Archive: Author: The Management

06/24/2014

Media Futures Here are yesterday's winners of $3.4 million in grants from the Knight News Challenge, including ten winners of the Prototype Fund, all focused on ideas and projects aimed at strengthening the open Internet. The winning projects included two major initiatives by public libraries to subsidize free MiFi cards that students can take home, and several efforts to combat online censorship and increase personal user security. In a nice ironic juxtaposition, on the same day Comcast and NBC Universal announced the winners of their first-ever hackathon, which had the theme of shaping "The Future of Media & Technology." The winning projects include tools that help deliver interesting TV content to users, deliver custom news stories to users, and enable users to...

06/23/2014

Trafficking Senators Cory Booker (D-NJ) and Marco Rubio (R-FL) have teamed up to cosponsor the Wi-Fi Innovation Act, which would make more spectrum available for unlicensed use, reports Marguerite Reardon for CNet. Harold Feld of Public Knowledge applauds, saying "If passed, the bill would resolve an ugly traffic jam between the FCC and the Department of Transportation that is needlessly delaying the next generation of Wi-Fi technology." Florida Democratic Rep. Alan Grayson's crypto-party for Members of Congress to learn more how to protect their digital communications, co-hosted with Rep. Zoe Lofgren (D-CA) is taking place this morning. Trainers from Access, the Internet freedom group, will be on hand. Remember when the right thing to do with your WiFi was to leave your network...

06/09/2014

Ducks If it walks like a duck, quacks like a duck, and looks like a duck…it must be a campaign for president in 2016 by Hillary Clinton. So says Chris Cilizza in the Washington Post, connecting the dots between the high-level campaign operatives working for Ready for Hillary, the top political endorsements, the attacks from the likes of Karl Rove, and the new Clinton memoir, which comes out for real this week. Robert Gibbs predicts that Clinton's book tour will collect a lot of data: "They’ll use all these events she goes to acquire information that can later be purchased by some political entity – whether it’s her campaign, or a super-PAC, or both. These will be people who’ll be exhibiting a...

06/04/2014

Turning On Google is rolling out an alpha version of "end to end" encryption to its email service, that will function as an extension in Chrome browsers and is built on top of OpenPGP, Stephan Somogyi, a security and privacy product manager blogged for the company yesterday. Assuming this new extension passes muster with the open source security community, it could make it much easier for ordinary web users to encrypt their emails. This could be a very big deal, though as Brian Behlendorf, one of the primary developers of the Apache Web server, tweeted, "How might one check that their Chrome extension isn't backdoored (due to an NSL)? You still have to trust Google". (A NSL is a "national security letter,"...

06/03/2014

Power Shifts The Supreme Court refused to hear New York Times reporter James Risen's appeal of a court subpoena demanding that he turn over information about a source for a chapter in his book "State of War." Risen has vowed that he will go to jail rather than disclose his source, leaving his case in the hands of the Justice Department. In the US, search warrants eventually become public court documents, but as the Wall Street Journal's Jennifer Valentino-Devries reports, requests for electronic surveillance stay sealed indefinitely, even after cases are closed, obscuring the extent to which law enforcement is using digital tracking tools like pen registers to pursue suspects. She notes, "Getting permission to use [those] techniques is easier than...

06/02/2014

Saving Face James Risen and Laura Poitras report that the NSA has been collecting "millions of images per day" for use in facial recognition tracking of suspects. They point out that current American law does not provide for any protection regarding the collecting of facial recognition data. Palantir, the secretive data analysis firm, gets a friendly profile in the Sunday Times Business Section, but it does include this critical quote from the ACLU's Chris Soghoian: "They are a key force in the surveillance-industrial complex, but they are in denial about it." Former Howard Dean internet organizer Zephyr Teachout got 42% of the votes of the Working Families Party state committee, falling short in her bid to get its endorsement for governor, reports Jesse...

05/30/2014

Rumblings The NSA has released an internal email from Edward Snowden to its general counsel's office that it says shows he didn't raise concerns about mass surveillance, contrary to his claims, but Snowden says this release is "incomplete" and doesn't include other correspondence about "indefensible collection activities," Ellen Nakashima and Barton Gellman report for the Washington Post. Google's chief legal officer David Drummond is calling on the U.S. Senate to fix the loopholes that were added to the USA Freedom Act as it passed through the House, telling recipients of a mass email that the current bill "will not prevent bulk Internet data collection." He notes, "as the bill stands today it could still permit the collection of email records from...

05/28/2014

Bodyguards The New York Times' Jason Horowitz reports on the roles of former Obama campaign titans David Axelrod and Jim Messina, who are lined up on opposite sides in the United Kingdom's upcoming national elections. He writes, "As more former aides turn their affiliation with the president into lucrative consulting arrangements, the Battle of Britain crystallizes a concern among some Democrats over whether those most central to Mr. Obama’s rise should be expected in their private business to stand for his public policies and values. And if they are not, some of the president’s supporters wonder what exactly it means to work for Mr. Obama in the first place." Horowitz notes, "while Mr. Messina found former associates generous with their time, Democratic...

05/27/2014

Hashing it Out In the New Yorker, Sasha Weiss explains the rise and power of the #YesAllWomen hashtag in the wake of Friday's mass killings in Santa Barbara by Elliot Rodger, a misogynist madman. More than a million tweets with the #YesAllWomen hashtag have appeared thru Monday--here's a visualization of geotagged tweets using the hashtag on Twitter spreading across the world on May 25. Feminist dynamo (and friend of PDM) Deanna Zandt collected several must-reads on the killings. She's also collecting stories of violence inflicted on women who refuse sexual advances on this Tumblr. Every now and then we come across something that connects the dots in a broader way that the daily drumbeat of news and commentary. Today here's the text and accompanying...

05/23/2014

Trucking Despite the late opposition of a coalition of tech companies including Facebook, Google, Microsoft, and Yahoo, the US House voted overwhelmingly in favor of the watered down USA Freedom Act, 303-121. Rep. Jim Sensenbrenner (R-WI), the bill's main sponsor, said the vote shows "Congress does not support bulk collection" of Americans' metadata. But, as Alex Byers of Politico noted, during floor debate he added, "I wish this bill did more…“To my colleagues who lament the changes, I agree with you. The privacy groups who are upset about lost provisions, I share your disappointment.” Rep. Zoe Lofgren (D-CA), said that she didn't believe that the bill would end bulk collect, noting, "Regrettably, we have learned that if we leave any ambiguity in the...