Apr 23 2009

DARPA’s Map-Based Wiki Keeps Platoons Alive

blackbearnh writes “One of the biggest problem that a platoon on the ground in Iraq or Afghanistan faces is that when a new unit cycles in, all the street-sense and experience of the old unit is lost. Knowing where insurgents like to plant IEDs, or even which families have a lot of domestic disputes, can spell the difference between living and dying. In response to this, DARPA created TIGR, the Tactical Ground Reporting System. Developed as much on the ground in active warzones as in a lab, TIGR lets platoons access the latest satellite and drone imagery in an easy-to-use map based interface, as well as recording their experiences in the field and accessing the reports of other troops. In this O’Reilly Radar interview, two of the people responsible for the development of TIGR talk about the intel issues that troops face in hostile territory,the challenges of deploying new technology meant for combat areas, the specific tricks that they had to employ to make TIGR work over less-than-robust military networking, and how TIGR is impacting platoons in their day to day operations”

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Apr 22 2009

Biden Promises ‘Right Person’ As Copyright Czar

Hugh Pickens writes “Vice President Joe Biden lauded Hollywood at a gala dinner in Washington, assailed movie piracy, and promised film executives that the Obama administration would pick “the right person” as its copyright czar. Biden warned of the harms of piracy at the private event organized by the Motion Picture Association of America in the sumptuous, newly renovated Great Hall of the National Portrait Gallery in Washington, D.C. “It’s pure theft, stolen from the artists and quite frankly from the American people as consequence of loss of jobs and as a consequence of loss of income,” Biden said, according to a White House pool report. Biden addressed President Obama’s forthcoming decision about who will be named the intellectual-property enforcement coordinator, better known as the copyright czar. Under a law approved by the U.S. Congress last October, Obama is required to appoint someone to coordinate the administration’s IP enforcement efforts and prepare annual reports. Copyright industry lobbyists sent a letter to the president asking him to pick someone sympathetic to their concerns, while groups that would curb copyright law sent their own letter (pdf) urging the opposite approach. We “will find the right person for intellectual property czar,” Biden said.”

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Apr 22 2009

Intel Cache Poisoning Is Dangerously Easy On Linux

Julie188 writes “A researcher recently released proof-of-concept code for an exploit that allows a hacker to overrun an Intel CPU cache and plant a rootkit. A second, independent researcher has examined the exploit and noted that it is so simple and so stealthy that it is likely out in the wild now, unbeknownst to its victims. The attack works best on a Linux system with an Intel DQ35 motherboard with 2GB of memory. It turns out that Linux allows the root user to access MTR registers incredibly easily. With Windows this exploit can be used, but requires much more work and skill and so while the Linux exploit code is readily available now, no Windows exploit code has, so far, been released or seen. This attack is hardware specific, but unfortunately, it is specific to Intel’s popular DQ35 motherboards.”

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Apr 22 2009

CSIRO Settles With Tech Giants Over WiFi Patent Spat

Combat Wombat brings news that the legal battle between the Australian Commonwealth Scientific and Research Organisation (CSIRO) and a host of major tech corporations has come to end, with a large settlement going to the CSIRO. The fight was over a patent on wireless LAN technology, which already earned the CSIRO a victory in court over Buffalo Technology and a settlement with Hewlett-Packard. The remaining 13 companies, which include Dell, Intel, Microsoft and Nintendo, have now chosen to settle as well. “[The CSIRO] will use the money won from a Wi-Fi technology patent battle to fund further research. … It is unclear how much money has flowed to the CSIRO, but experts say the technology would be worth billions of dollars if royalties were paid on an ongoing basis.”

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Apr 22 2009

Kernel Log: What’s coming in 2.6.30

New features include Wi-Fi drivers for chips from Atheros, Intel, Intersil/Prism and Marvell, LAN drivers for chips from Intel and enhanced energy saving technologies for the latest Wi-Fi hardware

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Apr 22 2009

Obama unleashes political firestorm by raising prospect of torture … – Globe and Mail


USA Today

Obama unleashes political firestorm by raising prospect of torture
Globe and Mail
WASHINGTON — America lost its moral compass during the Bush years, President Barack Obama said yesterday, leaving open the possibility that senior officials might be prosecuted for devising a flawed legal cover for torture.
Video: Obama On Bush Interrogations CBS
Report links CIA to military harsh interrogations The Associated Press
New York Times – Washington Post – Reuters – msnbc.com
all 6,968 news articles
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Apr 21 2009

Analysts Question Legality of Targeting Lawyers in 'Torture' Inquiry – FOXNews


FOXNews

Analysts Question Legality of Targeting Lawyers in 'Torture' Inquiry
FOXNews
With President Obama opening the door for prosecution of lawyers who justified harsh interrogation techniques, some legal analysts question how the Justice Department could pursue a case that amounts to prosecuting a legal opinion.
Obama doesn't rule out charges over interrogations Reuters
Unresolved debate in DOJ memos: Does torture work? The Associated Press
guardian.co.uk – Times Online – New York Times – CBC.ca
all 5,652 news articles
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Apr 21 2009

Barack Obama hints that George Bush 'torture lawyers' may be … – Times Online


ABC News

Barack Obama hints that George Bush 'torture lawyers' may be
Times Online
President Obama today left the door open to prosecuting lawyers from the Bush Administration who drafted memos authorising the use of harsh interrogation methods on terror suspects.
Video: Barack Obama addresses CIA conference ITN NEWS
Obama won't rule out charges over CIA interrogations CBC.ca
New York Times – Bloomberg – Reuters – BBC News
all 5,619 news articles
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Apr 20 2009

US Military Issuing iPod Touches To Soldiers

644bd346996 writes “Newsweek has an article about the latest weapons in the US military’s arsenal. The iPod Touch and the iPhone are being adapted as general purpose handhelds for soldiers in the field. ‘Apple gadgets are proving to be surprisingly versatile. Software developers and the US Department of Defense are developing military software for iPods that enables soldiers to display aerial video from drones and have teleconferences with intelligence agents halfway across the globe. Snipers in Iraq and Afghanistan now use a “ballistics calculator” called BulletFlight, made by the Florida firm Knight’s Armament for the iPod Touch and iPhone. Army researchers are developing applications to turn an iPod into a remote control for a bomb-disposal robot (tilting the iPod steers the robot). In Sudan, American military observers are using iPods to learn the appropriate etiquette for interacting with tribal leaders.'”

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Apr 20 2009

Rep. Jane Harman Focus In Yet Another Warrantless Wiretap Scandal

Many different sources are talking about the latest scandal surrounding the warrantless wiretapping program. Incriminating evidence against California rep. Jane Harman was apparently captured some time ago on a legal NSA wiretap. However, Attorney General Gonzales supposedly intervened to drop the case against her because (and this is where the irony meter explodes) Bush officials wanted her to be able to publicly defend the warrantless wiretap program. “Jane Harman, in the wake of the NSA scandal, became probably the most crucial defender of the Bush warrantless eavesdropping program, using her status as “the ranking Democratic on the House intelligence committee” to repeatedly praise the NSA program as ‘essential to U.S. national security’ and ‘both necessary and legal.'”

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