Thursday 3 June 2010

Kenny Dalglish To Take Over as Liverpool FC's Caretaker Manager?

Papers Please


Governor Jan Brewer defends the new law as necessary for Arizona's immigration woes. She also says that when pulled over by police that a driver's license isn't enough to prove US citizenship. Does this mean all people driving in that state will have to carry birth certificates just in case the police don't think you look American?
MORE

Hello John, gotta new motor?

Spank!!! # 20

Gun control and ownership laws in the UK

Rafa Benítez conquered Europe with Liverpool but is now victim of owners' reign


(Thanx HerrB!)

Philip Selway to release solo album on Bella Union

Radiohead’s Philip Selway has announced plans to release his debut solo album on Bella Union records. To be called Familial, it’ll be released on 30th August and see’s Selway craft a singer-songwriter album rather than just a “drummer” side-project.
The idea of a solo album was apparently seeded when Selway played on Neil Finn’s solo project 7 Worlds Collide back in 2001. During the sessions for Familial, Selway invited Germano, Steinberg, Wilco drummer Glenn Kotche and multi-instrumentalist Patrick Sansone to come and make the record with him. All who were also involved in 7 Worlds.
@'The Line Of Best Fit'
 
"it's a beaut! a delightful surprise of a record."

Israeli Force, Adrift on the Sea

FOR 2,000 years, the Jews knew the force of force only in the form of lashes to our own backs. For several decades now, we have been able to wield force ourselves — and this power has, again and again, intoxicated us.
In the period before Israel was founded, a large portion of the Jewish population in Palestine, especially members of the extremely nationalist Irgun group, thought that military force could be used to achieve any goal, to drive the British out of the country, and to repel the Arabs who opposed the creation of our state.
Luckily, during Israel’s early years, prime ministers like David Ben-Gurion and Levi Eshkol knew very well that force has its limits and were careful to use it only as a last resort. But ever since the Six-Day War in 1967, Israel has been fixated on military force. To a man with a big hammer, says the proverb, every problem looks like a nail.
Israel’s siege of the Gaza Strip and Monday’s violent interception of civilian vessels carrying humanitarian aid there are the rank products of this mantra that what can’t be done by force can be done with even greater force. This view originates in the mistaken assumption that Hamas’s control of Gaza can be ended by force of arms or, in more general terms, that the Palestinian problem can be crushed instead of solved.
But Hamas is not just a terrorist organization. Hamas is an idea, a desperate and fanatical idea that grew out of the desolation and frustration of many Palestinians. No idea has ever been defeated by force — not by siege, not by bombardment, not by being flattened with tank treads and not by marine commandos. To defeat an idea, you have to offer a better idea, a more attractive and acceptable one.
Thus, the only way for Israel to edge out Hamas would be to quickly reach an agreement with the Palestinians on the establishment of an independent state in the West Bank and Gaza Strip as defined by the 1967 borders, with its capital in East Jerusalem. Israel has to sign a peace agreement with President Mahmoud Abbas and his Fatah government in the West Bank — and by doing so, reduce the Israeli-Palestinian conflict to a conflict between Israel and the Gaza Strip. That latter conflict, in turn, can be resolved only by negotiating with Hamas or, more reasonably, by the integration of Fatah with Hamas.
Even if Israel seizes 100 more ships on their way to Gaza, even if Israel sends in troops to occupy the Gaza Strip 100 more times, no matter how often Israel deploys its military, police and covert power, force cannot solve the problem that we are not alone in this land, and the Palestinians are not alone in this land. We are not alone in Jerusalem and the Palestinians are not alone in Jerusalem. Until Israelis and Palestinians recognize the logical consequences of this simple fact, we will all live in a permanent state of siege — Gaza under an Israeli siege, Israel under an international and Arab siege.
I do not discount the importance of force. Woe to the country that discounts the efficacy of force. Without it Israel would not be able to survive a single day. But we cannot allow ourselves to forget for even a moment that force is effective only as a preventative — to prevent the destruction and conquest of Israel, to protect our lives and freedom. Every attempt to use force not as a preventive measure, not in self-defense, but instead as a means of smashing problems and squashing ideas, will lead to more disasters, just like the one we brought on ourselves in international waters, opposite Gaza’s shores. 

