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Electronic Frontier Foundation

DOJ Often Used Cell Tower Impersonating Devices Without Explicit Warrants 146

Via the EFF comes news that, during a case involving the use of a Stingray device, the DOJ revealed that it was standard practice to use the devices without explicitly requesting permission in warrants. "When Rigmaiden filed a motion to suppress the Stingray evidence as a warrantless search in violation of the Fourth Amendment, the government responded that this order was a search warrant that authorized the government to use the Stingray. Together with the ACLU of Northern California and the ACLU, we filed an amicus brief in support of Rigmaiden, noting that this 'order' wasn't a search warrant because it was directed towards Verizon, made no mention of an IMSI catcher or Stingray and didn't authorize the government — rather than Verizon — to do anything. Plus to the extent it captured loads of information from other people not suspected of criminal activity it was a 'general warrant,' the precise evil the Fourth Amendment was designed to prevent. ... The emails make clear that U.S. Attorneys in the Northern California were using Stingrays but not informing magistrates of what exactly they were doing. And once the judges got wind of what was actually going on, they were none too pleased:"

Comment Re:Holy AI, Batman (Score 1) 279

It's funny you guys bitch and bitch about apple locking down there phones. When was the last problem like this with iOS devices. I know jailbroken iphones/ipods with ssh enabled an the default alpine pass at one time got caught in a worm that would simply rickroll your iphone basicly. Open platform means you are hoping the people who made your software are nice. What the last ios problem was a developer hacking in a script to let your volume buttons take pictures. ;) Alot better then a 3000 dollar cellphone bill

Comment Its a tool, and the same ideas are already used. (Score 2, Interesting) 430

This thing is a tool, just like most of the other ones that are out there. Your insurance (for pretty much anything, auto, life, house, etc.) use the same basic principle. You take the big factors, sort them out into groups, and then figure out the relative risk.

You're young, male, and single? Guess what, on average, you've got a better chance of being in a car accident. Live in Florida? On average, you've got a better chance of having a house being blown away by a hurricane. There's data support all of it, but you've got to remember that it's a mathematical predictor, which doesn't mean it's always true.

The real question is what the heck are they going to do after the risks are tabulated? As a post mentioned before, it seems that it may be used for sentencing guidelines, but I hope that's just a small part. If you can find out the groups of at-risk youth, and then do something (like spend money on programs and other things that will encourage those youth to not commit crime (I know, far cry of concept for our elected officials)), then the system is worth it. Prevention of crime doesn't always mean that the police are directly involved. Rather, they should be the last resort.

And as to "real time", it's about as real time (if they're using most modern analytical software) as the data they get in. Ask someone in insurance how quickly they get data in (bonus points if you can find out the differences in time for various coverages).

PS - I love the idea about using this for politicians, and comparing polls in their represented area to their voting history. I'd bet a lot of them wouldn't like that brought up.

Comment Re:Keep in mind... (Score 1) 241

There are much more effective isotopes to use in a dirty bomb than weapons grade plutonium.

Quite true. I was thinking about it from a more historical angle (like U-235), but just double checking, I saw it was alpha decay as well. So yeah, it wouldn't be such a horrible thing. Actually panic would probably be worse (other than trying to clean the damn stuff up).

Comment Re:Keep in mind... (Score 1) 241

Yeah, for some reason, the Air Force might decide to transport nuclear weapons over a large metropolis, have a release accident, and have the bomb strike another aircraft, which happens to somehow set off the conventional explosives.

I'll give you the transport angle. Most times I've ever heard of it, much of the transport was done on the ground, with several routes and sometimes even drivers not knowing, but that's still hearsay. And I would bet, in the rich history of stupid things we've done, there was probably at least one weapon (more likely atomic), transported close to a decently sized population center.

Then again, there is a 50-year old nuclear reactor just down the road. 200,000 people live within one mile of it. I still sleep peacefully at night.

Yes, but generally the design for that reactor was not for it to release all of its energy in one blast. I'd trust a 50-year old reactor more than a 50-year old A-Bomb (and boy do I hope we don't have any 50 year old A-Bombs sitting around).

