07.01.14
Links 1/7/2014: CoreOS and Blackphone in Headlines
Contents
GNU/Linux
-
CoreOS Unveils Linux Containers As A Service
CoreOS is considered by some observers to be a fork of Google’s Chrome OS system, customized for Linux server management. The system is so small because container workloads contain part of the Linux operating system themselves, the user-space parts needed by the application. But all kernel functions, such as scheduling processes and memory management, are the function of the host system and shared by whatever number of containers is running on the host. Containers also leave each workload isolated from the others in a manner that’s sometimes described as “lightweight virtualization.”
-
CoreOS Linux does away with the upgrade cycle
-
Distributed Linux OS wizards CoreOS release first commercial product
-
CoreOS gets $8 million to bring a specialized Linux OS for server deployments to the mainstream
-
CoreOS Launches Managed Linux Operating System as a Service
The move toward a services-based approach for all IT is taking another step today with the launch of the CoreOS Managed Linux operating system as a service offering. CoreOS is an open-source Linux startup that has been developing a Docker container-based virtualization platform since August 2013. CoreOS first released a beta of its platform in May and is now announcing the first commercially supported release.
-
CoreOS Announces Managed Linux, World’s First “OS-as-a-Service”
-
CoreOS Linux Released as ‘World’s First OS as a Service’
-
CoreOS Raises $8M Series A Round, Launches Managed Linux As A Service
-
New Docker-enabled Linux distro wants to rival Red Hat
-
Linux Top 3: CoreOS, Oracle Enterprise Linux 7 and Ubuntu 14.10
-
New Commercial Rolling Linux, Xfce the Best, and More Mint
Our top story in tonight’s Linux news recap is the announcement of CoreOS, a new commercial Linux distribution. Over at Datamation, Matt Hartley explains why Xfce is the best Linux desktop. Also today, WorldOfGnome.org has a short review of GNOME 3.13.3, eWeek has a slideshow of newly released Peppermint 5, and the Mint 17 reviews just keep on coming.
-
Server
-
SME Server 9.0 Adds Support for Windows 8 Domain Joining
The official announcement reads, “We dedicate this release of SME Server 9.0 to Chris. Without him it would be nowhere near ready. If you download and use it, please remember him and his work, and that of all the other contributors who work tirelessly to make Koozali SME as good as it is.”
-
How Docker used open-source ideals and excellent timing to become a cloud darling
The container management company’s rise to prominence has generated a lot of buzz within the tech world, and in an interview with Gigaom, CEO Ben Golub explains why its open source platform has the potential to grow further.
-
-
Kernel Space
-
Linux Kernel 3.16 RC3 Brings Few Driver Updates
-
Linux 3.16-rc3 released
-
Kernel prepatch 3.16-rc3
-
The People Who Support Linux: Hacking on Linux Since Age 16
Pretty much all of the projects in software developer Yitao Li’s GitHub repository were developed on his Linux machine. None of them are necessarily Linux-specific, he says, but he uses Linux for “everything.”
For example: “coding / scripting, web browsing, web hosting, anything cloud-related, sending / receiving PGP signed emails, tweaking IP table rules, flashing OpenWrt image into routers, running one version of Linux kernel while compiling another version, doing research, doing homework (e.g., typing math equations in Tex), and many others…” Li said via email.
-
Graphics Stack
-
User Ptr Support Proposed For AMD’s Radeon DRM Driver
Christian König has proposed user pointer support for the Radeon DRM driver to match the Intel driver’s recent feature.
-
-
-
Applications
-
My Weather Indicator Released With Numerous Bug Fixes
My Weather Indicator, an Ubuntu AppIndicator for displaying the current weather on the panel, was updated to version 0.6.8 today, receiving numerous bug fixes as well as a few other changes.
-
WebODF v0.5.0 released: Highlights
Today, after a long period of hard work and preparation, having deemed the existing WebODF codebase stable enough for everyday use and for integration into other projects, we have tagged the v0.5.0 release and published an announcement on the project website.
-
The Development Of Xnoise Has Been Dropeed
Recently, Shuerhaaken, the Xnoise developer, has announced that he no longer maintains Xnoise, due to that the project has lost its development contributors. But since Xnoise is open-source, everybody can fork it and keep the media player alive.
-
who and whoami: Two more quick Five Ws
-
whohas: A good idea, in theory
-
whois: Accuracy, brevity, clarity
-
CrashPlan: Multi-platform Onsite, Offsite And Cloud Backup Solution
CrashPlan is an open source backup software developed by Code42, an American software company. Code42 was founded as an IT consultancy company, but finally ended up focusing on online storage solutions, and released the very first version of CrashPlan on 2007. CrashPlan is an ideal backup solution for small medium to large enterprise organizations. It can backup data between remote systems, local systems, and external devices and CrashPlan Cloud.
-
Instructionals/Technical
-
Retrieve hard drive’s age and general health information using Linux
-
Install and dual-boot SteamOS
-
Add a mQtranslate language selector to your header
-
Advanced Geoblock evasion with OpenBSD pf and rdomain’s
-
Installing Seafile (Secure Cloud Storage) with MySQL Database in RHEL/CentOS/SL 7.x/6.x
-
Is Xiki the most powerful command shell ever created?
-
CBT Nuggets Announces New Linux Training Course
-
VNC Server Installation on CentOS 6.5
-
How to repair a crashed WordPress database table
-
How to Reduce hard drive’s acoustic noise level
-
How To Install Python 3.3.5 On Ubuntu 14.04 Trusty Tahr, Ubuntu 12.04 Precise Pangolin And Derivative Systems
-
How To Install Slingscold 1.2.1.6/Slingscold Launcher 1.0.1 On Ubuntu 14.04, Ubuntu 13.10 And Derivative Systems
-
BorderImage is for Scaling! Scalable UIs 2.2.
-
Locked Settings : A Proxy Pattern Based Design
-
Dual-boot Windows 8 and Linux Mint 17 on a PC with 2 disks and UEFI firmware
-
Free software on Hacker Public Radio
An advocate for software freedom for more than a decade, O’Brien has written and recorded dozens of tutorial podcasts for people wanting to learn how they can make use of open source software. His long-running series on LibreOffice is quickly approaching a 40-episode milestone. Another series on privacy and security, which helps everyday computers users take advantage of encryption technologies, runs concurrently (one recent episode features O’Brien at a conference giving—what else?—a talk). Learning new software can make casual users feel lost in a sea of new procedures, techniques, icons, and settings. O’Brien’s voice is the lighthouse that keeps them firmly and confidently on course.
-
Maynard Is A Wayland-Based Desktop Environment For Raspberry Pi. How To Install Maynard On Raspian
As you may know, Maynard is a desktop environment for Rapbian (the Debian system for Raspberry Pi) developed by the Raspberry Pi Foundation and Callabora, but it can also run on a regular Linux desktop system. It uses GTK+, runs on Wayland and provides a backend for the Weston reference compositor, using GNOME Web as the default internet browser, mimicking the Gnome Shell experience.
