hackers

Climate Change is still very, very real

Despite the leaked information this week by a few scientist stiffling dissent and doctoring data, the information that is now public does NOT prove that skeptics were right.

However, when the mainstream media, with corporate sponsors and ownership by large energy conglomorates or stock in the obsolete technology that is continuing to be used and wreck havoc not just on climate but on agriculture, property, maritime safety and physical well being.

Skeptics assume that because this data is now public, they now have proof that climate change caused by humans is a myth, but they are very, very wrong!

Even though there is scandel brewing over climate change brough on by the University of East Anglia, the fact that the leading scientists tried to slience decent and exagerate the truth, there are many other institutions in the world with their own independent research and data to prove that climate change is still very real and does not only threaten the environment but economic interests.

Many climate change skeptics deny the existance of climate change not because of ignorance but because they fear that if action is taken to curb climate change it will mean that government regulation will be imposed to reduce the amount of manufacturing thus driving down profits.

The fact that economic liberalism (often supported by conservative political parties) has already allowed free trade to move manufacturing to countries with lax environmental regulation or to punch exceptions into laws than make existing pollutors to be exempt from new environmental laws has not only contributed to environmental damage but agricultural disaster, economic recession, unemployment, and poverty.

The status quo believes that it is unsulated from these problems because they have the wealth to afford to establish themselves where it will effect them the least. The problem is that despite isolating themselves from the outside world, the outside will always find a way in.

So if skeptics believe that because they have released the quibble of a few scientists trying to cover up dissent that talks in Copenhagen will fail, the skeptics are wrong!

It should be noted that eariler this year, News International was caught hiring hackers to break into private telephone and compuyter systems to dig up private conversations and personal information then used the stollen data to sensationalize it senationalize news in tabloids owned by News International.

News International is the corporation in the United Kingdom controlled by Rupert Murdoch who also owns News Corp (Fox News, The Wall Street Journal, MySpace.com) in the United states as well as News Limited in Australia.

Murdoch’s senationalism and biased news coverage has invoked all sorts of anarchy for all the wrong reasons.

In the United State, Murdoch’s “Fixxed News” has destablized the Republican Party by forcing out moderate, center-right conservative supporters in order to cater to the Republican base and far-right. Because Republicans emphazies the values of ONLY their base while abandoning and expelling everybody else, the Republican party has lost control of the House of Representatives, the Senate, and the 2008 Presidential Election not to metion many state and general elections through out the country.

As if that weren’t enough, the base and the far-right then developed misguided protest in the form of the what is now the T.E.A. Party Movement which has polarized American politics. One of the many things people notice about the T.E.A. Party is that it is composed mostly by white upper class individuals who for nearly the past 25 years (complements of former president Ronald Regan) have gotten away with alot of deregulation that created a barrier between the upper class and the middle class and has constantly pushed the middle class into becoming part of the working poor or into poverty.

With the rise of the Internet, a growing resistance has developed. So much so that in 2008, America elected President Obama through a grass roots campaign and community organization efford.

While the base and the far-right claims it has developed their own “grass roots efforts”, the discovery of who is really part of their grass roots campaigns denotes that they are not grass roots and only used the name “grass roots” as a buzzword which also has liberal activists on the look out for other things like greenwashing, disinformation, and of course counterhacktivism.

The counterhacktivism this week is a sign that conservative base and far-right are desperate to keep the status quo, even as going as far as to make it appear that the real hactivists are throwing their support behind skepticism. Of course, the mainstream media doesn’t know the difference between counterhacktivism and hacktivism. So who takes the credit for revealing this e-mails at East Anglia? The hacktivists.

Don’t be surprise to see more attacks by counterhactivists on issues such as the National Healthcare, Network Neutrality, Alternative Energy, Unionization, and fighting against Telecom Immunity and Factory Farming.

It is up to the hacktivist to fight back against the corporate and neo-conservative counterhacktivists.

This is our world. We have to defend it!

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Droid Does Quite Well

Generally when I write my critiques, I have an unconventional way of writing them. I like to point out the faults and grevances first before pointing out the praise, features, and benefits. This way, when someone finishes reading the article they can think postively about the thing that I wrote about. This can work the opposite way if you list the postive first and the negative second.

I’ve had my Motorola Droid for nearly a week now. Though it is a good phone it is not without grevances.

