|
:: 12.15.2003 ::
:: In other news... ::
From The Houston Chronicle:
New probes poised to take on Mars jinx
WASHINGTON -- They've sailed through searing solar flares and survived unexpected mechanical ticks. Now as an international fleet of robotic explorers closes on the Red Planet, the big question isn't what they'll find, but whether they'll land.
Delivering a spacecraft safely to Earth's nearest planetary neighbor is an engineering nightmare: Two-thirds of the 34 probes dispatched to Mars since 1960 have gone belly up.
"Some, including myself, call it the `death planet,' " declares Ed Weiler, NASA's associate administrator for space science.
Last week, the death planet claimed its latest victim: Japanese officials announced that Mars-bound Nozomi, launched in 1998 and due to arrive this week, was crippled beyond repair.
The spacecraft, whose name means "hope," was supposed to study the Martian atmosphere and moons, but it blew a thruster en route.
Next up: the spunky, British-built Beagle 2, a 73-pound machine designed to conduct the first sweep for Martian life in three decades.
On Friday, the robot will peel away from its companion, the European Space Agency's Mars Express, in preparation for a Christmas Eve arrival. Mars Express, meanwhile, will swing into orbit to begin a two-year mission to map the planet surface.
Trailing Beagle are the National Aeronautics and Space Administration's twin, $820 million golf-cart-sized rovers. Landing on nearly opposite sides of the planet in January, Spirit and Opportunity will spend 90 days rumbling over the dusty soil in search of water.
Although the NASA rovers are generating the most buzz, the quirky Beagle 2 has a die-hard cheering section.
"Even though I work for NASA, I have to admit I'm rooting for Beagle," says Christopher McKay, an astrobiologist with the space agency's Ames Research Center in California.
Read more here.
posted by me
:: 12:36:00 AM [+] ::
...
:: Oh, yeah... ::
Just in case you haven't heard, they nabbed him. Dig those last digs. OK. Back to the the hunt for Bin Laden, anyone?
posted by me
:: 12:24:00 AM [+] ::
...
:: 12.10.2003 ::
:: "Galactic impact makes black holes" ::
From a BBC News report
By Dr. David Whitehouse
Astronomers have seen a trail of black holes scattered across space formed by a titanic collision between galaxies. They were detected in the NGC 4261elliptical galaxy observed by the orbiting Chandra X-ray telescope.
The holes are all that remains of streams of stars thrown out into space after two spiral galaxies crashed into each other a few billion years ago.
The new data support the theory that large, almost featureless, elliptical galaxies are formed in spiral mergers.
NGC 4261 is about 100 million light-years away from our Solar System.
posted by me
:: 7:40:00 PM [+] ::
...
:: 12.07.2003 ::
:: So Weird ::
From Chuck Shepherd's News of the Weird:
LEAD STORY
The man convicted of blowing up the Pan Am flight over Lockerbie, Scotland, in 1988, killing 270 people, lives in relative luxury in a private four-room suite in Glasgow's Barlinnie prison, according to a November report in Britain's News of the World. Abdelbaset al Megrahi, serving a minimum 27-year sentence, has a color TV, VCR, stereo, personal computer, kitchen, floral curtains, framed art and unlimited telephone access. A prison official said the man must be isolated because of the nature of his crime, but that Barlinnie had a limited choice of such facilities. [News of the World, 11-16-03]
ALSO:
Angela Bridges filed a lawsuit in June against the Washington County (Ga.) Regional Medical Center and a doctor for failing to clean her wound properly. She fell into some shrubbery in her yard in 2002, cut her leg, and reported to the emergency room for cleaning and suturing. Nine months later, another physician found that a small boxwood twig, with five thriving green leaves, had broken through the sutured skin. [Sandersville Progress, 7-23-03]
AND...
In October, North Korea's official news agency reported that Japan had broken a promise to return five people to North Korea. The five are Japanese citizens who were kidnapped by North Korea in 1978 but released to see their families in October 2002. North Korea's position is that they were released only temporarily and must be returned to North Korea. [Japan Today-Kyodo News, 10-19-03]
Send your Weird News to Chuck Shepherd, P.O. Box 18737, Tampa FL 33679 or WeirdNews@earthlink.net
posted by me
:: 10:44:00 PM [+] ::
...
:: 12.05.2003 ::
:: Barbara B's Night Out ::
12/01/03: Bush's Drinking Daughter Goes 'Pansy' (Division)
Lifted from 365gay.com via alternativetentacles.com:
Bush's daughter Barbara was spotted recently having a gay old time at a concert by all-gay punk band Pansy Division. Barbara and friends cozied up in the back room drinking, while out front the band screamed their queer hearts out. The band reportedly dedicated their rabid anti-Bush song, Political Asshole, to the first daughter during the show. Daddy's just got to love that.
posted by me
:: 11:05:00 PM [+] ::
...
:: 11.26.2003 ::
:: E-voting update ::
From Wired News:
Dust-Up Over E-Vote Paper Trail
A decision by California's secretary of state to require a paper audit trail for electronic voting machines angers county election officials, who may be considering steps to fight the move. By Kim Zetter.
posted by me
:: 9:45:00 PM [+] ::
...
:: 11.24.2003 ::
:: "Congress Expands FBI Spying Power" ::
From a Wired News report:
A new bill boosts the scope of the Patriot Act by extending the FBI's power to acquire records from almost any business without a judge's approval. It's a huge blow to checks and balances, critics say. By Ryan Singel.
posted by me
:: 10:49:00 AM [+] ::
...
:: 11.22.2003 ::
:: More JFKill info ::
Here's a special section from The Dallas Morning News.
The assassination of President John F. Kennedy remains a defining moment in the history of the United States. This special report is designed to put the story in its proper historical context and track current coverage of the 40th anniversary of the assassination. This online area will be updated through Nov. 22, 2004.
Here's one of the many stories:
Networks return to find new take on JFK observance
posted by me
:: 10:44:00 PM [+] ::
...
:: JFKill: the 40th anniversary ::
From the HoustonChronicle.com:
JFK conspiracy cottage industry thriving
By JIM HENDERSON
Every year in late November, the death of a president draws the world's attention back to Dallas and America's most absorbing and enduring mystery.
Who killed President Kennedy?
That question will never be answered to everyone's satisfaction, and even the curator of the 6th Floor Museum in the old Texas School Book Depository on Dealey Plaza has been unable to come to his own conclusion.
"The Warren Commission compiled a huge amount of information," he says. "It's just not convincing."
For months, the communications industry -- newspapers; television networks; and magazine, book and CD publishers -- have been compiling histories and historical revisions to solemnize the 40th anniversary of the shots that altered a nation.
Could a lone sad sack have left such a large mark on history?
NEWS POLL from the HoustonChronicle.com:
Who do you think killed JFK?
Lee Harvey Oswald: 25%
The CIA: 18%
The Cubans: 3%
The Mafia: 13%
The Russians: 2%
The FBI: 3%
LBJ: 30%
Someone else: 6%
Total Votes: 1901
posted by me
:: 7:31:00 PM [+] ::
...
:: 11.19.2003 ::
:: Diebold update ::
From InternetNews.com:
Judge Needs Time For E-Voting Decision
By Jim Wagner
A federal judge Monday said he needed more time before making a decision on a restraining order request made by an ISP against e-voting machine maker Diebold.
Getting approval for the restraining order filed by the Online Privacy Group (OPG), a non-profit Web hosting company and ISP out of San Francisco, is the legal first step to determine whether Diebold has the constitutional right to make an ISP shut down a customer's Web site because it contains information that highlights the vulnerabilities of its e-voting machines.
posted by me
:: 12:43:00 PM [+] ::
...
:: 11.18.2003 ::
:: "Leonid meteor shower hits peak tonight" ::
From FloridayToday.com:
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. - Tonight's the night when Florida stargazers have their best chance of spotting Leonids meteors.
Astronomers are forecasting a peak in in the meteor shower at 2:30 a.m. Wednesday. Night owls who go to a dark place and look up - and perhaps a bit east, toward the constellation Leo - could be rewarded with the sight of a shooting star a minute.
ALSO
From Yahoo! News:
Leonid Meteor Shower Peaks Tonight into Wednesday Morning
By Robert Roy Britt
Senior Science Writer, SPACE.com
The Leonid meteor shower will peak late tonight into early Wednesday, hurling bits of ancient comet debris into Earth's atmosphere. While it will not match grand displays of recent years, the 2003 version is expected to provide a good number of shooting stars and a handful of spectacularly bright fireballs.
Weather permitting, skywatchers with dark skies could see a shooting star every minute or two. City and suburban dwellers will see much lower rates.
The annual Leonids are impossible to predict with certainty. Combined predictions by a handful of astronomers suggest residents of North and South America, Europe and Africa could see a modest show of swift shooting stars punctuated now and then by fireballs anytime from 11 p.m. Tuesday night through dawn Wednesday morning, local time.