-
-
Games
-
The Pit: Gold Edition arrives for Mac and Linux in July!
-
The Pit: Gold Edition Coming to Linux and Mac
-
SteamOS Alchemist Beta Includes The Latest GPU Drivers: NVIDIA 337.19, AMD 14.10.1006 And Intel Mesa 10.1.6+
As you may know, Valve, now a member of The Linux Foundation, has initiated some ambitions projects: the SteamOS, a Linux operating system optimized for gaming, the Steam Machine, a gaming colsole that will run with SteamOS and the Steam Controller, a game controller specially designed for SteamOS and the Steam Machine.
-
-
-
Desktop Environments/WMs
-
LXQt Now Has Full Qt5 Support
The “LXQt” desktop that’s a Qt version of the lightweight LXDE desktop can now be compiled using Qt5 where as previously there were still Qt4 dependencies.
-
LXQt Got Full Support For Qt5. Wayland Support Will Be Soon Added
-
Xfce App Launcher `Whisker Menu` Sees New Release
Whisker Menu is an application menu / launcher for Xfce that features a search function so you can easily find the application you want to launch. The menu supports browsing apps by category, you can add applications to favorites and more.
-
Why XFCE is the Best Linux Desktop
I have used various Linux desktop environments over the years: GNOME, KDE, LXDE and XFCE. As for the best Linux desktop? Each experience has its advantages. Some Linux desktops offer lots of glamour and neat effects, while others provide a solid (be it simpler) user experience without making the end user feel like they’re using a desktop from the late 20th century.
In this article, I’ll explain why I still feel that XFCE remains the best Linux desktop available, even after trying other desktop environments.
-
K Desktop Environment/KDE SC/Qt
-
Plasma Next: All for one, and one for all
I haven’t been directly involved in Plasma development in the past a lot, only since very recently, because of my job at BlueSystems. Ever since I started working on the Plasma Desktop Shell, I’ve had 2 important concepts in mind that I’ve tried to follow:
The desktop is the place people go when they want to be performant.
Let the user focus by offering simple concepts that just work. -
two things plasma has yet to achieve
There are two technology goals that Plasma hasn’t yet achieved that I hope it will one day. Neither of these were primary goals at the outset of Plasma’s design or development, but as the code base matured and I watched the strengths and weaknesses of various design decisions, they made it onto my radar.
Erasing the boundary between remote and local in user interfaces
Component-centric design providing stability and performance improvements
-
Akademy-es 2014: Great success in KDE’s return to Málaga
The ninth edition of Akademy-es was held last month in Málaga at the Telecommunications School of University of Málaga. Akademy-es had never been held in the city before but it is where the idea of Akademy-es began, during Akademy 2005, resulting in the first Akademy-es in 2006 in Barcelona. KDE old timer Antonio Larrosa is the link between both editions, being the local organizer of Akademy-es 2014 and Akademy 2005.
-
digiKam Software Collection 4.1.0 released…
-
digiKam Software Collection 4.1.0 released
digiKam is the closest thing you can get in GNU/Linux based systems (also on proprietary operating systems) which costs nothing. It’s one of the many extremely polished and feature rich open source applications developed by the KDE community. The digiKam community has announced the release of version 4.1.0 which include many bug fixes for the 4.0.0 release.
-
Last week in Krita — weeks 25 & 26
This last two weeks have been very exiting with the kickstarter campaign getting closer and closer to the pledge objective. At the time of writing we just crossed 13k! And with the wave of new users, drawn by the great word spreading labor of collaborators and enthusiasts, we have been very busy bringing new functions and building beta versions for you.
-
-
GNOME Desktop/GTK
-
GNOMEPERUFEST2014 was celebrated in IBM Perú
I’m pleased to announce that the GNOME PERU FEST 2014 has been held in the IBM Perú campus according to the plan I presented to the GNOME Foundation at the beginning of this year. “Let’s use Linux” was the mark for this year. I want to thank to all the people who helped me to accomplished this project, my family and friends in Lima were so kind to support the job. The GNOME Foundation, IBM and INFOPUCP were the organisations that sponsored this year the event. Thanks also La Republica, a well-know newspaper in Lima, because they published a post of our event in their Webpage
-
-
-
Distributions
-
Screenshots
-
Red Hat Family
-
Red Hat adds new cloud management certification for Red Hat Enterprise Linux OpenStack Platform
Red Hat is working with several management solution providers, including BMC and HP. As members of the Red Hat OpenStack Cloud Infrastructure Partner Network, these vendors have provided key insight, feedback and support for the management certification, and are all in various stages of the certification process.
-
Red Hat Delivers Cloud Certification Plan, and Teams with HP
When Red Hat announced very solid quarterly earnings a few days ago, CEO Jim Whitehurst was quick to attribute part of the strong performance to his company’s new focus on cloud computing. In discussing the enterprises that pay Red Hat for subcription support and services, he said: “These are some of the most sophisticated IT organizations in the world, and many continue to increase their purchases from Red Hat to modernize their IT infrastructure with cloud enabling technologies.”
-
Red Hat Introduces Cloud Management Certification for Red Hat Enterprise Linux OpenStack Platform
-
Fedora
-
3.15 Fedora ARM kernel status
There’s been quite a bit of water under the bridge since my post on the 3.14 kernel status. With 3.15.x due to land in Fedora 20 shortly I thought I’d give an overview of changes for 3.15 and what’s happened since the last post.
-
-
-
Debian Family
-
Removal of (some) PHP related software from Debian
-
Derivatives
-
Canonical/Ubuntu
-
Ubuntu phone release date: on track for 2014 launch
In 2013, Canonical – the company behind Ubuntu – attempted to raise $32m via crowdfunding for its Ubuntu Edge smartphone. It didn’t make it, but the Ubuntu phone isn’t dead. In fact, development is well under way and the Ubuntu phone operating system is very much alive.
-
Canonical Has Created “The Ubuntu One Downloader Script”, That Allows The Users To Easily Download Their U1 Data, Before The Service Shutdown
Mark Shuttleworth has announced that Canonical could not provide a storage service that could compete with Google Drive or Dropbox, so they have decided to drop the project.
-
Ubuntu 14.10 Utopic Unicorn Now Uses Kernel 3.16 RC2 As Default, On The Unstable Branch
-
Ubuntu 14.10 Alpha 1 Has Been Released In The Traditional Flavors
-
While A Mate Flavor Of Ubuntu 14.10 Is Already Under Works, Cinnamon Will Be Available Via The Default Repositories Of Ubuntu 14.10
For those who don’t know, both Cinnamon and Mate are GNOME2 forks used a lot on Linux Mint systems that provide the users alternatives to the GNOME 3 desktop environment.
-
Flavours and Variants
-
Lubuntu 14.04: Missing Network Manager Icon Bug Finally Fixed [Quick Update]
Quick update for Lubuntu 14.04 users: the bug that caused the Network Manager icon not to show up on the panel by default was finally fixed today.
