making threatening communications.

State Department spokesman Sean McCormack declined to address the Syring case specifically other than to say he had retired. U.S. officials declined to comment on whether he had decided to retire before or after having allegedly made the remarks.

Speaking generally, McCormack said such comments were unacceptable to U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice.

"Let me just underline for you the seriousness with which the secretary approaches the idea that the State Department should be a workplace that in no way, shape or form tolerates discrimination or hateful language," he said. "It's just not condoned or acceptable in this department."

Calls to Syring's home in Virginia were not returned.

Irony.....

Hotel mistakes Nobel laureate for bag lady | The Guardian | Guardian Unlimited:


She was wearing a Mayan dress, the traditional attire of indigenous people in central America, and the hotel's response was also traditional: throw her out.

Staff at Cancun's five-star Hotel Coral Beach appear to have assumed this was another street vendor or beggar, so without asking questions they ordered her to leave. Except the woman was Rigoberta Menchú, the Nobel peace prizewinner, Unesco goodwill ambassador, Guatemalan presidential candidate and figurehead for indigenous rights.

The attempted eviction, an example of discrimination against indigenous people common in central and south America, backfired when other guests recognised Ms Menchú and interceded on her behalf.
The human rights activist was in the Mexican coastal resort at the request of President Felipe Calderón to participate in a conference on drinking water and sanitation and was due to give interviews at the hotel.

David Romero, a journalist and newsreader who was due to interview her for state radio Quintana Roo, told local media that hotel security tried to eject Ms Menchú from the lobby. They relented when told who she was. It was said not to be the first time a hotel has tried to throw her out.

Ms Menchú, 48, was awarded the 1992 Nobel peace prize for protesting against human rights abuses during Guatemala's brutal civil war.

Commentators noted the irony of upmarket resorts discriminating against real Maya while trying to attract tourists with fake Mayan architecture and spectacles.

August 16, 2007

High Powered Laser Used On Commercial Airplanes - News Story - KFOX El Paso

High Powered Laser Used On Commercial Airplanes - News Story - KFOX El Paso:


High Powered Laser Used On Commercial Airplanes

Daniel Novick-KFOX News Reporter
POSTED: 7:31 pm MDT August 15, 2007
UPDATED: 12:58 pm MDT August 16, 2007
EL PASO, Texas -- The FBI said they arrested a Clint man accused of shining a laser at commercial airplanes, and they said the type of laser he used could cause disorientation in the cockpit, including momentary blindness for the pilots.
"It is very strong, it can have a reach of over 1,000 miles, so it's incredibly strong," said Andrea Simmons with the FBI.
The FBI found a class-IIIB laser along with 47-year-old Clinton Udet Pinckert, at his Clint home. The FBI charged Pinckert for Tuesday night's incident, and believe he may be connected to three other flights reporting the same problem.
"One of them was landing at the time, the other three were actually between 34,000 and 38,000 feet when they saw the laser," said Simmons.
"It concerns me, that shouldn't be happening. How is that happening?" said David Yuan, traveling in El Paso from San Francisco, Calif.
Yuan and other travelers KFOX spoke to Wednesday said they feel safer now that the FBI found Pinckert.
"Good. They're doing, so they've stopped him, they've apprehended him, it sounds like a good thing," said Yuan.
"Such a small little light could be detected I guess from wherever, and if it was pointed at the plane I think it's great that they caught him," said Maria Molina, from west El Paso.
Molina, traveling with family, said she hopes others will learn from the arrest.
"I think it gives a warning to other people and I mean kids, they think it's a joke or something to play with, and it's not, it's serious," said Molina.
"The lives of hundreds of people on these four aircraft were potentially at risk, so we want to send a very strong message that it's not OK to be using this in this manner," said Simmons.
The FBI said for attempting to disable a commercial aircraft, Pinckert, if convicted, could face up to 20 years in prison. The FBI said it does not believe that Pinckert has any terrorist ties

AT&T Must Face Justice for Illegal Spying

AT&T Must Face Justice for Illegal Spying:


NSA Surveillance Comes Under Fire Today in Appeals Court Battle

San Francisco - In a packed San Francisco courtroom today, the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) urged the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals to allow AT&T customers to continue to fight against illegal spying on their telephone and Internet communications.

EFF is representing the plaintiffs in Hepting v. AT&T, a class-action lawsuit brought by AT&T customers accusing the giant telco of violating their rights by illegally assisting the National Security Agency in domestic surveillance. The U.S. government is fighting to get the class-action lawsuit thrown out of court, contending that the litigation jeopardizes state secrets.

