Shared posts

29 Sep 22:14

The FBI has no trouble spying on encrypted communications

by Cory Doctorow

cipav_timberline-440x393

Every time the Bureau wants to spy on someone whose communications are encrypted, they just hack them.

The FBI has made a huge deal out of wanting back doors in encryption -- back doors that could be exploited by dirty cops, by crooks, by foreign spies -- to make their jobs easier. But in every single case where the FBI has wanted to eavesdrop on a suspect, they've just deployed one of their many dirty tricks to compromise their target's computer.

Sometimes, they hack a website to serve malware to everyone who visits it. In one case, the Bureau publicly asked a judge for permission to sneak a rootkit onto a target's computer so that they could covertly operate its camera and mic. The judge turned them down, but they may have done it anyway through one of the many secret warrant processes available to them.

They really like the idea of forcing tech companies to serve poisoned updates that contain malware, a measure that would reduce the rate at which people installed vital security updates. If this were to become common, responsible tech companies might adopt binary transparency to make it useless.

And as the Washington Post recently reported, an Obama administration working group exploring possible approaches tech companies might use to let law enforcement unlock encrypted communications came up with one that involves the targeted installation of malware — through automatic updates. “Virtually all consumer devices include the capability to remotely download and install updates to their operating system and applications,” the task force wrote. Law enforcement would use a “lawful process” to force tech companies to “use their remote update capability to insert law enforcement software into a targeted device.” That malware would then “enable far-reaching access to and control of the targeted device.” The Post did not report who came up with that idea, or whether it was already in use. And little is known about how much access the agency has to the extensive hacking capabilities developed by other government agencies, especially the National Security Agency.

THE BIG SECRET THAT MAKES THE FBI’S ANTI-ENCRYPTION CAMPAIGN A BIG LIE [Jenna McLaughlin/The Intercept]

(via /.)

29 Sep 22:12

broccoli cheddar soup

by deb

broccoli cheddar soup

For reasons I cannot — for once, I mean, good riddance — articulate, I spent half the summer, the half I was gestating this tiny moppet, with a nonstop craving for broccoli cheddar soup, something I’d never actually eaten before. I think a comment got it started and even though I can no longer find it, I’ll never forgive it. Sure, I had heard of the soup, but it always seemed to be in that category of foods it was better not to investigate. I mean, just consider all of the ways our lives have been ruined by finding how ridiculous brown butter and sea salt flakes are in crispy treats, or what happens when you make saltine crack into an ice cream sandwich, or butter in tomato sauce. I didn’t want to know why a cheddar cheese soup base was an obsession of so many people.

... Read the rest of broccoli cheddar soup on smittenkitchen.com


© smitten kitchen 2006-2012. | permalink to broccoli cheddar soup | 165 comments to date | see more: Broccoli, Fall, Freezer Friendly, Photo, Soup, Vegetarian

29 Sep 18:21

I approve of this message

by PZ Myers

Atheism needs feminism. Heck, it needs to be more socially conscious about everything.

He also provides an excellent list of rational atheist/feminist youtube channels.

