Posts Tagged ‘privacy’

PT Shamrocks’ Mid July 2010 Newsletter

Wednesday, July 14th, 2010

Mid July 2010 Newsletter

“Do not believe in anything simply because you have heard it. Do not
believe in anything simply because it is spoken and rumored by many.
Do not believe in anything simply because it is found written in your
religious books.  Do not believe in anything merely on the authority
of your teachers and elders. Do not believe in traditions because
they have been handed down for many generations. But after
observation and analysis, when you find that anything agrees with
reason and is conducive to the good and benefit of one and all, then
accept it and live up to it.”
- Budda

In this issue:

* Is the U.S. a Fascist Police-State?
* Scary Stuff
* U.S. government panel now pushing “vaccinations for all!” No
exceptions
* Breaking News! Home Office admits thousands have been illegally
stopped and searched under counter-terror laws (and could get compensation
* Federal Suit Attacks Constitutionality of N.J. Money-Laundering
Statute
* Good News – Original ‘Echelon’ secret UK-US spookery treaty published
* Tips for the TSA
* Bad News – Smart meters – the latest example of Britain leading the world in
invasive technology
* Crocodile Dundee Paul Hogan’s off-shore tax accounts to be
published Paul Hogan, the Australian actor, has lost a long-running
legal battle to keep the contents of his tax documents secret, paving
the way for details of his offshore accounts to be published.
* Food for thought – Is Someone Spying On Your Cell-Phone Calls?
* Police State – Toronto Transformed Into Locked Down Police State
* Horror Stories – Police Said to Taze Grandmother
* The District of Criminals – Pentagon revives Rumsfeld-era domestic spying unit
* The Coalition continues with 28 day detention
* Hot Tips – Funds Invest in Privacy Start-Ups Companies With Ideas on How to
Protect Personal Information Are a New Favorite of Venture Capitalists
* Advisory Financial Crimes Enforcement Network Advisory
* Dutch St. Maarten and the BES islands
* Dumbing Down – Tesco demands ID from 33 year old man – and refuses to sell him
alcohol when he hasn’t got any
* Dumb Laws – RateMyCop User Ensnared in ‘Dumbest Case Ever’
* Dumb signs – Are Cameras the New Guns?
* Dumb facts – Fined for the length of your dog lead A cash-strapped council has come
up with an ingenious way of raking in revenue from law-abiding people
* Dumb criminal acts – Fort Knox Nurseries
* Cannon Fodder – Remember, the internet is not a private place
* Oz/Nzed Corner
* Bug Bites: Chinese Supercomputer Is Ranked World’s Second-Fastest, Challenging
U.S. Dominance
* Wikileaks Was Launched With Documents Intercepted From Tor
* Shamrock’s Missive
* Quotes
* Tid Bits – ‘Mal-intent’ may be the future of security
* More Tid Bits – Bill would give DHS emergency cyber powers
* Bits and bobs – Surveillance cameras in Birmingham track Muslims’ every move
* More Bits n bobs – False economy
* Deflationary Depression and Purging To Come
* Brazilian banker’s crypto baffles FBI
* Hints & Tips – Biometric cash machine lands in Europe
* Letters to the Editor
* Quote of the month!
* PT Shamrock’s Exclusive Member’s Site!

*** Is the U.S. a Fascist Police-State?
- Zero Hedge

With the Holder v. Humanitarian Law Project decision (No. 08-1498,
also 09-89) of the Supreme Court, coupled with the Arar v. Ashcroft
denial of certiorari (No. 09-923), the case for claiming that the
U.S. is a fascist police-state just got a whole lot stronger.

First of all, what is a “fascist police-state”?

A police-state uses the law as a mechanism to control any challenges
to its power by the citizenry, rather than as a mechanism to insure a
civil society among the individuals. The state decides the laws, is
the sole arbiter of the law, and can selectively (and capriciously)
decide to enforce the law to the benefit or detriment of one
individual or group or another.

In a police-state, the citizens are “free” only so long as their
actions remain within the confines of the law as dictated by the
state. If the individual’s claims of rights or freedoms conflict with
the state, or if the individual acts in ways deemed detrimental to the
state, then the state will repress the citizenry, by force if
necessary. (And in the end, it’s always necessary.)

What’s key to the definition of a police-state is the lack of redress:
If there is no justice system which can compel the state to cede to
the citizenry, then there is a police-state. If there exists apro
forma justice system, but which in practice is unavailable to the
ordinary citizen because of systemic obstacles (for instance, cost or
bureaucratic hindrance), or which against all logic or reason
consistently finds in favor of the state even in the most egregious
and obviously contradictory cases then that pro forma judiciary system
is nothing but a sham: A tool of the state’s repression against its
citizens. Consider the Soviet court system the classic example.

A police-state is not necessarily a dictatorship. On the contrary, it
can even take the form of a representative democracy. A police-state
is not defined by its leadership structure, but rather, by its
self-protection against the individual.

A definition of “fascism” is tougher to come by it’s almost as tough
to come up with as a definition of “pornography”.

The sloppy definition is simply totalitarianism of the Right,
“communism” being the sloppy definition of totalitarianism of the
Left. But that doesn’t help much.

For our purposes, I think we should use the syndicalist-corporatist
definition as practiced by Mussolini: Society as a collection of
corporate and union interests, where the state is one more competing
interest among many, albeit the most powerful of them all, and thus as
a virtue of its size and power, taking precedence over all other
factions. In other words, society is a “street-gang” model that I
discussed before. The individual has power only as derived from his
belonging to a particular faction or group individuals do not have
inherent worth, value or standing.

Now then! Having gotten that out of the way, where were we?

Holder v. Humanitarian Law Project: The Humanitarian Law Project was
advising groups deemed “terrorists” on how to negotiate non-violently
with various political agencies, including the UN. In this 6-3
decision by the U.S. Supreme Court, the Court ruled that that speech
constituted “aiding and abetting” a terrorist organization, as the
Court determined that speech was “material support”. Therefore, the
Executive and/or Congress had the right to prohibit anyone from
speaking to any terrorist organization if that speech embodied
“material support” to the terrorist organization.

The decision is being noted by the New York Times as a Freedom of
Speech issue; other commentators seem to be viewing it in those terms
as well.

My own take is, Holder v. Humanitarian Law Project is not about
limiting free speech it’s about the state expanding it power to
repress. The decision limits free speech in passing, because what it
is really doing is expanding the state’s power to repress whomever it
unilaterally determines is a terrorist.

In the decision, the Court explicitly ruled that “Congress and the
Executive are uniquely positioned to make principled distinctions
between activities that will further terrorist conduct and undermine
United States foreign policy, and those that will not.” In other
words, the Court makes it clear that Congress and/or the Executive can
solely and unilaterally determine who is a “terrorist threat”, and who
is not without recourse to judicial review of this decision. And if
the Executive and/or Congress determines that this group here or that
group there is a “terrorist organization”, then their free speech is
curtailed as is the free speech of anyone associating with them, no
matter how demonstrably peaceful that speech or interaction is.

For example, if the Executive in the form of the Secretary of
State decides that, say, WikiLeaks or Amnesty International is a
terrorist organization, well then by golly, it is a terrorist
organization. It no longer has any right to free speech nor can
anyone else speak to them or associate with them, for risk of being
charged with providing “material support” to this heinous terrorist
organization known as Amnesty International.

But furthermore, as per Holder v. Humanitarian Law Project, anyone
associating with WikiLeaks including, presumably, those who read it,
and most certainly those who give it information about government
abuses would be guilty of aiding and abetting terrorism. In other
words, giving WikiLeaks “material support” by providing primary
evidence of government abuse would render one a terrorist.

This form of repression does seem to fit the above definition of a
police-state. The state determines unilaterally who is detrimental to
its interests. The state then represses that person or group.

By a 6-3 majority, the Supreme Court has explicitly stated that
Congress and/or the Executive is “uniquely positioned” to determine
who is a terrorist and who is not and therefore has the right to
silence not just the terrorist organization, but anyone trying to
speak to them, or hear them.

And let’s just say that, after jumping through years of judicial
hoops, one finally manages to prove that one wasn’t then and isn’t now
a terrorist, the Arar denial of certiorari makes it irrelevant. Even
if it turns out that a person is definitely and unequivocally not a
terrorist, he cannot get legal redress for this mistake by the state.

So! To sum up: The U.S. government can decide unilaterally who is a
terrorist organization and who is not. Anyone speaking to such a
designated terrorist group is “providing material support” to the
terrorists and is therefore subject to prosecution at the discretion
of the U.S. government. And if, in the end, it turns out that one
definitely was not involved in terrorist activities, there is no way
to receive redress by the state.

Sounds like a fascist police-state to me.
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Scary Stuff

U.S. government panel now pushing “vaccinations for all!” No
exceptions
- David Gutierrez

An advisory panel to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention (CDC) has recommended that every person be vaccinated for
the seasonal flu yearly, except in a few cases where the vaccine is
known to be unsafe.

“Now no one should say ‘Should I or shouldn’t I?’” said CDC flu
specialist Anthony Fiore.

The Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices voted 11-0 with one
abstention to recommend yearly flu vaccination for everyone except for
children under the age of six months, whose immune systems have not
yet developed enough for vaccination to be safe, and people with egg
allergies or other health conditions that are known to make flu
vaccines hazardous. If accepted by the CDC, this recommendation will
then be publicized to doctors and other health workers.

The CDC nearly always accepts the advisory committee’s
recommendations.

Current CDC recommendations call for the yearly vaccination of all
children over the age of six months, all adults over the age of 49,
health care workers, people with chronic health problems and anyone
who cares for a person in one of these groups. These recommendations
cover 85 percent of the US population.

Excluded are adults between the ages of 19 and 49 who do not come into
close contact with people in high-risk groups. The new
recommendation, if adopted, would close that gap, bringing an end to a
10-year campaign by supporters of universal vaccination.  In the past,
the advisory committee has been reluctant to recommend universal
vaccination for fear that it might produce vaccine shortages that
place members of higher risk groups in danger. Yet even with current
recommendations, only 33 percent of the public gets vaccinated every
year, leaving millions of doses to be disposed of.

The H1N1 swine flu scare of the past year played a major role in the
committee’s about face, both because the disease killed many people
falling outside the current recommended vaccine demographic and
because it raised public awareness of and demand for vaccines.

Sources for this story include: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dy
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

*** Breaking News!

Home Office admits thousands have been illegally stopped and searched
under counter-terror laws (and could get compensation
- Daily Mail

Thousands of people have been illegally stopped and searched under
counter-terrorism laws, the Home Office revealed today.

Officials are examining 40 cases where police forces across England
and Wales misapplied the Terrorism Act 2000.

The Home Office said paperwork blunders meant senior officers did not
get the correct authorisation to implement the law.

A series of errors have been identified in applications by forces,
including the Metropolitan Police and regional forces, between 2001
and 2008.

They include one in 2004 when the Metropolitan Police stopped 840
people even though they did not get authorisation from the Government
within 48 hours.

The mistakes centre on operations where stop and search powers under
section 44 of the Terrorism Act were used.
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

*** Federal Suit Attacks Constitutionality of N.J. Money-Laundering
Statute
- New Jersey Law Journal

Two criminal defense lawyers are asking a federal court to declare
unconstitutional New Jersey’s money-laundering law, which they say
uniquely criminalizes the mere possession of U.S. currency.

Glenn Cavanagh and Jon-Henry Barr seek to enjoin the start of a state
court criminal trial set for June 11 in Middlesex County, arguing the
New Jersey statutes, N.J.S.A. 2C:21-25(a) and -26, are
unconstitutional and their clients face irreparable harm from the
20-year prison sentence they face if convicted.

The clients, Belarmino Amaya and Carlos Mejia, were charged with money
laundering and conspiracy to money launder after state police pulled
over their truck and found $1.24 million in two duffel bags. The
money and the vehicle were confiscated.

Money-laundering cases typically include a companion count charging
other criminal conduct, such as drug offenses, prostitution or fraud,
the lawyers say, but New Jersey’s statute is different. It
criminalizes transporting or possessing “property known or which a
reasonable person would believe to be derived from criminal activity.”

It also provides that such knowledge “may be inferred where the
property is transported or possessed in a fashion inconsistent with
the ordinary or usual means of transportation or possession of such
property and where the property is discovered in the absence of any
documentation or other indicia of legitimate origin or right to such
property.”

Cavanagh says the law makes it a crime to carry large amounts of cash.
“It’s almost like requiring a license to possess currency,” he says.
“If it’s legitimate to own, why do I have to prove where I got it and
why I’m authorized to possess it?”

The federal money-laundering law has no comparable inference of
knowledge language. It makes transporting money illegal if the intent
is “to promote the carrying on of specified unlawful activity” or with
knowledge that the funds represent the proceeds of crime and that
their transport is designed to “conceal or disguise the nature, the
location, the source, the ownership, or the control of the proceeds of
specified unlawful activity” or transaction-reporting requirements.
Nor does any other state infer such knowledge, Cavanagh says, based on
research by two law student interns into laws around the country, the
results of which are attached to the lawyers’ motion for a temporary
restraining order, which is set to be argued June 7.

In opposing papers, Deputy Attorney General Jennifer Hsia says the
relief should be denied because Amaya and Mejia have not shown a
likelihood of success on the merits or irreparable harm. She also
argues it is against the public interest to interfere with the
prosecution of crime and urges the court to abstain under the doctrine
of Younger v. Harris, 401 U.S. 37 (1971), so as not to interfere
with state court proceedings.

The complaint in Amaya v. State of New Jersey, 10-cv-915, filed in
Newark on Feb. 22, alleges that the money-laundering law violates the
First, Fourth, Fifth, Sixth and 14th Amendments. It asks for a
declaration that the law is unconstitutional, injunctive relief,
return of the cash and truck, compensatory damages of at least $1
million, punitive damages, interest, costs and fees. An amended
complaint filed May 6 added a third plaintiff, identified only as
R.H.K., allegedly a businessman who transports currency for a fee
based on a handshake and without documentation, sometimes in or
through New Jersey, which puts him at risk of money-laundering
charges.

The defendants, Attorney General Paula Dow, Deputy Attorney General
Philip Mogavero, who is prosecuting Amaya and Mejia, and the three
state police officers involved in the motor vehicle stop, all
represented by Hsia, have not yet filed an answer.

On April 5, the plaintiffs obtained an entry of default but U.S.
District Judge Dickinson Debevoise vacated it on May 3 on Hsia’s
motion and denied the plaintiffs’ motion for a default judgment.

In her motion, Hsia said the response to the complaint was delayed due
to confusion over whether which division of the attorney general’s
office should handle the matter. By the time it was assigned to Hsia
in the Division of Law, the time to answer had passed. Cavanaugh and
Barr would not consent to drop the default though they later withdrew
their opposition.

Cavanagh and Barr say the ACLU-NJ, Association of Criminal Defense
Lawyers-New Jersey and the Institute for Justice, a Virginia-based
property rights advocacy group, have expressed interest in coming in
as amici but have not committed to doing so.

Amaya was transporting the money from New Jersey to California for a
fee and was driving a truck owned by Mejia, who was with him, when
they were stopped by officers from the state police Drug Trafficking
North Unit, says Cavanagh, a Clark solo.

“I can’t get over that this statute says that unless you can explain
where and how you got this dough, that’s dirty money.”

Barr, of Barr & Canada in Clark, is the municipal prosecutor in that
town and in Kenilworth. He is also president of the municipal
prosecutors’ association.
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Good News

Original ‘Echelon’ secret UK-US spookery treaty published
- Lewis Page

Old news in the world of surveillance and spookery today, as the
original 1946 secret treaty between the UK and US which set up the
famous “Echelon” listening system is finally published.

The UKUSA agreement, drafted to formalise intel-sharing arrangements
which had developed during World War II, formed the basis for the
US-British (and later, other nations) partnership against the Warsaw
Pact through the Cold War.

The treaty dealt primarily with communications intercept information,
known as signals intelligence or “sigint”. Back in the early days of
UKUSA cooperation, many long-distance or international phone calls
were carried by longhaul HF radio, and were comparatively easily
intercepted by a worldwide network of listening posts.

Later on, it is widely believed, the allied Echelon capabilities – by
now mostly being provided by the US, with useful access being supplied
by Britain and other nations – became able to monitor huge numbers of
calls automatically, with chosen key words or phrases flagging up a
given conversation for investigation by human operators.

Now released along with the Treaty itself are some intercept products
garnered up to the year 1949. The cooperative publication of British
files from GCHQ and other organisations has already occurred courtesy
of the National Archives, here. The American end of the publications
will go live on the NSA website at 3pm UK time today
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

*** Tips for the TSA
- Campaign For Liberty

US Customs and Border Patrol (CBP) and the Transportation Security
Administration (TSA) both consider us nitwits who can’t pack a
suitcase or travel about the country, let alone the world, without
their supervision. And so after hopelessly mucking up travel with
such nonsense as the “Western Hemisphere Travel Initiative” and
“3-1-1,” they now “Provide Reminders and Travel Tips to Summer
Travelers.”  Yep, those are nouns you hear shrieking as bureaucrats
force them into adjectival stress positions.

Plenty more such screams rend the “reminders”: “Monitor border wait
times for various ports of entry.  .  .  .  During periods of heavy
travel, border crossers may wish to consider alternative, less heavily
traveled entry routes” and “Passengers can help speed up the screening
process [sic for 'warrantless search'] by packing their carry-ons in
an organized manner. This helps our officers [sic for 'busybodies']
efficiently see what’s inside to quickly process it through screening
[sic for 'warrantless search'].” Forget about making things easier on
yourself by choosing the “port of entry” closest to your destination
or by packing in the “manner” you prefer, however disorganized: a serf
labors to ease his masters’ burdens, not his own.

Indeed, “reminding” us to do so has become something of a semi-annual
tradition for the TSA.  You might think an agency this hated would
learn some humility and seek rather than give advice.  But no.

Nonetheless, I forge ahead and modestly offer my recommendations to
Our high-flying Rulers:

1) Disband. Really. It’s the only sensible move after screeners
advised the world that they lack cojones, and took the pictures to
prove it. I mean, guys, c’mon, we’re all laughing at you. Hard.

2) Disband. Immediately. Before every last one of you winds up in
prison. You can’t keep stealing $24,000 watches with impunity
forever. Even Al Capone eventually ran out of luck.

3) Disband. For the good of the country, sorry, “homeland.” Because
everyone knows you lack brains as well as that other b-word. Look,
there used to be “dumb blonde/stewardess” excuse me, “flight
attendant” jokes for a reason. But now you dingbats take those
dingbats seriously.

Case in point: when one of United’s stews smelled a “‘pungent chemical
odor’ coming from a bag on board” while taxiing for take-off at San
Francisco International, you morons overreacted as usual rather than
considering the source. She (NB: the article reporting this absurdity
doesn’t mention the stew’s sex, but when was the last time a real man
fussed that a carry-on was, like, way too big for the overhead bin?
“She” goes for most of what works the aisles these days) immediately
thought, “Terrorists!” instead of “Hmmm. I’m not real bright, or I’d
be doing something besides handing out pretzels for a living. It’s
likely that pungent odor emanates from a substance well beyond my
limited outlook and experience. Perhaps it’s just Chinese herbs, and
since the elderly couple to whom it belongs doesn’t speak much
English, I’m going to show some startlingly good sense in these goofy
times and silly ‘profession’ by keeping my mouth shut. Plus, if I
open said orifice, I’ll remove all doubt about my regrettable and
inherent foolishness.”

Yeah, I’m dreaming. And so this arrogant airhead tattled to the
pilot. He (also unspecified, but I’m going with “he” to distinguish
him from our tattler) “receiv[ed] the bag” [sic for "accepted stolen
property after the stew pilfered it from the couple"] and “notified
local authorities.”

No surprise at what happened next: “passengers deplaned and were taken
by bus back to the airport, where they were rescreened [sic for
"searched for the second time that day without a warrant"] by
Transportation Security Administration agents.”  Good job, there, TSA:
we all know how sneaky those elderly couples can be, handing out
Chinese herbs willy-nilly that improve our circulation, clear our
skin, and in general promote good health. “TSA dogs searched the
plane with the help of hazardous materials and explosives teams from
the San Francisco Fire Department.” This delayed a flight that had
been about to depart by six hours. Alas, “Police do not expect to
file charges against anyone” despite the criminal stupidity of the
stew, you buffoons at the TSA, and “local authorities.”

4) Disband. Now. Before your sour grapes ferment and explode in your
face.

Like most of your victims, Mrs. Hays is an exemplary person without
any criminal record or intent. Unlike many of them, she actually
deciphered your silly rules and packed a cooler with snacks you allow
for her 93-year-old, infirm mother, a “[Traveler] with Disabilities
and Medical Conditions”   when transporting her cross-country.

No matter: screeners tried to steal, sorry, confiscate her cooler.
With her mother’s welfare at stake, Mrs. Hays protested rather than
bow her head and murmur, “Yes, your majesties.” That landed her in
jail: the screeners’ version of events had her punching one of them.

Unfortunately for the screeners, the checkpoint’s surveillance camera
sided with Mrs. Hays, and the judge was less creative than others who
believe your goons over passengers regardless of the facts. He was
content to lecture and reprimand Mrs. Hays, not the screeners who
lied, rather than imprison her. He’ll also dismiss the charges if
she “stays out of trouble” for six months. And a good thing, too:
ladies in their 50’s who tenderly care for aging mothers start so many
crime-waves these days.

This episode doesn’t exactly show you wingdings in a favorable light.
The surveillance camera not only proves your employees lie, and that
you fully support their mendacity, it also records their brutality
as they laugh at Mrs. Hays’ distress. So we might suppose you’d slink
away from your defeat here, hoping we’d soon forget, fearful of more
adverse publicity.  Au contraire. The inmates of police states and
their opinions do not chasten the wardens. So now you’re suing Mrs.
Hays for $2500. Here’s hoping she counter-sues your missing cojones
right off you. But whatever the outcome, remember: nobody likes a
sore loser.

My fifth and final tip is for Congress: abolish the TSA. Then take a
recess yourselves, and don’t come back.
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Bad News

Smart meters – the latest example of Britain leading the world in
invasive technology
- Alex Deane

We’ve written before about the privacy implications of Smart Meters,
both here and abroad. This story over at the Washington Post begins:

Cambridge, England – Wary homeowners could scupper the rollout of
smart technologies meant to boost energy efficiency, without secure
controls over data and access to appliances, executives said this
week.

Great. yet another technological debate in which the rest of the
world looks to the UK as the pilot for the most intrusive equipment
around.

“Home meters” allow two-way wireless communication with utilities – to
forecast demand and charge more at peak times and even switch off
individual appliances remotely.

Rollout is at an early stage but speeding up, and Britain’s providers
plan a nationwide deployment. The data-gathering power of meters has
prompted comparisons with “spies” in people’s homes. And not just
from privacy advocates, but from the companies themselves:

“We, Siemens, have the technology to record it (energy consumption)
every minute, second, microsecond, more or less live,” said Martin
Pollock of Siemens Energy, an arm of the German engineering giant,
which provides metering services.

“From that we can infer how many people are in the house, what they
do, whether they’re upstairs, downstairs, do you have a dog, when do
you habitually get up, when did you get up this morning, when do you
have a shower: masses of private data.”

“We think the regulator needs to send a strong signal to say that the
data belongs to consumers and consumers alone. We believe that’s a
blocker to people adopting the technology,” he told the Smart Grids
and Cleanpower conference in Cambridge.

There are of course potential benefits for consumers, such as the
ability to program individual appliances to switch on when power is
cheaper. On the other hand, the technology allows utilities to bully
customers to turn on washing machines or charge electric cars at
night, for example, by charging more at peak times.

Energy companies’ new ability to switch off appliances remotely is
also open to abuse:

“There’ll be a lot of resistance to being told by your utility when
you can do your washing,” said Chris Wright, chief technology officer
at Moixa Technology. Consumer agreements may focus on utilities
controlling only particular appliances such as freezers, air
conditioners or luxury items such as swimming pools.

Why on earth should we allow a change in the status quo, from being
responsible for our own lives to having to negotiate with energy
companies about which bits of our households they can’t micromanage?
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

*** Crocodile Dundee Paul Hogan’s off-shore tax accounts to be
published Paul Hogan, the Australian actor, has lost a long-running
legal battle to keep the contents of his tax documents secret, paving
the way for details of his offshore accounts to be published.
- Daily Telegraph

Hogan, 70, has been engaged in a five year-long fight with the
Australian Crime Commission (ACC) to keep the dossier containing his
offshore financial dealings under wraps.

Hogan has argued that the documents are confidential, but the ACC
wants access to them so that it can finalise a case against Hogan,
film producer John Cornell and their accountant, whom it suspects of
channelling millions of dollars from the proceeds of Crocodile Dundee
and other films into offshore tax havens.

However, Hogan, once an embodiment of the laid-back Australian
“larrikin”, has not been charged with any crime and maintains he has
done nothing wrong.

In a 2008 interview with Network Ten, Hogan said he had “paid plenty
of tax”.

Mr Cornell and the accountant also deny any wrongdoing.

The legal action began in 2005, when the ACC ordered Hogan’s
accountants to hand over several documents relating to his tax
affairs, effectively alleging that he was involved in tax evasion
schemes. The commission argued that the documents were either “made
in the furtherance of a crime or fraud” or are “evidence of” a crime
or fraud.

At Hogan’s request, publication of the documents was restricted by the
federal court, but the ruling was challenged by the country’s largest
newspapers in 2008.

Hogan appealed again, arguing that the documents were confidential and
that publication could cause him harm or damage.

He took his objection all the way to Australia’s high court, which on
Wednesday dismissed the appeal.

Earlier this year, Australian media reported that ACC was in the final
stages of preparing to lay criminal charges of tax evasion against the
three men.

The release of the documents is expected to help finalise their case.

Hogan gained international fame through his role as Mick “Crocodile”
Dundee in the 1986 film. The production went on to become the most
successful Australian film of all time and earned Hogan a Golden Globe
for best actor.

He married his Dundee co-star Linda Kozlowski in 1990 and the couple
moved to California.
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Food for thought

Is Someone Spying On Your Cell-Phone Calls?
- Newsweek

How suspicious spouses, protective parents, and concerned companies
are turning to cheap and hard-to-detect commercial spyware apps to
monitor your mobile communications.

Sometime in early 2007, Richard Mislan, an assistant professor of
cyberforensics at Purdue University, started getting phone calls and
e-mails from people around the world all looking for help with the
same problem. “They thought someone was listening in on their
cell-phone calls,” he says. “They wanted to know what they could do
to confirm it was happening.” Mislan, who has examined thousands of
phones at the Purdue Cyber Forensics Lab, politely disregarded some
callers as a little paranoid. Others, he thought, had reason to be
concerned. A decade ago the idea that anyone with little technical
skill could turn a cell phone into a snooping device was basically
unrealistic. But as the smart-phone market proliferates it grew 86
percent in the United States alone last year so do all the ethical
kinks that come with it. Among them is a growing sector of perfectly
legal smart-phone spyware apps that are peddled as tools for catching
a cheating spouse or monitoring the kids when they’re away from home.
But what they can effectively do, for as little as $15 or as much as
several hundred, is track a person with a precision once relegated to
federal authorities. “Not only can you look at a person’s e-mail or
listen to their calls, in some cases you can also just turn on the
microphone [on a smart phone] and listen to what the person is doing
any time you want,” says Chris Wysopal, cofounder and CTO of Veracode,
a software-security company.

Turning what is essentially cell-phone-bugging software into a
business model is not a bad idea, technically speaking. The
smart-phone market largely dominated by the Symbian, Research in
Motion, and iPhone operating systems has 47 million users in the
United States and is expected to exceed 1 billion worldwide by 2014,
according to Parks Associates, a market-research firm. In most cases,
people’s lives are tethered to these handsets. It’s how we e-mail,
text, search, and, on occasion, even call someone. And the dependence
just continues to grow. Last year consumers paid for and downloaded
more than 670 million apps that can turn a phone into everything from
a book reader to a compass. Smart-phone users effectively carry a
real-time snapshot of what happens in their daily lives. This is what
makes the smart phone the perfect way to track someone.

Among the top commercial spyware vendors who have ventured into this
space are FlexiSPY, MobiStealth, and Mobile Spy. While the services
vary, what they do is essentially the same. According to all three
spyware Web sites, a person must have legal access to a smart phone to
install a piece of spyware. For example, if you’re spying on a family
member, that means the phone is family property. If you’re an
employer monitoring your employee, the phone should be company-owned.
To install the spyware, you have to have the phone in your possession
for at least a few minutes to download the app. (There are apps that
can be downloaded remotely, but that’s less common and not legal.) In
Mobile Spy’s case, once the software is installed, you can log into
your Mobile Spy web account to view e-mails, text messages, pictures
taken, videos shot, calendar entries, incoming and outgoing calls, and
GPS coordinates. MobiStealth and FlexiSPY take it a step further and
allow a person to remotely record any conversations that take place
near the cell phone. “The most threatening [part] is that it’s pretty
impossible to tell if this is happening to you,” says Mislan. That’s
because once the spyware app is on the phone it is virtually
undetectable to the average user. There is no typical corresponding
app icon, nor is it listed on any menu.  At best, it may show up with
a generic name like “iPhone app” or “BlackBerry app,” so that it
appears to be a regular part of the system.

There is nothing illegal about making these apps, and almost all
makers have disclaimers on their Web sites warning people not to use
their products illegally.  ”Our software is for very specific uses,”
says Craig Thompson, support coordinator of Retina-X Studios, the
creator of Mobile Spy.  ”We do what we can to discourage
innappropriate use.”  Still, there is no way to know if someone is
using the app to monitor his or her child (legal) or stalk an ex (not
so much). Illegal use of spyware has already been reported in states
such as Washington, Oklahoma, and Texas. According to Wysopal of
Veracode, in addition to state and local laws, the federal Computer
Fraud and Abuse Act and the Wiretap Act technically offer some
protection for consumers. But even if someone discovers spyware on
their phone, prosecuting the perpetrator can be difficult. “The
problem with this law is the crime has to rise to the level of a
felony for the FBI to investigate, [and] that typically involves
$5,000 or more in damages,” Wysopal says. “I don’t really know what
the damages are for someone installing [mobile spyware] and reading
your e-mails.”

Jeff Troy, acting deputy assistant director for the FBI’s Cyber
Division, says the issue is a growing concern for his organization
because of how fast the smart-phone market is evolving. “I do think
there is need for additional cyber laws to address this,” he says.

Until that happens, the best solution may well be preventive.
According to BlackBerry maker Research in Motion, “BlackBerry
smartphones include a firewall that can be set to prevent an app (like
spyware) from making external connections; and passwords can also be
required to authorize downloading an application to the device.”
Google’s Android gives apps limited access to phone resources by
default, but that can be changed manually, so the best bet is to lock
the phone and/or SIM card whenever you’re not using it. Google has
also recently activated a “kill switch” on its phone to remotely
disable apps “that violate the Android Market Developer Distribution
Agreement or other legal agreements, laws, regulations or policies.”
Of the trio, Apple probably has the most user-friendly safety net,
because all apps must be approved by its app store. To even get most
spyware apps on an Apple iPhone, a person would have to jailbreak it,
which voids the warranty.

If the software is already on a phone, Mislan says there is little
that consumers can do on their own to confirm this. Even if you’re
positive you are being spied on, doing something like replacing the
SIM card is not always enough to wipe a phone clean of the problem.
In some cases, Mislan advises consumers to reach out to companies like
SMobile Systems that offer security solutions for cell phones a
growing market in themselves.

Wysopal says that as with so much that’s technology-related, something
big has to break before things change in the smart phone spyware
space. “You’ll have to see someone important, like a politician, have
their phone compromised,” he says. “If that happened, it would be a
wake-up call.”

Shamrock’s comment: Time for an offshore anonymous mobile? Check out
our cacophony of anonymous mobiles and sim chips at
http://www.ptshamrock.com/auto/anon_phone.htm
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

*** Police State

Toronto Transformed Into Locked Down Police State

Sweeping police powers with no limits, military style checkpoints,
LRAD sound cannons, huge makeshift prisons and a taxpayer bill of $1
billion
- Steve Watson

The Toronto Star Reports

“The regulation was made under Ontario’s Public Works Protection Act
and was not debated in the Legislature. According to a provincial
spokesperson, the cabinet action came in response to an ‘extraordinary
request’ by Toronto Police Chief Bill Blair, who wanted additional
policing powers shortly after learning the G20 was coming to Toronto.”

The regulation gives the police authority to question anybody entering
the restricted zone from June 14 until June 28, the day after the
summits are scheduled to end. As Adam Radwanski of The Globe and Mail
reports, there are no limits to police powers during the summit, and
no clear legal precedent specifying what they can and can’t do.

CTV.ca reports that there has been an increase in tension in the
security zone as police are stopping and searching hundreds of
protesters. “If you’re in that zone you’re going to be challenged,”
Const. Tim Garland, spokesperson for the Integrated Security Unit
told CTV.ca.

Some reports even detail incidents of police randomly stopping people
outside the security perimeters who are not even protesters and are
merely going about their business.

As our earlier report detailed, Charlie Veitch of the popular London
based activist group The Love Police was arrested yesterday in Toronto
under the new extraordinary powers for refusing to identify himself.

Police have been preparing for the lockdown for months now. An
unprecedented show of force will see up to 20,000 uniformed officers,
along with a 1,000 private security guards deployed, as well as
Canadian military forces. The security costs are expected to cost the
Canadian government (taxpayers) hundreds of millions of dollars, with
some estimating the bill will stretch beyond one billion dollars.

Security measures include two large perimeters, walled in with huge 3
meter high fences, with Toronto police in charge of the outer zone and
the RCMP in charge of the inner zone. Anyone entering the inner
perimeter, where the Metro Convention Centre is located, will be
processed through five levels of airport style security screening.

Various checkpoints throughout Toronto have been outfitted with
“Magnetometers,” “walk-through metal detectors,” “X-Ray belt driven
scanners” and “hand-held metal detectors.”

Residents and workers in the area have been made to register with the
authorities to get access to their homes and businesses during the
meeting.

The Canadian Forces plans are described as “large-scale operational
planning, land and air surveillance, underwater safety and security
for the venues and some logistic and ceremonial functions. Support
also includes drawing on the CF’s ongoing partnership in the North
American Aerospace Defence Command (NORAD).”

Protesters will also be subject to designated free speech zones. If
they breach these zones they will be forced to move or be arrested.

Police will be using a massive movie studio as a temporary jail. The
building is roughly five kilometres from the Convention Centre,
outside the two security zones.  The plan echoes tactics employed in
the U.S.  at recent DNC and RNC Conventions, where thousands of
protesters were indiscriminately rounded up and kept for up to several
hours in temporary prisons.

Police have also been cleared to employ Long Range Acoustic Devices
otherwise known as sound cannons.

Civil liberties advocates and activists had requested that a court
impose an injunction to prevent police from using the ear-piercing
devices, which were used by police and the National Guard to break up
protests at last year’s meeting in Pittsburgh.

However, the Ontario Superior Court ruled that the devices could be
used after police argued they were essential equipment.

In related news, Infowars reporter Luke Rudkowski and fellow activists
have been denied access into Canada altogether.

In a telephone interview with Infowars.com, Luke said he was detained
for nearly five hours by Homeland Security and Canadian Customs police
on the border in Buffalo, New York. Agents went through his car and
laptop looking for anything to arrest and detain the activists. After
the Canadians denied Luke, Kelly, and Matt entry into the country,
Homeland Security on the American side of the border questioned them
once again.
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Horror Stories

Police Said to Taze Grandmother
- Tim Hull

CN – Police Tasered an 86-year-old disabled grandma in her bed and
stepped on her oxygen hose until she couldn’t breathe, after her
grandson called 911 seeking medical assistance, the woman and her
grandson claim in Oklahoma City Federal Court. Though the grandson
said, “Don’t Taze my granny!” an El Reno police officer told another
cop to “Taser her!” and wrote in his police report that he did so
because the old woman “took a more aggressive posture in her bed,”
according to the complaint.

Lonnie Tinsley claims that he called 911 after he went to check on his
grandmother, whom he found in her bed, “connected to a portable oxygen
concentrator with a long hose.” She is “in marginal health, [and]
takes several prescribed medications daily,” and “was unable to tell
him exactly when she had taken her meds,” so, Tinsley says, he called
911 “to ask for an emergency medical technician to come to her
apartment to evaluate her.”

In response, “as many as ten El Reno police” officers “pushed their
way through the door,” according to the complaint. The grandma, Lona
Varner, “told them to get out of her apartment.”

The remarkable complaint continues: “Instead, the apparent leader of
the police [defendant Thomas Duran] instructed another policeman to
‘Taser her!’ He stated in his report that the 86 year-old plaintiff
‘took a more aggressive posture in her bed,’ and that he was fearful
for his safety and the safety of others.

“Lonnie Tinsley told them, ‘Don’t taze my Granny!’ to which they
responded that they would Taser him; instead, they pulled him out of
her apartment, took him down to the floor, handcuffed him and placed
him in the back of a police car.

“The police then proceeded to approach Ms. Varner in her bed and
stepped on her oxygen hose until she began to suffer oxygen
deprivation.

“The police then fired a Taser at her and only one wire struck her, in
the left arm; the police then fired a second Taser, striking her to
the right and left of the midline of her upper chest and applied high
voltage, causing burns to her chest, extreme pain and to pass out.

“The police then grabbed Ms. Varner by her forearms and jerked hands
together, causing her soft flesh to tear and bleed on her bed; they
then handcuffed her.

“The police freed Lonnie Tinsley from his incarceration in the back of
the police car and permitted him to accompany the ambulance with his
grandmother.”

Tinsley says the cops capped it all off by having his grandmother
“placed in the psychiatric ward at the direction of the El Reno
police; she was held there for six days and released.”

“As a result of the wrongful arrest and detention, the plaintiff Lona
M. Varner suffered the unlawful restraint of her freedom, bodily
injury, assault, battery, the trashing of her apartment, humiliation,
loss of personal dignity, infliction of emotional distress and medical
bills.”

They seek punitive damages for constitutional violations, from the
City of El Reno, Duran, Officers Frank Tinga and Joseph Sandberg, and
10 Officers Does.

They are represented by Brian Dell of Oklahoma City.
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

*** The District of Criminals

Pentagon revives Rumsfeld-era domestic spying unit
- Daniel Tencer

Pentagon revives Rumsfeld era domestic spying unit]

The Pentagon’s spy unit has quietly begun to rebuild a database for
tracking potential terrorist threats that was shut down after it
emerged that it had been collecting information on American anti-war
activists.

The Defense Intelligence Agency filed notice this week that it plans
to create a new section called Foreign Intelligence and
Counterintelligence Operation Records, whose purpose will be to
“document intelligence, counterintelligence, counterterrorism and
counternarcotic operations relating to the protection of national
security.”

But while the unit’s name refers to “foreign intelligence,” civil
liberties advocates and the Pentagon’s own description of the program
suggest that Americans will likely be included in the new database.