"Skywatchers up and down the U.S. East Coast will have the best view," says Bill Cooke of the Space Environments Team at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center. For a short stretch centered around 2:28 a.m. EST, easterners "could see more than one meteor per minute."
posted by me
:: 8:47:00 PM [+] ::
...
:: The George love tour ::
From The Guardian UK:
Bush flies in to Fortress London
The US president, George Bush, today boarded Air Force One to fly to London for the most heavily-policed state visit in British history.
ALSO:
While we have your attention, Mr President...
It's not often that we get the chance to speak directly to the most powerful man in the world. So as George Bush lands in Britain for his first state visit, we asked 60 Brits and Americans to make the most of it
Here's one:
Dear George,
I hate to wake you up from that dream you are having, the one in which you are a superhero bringing democracy and freedom to underdeveloped, oppressed countries. But you really need to check things out in one of the countries you have recently bombed to freedom. Georgie, I am kind of worried that things are going a bit bad in Iraq and you don't seem to care that much. You might want it to appear as if things are going well and sign Iraq off as a job well done, but I am afraid this is not the case.
Listen, habibi, it is not over yet. Let me explain this in simple terms. You have spilled a glass full of tomato juice on an already dirty carpet and now you have to clean up the whole room. Not all of the mess is your fault but you volunteered to clean it up. I bet if someone had explained it to you like that you would have been less hasty going on our Rambo-in-Baghdad trip.
To tell you the truth, I am glad that someone is doing the cleaning up, and thank you for getting rid of that scary guy with the hideous moustache that we had for president. But I have to say that the advertisements you were dropping from your B52s before the bombs fell promised a much more efficient and speedy service. We are a bit disappointed. So would you please, pretty please, with sugar on top, get your act together and stop telling people you have Iraq all figured out when you are giving us the trial-and-error approach?
Anyway, I hope this doesn't disturb you too much. Have a Regards,
Salam Pax
The Baghdad Blogger nice stay in London, wave hello to the demonstrators, and give my regards to your spin doctors. I bet they are having a hell of a job making you look good.
Read more here.
AND
Readers' letters to George Bush
Bush's alternative itinerary
posted by me
:: 8:45:00 PM [+] ::
...
:: "Quote Marks" ::
From Wired News:
"This is an experimental network that may or may not be the next Internet."
— A board member for a massive scientific research system imagines larger possibilities.
posted by me
:: 12:48:00 AM [+] ::
...
:: 11.16.2003 ::
:: So weird ::
From Chuck Shepherd's News of the Weird (.823):
On Oct. 29, thousands of rush-hour riders had to be rerouted on New York City commuter trains as firefighters tried to free Edwin Gallart, 41, whose arm got stuck in one train's toilet when he reached in to retrieve his fallen cell phone. (Ultimately, the toilet had to be ripped out.) And the next day in South Philadelphia, a 25-year-old man who had apparently been indecently exposing himself to girls and women in the neighborhood for several weeks, tried it one time too many and was chased by "20 to 30" girls from St. Maria Goretti High School, caught, roughed up, and held for police. [New York Times, 10-31-03] [Philadelphia Inquirer, 10-31- 03]
Also, in the Last Month
Catholic priest Antonio Caetano apologized for hitting a parishioner on the head when she would not leave after her daughter was denied a place in Sunday school because she registered too late (Souto Redondo, Portugal). The city of Winnipeg, Manitoba, installed 10 surveillance cameras to help combat pilferage at a municipal dump. Vegetable grower A. Duda & Sons introduced a product 15 years in the making, to delight Bloody Mary fans: celery stalks that are hollow in the center (Oviedo, Fla.). [Agence France-Presse, 10-21-03] [Winnipeg Sun, 10-22-03] [Palm Beach Post, 10-25-03]
Send your Weird News to Chuck Shepherd, P.O. Box 18737, Tampa FL 33679 or WeirdNews@earthlink.net
posted by me
:: 2:59:00 PM [+] ::
...
:: "Scene of the crime 11/22/63" ::
From SFGate.com:
From Dealey Plaza and the grassy knoll to the tale of Nick Beef's grave, conspiracy is still a big draw in Dallas
By John Flinn
People the world over make the pilgrimage to Dealey Plaza in search of answers, or some sense of closure, and most go home with neither. As the nation marks the 40th anniversary this week, the assassination of John F. Kennedy remains for many of us a disturbing mystery, a still-purple bruise on the national psyche.
But still we are drawn to Dallas. We come to gaze at the sniper's perch, hidden behind a wall of children's schoolbooks; to stand on the very spot where Abraham Zapruder shot history's most notorious home movie; to poke through the shrubs for clues that somehow eluded the thousands of searchers before us.
Driven by a morbid obsession, some are compelled to visit every site associated with the assassination, no matter how trivial: the former location of Jack Ruby's strip club, the Texas Theater, the street where Officer J. D. Tippit was gunned down, Oswald's quasi-secret gravesite.
John Flinn recently made his own pilgrimage.
posted by me
:: 2:50:00 PM [+] ::
...
:: 11.14.2003 ::
:: Reports from the Wired road trip ::
You Gotta Stop, Smell the Roses
It's midpoint on the Great Route 1 Road Trip. The main lesson learned so far is that slow is the way to go -- but that's easier said than done. Michelle Delio reports from charming rural North Carolina.
A Peek Inside the Secret World
WASHINGTON -- George Washington was a spy master extraordinaire.
Washington's decisive victory in the 1775 War of Independence can be attributed as much to his skills as a director of clandestine intelligence activities as his military savvy, according to Eugene Poteat, a retired CIA scientific intelligence officer.
This fun fact and many more can be discovered at the new International Spy Museum in Washington, D.C. The museum traces the evolution of espionage and explores the role intelligence gathering plays in current world events.
Sad End to Computing's Inventor
PHILADELPHIA -- Philadelphia artist Jim Reed grew up figuring that everyone's grandfather had invented something.
So he didn't feel like his grandfather John Mauchly was in any way out of the ordinary, even though Mauchly is widely credited with having invented the computer.
posted by me
:: 12:56:00 PM [+] ::
...
:: 11.13.2003 ::
:: "Put pepper in my coffee..." ::
Here's the lyrics to "Bad Day" from the official r.e.m. Web site:
A Public service announcement followed me home the other day
I paid it nevermind. Go away.
Shits so thick you could stir it with a stick
Free Teflon whitewashed presidency
We're sick of being jerked around
Wear that on your sleeve
Broadcast me a joyful noise unto the times, lord,
Count your blessings.
We're sick of being jerked around
We all fall down.
Have you ever seen the televised St. Vitus subcommittee prize
Investigation dance? Those-ants-in- pants glances.
Well, look behind the eyes
It's a hallowed, hollow anesthesized
"save my own ass, screw these guys"
smoke and mirror lock down
Broadcast me a joyful noise unto the times, lord,
Count your blessings.
the papers wouldn't lie!
I sigh. Not one more
Its been a bad day.
Please dont take a picture
Its been a bad day.
Please
We're dug in the deep the price is steep.
The auctioneer is such a creep.
The lights went out, the oil ran dry
We blamed it on the other guy
Sure, all men are created equal.
Here's the church, here's the steeple
Please stay tuned--we cut to sequel
Ashes, ashes, we all fall down.
Broadcast me a joyful noise unto the times, lord, Count your blessings.
Embrace the lowest fear/Ignore the lower fears
Ugh, this means war.
Its been a bad day.
Broadcast me a joyful noise unto the times, lord,
Count your blessings.
We're sick of being jerked around
We all fall down.
Its been a bad day...
posted by me (had another bad root canal today)
:: 1:53:00 AM [+] ::
...
:: 11.12.2003 ::
:: Quote of the day ::
Bush is an idiot. What's Blair's excuse?
-Michael Moore
posted by me
:: 12:36:00 AM [+] ::
...
:: 11.10.2003 ::
:: Dubya: I luv Ya Big Brudder ::
From Wired News:
Gore to Bush: Rescind Patriot Act
An Associated Press report
WASHINGTON - Former Vice President Al Gore says the Bush White House is using the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks to justify a major offensive against the freedoms and liberties Americans have enjoyed for centuries.
"They have taken us much farther down the road toward an intrusive, 'big brother'-style government -- toward the dangers prophesied by George Orwell in his book 1984 -- than anyone ever thought would be possible in the United States of America," Gore charged in a speech.
Gore, who lost the disputed 2000 presidential election to President Bush, brought many in the crowd of 3,000 to their feet Sunday when he called for a repeal of the Patriot Act, which expanded government's surveillance and detention powers, allowing authorities to monitor the books citizens read and conduct secret searches.
He said terrorism-fighting tools granted after Sept. 11, 2001, amount to a partisan power grab that has led to the erosion of the civil liberties of all Americans.
