Saturday, 21 May 2011

Aaron Bady

Video Captures Bradley Manning With Hacker Pals at Time of First Leaks

Rapture Rupture: When Your Parents or Boss Expect the End of Days

♪♫ Josh T. Pearson - Country Dumb

Make My Bed? But You Say the World’s Ending

What happens to a doomsday cult when the world doesn't end?

Revolutionary Cells:
On the Role of Texts, Tweets, and Status Updates in Nonviolent Revolutions

(PDF)

'Risking It All' (How Some Kids Make a Living in Brazil)


History of Electronic / Electroacoustic Music (1937-2001)

This is from a 62 CD set called "The History of Electroacoustic Music" that was floating around as a torrent, reputedly curated by a Portugese student. It's sketchy. The torrent vanished and the collection has long been unavailable. 
It's a clearly flawed selection: there's no women and almost no one working outside of the Western tradition (where are the Japanese? Chinese? etc.). However, as an effort, it's admirable and contains a ton of great stuff. Take it with a grain of salt, or perhaps use it as a provocation to curate a more intelligent, inclusive, and comprehensive selection. 
@'UbuWeb'

Grinderman - A Short Film


A short film about Grinderman. First broadcast on Channel 4 in the UK on 19 May 2011. The film includes an interview with Nick Cave, behind the scenes footage from the album artwork photoshoot and videos by John Hillcoat, Ilinca Höpfner and Iain Forsyth & Jane Pollard

RIAA v. the cloud: Box.net faces subpoena over prerelease music

German police seize Pirate Party servers, looking at Anon's toolkit

Acting on a French request for assistance, German police today confiscated German Pirate Party servers—apparently hoping to search the prominent collaboration tool widely used within Anonymous to select targets for attack.
Authorities appear to be concerned about a possible attack on French energy giant EDF. The German Pirate Party said in a statement that it does not believe itself to be a target of the investigation and expressed willingness “within its legal obligations” to aid French police:
The [Pirate Party] Board does not have information that indicates the necessity to take all servers of the Pirate Party off-line. According to the information it has been provided with, only one single public service on a virtual server of the party was affected. The disconnection of all servers is a massive intrusion into the communications infrastructure of the sixth largest party in Germany. Considering the state elections taking place in Bremen in two days, this caused a severe political damage, which the Board condemns decisively.
In relation to the ongoing investigations, it will have to be verified whether the issued search warrant was actually appropriate, especially whether the principle of proportionality was followed. After all, this action has led to a large-scale breakdown of the technical infrastructure of the Pirate Party Germany. It will also have to be verified whether data have been affected that have no relation to the French investigation.
PiratenPad links in Anonymous chat rooms
The “one single public service” is apparently a reference to the collaborative text editing tool EtherPad. The German Pirate Party has long hosted an installation of the open source EtherPad under the name "PiratenPad," and the PiratenPad install was a particular favorite of Anonymous. Anyone who has spent more than a few minutes in Anonymous chat channels has seen various PiratenPad links used to choose targets, write manifestoes, and collect "dox" on enemies.
The EtherPad Foundation, which coordinates development of the underlying technology, said today, "We entirely support PiratenPad in its struggle, we believe that EtherPad deployments and really-real time collaborative document editing should be a right for all people, great and small."
The group believes the main reason for the raid is “because PiratenPad was being used by the group Anonymous to organize an attack," but notes that even this particular EtherPad install was used for legitimate purposes such as "structured debates around the protests in Spain, so this is a major cause for concern from a libertarian perspective."
Anonymous' main communications tools have been hit hard in the last two weeks. The main Internet Relay Chat servers, run by a group called AnonOps, were taken over last week by a dissident member and have only recently been relocated to a different domain name, which continues to have "issues." Now comes the attack on PiratenPad, though an AnonOps leader says that "police.de wasn't my fault."
Rick Falkvinge, who heads the Swedish Pirate Party, came to the defense of his piratical brethren today, writing, "Doing this to a democratic party—Germany’s sixth largest, actually—two days before an election is nothing short of a democratic sabotage. This shows why we must introduce understanding of information policy into the justice system all across Europe. A computer is not just something you can carry away; doing so has consequences. It is not a wrench, and yet the law (and police) treat it like any tool, just like a wrench."
In response to the takeover of its servers, the German Pirate Party has been tweeting up some sturm und drang today, and its "#servergate" hashtag is the second highest "trending" tag in Germany.
Not surprisingly, the main German police website is now down, as is the website of federal investigators (the BKA). As one Anon put it in a tweet, "#Anonymous to german police: 'Let me introduce myself...' #servergate #PoliceMeetsCocks."
But the German Pirate Party called the attacks inappropriate. "We condemn the totally inappropriate actions by investigators,” said Sebastian Mink, chair of the Chairman Pirate Party, “but these actions are not a reason to attack other websites and we distance ourselves from such attacks.”
Nate Anderson @'Ars Technica'

*Gigg(le)s*

Danny Baker 
BBC LATEST: Injunction footballer "to sue Twitter". Also seeks restraining order on anyone going within 100m of grapevine. More later.

HA!

Via

It's coming...