Modern Warfare: Assassination, Surveillance, Censorship and More Digital Abuses
- Dr. Roy Schestowitz
- 2014-03-27 18:21:05 UTC
- Modified: 2014-03-27 18:25:04 UTC
The 'civilising' power of technology without human rights
Drones
When America invaded Iraq in 2003, it had a couple of hundred; by the time it left, it had almost 10,000.
A UN human rights watchdog called on the Obama administration on Thursday to review its use of drones to kill suspected al-Qaeda and Taliban militants abroad and reveal how it chose its targets.
A UN human rights watchdog called on the Obama administration today to review its use of drones to kill suspected al-Qaeda and Taliban militants abroad and reveal how it chose its targets.
In its first report on Washington’s rights record since 2006, it also called for the prosecution of anyone who ordered or carried out killings, abductions and torture under a CIA programme at the time of President George W. Bush, and to keep a promise to close the detention facility at Guantanamo Bay.
Physical risk is the central issue in recent disputes over the Purple Heart and the recognition of drone pilots. The controversies have helped prompt Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel to order a yearlong study of how the Pentagon awards its ribbons and medals.
Peace activist Medea Benjamin spoke to a crowd of Radford University students, faculty and community members last Wednesday evening in McGuffey Hall.
Trade and the crisis in Ukraine are likely to dominate the agenda during US President Barack Obama’s first official visit to Brussels on March 26.
But the European Union and Nato leaders also should use the summit to press Obama on another critical issue: ensuring that US operations against terrorist suspects, most often carried out with remotely piloted aircraft known as drones, comply with international law.
The British government should be more transparent about intelligence-sharing that leads to covert drone strikes, say MPs in a report published today.
The call for greater transparency ‘in relation to safeguards and limitations the UK Government has in place for the sharing of intelligence’, came in a report on drones by the Defence select committee. The report acknowledged that intelligence-sharing was outside the committee’s remit and called on the Intelligence and Security Committee to examine the issue.
The report adds that it is ‘vital’ that a ‘clear distinction’ is drawn between UK drone operations and covert strikes such as those conducted by the US in Pakistan, Yemen and Somalia.
The former chief executive of BT, who is now a senior Government trade minister, is at the centre of a row over Britain's alleged role in America's secret drones' war.
Ian Livingston was head of the telecoms giant when it won a contract to set up a top secret €£15m communications link between an RAF base in Northamptonshire and America's headquarters for drone attacks in Africa. Last year he was made Lord Livingston and four months ago started a high-profile trade job in the Department of Business, Innovation and Skills (BIS).
Mr Livingston was head of the telecoms giant when it won a contract to set up a top secret €£15m communications link between an RAF base in Northamptonshire and America's headquarters for drone attacks in Africa. Last year he was made Lord Livingston and four months ago started a high-profile trade job in the Department of Business, Innovation and Skills (BIS).
Lord Livingston, former CEO of BT, is at the centre of a row over the company's involvement in America's secret military drone war, which has killed hundreds of civilians in Yemen.
The Ministry of Defence needs to be more open about its use of unmanned aerial drones, MPs said yesterday.
Britain is due to hold its next strategic defence and security review (SDSR) in 2015, the year of a national election.
Amnesty protesters were dressed in orange jumpsuits – as worn by detainees at the Guantanamo detention centre – when they demonstrated in Brussels on Tuesday.
The next threat to your privacy could be hovering over head while you walk down the street.
The 49-foot-by-27-foot sculpture, based on a General Atomics MQ-1 Predator aerial vehicle, is a memorial to civilians killed by unmanned U.S. drones overseas, said artist Joseph DeLappe.
Drone strikes by the United States seemed to be in the news only sporadically in 2011, when George Brant chanced on a statistic that said the Obama administration was using them at least four times more than the pace they were employed by President George W. Bush. His curiosity ignited, the playwright delved into the subject and emerged with "Grounded," an award-winning play that explores the life of someone who pushes a kill button while 8,000 miles from the target, then goes home to her family.
