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Wednesday, July 10, 2002

Is Economy Really Picking Up

Are more trademark applications really a sign things are picking up, or just a sign more people are unemployed and sitting around trying to capture some intellectual property they can exploit when things actually do pick up?

Bump in trademark applications may signal economic rebound, some say. Nando Times Jul 10 2002 7:06AM ET
[Moreover - IP and patents news]

Jon Udell Explains the Real, and Simple, Solution to Trusted Computing

Jon Udell takes a look at Palladium and explains, succinctly, how we create a real Trusted Computing environment -- using technologies that are mostly available today plus a little personal accountability. Jon's scenario is where we should all be headed, and quickly, lest this whole digi-Nazi/Palladium thing gets out of hand.

O'Reilly Network: by Jon Udell - Control Your Identity or Microsoft and Intel Will.

I've been mulling over the list of features touted for the Microsoft/Intel/AMD security scheme called Palladium.

[ ... ] We can choose accountability, or we can let the unholy alliance of Hollywood, Microsoft, Intel, and the government choose for us. The alliance, cleverly, pretends to solve problems that really annoy us, like spam and email worms. But these violations of trust won't yield simply to trusted motherboards and operating systems. People have to assert (and prove) their claims of trustworthiness, and other people have to make judgments about those assertions. [...]

[Privacy Digest]

Barr on Right Side of Privacy Issue

Georgia Congressman Bob Barr can be infuriating -- he often comes out on the opposite side of issues from where I stand. Even so, he is one of the few people in Congress who ever (and I mean ever) calls the federal bureacracy to task for infringing the basic civil liberties of American citizens.

This is not the first time Barr has come down on the side of privacy advocates. Having served with both the US Attorney's office and the CIA, Barr knows something of the damage that such government entities can cause. And when he speaks about privacy issues, politicos have no choice but to take him seriously.

I disagree with Barr on many issues, but on this issue he deserves our full support. Those who oppose Barr across-the-board because of particular personal agenda items are doing themselves a disservice in the battle to maintain some level of privacy against our War-On-Terror-crazed government.

New York Times - free registration required Privacy Officer Is Possibility at Security Department.

Under Congressional pressure, the Bush administration said today that it was open to the idea of installing a chief privacy officer in a new Department of Homeland Security to make sure it weighed issues of confidentiality and the secure handling of personal information.

"If you bring us a proposal, I think we'd look at it very carefully," Mark W. Everson, controller of the Office of Management and Budget told Representative Bob Barr, Republican of Georgia, who heads the House Judiciary subcommittee on commercial and administrative law. "Privacy is a very important function."

Mr. Barr opened a subcommittee hearing by asking Mr. Everson what steps would be taken "to ensure the privacy of personally identifiable information as the new agency establishes necessary databases that coordinate with other agencies of the government."

[Privacy Digest]

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