Category Archives: Security

Anti-terror Ad Banned

I was trying to be funny with my post about custom anti-terror billboards, but it turns out it was not far from reality. The BBC reports of an Anti-terrorist hotline ad banned for being ‘offensive’

In the advert, a man says: “The man at the end of the street doesn’t talk to his neighbours much, because he likes to keep himself to himself.

“He pays with cash because he doesn’t have a bank card, and he keeps his curtains closed because his house is on a bus route.”

It then says: “If you suspect it, report it.”

Those criteria hardly seem worthy of reporting. Quiet, cash and curtains? I always thought terrorists preferred blinds.

VMware cloud praise from Forrester

Forrester has an absolutely glowing blog post about VMware’s new cloud offering.

VMWare drives another nail into the coffin of on-premises business email. At $5/mailbox/month for cloud email, f you take away client software and mailbox administration costs, our analysis shows that it costs twice as much to host a mailbox yourself than to host it in the cloud. This offering gives service providers around the world the opportunity to compete at that price. So who would use on-premises email? Only someone with stringent requirements, massive scale, or a recent upgrade. Even the federal government is moving to cloud-based email as GSA has announced.

Who would use on-premises? I am surprised no mention is made of compliance or security. Perhaps that is what is meant by “stringent requirements”? Privacy is one of the main reasons to keep email in-house. The cloud providers, even with a VMware solution such as this, need to clarify procedure and technology options to show they can give privacy equivalent to in-house email. I do not see encryption and subpoena response, for example, as stringent but rather baseline requirements.

Google 100% CAPTCHA fail

Last May I posted a concern about the 50% failure of CAPTCHA. Only one of the two words were actually checked to validate a user as human so entering random data worked half the time.

A few days ago a full disclosure post announced a 100% CAPTCHA failure.

Google’s reCAPTCHA is currently broken. At the moment, you may follow these
steps to complete a CAPTCHA without user-input:

1) Click the “Play Sound” button
(javascript:Recaptcha.switch_type(‘audio’);)
2) Enter any sentence comprising of 10 words (“google google google google
google google google google google google”, as an example).
3) “Answer Correct!”

http://www.google.com/recaptcha/learnmore

Happy 75th to Penguin Books

The Penguin Archive Project has revealed some fascinating details in the history of Penguin Books, such as the story of their ‘secret editor’ as reported in the Telegraph.

Eunice Frost became an editor at Penguin in the late 1930s and went on to be its first female director. Along with the firm’s founder, Allen Lane, she revolutionised the way we read by making good writing accessible to anyone for the price of a packet of cigarettes. So much was she the guiding spirit of the historic house that its penguin mascot and logo is named ‘Frostie’ after her. In 1958 she became the first woman in publishing to be awarded an OBE for services to literature.

Yet her name never appeared on any book, and even those who knew her well are still in the dark about the specifics of her life and the causes of her chronic regret.

Beyond ‘secret’ editing she also generated original writings, poetry and paintings. A somewhat sarcastic view of identity is presented in her work:

If only I could get a small advance

You bet I’d go straight to the South of France —

You need a lot more for the USA

Than any publisher will give away.

Oh to be Shaw — or even Graham Greene

They are twice damned and still show on the screen.

I hear the Council’s puffed you in Peru,

That’s nothing to my puffing up of YOU,

And anyway the whole thing’s just a plot

To make us think we’re someone when we’re not.

She clearly struggled with how to judge quality when reflecting upon market demand. Penguin appears to have been founded upon the concept that valuable information still can be delivered in affordable packages — quantity should not have to require a lack of quality — so the job of an editor there was particularly important.

In 1935 Allen Lane, then a director of his family’s publishing firm, The Bodley Head, was returning from a visit to see Agatha Christie in Devon when he decided to buy something to read. Scanning the shelves of the shop at Exeter railway station, he found nothing but pulp fiction and reprints of Victorian novels. At that point paperbacks were synonymous with those genres; high-quality fiction came in hardback form.

Lane determined to produce the same fare with soft covers (for sixpence a volume), and to make it available in stations and chain stores, thereby creating a democracy of reading from which civilisation has never looked back

This view of Penguin’s history reminds me of a poetry magazine that was started in 1909 in London. Harold Monro of the Poetry Bookshop in London was the Poetry Review’s founder and first editor.

Published by the Society and sharing its aim of “helping poets and poetry thrive in Britain today” — a declaration of intent towards all schools and groups of poetry, not merely the fashionable or metropolitan…

Although a respected editor at the time his work is far less known than those who followed his vision (e.g. Harriet Monroe of Chicago) and is probably forgotten by most. This new review of Penguin Books history might bring the story of quiet yet influential editors back into focus. Penguin started 20 years later but like the Poetry Review they relied on someone special to find message integrity among authors that could innovate independently from market demand and influence.