Human Rights
-
Asylum seekers’ health and education records fabricated in bid to keep contract, Salvation Army worker tells SBS
UK Human Rights
In January, Theresa May, the British Home Secretary, secured cross-party support for an alarming last-minute addition to the current Immigration Bill, allowing her to strip foreign-born British citizens of their citizenship, even if it leaves them stateless.
-
Clegg and Miliband call for reform of Investigatory Powers Tribunal, as critics accuse it of secrecy and unfairness
Censorship Using Threats
This list is meant as a spiritual successor to the grok.org.uk Full-Disclosure list started by Len Rose and John Cartwright in 2002 and terminated abruptly in March 2014 due to bogus legal threats. We are giving this list a fresh start, so members of the old list need to resubscribe here. "
UK Censorship by Default
Captain America, Marvel Comics' World War II supersoldier, is the star of Sky Broadband's latest advert. And he's taking a break from fighting 1940s comic book bad guys to promote Sky's default Internet filters.
It is against this background, therefore, that we now await the result of a first tier tribunal appeal by TJ McIntyre which took place last week. This appeal is against the Home Office decision not to allow him to view Home Office material on the possible liability they and/or filtering companies would face for wrongful blocking.
FOIA
It seems, the agencies could have been complicit in the arrest of Nelson Mandela which led to him being incarcerated for 27 years.
Over the past decade, Ryan Shapiro has become a leading freedom of information activist, unearthing tens of thousands of once-secret documents. His work focuses on how the government infiltrates and monitors political movements, in particular those for animal and environmental rights. Today, he has around 700 Freedom of Information Act requests before the FBI, seeking around 350,000 documents
Ukraine
Putin doesn't use cell phones. He doesn't text. He rarely ventures "into that place where you apparently live, that Internet," according to Time's Simon Shuster. And that means that he is "a very hard target for foreign spies." Sound crazy? Well, you didn't build your career working for the KGB in a country that was unabashed about spying on its citizens.
Moscow’s actions in the Crimea are comprehensible, former German chancellor, Helmut Schmidt said, criticizing the Western reaction to the peninsula’s reunification with Russia.
President Vladimir Putin’s approach to the Crimean issue is “completely understandable,” Schmidt wrote in Die Zeit newspaper where he’s employed as an editor.
Russia has taken a fleet of military dolphins trained by the Ukrainian navy, a Russian news agency reports. The Soviet Union's combat dolphin program has been around since the 1960s, and was handed over to Ukraine after the dissolution of the U.S.S.R. The Ukrainian navy had been planning to disband the program next month, but with Russia's annexation of Crimea, the dolphins have a new commander to report to—Vladimir Putin.
Natalya Poklonskaya, acting Chief Prosecutor of the Republic of Crimea, has been put on the wanted list in Ukraine. Her name, birth date and photograph appeared on the list of "persons hiding from the Ukrainian authorities", according to the Ukrainian Interior Ministry's website.
Ukrainians in the eastern city of Donetsk have voted in an online spoof referendum to secede from Ukraine and join the UK. Residents wrote that their hometown was founded by a Briton, so the UK should seize this “decisive moment” and take them in.
Encryption
If you were horrified by the revelations of the American National Security Agency (NSA) spying on citizens, world leaders, blue chip technology companies and - oh yeah, the pope - then you'll be glad that a young researcher working at MIT has developed a way to encrypt all the data that leaves your computer before spies and hackers can get their hands on it.
Stop living in a fear that the NSA, other government agencies, ISPs and hackers will steal your important data & funny-cat videos. MIT engineer Raluca Popa has built a new platform, called Mylar, that helps you build secure NSA-proof web applications. Most of the web applications typically depend on the servers to store and process the data. Anyone who gets access to the server can get control of entire data and there's nothing you can do about it. Mylar solves this problem through its unique approach to the problem. Mylar stores the data on the server in encrypted form and decrypts it in the user's browser. Only the intended user can therefore can use the information.