"The courts cannot permit the government to evade responsibility for unconstitutional activities with thin claims of 'state secrets.' Without judicial review, there is no way to stop abuses of power," said EFF Legal Director Cindy Cohn. "The courts are well equipped to protect state secrets while determining whether the spying is illegal and if so, to put a stop to it."

"In trying to shut down this case, the government is hoping to avoid accountability for spying on millions of AT&T customers," said EFF Staff Attorney Kevin Bankston. "Our system of checks and balances is supposed to thwart abuses of power. The White House is trying to wiggle out of those checks by taking the courts out of the picture."

Also Wednesday, the court heard arguments on the future of Al-Haramain Islamic Foundation v. Bush, a case alleging that the federal agents illegally wiretapped calls between the charity and its lawyers. The government also wants this case dismissed on state secrets grounds.

"The President is trying to hide behind a veil of false secrecy to evade a judicial determination that he broke the law. We're asking the court to see through that ploy," said Jon B. Eisenberg of Eisenberg and Hancock, LLP, attorney for the Al-Haramain plaintiffs.

C-SPAN television recorded today's hearing and said it would air later in the day.

The appeals court did not make a ruling Wednesday. The decision will be released at a later date.

Contacts:

Rebecca Jeschke
Media Coordinator
Electronic Frontier Foundation
press@eff.org

Jon B. Eisenberg
Attorney for the Al-Haramain plaintiffs
Eisenberg and Hancock, LLP
jon@eandhlaw.com

Ashlee Albies
Attorney for the Al-Haramain plaintiffs
ashlee@albieslaw.com


One stop shopping for identity thieves

Federal ID plan raises privacy concerns - CNN.com:


(CNN) -- Americans may need passports to board domestic flights or to picnic in a national park next year if they live in one of the states defying the federal Real ID Act.

The act, signed in 2005 as part of an emergency military spending and tsunami relief bill, aims to weave driver's licenses and state ID cards into a sort of national identification system by May 2008. The law sets baseline criteria for how driver's licenses will be issued and what information they must contain.

The Department of Homeland Security insists Real ID is an essential weapon in the war on terror, but privacy and civil liberties watchdogs are calling the initiative an overly intrusive measure that smacks of Big Brother.

More than half the nation's state legislatures have passed symbolic legislation denouncing the plan, and some have penned bills expressly forbidding compliance.

Several states have begun making arrangements for the new requirements -- four have passed legislation applauding the measure -- but even they may have trouble meeting the act's deadline.

The cards would be mandatory for all "federal purposes," which include boarding an airplane or walking into a federal building, nuclear facility or national park, Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff told the National Conference of State Legislatures last week. Citizens in states that don't comply with the new rules will have to use passports for federal purposes.

"For terrorists, travel documents are like weapons," Chertoff said. "We do have a right and an obligation to see that those licenses reflect the identity of the person who's presenting it."

Chertoff said the Real ID program is essential to national security because there are presently 8,000 types of identification accepted to enter the United States.

"It is simply unreasonable to expect our border inspectors to be able to detect forgeries on documents that range from baptismal certificates from small towns in Texas to cards that purport to reflect citizenship privileges in a province somewhere in Canada," he said.

Chertoff attended the conference in Boston, Massachusetts, in part to allay states' concerns, but he had few concrete answers on funding.

The Department of Homeland Security, which estimates state and federal costs could reach $23.1 billion over 10 years, is looking for ways to lessen the burden on states, he said. On the recent congressional front, however, Chertoff could point only to an amendment killed in the Senate last month that would've provided $300 million for the program.

"There's going to be an irreducible expense that falls on you, and that's part of the shared responsibility," Chertoff told the state legislators.

Bill Walsh, senior legal fellow for the Heritage Foundation, a Washington-based conservative think tank that supports the Real ID Act, said states shouldn't be pushing for more federal dollars because, ultimately, that will mean more federal oversight -- and many complaints about cost coincide with complaints about the federal government overstepping its bounds.

"They are only being asked to do what they should've already done to protect their citizens," Walsh said, blaming arcane software and policies at state motor vehicle departments for what he called "a tremendous trafficking in state driver's licenses."

The NCSL is calling Real ID an "unfunded mandate" that could cost states up to $14 billion over the next decade, but for which only $40 million has been federally approved. The group is demanding Congress pony up $1 billion for startup costs by year's end or scrap the proposal altogether.

Everyone must visit DMV by 2013

The Real ID Act repealed a provision in the 9/11 Commission Implementation Act calling for state and federal officials to examine security standards for driver's licenses.

It called instead for states to begin issuing new federal licenses, lasting no longer than eight years, by May 11, 2008, unless they are granted an extension.