The Senate minority leader, Tom Daschle of South Dakota, said Monday that while he's not ready to support repealing the Patriot Act, he is skeptical of the way it's been used by the White House and said there is "a lot of concern about the assault on civil liberties."
In my opinion, it makes no more sense to launch an assault on our civil liberties as the best way to get at terrorists than it did to launch an invasion of Iraq as the best way to get at Osama bin Laden," Gore said (in a speech sponsored by Moveon.org).
You can find Gore's remarks -- "Freedom and Security here.
posted by me
:: 10:36:00 PM [+] ::
...
:: 11.04.2003 ::
:: Why War? Diebold-related press release ::
From Scoop (New Zealand):
Diebold Documents Spark International Campaign
Tuesday, 4 November 2003, 10:42 am
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
Diebold Documents Spark International Campaign: Will Your Vote Count?
Swarthmore, Pa. -- When American citizens step into the voting booth tomorrow, will their votes be counted? Today, with Diebold Elections Systems operating electronic voting in 37 states, the answer is a resounding "maybe." As a result of widespread security flaws and the lack of any verifiable check on their systems, Diebold cannot guarantee the accuracy of any election in which their machines are present.
An electronic campaign initiated two weeks ago by Why War? has sparked students from fifty universities nationwide to host copies of internal Diebold memoranda which demonstrate the insecurity and unreliability of their voting machines.
Why War's website has been innundated with e-mails and visitors from individuals worldwide pledging their support and offering to defy Diebold's attempts at suppression by hosting mirrors of the provocative documents.
"We've been receiving more hits than ever before," said Why War? member Micah White, who originally found and posted the memos in October. "Our goal when we started this campaign was to provide public access to this information, and we've been so successful that Why War? recently had to purchase higher bandwith to accommodate the sheer number of people who wanted to read the memos."
Why War? has built a coalition of concerned citizens across the nation who will soon be taking charge of the campaign against Diebold. "This is not a partisan issue," said Ivan Boothe, another member. "The people who have taken the initiative to host these documents come from all parts of the political spectrum."
In response to growing national interest, the coalition will soon be moving its center of operations from Why War's website, why-war.com, to a new location devoted specifically to voting issues and resisting Diebold's attempts to keep this information a secret.
Why War? believes that the Diebold documents are akin to the Pentagon Papers in their potential to reveal systemic corruption within the American election process. The task now at hand is to analyze the content of these documents.
More information about the campaign can be found here.
List of municipalities that use Diebold machines can be found there.
Press contacts: Ivan Boothe, Swarthmore College, media@why-war.com, 267.496.6819 Joseph Lorenzo Hall, University of California-Berkeley, joehall@pobox.com, 510.918.0050 C. Scott Ananian, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, cscott@cscott.net, 617.233.1238 Derek Slater, Harvard University, slater@fas.harvard.edu, 617.493.0039 Austin Heap, Bentley College, HEAP_AUST@bentley.edu, 614.477.6579 Marquis Eusung Hwang, University of Chicago, mhwang@midway.uchicago.edu, 678.438.0137 Sechyi Laiu, Grinnell College, laiu@grinnell.edu, 641.269.3278 Matthew Hornyak, Carnegie Mellon University, matth@cmu.edu, 412.726.6968
###
posted by me
:: 11:27:00 AM [+] ::
...
:: Diebold updates ::
From Wired News:
Calif. Halts E-Vote Certification
The discovery that uncertified software may have been used in electronic voting machines has prompted California officials to delay plans to approve new machines made by Diebold Election Systems. Kim Zetter reports from Sacramento, California.
From CNET News.com:
Students buck DMCA threat
By Declan McCullagh
When Diebold Election Systems learned that its internal e-mail correspondence had popped up on the Web, it used a common legal tactic: sending cease-and-desist letters to Webmasters.
But in the months since the North Canton, Ohio-based company began trying to rid the Internet of those copyrighted files, it has arrived at a very unusual impasse. Far from vanishing, the files have appeared on more than 50 Web sites, run mostly by students who claim Diebold has a suspiciously cozy relationship with the Republican Party and that the e-mail conversations demonstrate its election software is flawed and should not be trusted.
On Tuesday, Diebold will find itself on the defensive in court as well. The Electronic Frontier Foundation and Stanford Law School's Center for Internet and Society are planning to file a lawsuit asking for a temporary restraining order that would effectively halt Diebold's campaign against the loosely organized network of mirror sites. A hearing could be held as early as Tuesday in federal district court in San Francisco.
EFF attorneys say the case is the first time that someone who has received a "notice and takedown" request--one of the many Diebold made, repeatedly invoking the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA)--has attempted such a pre-emptive strike before being sued.
"We're saying that the hosting of the documents is fair use" and therefore legal, said Wendy Seltzer, an EFF staff attorney. "They're very thinly protected by copyright in the first place and being posted as part of a political debate."
Diebold did not respond on Monday to a request for comment.
From Slashdot:
CNN Reports on Diebold
An Anonymous Reader writes "CNN has finally picked up the story about concerns about Diebold voting machines. It's about time this made it into the mainstream media." If you're interested, here are a couple of related stories.
From InternetNews.com:
EFF Looks To Block Diebold Threats
By Jim Wagner
The ISP Online Policy Group (IOPG) will find out later today whether a San Francisco judge will approve its restraining order against Diebold Inc., which has been sending the non-profit company cease-and-desist orders over publication of vulnerabilities in Diebold e-voting machines.
The e-voting machine flaws, which allow hackers to change vote tallies through Microsoft Access, have been published on several Web sites; Diebold has sent cease-and-resist orders to the ISPs hosting these Web pages, as well as ISPs who host Web sites that provide a link to the e-voting machine weaknesses.
The ruling will be the first test for ISPs who refuse to comply with the "safe harbor" measures provided in the 1998 Digital Millennium Copyright Act. The provision in the Act frees ISPs of liability over its customers publishing copyrighted material if they take down the site within 10 days of getting a cease-and-desist order from copyright holders.
posted by me
:: 11:04:00 AM [+] ::
...
:: On the Road w/ Wired ::
Salem Selling a Dubious Past
What better place to spend All Hallow's Eve than in Salem, Massachusetts, site of the infamous witch trials of 1692. Or was it? Michelle Delio reports from Salem.
ALSO:
Seafaring the Smart Way
posted by me
:: 10:55:00 AM [+] ::
...
:: 11.03.2003 ::
:: "Aussies Do It Right: E-Voting" ::
From Wired News:
As doubts about electronic voting systems grow in the United States, the Australians take the lead in offering a system that doesn't freak anyone out. Their solution is to make the whole thing open source. By Kim Zetter.
posted by me
:: 8:42:00 AM [+] ::
...
:: 11.02.2003 ::
:: RE George II & Iraq ::
Bush Losing Support on Iraq, Poll Says
November 2, 2003 09:23 AM EST
WASHINGTON - President Bush is losing public support for his war and economic policies, according to a new poll which for the first time shows that a majority of Americans disapprove of his handling of Iraq.
A slim majority, 51 percent, disapprove of his Iraq policy, while 47 percent approve, according to the ABC News-Washington Post poll released Sunday.
Most Americans, 54 percent, continue to believe the Iraq war was worth fighting, but that's down from 70 percent in April. A new high - 62 percent - say the level of U.S. casualties is unacceptable.
Fewer than one in 10 Americans say Bush has made the nation more prosperous, while 58 percent - a new high - say the president fails to understand their problems.
The economy remains a major issue, with 45 percent of Americans approving of the way Bush is handling the economy and 53 percent disapproving. By a wide margin, 62 percent to 35 percent, the public sees the economy as a more pressing problem than terrorism.
posted by me
:: 9:46:00 AM [+] ::
...
:: 10.31.2003 ::
:: Do Democrats Cause Cancer? ::
From Slashdot:
Fox News Considered Suing The Simpsons
from the now-thats-seriously-funny dept.
ZeDanimal writes "The Simpsons' pooh-bah Matt Groening said in an NPR interview this week that the Fox News Channel considered legal action against the show for its parody of the station's news ticker. Broadcast, of course, by Fox Entertainment, the episode that raised the ire of the "Fair and Balanced" Fox News crew was Krusty For Congress, which mocked the perceived rightward-leanings of the channel with pseudo-news items such as "Do Democrats cause cancer?" and "Oil slicks found to keep seals young, supple" scrolling across the bottom of the screen. Guess the powers-that-be learned something from the Al Franken affair... or maybe they just feared getting into a popularity contest with the likes of the inanimate carbon rod."
ALSO from Slashdot:
Deconstructing the Patriot Act PR Campaign
from the hard-looks dept.
