Tuesday, 16 August 2011

Commons Select Committee publishes further written evidence on phone-hacking

On 16 August 2011 the Committee decided to publish further correspondence it has received following its evidence session with News International executives on Tuesday 19 July 2011.

Read the correspondence

@'parliament.uk'

UK riots: police could get new curfew powers, says Theresa May

Phone hacking: News of the World reporter's letter reveals cover-up

Clive Goodman
The News of the World's former royal correpsondent, Clive Goodman, who was jailed over phone hacking. A letter from him claims phone hacking was widely discussed at the paper. Photograph: Carl De Souza/AFP/Getty Images
Rupert Murdoch, James Murdoch and their former editor Andy Coulson all face embarrassing new allegations of dishonesty and cover-up after the publication of an explosive letter written by the News of the World's disgraced royal correspondent, Clive Goodman.
In the letter, which was written four years ago but published only on Tuesday, Goodman claims that phone hacking was "widely discussed" at editorial meetings at the paper until Coulson himself banned further references to it; that Coulson offered to let him keep his job if he agreed not to implicate the paper in hacking when he came to court; and that his own hacking was carried out with "the full knowledge and support" of other senior journalists, whom he named.
The claims are acutely troubling for the prime minister, David Cameron, who hired Coulson as his media adviser on the basis that he knew nothing about phone hacking. And they confront Rupert and James Murdoch with the humiliating prospect of being recalled to parliament to justify the evidence which they gave last month on the aftermath of Goodman's allegations. In a separate letter, one of the Murdochs' own law firms claim that parts of that evidence were variously "hard to credit", "self-serving" and "inaccurate and misleading".
Goodman's claims also raise serious questions about Rupert Murdoch's close friend and adviser, Les Hinton, who was sent a copy of the letter but failed to pass it to police and who then led a cast of senior Murdoch personnel in telling parliament that they believed Coulson knew nothing about the interception of the voicemail of public figures and that Goodman was the only journalist involved.
The letters from Goodman and from the London law firm Harbottle & Lewis are among a cache of paperwork published by the Commons culture, media and sport select committee. One committee member, the Labour MP Tom Watson, said Goodman's letter was "absolutely devastating". He said: "Clive Goodman's letter is the most significant piece of evidence that has been revealed so far. It completely removes News International's defence. This is one of the largest cover-ups I have seen in my lifetime."
Goodman's letter is dated 2 March 2007, soon after he was released from a four-month prison sentence. It is addressed to News International's director of human resources, Daniel Cloke, and registers his appeal against the decision of Hinton, the company's then chairman, to sack him for gross misconduct after he admitted intercepting the voicemail of three members of the royal household. Goodman lists five grounds for his appeal.
He argues that the decision is perverse because he acted "with the full knowledge and support" of named senior journalists and that payments for the private investigator who assisted him, Glenn Mulcaire, were arranged by another senior journalist. The names of the journalists have been redacted from the published letter at the request of Scotland Yard, who are investigating the affair.
Goodman then claims that other members of staff at the News of the World were also hacking phones. Crucially, he adds: "This practice was widely discussed in the daily editorial conference, until explicit reference to it was banned by the editor." He reveals that the paper continued to consult him on stories even though they knew he was going to plead guilty to phone hacking and that the paper's then lawyer, Tom Crone, knew all the details of the case against him.
In a particularly embarrassing allegation, he adds: "Tom Crone and the editor promised on many occasions that I could come back to a job at the newspaper if I did not implicate the paper or any of its staff in my mitigation plea. I did not, and I expect the paper to honour its promise to me." In the event, Goodman lost his appeal. But the claim that the paper induced him to mislead the court is one that may cause further problems for News International.
Two versions of his letter were provided to the committee. One which was supplied by Harbottle & Lewis has been redacted to remove the names of journalists, at the request of police. The other, which was supplied by News International, has been redacted to remove not only the names but also all references to hacking being discussed in Coulson's editorial meetings and to Coulson's offer to keep Goodman on staff if he agreed not to implicate the paper...
Continue reading
Nick Davies @'The Guardian'
Injustice Facts