It also requires all 245 million license and state ID holders to visit their local departments of motor vehicles and apply for a Real ID by 2013. Applicants must bring a photo ID, birth certificate, proof of Social Security number and proof of residence, and states must maintain and protect massive databases housing the information.

NCSL spokesman Bill Wyatt said the requirements are "almost physically impossible." States will have to build new facilities, secure those facilities and shell out for additional equipment and personnel.

Those costs are going to fall back on the American taxpayer, he said. It might be in the form of a new transportation, motor vehicle or gasoline tax. Or you might find it tacked on to your next state tax bill. In Texas, Wyatt said, one official told him that without federal funding, the Longhorn State might have to charge its citizens more than $100 for a license.

"We kind of feel like the way they went about this is backwards," Wyatt said, explaining that states would have appreciated more input into the process. "Each state has its own unique challenges and these are best addressed at state levels. A one-size-fits-all approach to driver's licenses doesn't necessarily work."

Many states have revolted. The governors of Idaho, Maine, Montana, New Hampshire, Oklahoma, South Carolina and Washington have signed bills refusing to comply with the act. Six others have passed bills and/or resolutions expressing opposition, and 15 have similar legislation pending.

Though the NCSL says most states' opposition stems from the lack of funding, some states cited other reasons for resisting the initiative.

New Hampshire passed a House bill opposing the program and calling Real ID "contrary and repugnant" to the state and federal constitutions. A Colorado House resolution dismissed Real ID by expressing support for the war on terror but "not at the expense of essential civil rights and liberties of citizens of this country."

Privacy concerns raised

Colorado and New Hampshire lawmakers are not alone. Groups like the American Civil Liberties Union and Electronic Frontier Foundation say the IDs and supporting databases -- which Chertoff said would eventually be federally interconnected -- will infringe on privacy.

EFF says on its Web site that the information in the databases will lay the groundwork for "a wide range of surveillance activities" by government and businesses that "will be able to easily read your private information" because of the bar code required on each card.

The databases will provide a one-stop shop for identity thieves, adds the ACLU on its Web site, and the U.S. "surveillance society" and private sector will have access to the system "for the routine tracking, monitoring and regulation of individuals' movements and activities."

The civil liberties watchdog dubs the IDs "internal passports" and claims it wouldn't be long before office buildings, gas stations, toll booths, subways and buses begin accessing the system.

But Chertoff told legislators last week that DHS has no intention of creating a federal database, and Walsh, of the Heritage Foundation, said the ACLU's allegations are disingenuous.

States will be permitted to share data only when validating someone's identity, Walsh said.

"The federal government wouldn't have any greater access to driver's license information than it does today," Walsh said.

States have the right to refuse to comply with the program, he said, and they also have the right to continue issuing IDs and driver's licenses that don't meet Real ID requirements.

But, Walsh said, "any state that's refusing to implement this key recommendation by the 9/11 Commission, and whose state driver's licenses are as a result used in another terrorist attack, should be held responsible."

State reaction to Real ID has not been all negative. Four states have passed bills or resolutions expressing approval for the program, and 13 states have similar legislation pending (Several states have pending pieces of legislation both applauding and opposing Real ID).


Chertoff said there would be repercussions for states choosing not to comply.

"This is not a mandate," Chertoff said. "A state doesn't have to do this, but if the state doesn't have -- at the end of the day, at the end of the deadline -- Real ID-compliant licenses then the state cannot expect that those licenses will be accepted for federal purposes.

August 10, 2007

Jamming the Pearl - Larry Lessig

Jamming the Pearl:


In October, 2002, I testified before the Senate Commerce Committee about "network neutrality." (Here's the article referenced in the testimony.) I believe it was the first time Congress heard the term "network neutrality," but the message was just a continuation of the story many of us had been pushing since circa 1998 about preserving the "end-to-end" principle on the Internet.

After my testimony, an economist/lobbyist approached me and asked: "Do you really believe there is any threat that broadband network owners would discriminate in either the content they carry, or the applications they allow? After all, first, none will have enough market power to be able to do this without consequence, and second, even if they did have enough market power, what possible incentive would they have?"

I remember then thinking -- this is the life of the theorist. They have a simple economic theory about how people will behave. When mixed with large lobbyist fees, it becomes impossible for them to imagine how anyone could behave inconsistent with the theory.

I don't know what theory would explain the extraordinary stupidity of AT&T in censoring certain anti-Bush Pearl Jam lyrics.

But the important points to remember are these:

(1) This is precisely the behavior we e2e/NetNeutrality advocates have been warning about for almost a decade. And not just (or even most importantly) in this explicit form. Much more important are the games played more subtly, to push innovation and content in the direction that benefits AT&T.

