Updated: 2/1/03; 8:55:50 AM.
Waiting for Columbus
Paul W. Swansen's Radio Weblog
        

Tuesday, January 14, 2003

Good and Bad news from SprintPCS. It seems that even though their web site says that their PCS Vision plan is unlimited, in talking to their sales reps, use of the web and instant messaging use's minutes. So much for unlimited. Guess that moves Sprint out of the running in our search for an upgrade to or new wireless service.
8:47:29 PM    comment []

This is a good book. I recommended it earlier and I'll recommend it again.

Slashdot | Book Review - The Art of Deception.

MasterSLATE writes "One of the weakest links to the most secured computer systems are the humans that operate them. No matter how well secured a computer, network or information may be, there are always people that will have contact with them from the inside. This is what the social engineer exploits in order to gain access. In The Art of Deception, Kevin Mitnick writes about the human element and how it can be manipulated and exploited to gain access to computer systems or 'secure' information." --- Read on for the rest of Masterslate's review.

[Privacy Digest]
7:30:08 PM    comment []

Now playing: The human genome. Researcher downloads data to iPod [InfoWorld: Top News]
7:26:49 PM    comment []

I've found it amazing that tech companies still insist on using paper for much of their work. We make use of computers at work for order entry, accounting, and even the HR Department allows for changing your information with them. However there are those in the company who continue to insist on having printed material of info that is readily available to them on-line. Is it ignorance of the use of the technology. In some cases, individual at best, yes.
6:33:37 AM    comment []

The son has some good points here. He forgot to mention a reference I pointed him to many years ago about this very issue. Nicholas Negroponte's "Being Digital." and Stewart Brand's "The Media Lab."

The Shift.

After a interesting discussion last night I decided that I wanted to do some writing on this.

Someone posted a interesting question earlier. "Will we ever see a paperless society?" The initial thought is why keep paper around? The tree huggers would love us net-heads for keeping the forests intact and we would all spend a hell of a lot less on toner! Let's look at this in a few different ways though. Think for a moment all the ways that we use paper in a day.

Now unless we can come up with some magical thing to help us out in the bathroom I don't think that we will get away from the use there. Although there have been some crazier inventions so I guess you never can tell.

I don't know how many of you still write checks but this practice is quickly going to go the way of the do do bird. Banks are finding that it is much more cost efficent to process transactions via checkcard. I know some diehard people that still break out their checkbook wherever they go but how much easier is it for you, the store, and the bank to swipe that little piece of plastic. There are some places that don't even accept checks anymore because they don't want to deal with the hassle or the cost. We have boxes of unused checks sitting around the house because most everything is done either electronically or via plastic.

The newspaper, ahhh, we all see the old classic picture of dad wandering out to get the newspaper in his slippers with his morning cup of coffee. Well I know what my dad does in the morning, he sits down and checks his news aggregator in Radio. Here's my question to all of you. Think about the things that you read in the newspaper that can't be found on the net by logging onto to your local news media's website or subscribing to a mailing list? When the newspapers call me, my question to them is why should I pay you to deliver to my house when I can log onto your website and read for free?

Founded in August 1998, netLibrary is located in Boulder, Colorado. As the world's premier provider of electronic books (eBooks), netLibrary helps academic, public, corporate and special libraries create a richer, more productive learning environment for their patrons. By combining the time-honored traditions of the library system with electronic publishing, netLibrary offers an easy-to-use information and retrieval system for accessing the full text of reference, scholarly, and professional books. netLibrary is a division of OCLC Online Computer Library Center, a nonprofit organization that provides computer-based cataloging, reference, resource sharing and preservation service to libraries worldwide.

Taken from the netlibrary website. These guys are about a hour north of me. I think that currently the shift from real books to e-books is going to be a hard one for some people to swallow. I know that I would have no problem sitting down with some coffee and reading a book online but for some of the older generation there is no way. Watch for there to be a shift in the way that people procure their books in the next 5 years. For more info on this visit The Shifted Librarian.

