US Court Bans Use of Encryption

A US court has ruled a teen is not allowed to use encryption. TechDirt reports:

“[The accused] shall not use a computer that contains any encryption, hacking, cracking, scanning, keystroke monitoring, security testing, steganography, Trojan or virus software.” […] As for the oddities in banning him from using computers with viruses, trojans or keystroke monitors, which he could potentially violate without even knowing it, the court changed the terms to say that he can’t knowingly use a computer with any of those things on it. Unfortunately, they still include “encryption” on the list. I find it troubling that the court is okay with demonizing encryption (and, to a lesser extent, “hacking” tools) when there are plenty of legitimate reasons to do so. Does that mean he can’t even encrypt his email?

On the question of encryption for email, it goes back to the phrase: “shall not use a computer that contains”. It seems to me he can have his email encrypted unknowingly (e.g. as part of a service). More to the point the court should have been more clear with their term “use”. They could have qualified it with terms like “inappropriate”, “malicious”, “harmful”, etc. but instead their terms seem overly broad in leaving it open to ANY and ALL forms of use.

The obvious example of how this fails is the password. There is unlikely to be any way for the accused to prevent his password from being encrypted on any computer he uses. It also makes little sense for the court to rule that he must store all his passwords in clear text, thus placing him at much greater risk of harm.

Another example is HTTPS. He will use encryption on his computer every time he is redirected to a secure page. A secure connection is out of his control. Like the harm point made above with passwords it also makes no sense for the court to order him to transmit everything in the clear, especially as this violates other laws that require services to encrypt his sensitive data.

Apple Lags in Innovation

Scott Bradner writes in Network World that Apple is “still pushing industry forward”. This is a misleading title. His actual review is far from glowing and gives no evidence of a push. First example:

I did not find any of the sample features [in OS X 10.7 Lion] all that compelling, although the OS X App Store is likely to make finding, buying and installing good Mac applications a lot easier.

Not all that compelling. I agree. Linux distributions do a fine job finding and installing good applications with ease. Apple is playing catch up to Debian’s apt, SuSE’s YaST or RedHat’s RPM for example.

Moving on to the second example:

I have not bought an iPod because I, as a Unix geek, want to have an accessible operating system on my computers. (But, for full disclosure, my wife wants an iPod for Christmas — and she is likely to get one.)

I read this as Apple has announced it may bring unix to the iPod. Pushing the industry? Unix access to the iPhone/iPod was enabled by Ubuntu almost two years ago. It’s about time Apple opened up and gave their own version of full-featured unix integration to the i/Pad/Pod/Phone.

Bradner’s third and final example:

The final segment of the Apple/Jobs show was the introduction of the next generation of the MacBook Air. I wrote about the original MacBook Air when it was announced almost two years ago (Apple’s MacBook Air: evolution, not revolution). I bought one at the time and upgraded to the second generation when that was announced. The Air has been an almost perfect travel and presentation machine for me and I have had no second thoughts about not getting a “real,” in the opinion of some pundits at the time, computer.

Hmmm, well I guess it is news to most people that the Air was an near identical copy of the Panasonic Toughbook CF-W5.

The W5 was released September 12, 2006 while the Apple MacBook Air was announced on January 15, 2008. The W5, although nearly two years earlier, came with numerous advantages over the Air.

The W5 is 2.9 lbs, while the Air is 3.0 lbs. Keep that in mind when you find the W5 includes a built-in optical drive under the keyboard as well as all the usual SD, PCcard, USB and VGA ports. The Air has only one USB port — not even an Ethernet port is included. A W5 gave 6.5 hours of run-time standard but could run for 8 hours easily. OS X on the Air only manages 4 hours.

The W5 even has drain-holes in the keyboard in case you spill liquid on it. Innovative.

Few have heard of the great engineering at Panasonic and instead think Apple did something innovative with the Air. The real story is that Apple incorporated the W5’s design; maybe chip-for-chip it is what really lives inside an Air.

Panasonic has since updated the W5 several times.

February of 2009 they announced a W8 would ship with the Intel X-25M 80GB SSD. This brought the weight down another 15 grams. The W8 runs a Core 2 Duo SU9400 1.40 GHz processor and supports 4GB DDR2 SDRAM.