(2) This is precisely the behavior cable companies have demonstrated from the beginning of cable. They live in a culture in which they own the lines, so they believe they have the absolute right to control the content/application on those lines. Whether or not that culture is harmful for cable deployment, it will be deadly for Internet innovation.

(3) This is precisely the environment that raises the cost of application innovation for the cell phone industry. As many VCs have explained to me, innovating in the cell phone application space is deadly, because every innovation needs the approval of the network owner. Again, maybe Steve Jobs is right, and this kind of control is necessary for cell phones (though I don't believe it). But bringing the culture of the cell phone network to the Internet is a great way to increase profits to the network owners while reducing innovation on the Net.


This censoring event, whether AT&T's "mistake" or not, should be a rallying point for this movement. Let it be remembered a million times until we get an administration willing to do something (finally) to protect the promise of the Internet.

August 09, 2007

Small Plane Crashes In St. Mary's County - News Story - WRC | Washington

Small Plane Crashes In St. Mary's County - News Story - WRC | Washington:


HOLLYWOOD, Md. -- A small plane crash landed in the Hollywood area of St. Mary's County, officials said Thursday.
The incident happened at Airport View Drive and Lawrence Hayden Road at about 8 a.m. Authorities told News4 that three people were on board the plane when it crashed in a field next to the airport.Officials said the North Carolina-bound plane was taking off from the St. Mary's Regional Airport after stopping there to refuel when it crashed just past the runway. The plane burst into flames.

One of the passengers, 19-year-old Gerald Nance Jr., ran for help and called 911.

The single-engine, fixed-wing aircraft was piloted by the teen's father, 51-year-old Gerald Nance Sr., who escaped unharmed, and grandmother, 85-year-old Agnes Nance, of Bowie. She was flown to a Baltimore trauma center and is in critical condition.

Gerald Nance Jr. apparently pulled his father and grandmother from the wreckage before finding help.

Investigators from the Federal Aviation Administration are looking into the crash. According to state investigators, the plane had mechanical problems just after takeoff. The pilot was searching for an open field when the plane went down.

Experts said the position of the plane may have helped save lives.

Defending Networks Against DNS Rebinding Attacks

Defending Networks Against DNS Rebinding Attacks:


DNS rebinding attacks are real and can be carried out in the real world. They can penetrate through browsers, Java, Flash, Adobe and can have serious implications for Web 2.0-type applications that pack more code and action onto the client. Such an attack can convert browsers into open network proxies and get around firewalls to access internal documents and services. It requires less than $100 to temporarily hijack 100,000 IP addresses for sending spam and defrauding pay-per-click advertisers. Everyone is at risk and relying on network firewalls is simply not enough. In a paper released by Stanford Security Lab, "Protecting Browsers from DNS Rebinding Attacks," authors Collin Jackson, Adam Barth, Andrew Bortz, Weidong Shao, and Dan Boneh provide ample detail about the nature of this attack as well as strong defenses that can be put in place in order to help protect modern browsers. More...

I do not think that means what you think that means.... OOOPS

Google disables own blog as spam | Tech news blog - CNET News.com:


Google may be getting a little overly zealous in its antispam efforts. The company says it accidentally disabled one of its own corporate blogs after mistaking it for spam.

Google Blogoscoped first reported the problem with Google's Custom Search blog. Apparently, the blog had an odd message full of misspellings and incorrect grammar that said:

"Google Custom Search, is the wonderful product from Google which many webmasters have been looking and dream for. It allows webmasters to create their own custom search engines to search only the sites he/she wants. ? I?ll cover up more on this powerful tool very soon in my next blog." It was signed "Srikanth."

The blog is now back to normal, with no new posts since July 17. Here is the explanation from a Google spokesman as to what happened:

"Blogger's spam classifier misidentified the Custom Search Blog as spam. If a spammer gets caught by our automated classifier, the blog owner will receive notification of this identification. At the owner's request, the Blogger team will review the blog to verify that the blog in question isn't spam. In this case, the Custom Search Blog bloggers overlooked their notification, and after a period of time passed, the blog was disabled. The content wasn't deleted, but it was removed from the URL.

After the blog was disabled, the URL went back into rotation. A subsequent person came in, claimed the URL, and posted the new content about Google Custom Search, which was not an official post. So, it was a case of 'URL squatting' and not a security issue or any kind of hack.

Even after blogs are disabled as spam, the owner can write in requesting a review for her or his blog to be restored. If the review proves that the owner's content was not in fact spam, the blog will be restored with all content. So, when we saw what happened on Tuesday--and were well aware that our content wasn't spam--we restored the official Google Custom Search Blog. The individual who had claimed the URL and published the blog post in reference still has his content; it's just hosted at a new URL."