Real-time image search from all connected phones

It’s pretty easy to search and browse the photo library on your smartphone, but what if you could search for images on a friend’s phone? How about on millions of people’s smartphones? The concept sounds futuristic, but a research team at Rice University may bring the idea to the present day. The software for this creepy-sounding but potentially useful function is called Theia, and according to the GeekOSystem blog, the test app was initially developed for Google Android  smartphones. The Rice team has a detailed paper explaining the distributed image search solution, which can quickly search for useful images, such as a theft in progress (see above) or clues to the location of an abduction, for example. The researchers suggest that by using Theia software on a handset in combination with a Theia server, specific data from images can be found faster and cheaper than through traditional means:
Through user studies, measurement studies, and field studies, we show that Theia reduces the cost per relevant photo by an average of 59%. It reduces the energy consumption of search by up to 55% and 81% compared to alternative strategies of executing entirely locally or entirely in the cloud. Search results from smartphones are obtained in seconds.
The research paper details the process, but in a nutshell, Theia can remotely search both the metadata (time and location) and the content of photos on cellphones that are registered with the Theia service. To speed up the process and ensure smartphones don’t waste too many CPU cycles searching for content, Theia uses a partitioned search approach: Photos that match certain search parameters initially are uploaded to Theia servers, where the offloaded data can be further searched in real time using more powerful cloud computing servers.

I can see some interesting and practical uses for this, but of course, privacy is a concern. The research team suggests mitigating that by allowing users to specify which photo folder on a smartphone is searchable through Theia. Essentially, users would opt-in by registering their phones with the service, then designating which photo gallery could be scanned.
Although it doesn’t offer a distributed search feature, the photo upload feature of Theia reminds me of the Google Plus Android app, which already has an Instant Upload function. Every picture taken is immediately uploaded to a user’s Google Plus account, but isn’t shared by default. Instead, a user can decide to share it with the public or a specific group post-upload. Since the pics are already on Google’s servers, it could be easy to one day search through them, provided users allowed for that to happen.
Kevin C. Tofel @'GIGACOM'
Be afraid! Be VERY afraid...

Nick Davies

Stand by for new phone-hacking bombshells. Should be on the Guardian website around one o'clock.

Guardian Live Blog
Labour MP Tom Watson has already promised that the evidence is "dynamite".

Nóra Radó - On WikiLeaks & Dimplomacy: Secrecy & Transparency In The Digital Age

Cameron and Miliband blame bankers for riots

Amnesty TV - Misery Bear's torture

ROFL!!!

Via
(Thanx Hazel!)

Cancer’s Secrets Come Into Sharper Focus

♪♫ Amy WInehouse - Take The Box (2003)

Addiction a brain disorder, not just bad behavior

♪♫ The Specials - Concrete Jungle (Rehearsal 2008)

Thailand: The Green Cause Can Kill

'The 10,000 dollars paid to kill Thongnak is quite a lot for Thailand,' admits Col. Chaicharn Purathanont, who is leading the police investigation in Samut Sakhon, a province outside Bangkok with a range of industries using coal which was - the focus of the Sawekchinda’s activism.
The money was distributed among seven men assembled to target Thongnak, 47, says the colonel, spreading a crumpled sheet of paper on his glass-topped desk. It is a photocopy containing the pictures, names and role of each man involved in the killing.
Yothin Theprian, the alleged gunman on that list of suspects, has already turned himself in. Police say he was paid 1,333 dollars for shooting Thongnak as the activist sat outside his noodles shop on the morning of Jul. 28.
The investigation has frustrated the victim’s friends, including fellow activist Chanchai Rungrotsakorn. 'We think there are more powerful people above those the police have identified. There are connections, networks, local businesses and politics...'
Continue reading
Marwaan Macan-Markar @'Global Issues'