Comment Re:Keep in mind... (Score 4, Insightful) 241

Yes, there may be no detonation, but even a low-level atomic weapon having its high explosives going off is good enough to irradiate a good-sized area. Now imagine the impact of that weapon that set off it's high explosives, in mid-air, over a large metropolis. Dirty bombs are just as much of a pain in the ass. The destruction isn't wide spread, but you're still not going to want to live there. Actually, in the end, the economic and social damage may even be greater in the long run.

Comment Re:Not Surprising (Score 1) 211

Jailbreak the iphone
add
http://cydia.xsellize.com/ to cydia
Install "MyWi" in the Xapps group
1. Turn on
2. Make network
3. Open/WEP encrypted wifi network which shares your internet. It's perfect. Not only can you tether to one device you can tether to anyone around you with the key (or keep the network open) great for roadtrips if someone has an ipod touch or a netbook.

Comment Re:Iridium? (Score 1) 438

The only issue with that is after like 10km or so away from the tower it will actually REJECT your data packets. Even if you have like a -90 or -80 signal. GSM won't allow you to have data. CDMA on the other hand I believe will. Keep that in mind if you plan on using a large antenna/booster.

Comment Re:Lifespan... (Score 1) 239

One day walking into the local Futureshop (Best Buy for Canadians) I saw a cool deal on a "Readyboost" enabled 2gb Flash drive. The drive had a big readyboost logo and boasted on how good it was for such task. Setting up vista I put the drive in and enabled it for readyboost. In one day that thing will transfer about 250-300gb (that's combined) so about 100-200gb write in 24 hours.

This thing has been working for 3 months. Every time I come into the room all I see is the flash drive blinking away. So lets put out some rough math. (Oh the drive is at full capacity with the readyboost stuff) so the ablity to just keep writing to unused places doesn't work.

I'll use write for fun ... and a nice low number 150gb of write
150x31=4650 ... so give or take 4650gb of write to that flash in one month. It's on month 3 of operation. Hammer some torrents or other I/O intensive stuff and the thing writes even more. I used a cool readyboost monitor I found on the internet to monitor all this. Check it out ... I also found that the readyboost kinda slowed things down cause once in awhile you have to wait for it to do it's thing before it does what you want. Maybe it's just my machine being slow but I noticed no improvement.
Music

Apple's DRM Whack-a-Mole 352

Mateo_LeFou writes "Gulf News has a nice piece exposing the last couple generations of Apple's DRM strategy (you didn't really think they were abandoning DRM, did you?). Article focuses on how quickly the tactics are worked around, and how nasty the latest one is: purchased iTunes now have your personal data in them. Author suspects that this is to prevent you uploading them to a network."

Comment Re:easy as 1 2 3 (Score 2, Insightful) 676

Like Duke knows anything of electrical engineering. It only takes a State student to tell you that (or a Carolina student, but they can go to hell).

Curriculum here started with learning about what a gate was, how it was made from transistors (which were magic black boxes then), from gates we learned adders and other MSI devices, and eventually got to an abstraction of a microcomputer. Assembly then was a Godsend and now using that same assembly language, we've implemented C.

Point is, reference a school for electrical engineering, make a better choice than masking Duke to the country. I mean, look here at State, Ga Tech, Va Tech, MIT, Stanford, Princeton, USC, etc.
Security

UCLA Hacked, 800,000 Identities Exposed 148

An anonymous reader writes "The Washington Post reports that a central campus database at UCLA containing the personal information (including SSNs) of about 800,000 UCLA affiliates has been compromised for possibly over a year. The data may have been available to hackers since October 2005 until November 21, 2006, when the breach was finally detected and blocked. Several other UC campuses have also been involved in significant data security incidents over the past few years." From the article: "'To my knowledge, it's absolutely one of the largest,' Rodney Petersen, security task force coordinator for Educause, a nonprofit higher education association, told the Los Angeles Times. Petersen said that in a Educause survey release in October, about a quarter of 400 colleges said that over the previous 12 months, they had experienced a security incident in which confidential information was compromised, the newspaper reported."

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