FICOR replaces a program called Talon, which the DIA created in 2002
under then-Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld as part of the
counterterrorism efforts following the 9/11 attacks. It was disbanded
in 2007 after it emerged that Talon had retained information on
anti-war protesters, including Quakers, even after it was determined
they posed no threat to national security.

DIA spokesman Donald Black told Newsweek that the new database would
not include the more controversial elements of the old Talon program.
But Jeff Stein at the Washington Post reports that the new program
will evidently inherit the old Talon database.

“Why the new depository would want such records while its parent
agency no longer has a law enforcement function could not be learned,”
Stein reports. “Nor could it be learned whether the repository will
include intelligence reports on protest groups gathered by its
predecessor.”

The Pentagon’s notice states that the database will collect
“identifying information such as name, Social Security Number (SSN),
address, citizenship documentation, biometric data, passport number,
vehicle identification number and vehicle/vessel license data.” As
only US residents have Social Security Numbers, it appears the program
is being designed at least partly to contain domestic information.

Newsweek cites two unnamed US officials as suggesting that the new
program essentially echoes the old one. When CIFA, the DIA division
running Talon, was disbanded in 2008, “many of its personnel and some
of its functions were transferred” to the new DIA unit running the new
database program. The new program will be housed “in the same office
space that CIFA once occupied, in a complex near suburban Washington’s
Reagan National Airport.”

Mike German, a former FBI agent now working with the ACLU, says
“Americans should be just as concerned” about the new database as the
previous one under the Bush administration.

“It’s a little hard to tell what this is exactly, but we do know that
DIA took over ‘offensive counterintelligence’ for the DoD once CIFA
was abandoned,” he told the Post’s Stein. “It therefore makes sense
that this new DIA database would be collecting the same types of
information that CIFA collected improperly.”
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

*** The Coalition continues with 28 day detention
- Big Brother Watch.org

We had our first bad news under the Coalition a little while ago.
Now, we’ve had some more.

Theresa May has announced that the rules which allow the police to
detain suspects for 28 days without charge are to remain in force for
at least another six months. Both parties in the Coalition have
indicated that they think that the limit, which is the longest in the
developed world, is too high. But still it’s going to continue.

Extending detention without charge went against the grain of our
country’s traditions of fairness under the law.  I am afraid that
continuing the policy suggests that the government’s promise to
safeguard rights and liberties is hollow.

I mean – wasn’t this government supposed to be different from the last
lot? And isn’t the civil liberties agenda supposed to be the rallying
cry of the Coalition, as it’s one of the things on which the
constituent parts agree?

The record of prosecutions shows that this power has done nothing to
advance the fight against terrorism. All it does is damage the very
values of democratic freedom that terrorists hate.

After all, Dominic Raab MP’s excellent book The Assault on Liberty
makes it clear that there have been but five people detained up to the
28 day mark since this draconian power was introduced. Three were
released without charge (which means that each of those cases was
obviously a disgrace). The last two were charged, but the
Metropolitan Police reported that the information needed to charge
them emerged at the four and twelve day mark respectively. So even on
the authoritarians’ terms, they can at least reduce the term in
question substantially based on the evidence, even without recourse to
the principled argument they don’t seem to want to have.
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Hot Tips

Funds Invest in Privacy Start-Ups Companies With Ideas on How to
Protect Personal Information Are a New Favorite of Venture Capitalists
- Pui-Wing Tam and Ben Worthen

As privacy snafus mount across companies such as Facebook Inc. and
AT&T Inc., venture capitalists have spotted a new market opening and
are pumping millions of dollars into privacy-related start-ups.

This month, online privacy start-up ReputationDefender Inc. plans to
disclose that it has raised $15 million in new venture funding even
though the company wasn’t actively looking for new cash. SafetyWeb
Inc., which helps parents monitor their kids’ online activities, said
Thursday it closed $8 million in funding. And Truste, which offers
seals of approval to websites that meet certain privacy standards,
raised $12 million earlier this month.

Many of the investors include top-tier venture-capital firms such as
Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers and Accel Partners. Venture firms
such as Jafco Ventures, Atlas Venture and Battery Ventures also have
invested in online-privacy start-ups in the past few months.

As privacy snafus mount across companies such as Facebook and AT&T
venture capitalists have spotted a new market opening and are pumping
millions of dollars into privacy-related start-ups. Ben Worthen
explains.

“There are at least a dozen [online privacy companies] now in various
stages of making the rounds in the venture world,” said Theresia Gouw
Ranzetta, a venture capitalist at Accel, which backed Truste and is
also a major investor in Facebook. “We’re actively looking for more
[privacy] deals.”

The jump in privacy-related investments underscores how ways to
protect privacy on the Web and on mobile gadgets is increasingly
viewed as a real business. That’s a shift from a few years ago, when
companies struggled to sell such services, said Carsten Casper, an
analyst at researcher Gartner. Among those that crashed earlier this
decade was start-up Privacy Inc., which offered dummy email addresses
for online purchases.

But in the wake of recent privacy flaps involving AT&T, Facebook,
Apple Inc.  and others, consumer awareness has grown.  ”Privacy is a
big issue and it’s going to get bigger because people realize it can
be used against you,” said Ted Schlein, a venture capitalist at
Kleiner Perkins and a ReputationDefender board member. “That spells
market opportunity.”

Many venture capitalists liken today’s privacy market to the
technology-security market a decade ago, when companies such as
Barracuda Networks Inc.  were searching for solutions to deal with
viruses and hacking.  Security has since become one of tech’s hottest
markets, with businesses increasing their security spending by 10% to
$33.8 billion world-wide in 2009, even as total tech spending fell 9%
to $1.5 trillion for the year, according to Forrester Research.

Yet despite the surge of privacy investments, venture capitalists and
start-ups still face a challenge in getting people to pay for
confidentiality and discretion,, say analysts. A recent study by
think tank Ponemon Institute LLC found that identity theft victims
still don’t behave differently online from others on social networking
sites such as Facebook. Only 13% of the general public and 19% of
identity theft victims said they are responsible for protecting their
own privacy on social-media sites, according to the study.

Investors acknowledge the privacy market is nascent and will evolve as
regulations are introduced.  Still, the venture investments are an
early look at the solutions emerging to help combat privacy
incursions.

Some of the recently funded start-ups are aimed at giving consumers
tools to defend their privacy. ReputationDefender, which launched in
2006, provides a service that costs between $10 a month and $1,000
annually to monitor what is said about an individual online.  Its
tools can help remove private information from certain websites.

SafetyWeb, funded by Battery Ventures, and SocialShield Inc., funded
by Venrock Associates and others, have launched websites that parents
can use to help them track and analyze their children’s online
behavior. The services tell parents when others have posted and
tagged photos of their kids online, giving them a chance to have them
removed, among other thing.

Abine Inc., funded by Atlas Venture, this month launched a product
that can block online tracking and opt out of online ad networks.

Truste, which until 2008 was a nonprofit, works primarily with
corporations that want their websites certified as having met certain
privacy standards.

Executives involved in privacy start-ups say the interest by venture
capitalists has become intense. Michael Fertik, chief executive of
ReputationDefender, said more than 20 venture firms expressed interest
in investing even though the Redwood City, Calif., company wasn’t
intending to raise new cash until late this year, he said.

In the end, Mr. Fertik took $15 million from Jafco and existing
investors’ Kleiner Perkins and Bessemer. “It ended up being a
competitive situation,” he said.

He attributes the interest partly to “everyone’s being analyzed and
digitized online.”
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

*** Advisory Financial Crimes Enforcement Network Advisory

Newly Released Mexican Regulations Imposing Restrictions on Mexican
Banks for Transactions in U.S. Currency

The Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) is advising U.S.
financial institutions of a recent change in Mexican financial
regulations applying to Mexican banks that could affect the operations
of U.S. financial institutions. On June 15, 2010 the Mexican finance
ministry, Secretar a de Hacienda y Cr dito P blico de M xico (SHCP),
announced new anti-money laundering (AML) regulations that will
restrict the amounts of physical cash (banknotes and coins)
denominated in U.S. dollars that Mexican banks may receive.1 The
Mexican regulation will still allow certain transactions up to
relatively low value thresholds, as described in more detail below.
The regulations do not restrict non-cash transactions denominated in
U.S. currency (e.g., wire transfers, ACH payments, credit card
transactions, traveler’s checks, etc.). These new Mexican regulations
are intended to mitigate risks of laundering proceeds of crime tied to
narcotics trafficking and organized crime.  The regulations state that
the restrictions on U.S. currency transactions by banks with
individuals will go into effect four business days after official
publication on June 16, 2010. The restrictions on U.S. currency
transactions by banks with legal entities and trusts will go into
effect ninety (90) calendar days after official publication (on or
about September 14, 2010).2

This Advisory is issued to assist financial institutions in
understanding how the U.S financial system may be affected by the
changes in the Mexican regulations, to help U.S.  financial
institutions anticipate possible impacts on their businesses,
including the risk profiles of certain classes of transactions and
customers, and how various AML and counter-terrorist financing
safeguards consistent with Bank Secrecy Act (BSA) regulations may be
utilized to mitigate possible changes or increases in risks.

Background The United States and Mexico maintain strong commercial and
cultural ties, particularly evident around our shared border. There
are many legitimate reasons that U.S.  currency enters the Mexican
economy, including in connection with border trade, tourism, and
remittances.3 Nonetheless, a significant portion of the U.S.  currency
in Mexico is derived from illegal activity, specifically the sale of
narcotics in the United States, some of the proceeds of which are
smuggled as bulk cash into Mexico.4 Within Mexico, much of the U.S.
currency, regardless of source, is intermediated through multiple
transactions and ultimately make its way into the global financial
system and repatriated back to the United States (in a process similar
to that in most countries with respect to the processing of non-local
currency).

FinCEN and U.S. financial regulators have previously taken steps
aimed at raising awareness of the risks involved in the bulk shipment
of cash between the United States and Mexico. In 2006, FinCEN issued
guidance on the potential misuse of relationships with U.S.  financial
institutions by certain Mexican financial institutions, including
Mexican casas de cambio, and the money laundering threat involving the
smuggling of bulk U.S. currency into Mexico.5 More recently, on April
29, 2010, the Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council
(FFIEC) released the revised Bank Secrecy Act/Anti-Money Laundering
(BSA/AML) Examination Manual,6 which included a new section providing
guidance to banks on managing the risks associated with receiving bulk
shipments of currency and implementing effective monitoring and
reporting systems addressed to those risks. Although the FFIEC
BSA/AML Examination Manual is issued by the Federal banking regulators
regarding AML requirements applicable to banks, it contains guidance
that may be of interest to all financial institutions covered by the
BSA.

Summary of New Mexican Regulation The SHCP has issued the new
regulations, in consultation with the Mexican financial supervisor,
the Comisi n Nacional Bancaria y de Valores, pursuant to Article 1157
of the Mexican Law of Credit Institutions, to be included among other
AML requirements for banks issued pursuant to article 115. (See
Annexes for a copy of the new regulations as issued, and an unofficial
translation into English.) The regulations provide that Mexican banks
shall be prohibited from receiving U.S. currency for transactions
involving currency exchange, and for receipt of payment for services,
or transfers or remittances of funds, subject to the following
conditions: * For legal entities (in Spanish “personas morales”) and
trusts that are customers, U.S.  currency transactions will be
prohibited, unless such customer is based or conducts most of its
business within a tourist area (to be identified by SHCP at a later
date), within twenty miles of the U.S.  border, or within the States
of Baja California or South Baja California; in which cases the bank
may receive an aggregate limit of $7000 in U.S. currency from its
customer per calendar month. * For legal entities and trusts that are
non-customers, all U.S.  currency transactions will be prohibited.
* For individuals who are customers, the aggregate limit in U.S.
currency that the bank may receive from its customer per calendar
month shall be $4000. * For individuals who are non-customers, the
aggregate limits in U.S. currency that the bank may receive from the
individual shall be $300 per day, and $1500 per month. Only the
monthly threshold of $1500 per person will apply to non-Mexicans
(e.g., foreign tourists); the daily threshold will not apply. For all
transactions for individuals who are non-customers, the Bank will be
required to receive certain identification information from the
transacting person.

Guidance The change in Mexican regulations could have a significant
impact on the operations of U.S.  financial institutions, both
directly with respect to the nature of activity and relationships with
Mexican customers and financial institutions, and indirectly with
respect to possible changes in activity both within the United States
and through intermediary countries.  Financial institutions are
advised that some changes in transaction activity should be expected
in advance of the effective date of the Mexican regulations. In
addition, U.S. financial institutions should be aware that some
Mexican banks have already implemented restrictions on accepting
foreign currency. The end of this Advisory includes examples of
possible changes in activity. These examples are by no means certain
nor exclusive, but rather are illustrative and are being shared
through this Advisory for the purpose of aiding U.S. financial
institutions in developing assessments based upon their unique
customer and business profiles.

Financial institutions should consider the possible impact of the
restrictions when reviewing financial activity and monitoring
transactions. The changes to the Mexican regulations could lead some
customers to seek new relationships with U.S. financial institutions.
Financial institutions are reminded of their requirement to have a
Customer Identification Program, as applicable, as well as an AML
Program to detect suspicious activity. Financial institutions that
receive or offer services in connection with bulk cash shipments
should have policies and procedures that mitigate the risks of those
services.

While the transactional activity that U.S. financial institutions may
experience as a result of the new Mexican restrictions may not be
indicative of criminal activity, U.S. financial institutions should
consider this activity in conjunction with other information,
including transaction volumes and source of funds, when determining
whether to file a suspicious activity report (SAR).9 Financial
institutions’ requirements to report suspicious activity are
significant, because SARs continue to be one of the most valuable
sources of data for law enforcement and regulatory agencies in their
investigation and prosecution of criminal activity.

Suspicious Activity Reporting To assist FinCEN and law enforcement
with efforts to better assess the impact of the changes in the Mexican
regulations, particularly with respect to possible attempts by
criminals to divert or alter their methods of laundering the proceeds
of crime, we request that: (a) if a financial institution has
determined that a transaction is suspicious and thus has an obligation
to file a SAR with FinCEN; and (b) if the facts and circumstances of
the transaction lead the financial institution to suspect that the
transaction is being entered into as a result of the Mexican currency
restrictions, then the financial institution should include the
specific term “MX Restriction” within the narrative portion of the SAR
filing and highlight the exact dollar amount(s) associated with the
suspicious activity. We further request the Suspect/Subject
Information Section in the SAR filing include all information
available for each party suspected of engaging in this activity
(including the individual or company name, address, phone number, and
any other identifying information). With respect to currency
shipments from Mexico that are deemed suspicious, include information
on the common carrier, courier, or shipper of the currency, and
information on the point of exportation of the currency from Mexico
and the point of importation in the United States, if known.

FinCEN will continue to analyze U.S. currency flows between Mexico
and the United States to better understand legitimate, as distinct
from possible criminal, activity, and to aid in the detection,
deterrence, investigation and prosecution of criminal activity.
Future updates to this Advisory may be published as more specific
information as to the effects of the new Mexican regulations become
available.

Examples of Potential Activity The new restrictions implemented by
Mexico may have both direct and indirect effects on transactions
occurring in the United States. Financial institutions may find the
following examples of possible effects helpful in assessing risks and
in ongoing monitoring of financial transactions. * As the
restrictions on Mexican bank activity with respect to U.S. currency
is announced and goes into effect, it can be expected that the overall
amount of U.S.  currency repatriated by Mexican banks to the United
States will decline, with a possible further consolidation of the
Mexican entities seeking currency repatriation services. Prior to the
effective date of the restrictions, there could be an increase in
activity as pre-existing currency holdings of banks and their
customers are drawn down. * Individuals and businesses no longer able
to deposit U.S. currency into Mexican banks may instead look directly
to U.S.  financial institutions to deposit U.S. currency. * Within
the United States, financial institutions in the region of the Mexican
border or near frequently used ports of entry for travel to and from
Mexico by land, sea or air, should consider whether significant
changes in their U.S. currency activity might be related to the
changes in Mexico. * The limitations upon U.S. currency activity in
Mexico may lead to increased demand by Mexican persons, and
non-Mexican persons doing business with Mexico, for other types of
payment services or products to settle debts that might previously
have been paid in U.S. currency. This could include increased demand
for Mexican peso banknotes; debit cards, credit cards and pre-paid
products presented in Mexico to access funds in U.S. accounts;
increased use of wire transfers; ACH; money orders, checks or other
paper instruments; etc. * Moreover, to the extent that one source of
U.S. currency in Mexico has been proceeds of crime in the United
States that has been bulk shipped to Mexico, the restrictions upon the
ability to integrate bulk currency into the Mexican financial system
may cause criminals in the United States to attempt to launder more
U.S. currency within the United States. This may be accompanied by
attempts to transfer non-cash proceeds to Mexico, such as through
other types of payment services or products, transfer of goods or
commodities, or other means, such as trade-based money laundering.10 *
U.S. currency may be diverted from Mexico through intermediary
countries – in particular, currency that is not tied to legitimate
economic activity in Mexico, but rather related to narcotics
trafficking or other organized crime. Financial institutions should
thus consider, as part of their risk management related to bulk
currency activities generally, whether they understand the causes of
sudden significant increases in U.S.  currency activities involving
jurisdictions other than Mexico to avoid unknowingly facilitating the
processing of U.S.  currency diverted from past Mexican activity.

For questions regarding this Advisory, contact FinCEN’s Regulatory
Helpline at (800)949-2732.

Unofficial Translation
<http://www.fincen.gov/news_room/rp/files/06-2010-0238-eng-final.pdf>
The original Mexican regulations referenced in this advisory may be
found at:
<http://dof.gob.mx/nota_detalle.php?codigo=5146921&fecha=16/06/2010>
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

*** Since 1954 the Netherlands Antilles has been a separate country
within the Kingdom of the Netherlands, consisting of Aruba, and
Curacao, Dutch St. Maarten and the BES islands (Bonaire, St.
Eustatius and Saba.) Aruba received Status Aprate in 1986 and now
Curacao and St. Maarteen are seeking similar status while the BES
islands want to become special municipalities with more control over
internal affairs.

The Netherlands Antilles is scheduled to be dissolved as a unified
political entity on October 10,2010.

October 10th, 2010 is the date that Curacao and St. Maarten become
separate countries within the Kingdom and that the Netherlands
Antilles will cease to exist.

From January 1, 2011 the US dollar will be used as legal tender within
the BES.
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Dumbing Down

Tesco demands ID from 33 year old man – and refuses to sell him
alcohol when he hasn’t got any
- Alex Deane

I’m slow to pick up on this story but, as if by magic, I find that the
point I made elsewhere, that there is a growing, bureaucratic,
automatic authoritarian demand for identification (which would only be
fuelled by ID cards) demonstrated in a story to make one bleed from
the eyes in irritation:

Man aged 33 is refused a bottle of wine in Tesco… because he had no
ID

Headline says it all, you might think. Imposing their own unnecessary
rules above and beyond the law (”Think 25″) – driven in part by
absurdly harsh laws that punish shops for misselling goods, and also
by a total lack of common sense on the part of stupid, literalist,
jobsworth staff. Rules is rules. You can’t be too careful. Typical
demonstration of the ridiculous culture we’ve allowed ourselves to
fall into.

But wait, there’s more: his fianc e (aged 29) was there, and gave her
ID. The shop still wouldn’t sell it to them because “she might be
buying it for a minor” (i.e. the chappie, aged 33).

And there’s even MORE:

Earlier this year the same store was criticised for its ‘patronising’
attitude by a furious father who was refused entry because he was
carrying his daughter on his shoulders.

Martin Dunkley, 45, was about to enter the premises with daughter
Natalie, six, when a security guard stopped them for health and safety
reasons.

Let’s remember that whilst our bureaucrats excel at nannyism, they’re
not the only people at it – the private sector is perfectly capable of
crass, cotton-wool, cloying, soft authoritarianism, too.

Shamrock’s Comment: Stupidity knows no bounds!
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Dumb Laws

RateMyCop User Ensnared in ‘Dumbest Case Ever’
- David Kravets

A Florida man arrested and briefly jailed for posting a local police
officer’s home address on a cop-rating site said Wednesday his ordeal
was “completely crazy.”

“Just because I posted it, I got arrested.  It wasn’t like it was the
Pentagon Papers,” Robert Brayshaw, a 35-year-old Tallahassee man, said
in a telephone interview.

Brayshaw’s comments came hours after the deadline passed for Florida
to appeal a federal judge’s decision declaring the First Amendment
trumped Florida’s law meant to protect the privacy of police officers.
Brayshaw, who is now unemployed, said it has been difficult to get a
job because of his 2008 arrest.  He spent nearly three hours in jail
and was prosecuted under a 1972 statute making it unlawful to publish
personally identifying information of a police officer.

Florida and Tallahassee authorities agreed to pay $60,000 in damages
and legal fees to Brayshaw and his lawyers from the American Civil
Liberties Union.

Brayshaw said the officer “basically had her information listed
publicly in the phone book.”  He had a beef with the officer regarding
a trespassing flap in which he was not charged.

He posted to RateMyCop.com, a 2-year-old website that lets users rate
and comment on the uniformed police officers in their community.

RateMyCop uses public-records requests to gather the names and, in
some cases, badge numbers of thousands of uniformed cops at police
departments around the country, and allows users to post comments
about police they’ve interacted with. The site’s launch in 2008 drew
cries of outrage from police, who complained that they’d be put at
risk if their names were on the internet.

Brayshaw used the site to post anonymous comments about Tallahassee
Police Officer Annette Garrett, as well as her name and home address
information not normally cataloged by the site.  He wrote that Garrett
was rude to him when investigating a trespass call at an apartment
complex he was managing.

His case, he said, bounced through three judges, three prosecutors and
four public defenders, amid a year of local court proceedings.

“This is the dumbest case in America,” he said.

The authorities subpoenaed RateMyCop and Brayshaw’s internet service
provider to learn his identity, then booked him under the Florida law
a misdemeanor carrying up to a year in jail.  The case was later
dismissed against Brayshaw for procedural reasons, but he sued,
claiming the statute chills his speech.

U.S. District Judge Richard Smoak in Tallahassee ruled the First
Amendment does not protect “true threats, fighting words, incitements
to imminent lawless action, and classes of lewd and obscene speech.”
But publishing an officer’s phone number and address, he said, “is not
in itself a threat or serious expression of an intent to commit an
unlawful act of violence.”

The judge wrote he appreciated the intent of the 38-year-old law, but
noted that it went too far. “While the state interest of protecting
police officers from harm or death may be compelling,” the judge said
the law “was not narrowly tailored to serve this interest.”
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Dumb signs -

Are Cameras the New Guns?
- Gizmodo

In response to a flood of Facebook and YouTube videos that depict
police abuse, a new trend in law enforcement is gaining popularity.
In at least three states, it is now illegal to record any on-duty
police officer.

Even if the encounter involves you and may be necessary to your
defense, and even if the recording is on a public street where no
expectation of privacy exists.

The legal justification for arresting the “shooter” rests on existing
wiretapping or eavesdropping laws, with statutes against obstructing
law enforcement sometimes cited. Illinois, Massachusetts, and
Maryland are among the 12 states in which all parties must consent for
a recording to be legal unless, as with TV news crews, it is obvious
to all that recording is underway. Since the police do not consent,
the camera-wielder can be arrested. Most all-party-consent states
also include an exception for recording in public places where “no
expectation of privacy exists” (Illinois does not) but in practice
this exception is not being recognized.

Massachusetts attorney June Jensen represented Simon Glik who was
arrested for such a recording. She explained, “[T]he statute has been
misconstrued by Boston police. You could go to the Boston Common and
snap pictures and record if you want.” Legal scholar and professor
Jonathan Turley agrees, “The police are basing this claim on a
ridiculous reading of the two-party consent surveillance law
requiring all parties to consent to being taped.  I have written in
the area of surveillance law and can say that this is utter nonsense.”

The courts, however, disagree.  A few weeks ago, an Illinois judge
rejected a motion to dismiss an eavesdropping charge against
Christopher Drew, who recorded his own arrest for selling one-dollar
artwork on the streets of Chicago. Although the misdemeanor charges
of not having a peddler’s license and peddling in a prohibited area
were dropped, Drew is being prosecuted for illegal recording, a Class
I felony punishable by 4 to 15 years in prison.

In 2001, when Michael Hyde was arrested for criminally violating the
state’s electronic surveillance law, aka recording a police encounter
the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court upheld his conviction 4-2.
In dissent, Chief Justice Margaret Marshall stated, “Citizens have a
particularly important role to play when the official conduct at issue
is that of the police. Their role cannot be performed if citizens
must fear criminal reprisals .” (Note: In some states it is the audio
alone that makes the recording illegal.)
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Dumb facts

Fined for the length of your dog lead. A cash-strapped council has come
up with an ingenious way of raking in revenue from law-abiding people
- the Manchester Evening News

Dog owners are facing GBP1,000 fines if they take their pets to the
park on long leads.

The ban on leads longer than two metres (6ft5in) applies to dozens of
parks and open spaces.

Bosses at Tameside council say they have brought in the measure to
reduce dog fouling. The council says owners are more likely to clean
up after their pets if they are on a short lead.

Tameside is the first local authority in Greater Manchester to bring
in the rule and introduced it despite many retractable leads being
between five and eight metres in length.

I would love to see the council’s research that suggests the distance
between dog-on-lead and dog-owner is representative of the likelihood
of said dog-owner cleaning up dog mess. I would predict that no such
research exists (not even a council would be stupid enough to
commission something like that) – but even if it did, I would think
that the personality of the dog owner is a far stronger (if not the
strongest) indicator of whether dog mess is cleared-up.

Then there’s the question of how this policy would be policed.  Are we
going to see litter wardens and PCSOs in Tameside whipping out their
tape measures every time a person walks past with a dog on a lead?

Overall, it takes a sane person all of 10 seconds to realise this idea
is completely barking mad (if you’ll excuse the pun). Rather than
targeting the people that leave dog mess, it hits law-abiding dog
walkers in the pocket.  Fining someone for the length of their dog
lead is absurd; fining someone GBP1000 is outrageous.

Final word goes to Tameside Council who claim the idea is intended to
make parks ‘more enjoyable’ – Ministry of Love anyone?
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

*** Dumb criminal acts

Fort Knox Nurseries
- Dylan Sharpe

Fingerprint scanning and passwords for entry, mobile phones banned and
a network of impregnable fences and CCTV cameras.

What could I be describing?

A new prison?

A bank vault?

No – this is the latest security upgrade at…a Bolton nursery.

Visitors to Bolton Day Nursery will soon find themselves having to
undergo fingerprint scanning at the door, while all mobile phones will
be banned from the nursery, and no parent will be allowed in without a
child collection password.

Locks and fences will be upgraded, CCTV will be extended and no
supplier will be allowed access without identification.

The GBP60,000 “supersafe” initiative is in response to parents’
feedback at the Chorley Street Nursery, inside the David Lloyd Leisure
Club, about security being their top concern.

Over-the-top doesn’t even come close as a description for this scheme.
It takes the idea of responding to demand to a quite ridiculous level.

Of course parents want their children to be safe – but turning the
nursery into a pre-school Wormwood Scrubs, in which parents are
treated like criminals and children immunised to mass surveillance, is
an absurd response.

The cost is as excessive as the intrusion, not to mention wholly
unnecessary.  I can only hope the parents of Bolton Day Nursery are
equally opposed to this development and stop Asquith Nurseries rolling
it out to their other 83 establishments.
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Cannon Fodder

Remember, the internet is not a private place
- Dylan Sharpe

It hasn’t escaped Big Brother Watch’s attention that we are
increasingly reporting on the dangers of social networking, the
security of our email and WiFi accounts and general concerns about
what happens to our online browsing history.

In fact, to catalogue this slew of stories, we have now added a new
category to our word cloud below called ‘Online privacy’.

This latest story is the perfect example of why this is an
increasingly problematic issue (from the Daily Mail):

Some of Britain’s most famous companies have been ’spying’ on their
customers, it was claimed yesterday.

BT is among firms that have been using specialist software to find out
who has been making complaints about them to friends on social
networking sites.

Other companies like easyJet and Carphone Warehouse are also tracking
conversations on websites such as Twitter, YouTube and Facebook. They
then contact the complainants and offer to solve their problems.

BT uses software called Debatescape, which hunts through social
networking websites for key words or phrases that suggest someone is
making critical comments.

There are several slightly sinister conclusions to draw from this; not
least that if these companies have this technology you can bet that
our central and local government – as well as any number of law
enforcement agencies and quangos – are also monitoring our online
communications.

Indeed, as I wrote recently, there are already plans afoot in the EU
Parliament to have every internet search in Europe recorded for
monitoring.

From our inception, Big Brother Watch has sought to keep the state out
of our private web activities – this latest story provides a reminder,
if it were needed, that the internet is never a private place.
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Oz/Nzed Corner

Australia moves forward with internet censorship
- smh.com.au

What a horrible move in the wrong direction.

The government’s $128.8 million Cyber Safety policy includes forcing
internet service providers to block access to a secret blacklist of
website pages identified as ”refused classification” by Australian
government bureaucrats.

Web pages will be nominated for blacklisting by Australian internet
users who come across illegal or ”unacceptable” websites.

“This is a policy that will be going ahead,” Senator Conroy said. “We
are still consulting on the final details of the scheme. But this
policy has been approved by 85 per cent of Australian internet service
providers, who have said they would welcome the filter, including
Telstra, Optus, iPrimus and iinet.”

***NZed***

New Zealand cities rate as cheapest in Asia-Pacific
- NZHerald

Auckland and Wellington are cheaper to live in than any other major
city in the Asia-Pacific region, according to a global survey.

Mercer’s 2010 Worldwide Cost of Living Survey ranked Wellington 163rd
out of 214 cities. Auckland had slightly greater living costs at
149th, equal with Aberdeen and just ahead of Johannesburg (150) and
Kuwait City (151).

The higher-ranked the city is, the more expensive it is to live in.

Mercer senior associate Anthony Shippard said New Zealand’s position
on the list was “very good news”.

“The cost of living within New Zealand is really one of the most
reasonable in the whole of the Asia-Pacific region, and of the
developed economies within the Asia-Pacific region, it really is the
best.”

Mr Shippard said New Zealand had an advantage in that its economy had
not been as strongly affected by the recession as others.  ”The
strength of the New Zealand economy and, really, the state of your
currency, has meant that the US dollar is still able to buy
significant international goods at reasonable costs within New
Zealand.”

The survey is aimed at international companies which transfer
employees to cities around the world.  Cities were ranked by comparing
the prices of more than 200 everyday items, including housing,
transport, food, clothing and entertainment.

Mr Shippard said New Zealand would be regarded as a favourable
destination for companies sending employees overseas. “At the moment,
New Zealand looks good from both the employee perspective, in that the
quality of life is very good, but also the employer perspective, in
that the cost of relocating someone there is so low.”

Both Auckland and Wellington ranked highly in Mercer’s 2010 Worldwide
Quality of Living Survey last month, with Auckland taking fourth place
and Wellington coming in 12th.

In the Cost of Living Survey, three African nations featured in the
top 10 most expensive cities, with European centres taking the other
spots. First place went to Luanda, capital of southwest African
nation Angola, while other costly destinations included Tokyo (2),
Moscow (4) and Geneva (5).

The cheapest Australian city was Adelaide (90), while Sydney ranked as
one of the world’s priciest (26).

The most budget-friendly city surveyed was Pakistan’s financial
capital, Karachi, ranked lowest at 214th.

The survey measured destinations against a base city, New York, while
currencies were compared with the US dollar.

Back to Oz

Advance Australian investigation Fair

Following in the footsteps of the national Data Protection Authorities
in Germany, France, Czech Republic, and Italy, Australia has announced
that there shall be a formal investigation into Google’s electronic
snooping via their Street View cars.

Australia’s communications minister, Stephen Conroy, said

Google was responsible for the single greatest breach in the history
of privacy.

Equally, American Congressmen are pushing for retention of the data
Google has stolen in the USA until a proper investigation has taken
place. As we said in our joint statement recently, the same should be
done here in the UK. If they destroy the evidence of what they’ve
done, how can it properly assist in policing e-snooping in the future?

The refusal of the UK’s Information Commissioner to investigate Google
here becomes ever-more difficult to justify. People in this country
face the prospect of never knowing what Google snatched from their
transmitted data, whilst those abroad have full investigations. How
can that be right?

More about Oz

First, China. Next: the Great Firewall of  Australia?
- Time Magazine

The concept of government-backed web censorship is usually associated
with nations where human rights and freedom of speech are routinely
curtailed. But if Canberra’s plans for a mandatory Internet filter go
ahead, Australia may soon become the first Western democracy to join
the ranks of Iran, China and a handful of other nations where access
to the Internet is restricted by the state.

Plans for a mandatory Internet filter have been a long-term subject of
controversy since they were first announced by Stephen Conroy, the
Minister for Broadband, Communications and the Digital Economy, in May
2008 as part of an $106 million “cybersafety plan.” The plan’s stated
purpose is to protect children when they go online by preventing them
from stumbling on illegal material like child pornography.  To do
this, Conroy’s Ministry has recommended blacking out about 10,000
websites deemed by the Australian Communications and Media Authority
(ACMA) to be so offensive that they are categorized as ‘RC,’ or
Refused Classification.

The government won’t reveal an official list of the URLs on the
current blacklist, but Conroy’s office says it includes sites
containing child sexual abuse imagery, bestiality, sexual violence,
detailed instruction in crime, violence or drug use and/or material
that advocates the doing of a terrorist act. “Under Australia’s
existing [laws] this material is not available in news agencies, it is
not on library shelves, you cannot watch it on a DVD or at the cinema
and it is not shown on television,” Conroy’s office e-mailed in a
statement. But in March 2009, when a 2,395-site blacklist was leaked
to Wikileaks, an online clearinghouse for anonymous submissions, it
seemed confusingly broad, containing, among others, the websites of a
dentist from Queensland, a pet-care facility in Queensland, and a site
belonging to a school cafeteria consultant.

At the time, Conroy told the Sydney Morning Herald that any
Australians involved in the leak could face criminal charges. “No one
interested in cyber safety would condone the leaking of this list,” he
said.

Since then, criticism of the proposed Internet filter has escalated.
“Nobody likes it,” says Scott Ludlam, a senator from the Australian
Greens Party. “Everyone from the communications industry to child
protection rights and online civil liberties groups think this idea is
deeply flawed.”  Throughout 2009 GetUp!, an internet-based political
activism organization, launched an advertising campaign to raise
public awareness about the government’s proposal. (That July, the
advertisement the group made was banned from screenings on Qantas
domestic flights into Canberra.) In February, Anonymous, a community
of Internet users, which include hackers, shut down the Australian
Parliament’s web site in their second attack against the filter, which
they called “Operation: Titstorm”  a reference to the sexual content
that the filter will be blocking. Save the Children has questioned
the efficacy of the filter in protecting children, and in March,
Paris-based Reporters Without Borders listed Australia as a country
that’s “under surveillance” in its annual “Internet Enemies” report,
which rounds up the “worst violators of freedom of expression on the
Net.”

Read full story at
http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1995615,00.html
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Bug Bites:

Chinese Supercomputer Is Ranked World’s Second-Fastest, Challenging
U.S. Dominance
- NY Times

A Chinese supercomputer has been ranked as the world’s second-fastest
machine, surpassing European and Japanese systems and underscoring
China’s aggressive commitment to science and technology.

The Dawning Nebulae, based at the National Supercomputing Center in
Shenzhen, China, has achieved a sustained computing speed of 1.27
petaflops, the equivalent of one thousand trillion mathematical
operations a second, in the latest semiannual ranking of the world’s
fastest 500 computers.

The newest ranking was made public on Monday at the International
Supercomputer Conference in Hamburg, Germany.  Supercomputers are used
for scientific and engineering problems as diverse as climate
simulation and automotive design.

The Chinese machine is actually now ranked as the world’s fastest in
terms of theoretical peak performance, but that is considered a less
significant measure than the actual computing speed achieved on a
standardized computing test.  = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
=

*** Red Hot Product!

Aonymous Hong Kong mobile sim chip – Cheapest Roaming Time (Asian) Sim
Card with US$100 roaming time included. Just S$399 including
registered airmail dispatch!

Only a handful left, so it’s strictly first come, first served.

Order at https://www.ptshamrock.com/order_bwe.html Your ordering code
is “HKsim”.
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

*** Wikileaks Was Launched With Documents Intercepted From Tor
- Kim Zetter

Wikileaks, the controversial whistleblowing site that exposes secrets
of governments and corporations, bootstrapped itself with a cache of
documents obtained through an internet eavesdropping operation by one
of its activists, according to a new profile of the organization’s
founder.

The activist siphoned more than a million documents as they traveled
across the internet through Tor, also known as “The Onion Router,” a
sophisticated privacy tool that lets users navigate and send documents
through the internet anonymously.

The siphoned documents, supposedly stolen by Chinese hackers or spies
who were using the Tor network to transmit the data, were the basis
for Wikileaks founder Julian Assange’s assertion in 2006 that his
organization had already “received over one million documents from 13
countries” before his site was launched, according to the article in
The New Yorker.

Only a small portion of those intercepted documents were ever posted
on Wikileaks, but the new report indicates that some of the data and
documents on WikiLeaks did not come from sources who intended for the
documents to be seen or posted. It also explains an enduring mystery
of Wikileaks’ launch: how the organization was able to amass a
collection of secret documents before its website was open for
business.

Tor is a sophisticated privacy tool endorsed by the Electronic
Frontier Foundation and other civil liberties groups as a method for
whistleblowers and human rights workers to communicate with
journalists, among other uses. In its search for government and
corporate secrets traveling through the Tor network, it’s conceivable
that WikiLeaks may have also vacuumed up sensitive information from
human rights workers who did not want their data seen by outsiders.

The interception may have legal implications, depending on what
country the activist was based in. In the United States, the
surreptitious interception of electronic communication is generally a
violation of federal law, but the statute includes a broad exception
for service providers who monitor their own networks for legitimate
maintenance or security reasons. “The statutory language is broad
enough that it might cover this and provide a defense,” says former
U.S. federal prosecutor Mark Rasch.

The New Yorker article did not indicate whether WikiLeaks continues to
intercept data from the Tor network. Assange did not immediately
return a call for comment from Threat Level.

WikiLeaks uses a modified version of the Tor network for its own
operations, moving document submissions through it to keep them
private. WikiLeaks computers also reportedly feed “hundreds of
thousands of fake submissions through these tunnels, obscuring the
real documents,” according to The New Yorker.

The intercepted data was gathered from Tor sometime before or around
December 2006, when Assange and fellow activists needed a substantial
number of documents in their repository in order to be taken seriously
as a viable tool for whistleblowers and others.

The solution came from one of the activists associated with the
organization who owned and operated a server that was being used in
the Tor anonymizing network.  Tor works by using servers donated by
volunteers around the world to bounce traffic around, en route to its
destination. Traffic is encrypted through most of that route, and
routed over a random path each time a person uses it.

Under Tor’s architecture, administrators at the entry point can
identify the user’s IP address, but can’t read the content of the
user’s correspondence or know its final destination. Each node in the
network thereafter only knows the node from which it received the
traffic, and it peels off a layer of encryption to reveal the next
node to which it must forward the connection.