WikiLeaks' Sketchy Origins


The New Yorker has a fascinating new profile of Julian Assange, the mastermind behind WikiLeaks. Raffi Khatchadourian's piece is full of revelations about the enigmatic hacker-turned-"open-government activist", from details of his peripatetic childhood to an exclusive glimpse of Assange at work on the "Collateral Murder" video of an American Army helicopter shooting journalists and civilians in Baghdad.
Check it out—but also check out MoJo's controversial profile of Assange by David Kushner, which has just been updated and expanded. Like Kushner, Khatchadourian concludes that Assange's attempts to shine light on evildoers while lurking in the shadows is deeply contradictory: "The thing that he seems to detest most—power with accountability—is encoded in the site's DNA, and will only become more pronounced as WikiLeaks evolves into a real institution."
Perhaps the most interesting tidbit in the New Yorker story is its discussion of how WikiLeaks got its start. When WikiLeaks was in the planning stages in 2006, Assange said that he had more than 1 million documents; a claim that convinced Cryptome founder Jon Young that Assange was either exaggerating or up to no good. But now it seems that Assange did have his hands on a large, questionably obtained, cache of material. Khatchadourian reports that one WikiLeaks activist had access to a "tranche" of secret government documents obtained by Chinese hackers. The documents had been pulled off of Tor, the anonymizing network that WikiLeaks now encourages its leakers to use to stymie "internet spies." According to the New Yorker, WikiLeaks posted only a few of those swiped documents. If it's accurate, this anecdote raises some serious ethical and technical questions about how WikiLeaks operates. Does WikiLeaks condone this kind of online snooping? Has it relied upon it since its launch? Just how many of the senstive documents it's posted were genuinely leaked and how many were hacked?   
From Assange's response, the only thing that's clear is that (yet again) questioning WikiLeaks' M.O. makes him tetchy. He seemed to approve of the New Yorker piece, re-tweeting its assertion that "Some WikiLeaks documents were siphoned off of Chinese hackers' activities"—a detail that helps its noble-hacker mystique. However, after Wired looked into the Tor issue, Assange tweeted that its "beatup on WL&Tor" had "no new info": "Don't be fooled." The Register found this micro-denial "sketchy"; in a comment to the site, Assange implied that Wired and the New Yorker had gotten the Tor story wrong, but didn't elaborate on whether WikiLeaks had in fact gotten its start with documents taken from the privacy network.
Perhaps the New Yorker misinterpreted the geekery behind WikiLeaks; perhaps Khatchadourian got stuck in Assange's web of plausible deniablility. Either way, a more detailed response from Assange would go a long way toward clearing the air. As Ryan Sholin writes, "Is it OK to hack Tor in the name of the public good?...I have a hard time trusting Tor or WikiLeaks right now."
Dave Gilson @'Mother Jones'

