Category Archives: Security

Prisoner conviction based on return address

This story might have more to it than meets the eye:

A Wisconsin state appeals court refused to overturn the conviction of a prisoner who said no one ever saw him write a threatening letter to a judge.

The 2nd District Appeals Court noted Wednesday that Anthony Dwane Turner’s return address was on the envelope, sealing its decision.

Since he was a prisoner at the time, it would seem his return address was determined for him:

Turner asked the appeals court in 2005 to overturn his conviction. He argued prosecutors didn’t present any evidence at trial that anyone saw him write the letter or that the handwriting was his.

The appeals court refused, saying the envelope was marked with Turner’s name, inmate number and the address of the prison in Green Bay.

So I guess the question raised is whether someone in a prison can impersonate a prisoner by sending a letter that appears to be from their cell. The address is treated as a signature, but how trustworthy/spoofable is it?

Happy Greenery Day

Perhaps the most interesting thing about this Japanese holiday, traditionally celebrated on April 29th, is that it was “renamed” this year as Showa Day while a new Greenery Day was established on May 4th. Not sure why they say it was renamed when they could just say it moved. Maybe the rules prevent moving holidays.

And what ever happened to the People’s Day of May 4th? Apparently “Greenery” is a veiled reference to the Emperor’s love of greenery, so the effect has been to create a double holiday for the same guy separated by only a few days.

Showa Day now openly acknowledges the infamous Emperor Hirohito’s rule during the 1940s.

…critics say the move will upset other nations, especially China and the two Koreas, who will say it glorifies Japan’s often brutal militaristic past.

A similar bill was abandoned in the past, due to political pressure.

But this time the main opposition Democratic Party of Japan backed the bill, which was proposed by the ruling coalition.

The opposition said it now accepted the idea that the holiday would encourage public reflection of the turbulent 63 years of Hirohito’s reign, rather than glorify the emperor himself.

I think they should have stuck with Greenery, and left the People’s Day alone, as they already provide plenty of reflection.

Syria, Rice and Pelosi

There is something terribly wrong when you compare how these two news reports have been written. First, the story from last month:

ABC News has learned that Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi plans to visit Syria next week to meet with President Bashar Al-Assad. The visit will make Pelosi the most senior U.S. official ever to meet with President Assad.

White House spokesperson Dana Perino strongly criticized Pelosi’s planned visit, saying, “We think it is a really bad idea.

“People should take a stop back and think about the message it sends and the message it sends to our allies,” Perino said.

Pelosi will be traveling to Syria has part of a congressional delegation with five other members of the House of Representatives, including one Republican.

Ok, I’m taking a step back and thinking about the message. Am I supposed to be worried because she is a Democrat, that she was elected by popular vote, or that no one but the President is allowed to make positive change?

And now, today’s message:

US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice has held a ground-breaking meeting with Syrian Foreign Minister Walid Muallem at a summit in Egypt.

Mr Muallem said the highest-level talks between the two countries in several years were “frank and constructive”.

Ground-breaking? The Bush administration first bashes those in office who try to reach out to Syria and then steps in and tries to take credit for following behind?

Here is an even more insightful comparison:

As the weblog Think Progress noted, during a March 30 White House press briefing, deputy press secretary Dana Perino attacked Pelosi for her decision to spend time in Syria as part of a Mideast tour. Perino stated: “I know that Assad probably really wants people to come and have a photo opportunity and have tea with him, and have discussions about where they’re coming from, but we do think that’s a really bad idea.” But the White House did not criticize Republican lawmakers who were separately slated to visit Syria. Indeed, on April 1, Reps. Frank Wolf (R-VA), Joseph R. Pitts (R-PA) and Robert Aderholt (R-AL) traveled to Damascus and met with Assad, two days before Pelosi’s scheduled trip.

What’s with the glaring double-standards and slimy propaganda? Rove at work again? I think Bush was simply trying to make his own party look good by bashing someone doing something good for the country and trying to prevent them from getting any credit. The bottom line is the Iraq Study Group called for discussions with Syria and so Pelosi was doing her job, despite all the partisan muckraking, to improve America’s security.

Digg takes a stand

Kevin Rose has announced the pressure from savvy users is a greater threat than that of the financial powerhouses and their lawyers:

Occasionally we step in to remove stories that violate our terms of use (eg. linking to pornography, illegal downloads, racial hate sites, etc.). So today was a difficult day for us. We had to decide whether to remove stories containing a single code based on a cease and desist declaration. We had to make a call, and in our desire to avoid a scenario where Digg would be interrupted or shut down, we decided to comply and remove the stories with the code.

But now, after seeing hundreds of stories and reading thousands of comments, you’ve made it clear. You’d rather see Digg go down fighting than bow down to a bigger company. We hear you, and effective immediately we won’t delete stories or comments containing the code and will deal with whatever the consequences might be.

If we lose, then what the hell, at least we died trying.

Interesting to note that the users can take his site down immediately through distributed denial of service that would be hard, if not impossible, to prevent or even trace. However, the courts are far less efficient and might take months or years to force him off-line. But it also sounds good to say that he will take a stand to support dynamic community content against the ancient media moguls.

Edited to add (2 March 2007): Google and YouTube seem to be taking a similar stand, as the Guardian reported today.

In a filing with Manhattan’s district court, YouTube said: “By seeking to make carriers and hosting providers liable for internet communications, Viacom’s complaint threatens the way hundreds of millions of people legitimately exchange information, news, entertainment, and political and artistic expression.”

I’m guessing the Viacoms of the world take issue with the terms “legitimately exchange” because it poses a direct threat to their entire operations model. They want to control eyeballs and ears. Once upon a time this was more plausable because only giant companies could afford mass distribution and exchange of information, spreading the cost out accross all their consumers. Back then few individuals could afford the overhead of “discovering” talent, maintaining manufacturing and warehousing systems, or keeping an army of lawyers employed to fight against the competition. Today, however, consumers benefit from dynamic ranking/rating systems and virtually free distribution channels that requires minimal overhead. The only thing that really remains is the giant company single-contact relationship with advertisers. So the big (billion dollar) question is: what will regulators decide really constitutes a legitimate exchange of information?

Incidentally, I can’t pass up the chance to throw in the news that even the UN is facing a lawsuit related to this topic. A group of Congolese polio victims claim they were not fairly compensated for a song played on radio and TV:

Let’s Go and Vote was played repeatedly in the run-up to last year’s historic polls on radio and TV stations.

In a country where a third of the population is illiterate and with crumbling infrastructure, the song is credited with boosting turn-out to 70%.

But the eight members of the Staff Benda Bilili band were paid $50 each.

The UN has denied any responsibility for paying royalties.

[…]

“It is thanks to our song that people went and voted but Monuc [UN Mission in DR Congo] did not pay us and we are still forced to sleep and beg in the streets. This is slavery,” said band leader Nzale Makembo.

I searched but couldn’t find a copy of their video on YouTube.