Sikivu Hutchinson
https://www.youtube.com/user/SikivuHu…

Kevin Logan
https://www.youtube.com/user/ploppy111

Soreta Yuki
https://www.youtube.com/user/SoretaYuki

Vogter Viking
https://www.youtube.com/user/VogterVi…

Peach
https://www.youtube.com/user/xxxThePe…

Neil Carter
https://www.youtube.com/user/NeilCart…

Laughing Witch
https://www.youtube.com/user/laughnwitch

The Breakfast Club
https://www.youtube.com/user/Breakfas…

Matt Dillahunty
https://www.youtube.com/user/SansDeity

TheThinkingAtheist
https://www.youtube.com/user/TheThink…

meridianfrost
https://www.youtube.com/user/meridian…

FoxxyJazzabelle
https://www.youtube.com/user/jpkeitt

The Atheist Voice
https://www.youtube.com/user/TheAthei…

David Landon Cole
https://www.youtube.com/user/DLandonCole

Captain Andy
https://www.youtube.com/user/andyfrom…

Cristina Rad
https://www.youtube.com/user/ZOMGitsC…

SweetBabyDeejus
https://www.youtube.com/user/sweetbab…

Rebecca Watson
https://www.youtube.com/user/rkwatson

The Messianic Manic
https://www.youtube.com/user/TheMessi…

Sincere Kirabo
https://www.youtube.com/user/sincerek…

ThinkStephtically
https://www.youtube.com/user/Thinking…

healthyaddict
https://www.youtube.com/user/healthya…

AronRa
https://www.youtube.com/user/AronRa

TheBibleReloaded
https://www.youtube.com/user/TheBible…

devchelle2
https://www.youtube.com/user/devchelle2

The Atheist Experience
https://www.youtube.com/user/TheAthei…

Zennistrad1
https://www.youtube.com/user/Zennistrad1

Kristi Winters
https://www.youtube.com/user/drkmwinters

WildwoodClaire1
https://www.youtube.com/user/Wildwood…

AtheistMinority
https://www.youtube.com/user/Minority…

Philip Rose
https://www.youtube.com/user/TheTrueP…

carazelaya
https://www.youtube.com/user/carazelaya

Philosophy Tube
https://www.youtube.com/user/thephilo…

ToriTheQueer
https://www.youtube.com/user/AwesomeR…

TheSkepticFeminist
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC5ih…

Dick Coughlan
https://www.youtube.com/user/DickDyna…

VarmitCoyote
https://www.youtube.com/user/VarmitCo…

Zinnia Jones
https://www.youtube.com/user/ZJemptv

I took a look at some of them (I’ll work my way through the list eventually), and unsurprisingly…their comment sections, including that of the video above by Steve Shives, are full of flaming asshats who precisely prove their point for them. Lewis’ Law strikes again!

I should probably do some more youtube stuff. I’ve tried a few times, and had to run screaming from the revolting vileness of the average commenter.

29 Sep 13:21

Rush Limbaugh must be desperate to emulate Alex Jones

by PZ Myers

Someone is unhappy that scientists have found water on Mars. It’s Rush Limbaugh. As he says, he’s always right, and he has seen the truth.

…this news that there is flowing water on Mars is somehow going to find its way into a technique to advance the leftist agenda.

Yep, he caught us. It’s entirely true. Leftists are planning to use facts, science, and evidence to promote a reality-based agenda.

29 Sep 11:53

Comic for 2015.09.27

New Cyanide and Happiness Comic
29 Sep 00:20

Should America be "more like Switzerland" ??

by Minnesotastan
"Switzerland’s high rate of gun ownership is tied to the fact that it does not have a standing army so virtually every male citizen is conscripted into the militia where they receive comprehensive weapons training. Since they are a militia, they keep their government issued weapons (without ammunition) at home. Therefore, many of the guns in Swiss homes were issued to them by the government and most Swiss gun owners are highly trained in gun safety...

And with a law worthy of Orwell’s worst nightmare, every gun in Switzerland is registered by the
government...

Unless those two laughing women on the bicycles are transporting those weapons to a gun show or are members of the militia reporting for duty (in which cases the guns must not be loaded) or they are security personnel licensed to guard Roger Federer, they are probably breaking the law. “Open carry,” as we understand it in the United States, is only allowed in those very limited circumstances...

You can see that the Swiss militia inculcates the idea of gun ownership as a responsibility to protect the nation while to the American gun proliferation advocates, the reason for the 2nd Amendment is to protect the citizens from the government."
Addendum:
A tip of the blogging hat to reader Dominique, who forwarded me an article reporting that Switzerland has the highest rate of gun-related suicide in Europe:
“In Switzerland, firearms are like pesticides in developing countries. They are accessible,” Ajdacic-Gross explained. “Many suicides are impulsive. In other words, the decision is taken very quickly.”

At such moments, availability – or a lack of it – is crucial. “If somebody has to make a lot of effort to find something that will kill them, that’s a strong preventative factor.” 

28 Sep 21:58

Florida monkey escapes and wreaks havoc on Orlando. Again.

by Xeni Jardin
12074775_943303415730475_1937389387103503682_n

Zeek the monkey escaped his owner's home in a suburb of Orlando, Florida. Within hours after escaping, he accomplished a lot. He chewed on a neighbor's mail, pulled molding off a police car, and was found rocking back and forth on a street sign.

12004033_943303732397110_2176095387054448633_n

As funny as this headline is, Jesus Christ what is wrong with people that they think it's cool to keep a goddamned monkey as a household pet? Rocking back and forth like that sounds to me like a sign the poor little primate was experiencing stress.

What's worse, this is not the first time Zeek has escaped. In 2012, this happened more than once with the same owner and the same captive wild animal. Why is this man still allowed to keep this highly intelligent creature in his home? Because Florida, I guess.