However this comment is also at the page above:
First off, please take a little time to read my comment here:
http://ryansholin.com/2010/05/31/wikileaks-and-tor-moral-use-of-an-amora...
If you read that, I explain that Tor does not ensure (and has never promised to ensure) the security of the contents of data from point a to point b online. Tor obscures the origin from the destination.
The system is structured so that the exit nodes don't have to be trusted. If you read any of the Tor documentation, they tell you that. They tell you that anything you send over the wire unencrypted will come out for that last jump from exit-node to destination unencrypted, and anyone trying to intercept traffic at the exit node (the person running the node or an attacker) or the destination (the person running that service or an attacker) can read your stuff.
This is not news. On the other hand, your private information, including usernames/passwords, are probably in more danger on an open cafe wireless, where the kid next to you may be monitoring the unencrypted traffic on the wireless.
Mostly, we pay no attention to these things. But gosh, you'd expect Chinese hackers might have more incentive to take care? :)
Second, Assange says that something between a few and none of the materials published on Wikileaks came from the Chinese hacker monitoring. However the materials they did publish concerned documents outlining persecution of Tibetan activist NGOs and such. These organizations were warned.
This is a classic whistleblower scenario -- one I'd expect MoJo to understand. Any time there's a whistleblower, information is essentially stolen, violating some institution's security. This is true if it's Deep Throat spilling secrets to journalists he's sworn to keep. It's true if a chemical plant employee walks off with a manila folder with test results not meant for the public. It's true if someone takes information on a thumbdrive or laptop to present to the press or law enforcement. And it's true if someone intercepts a cell phone or internet data (whether or not from Tor).
All of these whistleblowers broke some form of security or confidentiality. I'm generally sorry when I hear that people are sniffing traffic from the Tor Network, but we know it happens, just as surely as we know somewhere right now, a sysadmin is reading someone's work email on an office server.
As we speak, there are activists, journalists, bloggers all over the world whose identity is being preserved by using Tor, writing in danger zones. Global Voices Online and Reporters without Borders are only two of the groups who train their people to use Tor to obscure the origin of their communications. They also teach people to use encrypted services (like https://gmail.com) rather than unencrypted services (http://gmail.com) so that end-to-end encryption will obscure the *contents* of their communication. Tor doesn't do that.
I'm former Tor staff, and a current volunteer. I spoke as executive director of Tor for a worldwide conference at Amnesty International (http://politics.gather.com/viewArticle.action?articleId=281474977022186), and was proud to be working with organizations including Human Rights Watch and many others during my tenure there. We focus on educating these people -- journalists, human rights activists, citizen journalists in countries where speech is not free, ...
We also document proper use of Tor to protect the user. However, my experience is that ignorant people will use Tor without protecting themselves or their data, and in the case of crackers, this can actually help law enforcement catch them. Although really *smart* criminals will use botnets and other more secure options than Tor, Tor remains the best solution for internet anonymity that doesn't involve stealing or exploiting someone else's computer or resources, and that is why it is in such widespread use among people who want to engage in civil disobedience, whistleblowing, or dissent.
You can learn more about who uses Tor, and why, here:
http://www.torproject.org/torusers.html.en
Assange stated pretty clearly that only a few whistleblower documents were published from Tor-sniffed hacking. Regardless of what you think of Wikileaks, dragging Tor through the mud just scares people away from a good resource, including people whose safety might eventually depend on their anonymity -- some successors of the Iranian election activists who used Tor to get media out of Iran, wherever that next need arises.
I'm no longer working on project staff, but I still do volunteer work for them. The way the media has engaged in scare tactics around something that isn't news (that exit nodes pass unencrypted content unencrypted) in a way that might scare someone into an insecure situation online, or drive them to use criminal means to protect themselves, makes me furious.
The Tor Project tried to make this into a teachable moment here:
https://blog.torproject.org/blog/plaintext-over-tor-still-plaintext
I hope MoJo folks will learn more about Tor, and perhaps even support the project in the future. Feel free to contact me with any questions.
Sincerely,
Shava Nerad
Tor volunteer (not speaking *for* Tor)
shava@efn.org
Hazel Dooney DooneyStudio
RT @ThePunkRockShop Why do advertising creatives have way too much DJ Shadow in their iTunes libraries? Seems a universal trait. [LOL True!]

James Blake "The Bells Sketch"




From The Bells Sketch EP

BRILLIANT!!! 长安街牛姐停车完整视频版 How to find parking all the time

Cocaine Can Rot Your Flesh

Cocaine
Photo: Efimero (CC)
Fox News reporting on a Time.com story:
Besides making you edgy and skittish, with a propensity toward emotional highs and lows, cocaine can also rot your skin, according to a study reported Monday by Time.com.
Researchers found that the illegal drug can contain agents that contribute to low white cell count or dying skin tissue, giving people the appearance of wearing rotting flesh.
The findings were published in the Annals of Internal Medicine after a discovery by doctors at the University of Rochester Medical Center in New York. It was found that women who had a history of cocaine use also tended to have discolorations on various body parts like their cheeks, buttocks, thighs and earlobes.
Those symptoms are consistent with use of the medication levamisole, which is used by veterinarians for de-worming farm animals. “Almost 80 percent of the cocaine coming into this country has levamisole mixed in,” said Dr. Ghinwa Dumyati, a University of Rochester medical professor.
He noted that the medication can cause an inflammation inside the small blood vessels. “The result can be the death of the epidermis or outer layer of skin,” he said.
Read More: Fox News

♪♫ MC5 - Kick Out The Jams

HA!

