Daily Archives: September 27, 2014

Germany: Watch NSA and BND secret agents in action outside Bundestag – Video

Posted: September 27, 2014 at 5:47 pm


Germany: Watch NSA and BND secret agents in action outside Bundestag
VideoID: 20140925-014 M/S Fake NSA agent and BND agent pretending to surveil outside Bundestag C/U Fake NSA agent and BND agent pretending to surveil outside...

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Germany: Watch NSA and BND secret agents in action outside Bundestag - Video

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NSA Leak: Epic TSA Agent’s Rant – Video

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NSA Leak: Epic TSA Agent #39;s Rant
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NSA Leak: Epic TSA Agent's Rant - Video

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NSA York U 2014/2015 E-Board – Video

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NSA York U 2014/2015 E-Board
Meet the executive board of the 2014/ 2015 year and learn a little bit about the club. Join us this year for an amazing year! We look forward to working with you.

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NSA York U 2014/2015 E-Board - Video

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Law enforcement and the NSA are worried about iPhone security

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Sept. 27 (UPI) -- The new iPhone has encryption technology that will make it very difficult for government agencies to access its information. Emails, your address book, your images and more will be encrypted to the point that the NSA and other law enforcement agencies will have a very hard time accessing that information, according to the New York Times. The new iPhone 6 uses an algorithm that makes it so even if Apple turned your information over to authorities, the information they received would essentially be nonsense until they spent significant time trying to decrypt it. Apple claims it will not retain the unique algorithm that can help break the code for each specific phone.

The director of the FBI, James Comey, said in a press conference that this kind of technology will let people "hold themselves beyond the law." He claims that having such elevated privacy protections could hinder investigations related to kidnappings and more. Besides the new iPhone, any smart phone user can download apps to protect their information from being seen. Many users across the globe use virtual private network apps that make it so their internet use cannot be monitored. The NSA, FBI and other agencies worry that these kinds of protections will become very popular soon and make it difficult for them to do their jobs.

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Law enforcement and the NSA are worried about iPhone security

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The FBI and NSA Hate Apples Plan to Keep Your iPhone Data Secret

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TIME Tech privacy The FBI and NSA Hate Apples Plan to Keep Your iPhone Data Secret A man shows his new iPhone outside Puerta del Sol Apple Store as Apple launches iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus on September 26, 2014 in Madrid, Spain. Pablo Blazquez DominguezGetty Images Apple made the iPhone 6 pretty difficult to crack. Law enforcement isn't happy about that

Apple released the iPhone 6 with a new, powerful encryption setting that should make it much harder for law enforcement and surveillance groups like the FBI and the NSA from accessing users emails, photos and contacts. After the Edward Snowden revelations last year, privacy-minded users may be happy about the new feature, but the law enforcement community is decidedly not.

Speaking at a news conference Thursday, FBI Director James Comey criticized Apples encryption, which scrambles information on the new iPhone 6 using a code that could take more than five-and-a-half years to try all combinations of a six-character alphanumeric passcode with lowercase letters and numbers, as Comey said.

Comey accused Apple of creating a means for criminals to evade the law, the New York Times reports. What concerns me about this is companies marketing something expressly to allow people to hold themselves beyond the law, he said.

In kidnapping cases, when seizing content on a phone could lead to finding a victim, Comey said there would be times when victims parents would come to him with tears in their eyes, look at me and say, What do you mean you cant' decode the contents of a phone, the Times reports.

A senior official told the Times that terrorists could use the iPhone 6 to store their data and evade law enforcement. Terrorists will figure this out, along with savvy criminals and paranoid dictators, one senior official predicted. Another said, Its like taking out an ad that says, Heres how to avoid surveillance even legal surveillance.'

However, major U.S. tech companies like Apple and Google argue that they cant do business if customers believe their data isnt secure, particularly in foreign markets like China and Europe, where consumers fear American tech products might come pre-loaded with ways for American surveillance agencies to access their data. On top of that, a security expert told the Times that law enforcement complaints about Apples encrypted were likely exaggerated, as access to call logs, email logs, iCloud, Gmail logs, as well as geolocation information from phone carriers like AT&T and Verizon Wireless and other data is relatively unfettered, particularly if police get a warrant.

[NYT]

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The FBI and NSA Hate Apples Plan to Keep Your iPhone Data Secret

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Sorry, NSA: iPhone 6 locks out US spies

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The move raises a critical issue, the intelligence officials say: Who decides what kind of data the government can access? Until now, those decisions have largely been a matter for Congress, which passed the Communications Assistance for Law Enforcement Act in 1994, requiring telecommunications companies to build into their systems an ability to carry out a wiretap order if presented with one. But despite intense debate about whether the law should be expanded to cover email and other content, it has not been updated, and it does not cover content contained in a smartphone.

At Apple and Google, company executives say the United States government brought these changes on itself. The revelations by the former N.S.A. contractor Edward J. Snowden not only killed recent efforts to expand the law, but also made nations around the world suspicious that every piece of American hardware and software from phones to servers made by Cisco Systems have "back doors" for American intelligence and law enforcement.

Surviving in the global marketplace especially in places like China, Brazil and Germany depends on convincing consumers that their data is secure.

Read MoreThe best insurance for your iPhone 6

Timothy D. Cook, Apple's chief executive, has emphasized that Apple's core business is to sell devices to people. That distinguishes Apple from companies that make a profit from collecting and selling users' personal data to advertisers, he has said.

This month, just before releasing the iPhone 6 and iOS 8, Apple took steps to underscore its commitment to customer privacy, publishing a revised privacy policy on its website.

