Canada to follow USA to digital warfare

The USA has handled the transition from old media to new digital media about as badly as possibly.

Right wing politicians there are easily easily bought off by lobbyists of the status quo industries. In the past they were bought off by tobacco lobbyists. Now TelCo lobbyists.

Canada has had a surprisingly enlightened and forward thinking environment. Until now. Harper’s Conservatives look to be joining the coalition of the willing to war.

Industry Canada says we’ll have a new Copyright bill by Christmas. Any day now, Industry Minister Jim Prentice will rise in the House of Commons and present the new legislation.

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Based on the Ministry’s hints about the bill to date, and on Stephen Harper’s recent throne speech, digital rights watchers are fearing the worst. Here’s what they’re predicting:

* “(It will) put digital locks on our computers, cellphones, iPods, other gadgets and tools and, ultimately, our culture” -Copyright lawyer Howard Knopf

* “There is every indication this legislation will be a complete sell-out to U.S. government and lobbyist demands.”
-Internet law Professor Michael Geist …

Search Engine | CBC Radio | Last chance to ask the Industry Minister about your copy rights.

It’s obvious to anyone who thinks about it for more than 2 minutes that a lock down strategy is doomed to failure.

It means prolonging a shadow economy. Turning potential customers into pirates.

Sad.

why so many Taser deaths?

What is the world saying about the many deaths in Canada after being stunned by a Taser?

BBC calls the brutal police killing of an immigrant in Vancouver an “Airport mix-up”.

If you’ve seen the video, I don’t think you’d call it a “mix up”.

Airport mix-up

Mr Dziekanski, a construction worker, was emigrating to Canada to join his mother, who lived in the western province of British Columbia.

Mr Dziekanski, who had not flown before, had boarded a plane a day earlier in Germany, and arranged to meet his mother at the baggage carousel in the international terminal.

Neither of them knew the baggage carousel was inside a secure area, with no view of the public arrivals hall area, except for a short distance through sliding glass doors.

Mr Dziekanski’s mother waited for him for five hours in the airport’s public arrivals area but eventually went home after a call to an immigration official, who told her partner that no person fitting her son’s description was in the immigration area.

After spending 10 hours in the secure part of the international arrivals area Mr Dziekanski apparently panicked when he finally emerged into the public area and could not find his mother.

Police were called when he began throwing furniture and shouting.

He died shortly after being stunned at least twice with a Taser, seconds after police arrived.

A debate about the use of Tasers – promoted as a non-lethal alternative to guns – is ongoing in Canada after a series of incidents, including the death of an inmate at a Nova Scotia prison last week.

BBC NEWS | Americas | Canada in pledge over Taser death

Initially I was sympathetic of law enforcement, suspicious of a passenger freaking out in a public space.

A taser seemed a smart and humane way of taking down a dangerous suspect.

But the video shows the Police over-reacted badly. They are guilty of killing this guy when there was no need. He had no weapon. No others were at risk.

A Full Public Inquiry had been announced, finally.

I wonder if this death would have been covered-up and buried if not for a passenger with a camcorder and YouTube.

More information, links and over 1000 comments are posted on the YouTube video.

U.S. Comptroller General projects Fall of the American Empire

180px-david_m_walker1.jpgDavid M. Walker speaks truth to power.

How can he do that in the USA?

He has a 15-year appointment as Comptroller General of the USA and cannot be brought down by the President nor anyone else.

Walker has compared the present-day United States with the Roman Empire in its decline, saying the U.S. government is “on a ‘burning platform’ of unsustainable policies and practices with fiscal deficits, chronic healthcare underfunding, immigration and overseas military commitments threatening a crisis if action is not taken soon.

The Government Accountability Office (GAO) is a legislative branch agency founded in 1921, whose mission is to help improve the performance and assure the accountability of the federal government for the benefit of the American people. Over the years, GAO has earned a reputation for professional objective, fact-based, and nonpartisan reviews of government issues and operations. …

David M. Walker (U.S. Comptroller General) – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The USA is a great nation. But with no political accountability beyond the next election. Walker’s budget projections are “the dirty little secret that everyone in Washington knows, but no one will talk about”.

Watch an excerpt from the TV show 60 Minutes on YouTube, or click PLAY.

I don’t expect things to change.

Not until full out disaster forces the issue.

Thanks Barbara Anne for circulating this video.

Super Corn Me – the movie

I posted my distaste for the corn industry after hearing about the book The Omnivore’s Dilemma by Michael Pollan.

Corn is killing us.

Now in Super Size Me tradition is this movie:

Click PLAY or watch it on YouTube.

(via Treehugger – Opening Today in Theaters: King Corn )

Radiohead still needs major label

Damn.