Privacy of Allies
It might be time for the National Security Agency director Keith Alexander to come down from the ivory tower where he sits and be put out to pasture. He and his executive staff are in a world or atmosphere that is disconnected from the practical concerns of everyday life. Just ask our closest allies and their leaders including German Chancellor Angela Merkel.
Corporations Spying
The U.S. intelligence community is still playing word games with us. The NSA collects our data based on four different legal authorities: the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) of 1978, Executive Order 12333 of 1981 and modified in 2004 and 2008, Section 215 of the Patriot Act of 2001, and Section 702 of the FISA Amendments Act (FAA) of 2008. Be careful when someone from the intelligence community uses the caveat "not under this program," or "not under this authority"; almost certainly it means that whatever it is they're denying is done under some other program or authority. So when De said that companies knew about NSA collection under Section 702, it doesn't mean they knew about the other collection programs.
Snowden
Jimmy Carter said that if Edward Snowden were to be convicted and given a death sentence, he would consider pardoning the National Security Agency leaker. He noted, however, that he doesn't feel he has enough information to judge the extent of the damage Snowden may have done to U.S. national security interests.
Reform
Perhaps the most significant component of the proposal is one that has been buried in the media coverage. The new legislation will reportedly require telecommunications companies to give the NSA access to cell phone records, a central preoccupation of the spy agency. US officials disclosed in February that only about 30 percent of all call records are available to the NSA because of the widespread use of cell phones, which have up to now not been part of the information handed over to the government.
The House parliamentarian, who oversees procedural matters, has determined that a new bill that substantially modifies the seminal 1978 Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act will go through the intelligence committee rather than the judiciary committee, a move that two congressional aides consider “highly unusual.”
So President Obama is finally ready to do something about the government storage of our phone records, preparing legislation for Congress that would partially change the National Security Agency's bulk collection. Except he's missing something much more important: all of the other, much more revealing data we generate simply by living our daily lives. What about all of the other data that internet companies buy and sell, and that yet more companies create and sell without even telling us – indeed, all of the rest of a data retention program that you and I helped build?
Facebook Joke
Facebook may want to become the Internet (as The Verge hypotheses), the real Internet – the geeks – don’t have a very good reputation of The Social Network. The dearth of any geeks on Facebook and mass exodus to Google + shows how much geeks love Facebook. The irony, for Facebook, is that these geeks are the future of the Internet, these geeks play a major role in success or demise of any product and they are not fond of Facebook – this acquisition has showed a very grim picture of Facebook.
Oculus VR Inc. co-founder Palmer Luckey called Facebook Inc.’s $2 billion purchase of his virtual-reality headset company a move that will help transform industries. Some fans weren’t so upbeat.
The creator of the popular video game says the social network creeps him out
[...]
Perrson is not alone in his criticism of the Facebook deal. Virtual reality enthusiasts were quick to blast the planned acquisition on Twitter after it was announced, Adweek points out.
Torture
Multiple national security leaks by US officials occurred during the production of the Oscar-nominated film, Zero Dark Thirty, which dramatized the hunt for Osama bin Laden that ended in his execution. But, when the Pentagon Inspector General’s office investigated what had happened, the office found then-Pentagon chief Leon Panetta had mishandled classified information.
We already know the CIA misled the Justice Department
The CIA's own account of the Bush-era interrogation techniques has been refuted by independent organizations
Recent Techrights' Posts
- Fantastic Journalism by Brian Fagioli
- A lot of today's Web, even "news" sites, is spam
- The Free Software Foundation (FSF) Has Raised More Than Three Times More Money Than the Software Freedom Conservancy (SFC), Which Mostly Gets Money From Corporations, Including Microsoft
- Do not donate any money to copycat organisations. It's worse than money down the river because your money might get spent attacking and even defaming the originals.