Magazines are an interesting medium. One must wonder if one of the big draws to magazines is the esthetics involved. I know that personally one of the only reasons that I hit the newstands on a monthly basis to purchase my surfer magazine was because of the free poster inside. We used to get the MacAddict in the mail but every once in awhile we would get a second copy on the newstand for the free cd inside. It will be interesting to see what kind of shift we as a society due to either phase out or keep the magazine stands intact.

I did some looking (not much) to try and find some numbers to track the amount of us mail that has been sent over the past several years to look at what kind of shift that we are seeing there. The public doesn't like to send regular mail anymore. E-mail is so much easier and quicker. However, the post office will NOT go out of business there will always be things that we need to send through the mail.

As for regular office documents, we have already made a huge shift in that area. We are emailing stuff back and forth rather then printing it out and setting it on someone's desk somewhere. It just makes more sense and makes for a better work enviroment. There are laws in place that say that scanned documents are as good as originals, I can't find the reference because it's 330am and I don't feel like looking, get over it. A digital signature is just as good as the real thing. Go to Best Buy and pay with your cc. You don't sign a piece of paper, you sign a screen. You can digitally sign any document online as well.

So will we shift to a paperless society? Who knows? I know that time will tell. As my children grow up they are going to be in a much more digital world then I was.

[Adam's Mile High Blog]
6:29:36 AM    comment []

Wi-Fi Alliance To Brand Public Hotspots [Slashdot]
6:25:27 AM    comment []

Palm Kills Off Graffiti [Slashdot]
6:22:33 AM    comment []

Chronos ships F10 Launch Studio [The Macintosh News Network]
6:19:28 AM    comment []

CNET NEWS.COM Perspectives By Declan McCullagh - RFID tags: Big Brother in small packages.

Could we be constantly tracked through our clothes, shoes or even our cash in the future?

I'm not talking about having a microchip surgically implanted beneath your skin, which is what Applied Digital Systems of Palm Beach, Fla., would like to do. Nor am I talking about John Poindexter's creepy Total Information Awareness spy-veillance system, which I wrote about last week.

Instead, in the future, we could be tracked because we'll be wearing, eating and carrying objects that are carefully designed to do so.

The generic name for this technology is RFID, which stands for radio frequency identification. RFID tags are miniscule microchips, which already have shrunk to half the size of a grain of sand. They listen for a radio query and respond by transmitting their unique ID code. Most RFID tags have no batteries: They use the power from the initial radio signal to transmit their response.

[ ... ]

You can imagine nightmare legal scenarios that don't involve the cops. Future divorce cases could involve one party seeking a subpoena for RFID logs--to prove that a spouse was in a certain location at a certain time. Future burglars could canvass alleys with RFID detectors, looking for RFID tags on discarded packaging that indicates expensive electronic gear is nearby. In all of these scenarios, the ability to remain anonymous is eroded.

Don't get me wrong. RFID tags are, on the whole, a useful development and a compelling technology. They permit retailers to slim inventory levels and reduce theft, which one industry group estimates at $50 billion a year. With RFID tags providing economic efficiencies for businesses, consumers likely will end up with more choices and lower prices. Besides, wouldn't it be handy to grab a few items from store shelves and simply walk out, with the purchase automatically debited from your (hopefully secure) RFID'd credit card?

The privacy threat comes when RFID tags remain active once you leave a store. That's the scenario that should raise alarms--and currently the RFID industry seems to be giving mixed signals about whether the tags will be disabled or left enabled by default.

In an interview with News.com last week, Gillette Vice President Dick Cantwell said that its RFID tags would be disabled at the cash register only if the consumer chooses to "opt out" and asks for the tags to be turned off. "The protocol for the tag is that it has built in opt-out function for the retailer, manufacturer, consumer," Cantwell said.

[ ... ]

If the tags stay active after they leave the store, the biggest privacy worries depend on the range of the RFID readers. There's a big difference between tags that can be read from an inch away compared to dozens or hundreds of feet away.