-
Peppermint Five Linux Brings the Cloud to Linux Desktop
As the world increasingly moves to cloud-based infrastructure and software-as-a-service (SaaS) applications, the needs of traditional desktop users are changing. The Peppermint OS Linux platform is an effort to integrate the cloud SaaS world with the desktop in a seamless hybrid approach. Peppermint had its 1.0 release back in 2010, and the technology has been steadily updated ever since. The Peppermint Five Linux distribution was officially released on June 23, providing an updated software base and new features for Peppermint OS users. Peppermint Five is based on the recent Ubuntu 14.04 Long Term Support (LTS) Linux release that debuted on April 17.
-
Linux Mint 17: Fresh and Long-Lasting
Linux Mint 17 is very impressive, but it is often said that the devil is in the details. With Linux Mint 17, the accumulated details are very devilish indeed. The development team did a hell of a job making this Linux distro smoother and better. The GUI for System Settings has a more consistent look. The categories are better organized and separated into subsections.
-
-
-
-
-
-
Devices/Embedded
-
Automotive Grade Linux Delivers Open Automotive Software Stack for the Connected Car
-
TI spins Cortex-A9 Sitara SoC
-
Automotive Grade Linux group releases Tizen-based IVI stack
The Linux Foundation released an Tizen-based Automotive Grade Linux (AGL) stack for in-vehicle infotainment, with the UI written in HTML5 and JavaScript.
We’ve seen Tizen-based smartwatches and phones, among other form-factors. Now Tizen is heading for the car. The Linux Foundation’s Automotive Grade Linux (AGL) project released its first open source IVI stack based on the Tizen IVI version of the Linux-based operating system.
-
Phones
-
Android
-
HTC Roadmap Leaked with Android 4.4.4 and Android L Plan for One M8/One M7/One Mini 2/One E8
Most of the HTC handsets listed in the roadmap have already received the Android 4.4.2 KitKat with Sense 6.0. The only device which is yet to get the software taste is HTC One Mini M4. As LlabTooFeR claims, the update has been in the testing phase for One Mini and is expected to roll out next week, sometime between 30 June and 6 July.
-
Android L developer preview available for Nexus 5 and Nexus 7
Rumors about Android 5.0 Lollipop have been floating around since the beginning of the year, but at the I/O conference, Google presented the next version of their operating system only as Android L. While they didn’t want to reveal the full name just yet, they did make a very interesting announcement regarding the operating system. The company released a developer preview (or beta) version of Android L and you can already test it out if you happen to own a Nexus 5 or Nexus 7 (2013). Before you get too excited though, we do need to mention that this version is aimed at developers and the average consumer might have some trouble installing it. If you want to check it out follow the instructions below (via Times of India), but please be cautious as the original article warns that Android L might cause some problems to your device. And again, this reportedly only works for the Nexus 5 and Nexus 7 (2013).
-
Android Wear review: the everything inbox
It’s not just email either, though it tends to take the brunt of everybody’s anger. There are dozens of apps sending us hundreds of notifications; managing all that incoming information is a genuine hassle. Looking at the notification center on our phones, it’s hard not to imagine some harried, 1930s office worker. His tie is loosened, sleeves rolled up, sweat beading on his forehead underneath a green visor as he looks at the metal tray marked “INBOX” on his desk. It’s piled high with a stack of paper, sent to him from people he doesn’t know and doesn’t love.
-
Android Wear, Android Auto and Android TV to be free from OEM skins
The showstopper for this year’s Google I/O was Android wear, with the unveiling of first Android Wear devices : Samsung Galaxy Live and LG G watch. All the lucky Google I/O attendees will be able to take one of them home too. We are expecting to see some detailed review of the smart watches soon from people who have already got their hands on them.
-
Blackphone preorders ship; new orders to open 7/14
-
New, security-minded Blackphone is ready to ship, and it’s packing Nvidia hardware
What’s also interesting about the Blackphone is that it’s the first device (or one of the first, at least) to be based on Nvidia’s Tegra 4i. The Tegra 4i was announced 18 months ago, but was held up almost indefinitely due to manufacturing delays and then modem validation issues. Details have been extremely scarce regarding the fate of the product, so it’s interesting to finally see some shipping silicon.
-
The Blackphone is Here and the NSA are Not Happy
-
Blackphone now shipping to the tune of $630
-
Blackphone preorders ship; new orders to open 7/14
-
Spy-busting Silent Circle-powered Blackphone launches, sells out
SGP Technologies has begun shipping its privacy-focused Blackphone, claiming the handset will protect users from intelligence agencies’ and criminal groups’ espionage campaigns.
The Blackphone is the first smartphone released by SGP Technologies and is a joint project between security firm Silent Circle and hardware company Geeksphone.
-
Blackphone Now Shipping To Paranoid Android Fans
-
Blackphone, a new encrypted smartphone built from scratch, is now market ready
-
Privacy focused Blackphone starts shipping
Blackphone, an Android-based smartphone developed by Silent Circle, SGP Technologies and Geeksphone, is now shipping. The phone became a sensation during Mobile World Congress as it offered extreme privacy of communication. After the NSA revelations made by Edward Snowden, there is a huge demand for services or devices which offer privacy from NSA and other surveillance agencies. However even the Blackphone doesn’t offer any protection from NSA. Phil Zimmermann, one of the creators of the phone, said that Blackphone doesn’t make you NSA proof.
-
Why You Shouldn’t Have To Buy The $630 Super-Secure Blackphone In Order To Protect Your Privacy
-
Privacy-optimized Blackphone is now shipping with anti-surveillance features
The Blackphone is something that had debuted back in February as an anti-surveillance device in the wake of the severe NSA threats which had emerged around that time. This device has been priced at $629 and it comes equipped with an Android-based operating system which kicks in an array of security traits.
-
Privacy Freaks Rejoice! Blackphone – The Privacy-Focused Android Smartphone Finally Began Shipping
-
You Can Finally Get Your Hands On The New Anti-Surveillance Blackphone
-
Want To Communicate Anonymously Without Being Monitored Or Tracked? ‘Blackphone’ Now On Sale
-
Stop Congress from allowing Obama’s NSA to collect more of your personal data
-
Full Release of Remaining Snowden Leaks Slated for July, Says Cryptome
-
-
-
Free Software/Open Source
-
Open source support gives older software a fighting chance
It would be difficult to find someone who could provide more insight into what is happening in the world of the Eclipse IDE than Wayne Beaton, the director of open source projects at The Eclipse Foundation. So what is new with Eclipse, beyond the obvious excitement surrounding the latest Eclipse Kepler release and the recently announced support for Java 8?
-
SaaS/Big Data
-
ownCloud Client 1.6.1
The recommendation is to update your installation to this version. The previous version 1.6.0 had great new features, first and foremost the parallel up- and download of files and a way more performant handling of the local sync journal. That required a lot of code changes. Unfortunately that also brought in some bugs which are now fixed with the 1.6.1 release.
-
A path to OpenStack contributions, bug reporting, and more
Interested in keeping track of what’s happening in the open source cloud? Opensource.com is your source for what’s happening right now in OpenStack, the open source cloud infrastructure project.
