Category Archives: Security

EU-US summit data breach

The Associated Press reports Czechs acknowledge data breach at EU-US summit

The Czech government confirmed on Saturday that a computer file containing personal information about European Union leaders was mishandled during the April 5 EU-U.S. summit in Prague.

The statement from the government, which currently holds the EU presidency, was reacting to a report earlier this week by the Finnish news agency STT. It said the private information was found by a Finn on a public computer in a Czech hotel after the summit.

Ooops.

Pet Door with RFID

Spiegel calls this Pet Door 2.0

Ghip happens to know such precise details about his cats’ behavior because he has figured out how to make the world’s first photo-tweeting cat door. Penny and Gus both wear collars outfitted with thumb-nail-sized radio-frequency identification (RFID) chips. The chips are passively sensed, which means they don’t require a battery and don’t weigh down the collar. Whenever a cat goes near the door, a small RFID reader scans the tag and determines whether the cat is authorized to go in or out.

If the chip tells the reader that the cat is authorized, it not only activates the door opener; it simultaneously also activates a camera and a program on an attached laptop that sends the captured image to a separate Twitter account, where it is automatically posted on the cats’ microblog with a simple, cute caption that is automatically generated, such as “Gus is out to get rid of a hairball” or “Penny is in to shred the chair.”

Very nice. I first wrote about this idea in October 2005 on Bruce’s blog

Organic White House angers MACA

La Vida Locavore points out a pointed letter from the Mid America CropLife Association (MACA) to the First Lady:

Did you hear the news? The White House is planning to have an “organic” garden on the grounds to provide fresh fruits and vegetables for the Obama’s and their guests. While a garden is a great idea, the thought of it being organic made Janet Braun, CropLife Ambassador Coordinator and I shudder. As a result, we sent a letter encouraging them to consider using crop protection products and to recognize the importance of agriculture to the entire U.S. economy. Read below for the entire letter.

MACA practically begs the First Lady to stop being organic, but their argument strays far away from organic issues and across a vast plain of technology. They mention everything from soil erosion and infrared weed detectors to four-wheel-drive tractors and GPS-enabled pesticide sprayers. Last time I checked, using a four-wheel drive tractor with high horsepower does not make a garden less organic. Likewise an infrared detector is surely acceptable. So what’s their beef? The “War of the Weeds” presentation on the maca.org site has fun facts like these:

Q: How many teens would it take to replace herbicides?
A: 220 million acres = 4 acres per teenager = 55 million!

So each teenager could kill 4 acres of weed (pun not intended). Apparently that’s based on data from the 1950s in Minnesota and North Dakota, when a program was started to keep kids from getting into trouble. I wonder if anyone considered this when they drafted the stimulus package.

MACA also takes a couple shots at California for requesting a hand weeding exemption. They argue hoes are less dangerous to your back than using your hand (er, pun not intended) and they say California organic growers claimed crop and profit loss if they were unable to use hand weeding. In fact, they say “hand weeding more dangerous to back than short handled hoe”. If I remember correctly, California actually banned the short-handled hoe in 1975 and then all short-handled tools in 1978 after employers tried to get around the original ban by using things other than hoes such as knives. Then in 2004 California banned hand-weeding after a long debate on how to close the loop-hole left by the 1978 rules. The state thus established protection for farm workers from back-breaking work, but also allowed options for organic growers to weed manually. A quick check of the California Code of Regulations, Title 8, Section 3456. Hand-Held Tools gives details:

(b) The use of a short-handled hoe or any other short-handled hand tool is prohibited in agricultural operations, as that term is defined in Section 3437, for weeding, thinning or hot-capping when such hoe or short-handled hand tool is used in a stooped, kneeling or squatting position. A long-handled hand tool used for these operations shall not be used as a short-handled hand tool in a stooped, kneeling or squatting position.

(c)(1) Hand weeding, hand thinning, and hand hot-capping in a stooped, kneeling or squatting position shall not be permitted in agricultural operations as defined in Section 3437, unless there is no readily available, reasonable alternative means of performing the work that is suitable and appropriate to the production of the agricultural or horticultural commodity.

(2) Upon inquiry made by the Division of Occupational Safety and Health personnel, the employer shall bear the burden of justifying that the use of hand weeding, hand thinning, or hand hot-capping was required due to the unsuitability of the use of a long-handled tool or other alternative means of performing the work.

This says to me that short-handled or long-handled tools can not be used when they are used in an unhealthy position, and hands also may not be used unless there is no alternative method found. Employers have to demonstrate their requirements, but most will fall out of regulation if they use nurseries or systems with plants less than 2-inches apart. Thus the MACA presentation seems to paint a somewhat deceptive anti-organic picture, which goes right back to their rambling letter to the White House. It seems to me they would rather express a passion against changes to their world rather than any coherent or logical argument with facts relevant to the issue at hand (pun not intended).