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Aside Links

RCMP members watch porn, snoop on spouses, files show – Politics – CBC News

So, two things here:

  1. These are some of the dangerous uses that a group of BC residents identified with regards to automatic license plate recognition, namely the use of non-hit data (i.e. information not linked to motor vehicle crimes) in excess of the ALPR program’s stated mandate;
  2. Holy hell. This is a case of a police officer stalking/inciting fear in a civilian and her current romantic partner, and there was a reprimand and a few days of docked pay? It’s these kinds of actions that teach people ‘the police won’t protect me if their own interests are involved.’

I mean really, with regards to (2), how terrifying would it be that an ex who is legitimately empowered to exercise the law is stalking you and those associated with you, using a ubiquitous surveillance technology. And moreover, imagine that things had been reversed: that the CIVILIAN was tracking the police officer. No way there’d be a reprimand and a few days of lost pay. No, that civilian would be looking at some intense court actions.

Total. Double. Standard.

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Why No Big Wireless Carriers Protect Journalist Phone Records

Via HuffPo:

I love just how direct Chris is these days when speaking with the press about the telcos and their utterly abhorrent practices.

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The secret laser-toting Soviet satellite that almost was

Via Ars Technica:

A super interesting story about the politics and the (minor, but very significant) technical failure that doomed the Soviet Union’s attempt to put anti-Satellite lasers in space.

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Introducing Strongbox, a Tool for Anonymous Document-Sharing

Via the New Yorker:

This has lots of interesting promise, though it’ll be *more* interesting when a non-US group of journalists use the system (the code will be open sourced). Frankly, given the history of American courts, I don’t think that leaking to a US publication is a terribly good idea at the moment if you want to remain anonymous.

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Aside Writing

Dissertation Stitching

Dissertation pieces are now being stitched together in the über-document that conforms with grad studies’ style guide. By this time next week, the first 6/8 chapters will be assembled and sent to my committee. It should total in the vicinity of 65,000-70,000 words at that point.

A little over a month after that, the last 2/8 chapters should be written and added to the über-document. And, god willing, everything defended by the end of August/very beginning of September.

Finishing is starting to feel real, and possible.

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Links

How to Fight Revenge Porn

Via The Atlantic:

This is an interesting approach, and one that might undermine some of the protections used to shield truly abhorrent websites.

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Aside Links

The Tyee

Via The Tyee:

You should read Bob’s article in case you’re curious about why the press, academics, and active citizens laugh at the ‘transparency’ into government operations made possible by access to information, or freedom of information and access, laws.

I would note: one of my colleagues has had a federal access request open for seven years at this point. Our work on license place recognition equipment, at the federal level, has been open almost two years, with no end in sight. There have been repeated ‘inappropriate’ (read: illegal, except it’s not illegal if the police do it, right?) closures of our file, and personal involvement by the federal information commissioner.

ATIP and FOI laws are a joke, and a bad ones at that.

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Links

Is the law catching up to BC’s police chiefs?

For anyone curious about (some of) the absurdity concerning policing in BC, this is a must read. Rob continues to do excellent work investigating the lack of accountability in the governance of BC authorities, this time showing how the police continue to do end-runs around access requests pertaining to their lobbying activities.

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The Document: an Open Letter From San Jose State U.’s Philosophy Department

If you’re invested in post-secondary education, the letter from the Philosophy department at San Jose State is one of the best articulations of why the MOOC-phenomenon could seriously threaten the quality of education provided by Universities.

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Links

Global Coalition Of NGOs Call To Investigate & Disable FinFisher’s Espionage Equipment in Pakistan | Digital Rights Foundation

Source: Global Coalition Of NGOs Call To Investigate & Disable FinFisher’s Espionage Equipment in Pakistan