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Surveillance on drivers may be increased

The Guardian: Surveillance on drivers may be increased

The case for cameras to be focused on people using mobiles as they drive is made by the independent adviser to the transport select committee, Robert Gifford, of the Parliamentary Advisory Council for Transport Safety (Pacts).

He argues that automatic number plate recognition (ANPR) technology should be applied in new ways to help defray costs of cameras and to catch offenders. “One of the good things about ANPR is that people are often multiple offenders so it would provide useful intelligence,” he said. “Those responsible for 7/7 got to Luton station by car.”

My god why is it necessary to mention terrorists or terrorism every time there is mention of new applications of surveillance technologies. Mr Gifford seems to mention it as an aside but the implication is that perhaps 7/7 could have been prevented if the system was in operation at the time. It’s like he feels the need to justify the use of surveillance by using our greatest fears. But why should that surprise me it is what has become almost a standard line by government spokesmen so why not independent advisors also.

Mr Gifford said expanding the use of technology for tracking the movements of cars could lead police to people who had committed other offences in the same way that Al Capone was eventually caught through his income tax evasion. He claimed that for greater safety and “the greater good of society”, most people would be prepared to accept “a slight reduction of our liberty”.

Interesting that the public don’t actually get to say whether they wish to give up some liberty in order for the greater good of society.

In any case as Marcel Berlins writes it’s not a civil liberties issue.

Currently being floated in parliament is a proposal for more road surveillance cameras, partly to catch out motorists who use mobile phones while driving. I have seen several accidents caused by chatting drivers; someone I knew quite well was killed because she was talking and driving at the same time. I would have expected the proposal, aimed at deterring dangerous conduct and thereby reducing accidents and saving lives, to be greeted with enthusiasm. But no.

The whingers have emerged. It would cost too much; the technology isn’t good enough; it won’t prevent accidents; it’s a cynical scheme to make money by fining the poor put-upon British motorist; Britain has become the most watched country in the world. To the last of those ill-founded objections I say, “So what?” I don’t care how many cameras we have on the roads, provided they are used for the public good, which, to my mind, includes catching dangerous drivers and lowering fatalities. This is not a civil liberties issue.

If this technology leads to prosecutions of people like Donna Marie Maddock who was caught on camera driving whilst using both hands to apply makeup then it surely is a good thing.

But I think Mr. Berlins is mistaken in believing that the issue of whether the technology will work is irrelevant.

It’s pointless to expand the system to catch people talking on mobile phones or applying makeup if the technology isn’t good enough to distinguish between those behaviours and innocent actions such as scratching one’s ear or sneezing or something equally innocuous. I don’t know what the true case is but you wouldn’t use speed cameras if the technology was unable to tell if a car was travelling at a legal speed of 56 MPH and an illegal 72 MPH so it clearly is an issue that needs to be at least considered before implementation.

Also it would seem to me that if every single motor vehicle is scanned by the ANPR then there may be a civil liberties issue here as well depending on what is done with the data. I wrote briefly last year in a much longer post about the use of ANPR in Bath following this article in The Bath Chronicle: Cameras scan for criminals.

It’s fine if my number plate is scanned, checked against the database of offenders and then discarded but if my travel into Bath is logged then eventually the police will have built up a log of my movements into and out of the city along with every other drivers’.

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Minor ID card victory

Government plans to make all passport applicants also have an ID card have been defeated in the Lords reports the BBC.

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This bike is a pipe bomb

Washington Post: Bike Band Sticker Causes Bomb Scare

ATHENS, Ohio — A sticker on a bicycle that said “this bike is a pipe bomb” caused a scare Thursday at Ohio University that shut down four buildings before authorities learned the message was the name of a punk rock band, a university spokesman said.

How moronic is this? What stupid terrorist would label their bike as containing a pipe-bomb if it really did contain one?

The bomb experts hit the bike with a high-pressure spray of water, then pried it apart with a hydraulic device normally used to rescue accident victims trapped in cars, acting Athens Fire Chief Ken Gilbraith said. Once they had it open, they saw there was no bomb.