-
-
Databases
-
MongoDB: A showcase for the power of open source in the enterprise
Big trends in the No Design Database era and other takeaways from MongoDB’s first user conference.
-
The day I finally drank the open source Kool-Aid
The combination of the Internet, Moores Law and hyper fast commoditization changed that, but not as quickly as you might imagine. At least not until the most recent times (perhaps the last five years) when vendors emerged who upended the old models and presented us with a fresh way to look at everything compute related. Infrastructure, Database, Software, Platform…Pretty Much Everything is rapidly being converted to a Service. Witness Citi recently talking MongoDB as a Service.
-
-
CMS
-
3 open source content management systems compared
Whether you need to set up a blog, a portal for some specific usage, or any other website, which content management system is right for you? is a question you are going to ask yourself early on. The most well-known and widely used open source content management system (CMS) platforms are: Joomla, WordPress, and Drupal. They are all based on PHP and MySQL and offer a wide range of options to users and developers alike.
-
-
Healthcare
-
7 Open source Electronic Medical and Health record (EHR) System Tools
These Tools helps you track medical data, create electronic medical records, deploy medical billing apps and lots more
-
-
Business
-
Netflix’s newest open-source project, Security Monkey, hunts for vulnerabilities atop Amazon’s cloud
Read the blog post about Security Monkey to learn more about the project, and if you use Amazon’s cloud, you might want to check out Security Monkey on GitHub.
-
-
Funding
-
Quality Software Costs Money – Heartbleed Was Free
About the only thing GNU Project founder Richard Stallman and I can agree on when it comes to software freedom is that it’s “Free as in free speech, not free beer.”
I really hope the Heartbleed vulnerability helps bring home the message to other communities that FOSS does not materialize out of empty space; it is written by people. We love what we do, which is why I’m sitting here, way past midnight on a Saturday evening, writing about it; but we are also real people with kids, cars, mortgages, leaky roofs, sick pets, infirm parents, and all kinds of other perfectly normal worries.
The only way to improve the quality of FOSS is to make it possible for these perfectly normal people to spend time on it. They need time to review patch submissions carefully, to write and run test cases, to respond to and fix bug reports, to code, and most of all, time just to think about the code and what should happen to it.
-
base Raises $60 Million to Fuel NoSQL Database Effor
It takes a lot of money to build a database company in an industry dominated by a giant like Oracle. It’s a lesson that open-source NoSQL database startup Couchbase know well as it continues to raise funding to build its business.
-
-
FSF/FSFE/GNU/SFLC
-
Introducing Alex Patel, our summer Campaigns intern
My name is Alex Patel, and I’ll be working as an intern with the campaigns team at the Free Software Foundation this summer. This fall, I will be a sophomore at Harvard College in Cambridge, MA, at which I’m pursuing a joint degree in computer science and philosophy.
-
Learn How to Protect Your Email Communication in Less Than 30 Minutes
Email Self-Defense, a beginner’s guide and infographic to email encryption by the Free Software Foundation (FSF), was released in six new languages [fr, de, jp, ru, pt, tr] on June 30, 2014. More languages are underway.
-
-
Openness/Sharing
-
Programming
-
Governance for the GitHub generation
In software, this is epitomized by the GitHub generation, but I believe it’s a characteristic of any aspect of culture touched by the Internet. For those still trapped in the worldview of the Industrial Age, a hierarchy of mediators collects dues in return for providing permission to pass. But the Internet connects everyone to everyone else, peer to peer without discrimination…
-
The D Language LLVM Compiler Updated With Numerous Changes
LDC that’s the LLVM-based D language code compiler has been updated. LDC 0.13.0 was released last week with new features.
-
Leftovers
-
Science
-
Health/Nutrition
-
Nurses Accuse Hospital Giant of Pulling Billboards Exposing Price Gouging
CHS hospitals charges some of the highest costs in the country and aggressively targets many patients for money.
-
-
Defence/Police/Secrecy/Aggression
-
US to arm Syrian moderates, but who are they?
Whereas previous aid to anti-Assad forces was handled by the CIA, the newest round will fall under the purview of the Department of Defense, which is frequently more hands-on
-
Obama’s Half-Billion to Syria’s ‘Moderates’
President Obama’s plan to spend another half-billion dollars on Syria’s “moderate” rebels will add more fuel to the destructive violence just as the killing was finally dying down. It’s also hard to see how this investment will promote serious negotiations, notes ex-CIA analyst Paul R. Pillar.
-
Obama snubs MI5, sends CIA to investigate threat of radical Islam in UK
As radical Islam spreads through the United Kingdom, US President Barack Obama has sent a special CIA unit to interrogate senior British security experts. The move is seen as a snub of Britain’s MI5 and MI6 intelligence agencies.
-
Unconventional Warfare: The Political Destabilization Campaign continues in Venezuela
Since February, continuing protests, many of them violent, against the socialist government of President Nicolás Maduro have claimed more than 40 lives in Venezuela and injured more than 800 people. Most were victims of opposition supporters who have also set fire to universities, public buildings and bus stations – even the buses themselves have been burned. The scale of the protests has decreased since the start of April when the government and opposition leaders held talks to end the conflict. Much of the unrest had until then taken place in richer neighbourhoods, led by students attending private schools. But recently demonstrations have been restricted to opposition strongholds, such as Táchira state on the Colombian border. The protestors cite high inflation, and shortages of food and other goods as the source of their frustration. The latter is almost certainly the result of hording by opposition-owned and controlled distribution chains.
[...]
President Maduro calls the protests “the revolt of the rich.” Asked by a Guardian U.K. reporter in April whether his government should accept responsibility for some of the killings, he proposed that 95 per cent of protest-related deaths were the fault of “right wing extremist groups” at the barricades. Maduro mentioned three motorcyclists who were beheaded by a wire strung across the road by protesters. In the same exclusive Guardian interview, Maduro, a former bus driver and unionist, emphasized the considerable increases in social services and reduction in inequality over the last 15 years.
-
What Should Obama Do to Save Iraq?
Instead of sending military to Iraq, the Obama administration should espouse critical factors for objectively serving the Iraqi people, reports Abbas J. Ali.
-
Iraq crisis: US steps up drone flights amid intelligence blame game
-
‘BARACK OBAMA: THE CHIEF SPONSOR OF ISIS’
Did the Islamic State of Iraq, the main predecessor of ISIS, not emerge after the U.S. invasion of Iraq? Did not many ISIS militants escape the U.S.-controlled Abu Ghraib Prison in 2013? And just how many weapons that the U.S. issued to the Syrian opposition end up in ISIS hands? Seriously, though, you cannot just get away with all this simply because you do not share a 550-mile land border with Syria
-
Keep calm and trust Iraqis with Iraq
The Iraqi resistance brought an end to the formal military occupation of their country; the resistance is now seeking to rid itself of the occupation-installed government and its bloody sectarianism. It is this resistance that is taking control of northern Iraqi cities. Witnesses on the ground in Iraq say that multiple groups with significant political differences have set those divisions aside to unite against the sectarian government of Nuri Al-Maliki. The Islamic State in Iraq and Levant (ISIL) is one of those groups, but they are playing a smaller role. Mosul and Tal Afar are in the hands of the General Military Council of the Iraqi Revolutionaries, liberated from Maliki’s brutal sectarian rule. Only a strong, coordinated military organization—not 1000 or even several thousand undisciplined extremists—could take and hold a city the size of Mosul (1.4 million) and continue to advance.
