FBI’s “National Security Letters” Threaten Online Speech and Privacy

Filed under:Bill of Rights,Technology — posted by 3wire on 8/17/2005 @ 2:27 am

EFF Urges Appeals Court to Find Secret Subpoena Power Unconstitutional

New York – The Electronic Frontier Foundation, joined by several civil liberties organizations and online service providers, filed a friend-of-the-court brief yesterday in the case of Doe v. Gonzales arguing that National Security Letters (NSLs) are unconstitutional. NSLs are secret subpoenas for communications logs, issued directly by the FBI without any judicial oversight. These secret subpoenas allow the FBI to demand that online service providers produce records of where their customers go on the Web, as well as what they read and with whom they exchange email. The FBI can even issue NSLs for information about people who haven’t committed any crimes.

A federal district court has already found NSLs unconstitutional, and the government is now appealing the case. In its brief to the Second Circuit Court of Appeals, EFF argues that these secret subpoenas imperil free speech by allowing the FBI to track people’s online activities. In addition, NSLs violate the First and Fourth Amendment rights of the service providers who receive the secret government demands. EFF and its cosigners argue that NSLs for Internet logs should be subject to the same strict judicial scrutiny applied to other subpoenas that may reveal information about the identities of anonymous speakers – or their private reading habits and personal associations.

Yet NSLs are practically immune to judicial review. They are accompanied by gag orders that allow no exception for talking to lawyers and provide no effective opportunity for the recipients to challenge them in court. This secret subpoena authority, which was expanded by the USA PATRIOT Act, could be applied to nearly any online service provider for practically any type of record, without a court ever knowing.

“The Constitution does not allow the FBI to secretly demand logs about Internet users’ Web browsing and email history based on vague claims of national security,” said EFF attorney and Equal Justice Works/Bruce J. Ennis Fellow Kevin Bankston. “The district court’s decision that National Security Letters are unconstitutional should have been a wake-up call to the House of Representatives, which just voted to renew the PATRIOT Act without adding new checks against abuse.”

Although such protections are lacking in the PATRIOT renewal bill that the House of Representatives recently passed, they are included in the Senate bill. It is not yet clear whether those protections will be included in the final bill when it reaches the President’s desk.

EFF was joined on the brief by the Center for Constitutional Rights, the Center for Democracy and Technology, the Online Policy Group, Salon Media Group, Inc., Six Apart, Ltd., the US Internet Industry Association, and ZipLip, Inc.

Army speeds high-tech tools to soldiers | CNET News.com

Filed under:Technology,War on Terror — posted by 3wire on 8/15/2005 @ 3:29 pm

Army speeds high-tech tools to soldiers | CNET News.com

The U.S. Army is playing up its ability to get high-tech tools to soldiers in the field more quickly and more affordably.

Rather than weapons, the Army’s Rapid Equipping Force is focusing on devices such as surveillance systems for searching out explosives, or handheld computers with voice recognition that carry a stockpile of phrases in Arabic. The goal isn’t to devise the gadgets from scratch; instead, the unit looks for commercial products or items already in the production pipeline.

(more)

EFF Launches Cooperating Techs Listserv

Filed under:Technology — posted by Q Ball on 8/4/2005 @ 11:02 am

Service Will Connect Technologists with Civil Liberties Cases

Are you a technologist interested in helping out on civil
liberties cases? Are you an attorney looking for some help
understanding technical issues in lawsuits? EFF is setting
up a listserv to help connect technologists to attorneys
on cases that are core to EFF’s mission but beyond what
we can handle in-house.

Over the years, EFF has connected hundreds of tech-savvy
lawyers with potential clients through our Cooperating
Attorneys listserv. This has worked so well, we thought
we’d provide the same service for those who need
technical assistance on litigation and civil liberties
issues.