First, there is the grevances with Verizon. The usage of mail in rebates is so last century. The fact that I have to pay an extra $100 to get that $100 back is BS. The concept of the rebate system seems to be on the idea that people are lazy and that they will not take the effort to photocopy a sales recept (easily done at the workplace, local library, Kinkos, or if you are lucky to have an open top printer/scanner). I certainly wasn’t going to go to Sam’s to pay $184 for a $199 phone that is worth paying an extra $8 for an insurance policy. It also would have been nice if Verizon would have created a printout of what the bill would look like. Though service will likely be near $100/month, there are a few things that can be done to reduce the cost of service. When I find out, I’ll be sure to write about it.

Next, their is the grevances with Motorola. I was suprised to here that the Droid was Motorola’s Hail Mary Pass in that hearing things like Motorola has been putting out some bad phones over the years. The Droid is a good phone….but Motorola wasn’t truthful in reporting the SAR rating of the phone. While Motorola told the FCC that it had an SAR rating of 0.89 W/kg (body) and 1.10 W/kg (head), the manual for the Droid has different values. Like 1.5 W/kg (body) and 1.49 W/kg (head). Of course, it is not like there is someone who keeps track of these things, right? On the other hand, I did disable the GPS on the phone, which probably explains why I don’t need to recharge the thing every four hours. GPS is a nice feature to work with mapping applications, but it can be a real battery drainer and privacy invader.

Which brings me to the final set of grevances that I have with Google. Google has played a big part in the Android Operating system development. It was kind of a let down that the applications I though Google had availble to use Google’s services weren’t there, or were so much better if used in the Internet browser than on the phone. Sure, you have Google Maps (which is good), Google Calendar (also good), and Gmail (which could use an upgrade), but Google does not have any applications for Tasks, Notes, or Docs. These applications are available for iPhone from Google, but Android users, no matter which phone you are using, will need to go to the Internet for that.

Seeing as how the Android operating system now brings Google applications to a mobile device, one can’t help but wonder if the guy at Google who decided to discontinue Google Notebook isn’t kicking himself right now. Notebook would have been a great app for Android, and the fact that it was discontinued is a foolish mistake. It would be like Microsoft removing Notepad because you have Word. Hopefully, someone will reinstate this service so that moble users can jot down notes.

The Android Market deserves both praise and criticism.

If anyone is not aware of the Anonymous hacker group, you should probably know that these guys mean business even in their quirky unorthodox ways. Anonymous is fickle. To either laud or jeer them would be hazardous to one’s online reputation. However, I find their motives of dealing soundboards in the Android Market (under the guise of “Onymous Heroes”) to be conspicuous. While it is great that the Android has many free appications to try out (although It would be nice to see a few more from Google and the Android group), the fact that one of the most stand-alone-complex group might not be so obvious to many users is a little concerning but at the same time a reminder that not everyone is creating programs in the Market (or App Store for that matter) with good intentions. That is, other groups (not like Anonymous) could have their own applications on the market to do some bad things. It is sort of like a reminder by them to say “hey watch your back” or taking advice from a theif on how to better safeguard your home from intrusion. On the other hand, the fact that no one is really keeping an eye on the Market to weed out programs that can be potential secuirty threats should make Android users wary of who the download their software from.

Reguardless, I do have plans on writing many reviews in the future about Android Apps. I would also like to develop some of them. I probably should put more effort into writing things in Java, to which that is what brings me to the upside of this review.

The Android operating system is Linux based, but many of the programs are written in Java. Perhaps I had alot of bad experiences with Java (as I don’t even use Java when browsing the Internet as the processes will keep on running), but the performance of Java on the Android is remarkable! Back when I had a Motorola RAZR, Java was unplesant. Palm couldn’t use Java work a dan on the Treo. But Android, has pretty much saved Java from being just another legacy language. Android doesn’t use the Java 2 SE or ME standards, which probably explains why Android programs are so fluid.

As stated earlier, the security flaws of the Android operating system is not with the operating sysetem itself, but with programs from some shady individuals selling their wares on the Market. However, there are gems among the junk. Where Palm Treo didn’t have the random number generation to develop a proper encryption key to run things like SSH and IRC (or battery life), the Android operating system does. Security is also one of the main goals of the Android operating system. If anything bad happens to the phone because of a program, Google will know about it. So basically, security is very good on the phone.