-
- [Meme] Shooting the Messenger
- "you needn't refute the message, just take out the messengers"
- Software Freedom Conservancy (SFC) Associate Sued Us for Publishing Perfectly Accurate Article About SFC; We Sued Them for Harassment
- SFC and its associates aren't nice people
- Techrights Does Not Forget
- Techrights has many anti-censorship mechanisms
- Windows Has Fallen to All-Time Low in India
- In India, only about 1 in 8 Web requests comes from Windows
- Microsoft Criminals: Law Enforcement is the Real Problem
- deflecting the issue and resorting to projection
- [Meme] They Dropped the L (Libre and Law)
- SFLC, could I borrow 75% of your letters?
- Companies That the Software Freedom Conservancy (SFC) Will Censor the Community for, Using Their Very Large CoC
- also exploiting poor (and sexually abused) women from eastern Europe
- Software Freedom Conservancy (SFC) Has Asked a Blogger to Delete This Page About the SFC, So We Reproduce It in Full Here
- Censored article
- Increasing Productivity With Less Hardware, Little Power, and Fewer CPU Cycles (and Far Less Digital Waste in General)
- A lot of people who glance at our PCs (as they visit us) act a bit baffled, as much of what we're using is a bunch of terminals and some text editors
- Gemini Protocol Keeps Getting Better (Less and Less Reliance on Centralised Certificate Authorities)
- Reliable systems do not depend on third parties, only themselves
- Why We Moved to Perl and Dumped PHP Last Year
- Elongating the lifetime of the underlying stack
- Links 05/12/2024: Explaining the South Korea Chaos and French PM Barnier's Government Already Disintegrating
- Links for the day
- Gemini Links 05/12/2024: Domain Changes, Griping With Haskell
- Links for the day
- Links 05/12/2024: Mass Layoffs at Microsoft's PR (Bribery of Media) Agency, UnitedHealthcare CEO Shot Dead
- Links for the day
- GNU/Linux news for the past day
- GNU/Linux news for the past day
- IRC Proceedings: Wednesday, December 04, 2024
- IRC logs for Wednesday, December 04, 2024
- Links 05/12/2024: Formaldehyde and Cancer, US and China Boycotting One Another
- Links for the day
- Gemini Links 05/12/2024: Hermeticism, Living in the Shell, and More
- Links for the day
- At the OSI, Microsoft Operative (Funded by Microsoft) Promotes Proprietary Software of Microsoft
- The OSI is deeply corrupt. The good news is, it's barely hiding it anymore.
- It's FOSS? No, It's SPAM.
- Another sellout
- Links 04/12/2024: Social Control Media Thoughts, Enrons of 2024, and More
- Links for the day
- Gemini Links 04/12/2024: Soviet Esotericism, Mikrotik is Awesome, and More
- Links for the day
- Techrights is Officially an Adult
- this site's eighteenth anniversary
- Technology: rights or responsibilities? - Part IX
- By Dr. Andy Farnell
- Many Geeks' Achilles Heel: They Don't Take Computer Breaks
- Life can get longer if you stay healthy
- [Meme] Silicon Valley's "Successful Businessmen"
- Debt is not a currency
- Visualising About 0.7 Trillion Dollars of Debt in Supposedly "Successful" Tech Companies
- If they're doing so well, how come they borrow so much money (which some would struggle to pay back or never manage to pay back)?
- Single-Digit Microsoft: Windows Finally Falls Below 10% in Angola
- it's only a matter of time before Windows is down to 5%
- Coming Up With Topics to Cover and Issues to Comment on
- Socialising is a big part of it
- In Asia, Microsoft's Bing Became Smaller Than Yandex and It Shrinks Every Month
- How long before Microsoft pulls the plug on Bing?
- [Meme] Far From What Was Originally Intended
- Makes site about RMS; Deletes his own 'site'
- Over at Tux Machines...