Aaron writes "The Center for Democracy and Technology offers up an interesting point for point rebuttal to the the claims made via the 'rah-rah-esque' DOJ's website, part of the PR campaign (including Ashcroft speaking tours) to convince the public the Act is good for them. I think this Broadband Reports article also brings up a good point: among the groups attacking the Act, why do so few of them bring up Echelon? It already gives the government much of the surveillance ability they claim they're lacking, and without congressional oversight. The UN this year even launched an investigation into the use of the system to spy on UN diplomats without much fanfare."
posted by me
:: 10:44:00 AM [+] ::
...
:: Another CME ::
From Wired News:
Second Solar Storm Blasts Earth
A Reuters report
WASHINGTON -- A second huge magnetic solar storm arrived at Earth on Thursday, just a day after an earlier one hit our planet in what one astronomer called an unprecedented one-two punch.
"It's like the Earth is looking right down the barrel of a giant gun pointed at us by the sun ... and it's taken two big shots at us," said John Kohl of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics in Massachusetts.
Kohl, the principal investigator for an instrument aboard NASA's sun-watching SOHO spacecraft, said the probability of two huge flares aimed directly at Earth coming so close together, as they have this week, is "unprecedented ... so low that it is a statistical anomaly."
Kohl said the second solar storm, known as a coronal mass ejection, peeled off the sun around 4 p.m. EST Wednesday. Charged particles from the ejection started arriving at Earth around 10 a.m. EST Thursday.
This was just a day after an earlier ejection was first detected on Earth, arriving around 1 a.m. EST Wednesday.
The second blast from the sun was moving even faster than the first one did, and some particles from the first linger even as the second onslaught continues, Kohl said in a telephone interview.
posted by me
:: 9:48:00 AM [+] ::
...
:: 10.30.2003 ::
:: Bushwhacked nation update ::
Report Links Iraq Deals to Bush Donations
October 30, 2003 10:51 AM EST
WASHINGTON - Companies awarded $8 billion in contracts to rebuild Iraq and Afghanistan have been major campaign donors to President Bush, and their executives have had important political and military connections, according to a study released Thursday.
The study of more than 70 U.S. companies and individual contractors turned up more than $500,000 in donations to the president's 2000 campaign, more than they gave collectively to any other politician over the past dozen years.
The report was released by the Center for Public Integrity, a Washington-based research organization that produces investigative articles on special interests and ethics in government. Its staff includes journalists and researchers.
The Center concluded that most of the 10 largest contracts went to companies that employed former high-ranking government officials, or executives with close ties to members of Congress and even the agencies awarding their contracts.
Major contracts for Iraq and Afghanistan were awarded by the Bush administration without competitive bids, because agencies said competition would have taken too much time to meet urgent needs in both countries.
posted by me
:: 10:51:00 AM [+] ::
...
:: RE Iraq: High Noon ::
From The NY Times:
Senate Panel Demands C.I.A. Data Leading Up to Iraq War by Friday Noon
By DOUGLAS JEHL
WASHINGTON — In a new clash between Congress and the Central Intelligence Agency, the Senate Intelligence Committee has demanded that the C.I.A. turn over by noon on Friday all of the documents and interviews still being sought by the panel for its inquiry into prewar intelligence on Iraq.
The demand was spelled out in a letter on Wednesday to George Tenet, the director of central intelligence, from the Republican chairman and the Democratic vice-chairman of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, who said that some of the panel's requests have gone unanswered since July.
"In light of the agency's many other responsibilities, the committee has been patient, but we now need immediate access to this information," said the letter, which was released by the chairman, Senator Pat Roberts, Republican of Kansas, and the vice-chairman, Senator John D. Rockefeller IV, Democrat of West Virginia.
A C.I.A. spokesman, Bill Harlow, said Wednesday evening that the agency had "only just received their letter, shortly after it was provided to the news media." Mr. Harlow said it was too soon to say whether the deadline set by the committee was realistic. "The intelligence community has been working hard to fulfill their request and will continue to do so," he said.
The Senate committee is preparing a critical report spelling out what Mr. Roberts has described as "serious errors" on the part of the C.I.A. in gathering and analyzing prewar intelligence about Iraq's suspected illicit weapons program.
posted by me
:: 9:57:00 AM [+] ::
...
:: A Major CME ::
From Wired News:
Solar Ejection Hurtles to Earth
A Reuters report
LONDON -- A massive bubble of gas that could cause havoc with power grids and satellite systems hit the Earth's magnetic field Wednesday morning and is likely to have the biggest impact in Alaska and the Far East.
Scientists said the cloud of charged particles unleashed at high speeds by a hyperactive Sun and known as a coronal mass ejection, or CME, traveled at about 5 million mph.
"It arrived at six this morning (6 a.m. GMT) and was going much faster than people thought," Dr. Mike Hapgood, a space expert at the Appleton Laboratory in England, told Reuters.
The gaseous cloud that dumps energy into the magnetic field that surrounds the Earth, creating a geomagnetic storm, is unlikely to have much of an impact in Europe.
Hapgood and other scientists suspect the CME produced an amazing aurora, or light show, over Alaska and the Far East, as well as some radio communication problems.
Another Reuters report:
Solar 'hurricane' hits Earth's magnetic field
Power plants cut production to limit any impact
By Patricia Reaney and Eric Auchard
OCTOBER 29, 2003 - A shockwave from the Sun hit the Earth today, the final burst from a solar hurricane that has hampered some space satellite transmissions and led electric grid operators to curb power transmissions as a precaution. Scientists said the cloud of charged particles, known as a coronal mass ejection (CME), unleashed by a hyperactive Sun was traveling at more than 5 million mph, reaching the Earth in just 19 hours.
Power plants from Sweden to New Jersey cut production to limit how much electricity was flowing over transmission grids, preparing to absorb any sudden surge in energy that might result in coming days from lingering effects of the storm.
"We expect this storm to continue through the day and tomorrow," said Larry Combs, a space weather forecaster at the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration's (NOAA) Space Environment Center in Boulder, Colo.
The center, which acts as the official U.S. space weather agency, advises power utilities, airlines and communications network operators of potential threats from space. It first warned of the storm a week ago (see story).
The gaseous cloud dumped energy into the magnetic field that surrounds the Earth, creating a geomagnetic storm; it was the final wave in a three-stage solar storm that began peppering the Earth with X-rays yesterday. These X-rays, traveling at the speed of light, forced air traffic controllers to scramble to find alternative communications channels and affected satellite transmissions of images back to Earth, weather experts said.
In the second wave, a pulse of solar radiation hit the Earth. Image transmissions from the Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO) satellite, which first detected the solar blast, degenerated into salt-and-pepper images for a time yesterday, forcing its operators to put the spacecraft into rest mode, NOAA said.
CMEs come around every few years but the one that arrived today may rank as one of the strongest.
The X-ray and solar radiation storms rank as the second largest such events recorded in the latest 11-year cycle, according to NOAA data. Records of solar cycles date from 1755. This is the tail end of the 23rd cycle, Combs said.
The geomagnetic particle storm that hit earlier today measured G5, or extreme. How long the storm remains in Earth's atmosphere will determine whether it ranks as one of the biggest storms ever.
posted by me
:: 9:50:00 AM [+] ::
...
:: 10.29.2003 ::
:: "Bush in 30 Seconds" ::
MoveOn.org Voter Fund has launched Bush in 30 Seconds, a political TV ad contest to help us find the most creative, clear and memorable ideas for ads that tell the truth about George Bush's policies. You don't have to be trained in the art of filmaking to participate, you just need to be ready, willing, and able to turn your clever ideas into a real 30 second ad. We want to run ads that are of the people, for the people, and by the people. Joining us in this effort is a great panel of celebrity judges, including Jack Black, Michael Moore, Donna Brazile, Gus Van Sant, Michael Stipe, Margaret Cho, and Moby. For the full scoop and guidelines on how to participate, check out bushin30seconds.org.
posted by me
:: 11:36:00 AM [+] ::
...
:: RE the Bush Case for War ::
From CBS News:
Panel: Iraq Threat Was Overstated
(CBS/AP) A Senate panel is preparing a report that will sharply criticize intelligence agencies for overstating the weapons of mass destruction threat allegedly posed by Iraq, a newspaper reports.
But the CIA says the panel is drawing conclusions prematurely, since the weapons hunt is continuing in Iraq.
The Washington Post says the report by the Senate Intelligence Committee will fault intelligence agencies, especially the CIA, for using too much disputed, circumstantial or single-source data in preparing its estimates of Iraq's alleged weapons programs.
However, the report may not be out until the end of the year, and committee members are still divided over how much blame to assign to the CIA, the White House or the Pentagon.
>The newspaper quotes the chairman of the committee, Sen. Pat Roberts, R-Kan., saying: "the executive was ill-served by the intelligence community" and calling the intelligence at times "sloppy."
From The Nation:
The Wilson-CIA Leak, WMDs and the Dems
As the Bush White House juggles two political grenades--the Wilson leak and the MIA WMDs--there are two questions: can Bush and his gang prevent detonations, and can the Democrats make it difficult for Bush to defuse these controversies and escape without offering full explanations?
posted by me
:: 11:29:00 AM [+] ::
...