???

Liverpool sack Rafa Benitez

This hasn't officially been confirmed yet but hearing that the board may have leaked the details...


(Thanx Ana!)

Good on you Glenn

I was just on MSNBC talking about Israel, the Gaza blockade and the flotilla attack with Eliot Spitzer, who was guest-hosting for Dylan Ratigan.  It was a rather contentious discussion, though quite illustrative of how Israel is (and is not) typically discussed on American television, so I'm posting the whole 8-minute segment.  Two points:  (1) before I was on, Spitzer had on an Israel-defending law professor, followed by Netanyahu's former Chief of Staff, and both of them (along with Spitzer) were spewing pure Israeli propaganda in uninterrupted and unchallenged fashion; at the end of Spitzer's discussions with them, he asked them to "stick around just in case," and once I was left, he brought at least one of them back on to respond to what I said without challenge; (2) literally 90 seconds before my segment was about to begin, the new cam and sound system I just acquired stopped working, forcing me to unplug everything and use only my laptop cam and mic, which caused the technical aspects to be less than ideal (though still perfectly workable); to watch in full screen, click play, then click in the lower right hand corner of the picture and select "option":

UPDATE:  Just to give the context, this was the five-minute, propaganda-suffused segment with former Netanyhau Chief of Staff George Birnbaum to which I listened before my segment began.
 UPDATE II:  A few worthwhile related items:  (1) for an excellent discussion of the illegality of the Israeli raid, see this analysis from former British Ambassador and maritime law expert Craig Murray, and this one from International Law Professor Kevin Jon Heller (the Post has a decent article on this topic today as well); (2) Amos Oz, the Israeli writer who supported the Israeli attacks on both Lebanon and Gaza (though he changed his mind about the former), has a very good Op-Ed in the NYT today on what Israel has become; and (3) the Post's Ann Telnaes has an incisive cartoon about this situation (and note the towels).
 UPDATE III:  Barney Frank -- unlike Anthony Weiner, Jerry Nadler, Spitzer, and a whole slew of other Jewish progressives vehemently defending Israel -- demanded an independent inquiry and had some rather harsh words for Israel today:  "as a Jew, Israeli treatment of Arabs around some of the West Bank settlements makes me ashamed that there would be Jews that would engage in that kind of victimization of a minority."
Glenn Greenwald @'Salon'

HA!

For Rodda and Jo
XXX

How would you like someone pumping music of their choice into your room, with no ability to change the volume, skip songs, or change the CD?

Paul Lewis paul__lewis
Local radio say #cumbriashootings victims included well-known rugby league player

Wyeth, Exported Waste And Infertile Pigs

Here’s a tale that may make you squeal. The drugmaker has pleaded guilty in Dublin Circuit Criminal Court to four counts of illegally exporting waste water from its plant in Newbridge, Ireland, where contraceptive pills were made (see here), to Holland, where the water wound up in animal feed and Dutch farmers had to destroy some 50,000 pigs.
Wyeth, which is now owned by Pfizer, actually confessed to four of 18 charges. These related to the illegal “trans-frontier” shipment of waste; illegal mixing of waste; and two breaches of the drugmaker’s EPA waste licence requiring approval for contractors, RTE Business reports. There was no comment from the Wyeth Medica unit. Sentencing is scheduled for next month.
At issue is the extent to which Wyeth supervised the disposal of its waste water, if at all. The case originated in 2002 when some Dutch pig farmers noticed their sows were infertile, RTE writes, adding that many farms were subsequently closed after infertile pigs on one farm were fed a syrup containing the hormone MPA, which is used as a human contraceptive. A probe later found Wyeth produced hormone-laced waste water in the process of sugar-coating its pills.
From there, the water was sent an environmental company in Dublin for disposal, and it was sold to a Belgian that passed it on as treacle to Dutch feed companies. The Dutch Feed Industry trade group claimed in 2003 that the disaster was ‘one of the worst in memory’ and cost the industry about $145 million (at today’s rates). Cara Environmental Technology, which processed the waste for Wyeth, is due in criminal court next week, but not admitting anything.
Ed Silverman @'Pharmalot'