The policy described the encryption method used in iOS 8 as so deep that Apple could no longer comply with government warrants asking for customer information to be extracted from devices. "Unlike our competitors, Apple cannot bypass your passcode, and therefore cannot access this data," the company said.

Under the new encryption method, only entering the passcode can decrypt the device. (Hypothetically, Apple could create a tool to hack into the device, but legally the company is not required to do that.)

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Sorry, NSA: iPhone 6 locks out US spies

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The Commander Cody Band – Take The Fifth Amendment – 8/5/1977 – Convention Hall (Official) – Video

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The Commander Cody Band - Take The Fifth Amendment - 8/5/1977 - Convention Hall (Official)
The Commander Cody Band - Take The Fifth Amendment Recorded Live: 8/5/1977 - Convention Hall - Asbury Park, NJ More The Commander Cody Band at Music Vault: h...

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The Commander Cody Band - Take The Fifth Amendment - 8/5/1977 - Convention Hall (Official) - Video

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Pet Owners Look to Muzzle Police Who Shoot Dogs

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TIME U.S. Law Pet Owners Look to Muzzle Police Who Shoot Dogs Brittany Preston Bereaved owners argue that when police shoot dogs it a violates their Fourth Amendment rights

Correction appended, Sept. 26

Lexie, a Labrador mix, was barking in fear when the police arrived at her owners suburban Detroit house early in the morning last November. The officers, responding to a call about a dog roaming the area, arrived with dog-catching gear. Yet they didnt help the one-year-old dog, who had been left outside the house, according to a lawsuit filed in federal court: Instead, they pulled out their guns and shot Lexie eight times.

The only thing Im gonna do is shoot it anyway, the lawsuit quotes an officer saying. I do not like dogs.

Such a response, animal advocates say, is not uncommon among law enforcement officers in America who are often ill-equipped to deal with animals in the line of duty. And now bereaved owners like Brittany Preston, Lexies owner, are suing cities and police departments, expressing outrage at what they see as an abuse of power by police. Animal activists, meanwhile, are turning to state legislatures to combat the problem, with demands for better police training in dealing with pets.

There are no official tallies of dog killings by police, but media reports suggest there are, at minimum, dozens every year, and possibly many more. When it comes to Prestons dog, officials from the city of St. Clair Shores and the dog owner agree on little. City police say the dog attacked, prompting officers to open fire in self-defense. But the lawsuit filed by Preston cites police audio recordings to argue that the November 2013 shooting was premeditated, prompted by officers eager to kill a dog. Preston is suing the city for violating her Fourth Amendment right to protection from unreasonable search and seizure.

We want whatever it takes to make sure it doesnt happen again, said Christopher Olson, Prestons lawyer. Before this case I wasnt a dog shooting lawyer, but I am now.

St. Clair Shores defended the officers actions.

The animal was only put down after a decision was made that it was in the best interest of the residents, said city attorney Robert Ihrie, who is defending the city in the lawsuit. Sometimes police officers are in a position where they need to make very quick decisions for the protection of themselves and others.

The Fourth Amendment argument gained traction in 2005, when the San Jose chapter of the Hells Angels sued the city and the police department because officers had killed dogs during a gang raid in 1998. A federal appeals judge found that the Fourth Amendment forbids the killing of a persons dog when that destruction is unnecessary, and the Hells Angels ultimately won $1.8 million in damages. In addition to the St. Clair lawsuit, other lawsuits stemming from police shootings of dogs are being planned or filed in Idaho, California, and Nevada.

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Pet Owners Look to Muzzle Police Who Shoot Dogs

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'Patriots' are ready to defend their right to keep guns

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Fear of the federal governments interference with Second Amendment rights and suspicion that elected officials are ignoring the will of the people have provoked a resurgence of self-described patriots across the country who say they are preparing to defend themselves and their rights.

Organizations tracking the movement say the number of groups has risen dramatically in the past six years.

Theres a very unreasonable, ridiculously crazy attack on the Second Amendment and people that own guns, said Cope Reynolds, a member of the White Mountain Militia in Show Low, Ariz. If everything were not protected by the Second Amendment, the government would have the opportunity, if they so desired, to go unchecked with impunity and do whatever they want to do.

Americans who have a tradition with guns, such as those who hunt for sport or game, believe the same. They might not belong to a militia or survival outfit, but they are just as concerned about gun rights. They dont wear the tradition on their sleeve, but they keep it alive by practicing their hobby and by handing down the love of guns and sport to their children.

Then there are the real activists.

Reynolds is the operations manager of Shots Ranch, a tactical shooting range and survival training facility in Kingman, Ariz. He considers this type of training to be necessary preparation for a time in America he sees as inevitable.

We want people to be able to provide for themselves in a world where we might not be able to just run down to Wal-Mart at any time, Reynolds said. We think that at some point in America were probably going to experience those times and a lot of us think its not going to be far away.

For individuals like Reynolds, the Second Amendment is an important check on the government and is needed to protect the Constitution.

Its the beauty and the danger of Americas Constitution, said Adam Winkler, a law professor at the University of California, Los Angeles, and a Second Amendment expert. Its great generalities are so vague that anyone can interpret them in light of their own experience and their own interests. And indeed, the Second Amendment is one of the most confusing textual provisions of the Constitution.

In 2008, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in District of Columbia v. Heller that the Second Amendment protects an individual right to own a firearm for traditionally lawful purposes like self-defense.

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'Patriots' are ready to defend their right to keep guns

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Mayor of New York City on the First Amendment – Video

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Mayor of New York City on the First Amendment
The mayor, Bill DeBlasio, commenting on the arrests of protestors at the Clilmate Change March in New York City on September 21 2014.

By: Martin Gugino

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Mayor of New York City on the First Amendment - Video

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