Tuesday 5 July 2011

Pete Yorn - Old Boy

Exclusive first interview with key LulzSec hacker

David Allen Green

Missing Milly Dowler's voicemail was hacked by News of the World

Milly Dowler was last seen alive on 21 March 2002. Photograph: Surrey police/PA
The News of the World illegally targeted the missing schoolgirl Milly Dowler and her family in March 2002, interfering with police inquiries into her disappearance, an investigation by the Guardian has established.
Scotland Yard is investigating the episode, which is likely to put new pressure on the-then editor of the paper, Rebekah Brooks, now Rupert Murdoch's chief executive in the UK; and the- then deputy editor, Andy Coulson, who resigned in January as the prime minister's media adviser.
The Dowlers' family lawyer this afternoon issued a statement in which he described the News of the World's activities as "heinous" and "despicable". Milly Dowler disappeared at the age of 13 on her way home in Walton-on-Thames, Surrey on 21 March 2002.
Detectives from Scotland Yard's new inquiry into the phone hacking, Operation Weeting, are believed to have found evidence of the targeting of the Dowlers in a collection of 11,000 pages of notes kept by Glenn Mulcaire, the private investigator jailed for phone hacking on behalf of the News of the World.
In the last four weeks the Met officers have approached Surrey police and taken formal statements from some of those involved in the original inquiry, who were concerned about how News of the World journalists intercepted – and deleted – the voicemail messages of Milly Dowler.
The messages were deleted by journalists in the first few days after Milly's disappearance in order to free up space for more messages. As a result friends and relatives of Milly concluded wrongly that she might still be alive. Police feared evidence may have been destroyed.
The Guardian investigation has shown that, within a very short time of Milly vanishing, News of the World journalists reacted by engaging in what was then standard practice in their newsroom: they hired private investigators to get them a story.
Their first step was simple, albeit illegal. Paperwork seen by the Guardian reveals that they paid a Hampshire private investigator, Steve Whittamore, to obtain home addresses and, where necessary, ex-directory phone numbers for any families called Dowler in the Walton area. The three addresses that Whittamore found could be obtained lawfully, using the electoral register. The two ex-directory numbers, however, were "blagged" illegally from British Telecom's confidential records by one of Whittamore's associates, John Gunning, who works from a base in Wiltshire. One of the ex-directory numbers was attributed by Whittamore to Milly's family home.
Then, with the help of its own full-time private investigator, Glenn Mulcaire, the News of the World started illegally intercepting mobile phone messages. Scotland Yard is now investigating evidence that the paper hacked directly into the voicemail of the missing girl's own phone. As her friends and parents called and left messages imploring Milly to get in touch with them, the News of the World was listening and recording their every private word.
But the journalists at the News of the World then encountered a problem. Milly's voicemail box filled up and would accept no more messages. Apparently thirsty for more information from more voicemails, the News of the World intervened – and deleted the messages that had been left in the first few days after her disappearance. According to one source, this had a devastating effect: when her friends and family called again and discovered that her voicemail had been cleared, they concluded that this must have been done by Milly herself and, therefore, that she must still be alive. But she was not. The interference created false hope and extra agony for those who were misled by it.
The Dowler family then granted an exclusive interview to the News of the World in which they talked about their hope, quite unaware that it had been falsely kindled by the newspaper's own intervention. Sally Dowler told the paper: "If Milly walked through the door, I don't think we'd be able to speak. We'd just weep tears of joy and give her a great big hug."
The deletion of the messages also caused difficulties for the police. It confused the picture at a time when they had few real leads to pursue. It also potentially destroyed valuable evidence.
According to one senior source familiar with the Surrey police investigation: "It can happen with abduction murders that the perpetrator will leave messages, asking the missing person to get in touch, as part of their efforts at concealment. We need those messages as evidence. Anybody who destroys that evidence is seriously interfering with the course of a police investigation."
The paper made little effort to conceal the hacking from its readers. On 14 April 2002, it published a story about a woman allegedly pretending to be Milly Dowler who had applied for a job with a recruitment agency: "It is thought the hoaxer even gave the agency Milly's real mobile number … The agency used the number to contact Milly when a job vacancy arose and left a message on her voicemail … It was on March 27, six days after Milly went missing, that the employment agency appears to have phoned her mobile."
The newspaper also made no effort to conceal its activity from Surrey police. After it had hacked the message from the recruitment agency on Milly's phone, the paper informed police about it. It was Surrey detectives who established that the call was not intended for Milly Dowler. At the time, Surrey police suspected that phones belonging to detectives and to Milly's parents also were being targeted.
One of those who was involved in the original inquiry said: "We'd arrange landline calls. We didn't trust our mobiles."
However, they took no action against the News of the World, partly because their main focus was to find the missing schoolgirl and partly because this was only one example of tabloid misbehaviour. As one source close to the inquiry put it: "There was a hell of a lot of dirty stuff going on."
Two earlier Yard inquiries had failed to investigate the relevant notes in Mulcaire's logs.
In a statement today, the family's lawyer, Mark Lewis of Taylor Hampton, said the Dowlers were distressed at the revelation. "It is distress heaped upon tragedy to learn that the News of the World had no humanity at such a terrible time. The fact that they were prepared to act in such a heinous way that could have jeopardised the police investigation and give them false hope is despicable," he said.
Lewis told the BBC this afternoon the Dowler family was pursuing a damages claim against the News of the World.
The News of the World's investigation was part of a long campaign against paedophiles championed by the then editor, Rebekah Brooks. The Labour MP Tom Watson last week told the House of Commons that four months after Milly Dowler's disappearance the News of the World had targeted one of the parents of the two 10-year-old Soham girls, Jessica Chapman and Holly Wells, who were abducted and murdered on 4 August 2002.
The behaviour of tabloid newspapers became an issue in the trial of Levi Bellfield, who last month was jailed for life for murdering Milly Dowler. A second charge, that he had attempted to abduct another Surrey schoolgirl, Rachel Cowles, had to be left on file after premature publicity by tabloids was held to have made it impossible for the jury to reach a fair verdict. The tabloids, however, focused their anger on Bellfield's defence lawyer, complaining that the questioning had caused unnecessary pain to Milly Dowler's parents.
Surrey police referred all questions on the subject to Scotland Yard, who said they could not discuss it.
News of the World's parent company News International, part of Murdoch's media empire, said the revelations were: "A development of great concern". It issued a statement saying: "We have been co-operating fully with Operation Weeting since our voluntary disclosure in January restarted the investigation into illegal voicemail interception. This particular case is clearly a development of great concern and we will be conducting our own inquiries as a result. We will obviously co-operate fully with any police request on this should we be asked."
Nick Davies & Amelia Hill @'The Guardian'
Unfugnbelievable...well actually...!