-
Why are 6,000 reporters keeping a US nonsecret?
I know a “secret.” I know the identity of the man who was CIA chief of station in Kabul until one month ago. The name of the top spook in Afghanistan was disseminated via email to 6,000-plus reporters as part of an attendance list of senior U.S. officials participating in a meeting with President Barack Obama during his surprise visit with U.S. troops. The government spotted the error and asked journalists not to post it. They agreed. Still, it’s all over the Internet. What I found via Google during a few hours of searching made me 98 percent sure it was him; sources in Kabul covered the 2 percent of doubt. Until the week before last I was working on this story for Pando Daily, where I was a staff writer and cartoonist. We intended to publish the name — not to endanger him (which in any case would not have been possible since CIA headquarters at Langley had yanked him off his post), but to take a stand for adversarial media.
-
A look at the last nine US reporters who faced the possibility of jail time
Each protected sources while under threat of imprisonment
-
US drone strike leaves 3 Taliban militants dead in Kunar
-
Drone strike in Kunar kills three Taliban: Afghan media
-
Iraq live: US to send another 300 troops as ISIL declares caliphate
The US is sending another 300 troops to Iraq to beef up security at the US Embassy and elsewhere in the Baghdad area to protect US citizens and property, officials said Monday.
-
Six-month update: US covert actions in Pakistan, Yemen and Somalia
-
Our View: War on terror has too much secrecy
Our war on terror is nearly 13 years old. And while we are thankful there have been no large-scale attacks on our homeland since 9/11, we are troubled by how little we know about what is being done to protect us. Consider two developments last week:
• Monday, the U.S. Justice Department declassified the legal memo used by President Barack Obama to justify a 2011 drone strike in Yemen that killed an American citizen who had become an al-Qaida leader. Targeted killings using unmanned drones have been a major weapon abroad, with literally thousands of attacks; hundreds of innocent civilians have been killed.
-
Could Australia stay independent if the US went to war in the Pacific?
In the last 25 years Australia has become enmeshed in the US military machine. We need to re-assert our independence for the sake of the nation and the Asia-Pacific region
-
The future for America: cold wars without end
-
Mercury News editorial: U.S. use of drones needs better justification
-
US government needs to conduct comprehensive strategic review of lethal drones, new report says
-
Press Obama Administration for Additional Transparency on U.S. Drone Policy
“We Believe that Every American Has the Right to Know When Their Government Believes it is Allowed to Kill Them.”
-
High-Level Bipartisan Report Slams Obama’s Drift towards Permanent War
-
Letter: Walkers confirm city as a target
While Battle Creek was celebrating its annual cereal festival, peace walkers who began their journey from the Boeing Company Headquarters in Chicago (Boeing is the company manufacturing drones) arrived in our city along with supporters who joined them along the way to stage a vigil to end drone warfare outside the Air National Guard complex where a drone command center is planned.
-
Blackwater Iraqi Chief Threatened to Kill US Government Inspector
-
Before Shooting in Iraq, a Warning on Blackwater
Just weeks before Blackwater guards fatally shot 17 civilians at Baghdad’s Nisour Square in 2007, the State Department began investigating the security contractor’s operations in Iraq. But the inquiry was abandoned after Blackwater’s top manager there issued a threat: “that he could kill” the government’s chief investigator and “no one could or would do anything about it as we were in Iraq,” according to department reports.
-
US Embassy Blamed State Dept Investigator For Upsetting Its Relationship With Blackwater After Investigator Complained About Death Threat
The “private security” contractor formerly known as Blackwater has often been accused of being engaged in what might normally be seen as a level of evil and depravity normally reserved for over-the-top movie villains. And yet, every time new news comes out about the company, it only seems to either live up to that reputation or take it even further. Blackwater is today known as Constellis Holdings as of a few weeks ago. Before that it was Academi. And before that it was also known as Xe Services for a while, as the company keeps trying to get further and further from its Blackwater reputation. NY Times reporter James Risen — who the DOJ is currently trying to put in jail — has an astounding report about how a Blackwater exec threatened to kill a State Department investigator, telling that investigator that nothing would be done if he were killed, because it happened in Iraq. Believe it or not, this was over the State Department investigator merely investigating claims of unsanitary conditions in a dining facility, rather than anything more serious…
-
New York Times Reporter, Author Faces Jail Time If He Refuses to Testify About Book Leak
New York Times journalist Judith Miller was jailed for 85 days for refusing to testify about a CIA leak in 2005, the last time a reporter was imprisoned for not divulging information.
-
Iraq’s ISIS sends letter of praise to US Supreme Court
ISIS spokesman also congratulated the US Supreme Court for giving mega companies of the US complete control over the government. “Elites ruled the world in middle ages which changed with the arrival sins like democracy, by giving back the power to elites, the US supreme court has given us the assurance that our dream will one day come true.”
-
U.S. vows not to produce any more anti-personnel land mines
The United States is on a course to eventually join a 1997 international treaty, championed by Princess Diana, which bans anti-personnel land mines or APLs. During a conference in Maputo, Mozambique, U.S. officials announced that the country’s military would stop producing and buying anti-personnel landmines.
-
Key changed views on Iraq after special briefing
-
-
Transparency Reporting
-
Exclusive: WikiLeaks Editor Sarah Harrison on Helping Edward Snowden, Being Forced to Live in Exile
In the latest revelations from documents leaked by National Security Agency whistleblower Edward Snowden, the Washington Post has revealed the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court secretly gave the National Security Agency sweeping power to intercept information “concerning” all but four countries around the world. A classified 2010 document lists 193 countries that would be of valid interest for U.S. intelligence. Only four were protected from NSA spying — Britain, Canada, Australia and New Zealand. The NSA was also given permission to gather intelligence about the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund, the European Union and the International Atomic Energy Agency. As we broadcast from Bonn, Germany we are joined by Sarah Harrison, investigative editor of WikiLeaks, who accompanied Snowden on his flight from Hong Kong to Moscow last June. She now lives in exile in Germany because she fears being prosecuted if she returns to her home country, the United Kingdom. Harrison describes why she chose to support Snowden, ultimately spending 39 days with him in the transit zone of an airport in Moscow then assisting him in his legal application to 21 countries for asylum, and remaining with him for about three more months after Russia granted him temporary asylum. She has since founded the Courage Foundation. “For future Snowdens, we want to show there is an organization that will do what we did for Snowden — as much as possible — in raising money for legal defense and public advocacy for whistleblowers so they know if they come forward there is a support group for them,” Harrison says.