The Droid has a beautiful and sharp 16:9 screen. Despite the criticism by many critics about the camera, I think they seem to forget that the camera has two flashes on it. And why is everyone complaining about the 5 megapixel camera? Sure, you have to hold down the picture button to take a photo, but 5 megapixels is a sharp good of not great quality camera. (Perhaps my review of digital cameras is short sighted, then again, I don’t exactly have $700 at the moment to go out and buy the latest Nikon camera on the market. So in my opinion, 5 MP is good.)

Another thing the critics have been ripping on is the audio. Perhaps it is the foolish assumption that because a phone has a speakerphone on it that it can be used as a radio. Well…yes and no. Like just about all other smartphones, you will need to use headphones or an audio adaptor that plugs into your car stereo or home audio equipment. With a 3.5mm headphone jack, any set of headphones can be plugged into the Droid. The iPhone, much like my previous phone which was a Palm Treo, does not have a 3.5mm headphone jack. Instead, iPhone users need to use an adaptor, which in my previous experience of using audio adaptors for headphones, is an unplesant experience as it makes listening to music impossible afte a while. The Droid, like its competitor the Palm Pre, has a 3.5mm jack as opposed with the G1 that has no jack (USB audio only has one purpose: SKYPE!).

Droid does streaming audio much like the iPhone. If there is one Application I can recommend right now, it is imeem Moble. Streaming audio has evolved over the years. Just remember when you do streaming audido, do it where you can get WiFi. Otherwise, don’t forget to bring your music collection with you. (Remember: “unlimited” on the 3G network, no matter which telecom you use, means 5GB.)

So to call the iPhone better because “it has 100,000 apps” and that “it is more popular” is clearly a sign that the critics are not interested in what is new or what is better, just what is cool. Remember that next time when you try to listen to music on your iPhone but can’t because your headphones sound awful because you need to use an adaptor. Remember that when you can’t swap batteries, run multiple applications, take night shots with the camera, or make a phonecall without having to deal with the Jack-In-The-Box-speaker-quality sound.

The Droid Does but Android still needs development.

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Rupert Murdoch should get a free ride home from the airport complements of the FBI

Telephone hacking, or phreaking, is a common subject in hacker magazines like 2600: The Hacker Quarterly. Because most forms are illegal, they are discussed in hypothetical situations.

Unfortunately, there is nothing hypothetical about paying over $1 million in hush money to quiet victims of telephone hacking. Especially when you are a controvertial billionaire broadcasting magnate who own various media outlets around the world.

Rupert Murdoch, the man who runs the New York Post, Fox News, and MySpace, is in hot water in the UK for hiring hackers to break in to cellular telephones (which are now like mini-computers) to steal personal information. (Hireing hackers is not as rare as you think. The FBI has a page about such people who hire hackers to break the law for them.) Murdoch’s UK company News Group then tried to use hush money to cover up the hackings of THOUSANDS of cellphones.

This is a controversy that not only concerns the UK, but also the United States, where his US company News Corp may have persuaded a judge into making MySpace the victium in the US v. Drew case, where locally, a depressed teenager was bullied into killing herself due to the actions of Lori Drew of Dardenne Prairie, Missouri.

More over, how does the paparazzi manage to get into the cellphonese of celebrities? Why was Barack Obama’s cellular records being looked over by workers at Verizon last year?

Murdoch’s involvement with telephone hacking in the UK will open up alot of questions that involve privacy when the Federal Bureau of Investigation meets up with him upon his return to the United States.

A major computer crime has been committed. Not by some guy with alot of time on his hands, but by a very rich and very powerful person who does not have authorized access to pry into the personal information of people around the world.

This man does not hold any leadership in government! There is no George W. Bush to pardon his actions or to make an excuse for him to break the law.

Gordon Brown is not at all pleased that the News Group is hacking telephones. So why should we permit him to break the law here with the News Corp?

I really urge anyone to contact their telephone provider and tell them that Mr. Murdoch does not have permission to break into their cellphone.

It is probably a good idea to shoot off a complaint to the FBI’s Interent Crime Center, especially if you susspect that your phone is being hacked.

It’s time to send Mr. Murdoch where he belongs: IN PRISON!

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The Honest Hackers from Brown

In what has got to be either bold or bastardly, a couple of boys from Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island hacked Neko, the wiki from the old website, last weekend.