Tibetan Monk Dies in Self-Immolation Protest

A Tibetan monk died Monday after setting himself on fire calling for the return of the Dalai Lama, the exiled Tibetan spiritual leader condemned by Beijing as a separatist, a rights group said.The death, confirmed by China's official Xinhua news agency, occurred in an ethnic Tibetan area of Sichuan province known as Garze Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture.According to the London-based Free Tibet rights group, the 29-year-old monk called Tsewang Norbu from Nyitso monastery doused himself with gasoline and set himself ablaze while shouting "Long live the Dalai Lama" before he died.
The death comes just days after China-designated Panchen Lama, the second ranking spiritual leader in Tibetan Buddhism, toured the region under heavy Chinese police protection. The Dalai Lama, who has lived in exile since a 1959 failed uprising against Chinese rule, originally selected another young man named Gendun Choekyi Nyima to become the 11th Panchen Lama.  But the youth was arrested by Chinese police in 1995 at age 6 and has not been heard from since. Many Tibetans oppose Beijing's designee installed by the Chinese government.The remote region where Monday's death occurred and other Tibetan parts of Sichuan have seen repeated protests against the government.
This is the second reported self-immolation this year in this area of Sichuan. In March, a 21 year old monk Phuntsog of Kirti monastery set himself on fire and died near Kirti Monastery in Aba county in apparent protest against the government. The self-immolation triggered a street protest of nearly a thousand monks and lay people against government controls on the restive region prompting an immediate crackdown on the monastery.
In April, Chinese authorities seized more than 300 protesting monks from Kriti monastery and weeks later admitted subjecting them to "legal education" at undisclosed locations.The United Nations Working group on Enforced and Involuntary Disappearances protested the detentions, accusing Beijing of involvement in "enforced disappearances."  But Beijing brushed off the U.N. protest, and instead urged critics to adopt a "fair perspective" on government efforts in the region.
@'Voice of America'

From Tottenham to Oakland Planet of Slums, Age of Riots

Tottenham, Chile, Tunis…
There are too many to count
Oakland, Brixton, Taybat al-Imam…
We almost can’t keep the names straight.
Clichy-sous-Bois, Caracas, Los Angeles…
The phrase “riot in London” echoed strangely in my ear, prompting only muted interest. I have been present for a few riots in London and in nearby Cambridge, marches against the war and the perennial Mayday battle between anarchists and the Metropolitan Police. From these to the more recent anti-cuts marches which ended in sporadic clashes with police, my interest has gradually waned, and when I most recently heard this phrase “riot in London,” I expected it would be followed by yet another description of a ritualized protest, with some marchers “kettled” and some anarchists fighting police. This is not simply a criticism: I was not not excited, but I was certainly not excited either.
Instead, the details began to emerge: the immediate spark was the police murder of a Black man, Mark Duggan, who was shot to death by police, and the beating of a 16-year old woman demanding answers from police about Duggan’s death. The fuel for the fire had been long accumulating, however: institutionalized racism in the form of poverty, police stop-and-search methods, and more recent Conservative Party cutbacks in the name of “austerity,” this year’s chosen catchword if “revolution” doesn’t eclipse it entirely.
The similarities with other serious waves of social rebellion then began to emerge with increasing clarity. This was both about Mark Duggan and it was not (here we can agree with the British Prime Minister David Cameron, albeit toward the opposite end), just as the recent rebellions in Oakland in 2009 were both about more than Oscar Grant, just as 2008 Athens was about more than Alexandros Grigoropoulos, 1992 L.A. was about more than Rodney King, the 1965 Watts Rebellion about more than Marquette Frye, and so on. And like these previous moments, the London rebellions are spreading with a degree of spontaneity and a flexibility of organizational forms that has left police utterly confounded. There have already been more than 1,000 arrests, and as hysterical media outlets up the rhetorical ante with talk of “guerrilla warfare,” the police are gearing up for far more...
Continue reading
George Ciccariello-Maher @'Counterpunch'

