The most outstanding and urgent hour of audio you’ll hear this week is the On the Media history of the PATRIOT Act (MP3), and the most important website you’ll visit this week is Sunset the PATRIOT Act, which lets you do something about it.
The On The Media special tells the story of how the PATRIOT Act was not only passed without any debate, but without any chance for Congress to read it,
but goes on to point out all the ways in which mass surveillance,
torture, and other gross abridgments of liberty were carried out without
support from PATRIOT.Our great and good friends at Fight for the Future, ringleaders of the SOPA and Net Neutrality fights, are using Sunset the PATRIOT Act
activist site to pour the heat on the Senate, who have until the close
of today’s session to kill the mass surveillance parts of PATRIOT.The lesson is that PATRIOT needs to die, but when it does, we have our work cut out for us.
Lethal Interpersonal Violence in the Middle Pleistocene
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.. lethal interpersonal violence is an ancient human behavior …
Good to know we are not new at killing each other.
The Internet With a Human Face: Maciej Cegłowski on the things we need to fix
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Maciej Cegłowski’s latest talk, The Internet With A Human Face, is a perfect companion to both his Our Comrade the Electron and Peter Watts’s Scorched Earth Society: A Suicide Bomber’s Guide to Online Privacy: a narrative that explains how the Internet of liberation became the…
The Internet With a Human Face: Maciej Cegłowski on the things we need to fix
Sesquipedalian Expatiation: The Cleveland Show – Felonious Munk
Word!
Ramadan PSA
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Hey guys, Ramadan is coming up in less than a month (roughly 3 weeks from now, no exact date yet) and I just wanted to make sure that some people were aware. Muslims around the globe are gonna be fasting along with other practices for a full month, so please be considerate by…
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nprfreshair: stand-up-comic-gifs: Kumail Nanjiani Recording now with Producer Ann Marie Baldonado!
Today’s terrifying Web security vulnerability, courtesy of the 1990s crypto wars
The Logjam bug allows attackers to break secure connections by tricking
the browser and server to communicate using weak crypto – but why do
browsers and servers support weak crypto in the first place?The answer is in the Bill Clinton-era export restrictions on strong
crypto. During the first crypto wars, the Clinton administration forced
tech companies to export pre-broken crypto to nations to which the US
was hostile. This created the possibility that Web servers would find
themselves communicating with browsers that only supported weak crypto,
and that Web browsers might connect to servers that were incapable of
the normal strong crypto that we rely upon to protect our sensitive
information from eavesdroppers.As a result, browsers and servers distributed in the USA and other
western states have routinely shipped with a mode in which they appear
to be communicating securely, but are actually using a weak,
easy-to-break cryptographic protocol.In other words, they have back doors. And attackers have figured out how to waltz through those back doors.
This is especially significant because western governments are demanding
a fresh round of back doors in broader classes of devices that are even
more tightly connected to our daily lives. UK Prime Minister David
Cameron made it an election promise, and the FBI has demanded that Congress give them the power to force tech companies to build in back doors.But it’s not the 1990s anymore. Crypto doesn’t just protect the Web – it secures your car’s wireless interface to keep attackers out of your brakes and steering; it secures your pacemaker against wireless attacks that can kill you where you stand; it secures your phone against having the camera and mic remotely operated by “sextortionist” voyeurs who blackmail their victims into performing live sex acts on camera with the threat of disclosure of nude photos covertly snapped by their compromised networked cameras.
Once these vulnerabilites are inserted, they ripple out into devices that are placed in the field and never updated,
whose owners and users have no way to know that they were broken by
design. There is only one way to attain cybersecurity, and that’s by
making the Internet and the devices we connect to it as secure as
possible.
Court Rules That CIA Can Keep Secret the 7,000-Page Senate Torture Report
May 21, 2015
Court sides with CIA, ‘torture’ reports to stay secret
Michael Doyle
McClatchy News
May 21, 2015
WASHINGTON — The CIA can keep
secret a nearly 7,000-page Senate report on harsh interrogation methods,
as well as an internal agency review, a federal judge has ruled.The
complete 6,963-page report compiled by the Senate Select Committee on
Intelligence, and the related “Panetta review,” are exempt from the
dictates of the Freedom of Information Act, U.S. District Judge James E.
Boasberg concluded.Though noting that “this case is no slam dunk for the government,” Boasberg in his 26-page decision Wednesday
rejected the ACLU’s arguments for disclosure. The Senate committee
report, he reasoned, remained a document under congressional control,
and Congress made sure to exempt itself from FOIA.“Congress has
undoubted authority to keep its records secret, authority rooted in the
Constitution, longstanding practice, and current congressional rules,”
Boasberg stated.The fact that the Senate intelligence panel had
forwarded a copy of the full report to the CIA, Boasberg added, “should
not be readily interpreted to suggest more wholesale abdication of
control.”Hina Shamsi, director of the ACLU National Security Project, voiced disappointment in the ruling.
“The
direct, contemporaneous evidence shows that the full torture report is
subject to the FOIA because Congress sent it to the executive branch
with instructions that it be broadly used to ensure torture never
happens again,” Shamsi said in a statement. “The Senate’s landmark
investigation into a dark period in our nation’s history should not stay
behind closed government doors, but needs to see the light of day.”But the current Senate committee chairman, Sen. Richard Burr, R-N.C., said he was pleased.
Further
release of this highly classified document will compromise the national
security of the United States and needlessly put Americans lives at
risk,” Burr said.The Senate committee released a summary of the $40 million report last December, following years of back-and-forth.
In
its a June 2009 letter to the CIA, the Senate committee specified that
the documents it generated during its investigation “remain
congressional records in their entirety and disposition” and that
“control over these records, even after the completion of the
Committee’s review,” would “lie exclusively with the Committee.”“At
the end of the day,” Boasberg wrote, “the ACLU asks the court to
interject itself into a high-profile conversation that has been carried
out in a thoughtful and careful way by the other two branches of
government. As this is no trivial invitation, it should not be blithely
accepted.(The ACLU) and the public may well ultimately gain
access to the document it seeks,” Boasberg added. “But it is not for the
Court to expedite that process.”Boasberg more quickly dismissed
the related FOIA request for the agency’s internal “Panetta review,”
noting a previous FOIA request for the documents by journalist Jason
Leopold had likewise been rejected.
Nano cell that mimics long-term memory
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Project leader Dr Sharath Sriram, co-leader of the RMIT Functional Materials and Microsystems Research Group, said the ground-breaking development imitates the way the brain uses long-term memory.
“This is the closest we have come to creating a brain-like system with memory that learns and stores analog information and is quick at retrieving this stored information,” Dr Sharath said.
“The human brain is an extremely complex analog computer… its evolution is based on its previous experiences, and up until now this functionality has not been able to be adequately reproduced with digital technology.”
The ability to create highly dense and ultra-fast analog memory cells paves the way for imitating highly sophisticated biological neural networks, he said.
The media’s reaction to Seymour Hersh’s bin Laden scoop has been disgraceful – Columbia Journalism Review
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Barrels of ink have been spilled ripping apart Hersh’s character, while barely any follow-up reporting has been done to corroborate or refute his claims—even though there’s no doubt that the Obama administration has repeatedly misinformed and misled the public about the incident. Even less attention has been paid to the little follow-up reporting that we did get, which revealed that the CIA likely lied about its role in finding bin Laden, which it used to justify torture to the public.
Hersh has attempted to force the media to ask questions about its role in covering a world-shaping event—but it’s clear the media has trouble asking such questions if the answers are not the ones they want to hear.