12065653_943303829063767_5997342287157301498_n

He was picked up by the Sanford police and safely transported to his owner, according to the police department's Facebook page:

Shortly after 8:00 a.m., we received a call from a Sanford resident that lives in the Hidden Lakes subdivision reporting that a monkey was eating mail out of a mailbox. When we arrived to help the monkey, later identified at Zeek, decided to pull off molding from one of our patrol cars. We were able to distract Zeek with a bottle of water until his owner came and retrieved him.

https://youtu.be/fXm-kXdOmb0

“Zeek had a little fun with our patrol car,” the police department reported, with this video.

[via AP]

12072627_943303425730474_8886909214464410635_n

28 Sep 21:55

Bonnie and Clyde bank robbers busted after posting pics of stolen cash on Facebook

by Mark Frauenfelder

loyaltiesthin

John Mogan, 28, and Ashley Duboe, 24, were arrested in connection with an Ohio bank robbery after Mogan posted a series of photos of himself playing with a thick wad of cash. In one photo, he pretends the money is a phone. In another photo, he is biting the money.

The Smoking Gun has more:

Mogan is a convicted felon who was just released from prison after serving about five years for robbing a bank in Lancaster, a city 20 miles east of Ashville. A female accomplice was also arrested in connection with Mogan's July 2010 robbery of a Fairfield National Bank branch.

Mogan began serving a three-year parole term immediately following his July 19 release from an Ohio state lockup. The heavily tattooed Mogan has the phrases “Loyalty’s Thin” and “Betrayal’s Thick” on opposite cheeks.

28 Sep 21:42

Cool bullet-time video of man breathing a huge fireball

by Mark Frauenfelder
28 Sep 21:41

Reminder: don't set fire to spiders while you pump gas

by Rob Beschizza

fire4.4_1443237329715_274819_ver1.0_640_360

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=56lFhpByO2s

A foolish motorist was lucky to escape unharmed after trying to kill a spider in Center Line, Michigan, with fire. At a gas pump. While pumping gas.

After spotting the terrifying creature and perhaps remembering the Internet's advice on how such things are best disposed of, he whipped out a lighter and promptly set ablaze everything in front of him. He put out the fire himself with a nearby extinguisher, but not before the pump was destroyed.

Fox News Detroit reports that he later came back to say he was sorry.

This charred fuel pump says it all. We are told his car was barely damaged from the flames. But his embarrassing mistake didn't stop the man from coming back the next day as a customer.

"He was sorry," Susan said. "He was sorry, he said he didn't know. It is just one of those things that happen - stupidity."

Adams said this serves as a reminder about being careful around gas pumps. Whether it is using a cell phone or static electricity, the smallest spark can cause a gas station fire.

It is not noted in reports whether the spider escaped immolation.

28 Sep 21:38

Distinguished scientists call for RICO prosecution of climate deniers

by Cory Doctorow

Goga-2316b3

The scientists point out that RICO threats were critical to ending big tobacco's program of denying the link between cancer and smoking.

We appreciate that you are making aggressive and imaginative use of the limited tools available to you in the face of a recalcitrant Congress. One additional tool – recently proposed by Senator Sheldon Whitehouse – is a RICO (Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act) investigation of corporations and other organizations that have knowingly deceived the American people about the risks of climate change, as a means to forestall America’s response to climate change. The actions of these organizations have been extensively documented in peerreviewed academic research (Brulle, 2013) and in recent books including: Doubt is their Product (Michaels, 2008), Climate Cover-Up (Hoggan & Littlemore, 2009), Merchants of Doubt (Oreskes & Conway, 2010), The Climate War (Pooley, 2010), and in The Climate Deception Dossiers (Union of Concerned Scientists, 2015). We strongly endorse Senator Whitehouse’s call for a RICO investigation.

The methods of these organizations are quite similar to those used earlier by the tobacco industry. A RICO investigation (1999 to 2006) played an important role in stopping the tobacco industry from continuing to deceive the American people about the dangers of smoking. If corporations in the fossil fuel industry and their supporters are guilty of the misdeeds that have been documented in books and journal articles, it is imperative that these misdeeds be stopped as soon as possible so that America and the world can get on with the critically important business of finding effective ways to restabilize the Earth’s climate, before even more lasting damage is done.

