Yearly Archives: 2009

Bush WH Linked to Abu Ghraib

In Establishing the connection between the Bush White House and Abu Ghraib my brother reports on work that connects the dots,

Denying that White House policy was directly responsible for the vile abuse of prisoners at Abu Ghraib has been the central goal of a five-year disinformation campaign by Bush officials. 'Torture Team' author Philippe Sands argues that newly-disclosed records show how blatantly Bush officials were willing to lie in order to lead reporters away from the truth.

Also, other good stuff at Neiman Watchdog.

Posted in Torture | 1 Comment

No More Puffers

According to An Airport Screening Program Is Killed, the government is scrapping the airport “puffers” that were supposed to suck in air from your body and analyze for minute traces of Bad Things.

Seems they cost too much, don't really work, and break down all the time.

Posted in National Security | 2 Comments

Figures

I bought a GPS not so long ago. So I wasn't happy to read that the GAO is fretting GPS may stop working next year,

U.S. GAO – Global Positioning System: Significant Challenges in Sustaining and Upgrading Widely Used Capabilities: It is uncertain whether the Air Force will be able to acquire new satellites in time to maintain current GPS service without interruption. If not, some military operations and some civilian users could be adversely affected. (1) In recent years, the Air Force has struggled to successfully build GPS satellites within cost and schedule goals; it encountered significant technical problems that still threaten its delivery schedule; and it struggled with a different contractor. As a result, the current IIF satellite program has overrun its original cost estimate by about $870 million and the launch of its first satellite has been delayed to November 2009—almost 3 years late. (2) Further, while the Air Force is structuring the new GPS IIIA program to prevent mistakes made on the IIF program, the Air Force is aiming to deploy the next generation of GPS satellites 3 years faster than the IIF satellites. GAO's analysis found that this schedule is optimistic, given the program's late start, past trends in space acquisitions, and challenges facing the new contractor. Of particular concern is leadership for GPS acquisition, as GAO and other studies have found the lack of a single point of authority for space programs and frequent turnover in program managers have hampered requirements setting, funding stability, and resource allocation. (3) If the Air Force does not meet its schedule goals for development of GPS IIIA satellites, there will be an increased likelihood that in 2010, as old satellites begin to fail, the overall GPS constellation will fall below the number of satellites required to provide the level of GPS service that the U.S. government commits to. Such a gap in capability could have wide-ranging impacts on all GPS users, though there are measures the Air Force and others can take to plan for and minimize these impacts.

Posted in Sufficiently Advanced Technology | 7 Comments

Post-Travel Thought

Obama has been President more than 100 days. Why do I still have to take my shoes off at the airport?

Cf. This interview with Bruce Shneier, Safe But Also Sorry from which I learn that the War on Shampoo will be over soon

Posted in National Security | 10 Comments

Heading Home Back to My Great Job

This was a very good conference (#iiw). Now back to reality. Sort of.

Posted in Talks & Conferences | 4 Comments

Drinking Formaldehyde

This has nothing to do with the conference, honest, but I can’t help but wonder if there might not a link between Boing Boing, Corpses are rotting more slowly than they used to and the presence of formaldehyde in diet drinks.

Posted in Science/Medicine | 3 Comments