By necessity, however, the last node through which traffic passes has
to decrypt the communication before delivering it to its final
destination. Someone operating that exit node can therefore read the
traffic passing through this server.

According to The New Yorker, “millions of secret transmissions passed
through” the node the WikiLeaks activist operated   believed to be an
exit node.  The data included sensitive information of foreign
governments.

The activist believed the data was being siphoned from computers
around the world by hackers who appeared to be in China and who were
using the Tor network to transmit the stolen data.  The activist began
recording the data as it passed through his node, and this became the
basis for the trove of data Wikileaks said it had “received.”

Read the rest of this article at
<http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2010/06/wikileaks-documents/#more-16575>

Shamrock comment: The above article clearly reveals why it is
essential to use encryption no matter how you communicate these days.
It is imperative that you send emails, attachments or other
information via the Internet always encrypted using pgp.

If you do not currently use pgp email encryption, email us and place
“PGP” in your subject heading.  We’ll be happy to email you an easy to
download and use guide on pgp for encrypted emails, etc.
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Shamrock’s Missive:

The Quest for the ultimate bank account!

We receive more emails from readers and customers about getting a rock
solid bank account, an account where the bank isn’t a proctologist
asking you for an invoice for each and every wire in and out for as
little as US$1500, sometimes less, than any other subject matter.

Let face it readers, banking these days has become less than
enjoyable, no thanks to the US and Organisation for Economic
Co-operation and Development (OECD) authorities and their never ending
list of compliance requirements. Long gone are the hassle free days
of banking.

I believe our leprechaun has indeed discovered the Ultimate offshore
bank account.

For more than 15 years PT Shamrock enjoyed hassle free banking in
Switzerland. Our account there was fast and reliable and we can’t
remember when we were asked about what this or that wire transfer was
for or about.

However last year all that changed. We never thought we could locate
a bank that was equal to or better than our former Swiss bank account.

We are pleased to report that we were wrong. In fact we were very
wrong indeed. Our company bank account in Hong Kong is superior, in
fact FAR superior, to our former Swiss account. Here’s why, what we
figured out and why;

First and most important, China owns Hong Kong and clearly isn’t going
to kowtow to OECD and or any other regulatory authority about filing
requirements, etc. including the US, UK and EU authorities.

Nearly every nationality is welcomed as customers, including our
American customers. There is no reporting to EU, UK or American tax
authorities. There are no W-9 filings of any sort, no social security
or other such nonsense numbers required. No bankers or professional
rferences are necessary and you aren’t required to have your passport
copy notarized; a simple photocopy will suffice along with a current
utility bill.

With a Hong Kong company and HK bank account you can achieve and
accomplish many things. You will receive or have the ability to
receive for example;
* Great easy to use internet banking, provided via a bank code device
(looks like a calculator).
* You receive an atm card for cash withdrawals around the world
* Our HK source creates you business plan for you in order to ensure
your bank account is opened and in good order
* The option for anyone of either a Premier MasterCard credit card,
Advance Visa Platinum Card, Visa Platinum card, Green credit card,
Gold card or a Classic credit card, any of which can be ordered
online direct once your account is opened.
* Your own company in your chosen name
* The option for nominee directors and or shareholders for greater
anonymity
* Online Securities Trading * Stocks monthly investment programs
* Enhance your foreign currency portfolio * Insurance services including;
Travel Insurance, Life Cover, Health Insurance, Accident Insurance, Home
Insurance, Fire Insurance and even golfer insurance!
* You can buy trade gold online as well * Multi currency account, in USD,
Euro, CHF, AUD, HKD, JYN, etc.
* You have the option to obtain a virtual office in Hong Kong as well
* Plus much more!

Please understand that due to contractual agreement, we are unable to
provide the name of this bank until we receive a paid order. That
legalize aside, this Hong Kong bank is with one of the safest and
strongest worldwide renowned banks, bar none. They have hundreds of
branches around the world and we’re confident you’ll be as pleased as
we are been once you make the move.

If you’re serious, email us and place “Hong Kong” as you subject
heading and PT Shamrock will be happy to act as your reference for
this exciting banking product as well as emailing you full particulars
on how to get started.

We aren’t sorry we moved our company banking and promise you won’t
either!

See you next issue

Shamrock

“The people never give up their liberties but under some delusion.”
– Edmund Burke, 1784
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Quote

“Law was, and remains, whatever the power holders say it is.”
– Dr. Walter Belford – conversations, December 2006
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Even More Quotes

“You cannot legislate the poor into prosperity by legislating the
wealthy out of prosperity. What one person receives without working
for, another person must work for without receiving.”
– Adrian Rogers, 1931
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Another Quote

“History does not teach fatalism. There are moments when the will of
a handful of free men breaks through determinism and opens up new
roads.”
– Charles de Gaulle
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Thought provoking quotes:

“Privacy is an insurance policy against oppression. Privacy allows a
tyrannized citizenry to think independently, freely, and clearly.”
– Michael Hampton
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

*** Tid Bits

‘Mal-intent’ may be the future of security
– Los Angeles Times

If Bob Burns is correct, terrorists may betray themselves someday by
jiggling on a Nintendo Wii balance board, blinking too fast, curling a
lip like Elvis — or doing nothing at all. Burns and his team of
scientists are researching whether video game boards, biometric
sensors and other high-tech devices can be used to detect distinct
nonverbal cues from people who harbor “mal-intent,” or malicious
intent.

“We’re looking pre-event,” said Burns, the No. 2 at the Homeland
Security Advanced Research Project Agency, a counterpart of the fabled
Pentagon agency that developed Stealth aircraft and the Internet.

“We’re trying to detect a crime before it has occurred.”

OK, roll the sci-fi thriller “Minority Report,” in which Tom Cruise
and other “pre-crime” cops use psychic visions to arrest murderers
before they kill. Or maybe “The Men Who Stare at Goats,” a George
Clooney comedy inspired by real military experiments with supposedly
psychic soldiers.

The work on mal-intent, which has cost $20 million so far, represents
the future in screening: trying to find the bomber, not just the bomb.

“Sometimes people look at our projects and say, ‘This is crazy,’”
conceded Burns, a former submarine weapons officer. If Burns’ group
is delving into the mind of terrorists, another Homeland Security
agency is studying its face. The human factors division has spent
nearly $20 million to experiment with micro-expressions, or
super-quick flickers of facial muscles, that may — or may not –
indicate hostile intent.

Researchers are studying 275 videos of test interviews — frame by
painstaking frame, 30 frames a second, each video up to 10 minutes
long — so analysts can catalog “micro-facial emotional leakages.”

“We are breaking new ground here,” said Larry Willis, the project
director.

The need for improvement is clear. Security teams trained to spot
suspicious behavior have pulled 152,000 people out of airport lines in
recent years, according to a report this month from the Government
Accountability Office, the investigative arm of Congress.

That led to about 1,100 arrests, mostly for immigration violations and
outstanding warrants. No one was charged with terrorism.

But screeners failed to spot 16 travelers who later were linked to
failed terrorist plots in New York and Virginia, jihadist training in
Pakistan and lethal attacks in Somalia, Afghanistan and India.

The report didn’t include the Nigerian man accused of trying to light
a bomb in his underwear on a Detroit-bound flight on Christmas Day, or
the Pakistani American who was pulled off a plane in New York on
charges of trying to explode a car bomb in Times Square.

According to the report, the Transportation Security Administration
failed to validate the underlying science before deploying 3,000
behavior detection officers to 161 commercial airports, about a third
of the nation’s total.

“A scientific consensus does not exist on whether behavior detection
principles can be reliably used for counter-terrorism purposes,” the
report said.

Paul Ekman, the nation’s foremost researcher into nonverbal cues that
indicate deceit, disputes that claim and argues more human observers
with better training are needed. He doubts high-tech tools can do the
job any better.

“I’m ambivalent (about mal-intent) because it’s a very high-risk
endeavor,” said Ekman, a professor emeritus at UC San Francisco. “The
odds are against it actually working in the field. But if you’re
going to try it, they’re doing the best job that can be done.”

Ekman dismissed Willis’ work, however. “The research already shows
that not every person intending harm shows micro-expression,” he said.
“So it’s a waste of time.”

Other senior researchers and academics say both research teams appear
to be on the right track.

“I was very skeptical at first,” said Gary Berntson, a professor of
psychology, psychiatry and pediatrics at Ohio State University. “But
it’s not voodoo science. It’s cutting-edge.”

Mark Frank, a psychologist who studies nonverbal behavior at the State
University of New York at Buffalo, called the work worthwhile.

“If the science helps us make better guesses, I think that is very
productive,” Frank said. “Or at least it’s the right approach.”

David Matsumoto, director of the Culture and Emotion Research
Laboratory at San Francisco State University, cautioned that people
“want a silver bullet, a 100 percent foolproof system.”

“That’s never going to happen,” he said. “But can they deploy
something that’s better than we have now? I think both programs are
well on their way to doing that.”

The mal-intent project began in 2007 and is based on the unproven
premise that technology can identify and interpret physiological,
behavioral and paralinguistic cues from someone with mayhem in mind.

Rather than using a Ouija board, researchers have linked
high-resolution cameras, low-level lasers and other devices to measure
fidgeting, pupil dilation, skin temperature, heart rate and other
supposed clues.

“Let’s be clear,” said Dan Martin, the project’s director of research.
“There is no terrorist cue, no Pinocchio growing of the nose to
indicate a plotting terrorist.”

At least in theory, the sensors would record key data as each traveler
moved down a security line. A computer algorithm then would analyze
any shifts triggered by a guard’s questions and raise an alert if
necessary.

The network is supposed to disregard travelers who simply are stressed
out from flight delays, screaming infants, indigestion or other
hassles.

“Whether or not your grandmother is afraid of flying doesn’t matter,”
Martin said. “The question is how your grandmother responds to
specific stimuli, and that indicates whether she should be pulled out
for secondary screening.”

John Verrico, a Homeland Security spokesman, said operators also will
watch for people who show no response “because you have to take into
account there are people who train themselves not to reveal
themselves.”

Age affects responses more than gender, race or ethnicity, the
research shows. Experiments have included only Americans so far, so
the system’s utility with visitors from other countries and cultures
is unclear.

Privacy advocates, civil libertarians and some social scientists are
incredulous.

“This is like eugenics 100 years ago when scientists said you could
tell criminals by the shape of their eyes or the slope of their head,”
said Lillie Coney, associate director of the nonprofit Electronic
Privacy Information Center. “It was bogus science then and it’s bogus
science now.”

Jay Stanley, a privacy expert at the American Civil Liberties Union,
called the work “absurd on its face.”

Bella DePaulo, visiting professor of psychology at UC Santa Barbara,
said she doubted researchers could ever simulate what a terrorist
thinks or feels.

“Lots of people, myself included, have studied how you tell when
people are lying or telling the truth,” she said. “But they’re
telling little lies. They’re not trying to blow up a bomb or fly a
plane into a building. How do you test for that?”
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

*** More Tid Bits

Bill would give DHS emergency cyber powers
– Federal News Radio

We’re learning more about the cybersecurity package forming in the
Senate. Wired.com reports Sen. Joe Lieberman, (I-Conn.) wants to
give the federal government the power to take over civilian networks’
security, if there’s an “imminent cyber threat.”s It’s part of a draft
bill, co-sponsored by Senators Lieberman and Susan Collins, that
provides DHS with the authority to ensure that critical infrastructure
stays up and running in the face of a looming hack attack.

The Senate version of the fiscal 2011 Defense authorization bill
scheduled to be released later this week is going to include funding
for pilot programs that will explore new ways for Defense Department
agencies and contractors to have greater access to cybersecurity tools
and services. NextGov cites sources from the Armed Services
Committee. Their completed markup of its version of the Defense bill
will include funding for projects that require the department to
partner with industry to track cyber threats, and speed up the
acquisition of cybersecurity products and services. The funding would
add to the $10 million in the fiscal 2010 supplemental appropriations
bill the Senate passed on May 27 for the Defense and Homeland Security
departments to conduct cybersecurity pilots.

Agencies looking to establish super-secure Internet hookups under the
Trusted Internet Connection program now have a vendor to turn to. The
General Services Administration has issued the first certification for
a TIC product to AT&T Government Solutions. The company’s Managed
Trusted Internet Protocol Services are available under GSA’s Networx
telecommunications contract. A spokesman says AT&T is the first
provider to receive authority to activate trusted connections.
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

*** Bits and bobs

Surveillance cameras in Birmingham track Muslims’ every move
– London Guardian

Counterterrorism police have targeted hundreds of surveillance cameras
on two Muslim areas of Birmingham, enabling them to track the precise
movements of people entering and leaving the neighbourhoods.

The project has principally been sold to locals as an attempt to
combat antisocial behaviour, vehicle crime and drug dealing in the
area. But the cameras have been paid for by a GBP3m grant from a
government fund, the Terrorism and Allied Matters Fund, which is
administered by the Association of Chief Police Officers.

About 150 automatic numberplate recognition (ANPR) cameras have been
installed in Washwood Heath and Sparkbrook in recent months.
Birmingham’s two predominantly Muslim suburbs will be covered by three
times more ANPR cameras than are used to monitor the entire city
centre. They include about 40 cameras classed as “covert”, meaning
they have been concealed from public view.

The funding arrangement was not made clear to the handful of
councillors who were briefed that the cameras would appear in their
area. Instead, they were told only that the money had come from the
Home Office. “I raised my concern then: is this really about spying?”
said Salma Yaqoob, a member of the Respect party and councillor for
Sparkbrook.
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

*** More Bits n bobs

False economy

Government Jobs Account for 95% of May Job Increases
– Bloomberg

Employers in the U.S. hired fewer workers in May than forecast and
Americans dropped out of the labor force, showing a lack of confidence
in the recovery that may lead to slower economic growth.

Payrolls rose by 431,000 last month, including a 411,000 jump in
government hiring of temporary workers for the 2010 census, Labor
Department figures in Washington showed today. Economists projected a
536,000 gain, according to the median forecast in a Bloomberg News
survey. Private payrolls rose a less-than-forecast 41,000. The
jobless rate fell to 9.7 percent.

Stocks declined and Treasuries surged on expectations a slowing in the
labor market will restrain consumer spending, the biggest part of the
economy. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke said yesterday
that unemployment was exacting a heavy toll, showing why economists
forecast interest rates will remain low.

“Hiring looks soft,” said Michael Feroli, chief U.S. economist at
JPMorgan Chase & Co. in New York. “It does raise some red flags that
businesses are still pretty cautious.”
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

*** Deflationary Depression and Purging To Come

What now that stimulus packages are ending, money set to plunge,
market control by insiders has to end, Fed doesn’t need a monopoly,
bond sales down, still high expectations for gold.

Read the entire article at

= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

*** Brazilian banker’s crypto baffles FBI
– The Register

Cryptographic locks guarding the secret files of a Brazilian banker
suspected of financial crimes have defeated law enforcement officials.

Brazilian police seized five hard drives when they raided the Rio
apartment of banker Daniel Dantas as part of Operation Satyagraha in
July 2008. But subsequent efforts to decrypt files held on the
hardware using a variety of dictionary-based attacks failed even after
the South Americans called in the assistance of the FBI.

Full article at

= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Hints & Tips

Biometric cash machine lands in Europe
– John Leyden

A Polish bank has become the first in Europe to offer the use of
biometrics instead of PINs at cash machines.

Customers of BPS visiting one of its ATM in Warsaw have the option of
using placing their fingerprints on readers, instead inputting a four
digit code, to authorise withdrawals or other transactions following
the introduction of new technology this week.

The system is based on the recognition of the pattern of veins in an
enrolled customer’s finger, a form of biometric technology developed
by Hitachi. The technology is already widely used in Japan but new to
Europe.

Customers are still issued with the same debit or credit card and it’s
only the authorisation method that changes – a pre-registered
fingerprint is offered as alternative to a memorised four-digit PIN -
as illustrated by a picture of the technology in use at BPS here.

“Our bank is the first in Europe to provide its clients with a new
means to secure transactions to complement the secret code of their
banking card,” said BPS Bank vice-president Krzysztof Jagielski.

Jagielski said the technology would help guard against losses from
scams such as ATM skimming while making it easier for pensioners to
withdraw state payments, AFP reports.

Three or four ATMs outfitted with biometric-recognition technology are
to be installed in Warsaw by the end of the year, with plans to
install a further 200 across Poland over an unspecified time period.
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

*** Letters to the Editor:

Keep them postcards and letters coming’ folks, ’cause we
done mailed the rosebushes!!

Dear Shamrock:

As always, great info. Well done mate.

Cheers,

JCP

Dear Shamrock:

In your June letter you recommend:

“Finally how about starting a part time Internet business or a
business that travels with you anywhere in the world where there’s an
internet connection, which is just about everywhere these days.”

Do you have any suggestions for such a business? I receive many
solicitations but worry that most are scams, etc.

Thank you

J. M.

Hello J. M.;

Thanks for your query.

We agree with you, we certainly wouldn’t go for any of the spam
adverts received and neither should you.

We suggest, first off, thinking about what you really like to do.
Something that perhaps you haven’t had a chance to pursue previously
for whatever reasons. Then think about starting a part time Internet
business with that something you really love. If you have a passion
for something you like, that greatly increases your chances of success
in your new Internet business.

You can go to your local library and borrow books at no cost to you on
how to start a business, etc. Ask your librarian and they’ll be more
than helpful in guiding you in the right book direction.

For the PT like minded individual, take a look at the books on offer
at http://www.ptshamrock.com/reports/index.html and our friends at
Eden Press, www.edenpress.com

Eden Press offers books on all kinds of topics including how to make
money, etc. Tell them PT Shamrock sent you.

Finally, don’t stop your current job until you have an income from a
part time Internet business equal to 50% of your current ***take
home*** pay! Then try lowering your monthly outgo expenses, i.e.
overhead, and try to save more of your take home money. Before long
these small baby steps can really turn your financial matters around
dramatically and with a successful internet business, set you free!

Any questions just ask.

Kindest regards and the best of luck

PT Shamrock

Dear Shamrock:

Good morning and “Happy June”!

I have to tell you I love your newsletter. Just wish there were 48
hours in a day.

Thanks, PT Shamrock, and have a great week!

D

Dear Shamrock:

As you might recall, I’m from Ecuador and I want to thank you for your
nationality and passport program from XXX in Central America.

In the last few years, in order for an Ecuadorian as well as many
other South American nationals to travel to Panama, Nicaragua, Costa
Rica or Mexico, one MUST, read that as mandatory, obtain a visitor’s
visa to the United States! Go figure that one out!

I do not now, nor never had any desire of visiting the United States.
This insane visa requirement, which has nothing to do with travel to
the United States, has thousands being held hostage by America and
restricting our right to free travel. My business requires my
traveling to Europe, Mexico, and Panama and on occasion to Costa Rica.
When the United States forced these visa requirements on the above
mentioned countries, it cost me thousands of dollars in lost business
and an untold loss of potential future business. Heaven knows how
many tens of thousands of innocent people have been effected by this
severe visa requirment just to visit our Northern neighbors, NOT the
United States.

While I can understand America’s need to keep illegal aliens from
entering or trying to enter that country, placing severe travel
restrictions on tens of thousands of legitimate business people who
have no intention of entering the US is, well, plain unfair and in my
opinion discriminatory.

Now with thanks to you and my passport from XXX, there is no need for
any visa from the US to travel to and conduct business in Panama,
Mexico and Costa Rica. I also have the ability to travel visa free to
the United Kingdom and all of Western Europe.

The money invested in your nationality program is money well worth it
and in fact, has paid for the passport several times over already.

Thank you from the bottom of my heart for being there for people like
myself.

Raul from Ecuador

Dear Raul from Ecuador;

Many thanks for the kind words and positive feedback.

Shamrock

Shamrock’s comment: Any reader interested in our Central American
nationality and passport program just email us with “CA” as your
subject heading. The particulars for this program will be emailed to
you.

Dear Shamrock:

Congratulations for your first class job/newsletter…

K.S.
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Quote of the month!

“Those who have been once intoxicated with power, and have derived any
kind of emolument from it, even though for but one year, can never
willingly abandon it.”
– Edmund Burke
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

*** “PT Shamrock’s Exclusive Member’s Site!”

Each month we offer exclusive information, free privacy programs,
access to our newsletter archives and other insider information
for members only.

Our member’s site is accessed by user name and password only. This
is available to our newsletter subscribers ONLY!

Each month the password will change and you will have to e-mail us
from your subscribers e-mail address to request the NEW password in
order to gain access.

As a subscriber to our newsletter you automatically qualify for this
exclusive service. Just send an e-mail to
and place “Members” in the subject
heading. We will forward to you full details for signing up and gaining
access to our Members Site, reserved for you.

Enjoy.
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Dear Friend:

If you like our newsletter please tell your friends and associates
about us. They can subscribe *FREE* by sending an e-mail to:
.

Our pledge!

We never spam our subscribers, never rent or give our
subscribers list to anyone, and unlike other newsletters do
not accept paid advertisements; And of course, our PT Buzz
Newsletter is absolutely free, just packed full of interesting
privacy news and information with a tad of humor thrown in for
good measure.

We’re probably the oldest privacy newsletter on the Internet!

Thank you for your patronage and help in spreading the word.

Shamrock

“The right to privacy is a part of our basic freedoms. Privacy is
fundamental to close family ties, competitive free enterprise, the
ownership of property, and the exchange of ideas.”

PT Shamrock – issue one; 1994
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Don’t forget to check out our Special Offers at

See you next issue!

“Mehr sein, als scheinen” (German Proverb)
Be more, seem less!

PT Shamrock
- – - – - – - – - – NOTICE – - – - – - – - – -
In compliance with Title 17 U.S.C. section 107, this material is
distributed free without profit or payment for non-profit
research and for educational purposes only.
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

———————————————————————–
To subscribe, send a blank message to PTBuzz-on@mail-list.com
To unsubscribe, send a blank message to PTBuzz-off@mail-list.com
To change your email address, send a message to PTBuzz-change@mail-list.com
with your old address in the Subject: line
To contact the list owner, send your message to
PTBuzz-list-owner@mail-list.com

PT Shamrock Limited Suite #79, 184 Lower Rathmines Road, Rathmines, Dublin D6, Ireland

Another Newsletter I’ve Followed for a long time-Privacy world

Saturday, March 20th, 2010

Privacy World – The WORLD’S SHREWDEST PRIVACY NEWSLETTER

State lawmakers work on bills to limit property seizures by police

Detroit – Efforts are under way to change Michigan’s civil forfeiture
laws that allow police to seize property without proving a crime
occurred.

State law allows police to take property, usually vehicles, for any
reason, even in the absence of criminal activity. A Detroit News
investigation in November found that vehicles sometimes are seized
even when police admit no crime took place. Two Michigan lawmakers
are working on separate bills that would restrict police power over
civil seizures. Meanwhile, a candidate for Wayne County sheriff, who
was in charge of a department that seized thousands of vehicles over
the past four years, says, if elected, he would overhaul the seizure
process in Wayne County.

“Under the current ordinance, there doesn’t have to be a crime proven
in order to seize someone’s vehicle,” said Walter Epps, a former Wayne
County sheriff’s lieutenant who ran the department’s Morality Squad
for more than four years. “But I feel if we’re going to take
someone’s car, the least we should do is to charge them with the crime
or issue them a ticket.” In one case, The News found that officers
from the Morality Squad seized a Southgate man’s vehicle after he
talked to a decoy prostitute — even though the undercover officer
admitted in her written report that the man hadn’t solicited her
during their brief conversation.

In another case, a Red Cross employee’s vehicle was seized by the
Morality Squad after she picked up a co-worker at a Detroit bank.
Because the vehicle owner’s co-worker had stood on a street corner
making eye contact with passing motorists while waiting for her ride,
police determined she was acting like a prostitute, even though she
never was charged for soliciting. Motorists must pay $900, plus
towing and storage fees, to get their vehicles back; otherwise, they
become property of the seizing agency and usually are sold at auction.

Two state lawmakers also are trying to pass laws to prevent police in
Michigan from seizing people’s property without officially accusing
them of a crime. State Rep. Gabe Leland, D-Detroit, introduced a
package of bills in December that would require police to seek charges
before seizing property.

“The intent of the legislation is simply to protect innocent people,”
Leland said. “The legislation states that when a person’s vehicle is
seized and they are either not charged with a crime or are determined
to be not guilty, then they will not be responsible for any related
towing or storage fees incurred during the investigation.” Leland’s
bills also would require authorities to return seized vehicles within
seven days at no cost if no charges are filed.

State Sen. Tupac Hunter, D-Detroit, said he plans to introduce
similar legislation later this month.

“Property seized during an investigation should be rightfully returned
to the property owner if the owner has been found innocent, or is not
found liable for a civil infraction,” Hunter said. “Something must be
done to reform the property forfeiture laws in order to protect
citizens’ rights. Michigan property owners should not have to fight
for seized property that should be rightfully returned to them when
innocence has been declared.”

From The Detroit News:
<http://www.detnews.com/article/20100214/METRO/2140309/1409/metro/State-lawmakers-work-on-bills-to-limit-property-seizures-by-police#ixzz0fc02r5Wu>

Until next issue, stay cool and remain low profile!

Privacy World

PT Shamrocks Mid March 2010 Newsletter

Thursday, March 18th, 2010

Mid March 2010 Newsletter

“When are people gonna say enough is enough?”
- anonymous

In this issue:

* US government rescinds ‘leave internet alone’ policy
* Scary Stuff – US military spied on Planned Parenthood, civilian phone
calls
* Breaking News! ID Card for Workers Is at Center of Immigration Plan
* Good News – Whistleblower Site Back After Microsoft Withdraws
Complaint
* You Could Now Be Arrested, In America, Just For Mentioning Europe’s
Problems Over Dinner
* Bad News – Air travellers to pay for security equipment with fee hikes
* Spy chips hidden in 2.5 MILLION dustbins: 60pc rise in electronic bugs
as council snoopers plan pay-as-you-throw tax
* Food for thought – Don’t like giving out SSN’s? Fox Business News says
“make up an SSN”
* Police State – 11 More U.S. Airports Get Body Scanners
* Horror Stories – ‘I’m an IT worker not an assassin’
* The District of Criminals – Ron Paul on the Totalitarian ID Card
* ID cards: the first year report
* Hot Tips – Is America Becoming A Police State?
* Advisory – Lawmakers Punt Patriot Act to Obama
* Brits, Who Already Pay 17.5 percent VAT, Face New Tax On Food
* The Love Police: How To Escape A Terror STOP!
* Dumbing Down – Internet access is ‘a fundamental right’
* Dumb signs – Dad Branded A Paedophile Over Pic Of Son
* Dumb facts – Flipping Off Cops Is Legal, Not Advised
* Dumb criminal acts – The DNA of a Police State
* Cannon Fodder – Hundreds more town hall staff to get police-style
powers
* Oz Corner: Ex-pats rate Oz the best place to raise kids, UK
scores ‘poorly’
* Bug Bites: Spy chips hidden in 2.5 million dustbins: 60pc
rise in electronic bugs as council snoopers plan pay-as-you-throw tax
* Red Hot Product
Shamrock’s Missive
* Quotes
* Tid Bits – Pak lawmakers refuse body scan, cut short visit to US
* Bits n bobs – Paypal freezes Cryptome
* Disturbing facts – Two Dubai Suspects Traveled to U.S.
* Letters to the Editor
* Quote of the month!
PT Shamrock’s Exclusive Member’s Site!

*** US government rescinds ‘leave internet alone’ policy
- Kieren McCarthy, The Register

The US government’s policy of leaving the Internet alone is over,
according to Obama’s top official at the Department of Commerce.

Instead, an “Internet Policy 3.0″ approach will see policy discussions
between government agencies, foreign governments, and key Internet
constituencies, according to Assistant Secretary Larry Strickling,
with those discussions covering issues such as privacy, child
protection, cybersecurity, copyright protection, and Internet
governance.

The outcomes of such discussions will be “flexible” but may result in
recommendations for legislation or regulation, Strickling said in a
speech at the Media Institute in Washington this week.

The new approach is a far cry from a US government that consciously
decided not to intrude into the internet’s functioning and growth and
in so doing allowed an academic network to turn into a global
communications phenomenon.

Strickling referred to these roots arguing that it was “the right
policy for the United States in the early stages of the Internet, and
the right message to send to the rest of the world.” But, he
continued, “that was then and this is now. As we at NTIA approach a
wide range of Internet policy issues, we take the view that we are now
in the third generation of Internet policy making.”

Outlining three decades of internet evolution – from transition to
commercialization, from the garage to Main Street, and now, starting
in 2010, the “Policy 3.0″ approach – Strickling argued that with the
internet is now a social network as well a business network. “We must
take rules more seriously.”

He cited a number of examples where this new approach was needed: end
users worried about credit card transactions, content providers who
want to prevent their copyright, companies concerned about hacking,
network neutrality, and foreign governments worried about Internet
governance systems.

The decision to effectively end the policy that made the internet what
it is today is part of a wider global trend of governments looking to
impose rules on use of the network by its citizens.

In the UK, the Digital Economy Bill currently making its way through
Parliament has been the subject of significant controversy for
advocating strict rules on copyright infringement and threatening to
ban people from the internet if they are found to do so. The bill
includes a wide variety of other measures, including giving regulator
Ofcom a wider remit, forcing ISPs to monitor their customers’
behavior, and allowing the government to take over the dot-uk
registry.

In New Zealand, a similar measure to the UK’s cut-off provision has
been proposed by revising the Copyright Act to allow a tribunal to
fine those found guilty of infringing copyright online as well as
suspend their Internet accounts for up to six months. And in Italy
this week, three Google executives were sentenced to jail for allowing
a video that was subsequently pulled down to be posted onto its
YouTube video site.

Internationally, the Internet Governance Forum, set up by under a
United Nations banner to deal with global governance issues, is due
to end its experimental run this year and become an acknowledged
institution. However, there are signs that governments are
increasingly dominating the IGF, with civil society and the Internet
community sidelined in the decision-making process.

In this broader context, the US government’s newly stated policy is
more in line with the traditional laissez-faire internet approach.
Internet Policy 3.0 also offers a more global perspective than the
isolationist approach taken by the previous Bush administration.

In explicitly stating that foreign governments will be a part of the
upcoming discussions, Strickling recognizes the United States’ unique
position as the country that gives final approval for changes made to
the internet’s “root zone.” Currently the global Internet is
dependent on an address book whose contents are changed through a
contract that the US government has granted to the Internet
Corporation for Assigned Names and Number (ICANN), based in Los
Angeles.

ICANN recently adjusted its own agreement with the US government to
give it more autonomy and now reports to the global Internet community
through a series of reviews. Strickling sits on the panel of one of
those reviews.

Overall, this new approach could enable the US government to regain
the loss of some of its direct influence through recommendations made
in policy reports. But internet old hands will still decry the loss
of a policy that made the network what it is today.
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Scary Stuff

US military spied on Planned Parenthood, civilian phone calls
- John Byrne, Raw Story

United States military intelligence spied on Planned Parenthood and
other domestic groups as part of US security preparations for the 2002
winter Olympics in Salt Lake City, according to a recently
declassified military document obtained by a civil liberties group
Thursday.

The document, drafted by a Pentagon Deputy Inspector General whose
name is redacted, was included in more than 800 pages released to the
Electronic Frontier Foundation as part of a Freedom of Information Act
Request. They include reports from the Pentagon’s Intelligence
Oversight Board that were submitted to the Defense Secretary from 2001
to 2007.

Referring to an incident where military intelligence personnel
distributed information about FBI spying on the 2002 Olympics, the
inspector general’s office tersely remarked that an “intelligence
oversight violation occurred.”

“The document…  contained US Persons data in referring to an
reporting on organizations (Planned Parenthood, the white supremacist
group National Alliance) and their involvement in protests and
literature distribution,” the inspector’s office wrote. “Also noted
was the report contained a large section labeled “GENERAL CRIMINAL
ACTIVITY.” Collection and dissemination of US Persons information by
military intelligence assets is not allowed unless this information
constitutes “Foreign Intelligence.”

“The inclusion of these two sections in this intelligence product is
clearly outside the purview of military intelligence assets and should
be handled through law enforcement or Anti-Terrorism/Force Protection
channels,” the inspector’s office added. “An inquiry into the
circumstances of this violation was conducted and the result will be
forwarded via separate correspondence.”

Electronic Frontier Foundation also notes that military intelligence
spied on the anti-war group Alaskans for Peace and Justice in 2005
(pages 122-137), and that NORAD had “procedural problems” relating to
spying on “US Persons” (pp. 257-258).

Despite a clear violation of military protocol and probable violation
of US law, such reports are rarely made public. These documents were
only made public under the Freedom of Information Act and were not
scheduled for release.

“Intelligence oversight reporting is rarely disclosed to the public,”
EFF’s Nate Cardozo noted in a posting about the documents on Thursday.

“Much of the reported improper activity consisted of intelligence
gathering on so-called “U.S. Persons,” including citizens, permanent
residents and U.S.-based organizations,” Cardozo added. “Although
Defense agencies are generally prohibited from collecting such
information (except as part of foreign intelligence or
counter-intelligence activity), it is apparent from the unredacted
reports released to EFF that some DoD components have had chronic
difficulty complying with that prohibition.”

Wired’s Kim Zetter notes that the documents provide no context or
background about how or why the Pentagon spied on Planned Parenthood
and other groups.

“The reports provide little context for the information that’s
disclosed, leaving the public to wonder about the nature and extent of
the information and surveillance revealed in them,” Zetter wrote.
“Pertaining to the Planned Parenthood members, for example, the
oversight report provides no explanation about how the information was
collected. Nor does it indicate why the information was collected.”

In another possible legal violation, military officers listened into
civilian cellphone calls in 2007. Zetter explains:

Another oversight document discusses an incident involving the
interception of civilian cellphone conversations of U.S. persons in
April 2007. During a field exercise at Fort Polk, Louisiana, a
Signals Intelligence noncommissioned officer operating a SIGINT
collection system intercepted the cell phone calls, though the
document doesn’t indicate if they were intercepted on U.S. soil or
outside U.S. borders.

Initial reports indicated that the officer listened to the
conversations for entertainment purposes, and the incident was
reported to the National Security Agency. But the inspector-general
document indicates that the officer never admitted to this and
indicates only that he may have listened to some conversations
“longer than necessary to do his job.”
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

*** Breaking News!

ID Card for Workers Is at Center of Immigration Plan
- Wall Street Journal

Lawmakers working to craft a new comprehensive immigration bill have
settled on a way to prevent employers from hiring illegal immigrants:
a national biometric identification card all American workers would
eventually be required to obtain.

.Under the potentially controversial plan still taking shape in the
Senate, all legal U.S. workers, including citizens and immigrants,
would be issued an ID card with embedded information, such as
fingerprints, to tie the card to the worker.

The ID card plan is one of several steps advocates of an immigration
overhaul are taking to address concerns that have defeated similar
bills in the past.

The uphill effort to pass a bill is being led by Sens. Chuck Schumer
(D., N.Y.) and Lindsey Graham (R., S.C.), who plan to meet with
President Barack Obama as soon as this week to update him on their
work. An administration official said the White House had no position
on the biometric card.

“It’s the nub of solving the immigration dilemma politically
speaking,” Mr. Schumer said in an interview. The card, he said, would
directly answer concerns that after legislation is signed, another
wave of illegal immigrants would arrive. “If you say they can’t get a
job when they come here, you’ll stop it.”

The biggest objections to the biometric cards may come from privacy
advocates, who fear they would become de facto national ID cards that
enable the government to track citizens.

“It is fundamentally a massive invasion of people’s privacy,” said
Chris Calabrese, legislative counsel for the American Civil Liberties
Union. “We’re not only talking about fingerprinting every American,
treating ordinary Americans like criminals in order to work. We’re
also talking about a card that would quickly spread from work to
voting to travel to pretty much every aspect of American life that
requires identification.”

Mr. Graham says he respects those concerns but disagrees. “We’ve all
got Social Security cards,” he said. “They’re just easily tampered
with. Make them tamper-proof. That’s all I’m saying.”

U.S. employers now have the option of using an online system called
E-Verify to check whether potential employees are in the U.S.
legally. Many Republicans have pressed to make the system mandatory.
But others, including Mr. Schumer, complain that the existing system
is ineffective.

Last year, White House aides said they expected to push immigration
legislation in 2010. But with health care and unemployment dominating
his attention, the president has given little indication the issue is
a priority.

Rather, Mr. Obama has said he wanted to see bipartisan support in
Congress first. So far, Mr. Graham is the only Republican to voice
interest publicly, and he wants at least one other GOP co-sponsor to
launch the effort.

An immigration overhaul has long proven a complicated political task.
The Latino community is pressing for action and will be angry if it is
put off again. But many Americans oppose any measure that resembles
amnesty for people who came here illegally.

Under the legislation envisioned by Messrs. Graham and Schumer, the
estimated 10.8 million people living illegally in the U.S. would be
offered a path to citizenship, though they would have to register, pay
taxes, pay a fine and wait in line. A guest-worker program would let
a set number of new foreigners come to the U.S. legally to work.

Most European countries require citizens and foreigners to carry ID
cards. The U.K. had been a holdout, but in the early 2000’s it
considered national cards as a way to stop identify fraud, protect
against terrorism and help stop illegal foreign workers. Amid worries
about the cost and complaints that the cards infringe on personal
privacy, the government said it would make them voluntary for British
citizens. They are required for foreign workers and students, and so
far about 130,000 cards have been issued.

Mr. Schumer first suggested a biometric-based employer-verification
system last summer. Since then, the idea has gained currency and is
now a centerpiece of the legislation being developed, aides said.

A person familiar with the legislative planning said the biometric
data would likely be either fingerprints or a scan of the veins in the
top of the hand. It would be required of all workers, including
teenagers, but would be phased in, with current workers needing to
obtain the card only when they next changed jobs, the person said.

The card requirement also would be phased in among employers,
beginning with industries that typically rely on illegal-immigrant
labor.

The U.S. Chamber of Commerce doesn’t have a position on the proposal,
but it is concerned that employers would find it expensive and
complicated to properly check the biometrics.

Mr. Schumer said employers would be able to buy a scanner to check the
IDs for as much as $800. Small employers, he said, could take their
applicants to a government office to like the Department of Motor
Vehicles and have their hands scanned there.
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Good News

Whistleblower Site Back After Microsoft Withdraws Complaint
- Ryan Singel

Cryptome, the secret-document-spilling site, is back online Thursday,
after Microsoft withdrew a copyright complaint that shuttered the site
the day before. Microsoft’s efforts to suppress a document about how
to subpoena online user data backfired, leading instead to widespread
attention to (and republication of) the document it tried to suppress.

Microsoft did not apologize in its Thursday statement, and defended
its use of copyright law to keep its law enforcement manual private.

Like all service providers, Microsoft must respond to lawful requests
from law enforcement agencies to provide information related to
criminal investigations. We take our responsibility to protect our
customers privacy very seriously, so have specific guidelines that we
use when responding to law enforcement requests. In this case, we did
not ask that this site be taken down, only that Microsoft copyrighted
content be removed.  We are requesting to have the site restored and
are no longer seeking the document’s removal.

