Author Archives: Michael Froomkin

Soundbite

Schneier on Security:

NSA Eavesdropping
This is the line that’s done best for me on the radio: “The NSA would like to remind everyone to call their mother’s this Sunday. They need to calibrate their system.”

Posted in Civil Liberties | Comments Off on Soundbite

Fair Warning (Alligator Dept.)

The front page of the Miami Herald is in one of its alligator panic moods today, blaring across the top, Trappers stalk a killer gator. Yes, on the day of the NSA scandals, the most important story in the universe is that,

Armed with smelly bait, a heavy-duty nylon cord and empty plastic bottles, a handful of hunters in a motorboat set traps in the muddy waters of the North New River Canal in West Broward on Thursday in an around-the-clock quest to snare a man-eating alligator.

The hunt began Wednesday about noon, after the mutilated body of a 28-year-old college student was found floating in the canal along State Road 84, just south of Markham Park, in Sunrise. The medical examiner ruled that the woman, who may have been jogging, was attacked, maimed and killed by an 8-to-10-foot alligator.

And, there’s the companion story, Search for water drives gators toward us.

Which brings me to this public service announcement.

It being the graduation season, we can expect some parties. And parties sometimes mean inebriation. And if it happens on campus, it happens near our lake. And our lake sometimes has alligators and even a crocodile or two.

So, students, take note of this important study: Alligators Dangerous No Matter How Drunk You Are:

BATON ROUGE, LA–In a breakthrough study that contradicts decades of understanding about the nature of alligator-drunkard relations, Louisiana State University researchers have concluded that people’s drunkenness does not impair the ancient reptiles’ ability to inflict enormous physical harm.

“Our data strongly indicates that human intoxication does not transform an alligator into a docile creature that enjoys wrestling,” said professor Ryder McCrory, chair of the Wildlife Taunting Department of LSU’s prestigious Center For Bullying And Hazing Studies. “Despite its slow-witted demeanor and tendency to bask motionlessly in the hot sun, it’s a mistake to believe that an alligator will passively tolerate a half nelson, no matter how much Southern Comfort is fueling it.”

You Have Been Warned.

Posted in Completely Different | 1 Comment

Merely Parsimonious With the Truth

TPMMuckraker, in post being widely cited elsewhere, echos Reps. Bennie G. Thompson (D-MS) and Rep. Zoe Lofgren (D-CA) in asking Did Gonzales Mislead Congress about NSA Program?

I don’t think this is perjury. Attorney General Alberto Gonzales assured the House Judiciary Committee that the government wasn’t deliberately engaging in warrantless “surveillance” of calls between two Americans.

And, in fact, what we’ve learned today about the NSA is (just barely) consistent with that claim: the surveillance was by telephone companies, and then they voluntarily gave the info — not in real time — to the government. So what we have here is a massive privacy violation by the phone companies (other than Qwest, and good for them), engineered by the NSA. That’s not quite exactly the same thing as ‘surveillance’ in which the government usually does the spying itself, and usually in real time.

It’s a serious matter, of course, if the government tries to blackmail someone into cooperating. USA Today reported that the NSA suggested to Qwest that it might lose government contracts if it didn’t play ball.

That sounds illegal. Of course, it also sounds like the Bush admnistration’s m.o. from the K Street Project right up to the scandal about to take down HUD Secretary Alphonso Jackson.

Posted in Civil Liberties, Politics: The Party of Sleaze | 3 Comments

Time to Short AT&T, Verizon and BellSouth?

According to Think Progress | Telcos Could Be Liable For Tens of Billions of Dollars For Illegally Turning Over Phone Records, AT&T, Verizon and BellSouth face huge liabilities for turning over millions of American’s call records to the NSA in violation of law. That potentially $1000 for each person whose call records were turned over. Millions and millions of people. Each.

Posted in Civil Liberties, Econ & Money | 9 Comments

Diebold Voting Machines Very Easy to Hack

Inside Bay Area – New security glitch found in Diebold system.

Elections officials in several states are scrambling to understand and limit the risk from a “dangerous” security hole found in Diebold Election Systems Inc.’s ATM-like touch-screen voting machines.

The hole is considered more worrisome than most security problems discovered on modern voting machines, such as weak encryption, easily pickable locks and use of the same, weak password nationwide.

Armed with a little basic knowledge of Diebold voting systems and a standard component available at any computer store, someone with a minute or two of access to a Diebold touch screen could load virtually any software into the machine and disable it, redistribute votes or alter its performance in myriad ways.

Are we paranoid enough yet?

Update: Ed Felten and Avi Rubin have links, details, and an assessment. It’s bad.

Posted in Law: Elections | 4 Comments

Incredible

Read USATODAY’s NSA has massive database of Americans’ phone calls, and then ask yourself, are we paranoid enough?

It seems not.

Update: Read Unclaimed Territory by Glenn Greenwald. Now.

Posted in Civil Liberties | 3 Comments