RICO for climate deniers

28 Sep 20:57

Photo



28 Sep 12:40

killdeercheer: This is so damn cute “What’s...

Luke.stirling

Play the video



killdeercheer:

This is so damn cute

“What’s wrong?”

28 Sep 11:51

Yuletide is a-comin’From www.simonstalenhag.se







Yuletide is a-comin’

From www.simonstalenhag.se

28 Sep 01:34

Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal - Infernomics

by admin@smbc-comics.com

Hovertext: I await your check, Fritos people.


New comic!
Today's News:

 OH MAN, the presentations for this show are gonna be so good.

28 Sep 01:32

Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal - Long Distance

by admin@smbc-comics.com
28 Sep 00:16

Photo

Luke.stirling

The strictest laws are the best ones to break.



27 Sep 21:30

Sunday Sweets Gets On The Map

by Jen

Whether you're a bona fide globe trotter or just dream of visiting parts unknown, nothing says romance and adventure quite like travel.

(By Cakes 2 Cupcakes)

 

So it's no wonder you see everything from wedding to baby shower cakes featuring luggage, passports, globes - even adorable map pinwheels:

(By Plum Tree Cakes)

SO SWEET.

 

Here's an elegant nautical take:

(By Gateaux Inc)

 

And now a little of everything!

(Also by Gateaux)

 

The handpainted map really makes this compass cake:

(By The Sugar Studio)

 

With so many vintage styles out there, it's fun to see this quirky modern design:

(By Beau Petit Cupcakes)

And don't you just love those colors?

 

Here's the cutest little aviator:

(By Little Lady Baker)

The plane! The clouds! That perfect globe! So good.

 

This subtle wedding style has just the right touch of glam:

(By Alma Pasteles)

 

And my personal favorite:

(By The People's Cake)

Those birds of paradise flowers are perfect. PERFECT, I say.

 

And finally, a wedding masterpiece of vintage sweetness, pastel romance, and hot air balloony, globe-y goodness:

(By Roses and Bows Bakery)

Right? GLOBE-Y GOODNESS.

Happy Sunday, everyone!

*****

Thank you for using our Amazon links to shop! USA, UK, Canada.

27 Sep 03:00

Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal - Babies are Weird

by admin@smbc-comics.com

Hovertext: I hate you! I hate you!


New comic!
Today's News:
26 Sep 20:37

beingblog: ”you have to understand,that no one puts their...



beingblog:

”you have to understand,
that no one puts their children in a boat
unless the water is safer than the land”

—Warsan Shire, as quoted in Omid Safi’s “Love in a Time of Refugees

[Image by Daniel Etter]

If this doesn’t make you sad and sick to your stomach, I don’t want to know you.

26 Sep 20:36

Photo



26 Sep 04:42

therobotmonster: jordynslefteyebrow: it’s….. it’s right...







therobotmonster:

jordynslefteyebrow:

it’s….. it’s right there…..right where you didn’t highlight….

It isn’t just the raising of taxes and the ending of endless military spending. Ending the war on drugs would vastly reduce our prison population and law enforcement costs immensely (and would generate millions to billions in tax revenue for pot). Rebuilding the infrastructure would put thousands of people to work, pumping money into the economy (money provided by taxing the 1% and corporations and diverting from our insane military spending). 

The thing about money, is it only has power when it is moving. Money being sat on by the wealthy might as well not exist. It is taken out of the economy and it only regains its power through being spent. Capitalism has to be blended with socialist and progressive programs and taxation because humans tend to hoard wealth. 

This also leads to the main complaint I have about how conservatives talk about government spending. They act as though that money is being shoveled into a furnace never to be seen again. That’s the Walton family, not government spending. That money the government spends goes to people: law enforcement, emergency services, food programs, etc. That puts money in the hands of people, who then spend it,on food, homes, services and goods. If the programs benefit the poor, almost all of that money will wind up going right into the economy, immediately. 

It is the opposite of trickle down, and as one would expect from trickle down’s opposite, it works.  

26 Sep 01:22

(via Poorly Drawn Lines – Look At Crag)

25 Sep 22:02

The Snowden Treaty: protecting the world's whistleblowers in the age of privacy breaches

by Cory Doctorow

AP_166186450540-promo

The Treaty on the Right to Privacy, Protection Against Improper Surveillance and Protection of Whistleblowers [PDF] (AKA "The Snowden Treaty") was created by David Miranda, Glenn Greenwald's partner, who was detained by UK police under terrorism legislation while transiting through London's Heathrow airport with a encrypted thumbdrive containing some of the Snowden leaks.