What year is it now?

Apple’s new Air announcement for early 2011 is that their new Air (MC505LL/A) will come with an SSD, run the Core 2 Duo SU9400 1.40 GHz processor, and support up to 4GB of memory.

Just to be clear, Jobs announced his company will in 2011 sell the same form-factor, hard drive, processor, and memory as the 2009 version of Panasonic’s W8.

This is why I say Apple lags in innovation. Nothing really wrong with their follow-the-leader strategy. Fashion works much the same. It is not who came up with the idea but who sells the most copies that gets the lion’s share (pun not intended) of the stage. I just can not help but point out where the ideas are really coming from. That is why I do not see Apple as an industry leader, especially in innovation. To be fair they have led GUI innovation some of the time, but even there they struggle to stay ahead of Linux.

Go buy a new Panasonic Toughbook W-series with Linux, in other words, and you can show fans of Apple what they will hear announced two years from now.

Clean City Simulation, Sponsored by IBM

IBM has posted an online simulation game called CityOne, where you can try and make a city as disgusting and dirty…ahem, I mean as clean and efficient as possible:

Think you know what it takes to make the energy systems that serve a city more efficient? Given the opportunity, could you make the city’s water cleaner and more plentiful, its banks more robust and customer-centric and its retail stores more innovative?

Changes you make affect sensors in the game. You are meant to “evolve” four industries: retail, banking, energy and water.

You have to sign in and agree to store information on IBM servers before you can play. I could not help but notice the incongruity here. Do you see a “submit” button?

Does this mean I am not bound by the terms because I clicked continue instead? The game has not even started and I have found a decision flaw.

This reminds me of games I used to play to solve the Middle East conflict. Although it is fun to choose from a limited set of options, after a while it becomes clear that someone has an agenda and you are just learning how to follow along.

The start of the IBM game, for example, gives you three water options based only on technology (that presumably that IBM sells): desalination, smart water meters, and separate water systems. I could not find the option for deregulation, issuing fines, or invading a neighboring state and seizing their water supplies. The “water consultants” in other words give the sort of advice you might expect if IBM placed a consultant in your city.

There is no city jester and no military/security consultant to offset the industry consultants who just seem to want to spend money on IBM.

Don’t ask why a CEO is said to be in charge of a city, instead of an elected official, let alone why this CEO only has four consultants and they are all working on industry. Just play along now.

Street Artist Arrested: KKKatie Taken Down

The city of San Francisco has re-arrested a “street artist” known for spray-painting “KKK”. Aggressive Panhandler, a local blog, has an amusing take, called KKKatie Taken Down, Or: How Not to be a “Street Artist”

Look, I’m not one to debate street art vs. vandalism, but if you’re gonna go around trying to make a name for yourself using $15 worth of supplies from the hardware store, could you at least make it look kind of nice? Did you only have one can of paint? You probably shouldn’t be running with a nom de guerre that includes a commonly recognized abbreviation of your given name either. I know if I ever start calling myself a Rustoleum Wrangler, I’m gonna go by “ChChCharlie” and my tagline will be “Do not attempt to tag actual human beings.”

That last line is a reference to how the artist threatened to spray paint a man who reported her to the police. She also threatened the man with racial comments and false claims if he turned her in.

“…she said to me, ‘If you do dial 9-1-1, I’m going to say you raped me and tried to kidnap me. Who do you think they’re going to believe, a black man or a white woman?’ And, I said, ‘Well, let’s see,'” Moore said.

The city arrested her but let her go, foolishly. Then she went on another KKK spree until she was detained and then attacked a police officer. The city now is said to have spent more than $10,000 just for cleaning surfaces, including a statue, that she spray painted with KKK.

The artist claims it stands for Kooky, Krazy Kid. This seems irrelevant to me. She uses initials and leaves it open to interpretation. If she painted Kooky, Krazy Kid then she might have a leg to stand on. As much as I am a fan of street art, this does not qualify and the police have unfortunately let the tab run instead of shutting her down when they had the first chance.