From what I have gathered, I was not the only victum

I too was spammed by Brown University more info:

http://digg.com/d1oTQZ

Its a very interesting concept, I have left the spammed page up. It is an experiment to replace bitorrent. Using dead Wiki’s is ineffective IMO, they should use pastebins.

Dead? I’ve been trying to get people’s attention to help develop this wiki for years! Now it has turned into my place to jot scientific musings and IP addresses belonging to spammers.

Neko: I'm not dead yet!

Neko: I'm not dead yet!

They boys who have identified themselves as Andy Pavlo and Ning Shi (or as the dean will soon be calling them “on double academic secret probation”) are part of a project called the Graffiti Network at the Department of Computer Science at Brown University (currently dead, here’s a Google Cache), are working on a project to distribute files through peer-to-peer networks by dropping off chunks of an Ubuntu distribution at random websites.

UBUNTU?! Not on this website, boys! This site rolls with Fedora!

On a page they created called “Effectiveness”, the boys uploaded part of their package (now deleted), then came back and apologized.

NOTICE: This page was created by a program as part of the Graffiti Network research project at Brown University. We have removed the data, but are unable to remove this page. We apologize for any inconveniences that our actions may have caused. For more information, please visit http://graffiti.cs.brown.edu/info/

Appology accepted, boys. But do not let me catch you doing it again.

Thursday, April 16th, 2009 Linux, hackers No Comments

The Tale of the Robber Baron Businesses

It doesn’t seem like it was so long ago that the St. Louis was the headquarters of many companies. McDonnell Douglas, Anheuser-Busch, May Company, A.G. Edwards, Trans World Airlines, Ralston-Purina. Major corporations that were headquartered here in St. Louis, Missouri, that were swallowed up by large out of town corporations who snatched up the assets of these companies only to be exported, outsourced, sold off, and eventually shut down.

The majority shareholders of these companies did not care about the importance of these businesses were to the area, so as long as they were being paid for letting the outsiders take over.

Now we have Boeing owning McDonnell Douglas, Macy’s owning May, American Airlines owning TWA, Nestle owning Purina, Wells Fargo owning Wachovia owned A.G. Edwards. And the biggest, most disasterous aquesition to our area, InBev owning Anheuser-Busch.

We are no longer the headquarters of various major corporations but the home of very expendable branches of corporations who do not understand, nor want to understand, the true value of the actual worth of the native companies.

The most recent of acquesition by out of town conglomorates was made by a company called InBev, who last year purchased a very profitable and successful Anheuser-Busch. AB was a financially sound corporation during this troubling time. Yet despite the fact that the InBev company from Europe had amassed a large amount of debt by taking out loans to purchase AB, the shareholders approved of the merger.

Imagine if you took out several credit cards or large loans from the bank and then showed off the money you took out to show that you were wealthy when in fact you are in so much debt that you put other people in a financial pinch. It would be alot like this commercial.

So now InBev is shedding off all of the many assest that AB had in St. Louis. The Bevo Mill, owned by AB, was sold by InBev for $1 to the City of St. Louis. To which the people the City put in charge of keeping the Mill open, defaulted on Payments, and now the Mill is closed indefinitely. Grant’s Farm, formerly owned by United States President Ulysses S. Grant and home of the Budweiser Clydesdales, has it’s hours reduced and there is no more free beer in the beer garden. Busch Entertainment Corporation, parent company of Sea World and Busch Gardens, is being auctioned off by InBev, but BEC may just break off before that happens.

Another takeover company, Macy’s, has yet to close the Macy’s (nee Famous-Barr) location at Jamestown Mall in North St. Louis County. The mall, like so many others has fallen from grace. Yet, when Macy’s finds out they are losing money, and didn’t bother to take the advice of closing down the Jamestown Macy’s, they will shut down the Downtown Macy’s which was the headquarters of May Department Stores, and is doing moderately well in these tough times.

Then there is this outrageous incident where steel used to build an oil pipeline from Canada to Wood River, Illinois is being imported from India. The pipeline that is being constructed runs along the Granite City Steel mill, where workers are being laid off. There are things in the “global free trade” system that do not make sense. And this is just one of them.