NOTW/The Scum/Murdoch

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The ad they don't want you to see


Harvey Norman has been caught red handed by undercover environmental investigators selling furniture that fuels the destruction of Australia's native forests.
Incredibly, our new TV ad that shows what Harvey Norman are doing to our environment has just been banned from commercial TV by the industry body that classifies ads - because they're scared of what Harvey Norman might do next. So while Harvey Norman spend over $100 million a year on ads - our community movement has been blocked.
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From the Australian Senate yesterday:

Monday 4 July 2011

In The Words of Gil Scott-Heron - A Tribute by Doctor L

Download

Calif Records Genge Mix

Developments in the DSK Case: What They Mean And What They Don't

Brian Eno – Drums Between The Bells (2011 - Albumstream))




Following on the heels of Small Craft On A Milk Sea, Brian Eno’s releasing a new collection, Drum Between The Bells, featuring the words of Rick Holland. He and Eno began working together in 2003 after meeting in the late ’90s through Eno’s collaborative Map-Making project, but Drum doesn’t include any of those early works. Take a listen to “Glitch” to get an idea of where things went.
Here’s the tracklist and some other details:
01 “bless this space”
02 “glitch”
03 “dreambirds”
04 “pour it out”
05 “seedpods”
06 “the real”
07 “the airman”
08 “fierce aisles of light”
09 “as if your eyes were partly closed as if you honed the swirl within them and offered me … the world”
10 “a title”
11 “sounds alien”
12 “dow”
13 “multimedia”
14 “cloud 4″
Silence
15 “breath of crows”
The album features the voices of Eno, Grazyna Goworek, Caroline Wildi, Laura Spagnuolo, Elisha Mudly Aylie Cooke, Holland, Nick Robertson, and Anastasia Afonina.
Drums Between The Bells is out 7/5 via Warp. It’ll be available in a few formats: A 44-page hardcover book with a double CD (one CD featuring instrumental versions of the tracks), a double LP, a straight-up CD, and as a digital download.

ALBUMSTREAM
Wayne Coyne 
Went up and down Elgin street all I got was head splatters

Want

(Thanx Dray!)

Sign Of The Times: Deaf Men Stabbed By Gang Members After Using Sign Language Mistaken For Gang Signs

Fuxake

HA!

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Government spending on alternative energy research vs. American spending on various pockets of the beauty industry

(Click to enlarge)
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*sigh*

The shot that nearly killed me: War photographers – a special report

Ali Abunimah

Egypt: Explosion hits gas pipeline in northern Sinai

♪♫ Foo Fighters w/ Alice Cooper - Schools Out/I'm Eighteen

Alice Cooper Joins The Foo Fighters onstage at their sold out Milton Keynes, UK show on July 2nd, 2011