Cryptome’s proprietor John Young published the 22-page document
earlier this week. leading Microsoft to take legal action Tuesday.
The document, which contains no trade secrets, advises law enforcement
how to file subpoenas outlines what data Microsoft keeps on
users of its online services such as Xbox Live and Hotmail, and
explains how to parse the resulting user data.

Cryptome’s hosting provider, Network Solutions, chose to shutter the
entire site and lock down the domain name, even before the Thursday
deadline for Young to remove the document. Under the Digital
Millennium Copyright Act, a U.S.-based host is immune to liability if
it makes sure the allegedly offending content is taken down during the
time that a counter-claim is being considered in court.

Similar manuals from other large service providers such as Yahoo and
Facebook have also been leaked and published online recently. Yahoo
also tried unsuccessfully to use the DMCA to suppress its document.
However, there is a clear news value to publishing such documents,
even if they’re copyrighted.

Microsoft took nearly 24 hours to respond to an inquiry for comment,
losing the opportunity to quickly leapfrog to the forefront of
transparency by understanding that such documents need not, and
should not, be hidden from users (with the possible exception of the
law enforcement hotline number).

Cox Communications, which runs the nation’s third largest ISP, has
long made its law enforcement subpoena page, including prices
public.

But Microsoft, Google, Facebook and Yahoo do not follow that example,
even though all of them want their users to trust them with their most
sensitive data and communications. Nor do any of them publish the
most basic statistics on how often law enforcement comes knocking with
subpoenas and warrants.

In fact, the simplest lesson here is that none of the pixels published
over this incident would have been necessary if Microsoft had just
published this document in the first place, which few people would
have ever bothered to go read. Instead, these companies prefer to
worry about the sensitivities of corporate-ass-covering lawyers and
law enforcement agencies instead of putting their users and
transparency first.
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

*** You Could Now Be Arrested, In America, Just For Mentioning
Europe’s Problems Over Dinner
- Vincent Fernando, Business Insider

You know a company/country/continent is in trouble when authorities
start cracking down on short bets against it.

That’s why it’s so disturbing how much heat European currency and
sovereign debt speculators are getting these days.

Even the U.S. has climbed aboard the bandwagon now.

Reports of a U.S. Justice Department investigation into Soros Fund
Management, SAC, and Greenlight Capital short positions against the
euro broke last week.

Yet now the speculator clamp down is evolving into something
completely terrifying. Apparently, it could now be considered
collusion if you simply share economic opinions over dinner:

WSJ:

The Journal article disclosed that the big euro bets were emerging
amid gatherings including an “idea dinner” involving a number of hedge
funds including SAC, Greenlight and Soros, where a trader argued that
the euro is likely to fall to “parity,” or equal to, against the
dollar on an exchange basis. The euro currently trades at $1.3609.
One of the questions investigators are likely to examine is whether
such information-sharing constitutes collusion, the people say.

At one such gathering, a dinner on Feb. 8 at a Manhattan restaurant,
an SAC portfolio manager said he believed the euro could fall to a
level equal to that of the dollar and urged other traders to “short,”
or bet against, the euro as his firm had, according to people at the
dinner. The size of the bets against the euro is unclear.

In a research note issued to hundreds of hedge-fund clients shortly
after the dinner, the research boutique that hosted the event summed
up the SAC manager’s argument without mentioning his name. [But
attributing it to an unnamed third party source, 'a presenter', which
is standard practice]

One of the most dangerous misconceptions used to restrict economic
freedoms is that opinions have more weight than fundamentals.  Should
we arrest people for threatening ‘economic stability’ if they argue
against a particular stimulus bill or government and then collectively
vote against it?

Because that’s all euro-shorts are doing. Whoever thinks that euro
speculators are pushing the euro to unfairly low levels has an
opportunity to vote against them any day of the week in the currency
markets.  So let’s not forget that a truly viable currency can carry
the weight of open criticism, just like a strong nation or
value-system can. Else traders better brush up on their Orwellian
double speak.
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Bad News

Air travellers to pay for security equipment with fee hikes
- Toronto Star

Ottawa –  Airline passengers are getting hit with fee hikes to pay for
tens of millions in new security equipment at Canadian airports.

Transport Minister John Baird announced Thursday that the security fee
was going up to cover the cost of extra security screeners and
scanners.

Fees now range from $5 to $16, depending on the length of a flight and
its destination.

The cost of the fee on a one-way domestic ticket will rise by $2.58;
for a trans-border ticket it rises $4.37 and $8.91 on an international
ticket.
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

*** Spy chips hidden in 2.5 MILLION dustbins: 60pc rise in electronic
bugs as council snoopers plan pay-as-you-throw tax
- UK Daily Mail

The growing threat of a stealth tax on the rubbish we throw away was
exposed by startling figures yesterday.

More than 2.5 million homes now have wheelie bins fitted with
microchips to weigh their contents.

This is an increase of nearly two-thirds in just a year. The bins,
which can be electronically identified and weighed, are designed for
‘pay-as-you-throw’ rubbish tax schemes.

Stealth tax: 2,629,052 homes have now been given bins with chips Under
such schemes – which are likely to be hugely unpopular – families who
put out more waste will pay higher taxes to their local council.

Disclosure of the rapid spread of chipped bins followed the
announcement this week of the first council to bring in a bin tax.
Bristol City is presenting its scheme as a reward for recyclers, with
cash payments to homes that leave out less rubbish.

The spread of chipped bins marks the revival of a tax idea that the
Government appeared to have abandoned last year.

Gordon Brown promised to ditch bin taxes in the spring of 2008, at a
point when the unpopularity among voters of fortnightly collections,
strict bin rules, and the threat of pay-as-you-throw was at its
height.

In January last year, ministers acknowledged that not one council had
applied to test pay-as-you-throw schemes.

But yesterday, research by the Big Brother Watch campaign group showed
that the use of chipped bins has quietly spread over the past year.

In March 2009, a survey based on Freedom of Information inquiries
showed there were 42 councils which used bins with microchips.  But
the latest check, also based on FOI requests, put the number of
authorities with electronic bins at 68 – one in five of all those that
collect household rubbish.

According to the responses from town halls, 2,629,052 homes have now
been given bins with chips.

Alex Deane of Big Brother Watch, said: ‘The number of local councils
placing microchips in bins is increasing, despite the fact that only
one of them has volunteered to trial the Government’s pay-as-you-throw
scheme.

‘Councils are waiting until the public aren’t watching to begin
surveillance on our waste habits, intruding into people’s private
lives and introducing punitive taxes on what we throw away. The
British public doesn’t want this technology, these fines, or this
intrusion.

‘If local authorities have no intention to monitor our waste then they
should end the surreptitious installation of these bin microchips.’

The campaign group complained that the bins allow councils to examine
household rubbish and sell the information to commercial concerns as
well as to impose taxes.

It also warned that collection of data from chipped bins could show
when households were on holiday, opening the way to abuse by
criminals.

The Local Government Association said that microchips were only put in
bins to improve services to the public, for example by helping the
elderly.

A spokesman said: ‘Microchips simply identify the house to which a bin
belongs, they do not mean councils can analyse what people are
throwing away or issue fines. ‘Putting microchips in people’s bins
can allow councils to provide people with a better service that costs
less.

‘If an elderly resident needs help getting their bin collected and
returned, a microchip quickly flags it up to the refuse collector,
saving time and money.’

However, using a microchip to identify a bin means that technology on
a dustcart can then weigh it and the information can be used to
prepare a tax bill.

Tories said they believed there were even more than 2.6million homes
equipped with microchipped bins, numbers of which have been
notoriously hard to track in recent years.

Tory local government spokesman Caroline Spelman said: ‘Labour
Ministers are secretly planning to roll out bin taxes across the
country after the election if Gordon Brown can cling to power.

‘The Government have already forced through bin tax laws and have been
funding the bin technology to collect the taxes.’

A spokesman for the Department of Environment, Food and Rural Affairs
said: ‘There are no Government plans to introduce microchips in bins.

‘Any use of microchips is a local authority decision – some councils
use them to monitor levels of waste. This is not about spying on
people or fining them.’

However, in 2008 nearly 100 councils ran investigations into the
contents of their residents’ bins, in some cases to check on what
rubbish they dump and in others to try to obtain information on their
incomes and lifestyles.
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Food for thought

Don’t like giving out SSN’s? Fox Business News says “make up an
SSN”
tips_and_tricks@yahoogroups.com

In my opinion 9 digits are 9 digits. Assigning them the LABEL “Social
security Number” converts them from 9 digits to a number owned by and
assigned by government. On most forms the words “Social Security
Number” are NOT spelled-out but rather abbreviated. In such cases
“SSN” could mean literally ANYTHING you desire. For example:
safe-secure number, sam sovereign number, sucker stop number, etc.

When you should, shouldn’t give out your Social Security number

CreditCards.com

Your Social Security number is one of the keys to your financial
health. It’s a unique indentifier lenders use to assess your
creditworthiness. It’s also exactly what a would-be thief needs to
apply for a credit card, mortgage, car loan or job in your name.

If you’re like most Americans, it’s also something you give out all
too frequently

“As with so many procedures in the business world, your Social
Security number is something that many companies ask for, so no one
really questions it,” says James Van Dyke, president of Javelin
Strategy & Research, a research firm that tracks financial services
topics. “But giving out your Social Security number is definitely a
practice consumers should think twice about.”

Case in point: A recent Javelin Strategy & Research report — the 2009
ID Fraud Survey — found that, among
<http://www.creditcards.com/credit-card-news/help/10-things-you-should-know-about-identity-theft-6000.php?aid=52aae854> identity theft victims, 38
percent said the perpetrator had obtained their Social Security number
and used it in the crime. “It’s certainly logical to say that you
could eliminate 38 percent of your risk of identity theft by limiting
access to your Social Security number,” says Van Dyke.

‘Your Social Security number, please’ Still, saying it and doing it
are two different things. Many of the forms you encounter during the
day — at doctor’s offices, at the dentist, at your child’s school –
ask for Social Security numbers. Retailers may ask for it, too, when
accepting a check for payment or before issuing check cashing
privileges. Potential employers also need it, and they may even want
a copy of the actual card, says Linda Foley, founder of the San
Diego-based Identity Theft Resource Center

You’ll also be asked for it at your local Department of Motor Vehicles,
car dealerships, pawnshops, drugstores — even at the airport, should
you lose your luggage, she says. In fact, you may be surprised at how
far-reaching this practice is, says Foley.

“A few years ago, we were putting some of my mother’s things into
storage, and they wanted her Social Security number to use as a
passcode,” she says. “It’s that prevalent.”

Just because someone asks for it doesn’t mean you have to comply, says
Michael J. Arata, the author of “Identity Theft For Dummies,”
especially since there are only a handful of organizations that
actually have a valid need for it. For instance, anytime you’re
applying for credit — for a new
<http://www.creditcards.com/balance-transfer.php?aid=52aae854> credit
card, a loan, new telephone or cellular service — the creditor will
need your Social Security number to run a credit check. You’ll also
need to provide it if you are applying for federal or local government
benefits such as Social Security, Medicare or Medicaid, unemployment
insurance or disability. Another example: If you or your children
receive services or aid at the state or local level, such as free or
reduced fee lunch or financial aid. The local motor vehicle
department, thanks to the USA PATRIOT Act, has the legal right to ask
for Social Security numbers, too. In addition, when you complete a
cash transaction totaling more than $10,000 you’ll be required to
provide your number so that transaction can be reported to the
Internal Revenue Service, says ITRC’s Foley.

Medical professionals have their own impetus, says the ITRC’s Foley.
“The reason a doctor or a dentist asks for your Social Security number
is that, should you die while under his or her care, they are required
to put your Social Security number on the death certificate,” says
Foley.

Even so, fulfilling non-credit-related requests — even medical-related
requests — is purely optional, says L. Jean Camp, an associate professor
at Indiana University and the author of “Economics of Identity Theft.”

“The problem is that you have the right to say that you’re not going to
give out your Social Security number, but a business owner has the right
to say he’s not going to do business with you,” says Camp.

“Most companies aren’t being malicious. They’re just being cautious by
giving themselves a way to track you down if you don’t pay a bill.”

Gracefully saying ‘No’ One of the best ways to get out of giving your
Social Security number to someone is to simply overlook it on your
paperwork, says Arata. You may get by without a confrontation. If
you’re questioned, however, ITRC’s Foley suggests being proactive.
“The most basic thing you can do is ask the person or organization why
they need it. One of the most powerful things you can say is, ‘Is
there a law or requirement that I must provide it to you, and can you
tell me what it is?’ You can also ask the person requesting your
Social what will happen if you don’t disclose it,” she says.

Often, as in the case of a school or a charitable organization, they
simply want it to use your number as a unique identifier. In that
case, says Javelin Strategy & Research’s Van Dyke, you’ll need to
start negotiating again. “Say, ‘In order for me to become your
customer, I really need you to find an alternative recordkeeping
method because I know giving out my Social Security number places me
at great risk.’ When you say it like that you may get better
results,” he says.

Even doctor or dentist offices should be willing to forgo your Social
Security number — especially if you have health insurance. And if
they won’t? Ask to give your information directly to the doctor and
have him or her input it into the system for you, says Van Dyke.
ITRC’s Foley says most medical offices may also feel comfortable
without it as long as they have an emergency contact on file –
someone who knows your Social Security number and could provide it in
the event of death.

And what of the worst case scenario — when you absolutely can’t get
out of it, but you still don’t feel comfortable? You can always make
up a number, says Camp, but if you do, make sure you write it down and
don’t inadvertently steal someone else’s identity. “If you go this
route as a last resort, make sure you put zeros in for the two middle
numbers,” she says. “There are no Social Security numbers that have
double zeros in that section.”

<http://www.foxbusiness.com/story/personal-finance/shouldnt-social-security-number/?utm_source=feedburner>
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

*** Police State

11 More U.S. Airports Get Body Scanners
- David Kravets

Transportation officials announced Friday 11 more United States
airports will begin receiving full-body imaging machines

“By accelerating the deployment of this technology, we are enhancing
our capability to detect and disrupt threats of terrorism across the
nation,” Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano said in a
statement.

Despite concerns of privacy and their effectiveness, the 11 airports
are to get the 150 machines beginning Monday at Boston’s Logan
International Airport, and one at the O’Hare International Airport in
Chicago. In all, 30 U.S. airports will employ the scanning devices.

Fliers declining to submit to the machines that create X-ray-like
virtual images of the body may get intense pat-downs from
Transportation Security Administration authorities. The combined 150
imaging machines are being bought, in part, by $1 billion the
government set aside from its $787 billion federal bailout bill.

The American Civil Liberties Union has decried the scanners as
“virtual strip searchs.” The Electronic Privacy Information Center,
in a Freedom of Information Act request, said the machines are capable
of storing and transmitting images of passengers despite the
government’s claim to the contrary.

A test-image shown to reporters Friday at Logan International “showed
the blurry outline of a female volunteer. None of her clothing was
visible, nor were her genitals, but the broad contours of her chest
and buttocks were. Her face also was blurred,” The Associated Press
said. “The image included the shadow of a cellphone purposely left on
her belt, as well as the metal buttons on her pants. But overall, it
looked like the outline of a ghost.”

The Amsterdam airport where suspected underwear bomber Umar Farouk
Abdulmutallab boarded a Detroit-bound Christmas flight had the
scanning machines. But they were not used to check the Nigerian.

The machines also cannot detect so-called “booty bombs” in which an
explosive is inserted into the body.

By summer, TSA expects the units, made by California-based Rapiscan,
to be deployed at airports in Fort Lauderdale, Florida; San Jose, San
Diego, Los Angeles and Oakland, California; Columbus, Ohio; Charlotte,
North Carolina; Cincinnati; and Kansas City.
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Horror Stories

‘I’m an IT worker not an assassin’
- John Leyden

An Israel-resident British IT worker has reacted with horror to news
that a suspected member of an alleged hit squad used a passport with
his details to enter Dubai, before allegedly participating in the
assassination of a prominent Hamas official.

UAE authorities reckon 11 “agents with European passports”
participated in the murder of Mahmoud Al-Mabhouh in his hotel room on
19 January. The suspects used six British and three Irish passports
while two others used French and German travel documents, all of which
are thought to be counterfeit.

Melvyn Mildiner – a British national and IT worker who emigrated to
Israel nine years ago – was among the individuals whose identity was
snatched. Midiner told the Jerusalem Post that he was in bed with
pneumonia at the time of the alleged hit.

Mildiner, 31, said the photo of a suspect issued by Dubai authorities
looks nothing like him.

“First, clearly it isn’t me. It doesn’t look like me,” he said. “The
details are not correct. The date of birth is wrong. I’ve never been
to Dubai. Someone, somewhere decided to use my identity.”

The Daily Mail reports Mildiner was left “angry, upset and scared”
over his “misidentification” as a possible suspect. “I have my
passport. It is in my house, along with the passports of everybody
else in my family, and there’s no Dubai stamps in it because I’ve
never been to Dubai,” he said.

The Mail adds that Mildiner used Twitter to pose queries about iPhone
application related queries on the day of Al-Mabhouh’s murder. This
unnamed Twitter account has since been protected.

Another Brit, Paul Keeley, 42, who has lived in a kibbutz for the last
15 years, said he had not left Israel for the last two years. “When I
first heard about this, I immediately looked to make sure my passport
was still there and it was,” he said.

Michael Barney, 54, a third impersonated Brit, told the Daily Mail
that he’d had a quadruple heart bypass and was therefore hardly spy
material.

The UK’s Foreign and Commonwealth Office has launched an
investigation, adding “we believe the passports used were fraudulent.”
A spokesman for Ireland’s Department of Foreign Affairs told the BBC
that it was unable to identify any of the three named Irish-passport
holding suspects named by Dubai authorities as “being genuine Irish
citizens”. French authorities say the same thing about the suspect
travelling on French papers while German authorities said the passport
number supplied to them was either incomplete or wrong.

Al-Mabhouh, 49, who flew in from Syria to Dubai to allegedly buy
weapons, was killed by suffocation in a professional hit blamed by
Hamas on Israeli agents. The veteran militant was a founding member
of Hamas’ military wing, and suspected as acting as a conduit for arms
shipments between Iran and Arab militants in Gaza. He had reportedly
survived three previous assassination attempts.

Police in Dubai have released CCTV footage of suspected members of the
hit squad (10 men and one woman), some of who were allegedly wearing
disguises, and all of who stayed in the Gulf only one day before
flying out to destinations in Europe and Asia. CNN has a detailed
description of how Mabhouh’s assassination is reckoned to have taken
place here.

Israeli authorities have not responded to reports pointing the finger
of blame towards Mossad, its feared and highly capable intelligence
agency.

If Israeli agents were indeed responsible for the hit then this would
be far from the first time Mossad agents have used Western passports
on murderous missions, Reuters reports. Israeli agents used forged
Canadian passports to enter Jordan in 1997 in a failed attempt to
poison Hamas leader Khaled Meshaal, for example.

British authorities received an assurance from Israel it would not use
forged British travel documents following a diplomatic protest in
1987, the news agency adds.
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

*** The District of Criminals

Ron Paul on the Totalitarian ID Card

The US House of Representatives passed a spending bill last week that
contains provisions establishing a national ID card, and the Senate is
poised to approve the measure in the next few days. This week marks
the American public’s last chance to convince their Senators they
don’t want to live in a nation that demands papers from its citizens
as they go about their lives.

<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UjjTenSDTGM&feature=player_embedded>
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

*** ID cards: the first year report
- The Register

Sir Joseph Pilling, the ID commissioner who oversees the ID card
scheme, said he is generally satisfied with progress after the first
year but it was too soon to give it a clean bill of health.

In a 28-page report presented to Parliament yesterday by Home
Secretary Alan Johnson Pilling said: “my initial reaction is to be
reassured rather than alarmed. A lot of work remains to be done and
some tricky issues are not yet resolved.” He said his early
impression was that the Identity and Passport Service was doing “a
pretty good job”.

He said: “More than in most places in Government staff understand why
security needs to be taken seriously.” Pilling has worked for the
Home Office since 1966.

Pilling has previously expressed concerns about the decision to move
from a temporary system to a longer-term one in 2012, assuming the
project survives the election.

Pilling said: “If I become concerned about any aspect of the NIS I
will not hesitate to write to the Home Secretary immediately. He, of
course, would then have to pass the report on to Parliament.”

He also said he had written twice to NO2ID and would have welcomed a
chance to meet them, he has also discussed his work with shadow Home
Secretary Damian Green.

He also noted that Manchester and London City airports had still to
sign formal agreements on data sharing.

Pilling has also met Sir Peter Gibson, Intelligence Services
Commissioner, who oversees use of the National Identity Register by
spooks.

He has a budget of GBP565,000 for setting up his office and running it
until March 2010.
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Hot Tips

Is America Becoming A Police State?
- Chuck Baldwin

There is a classic story about how no one had been able to capture a
herd of wild hogs that was rooting up crops from numerous farms.  It
got so bad that rewards had been posted for anyone clever enough to
corral the critters. But even this resulted in only limited success.

One day a stranger (who was a wily old trapper) came into town
and entering the general store ordered a truckload of fence posts and
fencing, along with some feed. When asked what he was going to use it
for, he said, “I’m going to get those wild hogs y’all are having
trouble with.” Of course, everyone in the store laughed at the
overconfident stranger. A few weeks later, however, the stranger rode
into town with the back of his truck tightly packed with the smelly
swine.

When asked how he was able to accomplish what no one else had been
able to do, the old trapper replied, ‘Simple. I started putting the
feed out in a small clearing and the hogs began freely eating the
feed.  It didn’t take long and they were there every day. Then I put
up the fence posts, but with no fencing. At first the hogs were a
little skittish, but it wasn’t long and they ignored the posts. Then
I began putting the fence up, but I left the gate off. Again, the
hogs were skittish at first, but soon realized they could come and go
freely, and before long, they were devouring the free food with a
vengeance. Then, one day when the hogs were aggressively consuming
the vittles, I slammed the gate closed.”

Ladies and gentlemen, I submit that what the old trapper did to the
wild hogs is exactly what our soon-to-be oppressors are doing to us!
What is worse, most Americans seem about as oblivious to the whole
thing as that bunch of pigs. For anyone who is paying attention,
however, the signs of growing enslavement are everywhere.

Inside my web site is a link page that is constantly updated with
pertinent information relating to how America is quickly being turned
into Huxley’s Brave New World. I invite readers to regularly visit
this page. It is entitled ‘The Emerging Police State.”

See the web page at: http://www.chuckbaldwinlive.com/patriotact.html
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

*** Advisory

Lawmakers Punt Patriot Act to Obama
- David Kravets

Congress is sending President Barack Obama legislation that extends
three provisions of the Patriot Act, despite heated debate among
lawmakers that the surveillance measure goes too far.

The act, hastily adopted six weeks after the 2001 terror attacks,
greatly expands the government’s ability to spy on Americans in the
name of national security. Three measures of the act were set to
expire at the end of 2009, but in December lawmakers extended the
deadline to the end of February in hopes of reaching a compromise.

But no deal was reached by the end of the new Feb. 28 deadline.
Instead, the Senate and House of Representatives ditched their two
conflicting measures and extended the Patriot Act for another year
without any changes. The final package was sent to the president
Thursday for his expected signature.

Lawmakers had taken the expiration as an opportunity to revisit a
number of the act’s surveillance provisions, including elements of the
Patriot Act that were not expiring. This included proposals to alter
the standard by which so-called National Security Letters are issued.

The letters allow the FBI, without a court order, to obtain
telecommunication, financial and credit records relevant to a
government investigation. The FBI issues about 50,000 NSLs annually,
and an internal watchdog has found repeated abuses of the NSL powers.

At one point last year, reforming the NSL took center stage during
vigorous debate in committee hearings. The Senate had moved to make
it more difficult for the FBI to issue NSLs, but caved after the
administration argued NSLs were assisting the fight against terrorism.
A House version granted the public greater protections.

The status quo, however, prevailed this week and the NSL structure was
left intact, as were the three expiring provisions. They were
extended on a 315-97 House vote Thursday and by a Senate voice vote
the day before.

The three extended Patriot Act provisions are:

* The “roving wiretap” provision allows the FBI to obtain wiretaps
from a secret intelligence court, known as the FISA court, without
identifying the target or what method of communication is to be
tapped.
* The “lone wolf” measure allows FISA court warrants for the
electronic monitoring of a person for whatever reason, even without
showing that the suspect is an agent of a foreign power or a
terrorist. The government has said it has never invoked that
provision, but the Obama administration said it wanted to retain the
authority to do so.
* The “business records” provision allows FISA court warrants for any
type of record, from banking to library to medical, without the government
having to declare that the information sought is connected to a terrorism
or espionage investigation.
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

*** Brits, Who Already Pay 17.5% VAT, Face New Tax On Food
- London Telegraph

The imposition of VAT on groceries is being actively considered by
Whitehall officials as a radical means of reducing the national
deficit.

The feasibility of introducing the food tax is being raised informally
between civil servants, industry bodies and retail insiders.

So politically-sensitive is the move that all the talks are occurring
“under the radar”, according to retail industry insiders.

Basic supermarket groceries are currently immune from VAT, along with
books, newspapers and children’s clothes.

However a VAT levy on food of between three and five per cent would
raise billions of pounds in tax and help reduce Government borrowings,
which are expected to hit GBP 180 billion this year.

Shamrock’s comment: “We’re going to keep on taxing, taxing and taxing
until the pip squeaks.” – Franklin Roosevelt, US President
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

*** The Love Police: How To Escape A Terror STOP!

Watch the video at
<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r9bfmW3iMqk&feature=player_embedded>
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Dumbing Down

Internet access is ‘a fundamental right’
- BBC

Almost four in five people around the world believe that access to the
internet is a fundamental right, a poll for the BBC World Service
suggests.

The survey, of more than 27,000 adults across 26 countries, found
strong support for net access on both sides of the digital divide.

Countries such as Finland and Estonia have already ruled that access
is a human right for their citizens.

International bodies such as the UN are also pushing for universal net
access.

“The right to communicate cannot be ignored,” Dr Hamadoun Toure,
secretary-general of the International Telecommunication Union (ITU),
told BBC News.

“The internet is the most powerful potential source of enlightenment
ever created.”

He said that governments must “regard the internet as basic
infrastructure, just like roads, waste and water”.
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Dumb signs

Dad Branded A Paedophile Over Pic Of Son

A man who took a picture of his son while they were out shopping was
accused of being a paedophile and threatened with arrest.
- Sky News Online

A man who took a picture of his son while they were out shopping was
accused of being a paedophile and threatened with arrest. Kevin
Geraghty-Shewan had taken four-year-old Ben to the Bridges Shopping
Centre in Sunderland to spend GBP10 the boy had been given as a treat.

He told Sky News: “Ben spotted a children’s ride which had a train on
it and wanted to have a go because he’s obsessed with trains. “When
he got on my wife suggested we take a picture of him.”

“I took the picture on my phone and suddenly this security guard came
up and told me it wasn’t allowed because I could be a paedophile.”

“I told him Ben was my own son. But he said I couldn’t prove it. He
said there is a real problem with paedophiles and that if I didn’t
like it, he’d call the manager.”

“A few minutes later a policeman walked in and approached me, so they
must have been tracking me on the CCTV.”

“He said he’d received a complaint that a man matching my description
was taking pictures of children and wanted my name and address.

“I told him it was ridiculous because it was my own son. He then
started asking me what I was doing in Sunderland, asked for my name
and address and told me he had the right to delete my pictures.

“I got annoyed and raised my voice a bit, then he threatened me with
arrest for breach of the peace.”

Mr Geraghty-Shewan was so outraged by the incident, he posted a
picture of the security guarde on his website.

When contacted by Sky News the Bridges said in a statement: “We take
the safety at all our shopping centres very seriously.

“We do ask our security guards across the estate to be diligent in
implementing our security measures, which includes monitoring
photography in our centres.

“Unfortunately on this occasion what should have been a simple polite
conversation led to a misunderstanding and we apologise for any
offence caused.

“It is always our aim to implement our security procedures with the
minimum of fuss and disruption to our shoppers.”

Shamrock’s Comment: The dumbing down continues!
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Dumb facts

Flipping Off Cops Is Legal, Not Advised
- David Kravets

Flipping the bird, or sticking out the middle finger, is perhaps the
oldest insulting gesture on earth. The move dates back to ancient
Greece and was adopted by the Romans as digitus impudicus, the
impudent finger.

A zillion middle fingers later, an Oregon man is suing suburban
Portland cops over his use of the gesture, claiming civil rights
violations. Twice he flipped them off for no apparent reason while
driving and was pulled over each time, resulting in what he said was
a “bogus” traffic citation that was later dismissed, and a tongue
lashing he still remembers.

“The guy flew into a road rage,” Robert Ekas, a retired Silicon Valley
systems analyst, said in a telephone interview Tuesday.

Lawrence Wolf, a Los Angeles criminal defense attorney, said there was
no law against flipping off cops. And in most instances when it leads
to an arrest or conviction, the charges are dismissed. But the
gesture invites police confrontation, he said.

“It’s certainly not the smartest thing one can do,” Wolf said.

American University legal scholar Ira Robbins has written a definitive
paper on flipping the bird: “Digitus Impudicus: The Middle Finger and
the Law.”

“The pursuit of criminal sanctions for use of the middle finger
infringes on First Amendment rights, violates fundamental principles
of criminal justice, wastes valuable judicial resources, and defies
good sense,” Robbins wrote.

In November, a Pittsburgh man was awarded $50,000 after he was wrongly
cited for disorderly conduct after flipping off an officer.

Ekas, in both instances, flipped off officers while they were driving
a Clackamas County patrol car. “It seemed like the right thing to
do,” said the 46-year-old, who is seeking damages and police reform
amid allegations he was unlawfully stopped. “The long and the short
of it, I was pulled over because I gave them the finger.”

A federal judge will entertain Clackamas County’s motion on March 15
to have the civil rights lawsuit tossed. The county denies the
allegations.

Ekas said his actions, which occurred with his teen-aged son in the
car both times, were a form of protest against the agency he claims is
abusing its citizenry. “That’s why they get the finger,” he said,
noting he wants a jury trial.

Wolf, meanwhile, suggested if Ekas’ case makes it to trial, the
officers are likely to testify that they were concerned “about his
sanity.”

The jury, he said, is likely to say, ‘Give me a break’ and then go
home.”
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

*** Dumb criminal acts

The DNA of a Police State
- SkyNews

Gordon Brown wants to expand the government-operated DNA database in
the UK.

Brown notes that the DNA database has helped to effectively prosecute
offending criminals. As with any technological development, such a
tool can be used for good or for ill. The problem lies not in the use
of the technology itself, but in the strong-armed monopoly of force
wielding the power; aka the government.

A free-market based on voluntary endorsement and association would be
most effective at regulating against unjustifiable usages of
technology. Any breach of contract in such a circumstance would be
much less devastating to the overall welfare of the populace, due to
the dynamic nature of a competitive economy. A forceful monopoly
offers no such refuge.  -
<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uUPlzxBDd1Y&feature=player_embedded>
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Cannon Fodder

Hundreds more town hall staff to get police-style powers

Hundreds more town hall staff and private security guards are to be
handed police-style powers in a fresh Home Office drive to create an
army of civilian “spies”.
Telegraph.co.uk

Almost 1,700 people, also including car park attendants and dog
wardens, already have powers to hand out a string of fines and even
take photographs of low level offenders under the Community Safety
Accreditation Scheme.

But the Government has quietly announced it plans to review the scheme
with chief police officers to see how it can be expanded further.

Even chief constables are now cautious over the scheme following it’s
rapid growth, which has seen numbers increase by a fifth in just 12
months.

It will further fuel concerns that, with increasing budget pressures,
the Government is keen to push for policing on the cheap.

Under CSAS, a chief constable can give employees of local authorities
or private companies limited powers such as the right to hand out
on-the-spot fines for offences including disorder, truancy and
littering; stopping vehicles for roadside tests and confiscating
alcohol.

They have their own uniform and badge and can demand names and
addresses as well as take photographs of offenders.

There are 1,667 so-called “accredited persons” in England and Wales
with 109 organisations, including 31 private companies, involved
across 26 forces.

A further 478 civilians have been given the power to stop vehicles to
check for out-of-date tax discs.

But a section buried in a recent Home Office neighbourhood policing
strategy document read: “The Community Safety Accreditation Scheme
(CSAS) is a powerful way for the police to work with partners and to
make the most out of other people whose job is to keep their
neighbourhoods safe by giving them a limited range of powers to tackle
ASB (anti-social behaviour).

“The Government and ACPO (Association of Chief Police Officer) will
review CSAS to see how it can be expanded to more forces and
organisations.”

The review is to be carried out this summer but Peter Davies,
Nottinghamshire assistant chief constable and ACPO lead on CSAS, said:
“Accredited persons do play a part in building safe and secure
neighbourhoods.

“However, their role must remain distinct from that of police officers
whose task is to uphold and enforce the law, tackling all forms of
harm to the public and communities.”

The move also raises fresh fears over the future of policing,
especially with chief officers under pressure to cut costs. There are
already more than 16,000 police community support officers and now a
growing number of accredited civilians.

Simon Reed, the vice-chairman of the Police Federation, said: “It is
just growing out of control. The growth rates are phenomenal.

“It is blurring the lines between police as the legitimate law
enforcement organisation and these pseudo agencies springing up.

“It is effectively a third tier of policing. We are having all these
police powers devolved to anyone and there does not seem to be any
boundaries to law enforcement. Where will it end?”

Dylan Sharpe, campaign director of Big Brother Watch, said: “Those
empowered by these schemes don’t have anything near the proper
training, experience or respect to try and boss around members of the
public.”

A leaked document last month suggested one in five police officers
could lose their job under cost-cutting measures.

Up to 28,000 officers would be replaced by civilian workers   saving
hundreds of millions of pounds, under suggestions put to a Workforce
Council meeting chaired by Acpo and involving the National Policing
Improvement Agency, the Home Office-funded body responsible for
finding efficiencies within the service.

The Daily Telegraph also disclosed that forces are losing thousands of
officers by freezing recruitment and replacing them with volunteer
special constables.

Three quarters of all forces have stopped taking new recruits meaning
that up to 3,200 officers could be lost nationwide over the next three
years.

David Hanson, the policing minister, said: “Police are cracking down
hard on anti-social behaviour, but beating it is not just a job for
them. We are determined to give powers to communities to help tackle
the crimes that matter most to them and the Community Safety
Accreditation Scheme is part of that drive

“It gives limited powers to people already working in community
safety, which was backed by two thirds of the public in a nationwide
survey. The scheme is yet another tool to tackle anti-social
behaviour and can help free police time to tackle serious crime and
protect the public.”

Shamrock’s comment: This alarming trend continues full steam ahead!
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Oz Corner:

Ex-pats rate Oz the best place to raise kids, UK scores ‘poorly’: HSBC
In’tl survey
- international-adviser

Expatriates say Australia is one of the best places to raise children
if one is living abroad, and that the UK is among the least agreeable
and most expensive, according to an HSBC Bank International report
released today.
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Bug Bites:

Spy chips hidden in 2.5 million dustbins: 60pc rise in electronic bugs
as council snoopers plan pay-as-you-throw tax
- UK Daily Mail

The growing threat of a stealth tax on the rubbish we throw away was
exposed by startling figures yesterday.

More than 2.5 million homes now have wheelie bins fitted with
microchips to weigh their contents.

This is an increase of nearly two-thirds in just a year. The bins,
which can be electronically identified and weighed, are designed for
‘pay-as-you-throw’ rubbish tax schemes.

Under such schemes – which are likely to be hugely unpopular -
families who put out more waste will pay higher taxes to their local
council.

Disclosure of the rapid spread of chipped bins followed the
announcement this week of the first council to bring in a bin tax.
Bristol City is presenting its scheme as a reward for recyclers, with
cash payments to homes that leave out less rubbish.

The spread of chipped bins marks the revival of a tax idea that the
Government appeared to have abandoned last year.
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

*** Red Hot Product!

Anonymous NO NAME NO ID Debit Card with a US$70,000 per month
load and cash withdrawal ability!

Our leprechaun has done it again and is proud to present this no name
NO ID totally anonymous ATM Master Card with hologram accepted
anywhere Master Card is accepted, on-line, stores, ATM’s, telephone
and mail orders etc.

This No Name NO ID Debit Card does not bear any personal details
about its holder on the card or when used from a ATM till or elsewhere.

This no name no id card is issued by a privacy friendly bank
NOT located in NORTH AMERICA that is a full member of MasterCard
and SWIFT.

The card itself has no name printed, embossed or encoded on it, so it
cannot be associated with any specific person. Card holders will have
direct access to real time card balance both on-line and by telephone
access.

Your no name no id card can be funded by USD wire transfer. Note that
this card is designated for electronic use only so it cannot be used
in manual imprinters.

This card offers you the ability to withdraw up to US$10,000 per day
and up to US$70,000 per month. There is a daily load limit of
US$2,500. In other words after 4 loads of US$2,500 each or $10,000,
you can withdraw the entire US$10,000 in one go at any hole in the
wall worldwide in total anonymity. Do this up to 7 times a month and
get up to US$70,000 in cash anywhere in the world in totally anonymity!

* ATM Withdrawal Fee      3 USD
* ATM Balance Inquiry/Transaction History 0.5 USD
* ATM Transaction Decline 0.5 USD
* Online & POS Transaction fee    1 USD
* Online & POS Decline fee        0.5 USD
* Monthly Administrative fee      3.5 USD
* Card Load Fee   15 USD
* Card to Card Transfer   2 USD
* Card Replacement Fee (if lost/stole or damaged) 25 USD
* Inactive Fee (90 days)  10 USD
* The maximum reload amount       2.500 USD
* Maximum per prepaid card a month        10.000 USD
* The minimum total to obtain from ATM    10 USD
* Minimum balance 10 USD

Limited supply available. Just Euro 995 while they last!
Only card card per customer.

Your order code is “NO Name NO ID ATM.”

To order please proceed to our secure on-line order form at
https://www.ptshamrock.com/order_bwe.html

Please indicate your preferred method of payment at the drop down
menu.

You can remit payment by Bank Wire Transfer, Money Gram,
Pecunix, Liberty Reserve or Western Union only for this produtc.

Once we receive your order, we will immediately e-mail you the
pay-in particulars.

If you wish to remit your payment in US$, please use the
Royal Bank of Canada’s exchange rate at
<http://www.rbcroyalbank.com/cgi-bin/travel/fxconvert.pl>
for the current US$ equivalent for Euro.
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Shamrock’s Missive:

People are being worked into frenzy these days about terrorism. Scare
the hell out of the people and into submission is the Terrocrats
motto.

See “Your Neighbour Is a Terrorist According to talkSport UK” at
<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GIAFHjL3ZMg&feature=player_embedded#>

Probably more important is the article we have in this issue, i.e.
“The District of Criminals – Ron Paul on the Totalitarian ID Card”

It’s imperative you watch the YouTube broadcast by Congressman Paul.
Your freedom could depend on it.