:: Reports from the Wired road trip ::
It'll Thrill Ya, It'll Kill Ya
The Old Sow demands respect as she comes roiling to the surface of the Atlantic off the Maine coast. She's the largest tidal whirlpool on earth and you trifle with her at your own peril. Michelle Delio reports from Eastport, Maine.
In the Beginning There Was a Sign
By Michelle Delio
FORT KENT, Maine -- Where is that confounded sign?
You'd think that the sign that marks the northernmost point of historic U.S. Route 1 would have pride of place in Fort Kent, Maine, a small frontier town on the Canadian border with precious few tourist attractions besides the sign.
But instead of being housed in some tasteful little roadside shrine, the weatherworn wooden sign is tucked into the corner of the Fort Kent Masonic Lodge's parking lot, partially hidden by a ratty tree.
The mileage marked on the sign is wrong too; it claims that it's 2,209 miles to Key West, Florida -- it's actually 2,425 miles.
"It's close enough," said Elmer Daigle, of Fort Kent's Daigle's Bed and Breakfast. "What's a few hundred miles more or less when you're going that far anyway?"
posted by me
:: 10:57:00 AM [+] ::
...
:: Diebold update ::
From Wired News:
E-Vote Protest Gains Momentum
By Kim Zetter
Swarthmore College students embroiled in a legal battle against voting machine-maker Diebold Election Systems have received a ground swell of support from universities and colleges nationwide.
The memos suggest the company knew about security problems with its voting machines long before it sold the machines to various states, including California, Georgia and, most recently, Maryland. The memos have popped up on numerous websites since August, despite attempts by Diebold to force ISPs and webmasters to remove them from the Internet.
Last week, Swarthmore students launched a civil disobedience campaign against Diebold after the company sent a student and the college's ISP a cease-and-desist letter demanding they remove the memos, which the student had posted online. Diebold cited copyright violations under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, or DMCA.
The Swarthmore campaign aims to keep one step ahead of Diebold's cease-and-desist letters by moving the memos and links to the memos from one computer and one website to another.
(Ivan Boothe, of Why War?) said his group had received supportive e-mails from lawyers and professors from various schools, as well as Swarthmore alumni. He is encouraging more students and schools to post links to the sites that contain the memos.
Members of a group in Maryland called the Campaign for Verifiable Voting is calling on officials in their state to amend its contract with Diebold to require machines recently purchased by the state to offer a voter-verifiable receipt. "We want integrity in our election process," said Robert Ferraro, director of the Maryland campaign. "If you're going to use these machines then the only way to verify is with a voter-verified paper trail. How can the electorate trust an election if you don't have the ability to do a recount?"
Activists also want voting machine manufacturers to open their voting systems to public scrutiny.
Since the companies are privately held, they are allowed to keep their software proprietary and closed to the public.
"The public should know how these machines work and be able to do independent analysis on them every step of the way," Boothe said. "A lot of us are still uncomfortable with private companies running something so basic to democracy."
posted by me
:: 10:51:00 AM [+] ::
...
:: 10.27.2003 ::
:: On the road ::
From Wired:
Finding New Life on an Old Road
Ignoring the advice of a highway bureaucrat, a Wired News reporter and her photographer husband kiss the interstate goodbye. The pair will follow Route 1 from Maine to Florida in search of geek history and culture. By Michelle Delio.
posted by me
:: 9:30:00 AM [+] ::
...
:: 10.26.2003 ::
:: A report from the spam wars ::
Firm Fined $2M in Calif. Anti-Spam Case
SAN JOSE, Calif. - A company accused of sending unsolicited bulk e-mail was fined $2 million by a judge Friday, the first such ruling under California's anti-spam law.
PW Marketing LLC and its owners, Paul Willis and Claudia Griffin, were also banned from owning, managing, or holding an economic interest in any company that advertises over the Internet without first notifying the attorney general. The injunction will remain in place for 10 years.
The company, which does not have a Web site and has been accused of operating under fictitious names, has sent millions of illegal, unsolicited e-mails advertising tools for spamming, including $39 how-to books and lists of e-mail addresses of California residents.
Prosecutors said PW Marketing violated the 1998 anti-spam law by sending unsolicited e-mail without a toll-free number for recipients to call to stop additional mailings. Its missives did not include a valid return address or the "ADV:" label to mark advertisements, which the state requires.
State attorneys also claimed the owners illegally tapped into computer users' network connections so the company could send e-mail that couldn't be traced back to its source.
posted by me
:: 3:51:00 PM [+] ::
...
:: "Geomagnetic Storm Hits Earth, Tweaking Power Grids" ::
A Reuters UK report
DENVER - The Earth's magnetic field was bombarded with extra energy from the Sun on Friday when a geomagnetic storm sent charged particles that affected electric utilities, airline communications and satellite navigation systems.
"We predicted it would be a mid-level storm, a G-3, and that's where it is," said Joe Kunches, chief of space weather operations at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Space Environment Center in Boulder, Colorado.
The storm started around 11 a.m. eastern time and is expected to last through the weekend, Kunches said.
posted by me
:: 2:21:00 PM [+] ::
...
:: "Investigators: Hussein Had No Nuclear Program" ::
A Washington Post report
By Barton Gellman
"Despite prewar claims, it is now clear Iraq had no active program to build a nuclear weapon."In their march to Baghdad on April 8, U.S. Marines charged past a row of eucalyptus trees that lined the boneyard of Iraq's thwarted nuclear dream. Sixty acres of warehouses behind the tree line, held under United Nations seal at Ash Shaykhili, stored machine tools, consoles and instruments from the nuclear weapons program cut short by the 1991 Persian Gulf War.
Thirty miles to the north and west, Army troops were rolling through the precincts of the Nasr munitions plant. Inside, stacked in oblong wooden crates, were thousands of high-strength aluminum tubes.
That equipment, and Iraq's effort to buy more of it overseas, were central to the Bush administration's charge that President Saddam Hussein had resumed long-dormant efforts to build a nuclear weapon. The lead combat units had more urgent priorities that day, but they were not alone in passing the stockpiles by. Participants in the subsequent hunt for illegal arms said months elapsed without a visit to Nasr and many other sites of activity that President Bush had called "a grave and gathering danger."
According to records made available to The Washington Post and interviews with arms investigators from the United States, Britain and Australia, it did not require a comprehensive survey to find the central assertions of the Bush administration's prewar nuclear case to be insubstantial or untrue. Although Hussein did not relinquish his nuclear ambitions or technical records, investigators said, it is now clear he had no active program to build a weapon, produce its key materials or obtain the technology he needed for either.
Among the closely held internal judgments of the Iraq Survey Group, overseen by David Kay as special representative of CIA Director George J. Tenet, are that Iraq's nuclear weapons scientists did no significant arms-related work after 1991, that facilities with suspicious new construction proved benign, and that equipment of potential use to a nuclear program remained under seal or in civilian industrial use.
Most notably, investigators have judged the aluminum tubes to be "innocuous," according to Australian Brig. Gen. Stephen D. Meekin, who commands the Joint Captured Enemy Materiel Exploitation Center, the largest of a half-dozen units that report to Kay. That finding is pivotal, because the Bush administration built its case on the proposition that Iraq aimed to use those tubes as centrifuge rotors to enrich uranium for the core of a nuclear warhead.
posted by me
:: 2:18:00 PM [+] ::
...
:: 10.25.2003 ::
:: RE Iraq ::
From Reuters UK:
Thousands protest Iraq policy in U.S
By Niala Boodhoo
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Thousands have rallied in Washington to protest U.S. policy in Iraq, the first major demonstration since President George W. Bush declared an end to major combat in the war on Iraq.
"We need to make President Bush realise that our children are being killed," Fernando de Solar Suarez said on Saturday at a rally near the Washington Monument, where the crowd later planned to march to the White House.
Suarez's son, a Marine, was killed in Iraq on March 27.
Guerrillas fighting the U.S.-led occupation have killed 108 U.S. soldiers since May 1, when Bush declared major combat in Iraq over.
Peace activists, many carrying placards, said increasing concerns about casualties in Iraq have spurred the U.S. anti-war movement back into action after months of relative quiet. "Iraq=Vietnam," one placard read. "Money for Jobs, not for War," said another.
posted by me
:: 2:52:00 PM [+] ::
...
:: 10.24.2003 ::
:: Geomagnetic Storm ::
From MSNBC.com:
Solar storm sweeps over Earth
Sunspot unleashes charged particles; level of disruption is in line with forecasts
Oct. 24 — A strong dose of space weather hit Earth on Friday — but the initial storm of charged particles from the sun wasn’t enough to endanger power grids, as feared. The event is presenting a nice opportunity to view sunspots, though safe viewing techniques must be employed to prevent eye damage. Check for updates as the day goes on.
posted by me
:: 1:21:00 PM [+] ::
...
