Nothing To Hide, Nothing To Fear

The Consumerist caught techs from a nationwide US computer repair outfit called The Geek Squad red-handed, rifling through specially-created-for-the-sting image files and stealing choice porn pics.

Many Consumerist commenters wondered if other tech support companies do this. That seems incredibly naive.

All of them, duh – did you ever know a geek who, when faced iwth a completely unsecured system, didn’t have at least a quick look? Stealing files is something else entirely, though the commenters should be more concerned that the repair people were looking for blackmail fodder. or worse: being paid a modest stipend by local, under-employed Homeland Security goons to go through harddrives, looking out for ‘suspicous’ stuff.

That should worry more than thinking that putative pics of pervy puppies and kittens might be nicked by some nosy tech droid.

Surely it makes sense to use encryption then: but the fact your harddrive and data were sensibly secured that way would be considered evidence of guilt of something-or-other by intelliigence agencies and Homeland Security, such are the paranoid and draconian times we live in.

But then of course it’s all moot anyway: none of it’s private once they rev up the national security letters or the RIAA. 30,000 national security letters are issued each year… You could refuse, but that in itself is an offence.

Chickens, Meet Roost

Could they by chance be connected?

This:

Missing US diplomat found dead in Cyprus
By George Psyllides, Associated Press Writer
Published: 03 July 2007

The US defence attache in Cyprus was found dead in a remote rural area of the Mediterranean island on Monday, four days after he disappeared with his diplomatic car, sparking an island-wide search.

A postmortem showed Lt. Col. Thomas Mooney, 45, bled to death from a cut to the throat, according to a police statement released late Monday. It did not clarify whether foul play was suspected, adding that the diplomat was identified by his dental records.

However, a Cypriot official involved in the autopsy said the diplomat fatally wounded himself.

“There is no evidence of foul play,” the official told The Associated Press, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the media. “He had a wound in the neck which is compatible with self-infliction.”

Mooney disappeared with his car, a black Chevrolet Impala, on Thursday, and a ground and air search operation turned up nothing until Monday.

Police said Mooney’s decomposed body was found near his car, which was parked on a dirt road in the Lefka area, a remote region of rugged, hilly terrain around 28 miles west of the capital, Nicosia.

Hours later the US Embassy confirmed that the dead man was Mooney – who is married with children.

“After the notification of next of kin, with deep sadness, I announce that Lt. Col. Thomas Mooney, who served his nation with distinction as our defence attache, was found dead by Cypriot authorities on Monday,” US Ambassador Ronald Schlicher said in a written statement..

And this:

Greece, Cyprus may have allowed secret CIA flights: European MPs

Greece and Cyprus are among 14 EU member-states suspected of turning a blind eye to secret CIA flights taking terror suspects to countries where they could face torture, according to a report approved by a majority of MEPs in the European Parliament on Wednesday.

The EU parliament voted to accept a resolution condemning member states who accepted or ignored the practice, according to Athens News Agency reports.

The EU report said the US had operated 1,200 flights, flying suspects on to states where they could face torture.

The report was adopted by a large majority, with 382 MEPs voting in favor, 256 against and 74 abstaining.

A paragraph referring to Greece said that aircraft used by the CIA had made 64 stops in Greek airports. It expressed grave concerns regarding the purpose of flights coming from or flying to countries linked to the CIA’s “extraordinary renditions” circuit, as the prisoner transfers were termed.

In the case of Cyprus, the report pointed to 57 stops at Cyprus airports of CIA-operated planes.

The US embassy in Cyprus gave this statement:

The US State Department said there was no indication of terrorist involvement.

“I wouldn’t point you in the direction of an act of terror,” US State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said.

Well, no, of course he wouldn’t and for once I agree: sounds like either revenge or remorse to me.

Comment of The Day: Who’s Your GoDaddy?

A letter to the Guardian about the recent UK bombings caught my eye this morning and led me in an unexpected direction: to Bob Parsons, GoDaddy CEO and larger-than-life internet personality. Here’s the letter:

You report on an internet forum – al-Hesbah – which featured a pre-emptive message telling Islamists to “Rejoice, by Allah, London shall be bombed” (The message boards of militant chatter, July 2). The only problem is that the al-Hesbah chat room is registered with a domain-registration company in Scottsdale, Arizona, and it is one that hides the identity of the original registrar. Does anyone besides me find it strange that after tracking back various “terrorist” websites to places like Texas and Virginia, all of a sudden Domains by Proxy starts up to provide “terrorist” websites with anonymity, and despite the hue and cry against anyone who supports terror and the USA Patriot Act, Domains By Proxy isn’t investigated, harassed, raided or for that matter even mentioned in the media as an obvious facilitator of the “terrorist” websites?