See you next issue

Shamrock

“The people never give up their liberties but under some delusion.”
- Edmund Burke, 1784

= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Quote

“I care not what others think of what I do, but I care very much about
what I think of what I do! That is character!”
- Theodore Roosevelt
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Another Quote

“Even a man who is pure in heart and says his prayers by night, may
become a wolf when the wolfbane blooms and the autumn moon is
bright…”
- Maleva, Maria Ouspenskaya from the original 1941 movie The Wolfman
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Thought provoking quotes:

“I predict future happiness for Americans if they can prevent the
government from wasting the labors of the people under the pretense
of taking care of them.”
- Thomas Jefferson
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

*** Tid Bits

Pak lawmakers refuse body scan, cut short visit to US
- Times of India

A delegation of Pakistani lawmakers refused to subject themselves to a
controversial full-body scan at a Washington airport, a media report
said on Sunday.

The six-member group of the parliament members from Pakistan’s restive
tribal region cut short their official US visit immediately to return
home, the Pakistani Express News channel said. It was the first
official delegation that refused to go through the body scanners since
they were installed at 19 US airports last month.

Abbas Afridi, the head of the delegation, said the US state department
had invited them to Washington to discuss security and development
projects in the tribal region, with a promise that they would not be
subjected to body scanning. “We were not scanned when we arrived on
March 28 in Washington from Pakistan, but on Saturday when we wanted
to travel to another city the authorities told us that we would be
scanned, said Afridi.
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

*** Bits n bobs

Paypal freezes Cryptome
- Andrew Orlowski

eBay Inc has suspended Cryptome’s PayPal account, confiscating
donations made to the site in the past two weeks. New York architect
John Young has refunded around $5,300 to donors.

Young has operated Cryptome since 1996, creating a large repository of
obscure or previously unpublished files focussing on intelligence and
internet policy. Much of it is available on DVD, sold through a
PayPal account.

Cryptome has recently published secret company guidelines for law
enforcement liaison policy from a number of well known internet
companies including Microsoft, Facebook, Skype, AOL, domain name
monopoly Network Solutions, and PayPal itself, which is owned by eBay.
On February 25 the site was taken offline in response to a DMCA
request by Microsoft.

PayPal hadn’t offered an with an explanation at press time, but we’ll
update this as soon as they do.
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

*** Disturbing facts

Two Dubai Suspects Traveled to U.S.
- New York Times

Dubai – At least two of the 26 suspects sought by Dubai police for the
alleged killing of a top Hamas leader appear to have entered the U.S.
shortly after his death, according to people familiar with the
situation.

Records shared between international investigators show that one of
the suspects entered the U.S. on Feb. 14, carrying a British
passport, according to a person familiar with the situation. The
other suspect, carrying an Irish passport, entered the U.S. on Jan.
21, according to this person. Senior Hamas leader Mahmoud
al-Mabhouh’s body was found in a Dubai hotel room on Jan. 20.

There aren’t records of either man leaving the U.S., though
investigators can’t be sure the two are still in the country,
according to this person. Since the two were traveling with what
investigators believe to be fraudulently issued passports, they may
have traveled back out of the U.S. with different, bogus travel
documents.

The suspected U.S. travel broadens to American shores the
international manhunt triggered by Dubai’s investigation into the
death of Mr. Mabhouh. Dubai police have already identified two U.S.
financial companies they believe issued and distributed several credit
cards used by 14 of the suspects in the alleged killing.

A U.S. State Department spokesman declined to comment.

A spokesman for Interpol, which is also investigating the murder,
declined to comment.

Separately, Dubai police said Sunday that forensic results showed the
drug succinylcholine in Mr. Mabhouh’s bloodstream at the time of his
death, suggesting he had been incapacitated by the muscle relaxant
before being suffocated.

United Arab Emirates authorities have sought international arrest
warrants for the 26 suspects, whom they caught on closed-circuit TV
arriving at Dubai’s airport and checking into their hotels. Some used
disguises, and two of them shared an elevator ride with their alleged
victim, according to footage released by police.

Dubai released photos, passports and travel details of the 26, all of
whom had landed in Dubai with European or Australian passports. Many
of the individuals identified by Dubai police surfaced within days.
However, they looked nothing like the photos on the passports used in
Dubai; the passport holders appeared instead to be victims of identity
fraud. Britain, France, Ireland, Germany and Australia have all said
they believe their passports were issued and used fraudulently in the
case.

Dubai’s police chief has said he is 99% certain that Israel’s Mossad
intelligence agency is behind the killing. But he hasn’t provided any
evidence. Other officials here appear more circumspect, and say Dubai
and U.A.E. officials are concentrating on identifying and
apprehending the suspects before blaming anyone.

Israeli officials have neither confirmed nor denied any involvement, a
longstanding practice. Last week, Israel’s foreign minister said
there was no proof implicating Israel.

The investigation could prove an irritant to U.S.-Israeli ties if
Mossad is implicated. European and Australian governments have called
in their Israeli ambassadors demanding answers to how their passports
were misused, though officials have stopped short of accusing Israel
of involvement.

The U.A.E. government would seek the extradition of any suspects
found in the U.S., said an Emirati official. If Israel was
implicated, the Obama administration’s relationship with that of
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu could come under further
strain. Washington and Israel have publicly sparred in recent months
on issues related to the resumption of peace talks between Israel and
the Palestinians. The Obama administration says it is continuing to
work with Israel on the possible resumption of peace talks, and U.S.
officials say they are “hopeful” that negotiations can resume shortly.

According to the person familiar with the matter, one of the suspects,
traveling with a British passport identifying him as Roy Allan Cannon,
entered the U.S. on Feb. 14. Another suspect, traveling as Irishman
Evan Dennings, entered the country on Jan. 21, a day after Mr.
Mabhouh’s body was discovered.

It wasn’t clear from where either man was traveling. Dubai
authorities have previously said the suspect traveling as Mr. Dennings
left Dubai on Jan. 20 on his way to Zurich.

Last week, the Associated Press identified a British citizen named Roy
Allan Cannon as having emigrated to Israel from Britain in 1979. His
son told the AP his father was a victim of identity theft, and that
“it’s clear that illegal use was made of personal information.” The
Irish government said last week it believed Mr. Dennings was also the
victim of identity fraud; he couldn’t be reached for comment.

Shamrock’s comment:

So much for Amerika’s anti-terrorist technology and trying to stop
terrorist and murders from entering the united States, correct
spelling. The problem is that we’re paying the price for this
kind of state sponsored terrorism at the cost of our privacy and
civil liberties.
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

*** Letters to the Editor:

Keep them postcards and letters coming’ folks, ’cause we
done mailed the rosebushes!!

Dear Shamrock:

In reference to your latest newsletter, Going to Canada? Check your
past”, is it basically a “problem” for US passport holders
only?

What if a citizen of another country, say Sweden, was
convicted of a felony crime such as smoking marijuana or DUI,
will this situation still apply? Is US the only country at this
point they share this type of information? Thanks!

PS. I am a great supporter of your mission. Actually we need more
people like you!

Swede

Dear Swede:

Thanks for the kind words.

The answer is that we don’t know. However in the event Sweden is
not currently supplying info to the US and Canada, one must
assume they will be shortly and act accordingly.

You can have your lawyer try and find out, and or enquire at the
Canadian consulate in Stockholm and try to remove any derogatory
information about yourself from your files if that’s possible.

Everyone with a “past” will sooner or later have similar problems
trying to enter the United States, The UK, Japan, New Zealand
and many other countries in the not too distant future we are sad
to report.

regards and good luck

Shamrock

Dear Shamrock:

My case is this;

The DOJ had used a man saying he was a prosecutor for them.I found out
years later that he never had an oath of office. I took it to court
under a common law Habeas and the judge took 7 months to tell us some
technical code and said it wasn’t her jurisdiction…

He was taken by 100 men in full riot gear at the crack of dawn.
Months prior, we had telephone bugs and helicopters flying over too!

The authorities said the company was bogus. But the company was never
charged with any crime. Just my poor guy, the PR guy and two others.
One was acquitted and one paid $20,000 and he was an attorney for the
deal.

I believe the DOJ’s man to be a hater of the way my man believes. He
was jealous that he could put together deals and was going to be very
successful. To find out this man works for a bank!

They totally made up this crime… to which there are no victims….
after all these years…

So now we wait on the original judge to say something, hopefully to
release him… seven long years later.

Shamrock, I’m glad to know that someone cares.

TJ

Dear TJ;

Unfortunately in this world there are many injustices, i.e. innocent
people in prison and murders walking around free!

Shamrock

Dear Shamrock:

Good day to you.

I have been receiving your newsletter now for a couple of years. Just
a couple of quick questions and I don’t expect a big answer maybe just
a little guidance in the right direction.

(1) I was curious about how one would move a large sum of money from
the US to an offshore account without leaving paper trails.

(2) With all the options for protection that you offer how would one
know what is the best plan of attack? I was thinking about two or
three layers of protection, maybe a trust in one country that has the
holdings of an offshore business in another country? Do you have any
tips for something like that? I’m thinking XXX for a bearer trust and
then having a XXX in XXX held under that trust.

D

Dear D:

Many thanks for the kind words.

In answer to your questions;

There are no quick fixes for them.

In reference;
(1) I was curious about how one would move a large sum of
money from the US to an offshore account without leaving
paper trails.

A – That needs to be done VERY carefully and legally.
Depending on the amount involved there are several ways to
accomplish this legally. However this must done legally
and above board otherwise you could be charged with a serious
offense along with other problems.

A consultation with our financial expert is recommended.
See <http://www.ptshamrock.com/secret/consultants.htm>

(2) With all the options for protection that you offer how
would one know what is the best plan of attack? I was thinking
about two or three layers of protection, maybe a trust in one
country that has the holdings of an offshore business in
another country? Do you have any tips for something like that?
I’m thinking XXX for a bearer trust and then having a XXX
in XXX held under that trust.

A – Assuming you’re an American you need to proceed carefully and
legally. Again a consultation would be a wise investment for you.

Your exact situation needs to be known to a professional,
whoever that might be, in order for anyone to offer intelligent
and legal possibilities that are available for you.

We’d be remiss if we didn’t advise you accordingly as there is
a lot involved and at state.

Regards

PT Shamrock
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Quote of the month!

“Life is a participant sport. Don’t be left sitting on the
sidelines.”
- unknown
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

*** “PT Shamrock’s Exclusive Member’s Site!”

Each month we offer exclusive information, free privacy programs,
access to our newsletter archives and other insider information
for members only.

Our member’s site is accessed by user name and password only. This
is available to our newsletter subscribers ONLY!

Each month the password will change and you will have to e-mail us
from your subscribers e-mail address to request the NEW password in
order to gain access.

As a subscriber to our newsletter you automatically qualify for this
exclusive service. Just send an e-mail to
<mailto: ptshamrock@ptshamrock.com> and place “Members” in the
subject heading. We will forward to you full details for signing up and
gaining access to our Members Site, reserved for you.

Enjoy.
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Dear Friend:

If you like our newsletter please tell your friends and associates
about us. They can subscribe *FREE* by sending an e-mail to:
<mailto: ptbuzz-on@mail-list.com>.

Our pledge!

We never spam our subscribers, never rent or give our
subscribers list to anyone, and unlike other newsletters do
not accept paid advertisements; And of course, our PT Buzz
Newsletter is absolutely free, just packed full of interesting
privacy news and information with a tad of humor thrown in for
good measure.

We’re probably the oldest privacy newsletter on the Internet!

Thank you for your patronage and help in spreading the word.

Shamrock

“The right to privacy is a part of our basic freedoms. Privacy is
fundamental to close family ties, competitive free enterprise, the
ownership of property, and the exchange of ideas.”

PT Shamrock – issue one; 1994
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Don’t forget to check out our Special Offers at <www.ptshamrock.com>

See you next issue!

“Mehr sein, als scheinen” (German Proverb)
Be more, seem less!

PT Shamrock
- – - – - – - – - – NOTICE – - – - – - – - – -
In compliance with Title 17 U.S.C. section 107, this material is
distributed free without profit or payment for non-profit
research and for educational purposes only.
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

———————————————————————–
To subscribe,   send a blank message to PTBuzz-on@mail-list.com
To unsubscribe, send a blank message to PTBuzz-off@mail-list.com
To change your email address, send a message to PTBuzz-change@mail-list.com
with your old address in the Subject: line
To contact the list owner, send your message to
PTBuzz-list-owner@mail-list.com

PT Shamrock Limited Suite #79, 184 Lower Rathmines Road, Rathmines, Dublin D6, Ireland

PT Shamrocks March 2010 Newsletter

Thursday, March 18th, 2010

March 2010 Newsletter

“I choose not to keep looking over my shoulder at ‘big brother’ while
he strips my carcass.”
- Joe Stack 1956 – 2010, Hailed as Hero in American ‘Patriot’ Resurgence

In this issue:

* Going to Canada? Check your past
* Scary Stuff – Greece Outlaws Cash Transactions Above 1500 Euros,
Unveils New Taxes
* Breaking News! Airport scanners face double exposure Not just unlawful
- but criminal too
* Did you know? Feds Can Search, Seize P2P Files Without Warrant
* Frustrated Owner Bulldozes Home Ahead Of Foreclosure
* Bad News – Offshore tax scheme clampdown looms
* Food for thought – What difference does it make?
* The District of Criminals – Police escort student out of class after refusal
to recite Pledge of Allegiance
* Police State – Microsoft Takes Down Whistleblower Site, Read the
Secret Doc Here
* Red Hot Product!
* Advisory “It’s Over” For US Economy: Buffett Partner Charlie Munger
* Dumbing Down Award of the month
* Cannon Fodder – US unveils planet-hugging London embassy
* Oz Corner * Bug Bites -Hackers expose security flaws with ‘Elvis Presley’
passport
* Citizens rail against government data sharing
* Racist content on US server ‘within UK jurisdiction’
Shamrock’s Missive
* Tid Bits – Joe Stack Hailed as Hero in American ‘Patriot’ Resurgence
* Just in case! Walmart suffers first ever fall in US quarterly sales
* Quotes * Tid Bits – FTC: Identity Theft Is No. 1 Consumer Complaint
* Disturbing facts – Girl’s arrest for doodling raises concerns about zero
tolerance
* Letters To The Editor
* Quote of the month!
PT Shamrock’s Exclusive Member’s Site!

*** Going to Canada? Check your past
Visitors with minor criminal records turned back at border
- C.W. Nevius

There was a time not long ago when a trip across the border from the
United States to Canada was accomplished with a wink and a wave of a
driver’s license. Those days are over.

Take the case of 55-year-old Lake Tahoe resident Greg Felsch. Stopped
at the border in Vancouver this month at the start of a planned
five-day ski trip, he was sent back to the United States because of a
DUI conviction seven years ago. Not that he had any idea what was
going on when he was told at customs: “Your next stop is immigration.”

Felsch was ushered into a room. “There must have been 75 people in
line,” he says. “We were there for three hours. One woman was in
tears. A guy was sent back for having a medical marijuana card. I
felt like a felon with an ankle bracelet.”

Or ask the well-to-do East Bay couple who flew to British Columbia
this month for an eight-day ski vacation at the famed Whistler
Chateau, where rooms run to $500 a night. They’d made the trip many
times, but were surprised at the border to be told that the husband
would have to report to “secondary” immigration.

There, in a room he estimates was filled with 60 other concerned
travelers, he was told he was “a person who was inadmissible to
Canada.” The problem? A conviction for marijuana possession……
In 1975.

Welcome to the new world of border security. Unsuspecting Americans
are turning up at the Canadian border expecting clear sailing, only to
find that their past — sometimes their distant past — is suddenly an
issue.

While Canada officially has barred travelers convicted of criminal
offenses for years, attorneys say post-9/11 information-gathering,
combined with a sweeping agreement between Canada and the United
States to share data, has resulted in a spike in phone calls from
concerned travelers.

They are shocked to hear that the sins of their youth might keep them
out of Canada. But what they don’t know is that this is just the
beginning. Soon other nations will be able to look into your past
when you want to travel there.

“It’s completely ridiculous,” said Chris Cannon, an attorney
representing the East Bay couple, who asked that their names not be
used because they don’t want their kids to know about the pot rap.
“It’s a disaster. I mean, who didn’t smoke pot in the ’70s?”

We’re about to find out. And don’t think you are in the clear if you
never inhaled. Ever get nabbed for a DUI? How about shoplifting?
Turn around. You aren’t getting in.

“From the time that you turn 18, everything is in the system,” says
Lucy Perillo, whose Canada Border Crossing Service in Winnipeg,
Manitoba, helps Americans get into the country.

Canadian attorney David Lesperance, an expert on customs and
immigration, says he had a client who was involved in a fraternity
prank 20 years ago. He was on a scavenger hunt, and the assignment
was to steal something from a Piggly Wiggly supermarket. He got
caught, paid a small fine and was ordered to sweep the police station
parking lot.

He thought it was all forgotten. And it was, until he tried to cross
the border.

The official word from the Canadian Border Services Agency is that
this is nothing more than business as usual. Spokesman Derek Mellon
gets a little huffy when asked why the border has become so strict.

“I think it is important to understand that you are entering another
country,” Mellon says. “You are not crossing the street.”

OK, but something changed here, didn’t it?

“People say, ‘I’ve been going to Canada for 20 years and never had a
problem,’ ” Lesperance says. “It’s classic. I say, ‘Well, you’ve
been getting away with it for 20 years.’ ”

A prior record has always made it difficult to cross the border. What
you probably didn’t know was that, as the Canadian Consulate’s Web
site says, “Driving while under the influence of alcohol is regarded
as an extremely serious offense in Canada.”

So it isn’t as if rules have stiffened. But what has changed is the
way the information is gathered. In the wake of 9/11, Canada and the
United States formed a partnership that has dramatically increased
what Lesperance calls “the data mining” system at the border.

The Smart Border Action Plan, as it is known, combines Canadian
intelligence with extensive U.S. Homeland Security information. The
partnership began in 2002, but it wasn’t until recently that the
system was refined.

“They can call up anything that your state trooper in Iowa can,”
Lesperance says. “As Canadians and Americans have begun cooperating,
all those indiscretions from the ’60s are going to come back and haunt
us.”

Now, there’s a scary thought. But the irony of the East Bay couple’s
situation is inescapable. Since their rowdy days in the ’70s, they
have created and sold a publishing company, purchased extensive real
estate holdings and own a $3 million getaway home in Lake Tahoe.

“We’ve done pretty well since those days,” she says. “But what I
wonder is how many other people might be affected.”

The Canadian Border Services Agency says its statistics don’t show an
increase in the number of travelers turned back. But Cannon says
that’s because the “data mining” has just begun to pick up momentum.

“It is too new to say,” he says. “Put it this way. I am one lawyer
in San Francisco, and I’ve had four of these cases in the last two
years, two since January. And remember, a lot of people don’t want to
talk about it (because of embarrassment).”

Asked if there were more cases, attorney Lesperance was emphatic.

“Oh, yeah,” he says. “Just the number of calls I get has gone up. If
we factor in the greater ability to discover these cases, it is just
mathematically logical that we are going to see more.”

The lesson, the attorneys say, is that if you must travel to Canada,
you should apply for “a Minister’s Approval of Rehabilitation” to wipe
the record clear.

Oh, and by the way, if you don’t need to travel to Canada, don’t think
you won’t need to clear your record. Lesperance says it is just a
matter of time before agreements are signed with governments in
destinations like Japan, Indonesia and Europe.

“This,” Lesperance says, “is just the edge of the wedge.”

Who would have thought a single, crazy night in college would follow
you around the world?

Rules for getting into Canada

For more information on offenses that prohibit entry to Canada, go to
the Canadian Consulate’s Web site at
geo.international.gc.ca/can-am/seattle/visas/inadmissible-en.asp.

For more information on visiting Canada, go to cic.gc.ca.

Shamrock’s comment: You can’t say we haven’t been warning you about
this for years now! Past criminal records aren’t the only items that
are going to be shared. Think biometrics’, fingerprints, iris scans and
pictures! Maybe it’s time for a second passport and nationality?
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Scary Stuff

Greece Outlaws Cash Transactions Above 1500 Euros, Unveils New Taxes
- <http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com/2010/02/greece-outlaws-cash-transactions-above.html>

In an attempt to rein in the shadow economy and collect more tax
revenue, Greece outlaws cash transactions greater than 1500 Euros.
Please consider Greek Finance Minister unveils tax reform, wage
policy.

“From 1. Jan. 2011, every transaction above 1,500 euros between
natural persons and businesses, or between businesses, will not be
considered legal if it is done in cash. Transactions will have to be
done through debit or credit cards”

“There’s tax relief for incomes up to 40,000 (euros)”

“Taxable income based on the new scales will include capital gains
from the short-term trading of stocks”

“Deposits in banks outside Greece are exempted from audits of their
origin if they are repatriated within six months of the passing of the
tax bill and are taxed with a 5 percent rate”

“Wages of board members in unlisted state companies will fall by 50
percent”

“The budget bill for allowances and compensations will be cut by 10
percent” Buy It Now!

Everyone in Greece will quickly figure out that the time to make major
purchases is now. So expect to see sales plunge starting January 1,
2011 as demand for everything priced above 1500 euros shifts forward.

New 40% Tax Rate

In addition, attempts to collect more sales taxes (VAT), Greece to
levy 40% tax rate on more earners. Greece will lower the current
75,000 euro income threshold that is subject to a 40 percent tax rate
as part of reforms to urgently boost government revenues, the
country’s finance minister said on Monday.

“The 40 percent tax rate will be applied on income levels that are
lower than what is the case today, but there will also be intermediate
rates that will provide relief for low and middle incomes,” Finance
Minister George Papaconstantinou told Ta Nea newspaper in an
interview.

He said that as a result of the tax changes, the biggest burden would
be felt by a small percentage of tax payers as 95 percent of earners
report incomes below 30,000 euros a year. Retirement Age, Fuel Taxes
Rise

Please consider Greece raises retirement age and fuel taxes a day
ahead of nationwide civil service strike.

Prime Minister George Papandreou told a cabinet meeting that the
reforms “must go ahead now with greater speed.”

“Our primary duty now is to save the economy and reduce the debt,
aiming to do so through the fairest possible solutions that will
protect, as far as that is possible, the weaker and middle classes,”
said Papandreou, who is to meet in Paris with French President Nicolas
Sarkozy on Wednesday ahead of a European Union summit the following
day.

The new tax bill, Papaconstantinou said, will increase the burden on
the rich while easing taxation for those on low incomes. The top
income bracket which will be taxed by the maximum 40 percent will be
expanded to include incomes of over euro 60,000 a year, from the
current euro 75,000 threshold.

Papaconstantinou said that public consultation over the tax bill
continued, and that there could be changes, but that any amendments
would be based on the broad principles outlined in the draft.

He confirmed plans to freeze public sector hirings and wages, while
cutting bonuses or stipends by 10 percent, a move he said would trim
between euro18 and euro345 euros off monthly salaries. The stipend
cut will also apply to those of the prime minister, ministers and
other high-ranking ministry officials.

“We all know that the civil service salary system is one full of
injustices, that lacks any central logic and has evolved with
successive bonus payments,” Papaconstantinou said. “We are committed
to have a unified payment system.”

He also said all Greeks must collect receipts in order to qualify for
the income tax-free amount of euro12,000, an attempt to crack down on
widespread tax evasion, where vendors under-declare their income by
not giving receipts. Cash registers will have to be installed
everywhere, including kiosks found on practically every Greek street,
and food markets.

Pensions Increase
In a move that makes little economic sense in light of attempted
austerity measures everywhere else, Greece to grant pension increases
of 1.5 pct. “All pensions will increase by 1.5 percent,” Finance
Minister George Papaconstantinou said in a television interview.

The government did not intend to raise the nation’s top 40 percent
income tax rate as part of measures to shore up its finances, he said.
I have little faith this will work because revenue projections are
sketchy and austerity measures will undoubtedly plunge Greece into a
severe recession, if not depression.

Will Greece have the resolve to cut more if necessary? Will France
and Germany pony up after a “good faith” try by Greece?

In light of Eurogroup Chairman Jean-Claude Juncker’s Grecian Bluff,
there are still more questions than answers. The EU simply has no
plans if Greece fails.
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

*** Breaking News!

Airport scanners face double exposure
Not just unlawful – but criminal too
- John Ozimek

A warning shot from the Equalities and Human Rights Commission (EHRC)
suggests that yet again, the UK government may be erring on the wrong
side of the law, this time over the vexed question of airport
scanners.

Legal opinion is on their side: a barrister has told El Reg that the
current scanning regime may not only be unlawful, but criminal to
boot.

In a letter to the Secretary of State for Transport, Lord Adonis, the
EHRC has expressed concerns about the apparent absence of safeguards
to ensure the body scanners, already in place at Heathrow and
Manchester airports, are operated in a lawful, fair and
non-discriminatory manner. It also has serious doubts that the
decision to roll this out in all UK airports complies with the law.

Their argument, based on the selection of passengers for scrutiny, is
that the current use of body scanners may already be breaking
discrimination law as well as breaching passengers’ right to privacy.

They are demanding safeguards, such as monitoring who is being scanned
and how those scans are carried out, to ensure that people are not
being unfairly selected on the basis of their race, religion, gender,
age, sexual orientation or disability.

Trevor Phillips, EHRC Chair, said: “State action like border checks,
stop and search and full body scanning are undertaken for good
reasons. But without proper care such policies can end up being
applied in ways which do discriminate against vulnerable groups or
harm good community relations.”

Whilst the EHRC is concerned with the possible discriminatory use of
scanners, El Reg today learnt about the concerns of one barrister who
specialises in criminal law, and who is currently seeking more
information on government policy on scanning.

Despite government claims that their policy on using scanners to scan
children is compatible with existing child protection legislation, he
has his doubts. First, because the “making” of an indecent image is a
criminal offence, and does not cease to be a criminal act just
because a government department issues guidelines on the matter.

That would be akin to a government department issuing guidelines
authorising its officials to carry out illegal house searches
(otherwise known as “breaking and entering”).

Whether an image generated by the scanning equipment is illegal is not
a matter for those viewing the images to determine. In other
circumstances, when police have advised art galleries against
displaying nude images of children, the presumption appears to be that
such an image is de facto indecent. In strict practice, only a jury
can determine whether the images in question are indecent.

As for the argument that such viewing is exempted from child
protection legislation on the grounds that it is being done in order
to detect a crime, our barrister is equally unpersuaded. Such
sweeping “just in case” powers are not granted to any arm of the
state: if they were, we might as well not bother at all with any
limitations on police powers.

His own view of statements put out by the Department for Transport
(DfT) is that they bear all the hallmarks of civil legal advice, and
that the DfT have therefore failed to recognise the criminal
implications of their actions.

A spokesman for the DfT would not respond directly to that suggestion.
Instead, he told The Register: “The safety of the travelling public is
our highest priority and we will not allow this to be compromised.
However, we are also committed to ensuring that all security measures
are used in a way which is legal, proportionate and
non-discriminatory.

“That is why we have been absolutely clear that those passengers who
are randomly selected for screening will not be chosen because of any
personal characteristics, and why we have published an interim code of
practice which addresses privacy concerns in relation to body
scanners.

“Given the current security threat level, we believe it was essential
to start introducing scanners immediately. We are currently carrying
out a full equalities impact assessment on the code of practice, which
will be published shortly when we begin a public consultation on these
issues. We would welcome any comments the EHRC wish to make during
this process.”
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Did you know?

Feds Can Search, Seize P2P Files Without Warrant
- David Kravets

The authorities do not need court warrants to view and download files
traded on peer-to-peer networks, a federal appeals court says.

February 17th’s 3-0 ruling by the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals
concerned a Nevada man convicted of possessing child pornography as
part of an FBI investigation. Defendant Charles Borowy claimed the
Fourth Amendment required court authorization to search and seize his
LimeWire files in 2007.

The San Francisco-based appeals court, however, cited the nation’s
legal standard, reiterating that warrants are required if a search
“violates a reasonable expectation of privacy.”

Borowy, the court noted, “was clearly aware that LimeWire was a
file-sharing program that would allow the public at large to access
files in his shared folder unless he took steps to avoid it.”

The defendant, however, claimed he had a reasonable expectation of
privacy because he thought he had turned off LimeWire’s share feature.

He was sentenced to 45 months in prison after pleading guilty to
child-porn charges. The deal allowed him to appeal whether the search
and seizure of his computer files was unlawful. Ultimately, a
forensic examination conducted with a search warrant found 600 images
of child pornography, as well as 75 videos on his computer or in his
house.

He was nabbed when an FBI agent logged into LimeWire and searched
using the keyword “Lolitaguy,” a term the court said was “known to be
associated with child pornography.”

The agent used a proprietary software program that verified hash marks
of files and displays a red flag next to known images of child
pornography. The agent used LimeWire’s “browse host” feature and
downloaded seven of 240 files being shared on Borowy’s IP address
four of which turned out to be child pornography.

The court’s decision was not the first word on the issue and won’t be
the last.

Tens of millions of people use peer-to-peer services daily. LimeWire,
one of many popular peer-to-peer programs, boasts 50 million monthly
users.

And the same federal appellate circuit that considered Borowy’s case
ruled similarly in 2008. The Supreme Court declined to review that
decision.

Two other federal circuits, the 8th and 10th, have recently issued
similar rulings. The 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals’ 2009 opinion
is on appeal to the Supreme Court.
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

*** Frustrated Owner Bulldozes Home Ahead Of Foreclosure
Man Says Actions Intended To Send Message To Banks
- WLWT.com

Moscow, Ohio – Like many people, Terry Hoskins has had troubles with
his bank. But his solution to foreclosure might be unique.

Hoskins said he’s been in a struggle with RiverHills Bank over his
Clermont County home for nearly a decade, a struggle that was coming
to an end as the bank began foreclosure proceedings on his $350,000
home.

“When I see I owe $160,000 on a home valued at $350,000, and someone
decides they want to take it, no, I wasn’t going to stand for that,
so I took it down,” Hoskins said.

Hoskins said the Internal Revenue Service placed liens on his carpet
store and commercial property on state Route 125 after his brother, a
one-time business partner, sued him.

The bank claimed his home as collateral, Hoskins said, and went after
both his residential and commercial properties.

“The average homeowner that can’t afford an attorney or can fight as
long as we have, they don’t stand a chance,” he said.

Hoskins said he’d gotten a $170,000 offer from someone to pay off the
house, but the bank refused, saying they could get more from selling
it in foreclosure.

Hoskins told News 5’s Courtis Fuller that he issued the bank an
ultimatum.

“I’ll tear it down before I let you take it,” Hoskins told them.

And that’s exactly what Hoskins did.

Man Says Actions Intended To Send Message To Banks

The Moscow man used a bulldozer two weeks ago to level the home he’d
built, and the sprawling country home is now rubble, buried under a
coating of snow.

“As far as what the bank is going to get, I plan on giving them back
what was on this hill exactly (as) it was,” Hoskins said. “I brought
it out of the ground and I plan on putting it back in the ground.”

Hoskins’ business in Amelia is scheduled to go up for auction on March
2, and he told Fuller he’s considering leveling that building, too.

RiverHills Bank declined to comment on the situation, but Hoskins said
his actions were intended to send a message.

“Well, to probably make banks think twice before they try to take
someone’s home, and if they are going to take it wrongly, the end
result will be them tearing their house down like I did mine,” Hoskins
said.

Man Has No Regrets Over Bulldozing House

Hoskins said he’s heard from people all over the country since his
story first aired Thursday, and he said most have been supportive.

He said he sought legal counsel before tearing down his home and
understands the possible consequences, but he has never doubted his
decision once he made it.

“When I knew I was going to lose it, I decided to take it down,”
Hoskins said.
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Bad News

Offshore tax scheme clampdown looms
- The Recruiter.co.uk

Thousands of contractors using offshore schemes to cut tax are facing
a clampdown after HM Revenue & Customs (HMRC) won a High Court
ruling to allow it recover tax retrospectively, warns Giant group, the
contractor services provider.

Following a High Court ruling last week on 28 January, HMRC can
introduce anti-avoidance measures that apply tax retrospectively.
This means that any offshore scheme marketed as legitimate could be
made retrospectively illegal, leaving contractors having to pay tax
backdated for many years.

The High Court ruled last week that an IT contractor must pay
retrospective tax of GBP80,000 after HMRC introduced measures in the
Finance Act 2008 to close a loophole to prevent contractors receiving
income offshore via a trust at a taxable rate of 3.5%. Several
thousand contractors are likely to be affected by the ruling, many of
whom could now face bankruptcy.

Matthew Brown, managing director of Giant group, says: “This ruling
sends a clear signal that if tax arrangements are blatantly
artificial, they can be taxed retrospectively. Even if a tax scheme
expolits a loophole in the current law there are still risks using it.
If a tax scheme sounds too good to be true, it probably is.

“Numerous providers of tax services to contractors operate offshore.
Contractors and recruiters need to be wary about dealing with these
providers as the risk of retrospective measures from HMRC has
significantly increased.”

Brown adds: “Contractors could try to persuade the HMRC to collect
outstanding tax from scheme promoters, but this may not be possible,
in which case recruitment agencies could also be in the firing line.
HMRC has already shown its willingness to include debt transfer
provisions in anti-avoidance legislation, so in cases where it
believes debts will be unrecoverable from contractors, recruiters
could be targeted if schemes are deemed to be managed service
companies (MSCs).”

Brown’s comments will add to concerns over the use of offshore
schemes. Contractors who deposited funds with Mirasol Holdings, a
split funds scheme, registered in the Turks & Caicos Islands, are
already concerned over the security of their money, after the UK arm
of Albany went into administration yesterday.

Shamrock’s comments: All government love to move the goal post
in their favor don’t they?
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Food for thought

We have been asked to reprint the following missive, which was
first published in our May 2003 issue.

What difference does it make?

We received a mail last week from a rather discouraged privacy seeker
in the united States (correct spelling.) The essence of his rather
lengthy mail was “what difference does it make” for one person to try
and change what the (US,) or any government, are doing to steal our
(your) rights?

The adage that one can’t fight city hall may or may not be correct.
However one person, or a small group of persons, can have a dramatic
impact on the course of history. More important, though at times you
may not be able to change the things you don’t like, you can change
yourself. That is what PT Shamrock and your PT Buzz Newsletter is all
about; presenting you with alternative information, articles, ideas,
options, along with the means and tools for you to obtain privacy and
true sovereignty in today’s unfree world so that YOU can change
yourself.

Mahatma Gandhi single handed caused the greatest power on earth at the
time, Great Britain, to grant Independence to India, East and West
Pakistan. He was murdered for it by his own people. The conspirators
who assassinated John F. Kennedy (US President) certainly changed the
course of history. Had JFK lived, there was the real possibly that
the US would NOT have had such a large presence in Vietnam, which
would have certainly changed things for the US and SE Asia.

Look at recent history and take Osama bin Laden and the 9/11 crew as
an example. They certainly changed the course of history, and not for
the better either. Nearly singled handed, they saw to the taking
away of more of your freedoms and privacy than anyone could possibly
have imagined.

Being somewhat of a history buff, we’ve done more than our share of
reading about turning points in history and have concluded that
history indeed, does repeat itself, although not exactly in the ways
one might predict.

Perhaps one man, along with a band of 188 men from America, Ireland,
Scotland, England, Germany, and Mexico, did more to change the future
of America than you realize.

William Barret Travis, died age 26, at a little Spanish mission called
the Alamo on March 6th, 1836 along with 188 defenders. US folk
legends Davy Crockett, Jim Bowie, Captain Dickinson, Jim Bonham and
many others gave their lives to fight tyranny and for freedom. The
youngest defender to give his life at the Alamo was only 15 years old!

These were truly great men, who knew what it meant to stand up and die
for what they believed in, freedom!

Post Mortem

Without the Alamo there could have been no Battle of San Jacinto.

Without the Battle of San Jacinto, Texas could not have existed.

Without Texas, the westward expansion of the U.S. would have been
thwarted.

Without the West, the U.S. would have remained an Atlantic power, and
not risen to become a world power.

Without the U.S. as a world power, the world as we see it today would
not exist. Most of us would probably be speaking German instead of
English today!

Clearly, Travis’ decision, along with the others, to sacrifice themselves
at the Alamo is one of the most decisive contributions by a single
individual in recent world history. Those who believe that historical
forces rather than individuals control events should consider this:

what if the indecisive Fannin had been in charge at the Alamo?
[Shamrock's history note; Colonel James W. Fannin Jr.
surrendered at Goliad without a fight shortly after the fall of the
Alamo to General Santa Ana. Fannin and all but one of his 400 men
were executed. One escaped during the murderous slaughter to tell the
story of what happened at Goliad.]

We’re not asking you to die for what you believe in, but we are asking
you to stand up for what you do believe in and take positive action.
Get that anonymous ATM card, obtain a legal second passport, and get
your money offshore that you’ve been thinking about doing, but have
been procrastinating with for so long. Spread the world about PT Buzz
and other privacy thinking publications. But what ever it is that you
do, DO IT NOW!

We’ll leave you with the quote below for you to think about until next
issue.

Shamrock

“It’s not about land, or money. But the one thing that no man, should
ever, be able to take from another man. The freedom to make his own
choices, about his life. Where he’ll live, how he’ll live, how he’ll
raise his family. We face a man who would take those God given rights
away from us. Well not from me he’s not. There can be no doubt about
the price!”
- William Barrett Travis, commander of the Alamo; prior to the fall
of the Alamo on March 6th, 1836
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

*** The District of Criminals

Police escort student out of class after refusal to recite Pledge of
Allegiance
- Daniel Tencer, Raw Story

A middle school teacher in Montgomery County, Maryland, will have to
apologize to a 13-year-old student after yelling at her and having her
escorted out of class by school police when the student refused to
recite the Pledge of Allegiance.

According to the ACLU of Maryland, a 13-year-old female student at
Roberto Clemente Middle School in Germantown refused to stand for the
Pledge of Allegiance on Jan. 27. The teacher reportedly ordered the
girl out into the hallway, where he threatened the girl with detention
and then sent her to the school counselor’s office.

The next day, when the student again refused to stand for the pledge,
the teacher called school officers to remove her from the classroom
and take her to the counselor’s office once again.

“When the student’s mother reached out to an assistant principal for
help in dealing with the teacher’s abusive and improper actions, the
official said her daughter should instead apologize for her
‘defiance.’ The student did apologize, twice,” the ACLU states.

The right to sit silently during the Pledge of Allegiance has been
held up by the US Supreme Court, and is enshrined in Maryland state
law and Mongtomery County Public Schools’ own policies, reports the
Washington Post.

“No one will be permitted to intentionally embarrass you if you choose
not to participate,” says the school district’s handbook, according to
TheGazette.net in Maryland.

The ACLU and the girl’s mother declined to identify the girl. They
say the student, now 14, has been “traumatized” by the experience,
including taunting from fellow students, and has not returned to the
school since the incident.

Neither the ACLU nor the school district would identify the teacher
involved.

The girl’s mother says the way the teacher “bellowed” at her daughter
was inappropriate and the school should take disciplinary action
against the teacher, reports TheGazette.net.

“It’s an even bigger problem because he did it to a child in front of
a group of other children,” the mother said. “On top of that, the
school didn’t protect her. I thought they would protect her, and
that’s why I let her go to that school. I was disappointed.”

