Archive for Security & Privacy

Is Joseph Stack A Terrorist

// February 19th, 2010 // No Comments » // Security & Privacy

Apparently not to most of the people voting in the CNN.com poll.

Look it up people, it’s terrorism.

Wouldn’t you say the Oklahoma City bombing was terrorism? The news media sure did. Joseph Stack harbored a grudge against the US Government for perceived wrongs, much like Tim McVeigh.

Several easy-to-find definitions of terrorism (although a widely agreed-to definition somehow still escapes us).

Princeton.edu

The calculated use of violence (or the threat of violence) against civilians in order to attain goals that are political or religious or ideological in nature; this is done through intimidation or coercion or instilling fear.

Wiktionary.org

  1. The deliberate commission of an act of violence to create an emotional response through the suffering of the victims in the furtherance of a political or social agenda.
  2. Violence against civilians to achieve military or political objectives.

An act of violence against civilians in the furtherance of a political or social agenda is terrorism no matter who the perpetrator is.

All Subversive Organizations Now Must Register in South Carolina

// February 16th, 2010 // No Comments » // Security & Privacy

Apparently All Subversive Organizations Now Must Register in South Carolina. I’m guessing this will save the authorities countless hours of investigation time in finding criminals accused of crimes where these organizations are suspected of involvement. Brilliant!

The TSA Wants You Naked

// July 11th, 2008 // No Comments » // Security & Privacy

Rivaling only the IRS in the public’s collective derision, the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) now has a new gadget through which to extend their reign of Orwellian coercion on we, the throngs of presumed-terrorists boarding U.S. flights every day.

The new “millimeter wave scanners” rolling out in some U.S. airports — and used as part of the “secondary screening” on selected passengers — photograph the human body through the clothing with a high-degree of photo-realistic accuracy.

From the article:

“These machines, which show detailed images of a person’s naked body, are equivalent to a ‘virtual strip search,’ ” says the Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC). “The image resolution … is high so the picture of the body presented to screeners is detailed enough to show genitalia.”

…and…

Barry Steinhardt of the American Civil Liberties Union marvels at the government’s double standard: “If Playboy published them, there would be politicians out there saying they’re pornographic.”

The TSA has also begun handing out cracker-jack-box badges to it’s workforce and outfitting them in blue, police-looking uniforms. Real law enforcement officers are none to happy being cast in the same lot with the TSA workers.

Now … they want to see us naked. Are we ready yet to say enough is enough, or will we, as we have since 9/11, simply march like lemmings through the nudie-portal and continue to let the TSA and their policies run amok, awash in excessive power and limited, ineffective oversight?

The TSA itself likely represents the greatest threat to aviation safety and the long-term economic viability of the airline industry. In so poorly executing their mission, they create a very thin illusion of security when in fact it could be argued the aviation safety record of the last 7 years was achieved in spite of them, rather than because of them.

A serious, thoughtful discussion needs to occur about how best to understand and guard against whatever the real threat to airline safety is, and shape new policies and, if necessary, organizations around the outcomes of that discussion. The TSA was hastily conceived during a period of fear and sorrow and since inception the divergence between real threats and their ill-conceived policies has only grown. 5 ounces of shampoo and a butter knife do not a terrorist make. Folks, It’s time to start over with this one.

Portrait of the Modern Terrorist as an Idiot

// June 18th, 2007 // No Comments » // Business & Politics, Security & Privacy

Bruce Schneier has an excellent article that aligns exactly with how I feel every time I hear news of a new “terrorist plot” that has been disrupted. Inevitably, the story that follows paints a picture of a marginalized, incompetent set of characters who had little chance of carrying out a mass-casualty attack, and who often hadn’t progressed beyond the “yelling-at-the-TV” phase of their so-called “plot”.

I’m sure there is real investigation going on and real plots are being uncovered and disrupted. But the ones that seem to get the most attention are the ones that revolve around sensational targets or the potential, however remote, of mass-casualties, regardless of the actors’ operational capacity.

As he says in his article: “[...] in this country, while you have to be competent to pull off a terrorist attack, you don’t have to be competent to cause terror.”

Perhaps these stories are the security equivalent of an opiate for the masses. The appearance that the security folks are “on the job” and “getting things done”. The reality sometimes seems so different.

There are real terrorists out there that pose a real threat to us. Too often, the ones you see getting arrested on TV or simmering in their cages at Gitmo aren’t the ones we should worry about.

Stop (Some) Junk Mail

// June 12th, 2007 // No Comments » // Security & Privacy

OptOutPreScreen.comI saw this on CNN.com the other day (can’t find the article now, glad their internal search works so well).

From their site:
[...]
OptOutPreScreen.com is the official Consumer Credit Reporting Industry website to accept and process requests from consumers to Opt-In or Opt-Out of firm offers of credit or insurance.”
[...]

In short, the site allows you to opt-out from (for 5 years or permanently), or opt-in to, the “…lists used by creditors or insurers to make firm offers of credit or insurance that are not initiated by you…”.

About 50% of the junk mail I receive are from credit card companies offering credit lines or cards with teaser rates for balance transfers. If this will stop 50% of my junk mail, I’ll be one happy camper.