The other is the Pentagon buying Chinese-made computer parts for their computers then wondering why the Chinese are breaking into the Pentagon. It is because the Pentagon buy’s the same parts that we buy them from. Places like Best Buy, who sell many electronic items that are made in China. The logic behind items that are shipped from overseas are cheaper is flawed.

Yet when the United States Govermment as well as several state governments are sending jobs for various agencies overseas and permitting foreign access to American data systems, then wonder why service is poor and there is virtually no security from the outside, it just makes you want to find the person who decided to permit all of these terrible and irresponsible ideas and kick some sense into his head.

Another example of broken systems is the St. Louis Metro Bus system. When the Obama Adminstration gave money to mass transit authorities, Metro had recieved money. Just not the Metro we though was getting the money. Through some weaselly business practice where a slight name change can break a company into separate entities, Metro’s adminstration (which had been slashing routes due to the fact that their route planning skills are medicore and non-aggressive) got money, but Metro’s transit system recieved NOTHING. This is a perfect example of what is wrong.

We entrusted the transit system to take people to work, to take people to companies and events, in an affordable and efficent system. Instead, everything that could go wong has gone wrong.

I took the bus to an event the other day and because the busses were so spread out, the bus I was on was ahead of schedule. So I sat on a bus for five minutes as it when nowhere. The bus had also been driving far below the speed limit, much slower than it would have even if passengers were getting on or off the bus.

Yet the adminstration which had overspent money on a Metrolink route that should have followed Interstate 64, a major highway that is under construction, went south through the congressional district of one of the local politicians. Meanwhile there are still no routes to West St. Louis County or to St. Charles County where a budding technology district is forming. So now that the transit part of Metro has no money to take people to work, local businesses lose workers and revenue, and eventually close down.

The automobile industry gets what it deserves right now. As much as wishful thinking will not make S.U.V.s, crossovers, or trucks popular in an economy when the oil barrons can’t live with just one home, the automotive needs to wake up and face reality. They had well over two decades to fend off the impending bankruptcy that awaites them.

Through out the 20th Century, General Motors has been responsible for the purchase and closure of many mass transit systems. They have also purchased many technologies for vehicles that run on alternative energy, as have the coal, nuclear, and oil based energy corporations, only to lock them up or to destroy those ideas before they have the chance to catch on.

When the city of Hazelwood, Missouri along with various representatives from the Missouri and federal goverment went to Detroit to keep the Hazelwood Ford Plant operational, Ford took whatever money that was offered to them but closed down the factory anyway citing that it would be too much work to train employees to equip vehicles that run on alternative energy.

Oh yes, the complicated workings of a dynamo. Certainly not as complex as a internal combustion engine. Can’t…solder…two…small…wires…to…a…power…converter. Must…retrain…the…entire…assembly…line.

The lazy execuses to put off saving the company with cars that are efficent and affordable then got the UAW to go along with the belief that installing an electrical generator, which would really be built in another factory much like engines or any other car parts, would not only be very complex but also un-American. Which is why the Japanese are so successful selling hybrid vehicles.

Sure, the UAW got with the program and started making hybrids at various American factories, but the hybrids they were making were going to be shipped to markets outside the United States where they would be very unpopular. Again, the who illogical “cheaper to buy it imported” philosophy damed the automobile industry to bust-up the auto unions who can’t be a union if there is no car company to save. It’s like buring the house down to evict the old occupents to build a new one on top of it in hopes that the new occupants will put up with a leaking roof and no heat.

Then there is Ameren Electric, nee Union Electric, Illinois Power, and a couple of co-ops. When big storms came into the St. Louis Area in 2006, the requests to trim trees prior to the events which prompted Ameren to launch their Power On campaign fell on deaf ears. When they finally got around to trimming the trees, many trees were cut in such a way that they could now cause property damage if they fell over because all the limbs on one side of a tree would be cut off.

But that doesn’t matter. The linesmen at Ameren are heros! There is just one teeny-tiny thing they want in return for saving the day from the catastrophie they created from their prior irresponsibly. They want to build a second nuclear reactor at the Callaway Nuclear Plant near Fulton, Missouri.

If you are saying “no” to this, good.

Let us not forget that it was irresponsiblity that caused an overflow of water that caused the Taum Sauk disaster that destroyed Johnson Shut-Ins State Park in December 2005. Having former KSDK anchor Karen Foss as spokenwoman for Ameren to paint the portrait of a “benevolent corporation” does not cover up the fact that Ameren still wants to spend $6 BILLION on a nuclear power plant that is worth more than the entire company.