The treaty, which has Snowden's endorsement, is co-sponsored by the international NGO Avaaz, and will be the first instrument of its kind: an agreement among nations to protect people who expose official wrongdoing.

The treaty arrives at an important moment: with the first tremors of the age of privacy breaches upon us, officialdom's response is to enable more spying and to immunize companies who rat out whistleblowers from liability for breaching their customers' privacy.

Without a counternarrative about security that involves protecting populations rather than putting them under suspicion, we are headed down a very dangerous and scary path.

Entitled the “The International Treaty on the Right to Privacy, Protection Against Improper Surveillance and Protection of Whistleblowers,” or, colloquially, the “Snowden Treaty,” an executive summary of the forthcoming treaty calls on signatories “to enact concrete changes to outlaw mass surveillance,” increase efforts to provide “oversight of state surveillance,” and “develop international protections for whistleblowers.”

At the event launching the treaty, Snowden spoke via a video link to say that the treaty was “the beginning of work that will continue for many years,” aimed at building popular pressure to convince governments to recognize privacy as a fundamental human right, and to provide internationally-guaranteed protections to whistleblowers who come forward to expose government corruption. Snowden also cited the threat of pervasive surveillance in the United States, stating that “the same tactics that the NSA and the CIA collaborated on in places like Yemen are migrating home to be used in the United States against common criminals and people who pose no threat to national security.”

“SNOWDEN TREATY” CALLS FOR END TO MASS SURVEILLANCE, PROTECTIONS FOR WHISTLEBLOWERS [Murtaza Hussain/The Intercept]

25 Sep 22:00

Jailers watched as man arrested for unpaid traffic fine dies naked on cell floor

by Mark Frauenfelder

jailed

David Stojcevski, 32, was sentenced to 30 days in Michigan's Macomb County jail for failing to pay a traffic fine. He was addicted to drugs but the jail refused to treat him so he died. Reason reports that over the "next 17 days of his incarceration in a brightly lit cell — where he was denied clothing — he lost 50 pounds, suffered convulsions, and eventually began to hallucinate. He died in agony, from a combination of obvious, untreated drug withdrawal and galling neglect." Jailers were able to see him on a security monitor the entire time, but they simply allowed him to suffer and die.

Stojcevski’s parents are suing the county. A lawyer for Macomb county said the suit “lacks legal merit,” and the county has no plans to settle.

25 Sep 22:00

Not just emissions: manufacturers' dirty tricks fake everything about cars

by Cory Doctorow

Mad-Max-Fury-Road-The-Immortan-Joe-Hugh-Keays-Byrne

VW's diesel firmware detected when it was undergoing emissions testing and changed the engine tuning to produce 1/40 of its normal toxic output, fooling regulators. But though they're the only ones who've been caught using firmware to game emissions testing, they're not the only ones with something to hide.

It's an open secret that manufacturers who're conducting gas-mileage testing on new cars trick them out in ways that are totally unrepresentative of field conditions, in order to produce sticker-numbers that promise eye-popping (and unattainable) fuel efficiency. These kinds of shenanigans work great in the EU, where auto manufacturers self-certify their efficiency claims and face no real penalties for lying.

Before a car's fuel efficiency is tested, manufacturers take such steps as removing all extra weight (including the stereo!), removing source of drag like side mirrors, adding special lube to the engine and filling the tires with exotic gases. The alternator is switched off so that the gas goes further (but the battery drains), and the petrol itself is replaced with special, expensive blends not available in the wild. There are even more dirty tricks -- taping the seams in the panels to reduce drag, running the cars in high gear and at high temperatures, for example.

But when you add firmware to the mix, you open up whole new fields for cheating manufacturers. The Digital Millennium Copyright Act makes it a felony (punishable by up to five years in prison and a $500K fine for a first offense) to break the DRM on car firmware, meaning that you can hide all sorts of dirty secrets in there. Laws like the DMCA are present all over the world, thanks to the efforts of the US Trade Representative, who has made adopting protection for DRM into a condition for trading with the USA. As the world's governments have volunteered to spend tax-money to protect the secrecy of proprietary software, companies have taken them up on the implicit offer: add DRM to your products, get away with murder (literally).

Volkswagen has retained some well-known lawyers to help them with Dieselgate: the firm of Kirkland & Ellis LLP, best known for defending BP after the Deepwater Horizon disaster. Who killed the world?