MA Vidal
Hermanus, South Africa

I was intrigued: who or what’s Al-Hesbah and why Scottsdale?

Al-Hesbah is an Arabic message board and has been called “one of the most widely used jihadist Internet forums. In March 2006, the site was accused by rival Jihadist forum of aiding in the arrest of the well-known cyber-persona of Irhabi 007, a representative of Al-Qaeda in Iraq. This led to the site administrators shutting down the site on March 26, stating that they had discovered the identities of two members of the site who were actual security officers, Muhammad al-Zuhayri and Muhammad Tamallat,

[…]

On June 29, 2007, the site was found to have a warning possibly related to the failed 2007 London car bombs in London, England.

Not content with unsupported assertion, I whoised El Hasbah, and this is their registration entry:

Registry Whois

Domain Name: al-hesbah.org

Status: CLIENT DELETE PROHIBITED, CLIENT RENEW PROHIBITED, CLIENT TRANSFER PROHIBITED, CLIENT UPDATE PROHIBITED

Registrar: Wild West Domains, Inc. (R120-LROR)

Expiration Date: 2008-04-15 14:06:18
Creation Date: 2004-04-15 14:06:18
Last Update Date:2007-05-10 09:27:05

Name Servers:
ns1.cpmax.net
ns2.cpmax.net

A quick google for Wild West Domains, Inc tells us it’s an ICANN registrar that tracks back to GoDaddy, who also own ‘domains by proxy’.

Domains by Proxy is an Internet company owned by Go Daddy CEO Bob Parsons, that offers private domain registration to its users. Ordinarily, the domain owner’s contact information is listed in the WHOIS database. Using one of their partner registrars such as Go Daddy or Wild West Domains, Domains by Proxy leaves their information instead, guaranteeing some amount of privacy to the domain owner. This means that it is impossible for spammers to harvest your email address from the WHOIS database. It also means that domain owners have, in theory, a lot more privacy.

On the other hand, it could mean a longer process to trace the activities back to the responsible owner if the domain is used for illegal or unwanted activities, such as spamming.

However, this is not true anonymity. Personal information is collected by these registrars to provide the service. By some accounts, registrars like Domains by Proxy take little persuasion to release so-called ‘private’ information to the world, requiring only a phone request or cease and desist letter.

Actually they’re a little more cagy than that. From the subpoena policy:

Upon the receipt of a valid civil subpoena, Domains by Proxy will promptly notify the customer whose information is sought via e-mail or U.S. mail. If the circumstances do not amount to an emergency, Domains by Proxy will not immediately produce the customer information sought by the subpoena and will provide the customer an opportunity to move to quash the subpoena in court.

[…]

Domains by Proxy will not produce the content of e-mail, as the Electronic Communications Privacy Act, 18 U.S.C. §2701 et seq., prohibits an electronic communications service provider from producing the contents of electronic communications, even pursuant to subpoena or court order, except in limited circumstances. Domains by Proxy ‘s e-mail servers do not retain deleted or sent e-mail. However, deleted e-mail may be recoverable from back-up servers for a period of up to thirty (30) days.

Domains by Proxy reserves the right to request a copy of the complaint and any supporting documentation that demonstrates how the Domains by Proxy e-mail address is related to the pending litigation and the underlying subpoena.

If British police are trying to track back the registrant they’re not going to have an easy job of it – which is rather the point.

Who is Bob Parsons? Bob Parsons is a man with a big presence online who has strong opinions about privacy and the internet: it would be safe to say he’s a strong libertarian and free-marketeer: you could even describe him as neoliberal. He likes to think of hinself of something of a maverick and an internet watchdog; his blog is very popular and he has a radio show too, in which he presents himself as ‘the voice of internet freedom.

[…] he uses his blog and his radio show, which airs live on Wednesday nights on Sirius (Charts) and XM Radio (Charts), as his soapbox. He rants about issues that he argues are critical to the Internet overall but obviously are of huge importance to his company.

This is what he says about private registrations:

Registrants who purchase private registrations have no problem with accountability.

In contract, those who seek privacy are fine receiving it with accountability. Law abiding citizens have no problem being held accountable for their actions. This is because, well, they are law abiding. So when people pay for private domain registrations they typically send three messages. The first message is that they are law abiding citizens; the second message is that they are willing to be held accountable for their actions; and the third and most important message, is that the registration information they are providing is valid.

Law abiding Americans are entitled to privacy.

[My emphasis]

Well, he would say that, wouldn’t he, since he’s presumably making money from successful private registration companies?

