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Archive

Archive for 'Tech'

China web police monitoring public opinion

An interesting post in the Financial Times today talks about a new online surveillance trend in China, led by the Beijing-based company TRS Information Technology, that shifts from searching for politically sensitive keywords to “advanced text mining solutions enabling censors to monitor and forecast public opinion.” The article appears to takes a negative view [...]

Real Names in Beijing Net Cafes become Mandatory

A new policy for Internet cafe users to register with their real names, announced last March, appears now to be implemented on a widespread basis within the city. First time visitors to a particular Internet cafe locale must have their pictures taken and their national ID cards scanned before sitting down at a terminal. The [...]

Google is NOT deleting search logs after 9 months

The San Franciscos Chronicles’ “TheTech Chronicles,” along with a number of other media outlets, is reporting that Google has will “halve the time it stores logs of user web searches” from 18 to 9 months. Charitably, one could call this a misleading statement, but it really is just plain wrong. Google keeps its search logs [...]

New Development in Censorship Cat and Mouse?

Just in time for the Olympics, the Guardian is reporting a development in how the Tor network diffuses that appears, at least temporarily, to obviate any established methods of web censorship. The Tor network was developed by the US Naval Research laboratory to anonymize (but not necessarily encrypt) Internet traffic. The Chinese government has been [...]

Microsoft device facilitates digital evidence gathering

From today’s Seattle Times:
Microsoft device helps police pluck evidence from cyberscene of crime
By Benjamin J. Romano
Seattle Times technology reporter
Microsoft has developed a small plug-in device that investigators can use to quickly extract forensic data from computers that may have been used in crimes.
The COFEE, which stands for Computer Online Forensic Evidence Extractor, is a USB [...]

China’s State Council Issues Report on US Data Privacy

The Information Office of China’s State Council released an English-language report on human rights in the US today. Section III of the report, On Civil and Political Rights, deals with issues of surveillance and data privacy. Here are some excerpts:
From January 2005 to September 2007, Verizon provided data to federal authorities “on an emergency [...]

Beijing City to Partially Resurrect Mandatory Real Name Policy

According to a report today in the London-based online journal, The Inquirer, net cafe patrons in metropolitan Beijing must register with their real names starting later this year. Beijing, to my knowledge, becomes the second Chinese city (Xiamen was the first, in the wake of the successful PX Chemical plant protest) to attempt to impose [...]

Chinese hackers: No site is safe (CNN)

CNN journalist John Vause today is reporting a meeting with Chinese hackers in Zhoushan city who say they have hacked into sensitive computer systems all over the world, including the Pentagon. Although the hackers claim to have been paid by the Chinese government, they could just as easily have been acting independently. Below are some [...]

The FISA Betrayal: Tiny Piece of a Much Larger Problem

The Fourth Amendment:

The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be [...]

ABC Editorial: Government Fails to Enforce Privacy on New IDs

Good opinion piece be Leslie Harris on the Real ID program….
Most disappointing, the hard decisions on how to implement Real ID — including how to protect privacy — have been left to the states. Simply put, there are no privacy rules. States are simply encouraged to follow a set of “best practices” for protecting privacy. [...]