Showing posts with label iphone. Show all posts
Showing posts with label iphone. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 27, 2010

technocracy & the matrix

Warrent Used to Raid Journalist's Home Possibly Invalid



Welcome to Steve Jobs' police state. Literally. California, enamored by Apple hype, sanctioned a possibly unconstitutional police raid on a journalist. Below is Wired's account of the events. Is Jobs worse than Gates at this point? Is it time for an Apple boycott?


Police raided the house of an editor for Gizmodo on Friday and seized computers and other equipment. The raid was part of an investigation into the leak of a prototype iPhone that the site obtained for a blockbuster story last week. Now, a legal expert has raised questions about the legality of the warrant used in the raid.

On Friday, officers from California’s Rapid Enforcement Allied Computer Team in San Mateo, California, appeared at the home of Gizmodo editor Jason Chen while he was not there and broke open the front door.

Chen and his wife discovered the officers when they returned from dinner around 9:45 that evening. According to an account he posted online, Chen noticed his garage door was partly open, and when he tried to open it completely, officers came out and told him they had a warrant to search the premises. The warrant had been signed just hours earlier, at 7:00 p.m., by a San Mateo County Superior Court judge. It allowed the police to search Chen, his residence and any vehicle in his control.

The officers were in the process of cataloging the items they had already taken from the premises and told Chen they had been in his home a “few hours already.” According to California law, a search warrant may be served between 7 a.m. and 10 p.m. unless otherwise authorized.

The officers told Chen he could request reimbursement for the damage to his front door.

Jennifer Granick, civil liberties director for the Electronic Frontier Foundation, said Chen is protected from a warrant by both state and federal laws.

The federal Privacy Protection Act prohibits the government from seizing materials from journalists and others who possess material for the purpose of communicating to the public. The government cannot seize material from the journalist even if it’s investigating whether the person who possesses the material committed a crime. Full Story


ALSO: Why the Elites like Apple - Apps That Criticize Public Figures BANNED

The Daily P.P. Awards
Predictive programming - when TV tells you how it's gonna be



Monday night's award goes to CSI: Miami (episode "Count Me Out") on CBS. The entire CSI franchise is anathema to civil liberties and science. But that is well-worn territory.

This rerun, originally aired in December, was about catching a meth dealer who murdered a Census taker. The episode only briefly touches on any anti-government sentiment inherent with such a topic but two subtle moments in the episode plant a seed that all Americans may be criminals.

Detective Calleigh Duquesne expresses the dangers for government employees like the Census taker because of "all of the anti-government people out there." Later in the episode a charcter, who was upset that police were on her property unlawfully and that taxes are too high, was arrested for falsely imprisoning her maid.

The nearly-subliminal message: those who disagree with government are dangerous. A recent poll showed that almost 80 percent of American do not trust the government. Are 4 out of 5 of us now suspects?

also:

*School district that spied on children in their bedrooms has a friend in federal judge

*China demands that companies spy on citizens

*Poll: More people using government web sites

*Android's rising popularity may make it next iPhone

*Media Wages War on Single Black Women

Monday, April 26, 2010

technocracy & the matrix

Video Game Censorship Goes to Supreme Court



We live in a world in which a 17-year old can sign up to possibly die in a foreign war but cannot buy a video game where his avatar would do the same thing. At least in California. Yes, that California. The state on the edge of bankruptcy has as one of its priorities the restriction of much needed commerce in the guise protecting the youth from "anti-social behavior."

Worrying about "anti-social behavior" in modern day video games is akin to having concern for your rabbi's foreskin. This is not the Pac Man days. Most of the games of concern have online components that usually exceed the popularity of the single-player campaigns. Playing with others - SOCIALLY - is how most of these games are marketed.

California censors also cite studies about the violence desensitization and aggression. These studies are as reliable as alchemy. The studies are so flawed, in fact, that they've figured into the prior actual rulings (all of which have stuck down gaming censorship). Judge Consuelo Callahan said in the 9th Circuit ruling:

"None of the research establishes or suggests a causal link between minors playing violent video games and actual psychological or neurological harm, and inferences to that effect would not be reasonable"


Ultimately, the national past time of America's soccer parents are feigning outrage over getting involved in their child's life. Their motto should be "Government, please raise my kid for me." And since all government start quelling free speech "for the children." we need to see protecting the First Amendment has a very grown-up matter. Full Story

The Daily P.P. Awards
Predictive programming - when TV tells you how it's gonna be