-
-
Environment/Energy/Wildlife
-
BP seeks to recoup excess Gulf oil spill payments
In a Friday court filing, BP asked US District Judge Carl Barbier in New Orleans to require businesses to make restitution plus interest of excess payments, which it called “windfalls.” It also requested an injunction to stop the businesses from spending these excess sums.
-
-
Finance
-
Rebekah Brooks
The ultra-rich are not like you or me. They are treated by totally different standards. They also behave differently. They have no problem with being cuckolded. Charlie Brooks sent his best wishes to Coulson in jail. If I were Brooks, I would be sending money in to pay very large men to help him find the soap in the shower. Although presumably like Aitken and Archer, Coulson is going to one of those jails for posh people where you can play golf and go home at the weekend. I never understood Brigadier Parker Bowles either, though apparently his wife’s shagging was good for his military career. Funny people, toffs.
-
Paypal Freezes ProtonMail Campaign Funds
This morning, we received an email and telephone call from PayPal notifying us that our account has been restricted pending further review. At this time, it is not possible for ProtonMail to receive or send funds through PayPal. No attempt was made by PayPal to contact us before freezing our account, and no notice was given.
-
-
PR/AstroTurf/Lobbying
-
BBC Bias – The People Have Noticed
-
New v old media — RT Crosstalk debate
I recently took part in a debate about the old versus the new “alternative” media and their relative merits on RT’s Crosstalk with Peter Lavelle:
-
-
Censorship
-
Anyone re-tweeting or sharing posts judged ‘extremist’ in Russia faces jail
Anyone retweeting or sharing posts judged “extremist” by the Russian Government now face years in prison.
-
Swiss Won’t Ban Downloading But Will Block Sites
A draft bill for the modernization of Swiss copyright law will be presented for public consultation in the coming months. While downloading for personal use will remain legal, uploading infringing content via BitTorrent will not. In addition to infringement warnings for Internet subscribers, the blocking of “obviously illegal” sites is also on the table.
-
Get OpenVPN up and running, enjoy your privacy
We are fanatic supporters of privacy. Not so much because we have super secrets to hide, but because we consider privacy as a basic human right. So we believe that anytime anyone chooses to exercise that right on the net, then they should have unencumbered access to all the necessary tools and services. OpenVPN is such a service and there are also many tools (clients) which allow us to utilize and enjoy that service.
-
-
Privacy
-
One handy chart shines light on all of the NSA’s once-secret spy programs
-
The NSA revelations all in one chart
-
Google to shut down social networking service Orkut in September
“Over the past decade, YouTube, Blogger and Google+ have taken off, with communities springing up in every corner of the world. Because the growth of these communities has outpaced Orkut’s growth, we’ve decided to bid Orkut farewell,” Google said in a post on the Orkut blog on Monday.
-
White House Ignores Snowden Petition for Full Year
Edward Snowden is still waiting to hear if he’ll get a presidential pardon.
He probably won’t get one after embarrassing President Barack Obama with revelations of massive U.S. government surveillance programs, but 100,000 of the exiled whistle-blower’s fans nonetheless earned the proposal an official White House response on June 24, 2013.
They did so by signing a whitehouse.gov petition that quickly cleared the six-figure threshold for feedback.
-
5 Secure Alternatives to WhatsApp
Ever since WhatsApp, a massively popular messaging app was acquired by Facebook, many of its users have started looking for alternatives to the service. Facebook, which itself, doesn’t have a good track record when it comes to privacy, is the only reason users are on the lookout for good replacements to the service.
-
Support grows for a Nobel Peace Prize for Snowden
-
New NSA chief says Snowden did not irreparably damage national security
-
New NSA chief says damage from Snowden leaks can be contained
-
Sky Isn’t Falling After Leaks by Snowden, NSA Chief Says
-
New NSA Chief: Sky Not Falling Over Snowden Revelations
-
The new NSA director downplays damage from the Snowden leaks
-
Sky isn’t falling after leaks by Snowden, says new NSA chief Michael Rogers
-
NSA chief downplays damage caused by Snowden leaks
-
New NSA chief says ‘sky not falling down’ after Snowden revelations
-
NSA chief says Snowden leaks damaging but ‘sky is not falling’
-
Ex-NSA chief: The sky is falling! New NSA chief: The sky is NOT falling
-
NSA flip-flops on Snowden leaks, from hyperbolic to “measured” response
-
NSA Director Downplays Damage From Snowden Leaks
-
Quoted: on NSA spying and the sky not falling
-
Spy Agencies Disclose Data on ‘Backdoor’ Spying of Americans
-
FBI, CIA Use Backdoor Searches To Warrentlessly Spy On Americans’ Communications
-
U.S. officials disclose data on ‘backdoor’ searches of Americans’ phone calls, e-mails
-
FBI, CIA Join NSA In “Backdoor” Searches On Americans
-
Number of Backdoor Searches of NSA Data Too High to Keep Track Of
-
Sen. Ron Wyden: NSA Report Shows ‘Inadequate Oversight’ of Searches
The Office of the Director National Intelligence has released data on the scope of its foreign intelligence-gathering efforts, but a senior senator says the so-called transparency report only raises additional questions.
-
Wyden Continues to Blast Obama Administration on ‘Backdoor’ Surveillance (Video)
-
Senators slam agency report on NSA spying
-
Senators question US surveillance transparency report
-
US’ NSA spied upon BJP, reveals Snowden
It has come to light that the United States National Security Agency had been authorised to spy on India’s Bharatiya Janata Party, which is now in power.
The BJP was among six non-US political parties for which authorisation was given to NSA to spy upon, a leading Indian English daily reported on Tuesday.
-
US NSA spied upon BJP, 5 other foreign political parties and 193 governments
-
US’ NSA Spied On BJP In 2010, Says Edward Snowden
-
Court Allowed NSA To Spy On All But 4 Countries
-
US authorised NSA to spy on 193 countries including Pakistan
-
US authorised NSA to spy on BJP, claims Snowden
-
US authorized NSA to carry out surveillance on BJP in 2010
-
US authorised NSA to spy on BJP and six other foreign parties
-
US’ NSA spied upon BJP, reveals Snowden
-
US sanctioned NSA to spy on foreign and international bodies
-
South Africa on NSA spying list
-
Secret document shows South Africa on NSA spying list
-
NSA may have had access to European Central Bank emails
-
German Contract Loss a Big Blow to Verizon, May Benefit European Competitors
-
NSA STILL ABLE TO TRACK MERKEL’S CALLS
-
Backbytes: Will Facebook make lab rats of us all?
-
Does Cell-Phone Case Imperil NSA Spying?
Though the Republican-controlled U.S. Supreme Court often splits 5-4 on partisan and ideological issues, a consensus is emerging against the government’s electronic intrusion on personal privacy, which could portend trouble for NSA spying, says Marjorie Cohn.
-
NSA allowed to spy on Africa since 2010 – report
-
US authorised NSA to spy on BJP: Snowden papers
-
NSA searched data troves for 198 ‘identifiers’ of Americans’ information
-
Secret documents say NSA had broad scope, scant oversight
The National Security Agency has been authorized to intercept information concerning all but four countries worldwide, top-secret documents say, according to The Washington Post.
