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Thursday, April 08, 2004
 

VOA.  Another sign of sophistication.  Iraqi terrorists (learning quickly from Osama's terrorist incubator) are putting pressure on Japan to withdraw from the coalition by taking hostages (deplorable but potentially effective).

Task forces have been set up in Tokyo at the prime minister's office and the Foreign Ministry to deal with what is evolving into the biggest crisis the administration of Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi has faced in its two-and-a-half years in office.

[John Robb's Weblog]

I suspect it won't have any effect on Koizumi himself--if he cared about the well-being of the Japanese people he wouldn't have violated the "peace constitution." However, I am hopeful that the voters will object to being hung out to dry by their Prime Minister, and make sure that he's given the boot.
8:43:13 PM    comment ()


Tech vs. Tech.

As potentially privacy-wrecking technologies proliferate, so do technological means to stymie them. From The Australian:

Personally-controlled blocker tags may offer a technical solution to unwanted consumer tracking by radio-frequency ID chips as retail stores begin to adopt (RFID) for inventory and anti-theft purposes.

RSA Security has unveiled a prototype Blocker Tag that effectively "spams" any scanner that attempts to read RFID tags without the right authorisations.
......
But consumer and privacy groups warn that the unique serial number transmitted by each RFID tag could be used to surreptitiously track people or goods. They fear shoppers may unwittingly broadcast information about their purchases and even the brands of clothing they are wearing as they shop.

Scanned data also could be linked to other customer information to create detailed marketing profiles, or to credit card payment records.
.......
RSA's patent-pending Blocker Tag works by "shielding" chips within close proximity, but the blocker does not interfere with normal RFID.

"Blockers can't be used to circumvent theft-control systems or to mount denial-of-service attacks," Kaliski says. "Instead, they work by creating a hostile environment for scanners that are not authorised to read information from legitimately purchased items."

[Hit & Run]

Interesting idea, but the caveats about blocking scanners that are "not authorised" makes me suspicious. I want to see a way to block all scanners, regardless of whether or not they are "authorised."
10:15:56 AM    comment ()


Sadr calls for calm, but it may be too late. A flyer purportedly from Muqtada al-Sadr calling for his army to stop the fighting is being circulated in Baghdad. And B2I has it and the translation. [Back to Iraq 3.0]

Al-Sadr's group may not be the only shi'ites fighting.
10:00:49 AM    comment ()



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