But anonymity, sorry, privacy, isn’t only useful for the ‘good guys’ and money’s money, online or off. It’s an industry that’s made Parsons has very well-off and well-connected; Bob Parsons has clout in US government circles. or or if not clout exactly, certainly an entree:

I flew to Washington D.C. late Monday evening to meet Tuesday with newly-appointed assistant Secretary of Commerce John Kneur who is also the Director of The National Telecommunications Administration (“NTIA”). The NTIA is the branch of the U.S. Government that oversees ICANN. And since ICANN is primarily responsible for the domain name system, when the possibility presented itself for me to meet with Assistant Secretary Kneuer, I jumped at the opportunity.

The purpose was to meet Secretary Kneuer and to discuss face-to-face his general plans for ICANN and the Internet. Since there has been quite a lot of talk and fear about the governance of the Internet moving to the United Nations, I was quite interested to talk to Secretary Kneuer.

Sounds like he and the Bush appoiintee are pretty sympatico:

I am happy to report that Secretary Kneur firmly supports ICANN and is committed to private sector management of the Internet. He confirmed that the NTIA will firmly support the complete transition of ICANN from DOC control to private sector control, a move that the International Community has been supporting for quite some time. He, like me and most other people I know, does not wish to see control over the Internet fall into the hands of the U.N. or the ITU. But, we were both happy to hear the ITU announce a few days ago that they have no intention of taking on the Internet as one more issue on their already full plate. So, I was seriously encouraged by that news.

Isn’t that nice.The person who gives, for a price, terrorist organisations the means to communicate anonymously, hugger-mugget with the US assistant secretary of commerce responsible for the regulation of those very digital communications. How very cosy.

Secretary Kineuer is a former telcoms industry lobbyist for the big phone companies, and is of a distinctly libertarian slant too:

Kneuer is a member of the camp of neo-cons who categorically refuse to “even *think* about regulation to promote competition,” writes Harold Feld of Media Access Project.

To prop up their ideology they enthuse over the wonders of the free market, conveniently overlooking reams of data that show a balance of sound public policy and market forces to be the engine driving the Web’s real successes.

Kneuer and his industry comrades try to drown out evidence of market failure with pseudo-libertarian talking points about deregulation, free markets and competition. By mouthing this propaganda they provide cover for the phone companies that Web guru Cory Doctorow calls “corporate welfare bums” — creatures of government regulations that base their businesses on “government-granted extraordinary privileges.”

Which brings us back to Bob Parsons again. I do find it odd that that his private registration companies aren’t under some kind of investigation if they’re hosting alleged jihadist sites. If they’re not, why not? It’s not exactly difficult to find out to find out which registrants are hosting sites like El-Hasbah and others like it. If I can do it, anyone can. But that in itself is suspicious, like the trail’s been put there on purpose. It’s been alleged that El-Hasbah is a false flag operation could there be more like it, hosted by private registration companies? Exactly how sympatico is proud Vietnam vet Parsons with the Bush administration and federal security agencies? Well he was fully behind Guantanamo Bay which got him a lot of negative reaction; suddenly he started coming over all cloak and dagger:

The soapbox crusades make him a hero to some; to others they are just more of the grandstanding that has made Parsons a sometimes polarizing figure. His ads generate hate mail accusing him of promoting pornography. He knows full well that the safari to Zimbabwe he went on in October, in which he killed an elephant, will cause some outcry. But does he really need bodyguards?

When Parsons attended a conference called the Domain Roundtable in May 2005, he showed up with two beefy guys. They even came a week in advance to case the joint. “They were looking for where to rush the man if anything went wrong,” says Jay Westerdal, who runs research firm Name Intelligence and puts on the Seattle conference.

What does all this mean? Who knows?

There are circular connections to be made between virtually any US corporate CEO and members of the Bush administration – so this may be nothing at all. It probably isn’t anything at all. There may be a story there, there may not – but whatever else, it’s always interesting to observe the little junctions where ibertarian wingnuttia, freemarketeering, Bushco and the spooks collide.

Fire and Rain

More devastating than any carbomb

I haven’t blogged over the past weekend because, as have most other Britons, I’ve been following the news about the attempted bombings in London and the incendiary attack on Glasgow airport. From a media junkie’s perspective alone it was an event of note – the photos, posted almost as it was happening, were incredible. And it made a change from the endless rain and floods.

But setting sheer news value aside for the moment I’m sure I can’t be the only one whose first reaction was “How very convenient for Gordon Brown – bloody typical Labour PR stunt, an ‘attack’ in his first week so he can act the calm, resolute leader.” In the light of so many scandals bubbling under, these latest outrages seems all too horribly convenient. Or something very like that.