“The United States has long had broad no-spying arrangements with those four countries – Britain, Canada, Australia and New Zealand,” the paper reported. Yet “a classified 2010 legal certification and other documents indicate the NSA has been given a far more elastic authority than previously known, one that allows it to intercept through US companies not just the communications of its overseas targets but any communications about its targets as well.”
-
All but four nations are subject to NSA surveillance
-
All but four nations are subject to NSA surveillance – new Snowden leak
-
Government can exploit loopholes for warrantless surveillance on Americans
-
Report: Secret Loopholes Allow NSA To Bypass 4th Amendment Protections
-
Legal loopholes could allow wider NSA surveillance, researchers say
Secret loopholes exist that could allow the National Security Agency to bypass Fourth Amendment protections to conduct massive domestic surveillance on U.S. citizens, according to leading academics.
The research paper released Monday by researchers at Harvard and Boston University details how the U.S. government could “conduct largely unrestrained surveillance on Americans by collecting their network traffic abroad,” despite constitutional protections against warrantless searches.
-
Surveillance Capitalism
Monopoly-Finance Capital, the Military-Industrial Complex, and the Digital Age
-
New FISC Memorandum Says Bulk Metadata Program Still Good To Go Until Congress Or Supreme Court Says Otherwise
As was noted in the writeup of the ODNI’s First Ever Transparency Report, this tentative and forced step into transparency was a step forward for No Such Agency, even if each document release has been accompanied by the unmistakable sound of gritting teeth and a nearly universal refusal to acknowledge that most of the “openness” had been compelled by court orders following FOIA lawsuits.
-
Chinese authorities publish a book to expose the United States’ surveillance against China
The Internet Media Research Center has compiled The United States’ Surveillance Record of China and Other Countries across the World under the authorization of the Office of the Central Network Security and Informatization Leading Group and the State Internet Information Office. According to a report by China National Radio (CNR), in the newly-published book eighteen experts expose the surveillance conducted by the U.S.
-
Libertarian Candidate for Governor Visits Waco
In her speech Glass attacked Washington politics, the NSA, and Texas Republicans saying their decades of control has resulted in nothing. Glass added that anyone thinking there’s no room for a third party in the Texas political landscape better get ready for a fight.
-
NSA and Big IT Tech
The Government of Germany just announced that it will be cancelling an information technology project with Verizon. The announcement makes clear Germany is doing this because they do not trust that Verizon will or even can safeguard Germany’s data and telecommunications from spying by the National Security Administration (NSA).
-
NSA admits it lets the FBI access its warrantless spying database
Two weeks ago the House of Representatives voted to bar the Obama administration from engaging in a controversial surveillance practice that insiders call a “backdoor search.” A Friday letter from the Obama administration gives some hints about how common the practice is.
-
FBI Doesn’t Know How Many Americans It Spies On
-
Is NSA Surveillance Mastermind Keith Alexander Selling US Secrets to Wall Street?
Perhaps you already assume that there’s some kind of twisted marriage between Wall Street megabanks and the US global surveillance regime. Why wouldn’t there be? But not even a total cynic could have anticipated spymaster Keith Alexander cashing in this hard, this fast.
-
The ‘Open Informant’ badge: A high-tech protest against high-tech surveillance
-
If the US government tapped Cisco routers, will your tech company be next?
When former National Security Agency (NSA) contractor Edward Snowden met with journalist Glenn Greenwald in Hong Kong, he arguably changed the face of US intelligence forever. After the release of Greenwald’s book No Place to Hide in May, even more was learned about the NSA’s alleged controversial actions.
-
Government Still Waiting On Us To Answer Cellphone Spy Row Claims
THE government still has not received a formal report from the United States regarding the National Security Agency’s reported surveillance of mobile phone calls in the country, Foreign Affairs Minister Fred Mitchell said yesterday.
-
Efforts to detect terrorism hampered by mass surveillance, says former NSA technical director
The US National Security Agency (NSA) is collecting too much intelligence data to analyse, one of its former technical directors has warned.
As a result, the agency could be missing indications of the very terrorist threats it is attempting to counter.
-
Bill Binney, the ‘original’ NSA whistleblower, on Snowden, 9/11 and illegal surveillance
He started his career as a patriot and ended it as a patriot – and he thinks Ed Snowden is a patriot as well. Computer Weekly talks to Bill Binney, the senior NSA official who blew the whistle before Snowden.
-
The Urgent Need to Shield Journalism in the Age of Surveillance
The media landscape has been transformed by NSA contractor Edward Snowden’s decision to leak a vast cache of documents to select journalists, notably at the Guardian and the Washington Post, which made global headlines a year ago this month. And “the new challenge this year is how to maintain the Internet as somewhere for free expression and innovation,” as Michael Maness, VP of journalism and innovation at the Knight Foundation, said.
-
Google aiming to collect healthcare data in the future and save 100,000 lives: But what about your privacy?
-
Google’s Larry Page wants to save 100,000 lives but big data isn’t a cure all
-
-
Civil Rights
-
Guantanamo Prisoners Were Granted Access to US Courts Ten Years Ago Yet Indefinite Detention Continues
The CIA recommended prisoners captured in the Afghanistan War be imprisoned at Guantanamo Bay because officials were convinced prisoners would be outside the jurisdiction of US courts. The secret jail would potentially be able to hold prisoners forever. However, just over ten years ago, the United States Supreme Court ruled that prisoners at Guantanamo Bay had a right to challenge their detention in US courts and opened up the pervasive lawlessness at the facility to lawsuits by prisoners.
-
9/11 trial dealt blow as defendant asks for alleged CIA torture records
-
Records Sought on CIA Fight With Senators
Reporters sued the CIA for records on its fight with Senate Select Committee on Intelligence Chairwoman Diane Feinstein over the CIA’s alleged coverup of an internal review of its rendition program.
-
Judge rules no-fly appeals unconstitutional; ISIS vows to avenge U.S. airstrikes: Spy Games Update
A federal judge in Portland issued an opinion last week that people on the government’s no-fly list have a constitutional right to know why.
-
Snitch Paranoia and Uncle Sam’s Very Big Ears
Whatever you think of the accomplishments of the American Indian Movement, Indian-on-Indian violence is a lasting stain on the organization. It was not good for health or longevity to be “bad-jacketed,” talked about as a “snitch.”
In the end, AIM’s penchant for brandishing and sometimes using firearms made it a target of FBI infiltration for the twin purposes of gathering intelligence and sowing paranoia. Instead of taking over tribal governments or building lasting institutions outside of tribal governments, AIM devolved into a criminal defense committee.
-
Workplace secrecy agreements appear to violate federal whistleblower laws
In November 2012, the U.S. Department of Energy asked contract employees at the Hanford plutonium processing plant in Washington state to take an unusual oath.