:: /. ::
You can read the Slashdot Diebold-related discussion here.
posted by me
:: 12:23:00 PM [+] ::
...
:: More Diebold stuff ::
BlackBoxVoting.org has posted Chapter 11 of their book... "Black Box Voting." =)
Here you go:
CHAPTER 11: Unauthorized Diebold vote replacement led to TV networks calling race for Bush
If you strip away the partisan rancor over the 2000 election, you are left with the undeniable fact that a presidential candidate conceded the election to his opponent based on a second card (card #3) that mysteriously appeared, subtracted 16,022 votes from Al Gore, and in some still undefined way, added 4,000 erroneous votes to George W. Bush, then, just as mysteriously, disappears.
posted by me
:: 12:07:00 PM [+] ::
...
:: Diebold memo update ::
A Swarthmore Coalition for the Digital Commons statement:
Diebold memos removed from Swarthmore servers
The SCDC can no longer host the controversial Diebold memos. Why-War continues to make the memos available by linking them. SCDC is, however, unable to link to Why-War.
The memos were removed from the SCDC web site at approximately 6:30 pm on Wednesday the 23rd.
The SCDC is investigating its legal options to fight Diebold's allegations of copyright infringement.
posted by me
:: 12:03:00 PM [+] ::
...
:: 10.23.2003 ::
:: RE Iraq ::
From Editor & Publisher:
Press Underreports Wounded in Iraq
Few Newspapers Tally Injuries, Accidents
By Seth Porges
NEW YORK -- When newspapers reported this week on poor medical and living conditions for Americans injured in Iraq, it might have come as a shock for some readers. For months, the press has barely mentioned non-fatal casualties or the severity of their wounds.
E&P reported in July that while deaths in combat are often tallied by newspapers, the many non-combat troop deaths in Iraq are virtually ignored. It turns out that newspaper readers have also been shortchanged in getting a sense of the number of troops injured, in and out of battle.
"There could be some inattention to [the number of injured troops]," said Philip Bennett, Washington Post assistant managing editor of the foreign desk. "And obviously if there is, it should be corrected. Soldiers getting wounded is part of the reality of conflict on the ground. I think if you were to find or discover that those figures are being overlooked, that would be something we'd want to correct."
Few newspapers routinely report injuries in Iraq, beyond references to specific incidents. Since the war began in March, 1,927 soldiers have been wounded in Iraq, many quite severely. (The tally is current as of Oct. 20.) Of this number, 1,590 were wounded in hostile action, and 337 from other causes. About 20% of the injured in Iraq have suffered severe brain injuries, and as many as 70% "had the potential for resulting in brain injury," according to an Oct. 16 article in The Boston Globe.
Current injury statistics were easily obtained by E&P through U.S. Central Command and the Pentagon, so getting the numbers is no longer a problem. According to Lawrence F. Kaplan, author of an article on injured troops in the Oct. 13 issue of , this information has only recently been readily accessible.The New Republic
Read more here.
posted by me
:: 4:59:00 PM [+] ::
...
:: Malcolm, far left of the middle ::
From Wired Magazine:
8-Bit Punk
Malcolm McLaren, the subculture hacker who created the Sex Pistols, discovers the new underground sound. It's called chip music. Can you play lead Game Boy?
posted by me
:: 11:02:00 AM [+] ::
...
:: "Plumbing Depths of Data Mining" ::
From Wired News
By Noah Shachtman
WASHINGTON -- On this, everyone in the gold-tinged, eagle-frescoed Senate conference room agreed: Federal authorities badly want to be able to comb the data trails of ordinary people in order to spot terrorists. But what -- if any -- limits should be put on that frighteningly invasive power? A panel of lawmakers, think tankers, data miners and civil libertarians assembled here Tuesday couldn't even begin to make up their minds.
Congress has yanked the funding for Terrorism Information Awareness, the Pentagon's notorious überdatabase effort. But research into TIA-like projects continues, essentially unrestricted. Tomes of regulations tell spooks and cops and g-men how they can amass intelligence and gather evidence. But much of the data mined by these children of TIA -- like itineraries, school transcripts and credit card receipts -- might not fall under those traditional definitions. There's only a vague sense that these database-combing programs can't be allowed to grow out of control.
Read more here.
posted by me
:: 10:24:00 AM [+] ::
...
23 skiddoo...
me
:: 1:26:00 AM [+] ::
...
:: 10.22.2003 ::
:: From Why War? With Love ::
Excerpts from the Diebold Documents :
“Elections are not rocket science. Why is it so hard to get things right! I have never been at any other company that has been so miss [sic] managed.” [source]
“I have become increasingly concerned about the apparent lack of concern over the practice of writing contracts to provide products and services which do not exist and then attempting to build these items on an unreasonable timetable with no written plan, little to no time for testing, and minimal resources. It also seems to be an accepted practice to exaggerate our progress and functionality to our customers and ourselves then make excuses at delivery time when these products and services do not meet expectations.” [source]
“I feel that over the next year, if the current management team stays in place, the Global [Election Management System] working environment will continue to be a chaotic mess. Global management has and will be doing the best to keep their jobs at the expense of employees. Unrealistic goals will be placed on current employees, they will fail to achieve them. If Diebold wants to keep things the same for the time being, this will only compound an already dysfunctional company. Due to the lack of leadership, vision, and self-preserving nature of the current management, the future growth of this company will continue to stagnate until change comes.” [source]
“[T]he bugzilla historic data recovery process is complete. Some bugs were irrecoverably lost and they will have to be re-found and re-submitted, but overall the loss was relatively minor.” [source]
“28 of 114 or about 1 in 4 precincts called in this AM with either memory card issues "please re-insert", units that wouldn't take ballots - even after recycling power, or units that needed to be recycled. We reburned 7 memory cards, 4 of which we didn't need to, but they were far enough away that we didn't know what we'd find when we got there (bad rover communication).” [source]
“If voting could really change things, it would be illegal.” [source]
“I need some answers! Our department is being audited by the County. I have been waiting for someone to give me an explanation as to why Precinct 216 gave Al Gore a minus 16022 when it was uploaded. Will someone please explain this so that I have the information to give the auditor instead of standing here "looking dumb".” [source]
“[...] while reading some of Paranoid Bev’s scribbling.” [source]
“Johnson County, KS will be doing Central Count for their mail in ballots. They will also be processing these ballots in advance of the closing of polls on election day. They would like to log into the Audit Log an entry for Previewing any Election Total Reports. They need this, to prove to the media, as well as, any candidates & lawyers, that they did not view or print any Election Results before the Polls closed. However, if there is a way that we can disable the reporting functionality, that would be even better.” [source] (emphasis added)
“4K Smart cards which had never been previously programmed are being recognized by the Card Manager as manager cards. When a virgin card from CardLogix is inserted into a Spyrus (have tried CM-0-2-9 and CM-1-1-1) the prompt "Upgrade Mgr Card?" is displayed. Pressing the ENTER key creates a valid manager card. This happens in Admin mode and Election mode.” [source]
PRESS RELEASE
DIEBOLD TARGETED WITH ELECTRONIC CIVIL DISOBEDIENCE
Swarthmore, Pa. — Defending the right of a fair, democratic election, Why War? and the Swarthmore Coalition for the Digital Commons (SCDC) announced today that they are rejecting Diebold Elections Systems’ cease and desist orders and are initiating a legal electronic civil disobedience campaign that will ensure permanent public access to the controversial leaked memos.
dieboldes.com
Diebold voting machines are used in 37 states and provide zero security against election fraud.
Earlier this week, the Electronic Frontier Foundation announced that it will defend the right of Online Privacy Group, the Internet service provider for San Francisco Indymedia, to host links to the controversial memos. Going one step further, Why War? and SCDC members are the first to publicly refuse to comply with Diebold’s cease and desist order by continually providing access to the documents.
“These memos indicate that Diebold, which counts the votes in 37 states, knowingly created an electronic system which allows anyone with access to the machines to add and delete votes without detection,” Why War? member Micah explained.
Although the reasons for individual engagement in the civil disobedience vary, the consensus between the two groups is that the public availability of these documents must be protected at any cost — they are crucial to the functioning of democracy.
Thus, through active, legal electronic civil disobedience, Why War? and SCDC will bring to light the usually silent acts of suppression and censorship. The result will be a permanent and public mirror of the memos: documents whose public existence challenges the assumed presence of democracy in America.
The documents are currently available here:
http://why-war.com/memos/
More information about the campaign of electronic civil disobedience:
http://why-war.com/features/2003/10/diebold.html
Electronic Frontier Foundation press release:
http://www.eff.org/Legal/ISP_liability/20031016_eff_pr.php
Media inquiries: media@why-war.com
posted by me
:: 2:50:00 PM [+] ::
...