It is possible that some companies are using software trickery to cheat on Europe’s tests on fuel efficiency. But as Nick Molden of Emission Analytics, a consulting firm in Britain, argues, the European testing regime is so out of date and open to abuse that carmakers do not have to bother with such subtlety. The companies test their own vehicles under the auspices of independent testing organisations certified by national governments. But these organisations are commercial enterprises that compete for business. Although obliged to put the vehicles through standard activity cycles both in a laboratory and on a test track—neither of which is remotely realistic—they are aware that their ability to “optimise” the test procedures is a way to win clients. In practice this means doing everything possible to make the test cars perform far better than the versions punters drive off the forecourt.

The cars that are tested have generally been modified to be as frugal as possible. Things that add weight, such as sound systems, are left out. Drag is reduced by removing wing mirrors and taping up cracks between panels. Special lubricants make the engines run more smoothly. Low-resistance tyres are overinflated with special mixtures of gas. Alternators are disconnected, which gives more power to the wheels but guarantees a flat battery in the end. The cars may be run in too high a gear, and conducting tests at the highest allowed ambient temperature—another efficiency booster—is commonplace.

Worst of all, though, is that once this charade has produced a claim as to the car’s efficiency, no one checks whether it is true or not. In America, too, carmakers are responsible for their own tests. But there the EPA goes on to acquire vehicles at random for testing at a later date, to see if the cars on sale to the public live up to the claims. If the numbers do not match up substantial fines can follow. In 2014 Hyundai-Kia was fined $300m for misstating fuel-economy figures. Europe has no such system for punishing those who transgress. As a result more than half Europe’s claimed gains in efficiency since 2008 have been “purely theoretical”, says T&E. And the industry as a whole has developed a gaming attitude to tests and regulations that it should take seriously. As Drew Kodjak of the ICCT observes, VW’s activities in America are part of a pattern of behaviour that the “European system created”.

A mucky business [Economist]

(via Red Ferret)

25 Sep 21:55

Woman questioned by police for wearing shirt with Arabic writing near 9/11 memorial

by Rob Beschizza

TERROR-TEE

The T-shirt of Terror's scary Arabic glyphs were enough to get Miru Kim pulled aside by New York City's finest for a chat.

Stopped while walking a dog near the 9/11 memorial, Kim says the officers pointed to her shirt, designed by the NYC activist organization We Will Not Be Silent.

"I just got stopped by two police officers in downtown Manhattan just because I was wearing this shirt from an anti-Iraq war group called Granny Peace Brigade from 2006. They took all my info, my address, apt. number, cellphone, right in front of my building," she wrote on Instagram. "Are they serious, NYPD? Are they gonna call me a potential terrorist because I am wearing a shirt with Arabic on it?"

Interviewed by Gothamist, Kim says she found it a bizarre and "quite intimidating" encounter.

According to the Civil Liberties Defense Center, police officers can legally approach anyone and "inquire" about "circumstances of interest." However, barring detention or arrest, citizens are not obligated to provide identification, much less answer any questions. (These protections don't apply during a traffic stop.)

"I thought it was kind of annoying getting all of my information taken down by police," Kim said. "I didn't ask why. I didn't really say anything. I basically just complied and explained that it's just a shirt from a long time ago."

The T-shirt's phrase is attributed to a student resistance movement in Nazi Germany called The White Rose. Its modern namesake sells apparel designs from their website, though this particular tee doesn't seem to be on offer.

Raw Story reports that it's not the first time wearers have gotten into trouble.

Raed Jarra, an Iraqi immigrant, was detained during [one] incident and eventually won a $240,000 settlement against JetBlue.

A Hunter College student was questioned and warned two months after Jarra’s detainment while wearing the same shirt on the Staten Island Ferry.

25 Sep 21:54

Collapse in filial piety, poor social net produces cohort of elderly Korean prostitutes

by Cory Doctorow

In this Sept. 17, 2015 photo, an elderly woman stands at a small, bustling plaza in front of the Piccadilly theater in Seoul, South Korea. It's a place where elderly prostitutes openly solicit customers for sex in nearby motels. They are dubbed "Bacchus ladies" after the popular energy drink that they have traditionally sold.(AP Photo/Ahn Young-joon)

South Korea has a Confucionist tradition of children supporting their elderly parents in South Korea whose existence meant that the country never had to develop an advanced social safety net for caring for the aged.

