Thursday, 14 April 2011

Clams Casino: Instrumental Mixtape

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Lukashenko threatens crackdown after Minsk bombing

Turkish Police Fail

Death To The Death Penalty

Over the Firewall and into the Fire

HA!

DREAMWEAPON: The Art and Life of Angus MacLise 1938-1979


'Angus was a dream percussionist. A dream person.' - Lou Reed
DREAMWEAPON
The Art and Life of Angus MacLise (1938 – 1979)
May 10 - May 29, 2011
curated by Johan Kugelberg and Will Swofford Cameron
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Various - Love Letter To Japan




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about
Many of us Scottish musicians have received so much love and support over the years from friends and fans in Japan. Now we want to send some love and support back to the people of Japan. All funds from this release go to The Japanese Relief Effort.
credits
released 11 April 2011 Thank you to these fine people for all of their selfless support with this project: Barry McLuskie, John Williamson, Emma Ford, Stuart Murdoch, Frank & Stefan at Marina, Laurence Bell, Justin Barwick, Duncan Cameron at Riverside Studios, Johnny & Marshall at Blackbird Studios, Scott Blackwood, Jim Collinson, Tim Parry, Jonathan Tester, James Rushton, Jim Burns. Artwork and design by Donald Soutar Compilation mastering by Duncan Cameron at Riverside Studios.

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Security Fears of Wi-Fi in London Underground

The London Underground is getting Wi-Fi. Of course there are security fears:
But Will Geddes, founder of ICP Group which specialises in reducing terror or technology-related threats, said the plan was problematic. He said: "There are lots of implications in terms of terrorism and security.
"This will enable people to use their laptop on the Tube as if it was a cell phone."
Mr Geddes said there had been numerous examples of bomb attacks detonated remotely by mobile phone in Afghanistan and Iraq.
He warned a wi-fi system would enable a terror cell to communicate underground.
And he said "Trojan" or eavesdropping software could be used to penetrate users' laptops and garner information such as bank details.
Mr Geddes added: "Eavesdropping software can be found and downloaded within minutes."
This is just silly. We could have a similar conversation regarding any piece of our infrastructure. Yes, the bad guys could use it, just as they use telephones and automobiles and all-night restaurants. If we didn't deploy technologies because of this fear, we'd still be living in the Middle Ages.
@'Scneider on Security'