:: Another Diebold internal memo ::
RE: Memory card checksum errors (was: 2000 November Election)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
To:
Subject: RE: Memory card checksum errors (was: 2000 November Election)
From: "Ian S. Piper"
Date: Thu, 18 Jan 2001 14:55:06 -0600
Importance: Normal
In-reply-to:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
I agree. Steve Ricke's sequence of events only relates to item 1 and how the memory card may have been reset. I thought it might shed some light on the subject.
Ian
-----Original Message-----
From: owner-support@gesn.com [mailto:owner-support@gesn.com]On Behalf Of John McLaurin
Sent: January 18, 2001 2:45 PM
To: support@gesn.com
Subject: RE: Memory card checksum errors (was: 2000 November Election)
There are two separate issues/problems that are getting combined in this stream.
– a check sum error occurred which the poll worker reset and continued counting the card “did not” require downloading before be reset. She never reran the previously counted ballots and this resulted in some negative PR post election. So that is Lana’s primary question, how did this happen? Ken explanation sounds like a good one and will not require a line for VTS if we can ever get to GEMS.
– the negative numbers on media display occurred when Lana attempted to reupload a card or duplicate card. Sophia and Tab may be able to shed some light here, keeping in mind that the boogie man may me reading our mail. Do we know how this could occur?
-----Original Message-----
From: owner-support@gesn.com [mailto:owner-support@gesn.com]On Behalf Of Ian S. Piper
Sent: Thursday, January 18, 2001 3:35 PM
To: support@gesn.com
Subject: RE: Memory card checksum errors (was: 2000 November Election)
Steve Ricke has been running tests on a specific unit from Seminole. He had a checksum error occur and had the same result of the card resetting to pre-election mode and being able to reset for election mode and continue. After that one error, he has since run thousands of ballots through without a repeat of the error. The original audit report for the Seminole corrupted memory card showed that it had experienced the same error when Mickey Martin and company were recounting ballots on November 9, 2000. Still testing.
Below is the sequence of events for this error. Hope it helps.
Ian
Ran test using memory card and accu-vote (Ser.# 71586) which had been corrupted in Seminole County, Florida.
Ran three 2000 ballot tests in election mode in McKinney.
Unit failed only once which was during the second 2000 ballot test (at about 1300 ballots),
Message on display "Corrupt count see official",
Pressed YES and NO buttons several seconds each with no change of message,
Turned unit OFF, then ON- resulted in "Please reinsert memory card" message,
Repeated turning unit OFF then ON with the same message result,
Reinserted card (Power ON) message displayed now "counter error ok to continue?",
if answered NO, returns to "Please reinsert memory card" message,
If answered YES, then message displayed is "Clear counters and recount?",
If answered YES, card is reset to pre-election mode and displays "Test ballots?",
We set card back into election mode. Ran another 2000 ballots without failure.
Will continue to try with other cards and accu-votes from other counties.
Steve Ricke
-----Original Message-----
From: owner-support@gesn.com [mailto:owner-support@gesn.com]On Behalf Of John McLaurin
Sent: January 18, 2001 1:56 PM
To: support@gesn.com
Subject: RE: Memory card checksum errors (was: 2000 November Election)
Thanks Guy, - the pollworker did restart the unit and eventually put the unit back in election mode. It did not require redownloading the card. Am I missing something in your explanation to understand this?
John
-----Original Message-----
From: owner-support@gesn.com [mailto:owner-support@gesn.com]On Behalf Of Guy Lancaster
Sent: Thursday, January 18, 2001 2:41 PM
To: Support
Subject: Memory card checksum errors (was: 2000 November Election)
This is an overview on what memory card checksum errors are. Exactly what causes them is a separate question.
The memory card is very simply a programmable memory device with a battery backup. The Accu-Vote accesses this memory directly. If something goes wrong when the Accu-Vote is writing new data to the memory card or if the Accu-Vote crashes (as computers have been known to do) and writes to random memory locations, then the data on the memory card may be corrupted (nasty word I know but it fits). All this means is that the data is modified in an unintentional manner. This could also happen without an Accu-Vote through static discharge or some types of radiation (i.e. old airport scanners, cosmic rays???).
There are several mechanisms that we could use to detect this. We use the simplest of these which is to treat the data as a series of numbers and store totals of sets of those numbers as separate data known as checksums. If the data has been modified without updating the checksums, then the checksums will fail to add up.
The Accu-Vote keeps three different types of checksums for three different classes of data. These are text, counters, and precinct. The text checksums cover all the titles and names that are used mostly just for printing reports. Since the text data does not affect the other operations, we check it only occasionally and we allow most operations to continue after a warning.
The counters and precinct data are considered critical and the Accu-Vote is largely inoperable when these checksums fail. We do support the option to clear the counters if only they have been affected and then counting may be restarted. However there is no way to recover from corruption of the precinct data other than to clear and re-download the memory card.
All checksums are validated upon insertion of a memory card or at power on. Thus this is the most common time to detect problems. However the counter and precinct checksums are validated every time a new ballot is scanned. If an error is detected, counting is aborted.
Now to Lana's questions. The above should answer everything other than why erroneous data managed to upload. I see two possible explanations. One is that the data was corrupted after the checksums were validated. In this case the errors would show the next time the checksums were checked. The other possibility is the miniscule chance that the erroneous data managed to add up to the correct checksum. The checksums are stored as totals ranging from 0 to 65535 so the chance of this happening are less than 60,000 to 1 just based on that. Other factors add to this to make it extremely unlikely. However in this case the card would not later show checksum errors.
So John, can you satisfy Lana's request from this? I can't without more details.
Guy
John McLaurin wrote:
Please see below and let me know what you think. Tab, one of these issues
we discussed - it's the one were we printed the audit report showing the
check sum error and the poll worker restarting the unit.
Please let me know what you guys think.
John
-----Original Message-----
From: Lana Hires [mailto:lhires@co.volusia.fl.us]
Sent: Wednesday, January 17, 2001 8:07 AM
To: jmglobal@earthlink.net; Glanca@ges.com
Cc: Deanie Lowe
Subject: 2000 November Election
Hi Nel, Sophie & Guy (you to John),
I need some answers! Our department is being audited by the County. I have
been waiting for someone to give me an explanation as to why Precinct 216
gave Al Gore a minus 16022 when it was uploaded. Will someone please
explain this so that I have the information to give the auditor instead of
standing here "looking dumb". I would appreciate an explanation on why the
memory cards start giving check sum messages. We had this happen in several
precincts and one of these precincts managed to get her memory card out of
election mode and then back in it, continued to read ballots, not realizing
that the 300+ ballots she had read earlier were no longer stored in her
memory card . Needless to say when we did our hand count this was
discovered.
Any explantations you all can give me will be greatly appreciated.
Thanks bunches,
Lana
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Follow-Ups:
RE: Memory card checksum errors (was: 2000 November Election)
From: "Ian S. Piper"
Re: Memory card checksum errors (was: 2000 November Election)
From: "Talbot Iredale"
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RE: Memory card checksum errors (was: 2000 November Election)
From: "Ian S. Piper"
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Thread
:: 2:23:00 PM [+] ::
...
:: A Diebold internal memo ::
This one's good:
RE: alteration of Audit Log in Access
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
To:
Subject: RE: alteration of Audit Log in Access
From: "Nel Finberg"
Date: Wed, 17 Oct 2001 14:48:16 -0700
Importance: Normal
In-reply-to:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Thanks for the response, Ken. For now Metamor accepts the requirement to restrict the server password to authorized staff in the jurisdiction, and that it should be the responsibility of the jurisdiction to restrict knowledge of this password. So no action is necessary in this matter, at this time.
Nel
-----Original Message-----
From: owner-support@gesn.com [mailto:owner-support@gesn.com]On Behalf Of Ken Clark
Sent: Thursday, October 18, 2001 9:55 AM
To: support@gesn.com
Subject: RE: alteration of Audit Log in Access
Its a tough question, and it has a lot to do with perception. Of course everyone knows perception is reality.
Right now you can open GEMS' .mdb file with MS-Access, and alter its contents. That includes the audit log. This isn't anything new. In VTS, you can open the database with progress and do the same. The same would go for anyone else's system using whatever database they are using. Hard drives are read-write entities. You can change their contents.
Now, where the perception comes in is that its right now very *easy* to change the contents. Double click the .mdb file. Even technical wizards at Metamor (or Ciber, or whatever) can figure that one out.
It is possible to put a secret password on the .mdb file to prevent Metamor from opening it with Access. I've threatened to put a password on the .mdb before when dealers/customers/support have done stupid things with the GEMS database structure using Access. Being able to end-run the database has admittedly got people out of a bind though. Jane (I think it was Jane) did some fancy footwork on the .mdb file in Gaston recently. I know our dealers do it. King County is famous for it. That's why we've never put a password on the file before.
