Is Google Malign? And Do You Care?

The trouble with search algorythms and databases is that although they’re useful tools they’re also horribly double-edged; they can be turned right back on us by the politically or economically unscrupulous.

So it’s proved.

If you don’t read anything else today, read Privacy International‘s report ranking internet search companies – can you say Google? – on how they invade or protect their users’ personal privacy. I think it’s safe to say they don’t do well.

Google was so concerned about this report, say Privacy International, that they’ve embarked on a media smear campaign against them. From an open letter to Google’s CEO:

Dear Mr. Schmidt,

You may be aware that Privacy International yesterday published its first privacy ranking of leading companies operating on the Internet. Google Inc performed very poorly, scoring lowest among the other major companies that we surveyed.

I am writing to express my concern not just at this unfortunate result, but also at communications between Google Inc and members of the media during the period immediately prior to publication of our report. Two European journalists have independently told us that Google representatives have contacted them with the claim that “Privacy International has a conflict of interest regarding Microsoft”. I presume this was motivated because Microsoft scored an overall better result than Google in the rankings.

Read open letter to Google in full

Google, Yahoo and their fellow data-handling corporations are big enemies to take on. So why are Privacy International doing this? They say:

We are increasingly concerned about the recent dynamics in the marketplace. While a number of companies have demonstrated integrity in handling personal information (and we have been surprised by the number of ‘social networking’ sites which are taking some of these issues quite seriously), we are witnessing an increased ‘race to the bottom’ in corporate surveillance of customers. Some companies are leading the charge through abusive and invasive profiling of their customers’ data. This trend is seen by even the most privacy friendly companies as creating competitive disadvantage to those who do not follow that trend, and in some cases to find new and more innovative ways to become even more surveillance-intensive.

We felt that consumers want to know about these surveillance practices so that they can make a better-informed decision about how, whether and with whom they should share their personal information. We also believe that companies need to be more open about how they process information and why it is processed.

Most importantly, we wanted to indicate to the marketplace that their surveillance and tracking activities are being scrutinised

Their interim rankings are available as a .pdf here. I’ll be posting some stuff from it later on, for you lazy sods who can’t be bothered downloading.

Some of us were born naturally suspicious and paranoid: we’re not all asleep at wheel, googling with abandon as though every search term is forgotten once done.

It isn’t, everything is logged somewhere. That’s the nature of the digital world and anyone who forgets that is a fool. There’s plenty of those about, blithely blundering through life thinking no-one knows what they’re doing, until the knock on the door or the heavy hand on the shoulder comes.

Many of these call themselves progressives, and blog, sometimes about data protection and civil liberties. But they also run Sitemeter, which collects saleable data via the specificclick cookie – consequent to your visit to their blog, the cookie’s tracking your movements around the web. I wanted to name names, but Martin persuaded me not to. Suffice it to say if you have Sitemeter, you’re datamining your readers, even though it may be unconsciously.

Do these bloggers know? Do they even care that are colluding with the very forces they rail against? If so, why not? Dammit, even the wingers have picked up on it. Why are so-called ‘progressives’ being so wilfully blind?

The issue of datamining and lack of data privacy, when combined with the authoritarian and draconian police and data surveiilance powers that our governments are abrogating to themselves, are a danger to anyone who dissents from received political wisdom or who challenges the status quo. If you really call yourseldf a progressive you should remove Sitemeter today.

Google, now that’s a much longer-term project.

I’ll be mortified if it turns out I’m foisting a tracking cookie on someone via this site, but I’d also be grateful that someone pointed it out. I’ve done my best, getting rid of Sitemeter for instance, but I’m not really technically adept enough to know if anything is lurking in the undergrowth. Not many of us are, and therein lies the root of our problem.

21st Century America, or 1970’s Argentina?

Which fascist Banana Republic will torture and disappear anyone, even children as young as 7?

Is it Honduras? is it East Timor? Is it Cambodia, maybe? Or Nicaragua? What about Colombia then, ’cause that’s a bit nasty? Is it El bloody Salvador and the death squads again?

Answer; none of the above – for once – though that’s where the current practitioners got their very thorough training. Can you spell Negroponte?

But no, as you well knew, it’s the good old US of A, aided by it’s good buddies in the British government and the new EU accession countries.

Los Desaparecidos De Septiembre 11….

Rights Groups List 39 Disappeared In War On Terror

Six human rights groups urged the U.S. government on Thursday to name and explain the whereabouts of 39 people.