UPDATE: Cumbria shooting: 13 DEAD 25 INJURED

Whitehaven shooting - live updates

Keith Richards teams up with Nick Kent for forthcoming autobiography


Former NME journalist Nick Kent has been helping Keith Richards pen his autobiography.
Kent, speaking at the recent Hay Festival, revealed that he helped The Rolling Stones guitarist "fill in" the gaps in his memory of the '70s.
Richards revealed last month that he is currently waiting to read the proofs of the book, which he hopes to release in October.
"I've helped Keith Richards write his upcoming book on the years of the early '70s. I helped fill in the early '70s, when things got really, really bad. I can understand why he forgot all about it. It just wasn't pleasant," Kent explained.
He added: "His memories are incredibly gloomy. A lot of resentment, bitterness, Keith broke down in tears several times when he talked about it and turned into a blubbering wreck. It was a bad time for him. When you look back on your life you tend to suppress bad memories and that's what he's done, apart from the fact that he was taking more drugs than all Motley Crue put together."
Elsewhere in his talk, Kent laid into the recent British music scene, signalling out Oasis in particular.
"There's a lack of talent at the moment," he said. "There aren't that many great performers at the moment. Noel Gallagher and Oasis would have only had a couple of hit records if they'd have been around in the '60s and '70s." 
Going back to articles that Kent wrote about the Stones in the 70's perhaps the most unpleasant I remember was when there was a sex show put on by two women for Jagger and Richards and their entourage (including Kent) and the rug they were cavorting around on got set on fire and of course nobody helped the girls as the two Stones didn't (couldn't?) move....

Lawrence Lessig - Remix: Making art and commerce thrive in the hybrid economy (PDF)

Remix
Remix
Making art and commerce thrive
in the hybrid economy
Lawrence Lessig

Publication: October 2008
Paperback: 352 pages
ISBN: 978-1408113479
Dimensions:
23.4 x 15.3 x 2.6 cm
Price: £12.99
 'Lessig's proposals for revising copyright are compelling, because they rethink intellectual property rights without abandoning them.'
Briefly Noted The New Yorker
'Lessig... has written a splendid combative manifesto – pungent, witty and persuasive.'
Financial Times
'... Lessig is surely right that digital culture requires governance that is more subtle and ecological, judging a balance of forces between commerce and community, than precise and draconian.'
Books of the Week, The Independent
'Prof Lessig is formidably qualified...his latest book, REMIX will enhance his cult status on the web.' The Guardian
To hear Lawrence Lessig talk about his book Remix you can listen now to the NPR interview (37 min 51 sec)
e-book version available – please click here to purchase £9.99