Poor bastard learns his lesson the hard way don’t stick stickers on your bike that contains statements that could be misconstrued by moronic figures in authority or else you’ll have your bike dismantled by heavy machinery.

Dean of Students Terry Hogan urged students to be more careful when showing support for the band from Pensacola, Fla.

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Password Security: What Users Know and What They Actually Do

A Wichita State University study has concluded that despite fears of internet crime most people are still creating insecure passwords for their online accounts even though they know better. [Via Bruce Schneier]

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Fox News: Video Footage shows Bush was informed of Katrina’s possible impact

Not really news as the truth did come out following the event but Fox News now has video footage that shows President Bush was warned of the potential impact of Hurricane Katrina.

In dramatic and sometimes agonizing terms, federal disaster officials warned President Bush and his homeland security chief before Hurricane Katrina struck that the storm could breach levees, put lives at risk in New Orleans’ Superdome and overwhelm rescuers, according to confidential video footage.

Bush didn’t ask a single question during the final briefing before Katrina struck on Aug. 29, but he assured soon-to-be-battered state officials: “We are fully prepared.”

The possibility that the levees might be ‘topped’ was a grave concern at the meeting and yet the President was to state categorically after the hurricane had hit New Orleans that no one could have predicted that the levees would be breached.

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We don’t need no Parliamentary scrutiny

Spy Blog has an excellent analysis of the Legislative and Regulatory Reform Bill or as it otherwise has been described as The Abolition of Parliament Bill.

Cabinet Office Minister Jim Murphy has published the Legislative and Regulatory Reform Bill 2006 looks to be another sneaky attempt by the Executive branch of Government to further weaken the role of Parliament.

Why does the NuLabour Government hate the idea of full public consultation and of detailed scrutiny by Parliament so much ?

This Bill adds to the already strong case for a law which imposes criminal penalties on any Government Ministers, civil servants and lawyers, who dare to use words like “any” or “all” or “every” in a Bill or Order or Regulation, without qualification, caveat or restriction of unlimited powers.

Similarly, by law, no Act of Parliament should ever be worded so that it could be interpreted to give the power to amend itself (not the same thing as normal Secondary Legislation), without new Primary Legislation and full, detailed scrutiny by Parliament.

This Legislative and Regulatory Reform Bill fails these simple constitutional safeguards.

Murky.org also makes some great points in his summing up of The Legislative and Regulatory Reform Bill

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Cyberthieves Silently Copy Your Passwords as You Type

Most people who use e-mail now know enough to be on guard against “phishing” messages that pretend to be from a bank or business but are actually attempts to steal passwords and other personal information. But there is evidence that among global cybercriminals, phishing may already be passé.
read more | digg story

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Amazing Google Vid- "Quantum Physics Double Slit Experiment"

This experiment shows the really mysterious behavior of quantum particles. Electrons behaving like waves and then like marbles? Mind blowingly cool.

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The System of the World Flickr’d

Flickr set documents locations in Neal Stephenson trilogy

Neil sez, “Great chunks of Neal Stephenson’s ‘The System of the World’ trilogy (review) use the Tower of London as a pivotal location, but I never got a clear enough mental picture of the place. So I photo-documented the Tower, with Flickr notes text extracts to provide a visual guide for the interested reader. The Baroque Cycle takes in a lot of the specific geography of London, and I’d love to see a collective gazetteer emerge, perhaps using ‘baroquecyclelondon’ as a tag?

A confluence of two of my favourite things: The Baroque Cycle and Flickr. [via]

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But it really was broken from pokin’!!!

Back in the good old days of the Spectrum 48k cheating at computer games involved the BASIC command POKE to set a key value in memory to a different number in order to get infinite lives or some such thing.

Well POKE is back in the form of free to download program. It really is the ultimate gaming utility and I have just the perfect use in mind for it at work. But like the girl from Hoboken in the limerick be careful of Pokin’ as you might cause your game to become broken.

There was a young girl from Hoboken
Who claimed that her hymen was broken
From riding her bike
On a cobblestone pike
But it really was broken from pokin’!!!

The top spot of the Pinball high score table will be mine. Oh yes it will be mine.

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