Then there is the promotional disinformation of former Greenpeace member Patrick Moore who has been advertising that nuclear energy is an alternative to fossil fuels, when it really is not. Even the people at Greenpeace have asked the media to disavow anything he says on behalf of Greenpeace that supports nuclear energy since Greenpeace does not, has not, and never will support the usage of nuclear energy. So when Ameren says “Relax! Greenpeace supports it”, that is totally false! Nuclear Power is NOT Green Energy!

Being that Callaway County is in rural Missouri, where KWWR broadcasts the farm report like traffic on KMOX, I am disappointed that such a farming area hasn’t taken the opporitunity to get into alternative energy. Sure, farming doesn’t pay much, and alternative energy systems are expensive thanks to Big Oil companies snatching up them up. But I can’t believe that very few farmers are catching on to using Wind Energy products produced by John Deere. Yet it will be a challenge to fight against the nuclear supporters in Jefferson City since the state capital is powered by the Callaway plant. On the other hand, north of Jefferson City along U.S. 54, there is a small community using wind turbines. Possibly related to Missouri Renewable Energy.

St. Louis will not be using ANY power that is produced by the second Callaway reactor as it is also not using any power by the first reactor. But if a major nuclear disaster were to occur at the plant, the St. Louis Area would be affected by it.

If Ameren is permitted to build this project with funds they don’t have, that will ulitmately be part of our electric bills, what does that say about being honest and hardworking? That is means nothing? That the injuries that you’ve sustained from laboring those many hours, days, months, or even years, means nothing because your sustainiable retirement can be bought by an unsustainable buy out worth far less? You’ve done the right thing. You pay your bills. You pay your taxes. You obey the law. And yet when someone who makes more money than you or some company that makes more money than you will every seen in your life time comes along and breaks the law, is it right to procrastinate or give a slap on the wrist to someone who has everything they want and now they want your piece of pie?

We have been abiding to every rule stating what we should do to preserve ourselves, yet somehow, the rules have been rewritten so that we are weakened and that outsiders can assert there strength by breaking the rules.

I read in the news lately that an American ship that was taken over by Somali pirates. When the crew overpowered the invaders looking to hijack the ship, they were condemed more for breaking the rules when pirates commandere a ship, rather than for their bravery of overpowering the pirates who left with nothing but the ships captain as a hostage who still attempted to escape from his captors.

We are living in a world where there are business pirates. People who make up rules that say “when someone breaks into your house to take your property and to harm you and your family, crawl into a fetal position and let the criminals take what they want” rather than “when someone breaks into your house to take your property and to harm you and your family, defend yourself and attack the invaders”.

The pirates are already here. To take control of businesses they can not afford to run. To sell off the profitable assest they do not feel are of any value. To export products and outsource or layoff employment, and to import goods and services from outside companies because the rules say that it is less expensive and “supports a global economy that promotes free trade”. To purchase your competitors to shut them down within the time span of a few years, because “it’s just how business work” in their opinion.

But we are not allowed to learn their techniques. For legal reasons, many companies, and educational institutions, do not want people to learn how to blatenly break the rules for fear that teaching these techiques would cause mischief and crime. When you are trying to apprehend cat burglars, wouldn’t it be wise know how they go about picking locks and deciding whose stuff they should steal? When you are trying to stop the spread of computer viruses, wouldn’t it be wise to know how to write them so you can create an antivirus? When you are trying stop people who con people out of their life savings (like what has been going on recently), wouldn’t it be good to know what conartist look for in a person to make them a target for financial schemes?

We live in an age where criminals plan their crimes like a family plans a vacation. Some criminals do not need to break the law in order to steal things. They just take out many loans that will take forever for them to pay back, buy whatever it is that they want, sell off the stuff about the thing they don’t believe is in their best interest, take whatever resources they think is valuable, then dispose of the rest of it, leaving just a skeleton behind.

We shouldn’t allow criminals, pirates, parasites, or even robber barons to take away our strength by abiding by the laws they create and break so they permit them to steal from us while we are punished for preserving and defending what is ours. In order for us to do the right thing, we must hold those with greater influence to be accountable for their actions and expect them to do the right thing too.