Two remarkable things happened in the last two days within half a mile of each other, at either end of Piccadilly. One, the car bomb, you have probably heard of. The second you probably haven’t.

This is a straight reproduction of a small article from The Metro newspaper, Friday June 29, 2007
“Mossad Spy” Found Dead

An Egyptian financier accused of spying for Israel has been found dead outside his London home in mysterious circumstances. Ashraf Marwan was alleged to have worked for Israeli intelligence agency Mossad during the 1973 Yom Kippur war with Egypt and Syria. He was accused of tipping Israel off about the war. Police said “He appears to have fallen from a balcony. The death is being treated as unexplained.” The 62 year old son-in-law of former Egyptian president Gamal Abdel Nasser was found on Wednesday in St James’s, Central London.

The fact that these two incidents are less than ten minutes walk apart does not make them connected. They may or may not be. But I note this, and the list above, to help those who have difficulty imagining that there is any need to consider any possibility other than Islamic terrorism to explain the apparent Haymarket car bomb. Astonishing things do happen in London.
More…

Even the fact that there were (mercifully) no fataiities seems to support conspiracy, such are the depths of cynicism to which New Labour has brought us, with its exaggerations, lies and ridiculous security theatre.

So I fully expected the usual flurry of hyperbolic government press releases and a rash of pointless security crackdowns – No cars within 5 miles of an airport! Exclusion zones around London nightclubs! Round up the usual suspects!- but surprisingly. it hasn’t happened, although the tabloids have been doing their best to whip up public panic. On the whole the government’s response has been unexpectedly rational.So my initial reaction was tempered somewhat by the lack of hoohah.

But now I just don’t know what to think; the pendulum is swinging wildly as new facts emerge.

Peiple have been arrested already, which is good, well done police – but isn’t that speed of arrest in itself suspicious? Then it turns out the arrestees are not British and several are on the run – one is a middle-eastern doctor – and the pendulum swings the other way.

Could this be Saudi money funding terror plots as payback for BAE? Who knows? The policing of terrorism is an area where truth has historically been a shifting thing, construed according to the political expediency of the moment. Consider Lockerbie, for instance.

I will give the new Home Secretary Jacqui Smith credit, though and not just because she’s female. She has managed to come over as calm and competent in stark contrast to her predecessor John Reid, who took trouble to be as threatening and unpleasant in demeanour as possible to mask his essential incompetence and weakness.

(But if you think she’s a real change, don’t – as Chief Labour whip, Smith has been responsible for enforcing MP’s compliance in voting for all Blair’s plans. When it comes to Iraq, she’s up to it in her neck, just like her new boss.)

I just don’t know what those attacks were all about, and neither does anyone else except those involved. Conspiracy or actual attack? Does it really matter? It’s all distraction. It’s the effect that aimed at that’s important, whoever’s responsible, and the anticipated response to the attacks was fear. So I am glad to see that people don’t seem to be giving into it, despite ridiculous headlines like ‘Britain Under Seige’ from rightwing redtops like the Daily Mail.

I mean bloody hell, we’re the generation that grew up under the constant threat of nuclear annihilation and IRA violence, when there was a bomb a week and you couldn’t go to a city centre pub without fear of immolation, when planes were regularly hijacked and an Olympic team was massacred. Remember the coach full of military families blown up on the motorway? The IRA, ETA. Red Brigade, Fatah – those were household names. Oh, we took precautions: remember when the streets became a public rubbish dump when all the bins were sealed after Bishopsgate to stop bombs being hidden in them? But life went on. This is nothing. We will not succumb to US-style pissypants crybabyism.

Gordion Brown’s certainly been trying to make the most of it: you could see him yesterday being given the solemn-faced, dramatically-lit interview by Andrew Marr, heavily powdered to hide his 5 o’ clock shadow, three-quarter-posed for the camera so as to look statesmanlike, jowls wobbling with suppressed ’emotion’, doing his best to come over as the solid rock of sanity in a crisis. (Haha. Ahahhahahahaha.)

When I see him do that, the pendulum swngs back towards conspiracy again. But then I remind myself, these attacks are nothings. They’re mere squibs. Whoever’s responsible for this latest bit of terrorist agitprop, a few mad individuals or a grand organised conspiracy, it really doesn’t matter. We need to treat the ‘war on terror’ as the sideshow it is. We’ve got a real threat facing us and it’s bigger than any government plot or terrorist outrage.