[ ... ]

But what about a more powerful RFID reader, created by criminals or police who don't mind violating FCC regulations? Eric Blossom, a veteran radio engineer, said it would not be difficult to build a beefier transmitter and a more sensitive receiver that would make the range far greater. "I don't see any problem building a sensitive receiver," Blossom said. "It's well-known technology, particularly if it's a specialty item where you're willing to spend five times as much."

Privacy worries also depend on the size of the tags. Matrics of Columbia, Md., said it has claimed the record for the smallest RFID tag, a flat square measuring 550 microns a side with an antenna that varies between half an inch long to four inches by four inches, depending on the application. Without an antenna, the RFID tag is about the size of a flake of pepper.

[ ... ]

To the credit of the people in the nascent RFID industry, these trials are allowing them to think through the privacy concerns. An MIT-affiliated standards group called the Auto-ID Center said in an e-mailed statement to News.com that they have "designed a kill feature to be built into every (RFID) tag. If consumers are concerned, the tags can be easily destroyed with an inexpensive reader. How this will be executed i.e. in the home or at point of sale is still being defined, and will be tested in the third phase of the field test."

If you care about privacy, now's your chance to let the industry know how you feel. (And, no, I'm not calling for new laws or regulations.) Tell them that RFID tags are perfectly acceptable inside stores to track pallets and crates, but that if retailers wish to use them on consumer goods, they should follow four voluntary guidelines.

First, consumers should be notified--a notice on a checkout receipt would work--when RFID tags are present in what they're buying. Second, RFID tags should be disabled by default at the checkout counter. Third, RFID tags should be placed on the product's packaging instead of on the product when possible. Fourth, RFID tags should be readily visible and easily removable.

Given RFID's potential for tracking your every move, is that too much to ask?

[Privacy Digest]
5:34:04 AM    comment []

freshmeat.net: SILC 0.9.8 (Toolkit).

SILC (Secure Internet Live Conferencing) is a protocol which provides secure conferencing services in the Internet. It can be used to send any kind of messages, in addition to normal text messages. This includes multimedia messages like images, video, and audio stream. All messages in the SILC network are encrypted and authenticated, and messages can also be digitally signed. SILC protocol supports AES, SHA-1, PKCS#1, PKCS#3, X.509, OpenPGP, and is being developed in the IETF. The software is delivered as SILC Client for end users, SILC Server for system administrators, and SILC Toolkit for application developers.

[Privacy Digest]
5:32:30 AM    comment []

Slashdot | Developers - Top 10 Vulnerabilities in Web Applications.

sverrehu writes "The Open Web Application Security Project (OWASP) has released a well-written document that is a must read for every web programmer out there. This security document is not about firewalls, encryption and patching. It's about common, highly exploitable errors made by the application programmers. Pick up your copy of "The Ten Most Critical Web Application Security Vulnerabilities" from the OWASP web site."

[Privacy Digest]
5:31:24 AM    comment []

The Open Web Application Security Project.

The Open Web Application Security Project (OWASP) is an Open Source community project staffed entirely by volunteers from across the world. The project is developing software tools and knowledge based documentation that helps people secure web applications and web services. Much of the work is driven by discussions on the Web Application Security list at SecurityFocus.com. All software and documentation is released under the GNU public licenses.

[Privacy Digest]
5:29:50 AM    comment []

For $129.... Sterling Hughes: Remember the users [Sam Ruby]
5:28:33 AM    comment []

Some standards matter.... As I'm more and more seeing my words appear excerpted on other people's site ( Hi Mark!), I decided to go after another source for related reads: RSS feeds. To participate, you don't need to use weblogging software that supports trackback or pingback, you simply have to update your templates to have a link to your RSS feed. [Sam Ruby]
5:27:10 AM    comment []

Car-Buying Resources. Use the Web to get the best price on your next car. [The Motley Fool]
5:24:03 AM    comment []

© Copyright 2003 Paul W. Swansen.
 
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