The DOE wanted them to sign nondisclosure agreements that prevented them from reporting wrongdoing at the nation’s most contaminated nuclear facility without getting approval from an agency supervisor. The agreements also barred them from using any information for financial gain, a possible violation of federal whistleblower laws, which allow employees to collect reward money for reporting wrongdoing.
-
SEE IT: ASU police throw professor to the ground, arrest her for jaywalking (VIDEO)
Ersula Ore was stopped in May while walking in the middle of a Tempe, Ariz., street to avoid construction — and when she refused to show her ID, she was wrestled to the ground, dashcam footage shows.
-
Salt Lake City Council wants answers from chief over shooting death of dog
-
Don’t You Dare Criticize Officers For Shooting Dogs, Whines SLC Top Cop
Perhaps feeling a bit besieged after dog owner Sean Kendall posted a video of his impassioned confrontation with Salt Lake City police after one of their fellow officers entered his yard and shot his dog, Geist, Police Chief Chris Burbank stepped in front of a camera—and acted pissy that anybody would dare criticize his officers.
-
Peru now has a ‘licence to kill’ environmental protesters
Law exempts soldiers and police from criminal responsibility if they cause injuries or deaths
-
Bracing for an Attack by Veterans
The Pentagon’s transfer of war equipment to local police forces lacks a rational explanation.
-
Aaron Swartz Documentary Steers Clear of Suicide Conversation
A new documentary about a young man who took his own life while facing charges on computer crimes skips a much-needed conversation about suicide
-
‘The Internet’s Own Boy’ documentary puts spotlight on Aaron Swartz life and death
“The Internet’s Own Boy: The Story of Aaron Swartz” depicts the life and death of Reddit’s co-founder and an Internet activist Aaron Swartz.
The documentary is written, directed and produced by Brian Knappenberger. On January 20 this year, the documentary premiered in the competition category of U.S. Documentary Competition program at the 2014 Sundance Film Festival.
-
Aaron Swartz’s story inspires and infuriates in ‘The Internet’s Own Boy’
Filmmaker Brian Knappenberger recently spoke to chief arts correspondent Jeffrey Brown about his new film, “The Internet’s Own Boy.”
-
Aaron Swartz Movie Charts Rise And Demise Of ‘The Internet’s Own Boy
Where to begin with the saga of Aaron Swartz? His life, cut short by suicide at age 26, continues to resonate strongly online and off because it was devoted in equal measure to technological innovation, social justice and free thought. While so many Silicon Valley billionaires blithely state their desire to change the world, Swartz truly meant it and truly did. His accomplishments include co-founding Reddit, crafting key elements of the RSS feed and Creative Commons, and helping lead the successful protest against federal copyright law PIPA/SOPA in 2012. He killed himself in January 2013, just before he was to have faced trial for several counts of computer hacking stemming from his theft of a trove of license-protected academic research documents controlled by the digital library JSTOR. No one disputes that Swartz broke the law in nabbing the documents, an act likely related to his passionate, stated belief in de-commercializing research and reforming copyright law, but several forces elevated it from a pedestrian hacking case to a national story. The Dept. of Justice, stung by Wikileaks and empowered by the Patriot Act and an outdated 1986 statute criminalizing computer misdeeds, threw the book at Swartz. As reported in the film, they spoke freely of making an example out of him for would-be anarchists, hack-tivists or cyber-terrorists. Relentless prosecutors spent two years making sure Swartz would do years of hard time for a crime whose victims appeared more than willing to look past.
-
The story of Internet icon Aaron Swartz comes to life in a new documentary
Aaron Swartz is remembered as many things — an early partner and creator of Reddit, a self-made millionaire by the age of 19, and a hacktivist who ushered in a huge wave of opposition to the Stop Online Piracy Act.
-
Facing 25 Years in Prison for Circulating a Petition
Green Party member and 2008 Congressional candidate Rev. Edward Pinkney of Benton Harbor, Michigan is once again battling political persecution. On July 21, he will stand trial for circulating recall petitions against Benton Harbor’s pro-corporate Mayor James Hightower.
-
-
Internet/Net Neutrality
-
Latest Cybersecurity Bill Could Actually Be A Backdoor To Destroying Net Neutrality
Earlier this year, we wrote about the Senate’s latest attempt at a cybersecurity bill, the Cybersecurity Information Sharing Act (CISA), which tries to distinguish itself from the toxic attempts to pass CISPA over the past few years. We and many others have already detailed how CISA, like the CISPAs before it, has a tremendous problem in creating perverse incentives for companies to help the government spy on people, but as a bunch of public interest groups are noting, the definitions are so broad, that the bill could actually be a backdoor way to undermine net neutrality. That’s because it has an incredibly broad definition of a “cyberthreat” such that an ISP could declare, say, Netflix to be a cyberthreat, allowing it to throttle Netflix’s bandwidth. Here are two key paragraphs from a letter sent by CDT, EFF and a bunch of other group…
-
-
DRM
-
How to Disappear (almost) Completely: a practical guide
Maybe you’ve seen Into the Wild, or (gasp) have actually read it. It’s the true story of an ordinary person who, one day, decided to abandon society, pack some rice and a rifle into a bag and head off into the wilderness never to return. It’s the sort of drastic move you rarely hear about in our modern life. But in next week’s final installment of How to Disappear, we’ll meet some people who’ve literally done just that: gone “off the grid.” For now, though, let’s take a (tongue-in-cheek) look at how you can take some first steps toward undoing the digital ties that bind, and get a little closer to the exit door.
-
-
Intellectual Monopolies
-
TTIP Update XXXI – The ISDS Consultation
In my last update, I focussed once more on the Investor-State Dispute Settlement element of TTIP, this time in the light of the European Commission’s consultation on the subject, which closes this week, on 6 July, and which is open to everyone – not just EU citizens. Alongside that column, I also wrote a similar post over on Techdirt, which contains yet more information about ISDS and the consultation.
-
Copyrights
-
Copyright Troll Malibu Media Allowed To Get Six Strikes Info From Comcast
A few weeks ago, we wrote about how Malibu Media was up to its old tricks again, demanding six strikes data from Comcast as part of its evidence gathering for its copyright trolling. Apparently, no one fought the request, so a magistrate judge has granted Malibu Media’s request and told Comcast to comply with the forthcoming subpoena. When the six strikes plan was first put into place, many people worried that the information from it would be used in lawsuits, but people hadn’t realized that it might also get abused by copyright trolls.
-
As Amazon slugs it out with the big publishers, authors are left cowering
And whoever comes out on top, you can bet the poor old writer won’t be any better off
-
Pirate Bay Founders’ File-Hosting Site Wiped From Google
Google has removed all links to Bayfiles, the file-hosting service created by the Pirate Bay’s founders. For reasons unknown, people searching for the site can no longer reach it through the search engine. The site’s operators are puzzled, but say that the change has very little impact on visitor numbers.
-
The File-Sharing Wars Are Anything But Over
The past year, the copyright industry appears to have calmed down a bit, thinking it won the file-sharing wars. At the same time, people sharing culture and knowledge have done the same thing. This conflict is far from over.
-
-