- GNU/Linux news for the past day
- IRC Proceedings: Tuesday, December 03, 2024
- IRC logs for Tuesday, December 03, 2024
- Illuminating Microsoft's Dirty Tactics
- Criticising illegal things that Microsoft does can be classified as "Microsoft bashing" or "hatred"
- Proof That Drew DeVault Vanished From Mastodon After the RMS Attack Site Was Linked to Him (and People Pointed Out DeVault's Fascination With Animated CP, Drawings of Naked Kids)
- We assume he just wanted to vanish from Mastodon
- Maybe Bill Gates is Getting Demented Like His Late Father (He Says Things That Are True But He's Not Supposed to Say in Public)
- It happened in a podcast with Reid Hoffman
- We've Clearly Struck a Nerve
- Microsofters and Microsoft proxies have meanwhile lost their temper
- The Userbase of GNU/Linux is Growing, Investments in the FSF Grow Too (in Spite of Microsofters Inciting and Slandering It)
- The FSF's expenses are close to 2 million dollars a year
- Links 03/12/2024: Pat Gelsinger's Firing Spun as 'Retirement', US Exports Land Mines
- Links for the day
- Links 03/12/2024: GrapheneOS, Raspberry Pi 4, and More
- Links for the day
- Links 03/12/2024: Googlebombing "Windows 12", Games Preservation, and Public Domain Game Jam
- Links for the day
- Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols (SJVN) 'Works' for Linux Foundation (LF) on SPAM Campaigns, Just Like Spamnil's TFiR (Swapnil Bhartiya)
- How can he publish something like this under his name?
- Microsoft's Debt Ratio is Awful
- It owes almost 150% of what it can give
- Microsoft Has Already Laid Off Tens of Thousands of Workers, "Headcount" is Misleading Spin From Microsoft-Funded Sites
- Expect Microsoft to suck up to Trump, looking for more bailouts (those typically manifest themselves in the form of "defence" contracts)
- South America: GNU/Linux Grew to 8.15% Venezuela, Steadily Over 3% Overall
- holding steady above 3%
- Clownflare (Cloudflare) Debt Grows, Losses Continue
- debt of nearly $400,000 per employee
- Gemini Links 03/12/2024: December Adventure and Social Justice Gone Wild
- Links for the day
- Microsoft Windows Falls to 12.5% in Cuba, Android Soaring
- Windows isn't even doing too well on desktops/laptops
- [Meme] GAGAM: Google, Apple, Gulag, Amazon, Microsoft, and the Rest
- The Web has never been more dangerous and hostile
- ChromeOS Isn't Freedom, But It's Killing Microsoft's Ability to Profit From Windows
- ChromeOS has shot up to 22% in Sweden
- Over at Tux Machines...
- GNU/Linux news for the past day
- IRC Proceedings: Monday, December 02, 2024
- IRC logs for Monday, December 02, 2024
- The L Word (Not Linux)
- Championing Software Freedom is "dangerous"
- Did IBM Layoffs Stop? Ask Dr. Krishna, The 'Genius' of IBM...
- Trust AK to solve all the problems of IBM by creating bigger problems
- It's Easy to Snyk in Marketing SPAM (and FUD) Into BetaNews
- The latest marketing piece (disguised as information, not shameless self-promotion)
- [Meme] Sportwashing vs Code of Censorship (CoC)
- Expectation of censorship (censor for me... or else!)
- GNU/Linux at 4% in Algeria
- So it more than doubled since last year
- With 4 Weeks to Go (Before the End of 2024) the FSF Has Already Raised Close to 100,000 Dollars
- The FSF must be doing something right
- "Linux on the Desktop" (Less Than a Third of Web-connected Computers Still a Desktop or Laptop)
- It's like we're chasing a goal that's 2 or 3 decades in the past
- [Meme] The Failure of Microsoft Rebranding Campaigns
- market share down, costs soared, back to basics
- 2 Years Have Passed Since ChatGPT Vapourware and Bing Gained Nothing, Yandex is About to Overtake Microsoft in Search
- A cause for concern at Microsoft?
- GNU/Linux Rises to 4% in Ireland, ChromeOS Grows and Android Takes Windows' Lunch
- Windows down to 22%
- [Meme] Meanwhile at Intel (Where the CEO Got the Boot)
- Well, if taxpayers pay to save Intel, then Intel should be publicly owned (by those taxpayers)