You can buy the book from A&C Black a Bloomsbury company

Gunman kills at least five in Cumbria rampage UPDATE: 12 DEAD

At least five people have been killed and 25 injured after a gunman opened fire in west Cumbria.
A body, thought to be that of the suspect - taxi driver Derrick Bird - has been found in the Boot area of the Lake District.
The first fatality was in Whitehaven before the gunman drove south, apparently shooting people at random.
Prime Minister David Cameron told the House of Commons at least five people had been killed.
He said the country's thoughts were with those families who had lost loved ones.
 Witnesses said the suspect drove through the town with a gun hanging out of his car window, before heading south through Gosforth and Seascale before turning inland.
A GP in the town of Seascale said he and a colleague had later certified two other people dead.
Dr Barrie Walker said: "The surgery was called and I went out. I've certified one of them dead. My colleague saw another," he said.
"At present there are two people dead and one seriously injured in Seascale. I know one of the victims. She was in the street.
Deputy Chief Constable Stuart Hyde said he believed Derrick Bird's body had been found
"The second person was on a bicycle and was shot on the bike."
BBC Look North Chief Reporter Chris Stewart said a farmer is also believed to have been killed in the Gosforth area.
After the shootings, detectives said 52-year-old Mr Bird drove to the central Lakes in a Citroen Picasso, then abandoned it in the Boot area.
Before the body was discovered people living nearby were urged to stay indoors for their own protection.
Helicopters and armed officers from other police forces were brought in to help apprehend the gunman.
Soon afterwards, Deputy Chief Constable Stuart Hyde said: "I can confirm that we've found a body in a wooded area near Boot which we believe to be Mr Bird, together with a firearm.
"A formal identification will be made later."
Nuclear plant shut Mr Hyde added: "Our focus now is to try and work out what has caused this and where Mr Bird has been over the last 24 hours and in particular the last few hours.
"I would plead to anyone who has seen him or has seen any of the incidents, please come forward, speak to us and help us piece together exactly was has happened in this very, very tragic set of circumstances.
"We have a number of crime scenes across the county, which are being staffed by police officers, and I would ask people to show a little bit of restraint and respect in regard to those scenes as we try and piece together exactly what has gone on."
.A major incident has been declared at West Cumberland Hospital, in Whitehaven, where the NHS said all routine operations had been cancelled.
The Accident and Emergency department at the Cumberland Infirmary in Carlisle is also on full incident stand-by, the hospital trust said.
The Sellafield nuclear reprocessing plant in west Cumbria closed its gates as a safety precaution and afternoon shift workers were being told to stay away, though the site has since reopened.
The Whitehaven victim, believed to be a colleague of 52-year-old Mr Bird, was killed at 1035 BST.
A local taxi firm boss, Glenda Pears, said: "We just don't know what's happened.
"The lad that's been killed was friends with him. They used to stand together having a craic on the rank.
"He was friends with everybody and used to stand and joke on Duke Street."
Sue Matthews, a telephonist at A2B Taxis in Whitehaven, said the Mr Bird was self-employed and lived alone. She described him as a "quiet fellow".
At the start of Prime Minister's Questions David Cameron expressed his shock at the events which had unfolded.
He said: "The government will do everything it possibly can to help the local community and those affected.
"When lives and communities are suddenly shattered in this way, our thoughts should be with all those caught up with these tragic events."
An emergency helpline has been opened for people concerned about the incident. Cumbria Police Casualty Bureau Line on 0800 096 009

Lawrence Lessig: Re-examining the remix

Plus +

from Thingiverse: via Bruce Sterling (@bruces)
This is the next step in my attempt to make a Sarrus linkage based 3D printer. The idea is to have a cartesian mechanism without those long rods and bearings.

I built three of the Mark III and mounted them in a x-y arrangement as shown. They can move over a square about 105 mm wide, and someday may carry an extruder. They are driven by DC motors taken from inkjet printers. These motors are driven in a servo arrangement using quadrature optical encoders and optical strips removed from the same printers.

    Lego printer

    Sarah Palin Has Some Tough Words For Amphetamines

    Yes, governor, we do get it now! When you were leading thousands of morons in shouting “drill, baby, drill” (or, sorry, “drill,baby,drill”) and “drill here, drill now”, what you were trying to get at was that we should in no way be doing exploratory offshore drilling, baby, exploratory offshore drilling, because that’s dangerous. How could we have been so blind?
    If an oil well in ANWR had blown up, the oil would just kind of pool all over the tundra, where it’s really too cold for media people to come up and make a big fuss, and it would be much easier to just nuke it, like the Russians did. Funny how none of that came across in your slogan, which just seemed to imply that we should drill the crap out of everywhere to get oil! It’s almost as if reductionist chants don’t carry nuance, and allow you to claim they mean any convenient bullshit you want when they become inconvenient!
    Oh, and, word to the wise: it’s totally OK to use whatever pill-based stimulants you need in order to get in the Twitterin’ mood, but it’s not necessary to actually name-check them at the beginning of your tweet. That just eats into your 140 characters. [The Greatest Twitter In The World]

    Coming soon...

    Willy Vlautin & Dan Eccles @ East Brunswick Hotel 30/5/10 - Autographed Set List

    (Photo by TimN)

    Steve Jobs: Gizmodo Bought Stolen iPhone Prototype And Then Tried To Extort Us

    Gizmodo's explanation that it wasn't sure what it was buying when it bought the stolen iPhone prototype doesn't appear to hold much water with Steve Jobs. 
    As this video clip from Peter Kafka reveals, Steve used startlingly strong language in his D8 talk to describe Apple's interactions with Gizmodo after Gizmodo bought the phone--namely, that Gizmodo tried to "extort" Apple:

    Breaking news...