The turning point evidently came when the ACLU of Maryland sent a
letter (PDF) to the school district asking for an apology.

“Expression of patriotism in unsettling times certainly is a worthy
and understandable emotion,” the letter stated. “But, as the Supreme
Court recognizes, that expression is best honored by venerating the
civil liberties and freedoms enshrined in the Constitution and not by
losing patience with those whose views or actions do not conform to
those of the majority.”

The teacher’s actions were “a violation of our regulations, and we’re
in the process of rectifying the situation,” Montgomery Public Schools
spokesperson Dana Tofig told TheGazette.net. Tofig said the teacher
would apologize to the student, but would not say if any disciplinary
action would be taken against the teacher.

The president of the county’s teachers’ union, Doug Prouty, told the
Washington Examiner that he supports the move to have the teacher
apologize.

“My initial thought is yes, but we would need to know all of the
details,” Prouty said.

School officials say several conflicts involving the Pledge of
Allegiance arise every year in Maryland, but most are resolved
quietly.
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

*** Former New Orleans Detective Pleads Guilty in Katrina Shooting
Cover-up
- ProPublica

Former New Orleans Police Department Lt. Michael Lohman today pleaded
guilty to a single count of conspiring to obstruct justice, in
connection with one of a string of violent encounters between police
and civilians in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina in 2005. Police
shot at least 10 people during the week after the storm made landfall.
(We have been investigating the shootings, along with our partners the
New Orleans Times-Picayune and PBS “Frontline.”)

Lohman’s conviction stems from the so-called Danziger Bridge incident
of Sept. 4, 2005. Responding to an emergency call that day, New
Orleans police officers shot six citizens killing two on and around
the span.

The Times-Picayune has been covering the Danziger Bridge shootings
from the start and they have the latest.

Lohman helped orchestrate the police’s investigation of the shooting,
a probe portrayed in the bill of information as an attempted cover-up.
The former lieutenant was involved in planting a handgun at the scene,
drafted phony police reports, and lied to federal agents, according
the court document. (The New York Times has good details on the
alleged cover-up. And we at ProPublica have posted the bill of
information in our easy-to-read document viewer.)

Lohman’s plea is the clearest indicator yet that the federal
government which for more than a year now has been investigating the
New Orleans Police Department’s actions in the aftermath of Hurricane
Katrina is mounting a two-pronged probe: federal prosecutors and the
FBI are scrutinizing incidents in which police shot civilians in the
chaotic days after the storm, as well as the alleged efforts of other
officers to cover-up those shootings.

Defense attorneys familiar with the widening federal probe say the
Justice Department is looking at the death of Henry Glover as a
possible cover-up, as well.  Glover was shot on Sept. 2.
2005 possibly by NOPD officer David Warren and died, according to
three witnesses, at makeshift police compound in the Algiers section
of New Orleans. His charred remains were later discovered in an
incinerated car dumped on a Mississippi River levee.

Federal agents began examining Glover’s death after ProPublica, in
conjunction with The Nation magazine, reported on the case in late
2008.

In recent weeks, the Justice Department has begun looking at three
other post-Katrina incidents the shootings of Danny Brumfield, Matthew
McDonald and Keenon McCann, all of whom were shot by NOPD officers in
the week after the hurricane made landfall. Brumfield and McDonald
died; McCann was injured but survived to file a lawsuit against the
police department. He was shot to death by an unknown assailant in
2008 while the suit was pending.

The NOPD, like most police departments, conducts an investigation
every time an officer opens fire on a citizen the goal is to make sure
the shooting was proper and justified. As a general rule, officers
are allowed to use deadly force only when confronted by a person
posing a physical threat, either to the officer or another civilian.

However, a joint effort by reporters with ProPublica, the New Orleans
Times-Picayune and PBS “Frontline found that NOPD investigators did
little to determine whether officers acted appropriately when they
shot Brumfield, McDonald and McCann. NOPD detectives collected little
physical evidence, spoke to few civilian witnesses, and conducted
brief interviews ranging from seven to 12 minutes with the officers
involved in the shootings.
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

*** Police State

Microsoft Takes Down Whistleblower Site, Read the Secret Doc Here
- Ryan Singel

Microsoft has managed to do what a roomful of secretive, three-letter
government agencies have wanted to do for years: get the
whistleblowing, government-document sharing site Cryptome shut down.

Microsoft dropped a DMCA notice alleging copyright infringement on
Cryptome’s proprietor John Young on Tuesday after he posted a
Microsoft surveillance compliance document that the company gives to
law enforcement agents seeking information on Microsoft users. Young
filed a counterclaim on Wednesday, arguing he had a fair use to
publishing the document, a full day before the Thursday deadline set
by his hosting provider, Network Solutions.

Regardless, Cryptome was shut down by Network Solutions and its domain
name locked on Wednesday, shuttering a site that thumbed its nose at
the government since 1996, posting thousands of documents that the
feds would prefer never saw the light of day.

Microsoft did not return a call for comment by press time.

The 22-page document
<http://www.wired.com/images_blogs/threatlevel/2010/02/microsoft-online-services-global-criminal-compliance-handbook.pdf>
contains no trade secrets, but will tell Microsoft users things they
didn’t know. (You can read it directly on your own computer from the
above link.)

For instance, Xbox Live records every IP address you ever use to login
and stores them for perpetuity. While that’s going to be creepy for
some, there’s an upside if your house gets robbed, according to the
document: “If your investigation involves a stolen Xbox console, if
the console serial number or Xbox LIVE user gamertag is provided and
the console has been connected to the Internet, IP connection records
may be available.”

Shamrock’s comment: The above document makes for a very sobering
read!
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Red Hot Product!

Here’s a no name ATM card that gives you the ability to withdraw up
to USD 10,000 per day in cash anonymously anywhere in the world!

This card is from a low profile bank in Central America that knows what
privacy means.

Only one card allowed per customer. Bank requires passport copy and a
delivery address. There are no reporting requirements to anyone from
the bank. Get yours while they last – Only Eur295!

Order at our secure on-line order form at
https://www.ptshamrock.com/order_bwe.html

We accept payment by PayPal, Credit Card, Bank wire, Pecunix,
Liberty Reserve, MoneyGram and Western Union.

Your ordering code is “NN295″.
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

*** Advisory

“It’s Over” For US Economy: Buffett Partner Charlie Munger

Long-time business partner of Warren Buffett, Charlie Munger, writes
in a new article for Slate.com that “it’s basically over” for the
United States economy.

In his article, the Berkshire Hathaway vice chairman constructs the
parable of Basicland, whose economy just so happens to run parallel to
that of America.

In the beginning of Basicland, people live within their means, debt is
limited to mortgages and some consumer loans, speculation is
discouraged, and taxes are limited and pay for only “basic services”
like fighting fires, defense, and the court system.

As a result, the economy happily grows at a steady annual rate of 3
percent.

But things take a turn for the worse, Munger writes.

“The extreme prosperity of Basicland had created a peculiar outcome:
As their affluence and leisure time grew, Basicland’s citizens more
and more whiled away their time in the excitement of casino gambling,”
and financial services soon grow to account for too big a portion of
the economy.

“The winnings of the casinos eventually amounted to 25 percent of
Basicland’s GDP, while 22 percent of all employee earnings in
Basicland were paid to persons employed by the casinos, many of whom
were engineers needed elsewhere,” Munger writes.

Then, Munger’s tale takes a shocking turn: Imported energy costs rise,
and low-cost labor competition from abroad appears.

“Suddenly Basicland had to come up with 30 percent of its GDP every
year, in foreign currency, to pay its creditors,” Munger writes.

The U.S. deficit, just the gap between spending and income in one
year, is projected to hit $1.6 trillion in 2010. Total debt is
project to exceed 100 percent of GDP starting in 2011.

Paul Volcker In the parable, Munger strongly suggests that the United
States take seriously the campaign of Reagan-era Fed Chairman Paul
Volcker, who wants the big banks to cease pretending to be banks if
they expect the freedom to trade securities on the side.

“He suggested that Basicland should strongly discourage casino
gambling, partly through a complete ban on the trading in financial
derivatives, and it should encourage former casino employees   and
former casino patrons, to produce and sell items that foreigners were
willing to buy,” Munger writes.

As the parable ends, none of the politicians listen, and Basicland
turned into “Sorrowland,” Munger concludes.
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

*** Dumbing Down Award of the month

This month’s award goes to….. Italy!

Does Italy’s Google Conviction Portend More Censorship?
- Ryan Singel

Online rights activists are divided Wednesday over an Italian court’s
guilty verdicts against Google executives who were convicted on
privacy charges for not blocking a video that made fun of a child with
Down syndrome. All agree the controversial ruling runs counter to
longstanding U.S. and E.U. “safe harbor” laws immunizing online
service providers for what users do, but the activists are mixed over
what the decision means and how much importance should be place
on it.

Leslie Harris, the president of the influential Washington, D.C.-based
Center for Democracy and Technology, argued the ruling would be used
by authoritarian regimes to justify their own web censorship.

“Today’s stunning verdict sets an extremely dangerous precedent that
threatens free expression and chills innovation on the global
internet,” Harris said in an e-mail statement. “If the conviction is
allowed to stand, it will chill the provision of Web 2.0 services that
provide user-generated content platforms in Italy, and Italian
internet users will find themselves without a powerful forum for free
expression.

“Most troubling, what happened in Italy is unlikely to stay in Italy.
The Italian court’s actions today will surely embolden authoritarian
regimes and be used to justify their own efforts to suppress internet
freedom.”

Chief among the concerns is that nations might turn to using criminal
laws or threats of criminal prosecutions to force companies to bend to
the their political will.

Electronic Frontier Foundation attorney Lee Tien of the San
Francisco-based Electronic Frontier Foundation shares Harris’ concern
for online rights.

“The threat to internet free speech from nations around the world that
don’t have the same laws and attitudes about free speech is absolutely
a constant problem and is getting worse,” Tien said.

But he warned against placing too much emphasis on this case, which
many see as thinly veiled machinations against Google by Italy’s Prime
Minister Silvio Berlusconi, who has nearly monopoly control over
Italy’s mainstream media. Italy’s parliament is currently considering
a law that would put online video services under the same rules
imposed on broadcast stations, legislation intended to stifle online
speech.

But the Google case will drag on in appeals for years and it’s not
clear it will be anything more than a legal anomaly.

Meanwhile, there are plenty of real and sticky issues around hate
speech and pornography, where people have legitimate issues and real
public policy has to be worked out, according to Tien.

“I’d prefer people to think about those cases and not focus on show
cases,” he said.

Google, for one, called the decision “astonishing.”

“It attacks the very principles of freedom on which the internet is
built,” Google lawyer Matt Sucherman wrote on Google’s blog. “If that
’safe harbor’ principle is swept aside and sites like Blogger, YouTube
and indeed every social network and any community bulletin board, are
held responsible for vetting every single piece of content that is
uploaded to them, every piece of text, every photo, every file, every
video, then the web as we know it will cease to exist, and many of
the economic, social, political and technological benefits it brings
could disappear.”

And while it might be tempting for some to dismiss the suit as the
work of a crazy Italian justice system, the United States is no
stranger to politically motivated legal attacks on free speech and
internet freedom.

The U.S. attorney’s office in Los Angeles prosecuted and convicted a
Missouri woman on hacking charges for helping put up a fake MySpace
profile to harass a neighbor’s teenage daughter, who later committed
suicide. The judge in the case overturned Lori Drew’s conviction. He
found the government’s contention that violating a website’s terms of
service was the same as hacking “unconstitutional.”

And in South Carolina, the Attorney General Henry McMaster threatened
to criminally prosecute Craigslist management if the classified
listings site didn’t remove its erotic listings category, saying the
site was promoting prostitution. A federal judge had to order
McMaster to stop his threats.

The Italy decision won’t be published in full for several weeks and
will likely be on appeal for years. None of those convicted will
likely ever serve their six months of jail time, in no small part
since they all live outside of Italy. The video at issue appeared in
2006, on Google Video, a service now replaced by YouTube.

University of Virgina media studies and law professor Siva
Vaidhyanathan, meanwhile, sees the Italian case as a very local issue
rooted in Italian politics and a sign that Google’s culture of
audacious enterprises isn’t as welcome outside the Unite States as it
hoped it would be.

“The government in Italy wants to hold Google down in Italy until it
says ‘uncle’ for a while,” Vaidhyanathan said. “But it does say a lot
about the fact that the globalization of Google is not going well.
The ruling comes as cyberliberties are in flux globally and Google is
trying to maintain revenues in countries like Egypt and Russia.”

Vaidhyanathan, whose upcoming book The Googlization of Everything
tackles the subject of Google as a worldwide cultural force, says that
the net’s and Google’s method of doing things first and letting people
opt out later is proving to be not a hit everywhere around the globe.

“Google is finding that getting beyond America is difficult,” sad
Vaidhyanathan, referring to Google’s hacking showdown in China,
privacy issues with its Street View mapping cameras in Germany, and
the censorship demands placed on it by China, Turkey, Thailand,
Argentina and India.

“I can see the general objection to Google’s way of doing things,”
said Vaidhyanathan. “It’s default setting is that it can do whatever
it wants and if you have a problem, just let them know, and that
opt-out model is not applicable in every case.”

To others, like Tien, the ruling is simply baffling. Clearly, Italy
doesn’t want its own service providers to have to meet the burden of
approving every forum posting, blog comment or uploaded video, and
punishing executives when their companies miss the mark, as was the
case of the Google executives in Italy.

That’s akin to making automobile executives personally liable in any
automobile accident related to the company’s sticky pedal woes.

Tien said that would be a “massive extension of liability.”
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Cannon Fodder

US unveils planet-hugging London embassy
- Lester Haines

The US has unveiled the design of its new embassy in London – a
“carbon neutral” glass cube described as a manifestation of the “core
beliefs of our democracy – transparency, openness, and equality”.

Philadelphia architects KieranTimberlake are at the helm of the
GBP 650m project, destined to land in Nine Elms, Wandsworth, in 2017.
Embassy staff will up sticks from their current Grosvenor Square abode
which is suffering from old age.

Louis Susman, US ambassador to the UK, explained: “We will replace our
current embassy, which has become overcrowded, does not meet modern
office needs and required security standards – and, after 50 years, is
showing signs of wear and tear.

“This effort has special significance in that we are creating a new
home and focal point for one of our most cherished and bilateral
relationships.”

Indeed, KieranTimberlake explains that “visual presence” of the
12-storey diplocube is “that of a beacon that is a respectful icon
representing the strength of the US-UK relationship”.

Highlights of the visual presence include a landscaped “Embassy Park”
surrounding the structure, open to all Londoners. The architects
explain that “the embassy grounds will provide the prospect of an open
park, a landscape of grasses rising gracefully to the new embassy
colonnade, with the required secure boundaries incised into the
hillside and out of view”.

KieranTimberlake’s Strategy Boutique continues: “The spiraling form of
the landscape is expressed through grading, walks and plantings in a
way that simultaneously opens out to the city beyond and spirals
inward as it envelops and then moves up into and through the embassy
building. As a choice of form, the spiraling garden is meaningful as
it represents connections of site to landscape to building.”

Ground-breaking on the site is scheduled for 2013. Adam Namm, acting
director of the US government’s overseas building operations, said UK
sub-contractors would likely benefit from working alongside the main
US builder. The UK treasury will not, however, be getting a slice of
the action, if the US gets its way.

Namm declared: “We feel we should not be subject to VAT. We’ve
made this view known to Her Majesty’s Government.”

According to the Telegraph Treasury officials are mulling that,
although a spokesman stonewalled: “We cannot comment on the tax
affairs of individuals or specific organizations.”

Shamrock’s comment: Don’t you just love the US’ double
standards? The US govt doesn’t want to pay tax, but if you don’t,
then guess what happens!
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Oz Corner:
Aussie net censorship turning Chinese
Minister opts for Google China-style stifling
- By John Ozimek

Recent DDoS chaos on the Australian internet may have been great fun
for all involved, but behind the good-humoured anarchy lies a growing
concern that the government really does have a dark and Big Brotherly
vision for the future of politics in the country.

As reported
<http://www.theregister.co.uk/2010/02/10/aus_gove_ddos_protest/> in
The Register this week, groups exasperated by government plans for a
mandatory firewall that will censor far more than the child porn
material claimed, finally resorted to long-promised direct action,
with a short and successful DDoS attack on government sites and
offices.

At its peak, the attacks floored Australia’s parliamentary website for
around an hour as well as having serious impact on The Department of
Broadband, Communications and the Digital Economy website.

Communications Minister Stephen Conroy responded by branding those
who carried out the attacks “irresponsible”. This is the stock response
of officialdom to direct action that causes any form of inconvenience:
however, such action has a long and distinguished pedigree, with
supporters arguing it is absolutely justified where existing political
mechanisms do not give voice to a significant point of view.

While distancing itself from the action, and denying all
responsibility for it, the Australian Sex Party has accused Mr Conroy
of being anti-democratic in the way he is conducting debate. The
action appeared to spring from a Sex Party media release last week
that reported the banning of women with small breasts from adult
magazines by Australian censorship authorities.

Convenor Fiona Patten said: “Senator Conroy… uses unfair tactics by
continuing to ban the Australian Sex Party website from within his own
department.

“Despite letters of protest about the unconstitutional nature of such
bans he refuses to budge. These bans have now spread to state
government departments with the Victorian Dept of Infrastructure the
latest government agency to ban access to the Sex Party’s site.”

She also expressed concern over Senator Conroy’s statements in Senate
Estimates that he admired Google’s role in blocking content in
countries such as China and Thailand. She adds: “First he tells us
that it is only Refused Classification (RC) material that will be
blocked and only via a complaint driven scheme. Now he is discussing
getting Google to block search requests for what might be considered
RC material.”

Having recently discovered a backbone
<http://www.theregister.co.uk/2010/02/10/google_china/> in its
dealings with China, Google declared itself unimpressed. Warning that
this would lead to the removal of many politically controversial but
harmless YouTube clips, a spokesman said Google will not “voluntarily”
comply with the government’s request that it censor YouTube videos in
accordance with broad “refused classification” content rules”.

This request by Senator Conroy emerged in an interview with ABC’s
Hungry Beast, as he finally appeared to accept the long-standing
argument put forward by critics that applying ISP filters to
high-traffic sites such as YouTube would slow down the internet.

Google Australia’s head of policy, Iarla Flynn, confirmed that Google
can give no assurances that it would voluntarily remove all Refused
Classification content from YouTube. She added: “The scope of RC is
simply too broad and can raise genuine questions about restrictions on
access to information.

“RC includes the grey realms of material instructing in any crime from
[painting] graffiti to politically controversial crimes such as
euthanasia, and exposing these topics to public debate is vital for
democracy.”

Despite this, a poll this week (also for Hungry Beast) has been
promoted as showing widespread support for the government’s proposed
internet filter. However, this poll obscures rather more than it
illuminates. In answer to a question as to whether they are in favour
of the government acting to help prevent children being exposed to
inappropriate material on the internet, a resounding 94 per cent said
yes.

This muddies the water greatly. The RC category includes not just
child abuse material, but also “bestiality, sexual violence,
gratuitous, exploitative or offensive sexual fetishes; and detailed
instructions on or promotion of crime, violence or use of illegal
drugs”. From Senator Conroy’s latest remarks, this would just be the
start point for future Australian censorship.

Another question, which has received slightly less publicity, was
whether website filtering might in future be used to block free
speech. The answer to that was an almost equally resounding 70
per cent affirmative. The debate goes on.
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Bug Bites:

Hackers expose security flaws with ‘Elvis Presley’ passport
- CNN

London, England – In the name of improved security a hacker showed
how a biometric passport issued in the name of long-dead rock ‘n’ roll
king Elvis Presley could be cleared through an automated passport
scanning system being tested at an international airport.

Using a doctored passport at a self-serve passport machine, the hacker
was cleared for travel after just a few seconds and a picture of the
King himself appeared on the monitor’s display.

Adam Laurie and Jeroen Van Beek, who call themselves “ethical
hackers,” say the exercise exposed how easy it is to fool a passport
scanner with a fraudulent biometric chip.

The Presley test was carried out at Amsterdam’s Schiphol airport in
September 2008 — by Laurie and Van Beek — to highlight potential
security shortcomings.

Passports, and the ability to fake them, are back in the spotlight
after the apparent use of false documents during the gang
assassination of a Hamas militant in Dubai in January.

Van Beek said: “What we did for that chip is create passport content
for Elvis Presley and put it on a chip and sign it with our own key
for a non-existent country. And a device that was used to read chips
didn’t check the country’s signatures.”

Fingerprint scans, eye scans and digital photographs are now
frequently used with passports to check a traveler’s biometrics –
unique physical characteristics that can identify a specific
individual.

Biometric passports — with data stored on embedded chip — are now
standard issue in Europe, the U.S. and a number of other countries.

Laurie and Van Beek use their knowledge of IT security and hacking to
show that biometric passports remain vulnerable to fraud.

“I think [fraud] is 100 percent possible,” said Laurie. “The passport
bit is the more difficult. You would have to buy one from a
professional forger or some means, but adding the chip is something we
could do ourselves using off the shelf equipment using $100
investment.”

The problem, in part, is that each country has its own security
signature for verifying its own biometric passports. While some share
that information, many countries do not, making it easy to exploit the
loopholes, said Laurie.

“I probably couldn’t produce a fake UK passport that would
successfully cross into the UK because I’m sure the UK is actually
able to check its own signatures,” Laurie said.

“But I may be able to produce a passport from some other country and
use it on an automated system to enter the UK and the UK wouldn’t be
able to check the signatures because they don’t have them.”

An international system coordinating the various security signatures
is needed, said Van Beek.

“If you want to make the system more secure then all countries need to
have access to a list of all certificates of all countries all over
the world. If that’s in place, if that list is used by all countries
and all inspection systems, that might help to detect non-genuine
documents and non-genuine chips,” said Van Beek.

“But if that system is not there, it’s really difficult to increase
the security level with the technology that’s currently used. So,
implementing a central security system with all lists from around the
world, that’s something that needs to be done before you can trust the
system,” he added.

Most countries rely on a combination of automated passport scanning by
computers and border control officers. But Laurie and Van Beek fear
an over-reliance on the automated scanning.

“If they [the scanners] are checking a facial image, they look at the
picture of the person standing there. They check it against the data
stored on the chip and if they match and that person isn’t on a stop
list, then they let you through,” explained Laurie. “In the current
state, I think they’ve actually made the borders weaker, not
stronger.”

But Britain’s Home Office maintains that its biometric passports are
some of the most secure in the world.

“We remain confident that the British passport is one of the most
secure documents of its kind — fully meeting rigorous international
standards,” said a Home Office spokesperson.

“Since 2006 biometric passports issued by the British government
biometrically link an individual to their passport through their
photograph contained in an electronic chip.

“Even if an individual’s photograph on the document is changed the
photograph in the chip cannot be without border control officers
becoming aware that the passport chip has been tampered with.”

But Laurie and Van Beek insist that confidence in technology could be
misplaced, because biometric passports can be faked, with pictures and
chips that match.
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

*** Citizens rail against government data sharing
- Kable

A new poll shows that Britons are becoming increasingly concerned
about the type of personal information held by the government.

Just under two thirds of respondents said they are against the
government centralising information about citizens so it can be shared
between different government departments.

The ‘State of the Nation’ poll carried out for the Joseph Rowntree
Reform Trust, for which ICM surveyed 2,288 people face to face, was
released on 20 February 2010.

The poll found that 61% of those surveyed believe police should not be
allowed to keep a person’s DNA profile if they have not been charged
with an offence, compared to 45% in a similar survey by the trust in
2006.

More than half of those polled oppose recent government proposals to
retain a person’s DNA profile for six years if the person has not
committed an offence. However, 92% said if a person is convicted of a
serious crime, such as rape or murder, then their profiles should be
kept indefinitely.

The survey revealed substantial opposition to medical records being
held on a centralised computer system, with 55% against this, compared
with 53% in 2006. Most medical records are currently controlled by
GPs and hospitals, but health services are introducing centralised
systems such as England’s Care Records Service and Scotland’s
Emergency Care Summary.

Other findings show that 52% of participants think the introduction of
identity cards is a bad idea, compared with 33% in the 2006 poll, and
most people believe that the government should not be allowed to
access the public’s phone, email and internet records. The 2006
figure of 82% has risen marginally to 83%. The Home Office’s
Interception Modernisation Programme is working on enhancing existing
government capabilities to access data about phone and web use.

Chris Pennell, senior analyst at Kable said: “The results of the
research echo recent research by Kable into citizen data security.
The survey, based on responses from 1,000 individuals and 240 public
sector organisations, indicated that 83% of respondents were concerned
about the storage and sharing of citizen data by public sector
organisations, while 84% said they were in favour of government having
to seek permission before sharing their data.

“While there is a high level of familiarity with UK and EU privacy
laws within public sector organisations, this has not stopped problems
with data security from occurring. This indicates that there is a
need therefore for a change to the current model, one which puts the
citizen in control of their personal data, opening up the market for
suppliers who can provide IT built around citizen consent.”
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

*** Racist content on US server ‘within UK jurisdiction’
- Out-Law.Com

The law of England and Wales applies to material published online,
even if it is hosted on a server in another country, the Court of
Appeal has ruled. As long as a substantial measure of the activities
takes place in England, its law will apply, it said.

Two men’s appeals against convictions for publishing racially
inflammatory material were based on their claim that the law of
England and Wales should not apply because the material in question
was hosted on a server in California in the US.

The Court of Appeal rejected that claim, saying that according to a
precedent set in a previous case domestic law will apply so long as
much of the activity in question took place in the UK.

The original trial judge said that that previous case, in which the
Crown took a case against Wallace Duncan Smith, meant “that the Crown
Court had jurisdiction to try the appellants for their conduct because
a substantial measure of the activities constituting the crime took
place in England,” according to the Court of Appeal.

“It seems to us that the substantial measure test not only accords
with the purpose of the relevant provisions of the [Companies Act at
issue in that previous case] it also reflects the practicalities of
the present case,” said Lord Justice Scott Baker in his ruling.

Stephen Whittle had been found to have written a number of articles
that were derogatory of Jewish and black people and likely to stir up
racial hatred. They were edited and put online by Simon Guy Sheppard.

Lord Justice Scott Baker agreed with the original trial court’s
analysis that this activity was within the jurisdiction of English
law.

“The judge pointed out that the material complained of was prepared in
England and Wales, was uploaded onto the website from England and
Wales and that this must have been done by Sheppard in the knowledge
and with the expectation and intent that the material should be
available to the public or a section of it within the jurisdiction in
England and Wales,” he ruled. “He noted there were references to
postage for people living in England and Wales should they wish to
have the materials sent to them by post. Thus it was in the
contemplation of Sheppard that people in England and Wales should have
access to the material which he posted on the website.”

The Court of Appeal also ruled that the material constituted ‘writing’
and so was covered by the Public Order Act, which contains the
offences of publishing racially inflammatory material. Just because
it was on the internet did not mean that it did not count as ‘written
material’ covered by the Act, the ruling said.

“Whilst in 1986 the world-wide web was a thing of the future and
computers were in their infancy it seems to us clear that ‘written
material’ is plainly wide enough to cover the material disseminated by
the website in the present case,” said the judgment. “The judge took
the same view. He said that what was on the computer screen was first
of all in writing or written and secondly that the electronically
stored data which is transmitted also comes within the definition of
written material because it is written material stored in another
form.  He drew a comparison with opening and closing a book; when the
book is open you can see the writing; when it is closed you cannot.”

Lawyers for the two men also argued that there was no actual
‘publication’ of the material because there was no actual proof that
anybody had read it. The Court of Appeals dismissed this claim.

“[The original trial] judge put it correctly when he said that what
the Crown had to show was that there was publication to the public or
a section of the public in that the material was generally accessible
to all or available to or was placed before or offered to the public
and that that could be proved by the evidence of one or more
witnesses,” said Lord Justice Scott Baker.

“The point that there cannot be publication without a publishee is in
our judgment fundamentally misconceived,” he said. “It is based on an
irrelevant comparison with the law of libel. Libel is a tort or civil
wrong where it is necessary for the claimant to prove that the words
complained of were published of him and were defamatory of him, the
offences of displaying, distributing or publishing racially
inflammatory written material do not require proof that anybody
actually read or heard the material.”
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Shamrock’s Missive:

Joe Stack’s kamikaze attack on a Texas IRS office, (see “Joe Stack
Hailed as Hero in American ‘Patriot’ Resurgence” article below,) and
the 20 million hits his web site received before being forced to be
shut down by the FBI, clearly shows that something is amiss in
Amerika, the land of the not so free.

Whilst we do not condone the harm of others by anyone, citizens
worldwide, especially in the USA, are clearly unhappy with their
governments’ terroristic policies, programs, technologies and actions.

Another case in point can be read above in this issue, i.e. Did you
know? section “Frustrated Owner Bulldozes Home Ahead Of Foreclosure.”

One thing is certain; anyone associated with any kind of
anti-government movement, i.e. tax or otherwise, will be branded as
“terrorists” and therefore should expect to be dealt with by their
respective government in such Terrocratic draconian measures as the
authorities deem appropriate.

May we suggest that the article “Hello, I’m with the IRS and I’m here
to help you” at <http://www.ptshamrock.com/finance/financial1.html>
written in late 1997 to be a worthwhile read, which can be read in a
better light in lieu of the demise of Mr. Joe Stack and the statement
he made by his final actions.

Other interesting commentary regarding Joe Stack is “I Don’t Buy the
Official Story of Joe Stack” by Anne Wright at
<http://wakeup1776.blogspot.com/2010/02/i-dont-buy-official-story-of-joe-stack.html>

PT Shamrock Ltd. is one of the world’s leading publishers of content
related to how to protect ones privacy in an increasingly non-private
world and we’re darn proud of it.

See you next issue

Shamrock

“The people never give up their liberties but under some delusion.”
- Edmund Burke, 1784
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Tid Bits

Joe Stack Hailed as Hero in American ‘Patriot’ Resurgence Expert:
Online Cheers for Joe Stack Reflect Growing Anti-Government Movement
- ABC News

Most were shocked by the charred scene of Joe Stack’s kamikaze attack
on a Texas IRS office, but for an alarmingly growing number of
Americans Stack is a hero.

The Web was studded with praise for Stack almost immediately after his
plane slammed into the Austin office complex Thursday morning. The
admiring salutes appearing on sites ranging from Facebook to the pages
of extremist groups reflect what experts say is an “explosive growth”
in the anti-government patriot movement.

“Extremist groups are already aligning behind [Joe Stack], beginning
to talk about him as a hero,” said Mark Potok, director of the
Southern Poverty Law Center which studies American militia and hate
groups. “The growth of those groups has been astounding.”

Stack’s suicide note, an angry rant against the IRS and the government
which was posted online the morning of his death, got around 20
million hits before it was taken down at the request of the FBI,
according to Alex Melen, president and founder of T35, the network
service provider for the Web site where the note was posted.

Melen, 25, said within minutes of taking the note down, the company
was “bombarded” with around 3,000 e-mails demanding Stack’s words be
reposted. Some of the e-mails contained personal threats against
Melen.

“What’s funny is most people were pretty much praising him,” Melen
told ABC News.

Bob Schulz, founder of the anti-government We the People Foundation,
said that while he only advocates non-violent means of protest, he can
understand Stack’s motives and said it is a reflection of a movement
unlike any he’s ever seen.

“There’s a huge patriot movement,” Schulz said. “I’ve been doing this
kind of work for 30 years.  Never have I seen the likes of what’s
going on now. It’s delightful.”

The anti-government movement gathered strength during the early 1990s,
resulting in several high profile stand-offs with the FBI.
Anti-government militias trained in the woods and prepared for a
confrontation with the U.S. The militia movement peaked in 1995 when
Timothy McVeigh and Terry Nichols bombed the Murrah Federal Building
in Oklahoma City, killing 168 people.

The anti-government movement became dormant until the mid-2000s.
Potok said a militia and extreme anti-government movement, fueled
initially by anti-immigration sentiment, is back in a big way,
especially since President Obama took office.

According to an April 2009 report by the Department of Homeland
Security, the current anti-government climate “parallels” what federal
officials saw in the 1990s.

“Rightwing extremists have capitalized on the election of the first
African American president, and are focusing their efforts to recruit
new members, mobilize existing supporters, and broaden their scope and
appeal through propoganda, but they have not yet turned to attack
planning,” the report said.

For many, Obama’s election was a near perfect storm of
disappointments, Potok said.

“The longer term thing goes back seven or eight years due to
immigration,” Potok said citing the surge of border patrol militias
like the Minutemen. “But Obama’s election, which is in a way related
to the non-white immigration issue, was representative proof that this
country is irreversibly changing demographically. Then the economy
has played a role and things have gotten worse and worse.”

The result is what Potok referred to as a “broad-based, right-wing
populist rebellion,” generally short of violent extremism.

Expert: Violent Acts ‘Inspire’ Extreme Groups While not necessarily
extreme itself, many groups in the overall movement are “shot through
with radical ideas, conspiracy theories and racism,” Potok said.
“Sometimes these attacks do serve as inspiration for other groups and
individuals.”

One reason anti-government groups are embracing Stack, rather than
distancing themselves from his extreme actions, is that he does not
seem to be crazy, Potok said. It’s a characteristic that troubles
forensic pyschiatrist and ABC News consultant Dr. Michael Welner.

“It’s easy to get a sense that someone like snaps,” Welner told “Good
Morning America” today. “But this is the kind of crime that’s planned
for a long time… I don’t find it to be psychotic. That’s the problem here.
It’s rational.”

Schulz believes Stack was simply beaten to the point of desperation by
the government.

“The government is routinely allegedly violating the Constitution…
Then when you call them on it, they ignore you too. That’s enough to
drive a lot of people together and to start, you know, some kind of
movement,” he said. “There are people that are out there so
frustrated that say ‘Hey it’s time to lock and load.’”

Online Posting: ‘Prepare for Battle!’  Schulz compared Stack’s attack
to McVeigh’s Oklahoma City bombing, saying despite the desperation,
any violent act is detrimental to the movement.

“Anybody that commits a violent act against the government sets things
back,” Schulz said. “The government uses that as more reason to
further clamp down… Timothy McVeigh set things back. Joe Stamp set
things back.”

Online, it appears that many people disagree.

“He sacrificed his life to inspire the quest for TRUTH,” one Facebook
poster said. “He deserves a memorial. A one man uprising… God
Bless him.”

“This was quite heroic,” said a member of Stormfront.org, a white
supremacist Web site. “There is a gradual awakening underway.”

“This is just the beginning, prepare for battle!” another said.
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

*** Just in case!

Walmart suffers first ever fall in US quarterly sales
- Financial Times

Walmart has suffered its first fall in quarterly sales at its US
discount stores, underlining the challenges facing future growth in
its home market as the economy recovers.

During the important holiday quarter ending on January 31, net sales
at Walmart’s 3,400 plus US stores fell 0.5 per cent year-on-year to
$71bn, while comparable store sales declined 2 per cent. Customer
traffic also fell.

The retailer blamed price deflation in food and electronics for
lowering the overall value of its sales, as well as the impact of
store refurbishment.

The decline contrasted with the strong sales and traffic growth during
its first three quarters, as low prices attracted new budget-minded
shoppers.

Shamrock’s comment: This is simply more unfortunate news confirming
the US economy is still in the dog house and likely to remain so for a
good time, in spite of all the brouhaha from the talking heads to the
contrary.
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Quotes

“The democracy will cease to exist when you take away from those
who are willing to work and give to those who would not.”
- Thomas Jefferson
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Memorable Quotes

“It is incumbent on every generation to pay its own debts as it
goes. A principle which if acted on would save one-half the wars
of the world.”
- Thomas Jefferson
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

More Quotes

“My reading of history convinces me that most bad government
results from too much government.”
- Thomas Jefferson
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Thought provoking quotes:

“I believe that banking institutions are more dangerous to our
liberties than standing armies. If the American people ever allow
private banks to control the issue of their currency, first by
inflation, then by deflation, the banks and corporations that will
grow up around the banks will deprive the people of all property
until their children wake-up homeless on the continent their
fathers conquered.”
- Thomas Jefferson, 1802
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

*** Tid Bits

FTC: Identity Theft Is No. 1 Consumer Complaint
- David Kravets

Are you really you? It’s hard to say.

That’s because identity theft was the top consumer complaint for 2009,
the Federal Trade Commission reported Wednesday.

It was also the top complaint from the year before, although 5 percent
fewer consumers reported it in 2009, the commission said.

Overall, of the 1.3 million complaints the agency received last year,
21 percent were for identity theft. Debt collection agencies ranked
second, with 9 percent of complaints, according to the Consumer
Sentinel Network Data Book released Wednesday.

Credit card fraud was the top complaint when it comes to identity
theft, followed by fraud related to government benefits, utilities,
phones and loans.

The FTC did not verify the complaints lodged with it. It said 72
percent of those reporting identity theft also notified a police
department.
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

*** Disturbing facts

Girl’s arrest for doodling raises concerns about zero tolerance
- Stephanie Chen, CNN

“I didn’t want them to see me being handcuffed, thinking I’m a bad
person.”
- Alexa Gonzalez, 12 year old student, New York USA

There was no profanity, no hate. Just the words, “I love my friends
Abby and Faith. Lex was here 2/1/10 :) ” scrawled on the classroom
desk with a green marker.

Alexa Gonzalez, an outgoing 12-year-old who likes to dance and draw,
expected a lecture or maybe detention for her doodles earlier this
month. Instead, the principal of the Junior High School in Forest
Hills, New York, called police, and the seventh-grader was taken
across the street to the police precinct.

Alexa’s hands were cuffed behind her back, and tears gushed as she was
escorted from school in front of teachers and — the worst audience of
all for a preadolescent girl — her classmates.

“They put the handcuffs on me, and I couldn’t believe it,” Alexa
recalled. “I didn’t want them to see me being handcuffed, thinking
I’m a bad person.”

Alexa is no longer facing suspension, according a spokeswoman for the
New York City Department of Education. Still, the case of the
doodling preteen is raising concerns about the use of zero tolerance
policies in schools.

Critics say schools and police have gone too far, overreacting and
using well-intended rules for incidents involving nonviolent offenses
such as drawing on desks, writing on other school property or talking
back to teachers.

“We are arresting them at younger and younger ages [in cases] that
used to be covered with a trip to the principal’s office, not sending
children to jail,” said Emma Jordan-Simpson, executive director of the
Children’s Defense Fund, a national children’s advocacy group.

There aren’t any national studies documenting how often minors become
involved with police for nonviolent crimes in schools. Tracking the
incidents depends on how individual schools keep records. Much of the
information remains private, since it involves juveniles.

But one thing is sure: Alexa’s case isn’t the first in the New York
area. One of the first cases to gain national notoriety was that of
Chelsea Fraser. In 2007, the 13-year-old wrote “Okay” on her desk,
and police handcuffed and arrested her. She was one of several
students arrested in the class that day; the others were accused of
plastering the walls with stickers.

At schools across the country, police are being asked to step in. In
November, a food fight at a middle school in Chicago, Illinois,
resulted in the arrests of 25 children, some as young as 11, according
to the Chicago Police Department.