Here’s how the Cooperating Techs list will work: Attorneys
needing technical assistance on cases will contact us and
let us know what kind of help they need and whether they
can pay. After we receive the request and determine if
it is appropriate for our list, we’ll post a note to the
list with a basic description of the project. (For example:
“CA attorney needs a tech familiar with Microsoft
Exchange servers to assist in recovering allegedly deleted
email messages needed for lawsuit. Can pay reduced fee.”)
If you’re on the list and are qualified and interested,
you contact us, and we’ll connect you to the attorney.
That’s it. EFF won’t investigate or vouch for either
side – we don’t have those kinds of resources. We’ll

simply provide the connection.

Interested in being an Cooperating Tech? Send a note
to cooptechs@eff.org with your: name, email address, and
the city/state in which you reside, and we’ll add you
to the list. If you’re an attorney facing a tech civil
liberties issue and could use some technical help, send
a note to techhelp@eff.org, and we’ll try to help you
find someone.

The Space Age

Filed under:Technology — posted by Q Ball on 7/28/2005 @ 9:50 pm

With the successful capture of the X-Prize by SpaceShipOne and the creation of the first spaceline, Virgin Galactic, we have truly entered the space age. Burt Rutan and Richard Branson have also started the first company dedicated to building private spacecraft for any company or spaceline to purchase.

U.S. Military Network Hacked

Filed under:Technology — posted by Q Ball on @ 8:38 pm

I am so upset at the stupidity of the world right now. I don’t want to get in to a rant. How does a military network that is vital to operations get hacked by someone in Britain? I can only hope that the network is not connected to the Internet. That would be one of the grandest mistakes ever. And to top it all off, the hacker did it to say that we should not be in Iraq. He should probably ask the Iraqi people what they have to say about that. Now that they actually have a say.

Hacked.

Serious Cisco Security Flaws

Filed under:Technology — posted by 3wire on @ 3:59 pm

Computerworld

ISS researcher quits job to detail Cisco flaws
‘IOS is the Windows XP of the Internet,’ says ISS research analyst Michael Lynn

News Story by Robert McMillan

JULY 27, 2005 (IDG NEWS SERVICE) – Internet Security Systems Inc. (ISS) research analyst Michael Lynn quit his job to provide information on a serious Cisco Systems Inc. router vulnerability at this week’s Black Hat USA conference, after his company decided not to give a presentation on the flaw

Rocket Scientists!?

Filed under:Science,Technology — posted by Q Ball on 7/27/2005 @ 7:40 pm

The rocket scientists at NASA still can’t figure out how to make the foam on the fuel tank stick.

After reviewing tape from the launch of Discovery NASA has decided to not go ahead with the next shuttle launch. This is because there was video of foam shedding off of the fuel tank during Discovery’s assent yesterday. The guys at NASA can send rovers to Mars, and make all the rocket engines work to lift the shuttle into space, but foam has got the best of them. If I was them I would be embarrased. Now, don’t get me wrong. I don’t hate NASA, I am all for exploring space and the science that goes with it but I want it done as safely as possible. The things that kill astronauts should be the stuff that can never be prevented and even then we should try to prevent it.

Shuttle

Windows Vista

Filed under:Technology — posted by Q Ball on 7/26/2005 @ 12:17 am

Vista is the final name of the new Windows operating system. Personally I don’t like the name but according to Micro$oft the name has positve conotations to laymen.

Vista

Product of the Year

Filed under:Technology — posted by Q Ball on 7/22/2005 @ 12:51 am

PCWorld’s product of the year is Firefox!

USA PATRIOT Act- Why should I care?

Filed under:Bill of Rights,Technology — posted by 3wire on 6/24/2005 @ 9:34 am

Have you read the PATRIOT Act? Of couse not. Then how can you have an opinion? Here’s the Act.

Electronic Frontier Foundation’s take on the The USA PATRIOT Act.
EFF: USA PATRIOT Act

The IPod Killer No One Is Talking About

Filed under:Technology — posted by Q Ball on 6/23/2005 @ 12:15 am

It is called the Cowon iAudio X5, and it kicks the IPod’s ass. As you go through the list of features I’m about to give you, you need to remember one thing: the X5 costs is the same price as an original IPod.