With Each Twist in Strauss-Kahn Case, City Sees Further Reflections of Itself

Diyya al-Najjar RIP

Info

Australian war prisoner scheme defied global law

Confidential Defence documents reveal that Australia's policies on handling captives in Afghanistan and Iraq from 2001 to 2003 were so contrived they ran the risk of being neither ethical nor in line with international law. The risk was starkly outlined in a top secret memo from the then chief of the Defence Force, Admiral Chris Barrie, to the then defence minister, Robert Hill, in February 2002, which warned that the prisoner ''arrangement may not fully satisfy Australia's legal obligations and in any event will not be viewed as promising a respect for the rule of law''.
Canberra joined the US offensive in Afghanistan after the attacks of September 11, 2001, promising that captives would be given the full protection of the Geneva Conventions.
But behind the scenes the allies split over the status of al-Qaeda and Taliban fighters. Australia felt bound by the conventions, which meant captives would be treated as legitimate prisoners of war, while the US president, George Bush, labelled them ''unlawful combatants'' outside the Geneva protocols.
Canberra was torn between its treaty obligations and a desire not to obstruct the US.
The extent of the contortions this produced are exposed in documents which the Public Interest Advocacy Centre in Sydney obtained under freedom-of-information laws.
The documents, made available to the Herald and the ABC, relate to prisoners of war in Afghanistan and Iraq between 2001 and 2004.
They reveal that:
Australian officials wrongly assumed the US would take a similar view of the legal rights of captives;
Australia came up with a legal convenience, the ''Afghan model'', to paper over the gap;
the model was based on the contrivance that the US would always be the formal ''detaining'' power when prisoners were taken, even if only one US soldier was operating with much larger numbers of Australians at the time of the capture;
the model was the result of ''a serious divergence of legal and policy views between coalition partners'';
as a result, Defence wanted as little publicity on it as possible;
nearly a year after Australian forces were sent to Afghanistan, Defence was still working on Australia having its own detainee capability but this was not done until 2010.
Astonishingly, the papers reveal that the Afghan model, described as interim, was carried by default into the Iraq conflict in 2003. This was despite a new policy being struck in March 2003 between the US, Australia and Britain to give Australia more say in how prisoners were treated. The ''trilateral agreement'' was never put into practice.
The situation reached absurd heights on April 11, 2003, when 66 prisoners rounded up by Australian SAS troops were deemed to have been ''captured'' by the sole US Army officer present.
''Defence may find it difficult, although not impossible, to coherently explain that [Australia] was not the detaining power,'' warns a high-level brief at the time. This week Admiral Barrie said his concerns were about the practicalities, not legalities, of the arrangement and, by the time of Iraq, Australia should have had its own capability.
An international law expert at the University of NSW, Andrew Byrnes, labelled the Defence policy a ''charade''.
The PIAC is calling for a full public inquiry. Its chief executive, Edward Santow, said: ''The papers show a failure of leadership in both the ADF and the Department of Defence.''
Deborah Snow & Anne Davies @'SMH'

Why Do People Believe Stupid Stuff, Even When They're Confronted With the Truth?

William Orbit - Water From A Vine Leaf (Cliff Child Remix)

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Google+ for Crowdsourcing Crisis Information, Crisis Mapping and Disaster Response

♪♫ The Small Hours - The Milkman Of Human Kindness

"Have to say this is rather fabulous." - Billy Bragg on Facebook

Al Qaeda: The Rebrand

HERE

Hacker Attack Disrupts Al-Qaeda Communications

Ali Abunimah Responds To Israeli Claims That Gaza Flotilla Is A 'Provocation'

@'Democracy Now'

Sven Blume - Space Dub

01] Axs - D.E. XXII
[02] Leo Cavallo - PR Edit I
[03] Organon - Radial Velocity
[04] Organon - Red Shift
[05] Leo Cavallo - Null 01
[06] Alexander Ross - Expansion Dub
[07] Ilias Katelanos - Manao Soda
[08] SCB - 20/4
[09] Ilya Orange - Emtry Railways
[10] Faces - Disc Over ( Responz Dub]
[11] Marko Fürstenberg - Without You (s.W Remix)
[12] Axs - D.E. XV
[13] Morocan Lover - Deserted

Changing the rules of the TV interview 

'It sounds like an interview with a satnav stuck on a roundabout.' LOL!

Cops Just Love Those Tasers

HA!

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6 Things Google+ Can Do That Facebook Can't

Music Rights Groups Raided By Police, Bosses Arrested For Fraud

Sunday 3 July 2011

Is Mark Zuckerberg in Google+ Circle?

Want Mark Zuckerberg in your circle of Google+ friends? Good luck finding the real one.
The Facebook founder apparently has not one, not two, but at least three profiles on Google's newly launched social network, billed as Facebook's biggest rival yet. While most people are temporarily blocked from joining Google+ due to demand, it looks like three versions of Zuckerberg made it past the velvet rope.

Lovely Jon mix for Soul Jazz Records


Killer schizophrenic mix from film buff Lovely Jon
Sounds Of The Universe continue with their Sotu Mix series which has included exclusive selections from Maxmillion Dunbar, Claremont56, Distal, West Norwood Cassette Library and DJ Haus (Hot City).
This is a rollercoaster ride of obscure cinematic ditties, hip hop, post-punk, freaky rock, soul and everything in between!

Censorship tells the wrong story (Reporters Without Borders)

(Click to enlarge)
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Water Caught at 7000 FPS Is Mesmerizing

Inside
- How the Search Giant Plans to Go Social