The decline of the Confucionist values, along with globalism, a demographic crunch, a rise in divorces and the historic exclusion of women from education and careers has left a huge cohort of elderly women with no means of supporting themselves except for prostitution.

Hyung-jin Kim profiled several elderly prostitutes and their clients in Seoul, and found stories of women who were doing sex-work to pay for basics like arthritis medication.

There's a regional crisis in eldercare in the Pacific Rim. In China, two generations of one-child policy along with improved medical outcomes and longer lifespans has created a situation where two working parents might be expected to support seven people with their income -- four grandparents and a child (sometimes there are great-grandparents in the mix).

Japan's well-known age crisis is exacerbated by a growing national xenophobia, which has the country severely limiting the number of careworkers who can come to the country from traditional labor-exporting nations like the Philippines.

"Hey, do you want to go with me? I can treat you really well," a 76-year-old woman with a limp says as a reporter approaches her on a recent sunny afternoon.

Despite a police crackdown this spring that resulted in 33 arrests, including an 84-year-old woman, the so-called "Bacchus ladies" can still be seen near the Piccadilly theater in Seoul's Jongno neighborhood. The nickname comes from the popular energy drink that many of the prostitutes have traditionally sold.

The middle-aged and elderly women and their customers — both pitied and scorned in this conservative country — provide a look at the dark side of South Korea's rapid economic rise and erosion of traditional parent-child roles. As a growing, ultra-competitive middle class has become preoccupied with getting ahead, many elderly and poor people have been left to fend for themselves.

Elderly prostitutes reveal dark side of South Korea's rise [Hyung-jin Kim/Denver Post]

(Image: Ahn Young-joon/AP)

25 Sep 21:45

What the Internet looks like when it's not a patent drawing

by Cory Doctorow

heinrich-holtgreve-zeit-magazin-internet-10

In contrast to yesterday's post about the way the Internet is depicted in patent drawings, check out these photos of the Internet's secret actual infrastructure.

Photographer Heinrich Holtgreve's The Internet as a Place is a beautiful series of images of the deceptively banal places where the Internet's infrastructure lives -- the fiber passing through the Suez canal, the exchanges where networks talk to each other, the anonymous buildings and sewer openings that lead to dark spaces that course with data.

On a recent trip to NYC, Henrik Moltke led me on a guided tour of the sidewalks around NASDAQ, which are spraypainted with markings indicating whose fiber goes where. It's precisely because these markings are so innocuous and easy to miss that they're exciting -- a form of secret knowledge that can be discovered by anyone who chooses to see it.

His first stop was Egypt. The country is a major hub for undersea cables, 11 of which now run through the Suez Canal to connect people as far away as Germany and Malaysia. Holtgreve spent three months trying to visit places like the Cairo Internet Exchange, but no dice. Such places thrive by assuring their members of the utmost security. That means not advertising what’s inside, much less letting a photographer poke around with a Canon 5D Mark III. Even when someone would let him in, he wouldn’t always to take pictures. “I was shown around another data center in Cairo, but I wasn’t allowed to bring my camera,” he says. “They half-jokingly suspected me for being an Israeli spy.”

Still, he caught a few breaks. Holtgreve met a friendly dentist who let him photograph the Cairo exchange building from his balcony. Someone who worked for an undersea cable company gave him the GPS coordinates of a beach manhole in Alexandria where cables like SEA-ME-WE-4 and FLAG meet land. In the desert near Cairo, he photographed a warehouse owned by a major French global telecom equipment company. Hundreds of seemingly ancient antennas sat dusted with sand. “It felt like walking around Mos Eisley,” Holtgreve says.

This Is What the Internet Looks Like IRL [Laura Mallonee/Wired]


25 Sep 21:31

bobbycaputo: Donald Trump Calls Photojournalist ‘A F***ing...





bobbycaputo:

Donald Trump Calls Photojournalist ‘A F***ing Thief’ Over Photo of Empty Chairs

Donald Trump is lashing out at an Associated Press photographer over photos of empty chairs at a Trump speech in South Carolina. The presidential candidate is accusing the photojournalist of portraying a dishonest story through his photos.

Photographer Mic Smith covered the event in Charleston, South Carolina, on Wednesday. The photos he transmitted to the Associated Press appear to tell two different stories: one was a closeup of the front of the room, showing Trump speaking to a crowd of people seated and gathered around him:

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