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Just Another Chip in the (Privacy) Wall

2004-11-18 Thread R.A. Hettinga


Technology Review


Just Another Chip in the (Privacy) Wall
 An electronic database implanted under the skin can assure speedy and
proper medical care-but is it worth it?



By David Kushner
November 18, 2004





You can almost see the ads now: Imagine a bright future with a chip in your
arm!




Went to the supermarket, but left the wallet at home? No problem! Flex your
bicep and the smiling cashier passes a scanner over your arm.
Voila-identification chip recognized! Problem solved. Your credit is good
with us!

Passed out during a sunrise jaunt on the top of Haleakala Mountain in Maui?
Fret not! The hospital down below is on the case. Arm please. Scanner! The
readout on the computer is fine. Just a little altitude sickness.

Key to the safety deposit box weighing you down? Chuck it! Next time you're
in the bank, give the teller a friendly wave-and watch the doors open to
greet you!

After decades as the stuff of sci-fi novels and anime movies, the age of
chipped humans is finally a reality. Last month, following two years of
review, the Food and Drug Administration approved the use of an implantable
chip for medical applications. Each Verichip is the size of a grain of rice
and contains a unique, 16-digit radio frequency ID. Linked to a database,
that ID tag can call up a variety of information-from medical records to
financial information.

 Not surprisingly, the technology is causing its share of controversy.
Civil liberties groups are calling this the end of privacy. Religious
groups are calling it the number of the beast. Down on the shores of Delray
Beach, FL, Applied Digital-the company behind the Verichip-calls it a
goldmine.

 Like a lot of new technologies, the Verichip happened rather by accident.
Fifteen years ago, a company called Digital Angel developed implantable
identification chips for the purpose of tracking companion pets and cattle.
But the idea was nothing to moo at. Last year, 800,000 animal chips were
sold in the United States for $55 to $70 apiece-30 percent more than in
2002.

 If the chips could identify animals, why not a human being? This thought
occurred to Richard Seelig, a surgeon in New Jersey, shortly after the
attacks of September 11, 2001. Seelig watched with horror as New York City
firemen scrawled their social security numbers in black ink on the
forearms-just in case they were to be burned beyond recognition in the
inferno. Familiar with Digital Angel's work, Seelig voluntarily implanted
himself with a radio frequency identification chip. And the race to bring
it to the rest of the world was on.



According to Angela Fulcher, spokesperson for Applied Digital, the human
chip works in essentially the same manner as the animal chips. The chip is
contained inside a cylindrical transponder, a glass tube 11 millimeters in
length and 2.1 millimeters in diameter. Along with the chip is an antenna
coil, which picks up and transmits the identification number to a scanner.
The Pocket Reader, an existing handheld scanner created by Applied Digital,
reads the radio frequency ID number when it's passed over the skin within a
space of three or four inches.

Unlike the animal version, the human chip is coated with Biobond-a porous
polypropylene sheathe that connects to surrounding tissues. The chip is
implanted, via a proprietary Verichip inserter, in a fleshy area such as
the bicep. "Based on our experience at with microchips and animals,"
Fulcher says, "we see the lifespan at being 10 years."

 Although newly approved by the FDA, Verichips are already in use outside
the United States. In total, an estimated 1,000 people have been implanted
thus far. In Mexico, Rafael Macedo de la Concha, the country's attorney
general, was implanted with a chip to provide secure access to government
documents. In Barcelona, a beach club is injecting partiers with ID chips
in lieu of hand stamps.

 Despite the announcement of the FDA approval, however, such frivolous
implants may soon be second guessed. Organizations have criticized Applied
Digital for not adequately disclosing the FDA's finding of Verichip's
risks. A group called the Consumers Against Supermarket Privacy Invasion
and Numbering, or Caspian, obtained a letter from the FDA to Applied
Digital dated October 12, and posted it on the Web. The letter cites
several "potential risks to health associated with the device," including
adverse tissue reaction, migration of the implanted transponder,
electromagnetic interference, electrical hazards, and incompatibility with
magnetic resonance imaging.