The Strategy Center, a California-based civil rights group that tracks
zero tolerance policies, found that at least 12,000 tickets were
issued to tardy or truant students by Los Angeles Police Department
and school security officers in 2008. The tickets tarnished students’
records and brought them into the juvenile court system, with fines of
up to $250 for repeat offenders.

The Strategy Center opposes the system. “The theory is that if we
fine them, then they won’t be late again,” said Manuel Criollo, lead
organizer of the “No to Pre-Prison” campaign at The Strategy Center.
“But they just end up not going to school at all.”

His group is trying to stop the LAPD and the school district from
issuing the tickets. The Los Angeles School District says the policy
is designed to reduce absenteeism.

And another California school — Highland High School in Palmdale –
found that issuing tardiness tickets drastically cut the number of
pupils being late for class and helped tone down disruptive behavior.
The fifth ticket issued landed a student in juvenile traffic court.

In 1998, New York City took its zero tolerance policies to the next
level, placing school security officers under the New York City Police
Department. Today, there are nearly 5,000 employees in the NYPD
School Safety Division. Most are not police officers, but that number
exceeds the total police force in Washington, D.C.

In contrast, there are only about 3,000 counselors in New York City’s
public school system. Critics of zero tolerance policies say more
attention should be paid to social work, counseling and therapy.

“Instead of a graduated discipline approach, we see … expulsions at
the drop of a hat,” said Donna Lieberman, an attorney with the New
York branch of the American Civil Liberties Union.

“If they have been suspended once, their likelihood of being pushed
out of the school increases,” she said. “They may end up in jail at
some point in their life.”

One of Lieberman’s clients was in sixth grade when police arrested her
in 2007 for doodling with her friend in class. The child, called M.M.
in court filings to protect her identity, tried to get tissues to
remove the marks, a complaint states.

Lieberman says police subjected M.M. to unlawful search and seizure.
A class-action lawsuit, filed in January on behalf of five juveniles,
is pending. It maintains that inadequately trained and poorly
supervised police personnel are aggressive toward students when no
criminal activity is taking place.

Several studies have confirmed that the time an expelled child spends
away from school increases the chance that child will drop out and
wind up in the criminal justice system, according to a January 2010
study from the Advancement Project, a legal action group.

Alexa Gonzalez missed three days of school because of her arrest. She
spent those days throwing up, and it was a challenge to catch up on
her homework when she returned to school, she said. Her mother says
she had never been in trouble before the doodling incident.

New York attorney Joe Rosenthal, who is representing Alexa, plans to
file a lawsuit accusing police and school officials of violating
Alexa’s constitutional rights. New York City Department of Education
officials declined to comment specifically on any possible legal
matters.

“Our mission is to make sure that public schools are a safe and
supportive environment for all students,” said Margie Feinberg, an
education department spokeswoman. Our mission is to make sure that
public schools are a safe and supportive environment for all students.
–Margie Feinberg, New York City Department of Education spokeswoman

Several media outlets have reported that school officials admitted the
arrest was a “mistake,” but when asked by CNN, Feinberg declined to
comment specifically on the incident. She referred CNN to the NYPD.

The NYPD did not return CNN’s repeated phone calls and e-mails. It is
unknown whether charges will be pressed against Alexa.

Kenneth Trump, a security expert who founded the National School
Safety and Security Services consulting firm, said focusing on
security is essential to the safety of other students. He said zero
tolerance policies can work if “common sense is applied.”

Michael Soguero recalls being arrested himself in 2005 when, as
principal at Bronx Guild School, he tried to stop an officer from
handcuffing one of his students. A charge of assault against him was
later dropped. He says police working in schools need specific
training on how to work with children.

In Clayton County, Georgia, juvenile court judge Steven Teske is
working to reshape zero tolerance policies in schools. He wants the
courts to be a last resort. In 2003, he created a program in Clayton
County’s schools that distinguishes felonies from misdemeanors.

The result? The number of students detained by the school fell by 83
percent, his report found. The number of weapons detected on campus
declined by 73 percent.

Last week, after hearing about 12-year-old Alexa’s arrest in New York,
he wasn’t shocked.

“There is zero intelligence when you start applying zero tolerance
across the board,” he said. “Stupid and ridiculous things start
happening.”

Shamrock’s comment: We find and condemn the authorities actions most
disturbing in this matter. Arresting and placing handcuffs on a
twelve year old child will only cause psychological damage to a young
person and irreparable harm for the authorities involved.

Unfortunately governments’ zero tolerance policies aren’t working the
way intended and should have common sense placed into play.

Polices placed into play like those of juvenile court judge Steven
Teske of Clayton County, Georgia, do make sense and are working.

When will this craziness end?
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

*** Letters to the Editor:

Keep them postcards and letters coming’ folks, ’cause we
done mailed the rosebushes!

Dear Shamrock:

Thank you for all your great newsletters.

Our freedom is very threatened at the moment. There are
some movies you will find very fascinating. <snip>

Understanding the enemy is half the battle for freedom.

B.B.T.

Dear Shamrock:

Hope you’re well. Enjoying your newsletters as always.

I thought you might like to look at this article. US
Prosecutors are now charging any DNA they find with a
crime, thus circumventing the statute of limitations laws:
<http://rawstory.com/2010/02/prosecutors-charging-dna-evidence/>

This is truly scary. I haven’t been home in two years, since
the last time the Nazis there confiscated my laptop because
I wouldn’t give them my encryption keys. I just fly my family
to meet me now.

Thanks as always for your fine newsletter and for taking the
stand that you do. You are definitely a gem in this coal mine!

A

Dear A:

Nice to hear from you after such a long time.

Thanks for the kind words, much appreciated.

<snip> Wishing you and yours continued health and success.

Kindest regards

Shamrock

Dear Shamrock;

I really appreciate your reply more than anything. It really
surprised me as it’s been a too long while since I last saw this
type of care for the client. Old school and it is also how I work.

Anonymous

Dear Shamrock:

I love your website! Very nicely done.

Could you advice me on the most Anonymous Bank/Credit Card you have
available? <snip>

I’m highly interested, please get back to me a.s.a.p!

D.

Dear D.

Many thanks for the kind words. Suggest you take a look at the
cards we have on offer at http://www.ptshamrock.com/atmcc.html

Then check out our no name debit card, which is our best seller.

Full details can be located at
http://www.ptshamrock.com/auto/nonamecc.html

Any questions please do not hesitate to ask.

Shamrock

Dear Shamrock:

Well, I’ve been a subscriber for a couple of months now and have
really enjoyed the e- mails. Some of the content has been quite
relevant; others, not so much. But everything I’ve read has had value
and so wanted you to know that.

I’m writing for a couple of reasons. The first is that, now that I’ve
taken some time to go into the members area I’ve been busily
downloading a lot of the material. And, as you well know, a small
portion of that material requires a password, specifically FWP issues
1-12 and 14-16. Could I get those passwords from you?

The second reason I’m writing is to simply ask you: Why do you freely
give away all this good information? I know what’s in it for me but
what’s in it for you? Is there some angle I’m missing or what? Now,
I’m not complaining, I’m just…skeptical… and appreciative, even
though it’s highly likely I’m one of your… how shall I say?…
less-well-to-do subscribers. Rather, I’m simply someone who values
personal privacy and, sadly, would really, REALLY “like” to get out of
where I am now and do it as quickly as is reasonably possible.

Anyway, that’s my story and those are my requests.

Thanks for all your help.

D

Dear D.

Many thanks for the kind words.

The passwords have been sent via separate cover. Do enjoy.

You ask “Why do you (PT Shamrock) freely give away all this good
information?”

There’s several reasons really; first off where else can the main
street public locate the information we offer; on your local TV
station, The BBC, WalMart, local bank or Fox News? Hardly.

Further, in spite of your not so well to do financial status, we trust
that you will soon join the ranks of our many thousands of satisfied
customers who have supported us over the many years we’ve been
around by acquiring one or more of our numerous privacy related
products and services that we offer.

We’d like to think that the very reason you say you are skeptical,
i.e. offering great free information, etc., has contributed to our
extraordinary success and longevity helping make PT Shamrock the
oldest, and we trust, best privacy provider on the Internet bar none.

Our motto has always been “Give the customer more than their monies
worth and you’ll retain loyal and supportive customers for a long time.”

We’ve learnt from the many, many years we’ve been in business that it
is far easier to retain a customer and subscriber by keeping them happy,
than to try and find a new one.

In due time we trust you’ll become a loyal customer too!

Kindest regards and good luck

Shamrock
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Quote of the month!

“When we get piled upon one another in large cities, as in Europe,
we shall become as corrupt as Europe.”
- Thomas Jefferson
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

*** “PT Shamrock’s Exclusive Member’s Site!”

Each month we offer exclusive information, free privacy programs,
access to our newsletter archives and other insider information
for members only.

Our member’s site is accessed by user name and password only. This
is available to our newsletter subscribers ONLY!

Each month the password will change and you will have to e-mail us
from your subscribers e-mail address to request the NEW password in
order to gain access.

As a subscriber to our newsletter you automatically qualify for this
exclusive service. Just send an e-mail to
<mailto: ptshamrock@ptshamrock.com> and place “Members” in the
subject heading. We will forward to you full details for signing up and
gaining access to our Members Site, reserved for you.

Enjoy.
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Dear Friend:

If you like our newsletter please tell your friends and associates
about us. They can subscribe *FREE* by sending an e-mail to:
<mailto: ptbuzz-on@mail-list.com>.

Our pledge!

We never spam our subscribers, never rent or give our
subscribers list to anyone, and unlike other newsletters do
not accept paid advertisements; And of course, our PT Buzz
Newsletter is absolutely free, just packed full of interesting
privacy news and information with a tad of humor thrown in for
good measure.

We’re probably the oldest privacy newsletter on the Internet!

Thank you for your patronage and help in spreading the word.

Shamrock

“The right to privacy is a part of our basic freedoms. Privacy is
fundamental to close family ties, competitive free enterprise, the
ownership of property, and the exchange of ideas.”

PT Shamrock – issue one; 1994
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Don’t forget to check out our Special Offers at <www.ptshamrock.com>

See you next issue!

“Mehr sein, als scheinen” (German Proverb)
Be more, seem less!

PT Shamrock

Internet Privacy Software

Thursday, February 4th, 2010

https://xerobank.com/download/

XeroBank Installer

XeroBank Internet Privacy Software

XeroBank’s internet privacy software suite gives you the tools to anonymously access the internet. The XeroBank Installer includes xB Browser, xB Mail, and xB VPN. Interet privacy software evades tracking, logging, cookies, spyware, and does not leave personally identifiable information.

xB Browser empowers you to do free anonymous browsing using our USB portable anonymous web browser, and can be upgraded to the private XeroBank anonymity network for high-speed anonymity. xB Browser will also encrypt your browsing activities to prevent local network snoops, including work, administrators, and even your ISP from being able to track where you go and what you do online. xB Mail is included for XeroBank users, and is used to access our encrypted email service. xB VPN is used to create an anonymous VPN connection to the XeroBank anonymity network. It is designed for OpenVPN connections and can be run on Windows 2k, NT, XP, Vista, and Vista x64.

Are you ready for high-speed anonymous web surfing?

Your internet privacy software can be upgraded from the free network to the high-speed XeroBank network. All your normal programs will be transparently protected by our anonymous network without any additional configuration. XeroBank internet privacy software will even allow you to pick what country you want websites to think you are visiting from.

Try XeroBank High-Speed Anonymous Internet for 30 Days

PT Shamrocks Febuary 2010 Newletter

Sunday, January 31st, 2010

February 2010 Newsletter

“The Constitution is not an instrument for the government to restrain
the people, it is an instrument for the people to restrain the
government.”
– Patrick Henry

We are exceedingly proud to announce that this February 2010
newsletter issue marks our 16th anniversary publishing PT Buzz.
To the best of our knowledge we are the oldest privacy provider
on the internet!

Thank you for your continued support over these many years!

PT Shamrock – February 2010

In this issue:

* Labour is dreaming up 33 new crimes a month
* Scary Stuff – Poll: Most Americans would trim liberties to be safer
* Breaking News! Italy to Require Anyone Who Uploads Video to the
Internet to Obtain Government Authorization
* Good News – European court pulls plugs on terror stop and search
* Did you know? Italians take the ‘p’ to fight back against Big Brother
* Bad News – China Expanding Censorship to Text Messages
* Food for thought – US wants “obedient servants of the state,” Ron Paul
* Meet Mikey, 8: U.S. Has Him on Watch List
* The District of Criminals – FBI broke law in phone searches
* Government in the Bedroom and Everywhere Else
* Police State – 800,000 Americans Busted Annually For Pot
* Red Hot Product!
* Advisory – UK border database on target and budget, says Home Office
* ACLU challenges US laptop border searches
* Dumbing Down – Police rake in GBP 400 million from middle-class fines
* Dumb facts – Insane air board’s new role: Tire Nazis
* Dumb criminal acts – DVLA makes GBP44m flogging drivers’ details
* Dumbing Down Award of the month – This months award goes to…
* Oz/Nzed Corner
* Bug Bites: – Taser’s new weapon: mobile phone monitoring
* More Bugs – Google Turns on Gmail Encryption to Protect Wi-Fi Users
* States get more time to comply with Real ID
* ID card scheme for foreigner’s extended
* Shamrock’s Missive
* Quotes
* Tid Bits – FBI seeks public’s help via Times Square billboard
* More Tid Bits – An Orwellian world for Big Brother
* Even More Tid Bits – Stop and search for children who were
’sledging downhill’
* Bits and Bobs – Heathrow staff given body language training to spot
suspected terrorists
* Letters To The Editor
* Quote of the month!
* PT Shamrock’s Exclusive Member’s Site!

*** Labour is dreaming up 33 new crimes a month… including barring
you from swimming into the Titanic
– Mail Online

Labour has created 4,300 new crimes since taking power – including a
ban on swimming in the wreck of the Titanic and on the sale of game
birds shot on a Sunday.

Gordon Brown has been the worst offender in this unprecedented
‘legislative splurge’, with his Government creating new offences at
the rate of 33 a month.

Under Tony Blair, Labour invented 27 new ways of criminalising the
public every month.

The ‘crimes’ range from swimming in the hull of the Titanic without
the permission of a Cabinet Minister to ‘disturbing a pack of eggs’
when instructed not to by an authorised officer.

In total, between 1997 and 2009, 4,289 new criminal offences were
created – approximately one for every day ministers have been in
office. It is twice the rate at which new crimes were created under
the last Tory administration.

They include offences – such as carrying out a nuclear explosion -
which could easily be covered by existing laws.

Others are simply bewildering, such as the ban on the sale of game
birds shot on a Sunday-or Christmas Day.

This stems from the fact it is illegal, for ancient religious reasons,
to shoot the birds on a Sunday – so the Government felt the need to
also make it illegal to sell birds shot on a Sunday, to reinforce the
point.

Liberal Democrat home office spokesman Chris Huhne, who uncovered the
figures, will attack the Government’s law-making frenzy in a speech
tonight.

He will say: ‘Over the past 12 years, this Labour Government has been
suffering from the most acute and prolonged bout of legislative
diarrhoea.

‘We have had 69 Home Affairs Bills in 12 years, an average of almost
six per year. This is a staggering-volume to have added to the
statute books in such a short time, and this is just the two
departments of the Home Office and the Justice Department.

‘The “bill teams” in departments are possibly among the most
productive parts of the public sector. Unfortunately, the product is
in too many cases virtually worthless.’

Many of the new laws are backed by powers to enter people’s home
without a warrant to check they are not being breached.

Mr Huhne wrote to Justice Secretary Jack Straw urging him to repeal
some of the laws.

But, in reference to the crime of ‘disturbing a pack of eggs’, Mr
Straw said: ‘Egg marketing inspectors must be able to ensure that eggs
suspected of being marketed in contravention of EU regulations are not
tampered with.’

He added: ‘I am sorry that you regard these offences as unnecessary.
In their different ways they are important pieces of legislation.’

Editors note: How may laws has the united States [correct spelling]
written into law that is criminalising the public every month?
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Scary Stuff

Poll: Most Americans would trim liberties to be safer
– McClatchy Newspapers

After a recent attempted terrorist attack set off a debate about
full-body X-rays at airports, a new McClatchy-Ipsos poll finds that
Americans lean more toward giving up some of their liberty in exchange
for more safety.

The survey found 51 percent of Americans agreeing that “it is
necessary to give up some civil liberties in order to make the country
safe from terrorism.”

At the same time, 36 percent agreed that “some of the government’s
proposals will go too far in restricting the public’s civil
liberties.”

The rest were undecided or said their opinions would depend on
circumstances.

As has happened often since the 2001 terrorist attacks, the renewed
debate over security is hinging on the balance between personal
liberty and safety. The suspect’s success in boarding a Detroit-bound
plane allegedly carrying explosives is setting off calls for full body
scans, which some find an invasion of privacy, and for new
restrictions on passengers once they’re in flight.

To stop terrorists, Americans look first to better governmental
coordination and use of intelligence, the poll found, with 81 percent
calling that effective and only 11 percent calling it ineffective.

Body scans or full body searches at airports ranked second, named by
74 percent as an effective way to stop terrorism. Nineteen percent
called those measures ineffective.

Further restrictions on carry-on baggage ranked third, called
effective by 57 percent, ineffective by 34 percent.

New in-flight restrictions such as banning the use of laptops and
electronic equipment or restricting people to their seats ranked last,
called effective by 50 percent and ineffective by 42 percent.

A solid majority of Americans still feel safe flying, but the number
has dropped.

The survey found 75 percent saying they feel safe, down from 86
percent in 2007, and 24 percent saying they don’t feel safe in the
air, up from 13 percent in 2007.

Even with the Christmas Day bombing attempt and all the news coverage
of it and its aftermath, terrorism remains very low on the national
priority list. Just 4 percent called it the country’s most important
problem.

The economy and jobs remained the top issue on people’s minds by far,
named as the top problem by 48 percent of Americans polled.

Other domestic issues were cited by 31 percent, topped by 9 percent
who said that health care was the biggest problem.

Fourteen percent cited some aspect of war or foreign policy, including
the 4 percent who named terrorism.

The poll found that 52 percent approved of the way President Barack
Obama is doing his job, and 45 percent disapproved.

METHODOLOGY:

These are some of the findings of a poll conducted from last Thursday
through Monday. For the survey, Ipsos interviewed a nationally
representative, randomly selected sample of 1,336 people 18 and older
across the United States. With a sample of this size, the results are
considered accurate within 2.68 percentage points, 19 times out of 20,
of what they would’ve been had the entire adult population in the U.S.
been polled. All sample surveys and polls may be subject to other
sources of error, including coverage and measurement error. These
data were weighted to ensure that the sample’s composition reflects
that of the U.S. population according to census figures. Respondents
had the option to be interviewed in English or Spanish.
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

*** Breaking News!

Italy to Require Anyone Who Uploads Video to the Internet to Obtain
Government Authorization
– cryptogon.com

New rules to be introduced by government decree will require people
who upload videos onto the Internet to obtain authorization from the
Communications Ministry similar to that required by television
broadcasters, drastically reducing freedom to communicate over the
Web, opposition lawmakers have warned.

The decree is ostensibly an enactment of a European Union (EU)
directive on product placement and is due to go into effect at the end
of January after being subjected to a nonbinding appraisal by
parliament.

On Thursday opposition lawmakers held a press conference in parliament
to denounce the new rules, which require government authorization for
the uploading of videos, give individuals who claim to have been
defamed a right of reply and prevent the replay of copyright material
as a threat to freedom of expression.

“The decree subjects the transmission of images on the Web to rules
typical of television and requires prior ministerial authorization,
with an incredible limitation on the way the Internet currently
functions,” opposition Democratic Party lawmaker Paolo Gentiloni told
the press conference.

Article 4 of the decree specifies that the dissemination over the
Internet “of moving pictures, whether or not accompanied by sound,”
requires ministerial authorization. Critics say it will therefore
apply to the Web sites of newspapers, to IPTV and to mobile TV,
obliging them to take on the same status as television broadcasters.

“Italy joins the club of the censors, together with China, Iran and
North Korea,” said Gentiloni’s party colleague Vincenzo Vita.
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Good News

European court pulls plugs on terror stop and search
– The Register

The European Court of Human Rights has ruled that the UK police’s use
of stop and search powers granted under terrorism legislation is
illegal.

The case was brought by two people who were stopped and searched under
the Terrorism Act of 2000 while on their way to an arms fair.

The law grants police the power to search anyone regardless of
suspicion. A senior police officer can grant the power for a defined
area; this must then be confirmed by the secretary of state within 48
hours.

Since the law was passed in February 2001 there has been a rolling
programme of applications and authorisations for the whole of the
Metropolitan Police area all of the time.

The court objected on several grounds. It found the searches
interfered with the right to a private life and that, unlike airline
passengers, people had in no way consented to be searched. It found a
lack of basic safeguards in use of the powers – no minister has ever
objected or sought to change the terms of such an order.

The court was not impressed with the independent reviewer who has
complained since May 2006 that the law is being over-used.

Finally the court objected to the lack of any controls on the
individual police officers – they only have to say they had a hunch
rather than show reasonable grounds for a search.

In summary the Court found the powers “were neither sufficiently
circumscribed nor subject to adequate legal safeguards against abuse”.

The court also found from statistics that black and Asian people “were
disproportionately affected by the powers”.

Between 2004 and 2008 total searches recorded went up from 33,177 to
117,278.

Kevin Gillan, a 32-year old student and Pennie Quinton, a 38-year old
reporter and photographer, were on their way to a demonstration at an
arms fair being held in Docklands when they were stopped.

The two applicants share Euro 33,850 in costs and expenses.

The verdict is another blow for the Home Office which has had its
wrists slapped over the DNA database, prisoners’ rights to privacy in
recent months.

Policing and Security Minister David Hanson MP said: “Stop and search
under section 44 of the Terrorism Act 2000 is an important tool in a
package of measures in the ongoing fight against terrorism.

“I am disappointed with the ECHR ruling in this case as we won all
other challenges in the UK courts, including at the House of Lords.
We are considering the judgment and will seek to appeal.”
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

*** Did you know?

Italians take the ‘p’ to fight back against Big Brother
– John Ozimek

Italians are fighting back against the surveillance society with a
grass roots project designed to publicise the location of CCTV cameras
and to “out” those that have been set up contrary to Italian Law.

The “Anopticon” project, which was launched earlier this year, is a
deliberate parody of the “panopticon”, an ideal prison first put
forward by Jeremy Bentham in 1791. Its inhabitants were forced to
conform to social standards, as even the slightest action they take is
watched by “all-seeing” guards.

If the “panopticon” is an environment in which everything is seen, an
“anopticon” would be one in which private activity remains private and
free from surveillance.

The initial “Anopticon project” was started with a website launched by
a Venice-based group, who used online mapping as a means to pinpoint
publicly where all known CCTV sites in Venice are situated. Since
then, it has spread out to other cities, including Padova, Foggia,
Urbnino and Solero.

It is also supported by a (small) group on Facebook.

Although the project began with the simple aim of revealing where
cameras were located, it has already concluded that a high proportion
of CCTVs are not lawful, in that they fail to provide the “information
notice” required by Legislative Decree 196/2003 (the Italian
equivalent of the Data Protection Directive).

In addition to surveying camera location and legality, the project has
therefore expanded recently, with a call for Italian supporters to
“out” those cameras that do not comply with existing law.

This has led to a new campaign – “Denounce illegal CCTVs”, which will
actively seek to identify every surveillance device that does not
respect Italian data protection law (including the need for an
“information notice”). Details of these devices will then be passed
to the Italian Data Protection Authority.

The Anopticon project appears to be an implementation of a similar
initiative proposed for the UK on the mySociety projects blog. This
is a space where individuals can put forward ideas that would aid in
the maintenance of an open society.

Back in 2003, the project proposer justified such a system as a means
to “watch the watchers”, allowing the public to be instantly aware of
where they are being watched and by whom. They write:

“By inviting members of the public armed with GPS (or able to use
online mapping services to retrieve coordinates) we can map out CCTV
locations within the UK and track who owns them by their Data
Protection Act signs. Members of the public can input information
about the people in control of CCTV systems to build up a picture of
the organisations who are monitoring the public. The entries can be
checked by a rating and peer review system.”

According to mySociety director, Tom Steinberg, this proposal never
went any further.

Bootnote The Anopticon mentioned in this story should not be confused
with the fictional anopticon device created by Isaac Asimov for his
short story ‘Anniversary’, and hinted at in his earlier story
‘Marooned Off Vesta’.

The device in the story was so named as it focused light using force
fields rather than lenses, allowing a small object the size of a pair
of field glasses to function as both a microscope and a telescope.
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Bad News

China Expanding Censorship to Text Messages
– Fox News

China’s already repressive regime is moving to increase censorship,
adding text messages to the list of filtered communications.

China’s already repressive regime is moving to increase censorship,
ordering carriers in the world’s largest cell phone market to filter
the billions of messages sent in the country every day.

According to the state news agency Xinhua, if the government
identifies one of 13 different types of vulgar content — including
sexual content, inappropriate pictures and provocative headlines –
cell phone companies like China Mobile and China Unicorn will disable
a user’s text-messaging services.

Preventing the spread of pornography is a common thread in China’s
censorship, explains Abbe E. Foreman, a professor with the computer
and information science department at Temple University’s College of
Science and Tech.

“They’ve been doing this type of censorship for some time,” she said,
adding that “5,000 people in China were arrested on pornography
charges last year. I’m guessing they found them all through some sort
of censorship program.”

But many believe the government is looking for more than pornography.
Kan Kaili, a professor of telecommunications at Beijing University of
Posts and Telecommunication, told The New York Times that the new
measures appeared broader, more intrusive and more punitive than
previous limitations.

“They are doing wide-ranging checks, checking anything and everything,
even if it is between a husband and wife,” he told the newspaper. “I
don’t think people will be very happy about this.”

It’s unclear whether the lockdown on text messages is a new
regulation, or merely the expansion of a current system that
automatically monitors messages and suspends a user’s account if it
detects illegal content. The Wall Street Journal tried to clear up
the confusion, noting that Xinhua’s latest report said text messaging
services would be suspended only for users who’ve had multiple
complaints filed against them for sending pornographic mass-text
messages.

China certainly has the technical ability to carry out such filtering,
even on the scale of billions of text message per day, says Sal
Stolfo, professor of computer science at Columbia University. With
access to the network provider’s infrastructure, he says, it’s
relatively easy to inspect messages as they flow by.

“They’re undoubtedly doing keyword searches,” Stolfo said, “and
somebody obviously has to choose which keywords those are. But it’s
technically very easy to do, and scalable to billions of messages a
day.”

Foreman said she worries that the nature of this type of censorship
makes the program easily and quickly transformable. While the
government may be searching for pornographic content today, keywords
are readily changed to allow the government to ferret out dissent
tomorrow.

“Once you open that door, and you’re looking at e-mails and text
message, what’s to stop someone from changing the keyword from ’sex’
to ‘bomb’ or ‘government’?” she asked. “They can use any keyword
they want.”

The crackdown on text messaging is just the latest attack on privacy
in China, and whether the government actually implements the filters
is almost irrelevant. “Just knowing it’s possible reminds people
who’s in control, and it will have a chilling effect. People will
probably avoid certain language just knowing about this,” says Stolfo.
“It’s an intrusion of government forces into the private lives of
citizens, and it’s shameful.”

China may be limiting texting in light of its widening spat with
Google, which recently announced that it would refuse to comply with
Chinese demands for censorship. Google says it is willing to leave
the Chinese market entirely rather than comply.

“The challenge that the government has is to keep control. Google, an
American company, is publicly challenging them. Do they have much
choice? They can whimper and walk away or they can fight back,”
explains Stolfo.

Following Google’s announcement of plans to withdraw, other companies
were quick to take positions with regard to China. Microsoft notably
announced that its search engine Bing, would remain in the country and
would continue to comply with censorship demands.

“Microsoft will continue to engage in the Chinese market, offering
Bing and other Microsoft software and services to Chinese customers,”
a Microsoft spokesman told FoxNews.com.

Stolfo said that was horrifying news.

“Google’s strategy is don’t be evil, and Microsoft came out and said,
we’re still evil. ”
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Food for thought

US wants “obedient servants of the state”, Ron Paul
– Russia Today

“The greatest threat to a government is people who think for
themselves,” believes US Congressman Ron Paul.

“If you condition people to everyday, all day, depend on the
government to do their thinking for them, they will become more
obedient.”

Paul said the billions of dollars spent by the American government on
intelligence could not prevent the recent terror attempt in US skies.

“I think the responsibility has fallen on the $75 billion bureaucracy
that has 16 agencies that cannot co-ordinate their work,” he said.
“Airlines should be responsible for who gets on their planes,” he
added.

According to the congressman, all the efforts of the US government to
introduce new technical systems for airport passenger control, such as
body scanners, are “just to make us obedient servants of the state, to
teach us that they are in charge of us and to tell us what to do, that
we are robots and are supposed to obey them.”

“It’s not that individuals are perfect, it’s just that governments are
always imperfect, they always make mistakes and when they do, they
are very painful and they hurt each and every one of us.”

Paul said that America has made an amazing shift away from traditional
values while even former communist regimes are moving in the direction
of a free market.

“[The economy] should be micromanaged by the people, by the consumer.
In the free market the consumer is king,” Paul said. “But in the US,
as in most countries in the world today, it is being micromanaged by
the central government and central banks.”

Speaking about the earthquake in Haiti, Paul said, “just handing out
money to Haiti is not going to solve their problems.”

According to the outspoken politician, the best thing the US could do
for Haiti in the long term would be to introduce the country to sound
economic policies so that they would not suffer from poverty.

Commenting on the situation in Yemen, Paul said that the US is
“looking for another war” and that it is a “disastrous continuation of
the foreign policy of George Bush.”
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Horror Stories

Meet Mikey, 8: U.S. Has Him on Watch List
– New York Times

The Transportation Security Administration, under scrutiny after last
month’s bombing attempt, has on its Web site a “mythbuster” that tries
to reassure the public.

Myth: The No-Fly list includes an 8-year-old boy.

Buster: No 8-year-old is on a T.S.A. watch list.

“Meet Mikey Hicks,” said Najlah Feanny Hicks, introducing her
8-year-old son, a New Jersey Cub Scout and frequent traveler who has
seldom boarded a plane without a hassle because he shares the name of
a suspicious person. “It’s not a myth.”

Michael Winston Hicks’s mother initially sensed trouble when he was a
baby and she could not get a seat for him on their flight to Florida
at an airport kiosk; airline officials explained that his name “was on
the list,” she recalled.

The first time he was patted down, at Newark Liberty International
Airport, Mikey was 2. He cried.

After years of long delays and waits for supervisors at every airport
ticket counter, this year’s vacation to the Bahamas badly shook up the
family. Mikey was frisked on the way there, then more aggressively on
the way home.

“Up your arms, down your arms, up your crotch, someone is patting
your 8-year-old down like he’s a criminal,” Mrs. Hicks recounted. “A
terrorist can blow his underwear up and they don’t catch him. But my
8-year-old can’t walk through security without being frisked.”

It is true that Mikey is not on the federal government’s “no-fly”
list, which includes about 2,500 people, less than 10 percent of them
from the United States. But his name appears to be among some 13,500
on the larger “selectee” list, which sets off a high level of security
screening.

At some point, someone named Michael Hicks made the Department of
Homeland Security suspicious, and little Mikey is still paying the
price. (His father, also named Michael Hicks, was stopped for the
first time on the Bahamas trip.)

Both lists are maintained by the Terrorist Screening Center, which
includes the Federal Bureau of Investigation. They are given to the
Transportation Security Administration, which in turn sends them to
the airlines.

A spokesman for the T.S.A., James Fotenos, said that as a rule, “there
are no children on the no-fly or selectee lists,” but would not
comment on Mikey’s situation specifically.

For every person on the lists, hundreds of others may get caught up
simply because they share the same name; a quick scan through a
national phone directory unearthed 1,600 Michael Hickses. Over the
past three years, 81,793 frustrated travelers have formally asked that
they be struck from the watch list through the Department of Homeland
Security; more than 25,000 of their cases are still pending. Others
have taken more drastic measures.

Mario Labbe, a frequent-flying Canadian record-company executive,
started having problems at airports shortly after Sept. 11, 2001,
with lengthy delays at checkpoints and mysterious questions about
Japan. By 2005, he stopped flying to the United States from Canada,
instead meeting American clients in France. Then a forced rerouting
to Miami in 2008 led to six hours of questions.

“What’s the name of your mother? Your father? When were you last in
Japan?” Mr. Labb recalled being asked. “Always the same questions
in different order. And sometimes, it’s quite aggressive, not funny
at all.”

Fed up, in the summer of 2008, he changed his name to Francois Mario
Labbe. The problem vanished.

Several Web sites, including the T.S.A.’s own blog, are rife with
tales of misidentification and strategies for solving them. Some
travelers purposely misspell their own names when buying tickets,
apparently enough to fool the system. Even the late Senator Edward M.
Kennedy once found himself on a list.

“We can’t just throw a bunch of names on these lists and call it
security,” said Representative William J. Pascrell Jr., a New Jersey
Democrat. “If we can’t get an 8-year-old off the list, the whole list
becomes suspect.”

Mr. Fotenos, the T.S.A. spokesman, promised improvements in a few
months, as the agency’s Secure Flight Program takes full effect.
Under the new system, airlines will collect every passenger’s birth
date and gender, along with their names. The T.S.A. will cross-check
all that with the watch lists. Previously, the airlines cross-checked
the lists themselves, using only the names.

Certainly, Mikey’s date of birth, less than a month before 9/11,
should prevent him from being mistaken as a terrorist.

A third grader at a parochial school in Clifton, N.J., Mikey recites
the drill like the world-weary traveler he is. Leave early for the
airport, always with his passport. Try to get a boarding pass at the
counter. This will send up a flag. The ticket agent, peering down at
tiny bespectacled Mikey, will apologize or roll her eyes, and call for
a supervisor. The supervisor, after a phone call, or more likely, a
series of phone calls, will ultimately finagle him onto the plane.
But the Hickses are typically the last to select seats and the last to
board, which means they sometimes can’t sit together.

Mrs. Hicks, a photojournalist who herself got Secret Service clearance
to travel aboard Air Force II with then-Vice President Al Gore,
anticipated additional chaos following the attempted underwear
bombing. Before leaving for the Bahamas on Jan. 2, she reached out
to Congressman Pascrell’s office, which then enlisted a T.S.A. agent
to meet the family at the airport. Even this did not prevent Mikey
from an extra pat-down.

On the way home last Friday, Mikey’s boarding pass showed four giant
red S’s at the airport in Nassau. “Oh, random screening,” Mrs. Hicks
said. Mikey asked his mother not to worry and said he would use his
tae kwon do, he has a junior black belt, if needed. Mrs. Hicks said
she wanted to take pictures of her son being frisked but was told it
was against the rules.

Mikey, who would rather talk about BMX bikes and his athletic trophies
than airport security, remains perplexed about the “list” and the
hurdles he must clear. “Why do they think a kid is a terrorist?”
Mikey asked his mother at one point during the interview.

Mrs. Hicks said the family was amused by the mistake at first. But
that amusement quickly turned to annoyance and anger. It should not
take seven years to correct the problem, Mrs. Hicks said. She applied
for redress in December when she first heard about the Department of
Homeland Security’s program.

“I understand the need for security,” she added. “But this is
ridiculous. It’s quite clear that he is 8 years old, and while he may
have terroristic tendencies at home, he does not have those on a
plane.”
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

*** The District of Criminals

FBI broke law in phone searches
– Reuters

The FBI collected more than 2,000 records on U.S. telephone calls by
invoking terrorism emergencies that did not exist or by persuading
phone companies to provide them, The Washington Post reported on
Tuesday.

FBI officials issued approvals afterward to justify their actions in
collecting the phone records between 2002 and 2006, the newspaper
said.

“This practice ceased in 2006 and never involved obtaining the content
of telephone conversations. Additionally, steps have been taken to
ensure similar situations do not occur in the future,” FBI spokesman
Michael Kortan told Reuters.

FBI officials issued approvals afterward to justify their actions in
collecting the phone records between 2002 and 2006, the newspaper
said.

The Post said it had obtained emails that showed how counterterrorism
officials did not follow procedures aimed at protecting civil
liberties.

FBI officials confirmed a Justice Department inspector general’s
report due this month is expected to conclude the FBI frequently
violated the law with its emergency requests, the newspaper said.

FBI general counsel Valerie Caproni, in an interview with the Post,
said the FBI technically violated the Electronic Communications
Privacy Act.

“We should have stopped those requests from being made that way,” she
told the Post.

Caproni said FBI Director Robert Mueller did not know about the
problems until the inspector general’s investigation, which began in
mid-2006.

“No FBI employee used informal methods to obtain telephone records for
reasons other than a legitimate investigative interest,” Kortan told
Reuters.
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

*** Government in the Bedroom and Everywhere Else
– William Anderson

Left-liberals, when discussing abortion on demand, often declare: “We
don’t want government in the bedroom.” While I am not arguing about
abortion rights, I will point out how the left really wants government
in our homes.

After we moved to Cumberland, Maryland, in 2001, a woman from the
state tax assessor’s office soon walked into our house. There was no
asking permission, nothing. She strolled in as though she owned the
place, and I suspect she understood her powers over our family and our
possessions.

Indeed, on that day we did have government in our bedrooms, and
everywhere else. That was not an aberration, and the huge reach that
government has over our lives and homes hardly is limited to tax
assessment. The majority of us, each time we visit a bathroom, can
appreciate the long reach of the state whenever we flush a toilet.
Jeff Tucker tells why:

This act [the Energy Policy Act of 1992], passed during an
environmentalist hysteria, mandated that all toilets sold in the
United States use no more than 1.6 gallons of water per flush. This
was a devastating setback in the progress of civilization. The
conventional toilet in the US ranges from 3.5 gallons to 5 gallons.
The new law was enforced with fines and imprisonment.

Tucker points out that in the past, toilets with more water tended to
flush better, and one did not need to constantly use a plunger, or
worse. These toilets, he noted:

were great cultural and civilizational achievements. In a state of
nature, the problem of human waste and what to do about it is
persistent. Do the wrong thing and you spread disease and misery.

Indoor plumbing since the time of the ancient world has been a sign of
prosperity and human well-being. Indoor toilets that flow into a
sewer have been around since 1500 B.C., but every new settlement of
people in a new area presents the problem anew. In rural America,
indoor toilets weren’t common until the 1930s. That today everyone
assumes them to be part of life is a testament to the creative power
of economic progress.

Unfortunately, government policies have made our bathrooms more
unsanitary. However, why stop there? Let’s go back to the bedroom.

As governments and political, education, and media elites continue to
spread “global warming” panic, one of the things we are hearing from
these elites is that governments need to adopt “population controls.”
For example, Canada’s Financial Post recently had a column by Diane
Francis that demanded a China-style “one child” policy for the world,
in the name of “sustainability,” of course.