Sunday night's award goes to American Dad (episode "Bully for Steve") on Fox. In order to teach his son, Steve, how to stand up for himself, dad Stan becomes his bully. Father beating up son, or child abuse, is the humor here. Funny stuff? But this is only found out because of the surveillance system at Steve's school. A system in which the principal (who seems to have secret proclivities) is the only one with access. This is much like what is going on in Pennsylvania in which a school district used laptops to spy on the students at home in their bedrooms. Men in private rooms secretly watching teenagers - the new norm.



also:

*Senator calls for privacy protection from FaceBook and the other Info Pimps

*At Apple's orders, police seize Gizmodo editor's computers

*Frontline to broadcast Vaccine Wars Tuesday night

*The people vs Apple: Class action suit against iPhones, iPods liquid sensors

*Wall Street Journal now top paper in US

Friday, April 16, 2010

CoOlDiGgY tech & media

SURPRISE! Online Privacy Actually Does Matter To Youth: STUDY



Most young people are anti-big brother contrary to common wisdom

NEW YORK — All the dirty laundry younger people seem to air on social networks these days might lead older Americans to conclude that today's tech-savvy generation doesn't care about privacy.

Such an assumption fits happily with declarations that privacy is dead, as online marketers and social sites such as Facebook try to persuade people to share even more about who they are, what they are thinking and where they are at any given time.

But it's not quite true, a new study finds. Despite mounds of anecdotes about college students sharing booze-chugging party photos, posting raunchy messages and badmouthing potential employers online, young adults generally care as much about privacy as older Americans.

The report, from researchers at the University of California, Berkeley and the University of Pennsylvania, is among the first quantitative studies looking at young people's attitudes toward privacy as government officials and corporate executives alike increasingly grapple with such issues.

"It is going to counter a lot of assumptions that have been made about young adults and their attitudes toward privacy," said Mary Madden, senior researcher at the Pew Internet and American Life Project. She was not part of the study but reviewed the report for The Associated Press ahead of Thursday's release.

*VIDEO: Why is Alex Jones torturing that iPad?



*Apple App Store Bans Pulitzer-Winning Satirist for Satire

*Gmail gets drag-and-drop attachments

*TV Report Card, Smart Shows Rule

*Oldest Martian Meteorite Not as Old as Thought

*Assassin's Creed 2 Sets World Record For Most Magazine Cover Appearances

*Fox News Pulls Sean Hannity From Tea Party Rally

*Networked Networks Are Prone to Epic Failure

*Weinsteins Buying Back Miramax?

Monday, March 29, 2010

CoOlDiGgY tech & media (late edition)

WSJ: Verizon iPhone Arriving This Summer/Fall



The rumor mill is churning today as news of a CDMA iPhone running on Verizon will be manufactured by Pegatron in China while a whole new AT&T model, made by Foxconn, will also drop in the summer/fall timeframe. the Journal notes that the two new devices will be exactly the same except, obviously, the CDMA version will lack a SIM card.

We've seen weird leaks of an iPhone 4G screen - something longer than the current iPhone screen with a front-facing camera - but nothing concrete. We also need to take this with a grain of salt. Asian manufacturers enjoy talking up their connections with certain companies because it gives them a slight boost in the equities markets, so this could be a pump and dump.

Read more...

*Scientists stumped as bee population declines further

earlier:
Say Goodbye to Linux on the PS3



Those who own an older PS3 version and currently run Linux on the console will want to listen up: a new firmware update coming down later this week will kill that installation.

According to Sony, it plans to release PlayStation 3 firmware version 3.21 on Thursday to achieve one goal: eliminate the "Other OS" option currently available in all pre-Slim models of the video game console. The feature allowed PS3 owners to install an operating system--in almost every case, Linux--onto the PlayStation 3.

Read more...

Friday, March 19, 2010

CoOlDiGgY tech & media





Two U.S. senators met with President Obama on Thursday to push for a national ID card with biometric information such as a fingerprint, hand scan, or iris scan that all employers would be required to verify.

In an opinion article published in Friday's edition of the Washington Post, Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) and Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) say the new identification cards will "ensure that illegal workers cannot get jobs" and "dramatically decrease illegal immigration."

Schumer and Graham pitched the idea to President Obama during a private meeting Thursday at the White House. Graham said afterward that Obama "welcomed" their proposal for a new ID card law; the White House said in a statement that the senators' plan was "promising."


Read more...

*California Court Rules Cyber-Bullying Is Not Free Speech

*A computer glitch sent police to the home of elderly couple's home over 50 times

*Pay to Play: Some iPhone App Sites Demand Money for Reviews

*British youngsters prefer online advice to parents

*Sex.com auction takes a cold shower

*U.S. wind power growing fast but still lags

*Palm's future: a vicious cycle

*Tech Equipment Tax Deduction Tips

*Court Slaps Prosecutor Who Threatened Child-Porn Charges Over ‘Sexting’

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