The UK in 2050, projected

Europe

To fly from the UK to Italy last week was like crossing continents: Britain’s cold rain gave way to suffocating heat and a ferocious scirocco, the hot Saharan wind, in Sicily. The Fiat car plant was closed after employees refused to work in the heat. Fires were burning in southern Italy, with Calabria (24 blazes) and Puglia (22) worst affected. In Greece, seven people have died. Firefighters and soldiers are battling a fire which has destroyed much of Mt Arnitha National Park, and threatens Athens. Peter Popham

Australia

From the worst drought in a century to the worst floods in decades, Australians are wondering what will come next. Severe storms have battered the east coast, causing major flooding in New South Wales. In the low-lying Gippsland region of Victoria, hundreds of people had to abandon homes and businesses at the weekend after rivers burst their banks. Helicopters rescued residents as floods engulfed houses, barns and paddocks, leaving cattle stranded. Floods have also hit the Newcastle area, north of Sydney, leaving nine people dead. Another attempt is being made to refloat the Pasha Bulker, a coal freighter swept on to a sandbank just off a Newcastle beach three weeks ago.Kathy Marks

Americas

The first days of summer in the United States have seen fire and water combine with devastating effect. Wildfires around Lake Tahoe, California, have consumed more than 250 homes. Fire chiefs predict that the week-old fire should finally be brought under control by tomorrow. Boston broke high temperature records on Wednesday while black-outs in a sweltering New York City stranded a quarter of a million commuters. Meanwhile Texas and Oklahoma, until recently struggling with drought, have been hit with record rains and widespread flooding. Storms in the southern plains left 11 people dead.David Usborne

[…]

The world over, people are getting the message that the planet is ailing. Results last week from an unprecedented poll in 46 countries by the US-based Pew Research Centre showed environmental degradation is the number one concern of people around the world, eclipsing worry even about nuclear attacks, ethnic rivalries or Aids.

“It’s going to get worse before it gets better,” says David Masur, director of PennEnvironment, an environmental advocacy group in Pennsylvania. “We’re not even at the tipping point yet, in terms of the worst of the worst.”

More…

British people have had a taste of the real danger themselves this past week and they don’t like it. About 27,000 homes and 5,000 businesses have been affected by flooding and storms with insurers estimating the cost at over a billion pounds.

It’s gradually sinking in (if you’ll excuse the pun) that we’ve got much more imminent threats to worry about than car-bombing.

FBI Recruiting Stasi Students, Attempts To Ban Academic Freedom. Sorta.

It sounds like a joke – the FBI wants to stop US students going abroad, ’cause those evil, wily foreigners’ll steal their brains while they’re asleep:

FBI wants students to stop travelling

Fears technology loss

By Nick Farrell: Monday 25 June 2007, 07:50

THE FBI IS visiting the nation’s top technical universities in a bid to stop students taking their holidays outside the country.

MIT, Boston College, and the University of Massachusetts, have all had a visit from the spooks to warn them about the dangers of foreign spies and terrorists stealing sensitive academic research. The FBI wants the universities to impose rules that will stop US university students from working late at the campus, travelling abroad, showing an interest in their colleagues’ work, or have friends outside the United States, engaging in independent research, or making extra money without the prior consent of the authorities.

No friends from abroad? Naah, this has to be a windup.

But no, no joke. You can download the guidelines here and they are as draconian as you could imagine. It really is like East Germany all over again:

Faculty, staff and students are encouraged to monitor their colleagues for signs of suspicious behaviour and report any concerns to the FBI or the military.

Read more…

UPDATE: I’m editing this toi give the other side of the coin from a commenter at the link above:

A bit overblown
Submitted by JohnB (not verified) on Sun, 2007-06-24 23:52.

I’m a huge civil libertarian and in fact will be engaging in some ACLU protest activities this week in DC. But this article on Press ESC is really almost to the point of being misleading. Read the original article and guidance document and you’ll see that:

1) The guidance doc specifically says it is applicable to people with access to classified info. Not just students (unless they’re working on classified info).

2) The guidance doc also goes to some length to say that these signs don’t mean someone is a spy, that people should respect each other’s privacy and that good judgment needs to exercised when considering whether to report something.

3) These are not being foisted on universities and there is no apparent attempt to try to get universities to enforce these guidelines. This is essentially a “heads up” list of things that often are associated with people who spy.

And remember: these are guidelines for people working on CLASSIFIED info. I HOPE people who work on (legal) classified projects keep an eye out for these kinds of things.

Now if we could only keep the USDOJ from spying on us without any court oversight, I’d feel MUCH better

Even if that is so, it seems that the FBI is trying to push these guidelines to apply not merely to those working directly on government funded classified projects but also to those attending institutions whose research is largely funded by DOD money. Again with the chipping away at the resistance to spying on each other like good little automatons.