 In addition to medical concerns, privacy advocates lament the potential
abuses of implantable IDs. The outcry stems from the proliferation of radio
frequency identification in products and badges. The San Francisco Public
Library is trying to put ID chips in all of its books. In Virginia, the
Department of Motor Vehicles is considering putting chips on every driver's
lic

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November Machinery

2004-11-18 Thread Kevin Murphy





 
November Machinery Deals !!
 

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TURNING CENTERS  

OKUMA LB-300 CNC 
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OKUMA CROWN S BIG 
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EMCO ET-425MC Dual 
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2004 TAKUMI High 
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CHIRON FZ-12W CNC 
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TREE JOURNEYMAN 
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MILLTRONICS VM-17 CNC 
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2001 MORI SEIKI High 
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with High Speed Processing Options Installed, 20,000 High Speed 
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TREE VMC-1260E CNC  VERTICAL 
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CINCINNATI SABRE 750 CNC Vertical 
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 Mitsubishi Laser Model 4030 
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Daewoo 250M or 230M CNC Turning Center with Live Tooling
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 Cincinnati 25HC Horizontal 
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2004-11-18 Thread Careykyi

  

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Re: [osint] Group to launch terrorist database

2004-11-18 Thread Steve Thompson
> "R.A. Hettinga" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> [from osint]
> Wednesday, November 17, 2004> Group to launch terrorist database> BY Diane Frank> Published on Nov. 17, 2004[snip]
> The Terrorism Knowledge Base is the latest Web-based
> resource from the National Memorial Institute for the
> Prevention of Terrorism, a nonprofit organization in
> Oklahoma City. The institute developed three solutions,
> which also include the Lessons Learned Information
> System and the Responder Knowledge Base, with 
> funding from the Justice and Homeland Security
> departments.> This system provides open-source, unclassified information
> on international and domestic terrorism, pulling information from
> a database of terrorist incident information maintained since
>  1968 by Rand, nonprofit research organization. It also
>  incorporates links to original court documents pertaining to
> suspected terrorists.They should set up a snitch line, so to speak, so that the general public can report, possibly even by email, incidents of small-scale terrorism and potential terrorism that they might witness as they go about their daily lives.  It couldn't hurt.  In fact, such a move would easily eliminate any question of institutional bias in reference to the selection criterion used to evaluate whether any given incident qualifies as terrorism or not.
 
I'm not usually one to come out in favour of government database systems, but for something like the terrorism database (which has the potential to greatly enhance the security of democracy and law), what's there not to like about it?
 
 
 
Regards,
 
Steve
 
 
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[CYBERIA] A VERY significant DMCA case

2004-11-18 Thread R.A. Hettinga
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1


- --- begin forwarded text


DomainKey-Signature: a=rsa-sha1; q=dns; c=nofws; s=s1024; d=yahoo.com;

b=oTDVOd2nHalBsKpKJum+5IY+lu1RJaHM79+4MmwY72xPRCq9nhudLZRniLNmeZojjGL9Cl3sFptEpXD2Go79CazzJCeB/dg4OT0EcNTRhLoB3c/qMqE5b0YopkFen3gJ4Zw0SKmrbN1bSGKlXBqAkrsurOheKaqq7Dd2lM/Yq68=

 ;
Date: Thu, 18 Nov 2004 07:53:23 -0800
Reply-To: Law & Policy of Computer Communications <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sender: Law & Policy of Computer Communications <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Comments: DomainKeys? See http://antispam.yahoo.com/domainkeys
From: Paul Gowder <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [CYBERIA] A VERY significant DMCA case
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

This just came to my attention.  I don't know if it's
been mentioned here before, since I only read this
list intermittently.  Still...