[…]

The United States has acknowledged detaining three of the 39. The groups said, however, that there was strong evidence, including witness testimony, of secret detention in 18 more cases and some evidence of secret detention in the remaining 18 cases.

Joanne Mariner of Human Rights Watch said it was unknown if the suspects were now in U.S. or foreign custody, or even alive or dead.

“We have families who have not seen their loved ones for years. They’ve literally disappeared,” Mariner told Reuters.

Among the cases detailed in the report is the detention in September 2002 of two children, then aged seven and nine, of confessed Sept. 11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, who was later detained and is now held at Guantanamo.

Read more

Like a puddle in the sun my residual sympathy for the mass of Americans who just sit by while their government is imprisoning, disappearing and torturing childreni, yet who gorge on paedophile-exposing reality tv shows like candy, is drying up.

The liberals are just as bad, thinking that a democratic candidate’s winning of the next election will solve everything, the white knight is on his way, the cavalry is coming, hurrah!, so they can sit back and wait for the Democratic groundswell to clear away all the murderous trash in DC.

What a copout.

I suspect their are millions worldwide, formerly well-disposed, who feel just like me. Not terrorists, not reflexively anti-american, just seriously pissed off and out of patience with the US government’s brutality and arrogance and it’s citizens’ apathy.

There’s another 2 years of this adminstration to come yet. If they’ll disappear and torture children, like the 60 in Guantanamo and the children abusd in Abu Ghraib that we do lnow about and then there’s the unknown and unnumbered ones that we don’t know about.

The Republicans will do anything, anything at all to grab and maintain power. If they’d imprison, torture and/or rape a child, what would they not do?

To stand idly by while they do this is to be complicit. All that it takes for evil to triumph is for good people to do nothing, and so it’s proved.

I’d like to say you deserve what you get, but as it’s necessary to say again and again and again to Americans – it’s not all about you.

Unlike you the rest of us don’t even get the figleaf of a nominally democratic vote in the presidential election. We just have to deal with the fallout of your stupidity.

But hey, there’s plenty more diposable brown children. The stars and stripes forever, eh?

You Shall Know Them By The Company They Keep

[UPDATE: Ann Winterton’s bill was defeated yesterday, but there’s two more coming right along behind. This is not over by a long chalk.]

The Catholic church in Britain, buoyed up by the rise of the religio-fascist Pope Ratzo, the presence of some prominent Catholics in the UK giovernment and the huge influx of Catholic migrants, is getting way too big for its boots: it’s threatening, the 70 Catholic MP’s who don’t toe the church’s anti-abortion line with excommunication (though they insist not, that’s effectively what it is) and worse, should they even so much as abstain from voting on new legislation tightening abortion rules. Catholic MPs include Ruth Kelly, the Communities and Local Government Secretary, and John Reid, the Home Secretary. The head of LifeLeague, James Dyson, said the pressure group would “out” Catholic MPs who took communion and abstained on abortion measures.Aiding them in this profoundly undemocratic exercise are some of the most rabid rightwing nutjobs British politics can produce.

The leader of Scotland’s Roman Catholics yesterday questioned whether politicians who backed abortion should remain full members of the church, and also compared Scotland’s abortion rate to “two Dunblane massacres a day”. In a sermon marking the 40th anniversary of the 1967 Abortion Act, Cardinal Keith O’Brien attacked both the practice of abortion and pro-choice members of the Scottish parliament.

[…]

“I think it’s far beyond time that the present Abortion Act of 40 years ago was re-examined,” he said. “We are killing, in our country, the equivalent of a classroom of kids every single day. Can you imagine that? Two Dunblane massacres a day in our country going on and on. And when’s it going to stop?”

The Dunblane reference was just gratuitously unpleasant and ill behoved a cleric – but it proves that this is about poitics and power, not conscience. That a priest would commit such an offence to common decency as to use a tragedy and parents’ grief to make a political point says he is a political, not a spiritual man. But then the anti-abortion movement has never been spiritual or about the sanctity of life but about the subjugation of women – and that goes double for the Catholic church.

British Catholics are in an invidious position. Allegiance to the Pope is required for Catholics as a matter of doctrine and this allegiance extends to the Vatican, it’s cardinals and all of their doctrinal instructions. Those instructions are infallible as they come from God directly, Catholics are told: the church’s position is that temporal powers are are strictly limited by God and God’s instructions trump the state’s. The Pope speaks directly to God, ergo the Pope’s instructions trump the state’s because abortion is considered a spiritual, not a temporal matter.