I don’t have to give a lesson in the “birds and the bees” to tell
readers how children are created, so it is no stretch to say that
Francis (who has two children, by the way) is calling for, well,
government in the bedroom. So much for “pro-choice” policies.

But why stop at bathrooms and bedrooms? Government sees fit to
rummage through your children’s toy boxes and tell you that many of
the toys are “unsafe” and must be destroyed or recalled. (For that
matter, one can surmise that the toy boxes themselves most likely are
“hazards” in one way or another, according to the government’s
Consumer Product Safety Commission.)

Then there is the kitchen. The same government that keeps your
toilets stopped up, demands the authority to snuggle up with your and
your spouse under the covers, and tells your children what are and are
not “acceptable” toys, also tells you how to cook and keep your
kitchens “safe.” (These safety sites don’t tell you how government
policies make food prices higher, forcing you to use more resources
than economically necessary. Nor do they tell of the symbiotic
relationship between government food regulators and the food
industry.)

So, there you have it. The same people who claim they don’t want
“government in the bedroom” demand that government be in your bedroom,
kitchen, bathroom and elsewhere. Gee, think of what might be going on
if they claimed to want government in your bedroom.
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

*** Police State

800,000 Americans Busted Annually For Pot
– Sherwood Ross

Seven million Americans have been arrested since 1995 on marijuana
charges and 41,000 of them are rotting in federal and State
prisons but the public is starting to rebel against “the preposterous
war on pot,” two political scientists say. Thousands of other pot
users and sellers are confined in local jails as well.

“People convicted of possessing even one ounce of marijuana can face a
mandatory minimum sentence of a year in jail, and having even one
plant in your yard is a federal felony,” progressive organizer Jim
Hightower and co-author Phillip Frazer point out in the November issue
of “The Hightower Lowdown.”

Police arrest someone in America every 36 seconds on marijuana
charges, with a record 872,000 arrests made in 2007, “more than for
all violent crimes combined,” Hightower and Frazer point out. They
note that 89 per cent of all marijuana arrests “are for simple
possession of the weed, not for producing or selling it.”

They argue the drug war “is doing far more harm than marijuana itself
ever will,” because (1) it diverts hundreds of thousands of police
agents from serious crimes “to the pursuit of harmless tokers”; (2) it
costs taxpayers at minimum $10 billion a year to catch, prosecute, and
incarcerate marijuana users and sellers; (3) it enables government to
snatch the cars, money, computers and other properties of people
caught up in drug raids even if they have had no charges filed against
them; and (4) it allows “police agents at all levels to trample our
Bill of Rights in their eagerness to nab pot consumers.”

The drug war has also unleashed a torrent of racism in the form of
unjust sentencing, which confines crack-cocaine users who are mostly
black to prison for longer terms than powder snorters, who are mostly
white.

Hightower and Frazer say authorities have perverted the infamous
“Patriot Act” of 2001 for use in non-terrorism cases, allowing
“sneak-and-peak” search warrants to be used in drug war probes,
including pursuit of marijuana users. The Act’s provisions were
supposed to be applied only for suspected terrorist acts. Only three
of the Justice Department’s 763 requests for “sneak-and-peak” last
year were used for terrorism searches, they report in Lowdown.

By outlawing drugs, Hightower and Frazer contend, Congress has
created “a vast, murderous narco-state within Mexico” to satisfy U.S.
consumer demand for the drugs. And Plan Colombia, the multi-billion
operation started by Bill (”I didn’t inhale”) Clinton in 2000 to
eradicate cocoa production there, has failed, judging by the 15 per
cent increase in coca production.

For all the legislation against it, pot is more plentiful than ever
and 10 per cent of Americans told surveyors they have enjoyed using it
in the previous year while four in ten say they used it at some point
in their lives. Plus, a 2005 survey found 85 per cent of high school
seniors claimed pot was “easy to get”, easier than alcohol, which is a
regulated drug, Hightower Lowdown points out.

The publication quotes a University of Michigan student who told them,
“If the government trusts society to use alcohol responsibly, it is
idiotic to assume citizens are somehow incapable of responsible use of
cannabis.”

A Gallup opinion poll in 2005 found that 51 per cent of Americans
stating alcohol is more dangerous than marijuana and 52 per cent
saying it should be legalized, taxed, and regulated.

State and local governments, Hightower and Frazer report, “have begun
walking step by step away from the weed war.” Since 1996, 13 states
from Rhode Island to Alaska have passed laws to allow growing and
distribution of doctor-prescribed marijuana for medical purposes.
What’s more, pot possession is no longer criminalized in a dozen
states: Alaska, California, Colorado, Maine, Massachusetts, Minnesota,
Mississippi, Nebraska, Nevada, North Carolina, Ohio, and Oregon.

The drive now is for outright legalization of pot, the authors say.
This would enable officials to take the exorbitant profit and violence
out of illicit black-market weed by legalizing it and turning it into
a revenue-producer that would rake in tax dollars.

Instead, the Office of National Drug Control Policy says, Americans
spend $9 billion a year buying pot from Mexico; $10 billion on pot
from Canada, and $39 billion on home-grown pot, now America’s
Numero Uno cash crop “topping the value of corn and wheat combined.”
By one estimate, legalization would produce annual tax revenues of
$6.2 billion. In Portugal, which legalized all drugs in 2001, hard drug
use has showed a stunning decline while the numbers of people getting
detox aid has soared, Time magazine reported last April 26th. By
contrast, USA has the highest rates of drug use in the world.

As Rep. Barney Frank has said, “I now think it’s time for the
politicians to catch up to the public. The notion that you lock
people up for smoking marijuana is pretty silly.”

There is, however, a downside to the legalization of pot: some of
the individuals in the legal system who depend on the arrests of
pot smokers might have to find worthwhile jobs instead. Look at
all the paychecks that get cut: The cops make their collars. The
bail bondsmen get their rake off. The prosecutors make their cases.
The social workers write up their interviews. The clerks push their
papers. The lawyers collect their fees. The judges render their
verdicts. The prison guards make their rounds. The vendors sell
their baloney sandwiches. The construction firms build their
additions. And the shrinks nod their heads.

One last thought: cigarettes kill 440,000 Americans every year and
sicken millions but no one reportedly ever has been killed by smoking
a joint. If the growers and peddlers of pot belong in jail, where do
the manufacturers of brand name cigarettes and cigars belong? In two
years’ time they kill more Americans than all the Blue and Grays who
died (620,000) in the Civil War. Indeed, in the next two years, 440
times as many Americans will be killed by smoking cigarettes than all
U.S. troops killed in six years of fighting in Iraq. While this
writer opposes the use of all drugs, and does not indulge himself,
it’s easy to see the prosecution of pot smokers and growers for
victimless crimes is, as Hightower Lowdown reports, “preposterous.”
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Red Hot Product!

Anonymous pre-paid NO NAME Debit Card – only Euro 175!

Our leprechaun has done it again and is proud to present this no name
anonymous Pre Paid Master Card with hologram accepted anywhere Master
Card is accepted, online, stores, ATMs, telephone and mail orders etc.
This No Name debit card doesn’t bear any personal details about its
holder on the card or when used from an atm till or elsewhere.

Just Euro 175 while they remain available. Order two cards for only
Euro 279.95 including shipping.

This pre-paid anonymous card product is issued by a major bank in
Central America that is a full member of MasterCard and SWIFT. The
card itself has no name printed, embossed or encoded on it, so it
cannot be associated with specific person. The bank is obliged to
request client’s ID, which are quite liberal if I say so myself. The
ID details will only be kept by the bank in Central America under
strict banking secrecy. Clients have direct access to real time card
balance both online and by telephone access.

Your no name card can be funded by USD wire transfer. [Note that this
card is designated for electronic use only so it shouldn't be used in
manual imprinters.]

Fees:
* ATM Withdrawal Fee 3 USD
* ATM Balance Inquiry/Transaction History 0.5 USD
* ATM Transaction Decline 0.5 USD
* Online & POS Transaction fee 1 USD
* Online & POS Decline fee 0.5 USD
* Monthly Administrative fee 3.5 USD
* Card Load Fee 15 USD
* Card to Card Transfer 2 USD
* Card Replacement Fee (if lost/stole or damaged) 25 USD
* Inactive Fee (90 days) 10 USD
* The maximum reload amount 2,500 USD
* Maximum per prepaid card a month 10,000 USD
* The minimum total to obtain from ATM 10 USD
* Minimum balance 10 USD

To order please proceed to our secure on-line order form at
https://www.ptshamrock.com/order_bwe.html

Your order code for this product is “175 No Name.”
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

*** Advisory

UK border database on target and budget, says Home Office
– Chris Williams

Half of all journeys in and out of the UK are now being centrally
recorded and analysed by the GBP1.2bn e-Borders scheme, the government
estimates.

The Home Office yesterday said the system is currently gathering data
on between 45 and 50 per cent of people crossing the border.

e-Borders aims to count every person in and out of the country by
March 2014. By the end of this year travel operators will report 95
per cent of journeys to e-Borders’ Manchester hub, Immigration
Minister Phil Woolas said.

The remaining five per cent of the 100 million annual border
crossings, comprising private aircraft and small boats, will be
covered by March 2014, he added.

So far e-Borders has suffered a delay to the opening of the Manchester
centre, caused by problems training “match analysts”, who will issue
alerts to border guards when the system matches passengers’ details to
crime, terrorism and immigration watchlists.

The Home Office said the delay had no impact on the overall scheme
however, because another analysis centre was already operational.

Woolas also claimed that e-Borders is currently on target to be
completed on budget, which runs until 2017.

Last year Woolas dismissed claims by Eurostar and ferry operators that
the way the system requires data on passengers from continental Europe
before they travel was illegal. Passengers who refuse to give details
before their journey would still be allowed to enter the UK, he said.
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

*** ACLU challenges US laptop border searches
– John Leyden

Privacy campaigners are continuing a legal challenge against random
laptop border searches by US customs amid concerns there may be a
racial bias in those delayed and inconvenienced by stop and search
powers introduced as part of the war on terror.

The ACLU also argues that searches of mobile phones by US border
agents in the absence of any reason to be suspicious also pose a
unwarranted invasion of privacy while delivering few tangible
benefits.

Customs and Border Protection agents searched over 1,500 electronic
devices at the US border over a period of nine months between October
2008 and June 2009, according to documents obtained by the ACLU as
part of a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit and published on
Thursday.

The documents also show that customs (CBP) agents forwarded electronic
files found on travelers’ devices to other agencies almost 300 times.

Some of the travelers inconvenienced by these searches complained that
they ceaselessly accused of wrongdoing or otherwise embarrassed or
inconvenienced by the searches, which agents are not obliged to
justify under tightened regulations in force since July 2008. The
policy was started by the Bush administration and continued by the
Obama government.

THE ACLU is concerned that travelers have been left unable to carry
medical records, financial information, and photos when they travel
without the possibility of government inspection for no good reason.

“The CBP’s ability to take and view the personal files of anyone
passing through U.S. borders without any suspicion not only presents
an inconvenience to travelers, but also fails to protect sensitive
personal information that is commonly stored in laptops and cell
phones,” said Catherine Crump, staff attorney with the ACLU First
Amendment Working Group. “Fundamental constitutional problems with
this policy exist, and must be addressed.”

“The government has a legitimate interest in searching electronic
devices where there is individualized suspicion of wrongdoing, but
CBP’s policy allows officials to exercise their power arbitrarily,”
she added.

The ACLU is concerned there may be an element of racial profiling in
those selected for data searches. CBP promised to issue a civil
liberties assessment of the policy within six months but failed to
make that deadline and is yet to issue a report.
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Dumbing Down

Police rake in GBP 400 million from middle-class fines
– London Telegraph

Fines for minor middle class crimes such as speeding, dropping litter
and putting bins out on the wrong day are netting the police and town
halls more than GBP 400 million a year, new figures suggest.

The use of increasingly sophisticated surveillance techniques is
helping the authorities snare more and more people but critics claim
it is at the expense of catching real criminals.

Parking offences have helped rake in more than GBP 330 million, while
speeding fines have topped GBP 100 million and on the spot fines for
minor offences such as overfilling a dustbin has pulled in almost GBP
12 million.

Matthew Elliot of the Taxpayers’ Alliance said: “Police priorities are
increasingly being warped by revenue raising and box ticking which is
diverting their time away from catching real criminals to targeting
the hard working middle classes.
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Dumb facts

Insane air board’s new role: Tire Nazis
– Chris Reed, San Diego Union Tribune

I read the proposed rules and I think the concerns of the California
New Car Dealers Association are spot-on:

CARB is proposing to require every repair dealer to check the
inflation of every tire during repair to improve mpg for all vehicles
which, in theory, is meritorious.

However (the) regs. CARB’s pushing through (released this week and
subject to a 15 day comment period), provides that the only times
that consumers may decline a check and inflate service they can never
decline the service if it’s offered for free is when they are charged
for services AND if they can PROVE (with DOCUMENTATION!) that they’ve
had their tires checked and inflated in the last 30 days, or if they
WILL do so within the next week. It is unclear, but possible, that
CARB could take enforcement action against the consumer if they don’t
follow through with their promise?!

Note that even the Department of Consumer Affairs opposed the last
draft of these rules letter attached (and I’m guessing these
amendments won’t remove their opposition). CARB’s not messing around
with these either the potential penalty for violating the regulation
is at least up to $1,000 per violation and six months imprisonment.
The enforcement section referred to by CARB states that a violation of
the regulation shall be “deemed to result in an emission of air
contaminants,” potentially leading to even harsher penalties.

Full article at

= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

*** Dumb criminal acts

DVLA makes GBP44m flogging drivers’ details
The great government data giveaway, if you’ve got the cash…
– John Oates

The Driver and Vehicle Licensing Agency has sold more than 18 million
names and addresses of drivers since it started the trade five years
ago.

Most of the names go to clamping companies and other private parking
firms, although the DVLA was keen to stress to us today that it does
not make a profit from the trade. It also said the information does
not only go to dodgy clamping firms.

Figures from the Daily Mail reveal the government agency has made
GBP43.9m by selling the data culled from 18 million entries.

The DVLA charges GBP2.50 per address, and the most common request is
from private parking companies pursuing people for payments.

There was a large row last year after engine oil firm Castrol did a
deal to use number plate recognition technology coupled with data
mined from the DVLA database to show personalised posters
to drivers.

Castrol hoped to roll out the billboards more widely, but after four
days there were so many complaints that the scheme was abandoned.
The DVLA said at the time it would investigate and that its data should
not be used for marketing purposes.

The DVLA said it only releases information to someone like the police,
who have a statutory right to it, or to someone who has reasonable
cause to request it such as someone who has suffered material loss or
injury. The statement added that unauthorised parking on private land
was a big problem, and without DVLA data landowners would have a tough
time “enforcing their rights”.

The DVLA also made clear it does not profit from the sales – GBP2.50
simply covers the cost of processing requests.

Shamrock’s comment: So much for government privacy!
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Dumbing Down Award of the month

This months award goes to…

A judge in Texas USA.

“Bryan High students who skip school will soon be tracked 24 hours a
day, seven days a week,” reports KBTX.

“It’s called the Attendance Improvement Management Program or AIM, and
it has been used across Texas and the United States.”

Students who skip class are now forced to attend “truancy court” and
be lectured by a judge before being mandated to carry a GPS tracking
device.

“Students on the program are tracked with a hand-held GPS device
between the time they leave for school in the morning and the time
they check in for curfew at night.”

Watch the clip at

= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Oz/Nzed corner:

Airline Group Protests Airport Body Scanners, Australian Says
– Bloomberg

The Asia-Pacific airline industry group is protesting the introduction
of full-body scanners at airports, saying it treats all passengers as
potential terrorists, the Australian newspaper reported.

The Association of Asia Pacific Airlines said there is insufficient
evidence about the effectiveness of the scanners and automatic
explosive detection systems to justify their use, the newspaper said.

More …

Australia Restores Some Sanity to Airport Screening
– Bruce Schneier

Welcome news:

Carry-on baggage rules will be relaxed under a shake-up of aviation
security announced by the Federal Government today. The changes will
see passengers again allowed to carry some sharp implements, such as
nail files and clippers, umbrellas, crochet and knitting needles on
board aircraft from July next year.

Metal cutlery will return to return to cabin meals and airport
restaurants following Government recognition that security
arrangements must be targeted at ‘real risks’.

I’m sure these rules won’t apply to flights to the U.S., where
security arrangements must still be targeted at movie-plot threats.

***NZed***

NZ’s cyber spies win new powers
– Sunday Star Times

New cyber-monitoring measures have been quietly introduced giving
police and Security Intelligence Service officers the power to
monitor all aspects of someone’s online life.

The measures are the largest expansion of police and SIS surveillance
capabilities for decades, and mean that all mobile calls and texts,
email, internet surfing and online shopping, chatting and social
networking can be monitored anywhere in New Zealand.

In preparation, technicians have been installing specialist spying
devices and software inside all telephone exchanges, internet
companies and even fibre-optic data networks between cities and towns,
providing police and spy agencies with the capability to monitor
almost all communications.

Police and SIS must still obtain an interception warrant naming a
person or place they want to monitor but, compared to the phone taps
of the past, a single warrant now covers phone, email and all internet
activity.

It can even monitor a person’s location by detecting their mobile
phone; all of this occurring almost instantaneously.

Police say in the year to June 2009, there were 68 interception
warrant applications granted and 157 people prosecuted as a result of
those interceptions.

Police association vice-president Stuart Mills said the new
capabilities are required because criminals were using new
technologies to communicate, and that people who weren’t committing
criminal offences had little to fear.

However, civil liberties council spokesman Michael Bott said the new
surveillance capabilities are part of a step-by-step erosion of civil
rights in New Zealand.

Police Minister Judith Collins responded to questions from the Sunday
Star-Times about the new surveillance capabilities, saying: “I support
the rule of law.” In last year’s budget she approved extra police
funds to subsidise companies wiring surveillance devices into their
telecommunications networks.

The measures are the consequence of a law, the 2004 Telecommunications
(Interception Capability) Act, which gave internet and network
companies until last year to install devices allowing automated access
to internet and cellphone data.

Telecom, Vodafone and TelstraClear had earlier 2005 deadlines, and new
cellphone provider 2degrees installed the interception equipment
before launching last year.

Official papers obtained by the Star-Times show that, despite
government claims that it was done for domestic reasons, the new New
Zealand spying capabilities are part of a push by United States
agencies to have standardised surveillance capabilities available for
their use from governments worldwide.

Ad Feedback While US civil liberties groups unsuccessfully fought
these surveillance capabilities being used on US citizens, the FBI was
lobbying other governments to adopt them. FBI Director Robert Mueller
III told a senate committee in March last year that the FBI needs
“global reach” to fight cyber-crime and terrorism and that co-
operation with “law enforcement partners” gives it “the means to
leverage the collective resources of many countries”.

Auckland lawyer Tim McBride, author of the forthcoming New Zealand
Civil Rights Handbook, says our politicians had let down New
Zealanders when they yielded to the foreign pressure and imported US-
style surveillance into New Zealand.

He said “monitoring email, internet chatting and Facebook is like the
police and SIS planting bugs in every cafe and park. It would
probably help solve a few crimes, but the cost is just too great”.

The 2004 New Zealand law, which mirrors laws overseas, requires the
content of any communication plus “call associated data”, such as
times, phone numbers, IP addresses and mobile phone locations, to be
able to be copied and sent to the police, SIS or Government
Communications Security Bureau (GCSB) at the time of transmission or
“as close as practicable” to that time.

In practice, a specialist said, this means someone’s email can be “at
the agency within one or two minutes of it actually being on the
wires”.

When the police and SIS were pushing for the interception capability
law they argued repeatedly that it would not “change or extend in any
way the existing powers”.

But civil libertarians say that the invisibility of electronic
surveillance reduces the opportunity to challenge it.

A technician familiar with the developments said the previous
surveillance technology dated from the early 1980s when the Telecom
phone system went digital. Police bugged individual phones and could
request suspects’ call logs.

More recently police had taken a warrant to telcos and gone away with
printed emails, but did it rarely as there were problems using the
evidence in court.

“This is the first big jump from there,” said the technician.

“They’ve never had the powers to force ISPs to build in spying
capabilities before now. I imagine law enforcement is very excited
about this.”
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Bug Bites:

Taser’s new weapon: mobile phone monitoring
– AFP

Stun gun maker Taser wants to help parents, not with jolts of
electricity but with a tool which allows parents to effectively take
over a child’s mobile phone and manage its use.

“Basically we’re taking old fashioned parenting and bringing it into
the mobile world,” Taser chairman and co-founder Tom Smith said at the
Consumer Electronics Show here, where the Arizona company unveiled the
new product.

“Because when you give your child his mobile phone you don’t know who
they’re talking to, what they’re sending or texting, all of those
things,” Smith told AFP.

The phone application, called “Mobile Protector,” allows a parent to
screen a child’s incoming and outgoing calls and messages, block
particular numbers and even listen in on a conversation.
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

More Bugs

Google Turns on Gmail Encryption to Protect Wi-Fi Users
– Ryan Singel

Google is now encrypting all Gmail traffic from its servers to its
users in a bid to foil sniffers who sit in cafes, eavesdropping in on
traffic passing by, the company announced recently.

The change comes just a day after the company announced it might pull
its offices from China after discovering concerted attempts to break
into Gmail accounts of human rights activists. The switch to
always-on HTTPS adds more security, but does not help prevent the kind
of attacks Google announced Tuesday.

All Gmail users will now default to using HTTPS, the secure, encrypted
method for communicating with a remote server, for their entire e-mail
sessions, not just for log-in. Session-long HTTPS has been an
official option for Gmail users since 2008 (and unofficial for much
longer), but Google says it hesitated turning it on for all since the
encryption does slow down the service.

“Over the last few months, we’ve been researching the security/latency
tradeoff and decided that turning https on for everyone was the right
thing to do,” Gmail Engineering Director Sam Schillace wrote in the
Gmail blog.

This option often wasn’t necessary when people used fixed and trusted
connections, such as their home or office DSL or cable lines. But as
Wi-Fi connections, especially public ones, became more popular,
hackers began using simple sniffing software to snoop on people’s
online activities with the goal of stealing passwords.

Still, the switch doesn’t encrypt e-mail, it simply encrypts the
communications in transit between Google’s servers and a user’s
computer, the same as when you use your bank’s website. E-mails sent
to other people are transmitted in the clear as they have always been.
True encrypted e-mail can only be read by the sender and receiver,
regardless of how they move across the internet.

For those whose schools or workplaces routinely monitor employee or
student internet usage, the change also shields their e-mails from the
IT department.

A coalition of privacy and security experts called on Google publicly
to make the change last June, saying that Google was putting millions
of people at risk by not using encryption as the default for their
cloud computing services.

Users who find the service slows them down or determine that it’s
overkill for their needs can turn the HTTPS off in their account
settings.

Rival free e-mail from Yahoo and Microsoft do not use HTTPS throughout
their sessions, nor do social networking sites or other so-called
cloud-computing services.

Instead, most of those services use the secure HTTPS protocol only for
logging in, and fall back to unencrypted browsing thereafter. Failing
to use HTTPS full-time increases one’s vulnerability to a host of
nasty hack attacks when using an open or badly secured network,
particularly a public Wi-Fi spot.
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

*** States get more time to comply with Real ID
– Washington Post

The Obama administration will abandon a Dec. 31 deadline for states
to tighten security requirements for driver’s licenses, Homeland
Security Secretary Janet Napolitano announced Friday.

Delaying the requirement, which faces opposition from governors and
Senate Republicans over how it should be implemented, jeopardizes an
immigration and security measure adopted after the Sept. 11, 2001,
terrorist attacks. But it also removes concerns that tens of
thousands of holiday travelers could have been subjected to heightened
airport security checks if they lacked the new licenses.

Under a controversial 2005 domestic security program passed by
Congress and known as Real ID, states were required to issue more
secure licenses by the end of 2009. Those would be the only licenses
accepted by federal officials for such purposes as boarding commercial
aircraft. Instead, states now have until May 11, 2011, to comply with
Real ID, Napolitano said.

“In order to ensure that the millions of Americans traveling this
holiday season are not disrupted, DHS is extending the Dec. 31 REAL
ID material compliance deadline,” Napolitano said in a written
statement.

States have balked at what governors called an unfunded, $4 billion
federal mandate by Congress, and what civil liberties groups
criticized as a de facto national ID.

After opponents fought the Bush administration to a standstill, Obama
security officials and governors jointly asked Congress last spring to
replace Real ID with a new program called Pass ID, which would cost
half as much, be less stringent and come with federal grants.

That plan would give states five years to include in their IDs a
digital photograph and machine-readable features such as a bar code.
It would also require states to verify applicants’ identities and
legal status by checking federal immigration, Social Security and
State Department databases and original birth certificate records.

It would add stronger privacy controls than contained in the Real ID
program and drop a demand for new databases.

Supporters hoped the year-end deadline would push Congress to approve
Pass ID. But opponents refused to yield, with some Republicans
accusing the administration of gutting the earlier plan and
backsliding on security. Privacy groups continue to fight what they
have called a “Real ID-lite.”

“Any attempt to implement PASS ID will harm national security,” Reps.
Lamar Smith (R-Tex.), Peter T. King (R-N.Y.), Darrell Issa (R-Calif.)
and F. James Sensenbrenner Jr. (R-Wis.) wrote in a Dec. 14 letter to
several colleagues.

“Key senators have called DHS’s bluff, and the agency has once again
blinked,” American Civil Liberties Union officials wrote in a blog
recently, noting that under Bush, DHS extended a previous deadline of
May 2008 in the face of similar opposition.

Senate Majority Leader Harry M. Reid (D-Nev.) said that until
heath-care legislation is passed, he could not spare the time to
overcome procedural blocks that several Senate Republicans had
anonymously placed on the ID measure. With Congress set to leave soon
for its winter break, Napolitano and governors retreated, leaving the
future of the changes in doubt.

On Thursday, Republican Gov. Jim Douglas of Vermont, chairman of the
National Governors Association, and Democratic Gov. Joe Manchin III
of West Virginia, vice chairman, asked Napolitano to waive the
deadline. DHS said 46 states are not in compliance with the
requirements, and 13 have passed laws refusing to participate. “Our
citizens should not be punished for the failings of Real ID and the
inability of Congress to act,” the governors wrote.

Roger Dow, head of the U.S. Travel Association, an industry trade
group, said its members were pleased that the government did not allow
the battle to tie up “the way the economy moves or how Americans
travel,” by potentially forcing residents of the 46 states to go
through added airport screening.

Napolitano urged Congress “to address systemic problems with the REAL
ID Act to advance our security interests over the long term.” She
said her agency was “committed to moving forward to implement this key
9/11 Commission recommendation.”

The commission recommended tougher federal standards for driver’s
licenses and birth certificates. Eighteen of the 19 Sept. 11
hijackers obtained state IDs, some of them fraudulently, easing their
movements inside the country.

Lobbyists said that some GOP lawmakers may be delaying action on the
ID security measure because they oppose the Obama administration’s
upcoming push for an immigration overhaul, and want to combine the
issues. Analysts said that combining the two measures could
complicate prospects for both. That was the case in 2007, the last
time the Senate tried and failed to approve an immigration overhaul.
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

*** ID card scheme for foreigner’s extended
- John Oates

The government’s much loved ID card scheme was extended yesterday -
from now on Tier 2 foreign nationals will have to apply for a card if
they wish to extend their stay in the UK.

Tier 2 includes skilled workers, ministers of religion, sportsmen and
women, representatives of overseas businesses and dependants. Forcing
three quarters of the Premier League down to the Post Office should do
wonders for the popularity of the cards. People in Tier 2 were to be
included in the scheme from April but this has been brought forward.

The Home Office, or rather the UK Border Agency, is working with 17
post offices to collect the biometric data needed. Migrants can pay
GBP8 at 17 post offices, or continue to register their details for
free at some UK Border Agency and Passport Service offices.

The Post Office has piloted the scheme since November and said the
technology is working well and 1,432 people have already enrolled.

Post offices taking part are: Aberdeen, Beckenham, Beeston, Bracknell,
Cambridge, Durham, Kingstanding, Battersea, Camden High Street, Earl’s
Court, Old Street, Middleton, Oxford, Redditch, Romsey, South Shields
and Stamford.

Since November 2008, when cards were required for foreign students and
people with marriage visas over 130,000 cards have been issued. The
inclusion of skilled workers will add a further 40,000 people a year
to the scheme.

The scheme is also being trialled for British citizens in Manchester,
Liverpool and Blackburn.

Guy Herbert, general secretary of lobby group No2ID told ZDNet the
government already had plenty of information on the identity of Tier 2
immigrants and the scheme was superfluous and wasteful.

The Conservative party have promised to abolish the scheme should they
win this year’s election.
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Shamrock’s Missive:

My how times change. I recall as a wee lad when for the first time
I received a toy made in Japan. My father, at that time a recent
veteran of the Second World War in the pacific, was aghast; “Made in
Japan! Don’t buy anything made in Japan they aren’t made very well!”

Needless to say my father’s personal experience during the Second
World War didn’t endear him with anything to do with Japan. I wonder
what my father would have thought had he lived long enough to see Japan
rise up to become the world’s second mightiest economy. Sorry, I
mean the world’s third mightiest economy!

China’s economy is set to become the second mightiest in the world.
See “China to knock off Japan as world’s second largest economy”
http://www.vancouversun.com/business/China+knock+Japan+world+second+largest+economy/2468943/story.html

Although China appears to be the first country to recover from the
current recession/depression that the rest of the world remains in,
our leprechaun sees huge bubbles developing in China that should
cause considerable consternation for all.

Least we forget, it was America’s real estate and banking bubbles
bursting that brought on the world recession/depression we’ve all
been experiencing!

In spite of China’s huge financial strides and progress, China’s has a
less than desirable track record towards its dissidents and critics.
Think Tiananmen square during the summer of 1989.

Apparently Yahoo and Google have helped China’s Big Brother to
achieve that record!
See “Google Faces Lawsuit From Chinese Dissident.”

In spite of Google’s so-called “don’t be evil” policy, I find Google most
hypocritical. I recently read “The Google Story” by David A. Vise
and Mark Malseed [available at Amazon.com for around three pounds
sterling, i.e. USD5.]

Impressive as Vise and Malseed makes Google appear, the authors
failed to mention some interesting and lesser known facts:
Google’s connection with the CIA and its venture capital firm extends
to sharing at least one key member of personnel. In 2004, the
Director of Technology Assessment at In-Q-Tel, Rob Painter, moved
from his old job directly serving the CIA to become ‘Senior Federal Manager’
at Google.

As Robert Steele, a former CIA case officer has put it: Google is
“in bed with” the CIA. See
http://www.marketoracle.co.uk/Article16486.html

Hypocrisy knows no bounds!

So the moral of this missive is: Be very careful what you “Google”
these days. Big Brother is watching you not only in China, but in
America and elsewhere as well.

Our question for you is, what are you going to do about it?

See you next issue

Shamrock

“The people never give up their liberties but under some delusion.”
– Edmund Burke, 1784
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Quotes

“Freedom is the freedom to say 2 + 2 equals 4!”
– Winston Smith, in George Orwell’s classic, 1984
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Memorable Quotes

“Honest differences are often a healthy sign of progress.”
– Mahatma Gandhi
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Thought provoking quotes:

“When you have robbed a man of everything, he is no longer in your
power. He is free again.”
– Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

*** Tid Bits

FBI seeks public’s help via Times Square billboard
– A

Tawan Hines has his name in lights on Broadway. Instead of bringing
him fame, it could get him arrested.

The drug-trafficking suspect is among the first fugitives to have
their names and mug shots on a digital billboard in the heart of Times
Square. The FBI unveiled the equivalent of giant, flashing wanted
posters there for the first time Friday, hoping to generate tips from
tourists and others who flood the “crossroads of the world” each day.

“We hope we’ll get a few calls about him,” Belle Chen, head of the
criminal division of the FBI’s New York office, said as Hines’ face
filled the screen.

Clear Channel Outdoors offered the space to the FBI following a pilot
program in Philadelphia that led to two arrests. The billboard sits
above the entrance to the W Hotel, surrounded by lower-tech billboards
advertising Broadway musicals.

Under the agreement with Clear Channel, the FBI has access to 430
other digital billboards in 33 cities. It can use them to publicize
fugitives and missing children it believes might still might be in the
area, and to make public safety announcements.

Hines evaded an FBI raid in Westchester County in November that
resulted in dozens of arrests.

Another fugitive shown on the billboard Friday was chosen because
she’s suspected of kidnapping her daughter and hiding out Europe.
Agents hope a European tourist might recognize her.

Tim Tompkins, the president of the Times Square Alliance, which works
to promote the area as a destination for commerce and tourism, sees
another benefit.

“As far as I’m concerned, this makes Times Square even safer,”
Tompkins said. “No bad guy is going to want to hang out in a place
where there’s a 100-foot image of him for all the world to see.”
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

*** More Tid Bits

An Orwellian world for Big Brother
– Online Journal

The Council of Europe document ‘Internet Governance and critical
Internet resources’ states (p.7) that ” . . . the Internet of
Things refers to the seamless connection of devices, sensors, objects,
rooms, machines, vehicles, etc, through fixed and wireless networks.
Connected sensors, devices and tags can interact with the environment
and send the information to other objects through machine-to-machine
communication . . . The Semantic Web promotes this synergy: even
agents that where not expressly designed to work together can transfer
data among themselves when the data come with semantics.”

Pachube (pronounced Patch-bay) is a platform that helps individuals
and organisations connect to and build the ‘internet of things’ and
enable buildings, interactive environments, networked energy meters,
virtual worlds and sensor devices to “talk” and “respond” to each
other. Pachube, according to the founder, Usman Haque, is a vision
inspired by Dutch architect Constant Nieuwenhuys and his 1956 proposal
for a visionary society, New Babylon.

Around the world, a near invisible network of RFID wireless tags is
being put on almost every type of consumer item. Wireless tags and
sensors are being produced in their billions and are capable of being
connected to the Internet in an instant. Yet this network is being
built with little public knowledge or consent.

Full story at

= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

*** Even More Tid Bits

Stop and search for children who were ’sledging downhill’
– UK Daily Mail

It seemed an obvious fun thing to do when their school was closed for
the day because of the weather. But when Jacob Mogre, 12, and his
friend Charlie Stakim, 11, took their sledge to a snow-covered hill
they had not reckoned with the long arm of the law.

For just as they were about to begin a long slide down the slope, they
were beckoned by two police community support officers.

The boys were asked why they were not in school and then quizzed about
damage to a nearby fence.

They politely told the officers they knew nothing about the fence, but
instead of simply being allowed to carry on playing they were given an
official ’stop and search’ form which they had to sign themselves.

‘Sledging downhill’ was given as the ‘grounds for intervention’ on
Monday.
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

*** Bits n bobs

Heathrow staff given body language training to spot suspected
terrorists
– London Telegraph

Security staff at Heathrow are being trained in “behavioural
profiling” of passengers to spot suspected terrorists.

A specialist unit of airport staff are being taught how to recognise
the body language of potential suicide bombers.

Police patrolling at transport hubs already look for suspicious
behaviour, however the new scheme, called a Behavioural Analysis
Screening System, aims specifically at learning about the traits of
would-be bombers.

The specifics of the training are secret but it will be based on an
Israeli model, which attempts to identify a suspicious individual
walking in a crowd of hundreds by looking for nervous behaviour, such
as avoiding eye-contact, or having the appearance of being drugged.
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

*** Letters to the Editor:

Keep them postcards and letters coming’ folks, ’cause we
done mailed the rosebushes!

Dear Shamrock:

Regarding Dr. Charles Freeman’s interview, January and Mid
January 2010 issues:

This is always such useful and interesting information. Thanks for
keeping me on your list! One day, years from now (hopefully no more
than 10) I hope to have saved up a nice nest egg from my law firm and
other business work, which is currently going well, and to be able to
navigate international travel and opportunities legally, profitably,
and charitably to others. I know your great information will serve me
well.

Best H

Dear H,

Many thanks for the kind words.

Shamrock:

Dear Shamrock:

Ref. Charles Freeman interview; Great interview and thanks for the info. Take care.

C. C.

Dear Shamrock

Hello and happy new year!

Thank you for the wonderful stuff you make available to members.

May I just ask about the latest installment for The Internationalist:
part II, Chapter VIII as it opens up to Chapter VII?

Sincerely appreciate you.

FW

Dear FW;

Thanks for the kind words and for letting us know about the incorrect
link. It’s been fixed so do enjoy.

Shamrock

Dear Shamrock:

Lovely interview with Charles Freeman. It was very informative to say
the least.

P. H.
London

Dear Shamrock:

Thank you for the information about PGP (Pretty Good Privacy) in the
AppData folder, Mid December 2009 issue. I was shocked at the revealing
information “concealed” on my laptop.

Thanks again.

L.K.
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Quote of the month!

“You have zero privacy anyway, get over it.”
– Chief executive officer of Sun Microsystems Scott McNealy to
reporters and analysts
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

*** “PT Shamrock’s Exclusive Member’s Site!”

Each month we offer exclusive information, free privacy programs,
access to our newsletter archives and other insider information
for members only.

Our member’s site is accessed by user name and password only. This
is available to our newsletter subscribers ONLY!

Each month the password will change and you will have to e-mail us
from your subscribers e-mail address to request the NEW password in
order to gain access.

As a subscriber to our newsletter you automatically qualify for this
exclusive service. Just send an e-mail to
and place “Members” in the
subject heading. We will forward to you full details for signing up and
gaining access to our Members Site, reserved for you.

Enjoy.
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Dear Friend:

If you like our newsletter please tell your friends and associates
about us. They can subscribe *FREE* by sending an e-mail to:
.

Our pledge!

We never spam our subscribers, never rent or give our
subscribers list to anyone, and unlike other newsletters do
not accept paid advertisements; And of course, our PT Buzz
Newsletter is absolutely free, just packed full of interesting
privacy news and information with a tad of humor thrown in for
good measure.

We’re probably the oldest privacy newsletter on the Internet!

Thank you for your patronage and help in spreading the word.

Shamrock

“The right to privacy is a part of our basic freedoms. Privacy is
fundamental to close family ties, competitive free enterprise, the
ownership of property, and the exchange of ideas.”

PT Shamrock – issue one; 1994
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Don’t forget to check out our Special Offers at

See you next issue!

“Mehr sein, als scheinen” (German Proverb)
Be more, seem less!

PT Shamrock
- – - – - – - – - – NOTICE – - – - – - – - – -
In compliance with Title 17 U.S.C. section 107, this material is
distributed free without profit or payment for non-profit
research and for educational purposes only.
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
You can remove your e-mail address from this list by submitting
it at: or by sending an e-mail to,
and place “unsubscribe” in
the subject heading.

———————————————————————–
To subscribe, send a blank message to PTBuzz-on@mail-list.com
To unsubscribe, send a blank message to PTBuzz-off@mail-list.com
To change your email address, send a message to PTBuzz-change@mail-list.com
with your old address in the Subject: line
To contact the list owner, send your message to
PTBuzz-list-owner@mail-list.com

PT Shamrock Limited Suite #79, 184 Lower Rathmines Road, Rathmines, Dublin D6, Ireland