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Submission + - Spy Stories From The Murdoch Empire

Presto Vivace writes: News Corp Fights With Itself In Grand Game Of Espionage

But amidst all the lawsuits and accusations, it turns out there are some other fascinating stories to be found in News Corp's world of competitive corporate hacking and private security. A new book by Neil Chenoweth, Murdoch's Pirates, digs into that world and turns up some pretty fascinating results. From an excerpt published in the Sydney Morning Herald, we get the story of some befuddled inter-agency espionage between News Corp and its own subsidiary, complete with aliases, informants, moles and a cross-border escape gambit by a spy on the run.

Submission + - Slashdot users give new beta design a huge Bronx cheer 2

Presto Vivace writes: Alice Marshall reports that:

Slashdot users are extremely unhappy with the new Slashdot Beta design. The comment section of every single post is devoted to dissatisfaction with the new design. ... ... The thing to keep in mind about community sites devoted to user generated content is that the users generate the content.

Submission + - BOOOO

An anonymous reader writes: BETA BOOOOOOOO

Submission + - NYPD is beta-testing Google Glass 1

Presto Vivace writes: Venture Beat

The New York City Police Department’s massive and controversial intelligence and analytics unit is evaluating whether Google Glass is a decent fit for investigating terrorists and helping cops lock up bad guys, VentureBeat has learned. The department recently received several pairs of the modernist-looking specs to test out.

“We signed up, got a few pairs of the Google glasses, and we’re trying them out, seeing if they have any value in investigations, mostly for patrol purposes,” a ranking New York City law enforcement official told VentureBeat.

Submission + - Mob Source Phone Video Collaboration

Presto Vivace writes: Google patent suggests automatically sending your videos and photos to law enforcement

Google recently filed a patent for a system that identifies when and where a “mob” event takes place and sends multimedia alerts to relevant parties. The patents are actually titled “Mob Source Phone Video Collaboration” and “Inferring Events Based On Mob Sourced Video“.

Submission + - NSA and GCHQ target 'leaky' phone apps to scoop user data (theguardian.com)

schwit1 writes: New leaked NSA documents shed a new light on the agency's assault on the data controls of smartphone apps. Using app data permissions as a jumping off point, the documents show agency staffers building huge quantities of data, including "intercepting Google Maps queries made on smartphones, and using them to collect large volumes of location information." One slide lists capabilities for "hot mic" recording, high precision geotracking, and file retrieval which would reach any content stored locally on the phone, including text messages, emails and calendar entries. As the slide notes in a parenthetical aside, "if it's on the phone, we can get it.

Submission + - Congressmen Call For Clapper's Head (washingtonpost.com) 1

Antipater writes: Six members of Congress, led by Darrell Issa, have released an open letter to the White House that urges the President to go further in his intended reforms of the NSA. The letter, found here, calls out issues like the NSA's weakening of encryption standards and national security letter abuse. It also calls for the immediate firing of James Clapper, stating that "[his] continued role as Director of National Intelligence is incompatible with the goal of restoring trust in our security programs and ensuring the highest level of transparency."

Feed Google News Sci Tech: Make ISPs into 'common carriers,' says former FCC commissioner - The Periscope P (google.com)


The Periscope Post

Make ISPs into 'common carriers,' says former FCC commissioner
The Periscope Post
It's time for the Federal Communications Commission to correct its past mistakes and get tough on broadband providers, a retired FCC commissioner says. Michael Copps, an FCC commissioner from 2001 to 2011 (and acting chairman for several months in...
Net Neutrality Threatens The Future Of MusicYour EDM
Will you speak up when ISPs strangle your Netflix? The company sure hopes soDigital Trends
Business as usual for local providers after Net neutrality decisionNooga.com
Top Tech News-Al Jazeera America-Lexington Clipper Herald
all 31 news articles

Submission + - Privacy-destroying technologies

Presto Vivace writes: Technology is evil only through its misuse, and in the case of this dirty dozen the potential for abuse is frightening A device to capture your fingerprints 20 feet away

iDair's primary customer is the military, but it's pushing into the commercial space. The device is about the size of a small flashlight, so now your employer can set one up at the front door of the office and within a few days have the prints of the entire company.

Legal spyware for government workers

The software is called Spector360, and its manufacturer says it's about stopping intellectual property theft and data breaches. But it caught the FDA scientists sending emails to lawmakers and others about medical devices they thought were dangerous, and the scientists are now suing.

Molecular scanners that can secretly scan you from 164 feet away

But as always, it's not so much the technology itself as how it can be used or misused. With Genia's tech, the Department of Homeland Security will be able to scan from up to 164 feet away for traces of drugs or explosives on your clothes,

'Pre-Crime' cameras are watching you

Submission + - More bad news for the F-35 (aviationweek.com)

schwit1 writes: A new U.S. Defense Department report warns that ongoing software, maintenance and reliability problems with Lockheed Martin Corp’s F-35 stealth fighter could delay the Marine Corps’ plans to start using its F-35 jets by mid-2015.

It said Lockheed had delivered F-35 jets with 50 percent or less of the software capabilities required by its production contracts with the Pentagon.

The computer-based logistics system known as ALIS was fielded with “serious deficiencies” and remained behind schedule, which affected servicing of existing jets needed for flight testing, the report said. It said the ALIS diagnostic system failed to meet even basic requirements.

The F35 program, which began in 2001, is 70 percent over initial cost estimates, and years behind schedule, but top U.S. officials say it is now making progress. They have vowed to safeguard funding for the program to keep it on track.

Earlier this week, the nonprofit Center for International Policy said Lockheed had greatly exaggerated its estimate that the F-35 program sustained 125,000 U.S. jobs to shore up support for the program.

Submission + - Revenge porn website ex-owner Hunter Moore Arrested (bbc.co.uk)

Celexi writes: Controversial Hunter Moore who ran a revenge porn website "isanyoneup.com" has been arrested today by the FBI on charges including conspiracy, unauthorized access to a protected computer to obtain information and aggravated identity theft. His partner Charles Evens which apparently did the email hacking, has also been arrested, if convicted on all charges it will be a quite long sentence as well.

Submission + - Tech corporate leaders charged with conspiracy to depress wages 4

Presto Vivace writes: How Silicon Valley’s most celebrated CEOs conspired to drive down 100,000 tech engineers’ wages

These secret conversations and agreements between some of the biggest names in Silicon Valley were first exposed in a Department of Justice antitrust investigation launched by the Obama Administration in 2010. That DOJ suit became the basis of a class action lawsuit filed on behalf of over 100,000 tech employees whose wages were artificially lowered — an estimated $9 billion effectively stolen by the high-flying companies from their workers to pad company earnings — in the second half of the 2000s. Last week, the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals denied attempts by Apple, Google, Intel, and Adobe to have the lawsuit tossed, and gave final approval for the class action suit to go forward. A jury trial date has been set for May 27 in San Jose, before US District Court judge Lucy Koh, who presided over the Samsung-Apple patent suit.

Submission + - Anonymous Hacker Who Exposed the Steubenville Rapists Gets More Prison Time Than (geekrepublic.org)

An anonymous reader writes: Deric Lostutter, the 26-year-old “hacktivist” who leaked the evidence that led to the conviction of two of the Steubenville, Ohio rapists is now facing more time behind bars than the rapists he exposed. The Steubenville Rape Case made national headlines when a video made by the rapists themselves, and their friends, proved that their victim was unconscious and unable to consent.

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