However, I suspect that should anyone else from any other religion give their primary allegiance to another city-state and its leader ahead of their own nation and compatriots they’d be called traitors, with prominent Catholics like Ruth Kelly in the forefront of the name-calling, especially so if they were Moslem.

The church can obsfuscate about liege lords and loyalty as much as they want, but their own statements of doctrine say it’s so.

This puts many British Catholics in a very delicate and ambiguous position: their loyalty has been constantly historically suspect and this has more than once resulted in bigotry and violence, so much so that the church has had to become an underground, secret, and dare we say it, even a terrorist organisation at times. This state of affairs has formed the basis of much of the long history of anti-Catholic bigotry in England but we had begun to get over it, at least until the ascendance of Ratso to the papal throne and the subsequent empowerment of the worst of the right wing of the church.

Read More

US Democrats: Venal, Stupid… Or Both?

At Working Assets, David Sirota points to secret negotiations on trade between the Democratic party and Bushco, that prove the Dems are either utterly dim or totally compromised, one of the two:

DEAL MAKES SURE TO PREVENT UNIONS FROM HAVING SAME RIGHTS AS CORPORATIONS: Reuters reports that the deal includes “a provision that would only allow national governments” – not unions – “to file a labor complaint under the pact,” meaning Democrats complicit in the deal are effectively proposing that America rely on the Bush administration to make sure workers and the environment are protected. This provision in the deal creates a clear double standard that prioritizes corporate rights over worker rights. Specifically, the provision stands in contrast to provisions already in America’s current trade pacts that allow domestic and foreign corporations to file complaints against sovereign governments (including U.S. local, state and federal governments) when those governments pass environmental/consumer protection laws. These complaints have resulted in U.S. taxpayers alone being forced to pay roughly $1.8 billion in “damages” in international courts because of its own laws.

Actually the provisions don’t contrast at all; I expect the Democrats are perfectly aware that Bushco has declared that the US can’t be sued by anyone at all and so they’ree just accepting the status quo. Democrat multimillionaire corporatists no more want workers’ rights than the Republicans do.

Chimpy declared his government immune from prosecution in 2006:

Citing an “unpublished opinion of the [Attorney General’s] Office of Legal Counsel,” the Secretary of Labor’s Administrative Review Board has ruled federal employees may no longer pursue whistleblower claims under the Clean Water Act. The opinion invoked the ancient doctrine of sovereign immunity which is based on the old English legal maxim that “The King Can Do No Wrong.” It is an absolute defense to any legal action unless the “sovereign” consents to be sued.

The opinion and the ruling reverse nearly two decades of precedent.

Or maybe the Democrats didn’t know about that ( which makes them thick), but think it just fine and dandy either way that corporate might makes right.

REUTERS – BIG BUSINESS OVERJOYED: Reuters reports that most of the corporate lobbying community in Washington, D.C. is praising the deal.

DLC APPLAUDS DEAL AS FIRST STEP TO GIVING BUSH FAST TRACK: The Democratic Leadership Council – the corporate-funded group that has long supported NAFTA and other similar pacts – issued a statement praising the deal, and saying it is “good news” that the agreement is a step towards Democrats passing President Bush’s request for reauthorization of “fast track” trade authority.

SENATE DEM POLICY COMMITTEE PASSES OUT K STREET PRESS RELEASES: The U.S. Senate Democratic Policy Committee blasted out a triumphant email alert to Capitol Hill staff touting press releases praising the secret Democratic-Bush trade deal from the National Association of Manufacturers, the Financial Services Forum, Microsoft and the Emergency Committee on Trade – the corporate front group pushing this deal.

Either way, the workers lose. Meet the new bosses …

Impeachment IS On The Table

Nice one. From Raw Story:

[…]

At a dinner honoring Pelosi Saturday evening, pro-impeachment activists slipped elegant placecards onto each place at the table. The cards read:

Remember, We’re the Deciders.
Impeachment is on the table.
Investigate and Impeach Cheney and Bush!

[…]

Secret Service agents blocked Jeeni Criscenzo, the endorsed Democratic Congressional candidate who ran against Darrell Issa, from unfurling a banner at the dinner which read:

Impeach Bush-Cheney Now
No Attack on Iran!

“Where is our freedom?” asked Criscenzo. “Thousands of people have signed this banner and they won’t let us present it to the Speaker quietly and respectfully.” Criscenzo added that she “might just go to Washington for Mother’s Day” to try and present the banner to Pelosi.

Read more