Note however that even if we put a password on the file, it doesn't really prove much. Someone has to know the password, else how would GEMS open it. So this technically brings us back to square one: the audit log is modifiable by that person at least (read, me). Back to perception though, if you don't bring this up you might skate through Metamor.
There might be some clever crypto techniques to make it even harder to change the log (for me, they guy with the password that is). We're talking big changes here though, and at the moment largely theoretical ones. I'd doubt that any of our competitors are that clever.
By the way, all of this is why Texas gets its sh*t in a knot over the log printer. Log printers are not read-write, so you don't have the problem. Of course if I were Texas I would be more worried about modifications to our electronic ballots than to our electron logs, but that is another story I guess.
Bottom line on Metamor is to find out what it is going to take to make them happy. You can try the old standard of the NT password gains access to the operating system, and that after that point all bets are off. You have to trust the person with the NT password at least. This is all about Florida, and we have had VTS certified in Florida under the status quo for nearly ten years.
I sense a loosing battle here though. The changes to put a password on the .mdb file are not trivial and probably not even backward compatible, but we'll do it if that is what it is going to take.
Ken
From: owner-support@gesn.com [mailto:owner-support@gesn.com]On Behalf Of Nel Finberg
Sent: Tuesday, October 16, 2001 11:32 PM
To: support
Subject: alteration of Audit Log in Access
Jennifer Price at Metamor (about to be Ciber) has indicated that she can access the GEMS Access database and alter the Audit log without entering a password. What is the position of our development staff on this issue? Can we justify this? Or should this be anathema?
Nel
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
References:
RE: alteration of Audit Log in Access
From: "Ken Clark"
posted by me
:: 2:21:00 PM [+] ::
...
:: e-Voting update ::
From Wired News:
Students Fight E-Vote Firm
By Kim Zetter
A group of students at Swarthmore College in Pennsylvania has launched an "electronic civil disobedience" campaign against voting machine maker Diebold Election Systems.
The students are protesting efforts by Diebold to prevent them and other website owners from linking to some 15,000 internal company memos that reveal the company was aware of security flaws in its e-voting software for years but sold the faulty systems to states anyway. The memos were leaked to voting activists and journalists by a hacker who broke into an insecure Diebold FTP server in March.
Diebold has been sending out cease-and-desist letters to force websites and ISPs to take down the memos, which the company says were stolen from its server in violation of copyright law. It has been using the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, or DMCA, to force ISPs to take down sites hosting the memos or sites containing links to the memos.
Bev Harris, owner of the Black Box Voting site and author of a book on the electronic voting industry, was one of the first people to post the memos before a letter from Diebold threatened her with litigation.
Half a dozen other people hosting the memos in the United States, Canada, Italy and New Zealand also have received letters forcing them to take the material down.
Why War?, a nonprofit student organization at Swarthmore, and the Swarthmore Coalition for the Digital Commons, also composed of Swarthmore students, announced plans to defy Diebold and their college ISP.
Why War? posted the memos on its website about two weeks ago but moved them to a student's computer after the college ISP received a cease-and-desist letter.
The college notified the student, who wishes to remain anonymous, that it would disconnect his Internet service if he didn't remove the memos. But Luke Smith, a sophomore, said students are planning to bypass that threat by hosting the memos on different machines. Each time one machine is shut down by Diebold, they will move the memos to another machine, passing them from student to student.
posted by me
:: 9:36:00 AM [+] ::
...
:: 10.19.2003 ::
:: RE "The Future of Iraq" ::
From The NY Times via The Lakeland Ledger online:
State Dept. Study Foresaw Trouble Now Plaguing Iraq
By ERIC SCHMITT and JOEL BRINKLEY
WASHINGTON, Oct. 18 A yearlong State Department study predicted many of the problems that have plagued the American-led occupation of Iraq, according to internal State Department documents and interviews with administration and Congressional officials.
Beginning in April 2002, the State Department project assembled more than 200 Iraqi lawyers, engineers, business people and other experts into 17 working groups to study topics ranging from creating a new justice system to reorganizing the military to revamping the economy.
Their findings included a much more dire assessment of Iraq's dilapidated electrical and water systems than many Pentagon officials assumed. They warned of a society so brutalized by Saddam Hussein's rule that many Iraqis might react coolly to Americans' notion of quickly rebuilding civil society.
Several officials said that many of the findings in the $5 million study were ignored by Pentagon officials until recently, although the Pentagon said they took the findings into account. The work is now being relied on heavily as occupation forces struggle to impose stability in Iraq.
posted by me
:: 10:11:00 AM [+] ::
...
:: 10.15.2003 ::
:: Freebies: Steal This! ::
Here's an excerpt from Wallace Wang's book,
"Steal This Computer Book 3"
Published by No Starch Press, SF
Chapter 17:
WEB BUGS, ADWARE, POP-UPS & SPYWARE
"In the world of advertising, nothing is really free. When you listen to a radio or watch a television show, advertisers pay the costs and earn the right to broadcast their messages any time they want. Most people tolerate radio and television advertising since they've grown accustomed to its constant interruptions."
Continued here.
But first, remember to buy some delicious ORANGE DRINK! Mmmmmmm. IT ROCKS.
OK, and now for a great quote:
"Technological progress has merely provided us with more efficient means for going backwards." -Aldous Huxley
posted by me
:: 1:09:00 AM [+] ::
...
:: 10.10.2003 ::
:: RE Rushes & Rush ::
A comment from an aohell board:
> "For the most part the partisens may take the oppurtunity to kick him ..."
If you wish to effectively counter this, post Rush's many, many statements over the years RE how those afflicted with drug addiction should be treated.
Personally, and from my own experience with Rush's show, I tend to think his previous positions on these issues would tend to be condemnatory. BUT, I'm willing to be fair and take a balanced look at his record.
Anyone willing to assist in setting straight the legion of liberals that are calling Limbaugh a hypocrite?
I personally wear the scarlet letter "I" (for independent) and am willing to listen.
* * * * * *
Here's a start, although I cannot verify the authenticity of the quote:
"Drug use, some might say, is destroying this country. And so if people are violating the law by doing drugs, they ought to be accused and they ought to be convicted and they ought to be sent up" -- Rush Limbaugh
posted by me
:: 8:09:00 PM [+] ::
...
:: Declan's latest ::
From CNET News.com:
My (brief) career as an ISP
October 10, 2003, 4:00 AM PT
By Declan McCullagh
The FBI is convinced that I'm an Internet service provider.
It's no joke. A letter the FBI sent on Sept. 19 ordered me to "preserve all records and other evidence" relating to my interviews of Adrian Lamo, the so-called homeless hacker, who's facing two criminal charges related to an alleged intrusion into The New York Times' computers.
There are a number of problems with this remarkable demand, most of which I'll get to in a moment, but the biggest is the silliest. FBI Supervisory Special Agent Howard Leadbetter II used the two-page letter to inform me that under Section 2703(f) of the Electronic Communication Transactional Records Act, I must "preserve these items for a period of 90 days" in anticipation of a subpoena. So far I haven't received such a subpoena, which would invoke a lesser-known section of the USA Patriot Act.
Leadbetter needs to be thwacked with a legal clue stick. The law he's talking about applies only to Internet service providers, not reporters.
(Read more)
:: 10:52:00 AM [+] ::
...
:: 10.09.2003 ::
:: The Plame Affair ::
The Novak Affair
How I broke the CIA-leak story, and why nobody noticed
From LA Weekly News
by David Corn
I fought the Republican spin machine, and the Republican spin machine won.
The battlefield was a Fox News Channel studio. I had been booked to discuss my new book (plug, plug: The Lies of George W. Bush: Mastering the Politics of Deception), but I was also told I would be talking about the Wilson-CIA-leak affair. That was natural, for (plug, plug) I was the first journalist to report that a July 14 piece by conservative columnist Robert Novak was possible evidence of a possible White House crime. In that article, Novak, citing “senior administration officials,” disclosed that the wife of former Ambassador Joseph Wilson was a CIA operative. Wilson had challenged the administration on its Iraq policy — particularly its use of the (now infamous and still unproven) claim that Saddam Hussein had been uranium shopping in Niger — and the column seemed to be an administration effort to undermine or punish Wilson. The leakers also may have broken a federal law prohibiting the identification of covert officers. I noted that in The Nation two days after the Novak column appeared. But the leak did not become major news until two months later, when the CIA asked the Justice Department to investigate the White House.
posted by me
:: 5:25:00 PM [+] ::
...
:: 10.08.2003 ::
:: Challenging the RIAA ::
From Wired:
Charter: Hands Off Song Swappers
Broadband service provider Charter Communications sues the Recording Industry Association of America to block it from getting names of about 150 of Charter's customers suspected of file trading.
posted by me
:: 11:57:00 AM [+] ::
...
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