George Pelecanos Reading from The Cut with The Nighthawks


Spero Lucas has a new line of work. Since he returned home after serving in Iraq, he has been doing special investigations for a defense attorney. He's good at it, and he has carved out a niche: recovering stolen property, no questions asked. His cut is forty percent.
A high-profile crime boss who has heard of Lucas's specialty hires him to find out who has been stealing from his operation. It's the biggest job Lucas has ever been offered, and he quickly gets a sense of what's going on. But before he can close in on what's been taken, he tangles with a world of men whose amorality and violence leave him reeling. Is any cut worth your family, your lover, your life?
Spero Lucas is George Pelecanos's greatest creation, a young man making his place in the world one battle and one mission at a time. The first in a new series of thrillers featuring Spero Lucas, The Cut is the latest confirmation of why George Pelecanos is "perhaps America's greatest living crime writer." (Stephen King)
Early Praise:
"Pelecanos's excellent first in a new crime series introduces Spero Lucas, a 29-year-old Iraq War vet who does investigative work for a Washington, D.C., defense attorney...Both vital and timely, this remarkable novel also connects D.C.'s past and present as only Pelecanos does. Readers will want to see a lot more of Lucas." -Publishers Weekly, Starred review
"Triple-distilled excellence: first, a truly great new series character; second, a truly great contemporary crime novel; and third, and as always, Pelecanos's status as the undisputed poet laureate of America's most secret city - the three-quarters of Washington DC that tourists never see. Not just recommended - this is essential reading." - Lee Child
"Every time I read one of George Pelecanos's novels--and The Cut might be the best yet--I'm left a little awed, a little envious, and wholly certain that what I've just experienced is the authentic marriage of art to truth. The guy's a national treasure." - Dennis Lehane
"Spero Lucas is a great character, hes cool, hes honorable and a guy you would want at your back. Hes also interesting to read and the action is totally believable. Pelecanos takes us into a world a lot of us only see on TV and makes us believe we are right there, in on the action. Social issues are brought up, but there is no preaching, George is just telling it like it is. What Pelecanos writes is real, he just does with fictional people. Another awesome book from a true genius of the genre." -Crimespree Magazine
Read more and hear an excerpt read by The Wire's Dion Graham.
HERE
(Thanx beeden!)

Lawrence Lessig - Code is Law: Does Anyone Get This Yet?

Sydney collar bomb hoax: police arrest Australian man in US

FCC, Mayor Lee, Train Operators Union All Scrutinizing BART As Cell Shutdown Remains Possible For Tonight's Protest

A brief interview with the Chief Communications Officer for BART, Linton Johnson

#opBART Livestream (San Francisco)

         
LIVE Police radio
andnotnull 
Say what you will about shooting people and their distaste for peaceful protest, but at least the trains run on time... #MuBARTek

The war against social media

HA!

Jacob Appelbaum

FCC reviewing SF subway cell shut down

The U.S. Federal Communications Commission said today that it's investigating a decision by government officials in San Francisco to pull the plug on subway cell service before a protest last week.
Also today, Bay Area Rapid Transit officials were bracing for a second protest scheduled to begin at 5 p.m. PT (8 p.m. ET) to highlight the civil liberties concerns raised by silencing mobile devices. Today's protest was organized by the group Anonymous, which appears to have been behind an intrusion into a BART Web site over the weekend.
It's unclear whether BART will disable service again. BART spokesman Linton Johnson told CNET this afternoon that he would not reveal his agency's "tactics," and declined to elaborate.
Preliminary reports on Twitter this afternoon suggested that BART police -- the agency maintains a uniformed division, which was involved in a fatal shooting that sparked the initial outcry -- would shut down the subway station where today's protest is scheduled to be held. The location, at the Civic Center BART, is adjacent to San Francisco city hall.
"I can not talk about our tactics tonight because we are obliged by the Constitution to balance everybody's rights," BART spokesman Johnson told KRON TV this morning that he would not reveal what BART plans are in preparation for the protest.
"We were forced into a gut wrenching decision" to cut cell service in order to protect BART users' "constitutional right to safety."
There is, however, no right to safety in the U.S. Constitution, only a right to speak and assemble freely -- which, some legal experts say, BART violated. The word "safety" appears in the state constitution, but in a section that talks about individual rights, not police powers...
Continue reading
Elinor Mills @'cnet'

Nick Oliveri faces 15 years in prison

After being arrested last month at his LA home following a two-hour standoff with police and a SWAT team, current Kyuss/former QOTSA bassist Nick Oliveri has been charged with several counts that could land him up to 15 years in prison.
According to TMZ, last July the police were called over a 'domestic disturbance' between Oliveri and his girlfriend at his home. A standoff ensued after he apparently wouldn't allow her to leave. Two hours later, when the police finally entered his home, they allegedly found a fully-loaded rifle, cocaine and methamphetamines.
Oliveri has been charged with one misdemeanor count of resisting, obstructing or delaying a police officer, two counts of possession of a controlled substance with a firearm, and two counts of possession of a controlled substance. If convicted on all counts, he could face a maximum of 15 years.
@'The Quietus'

Kicking and Streaming: Why Indies Tolerate Spotify’s Minuscule Royalties

Glasses Remixed

(Thanx Stan!)