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EFF brief accuses DOJ of "backdoor wiretapping"

In a new brief, the EFF alleges that in order to get around wiretapping’s “probable cause” requirements, the DOJ ordered a suspect’s ISP to start accumulating his emails so that they could later come in and use the Stored Communications Act to subpoena the archive.

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Saturday, June 13th, 2009 Uncategorized Comments Off

NSA Ill-Suited For Domestic Cybersecurity Role

Hugh Pickens writes “Former CIA counterterrorism analyst Stephen Lee has an interesting article in the Examiner asserting that the National Security Agency is ‘a secretive, hidebound culture incapable of keeping up with innovation,’ with a history of disregard for privacy and civil liberties. Lee says that for most of its sixty-year history, the NSA has been geared to cracking telecom and crypto gear produced by Soviet and Chinese design bureaus, but at the end of the cold war became ’stymied by new-generation Western-engineered telephone networks and mobile technologies that were then spreading like wildfire in the developing world and former Soviet satellite countries.’ When the NSA finally recognized that it needed to get better at innovation, it launched several mega-projects, tagged like ‘Trailblazer’ and ‘Groundbreaker,’ that have been spectacular failures, costing US taxpayers billions. More recently, the NY Times reported that the NSA has been breaking rules set by the Obama administration to peer even more aggressively into American citizens’ phone traffic and email inboxes. Whistleblower reports portray NSA domestic eavesdropping programs as unprofessional and poorly supervised, with intercept technicians ridiculing and mishandling recordings of citizens’ private ‘pillow talk’ conversations. Lee concludes that ‘if the Federal government must play a role, then Congress and President Obama should turn to another agency without a record of creating mistrust — perhaps even a new entity. Meanwhile, NSA should focus on listening in on America’s enemies, instead of being an enemy of Americans and their enterprises.’”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


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Friday, June 12th, 2009 Uncategorized Comments Off

NSA Ill-Suited For Domestic Cybersecurity Role

Hugh Pickens writes “Former CIA counterterrorism analyst Stephen Lee has an interesting article in the Examiner asserting that the National Security Agency is ‘a secretive, hidebound culture incapable of keeping up with innovation,’ with a history of disregard for privacy and civil liberties. Lee says that for most of its sixty-year history, the NSA has been geared to cracking telecom and crypto gear produced by Soviet and Chinese design bureaus, but at the end of the cold war became ’stymied by new-generation Western-engineered telephone networks and mobile technologies that were then spreading like wildfire in the developing world and former Soviet satellite countries.’ When the NSA finally recognized that it needed to get better at innovation, it launched several mega-projects, tagged like ‘Trailblazer’ and ‘Groundbreaker,’ that have been spectacular failures, costing US taxpayers billions. More recently, the NY Times reported that the NSA has been breaking rules set by the Obama administration to peer even more aggressively into American citizens’ phone traffic and email inboxes. Whistleblower reports portray NSA domestic eavesdropping programs as unprofessional and poorly supervised, with intercept technicians ridiculing and mishandling recordings of citizens’ private ‘pillow talk’ conversations. Lee concludes that ‘if the Federal government must play a role, then Congress and President Obama should turn to another agency without a record of creating mistrust — perhaps even a new entity. Meanwhile, NSA should focus on listening in on America’s enemies, instead of being an enemy of Americans and their enterprises.’”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


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Friday, June 12th, 2009 Uncategorized Comments Off

NSA Ill-Suited For Domestic Cybersecurity Role

Hugh Pickens writes “Former CIA counterterrorism analyst Stephen Lee has an interesting article in the Examiner asserting that the National Security Agency is ‘a secretive, hidebound culture incapable of keeping up with innovation,’ with a history of disregard for privacy and civil liberties. Lee says that for most of its sixty-year history, the NSA has been geared to cracking telecom and crypto gear produced by Soviet and Chinese design bureaus, but at the end of the cold war became ’stymied by new-generation Western-engineered telephone networks and mobile technologies that were then spreading like wildfire in the developing world and former Soviet satellite countries.’ When the NSA finally recognized that it needed to get better at innovation, it launched several mega-projects, tagged like ‘Trailblazer’ and ‘Groundbreaker,’ that have been spectacular failures, costing US taxpayers billions. More recently, the NY Times reported that the NSA has been breaking rules set by the Obama administration to peer even more aggressively into American citizens’ phone traffic and email inboxes. Whistleblower reports portray NSA domestic eavesdropping programs as unprofessional and poorly supervised, with intercept technicians ridiculing and mishandling recordings of citizens’ private ‘pillow talk’ conversations. Lee concludes that ‘if the Federal government must play a role, then Congress and President Obama should turn to another agency without a record of creating mistrust — perhaps even a new entity. Meanwhile, NSA should focus on listening in on America’s enemies, instead of being an enemy of Americans and their enterprises.’”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


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Friday, June 12th, 2009 Uncategorized Comments Off

Google Edges Deeper Onto MS Turf With Outlook Plug-In


Google released on Tuesday a plug-in to its Google Apps arsenal that could be the last push needed to nudge some businesses into fully adopting its cloud computing services. The product, Google Apps Sync for M|cr0s0ft Outlook, works with the Premier version of Google apps, which costs per business user per year, as well as the free educational version, which is limited to 50 user accounts. The software plug-in will allow enterprise users to adopt Google’s email services without without forcing a migration to the Gmail user interface, according to Google.

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Wednesday, June 10th, 2009 Uncategorized Comments Off

Solution For College’s Bad Network Policy?

DAMN MY LIFE writes “I’m going to Central Michigan University in the fall. Upon examination of their poorly organized network usage policies, I’m worried that using their internet service will expose my web browsing habits, emails, and most importantly, passwords. Another concern I have is the “Client Security Agent” that students are required to install and leave on their systems to use the network. Through this application, the IT department scans everyone’s computer for what they claim are network security purposes. Of course, scanning a person’s hard drive can turn up all kinds of things that are personal. Do all colleges have such extreme measures in place? Is there any way that I can avoid this? There are no wireless broadband providers available in the area, I already checked.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


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Saturday, June 6th, 2009 Uncategorized Comments Off

Get YourName@Linux.com

The Linux Foundation is now offering individual memberships to help support the cause. Members get an ultra-hip @linux.com email address.

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Tuesday, June 2nd, 2009 Uncategorized Comments Off

Get YourName@Linux.com

The Linux Foundation is now offering individual memberships to help support the cause. Members get an ultra-hip @linux.com email address.

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Tuesday, June 2nd, 2009 Uncategorized Comments Off

Why Phishers Love Facebook

Behind every criminal computer hack there is a two-step process: gain trust, then exploit that trust with an attack. So far, the consequences have been relatively mild — mostly, some annoying emails. But if Facebook and other social networking sites don’t get a handle on security issues soon, a serious outbreak could occur.

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Tuesday, June 2nd, 2009 Uncategorized Comments Off

Why Phishers Love Facebook

Behind every criminal computer hack there is a two-step process: gain trust, then exploit that trust with an attack. So far, the consequences have been relatively mild — mostly, some annoying emails. But if Facebook and other social networking sites don’t get a handle on security issues soon, a serious outbreak could occur.

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Tuesday, June 2nd, 2009 Uncategorized Comments Off