Features: Audio playback- mp3, WAV, OGG Vorbis, WMA, ASF and FLAC; Video playback- XviD and MPEG4; Picture display- JPEG; FM Tuner which can record FM and has a programable record feature. There is also a line in record. The X5 has another unique feature: it can connect directly to another USB device and transfer files without a PC as an intermediary. All of this for $300. There are two versions of the X5, one with a 20G HDD and 30G HDD. The 20G costs $300 and the 30G is slightly more. The battery lasts 14 hrs. with the 20G and 35 with the 30G. The smaller version is said to be very slim, about the size of an orignal IPod and the bigger version, well, a little bigger. If this doesn’t convince you to get one check it out at Cowon’s website or at CNet.

EFF: RFIDs in Schools

Filed under:Bill of Rights,Technology — posted by 3wire on 6/21/2005 @ 10:15 am

EFF: RFIDs in Schools

Across the nation, public schools are using RFIDs to turn campuses into pervasive surveillance networks. EFF is fighting to stop these schools from tracking students using RFID technology.

Hollywood steps up fight against Chinese pirates

Filed under:Technology — posted by 3wire on 5/24/2005 @ 7:27 pm

Buy A Star Wars DVD for $1.20

Agenda Inc. Live Feed – Hollywood steps up fight against Chinese pirates

Want Immortality? Keep Playing Games

Filed under:Technology — posted by Maverick on 5/23/2005 @ 9:53 am

Ian Pearson, one of Britain’s leading forward thinkers, claims that the progress in computer technology is so fast that in 45 years they will be as complex and powerful as the human brain. This, claims Pearson, means that by that time a rich egomaniac may be able to load their conciousness onto a computer and live virtually forever. Poor people, of course, will have to wait until the prices come down.

Click here to read more.

More on Reversal of the Broadcast Flag

Filed under:Technology — posted by Q Ball on 5/10/2005 @ 1:41 pm

Wired Article

Student suspended for cellphone call from mom in Iraq

Filed under:Bill of Rights,Technology,War on Terror — posted by Q Ball on 5/7/2005 @ 12:46 am

Student suspended for cellphone call from mom in Iraq – Engadget – www.engadget.com /

Broadcast Flag Overturned!

Filed under:Technology — posted by Q Ball on 5/6/2005 @ 6:52 pm

D.C Circuit Court of Appeals finds in favor of the people! Archivists rejoice.

More at Copyfight

DivX Hardware

Filed under:Technology — posted by 3wire on @ 3:07 pm

In case you have been living in a technology black hole and don’t know that the DivX codec is the coolest thing happing to video these days, you should know that there is even DivX compatible hardware available, including DVD players. Check this one out.

High Definition Recorder

Filed under:Technology — posted by 3wire on 4/25/2005 @ 3:20 pm

Thinking of building an HD PVR? This is a good place to start.

http://www.eff.org/broadcastflag/cookbook/guide.php#requirements

Also check out www.pchdtv.com for a compatible video card.

TViX Multimedia Box

Filed under:General,Technology — posted by Q Ball on 4/21/2005 @ 4:52 pm

I was surfing the net and happened across a cool new device called TViX. It is similiar to a TiVo in that it allows you to rip your DVDs to it and will also store and playback mp3s and photos. It has a slideshow feature for viewing photos. Besides DVDs it will play any video format, ex. DivX, mpeg1 and mpeg2. As for audio it will play WMA and Ogg as well. For video out it has component, composite, and s-video. For audio it has the standard stereo, coaxial, and optical. Two things I wish it had are: Some kind of Hi-Definition video out and an Ethernet port. The up coming HD media format is a good reason to have HD out. As of right now the two models they have only allow you to transfer files via USB 2 or Firewire, there is no networking which I think is essential nowadays for anthing remotely resembling a computer. Another plus, however is that the TVix comes with a remote. I am not sure what all the features are of the remote, but in the pictures it looks like it has alot of functionality.

TViX


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