This is like Churchill saying, “Let’s speak with Hitler one more time. See if we can talk some sense into him.”

Radiohead is apparently not quite ready to follow Nine Inch Nails into a life without record labels. Although the group has made its new album In Rainbows available for download on its website for whatever price fans are willing to pay, the album will still be released on CD, most likely via one of the Big Four labels.

read more … Radiohead still needs major label to let world see its “Rainbows”

iBrick – is Steve playing the media again?

ibrick.jpgYeesh.

You might anticipate that Apple would have some problems releasing a brand new product.

But I’ve never heard the amount and severity of negative opinion towards Big Apple as I have over the update to iPhone firmware which rendered many phones as useful as a brick.

Even fanboi Leo Laporte is lashing out. (audiocast)

Steve, you have to back down on this one. Apple is dead wrong.

Or — you sly fox — are you using this press disaster to pressure AT&T into renegotiating the contract? Some are blaming AT&T more than Apple.

… I always find a way to spin Apple in a positive light.

It may as well be a brick « cutter’s blog

two more soldiers killed in Iraq – but who’s counting

Not George W.

Lost Voices – Why the deaths of Yance T. Gray and Omar Mora are particularly galling.

By Fred Kaplan in SLATE

On Monday, while Gen. David Petraeus prepared to testify before two House committees about the successes of the surge, seven of his soldiers died when their transport vehicle overturned in a highway accident west of Baghdad.

Two of those soldiers, Staff Sgt. Yance T. Gray, 26, and Sgt. Omar Mora, 28, were part of another group of seven—the seven noncommissioned officers of the 82nd Airborne Division who wrote a brave, well-reasoned op-ed in the Aug. 19 New York Times, calling the prospect of victory “far-fetched” and appraisals of progress “surreal.”

One of the other NCOs, Staff Sgt. Jeremy A. Murphy, was shot in the head during a firefight before the op-ed piece was published. (Rushed to a military hospital, he is alive but recovering slowly.)

It is sad and appalling that nearly half of the authors of that op-ed are now casualties of the war that they publicly criticized but more than willingly continued to fight. (The last paragraph of their piece read: “We need not talk about our morale. As committed soldiers, we will see this mission through.”) …

The Iraq war claims two soldiers who wrote a critical op-ed. – By Fred Kaplan – Slate Magazine

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large photo mosaic of dead soldiers

aging sewers ready to burst

I first heard about this looming crisis from Greg Chartier. Cities are neither willing nor able to fix their sewers.

… an estimated $390 billion worth of work needs to be done on the nation’s sewage systems over the next 20 years, according to the environmental group American Rivers—a cost that local officials say has residents clutching at their purse strings.

“A lot of cities don’t want to borrow to do this work,” Kevin Baskins, spokesman for the Iowa Department of Natural Resources, tells USA Today.

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Aging U.S. Sewers Ready to Burst (TreeHugger)

STORM WORM on your PC?

The “Storm Worm” began infecting thousands of mostly home computers in Europe and the United States on Friday, January 19, 2007 using a topical e-mail message with the subject “230 dead as storm batters Europe”.

Don’t click on email messages from addresses you don’t know.

The Storm worm botnet has grown so massive and far-reaching that it easily overpowers the world’s top supercomputers.

That’s the latest word from security researchers who are tracking the burgeoning network of Microsoft Windows machines that have been compromised by the virulent Storm worm, which has pounded the Internet non-stop for the past three months.

… Sergeant said researchers at MessageLabs see about 2 million different computers in the botnet sending out spam on any given day, and he adds that he estimates the botnet generally is operating at about 10 percent of capacity.

“We’ve seen spikes where the owner is experimenting with something and those spikes are usually five to 10 times what we normally see,” he said, noting he suspects the botnet could be as large as 50 million computers. “That means they can turn on the taps whenever they want to.”

… It means the cyber criminals who control the botnet have a tremendous amount of destructive power at their fingertips. Early this summer, the Baltic nation of Estonia was pounded in a cyberwar that saw distributed denial-of-service attack primarily targeting the Estonian government, banking, media, and police sites.

… And he added that while the now-well-known e-cards and fake news spam is being used to build up the already massive botnet, the authors are using pump-and-dump scams to make money.

Storm worm botnet more powerful than top supercomputers – Security – www.itnews.com.au

chartstormwormstats.jpg
SpamNation

Storm Worm – Wikipedia

movie – Manufactured Landscapes

Scary beautiful.

Manufactured Landscapes is a film by photographer Edward Burtynsky and filmmaker Jennifer Baichwal.

The film shows the immense impact of of industrial growth and development in China. It is stunning in the way it shows the gross impact of humans upon the planet.

appliedthinking: Manufactured Landscapes

To see the trailer click PLAY or watch it on YouTube.