Laws are written to be upheld by everyone, especially by those who have exceptional qualities.

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Ghostnet in the Shell

At risk of sounding pro-union or like some “Buy American” redneck (in that someone who shouts “Buy American” but continues to buy all their stuff from Wal-mart), today’s post is pretty obvious.

Seeing as how I am still unemployeed (send money or a job!), I have tried ever so hard not to bring up the subject of unions. If you are a large corporation, the very though of having union workers or a person who brings up the subject of unions is enough to turn down a resume or fire a worker for possible inserting the though of unionizing.

Many people feel that unions are Marxist or are against the very fabric of what the United States stands for. The fact is, most unions are developed to preserve jobs and benefits and to make sure that management enforces safety practices and don’t run off to the tropics in a private jet when the company’s portfollio tanks.

And while history has painted a very sour story of unions in the United States, there are some people in the tech industry who regret not unionizing when they had the chance.

Microsoft workers in Seattle formed a union in 1998 as part of the Communication Workers of America. Had more employees followed suit, especially in hardware manufacturing rather than just software development, more computers and their components would still be made in the United States.

But now America, and much of the world, has another problem thanks to the exportation of technology to places like Southeast Asia. Ghostnets. A ghostnet is a vast cyber-spying network on many of the latest high tech devices especially the ones from China. (That includes you, iPhone users!) The worries that the United States goverment was using technology to spy on citizens begain to cause concerns for civil liberies groups such as the Electronic Frontier Foundation for most of this decade. But when the Pentagon is complaining that their networks are being hacked by the Chinese, it does no good to complain that China stealing government secrets when stamped on the motherboards on just about every computer the government owns are the words “Made in China”.

Many tech savvy people, including myself, know that it is quite possible to access a computer through a remote host. The only surefire way to keep intruders out is to either unplug the Internet cable, turn the WiFi and Bluetooth off, and run the computer on a battery or solar pannels. But since most of us have come to rely on the Interent over the years, so has the hardware. And that is where the problem lies this time around.

Apparently, some Chinese hardware manufactures (of which it is quite obvious the Chinese government would deny it anyway), put in some backdoors in the hardware. Such that cameras and microphones turn on monitors that have them, computers turn on when they aren’t supposed to, private data such as passwords and account numbers are being transfered.

If you don’t want the Chinese to break into your computer, don’t use any hardware or software developed or built in that area. But since that is impossible due to a globalized market, the government and consumers have every right to experience buyer’s remorse.

The biggests mistake that the American computer industry ever made was to export hardware manfacturing and software development to Asia. Just about everything in you computer is made in China. If you are using Windows Vista, there is a good chance the software was not developed here in the United States anymore. Sure the core stuff may be American, but the rest of it is probably programmed by H1-B visa workers Microsoft sent to Canada (because the United States wasn’t going to let foreign workers in) or exported to India, China, Taiwan, Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philipines, Thailand, Singapore, or Pakistan. Why anyone would want to support such a thing is daft. We are talking about computer programmers and information technology worker, not strawberry pickers and farm hands from Mexico.

I suppose that once the locals in that area realizes that when the Americans were being paid $15-25 per hour, had 40 hour work weeks, the big multinational companies will move to other places where the online security of the locals, and the places the locals replaced, can be exported. Somalia perhaps.

The fact is that large businesses have no concept of security in the foreign world. As long as they can pay some one $2 per hour with no benefits to work 80 hours a week while we blindly enjoy the benefits.

As long as people are educated, and not just told what people just want them to know, things should be OK.

But remember, the name of the game is CONTROL. The people with the most education, imagination, and freedom are the most difficult to manipulate. While those who stay in line, do what they are told, and never speak out are the least threatening to the status quo.

Come to think of it, I think this may be why I haven’t landed a job yet. I don’t fit the mold. I’ve never fit the mold. And I am quite proud that I have never fit the mold. I know what I want in life. I’ve worked hard to obtain it. But now that I see that every time I move closer to my goals, the further back they move away.

There are gatekeepers in this world, who are happy with their position and who will fight to keep it. Their will as strong as my own, as I fight to get what I want and often do succeed. But now I see that it is a standoff of wills, to see how long I will break before I get what I want. And that is a job.

I will no longer be denied.

Tuesday, March 31st, 2009 hackers, security, unions No Comments
September 2010
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