Lexmark International Inc. v. Static Control
Components Inc., 6th Cir., No. 03-5400 10/26/04
http://pacer.ca6.uscourts.gov/opinions.pdf/04a0364p-06.pdf

This case appears to be a ringing blow against the
DMCA, and against copyright fascism in general.  The
Sixth Circuit, vacating a grant of preliminary
injunction, held that a program was likely
uncopyrightable, because unoriginal, because its
functional requirements merged with its expression.
It further concluded that the DMCA can't be used to
protect such an un-copyrightable work.

Because this was before the court on review of a
preliminary injunction, it's not terribly definitive
on the facts -- but as a statement of law -- it seems
very promising.

Thoughts?



__
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**
For Listserv Instructions, see http://www.lawlists.net/cyberia
Off-Topic threads: http://www.lawlists.net/mailman/listinfo/cyberia-ot
Need more help? Send mail to: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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- --- end forwarded text


- -- 
- -
R. A. Hettinga 
The Internet Bearer Underwriting Corporation 
44 Farquhar Street, Boston, MA 02131 USA
"... however it may deserve respect for its usefulness and antiquity,
[predicting the end of the world] has not been found agreeable to
experience." -- Edward Gibbon, 'Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire'

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=Ijza
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Re: E-Mail Authentication Will Not End Spam, Panelists Say

2004-11-18 Thread Russell Nelson
R.A. Hettinga writes:
 > Any e-mail authentication system, for example, would check that the block
 > of Internet addresses assigned to an e-mail provider includes the specific
 > numeric address of a sender of a piece of e-mail.

Huh?  Somebody is confused here.  DomainKeys is 1) an e-mail
authentication system, and 2) it doesn't check IP addresses.  Instead,
it uses cryptographic signing using public/private keys which have the
potential of being assigned down to the individual level.

 > Still, panelists insisted authentication is a vital first step. After that,
 > they said, could come a system that evaluates the "reputation" of senders,
 > perhaps using a process that marks good e-mail with an electronic seal of
 > approval.

Yes, this is true.  John Gilmore is a pain in the ass for standing on
his rights (some government types might say *fucking* pain in the
ass), but he is correct.  ALL of the effort spent to secure open
relays was basically wasted effort, because spammers just moved on to
insecure client machines.  The proper route to control spam is to
involve users in prioritizing their email, so that their friend's
email comes first, followed by anybody they've sent mail to, followed
by people they've gotten email from before, followed by mailing list
mail, followed by email from strangers (which is where all the spam
is).  All of that relies on email authentication to work.

Why the heck can't we just shortcut all this pain, and just listen to
John in the first place?  I vote to elect John to the post of
Benevolent Dictator For Life.

-- 
--My blog is at angry-economist.russnelson.com  | Violence never solves
Crynwr sells support for free software  | PGPok | problems, it just changes
521 Pleasant Valley Rd. | +1 212-202-2318 voice | them into more subtle
Potsdam, NY 13676-3213  | FWD# 404529 via VOIP  | problems.



Re: E-Mail Authentication Will Not End Spam, Panelists Say

2004-11-18 Thread R.A. Hettinga
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1

At 9:15 PM -0500 11/18/04, Russell Nelson wrote:
>The proper route to control spam is to
>involve users in prioritizing their email, so that their friend's
>email comes first, followed by anybody they've sent mail to, followed
>by people they've gotten email from before, followed by mailing list
>mail, followed by email from strangers (which is where all the spam
>is).

A whitelist for my friends, all others pay...

oh, forget it.

Cheers,
RAH

- -- 
- -
R. A. Hettinga 
The Internet Bearer Underwriting Corporation 
44 Farquhar Street, Boston, MA 02131 USA
"... however it may deserve respect for its usefulness and antiquity,
[predicting the end of the world] has not been found agreeable to
experience." -- Edward Gibbon, 'Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire'

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Version: 1308

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