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Internet Provides New Opportunities For Political Dirty Tricks



Dirty tricks used to mislead voters and keep them away from the polls, but new Web-centric attempts to disenfranchise voters are stoking fears amongst voters and activists. In the past, political trickery has relied on phone calls, fliers, and direct mailing, which are much easier to track and prosecute than the new wave of political scare tactics.

Traditional calls, like the push polls in 2000 that lifted Bush over McCain in South Carolina, have been replaced by robo-calls via VoIP that are harder to trace and not subject to the same restrictions land-line and cell phone based political phone campaigns are. Such tactics were turned on African-American voters in North Carolina during this primary season when calls were placed that led voters to believe they were not properly registered.

More familiar online techniques such as phishing, pharming (secretly redirecting traffic from one site to another), and good old fashioned typo-squatting have also made their way to the political arena. The primary battle between Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton saw hackers redirecting visitors to Obama's social networking site MyBarackObama.com to Clinton's home page.

Experts expect to see spam e-mails giving out incorrect polling locations, misleading information about who can and cannot vote, and even money making and identity theft schemes centered around voter registration.

Of course all of the uses of the Internet in politics are not nefarious. Barack Obama has proven himself adept at utilizing social media and activists have been using it to organize large numbers of people since the 2004 Howard Dean campaign. [From: CNN]

White House E-Mails Missing

White House Dragging its Feet on E-Mail RecoveryRemember all those e-mails that went missing at the White House? The Bush administration is hoping you don't. According to an internal memo leaked to the Associate Press (AP) the government is pushing forward with its recovery "effort" the only way it knows how -- completely half-assed.

According to the memo, the White House is missing as much as 225 days worth of e-mail that just so happen to date from the time of the Valerie Plame leak and the Abu Ghraib scandal. The White House is theoretically taking bids from contractors to recover the e-mails, but has no expectation of the work being completed before April of 2009, after the current administration has left office.

According to contractors questioned by the AP, the memo doesn't appear to be a legitimate request for help in the recovery process. The memo says anywhere from 25-225 days of e-mails may be missing. The large discrepancy makes it hard to estimate the man power and time needed to tackle the project. Steve Schooner, co-director of the Government Procurement program at George Washington University said, "Generally, when the scope of the work is expected to fluctuate by a factor of nearly ten, I can only take you so seriously." [From: AOL News]

White House Says It Destroyed Millions of E-Mails

White House Destroyed Hard Drives, E-Mails
The White House is no stranger to controversy surrounding lost e-mail, but the latest bit of information might be the most shocking yet. Following a court ruling, the Bush administration must institute a recovery plan to restore what U.S. Magistrate Judge John Facciola fears may be large volumes of missing communications from 2003 to 2005.

In an effort to deter the court from pushing forward with the recovery plan, the White House revealed details about how it disposes of computer equipment that is to be retired. The White House revealed in January that it recycled backup tapes from 2003, taping over existing data. In other words, they're saying the millions of e-mails are gone forever.

Now, according to the Associated Press, the administration is claiming that any data on older computers is lost for good as well. When retiring older workstations White House Information Technology (IT) staff transfers some, but not all data from the old hard drive to the new PC. The old hard drive is then sent off to another government agency where it is physically destroyed.

Whether the White House is telling the truth or lying to conceal evidence of misdeeds, it seems to be up to no good. If the White House is telling the truth and the e-mails are simply lost, then the administration is not keeping proper archives and records. The data loss is at best a sign of the ineptitude of the White House IT staff, and at worst a flagrant disregard for business record retention laws.

If the White House is lying and is hiding the e-mails, or intentionally destroyed them, then that is a whole other can of worms that could put the administration and its IT staff in legal jeopardy.

From AP/AOL News (via Slashdot)

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Bush To Request $6 Billion to Combat Cyber-Terrorism

Bush Wants $6 Billion for Cyberterrorism ProtectionJust last week it was revealed that the group that perpetrated the cyber-attacks on Estonian networks, escalating the already high tension between that nation and its neighbor Russia, wasn't really a group at all. It was a 20-year-old hacker from within Estonia itself. That revelation was a bit of a wake-up call for the global community -- that a strong-minded individual could create an international incident without much trouble. President Bush seems to have been paying attention and is reportedly ready to propose a $6 billion project to create some sort of National Security Agency for American networks.

It's unclear just what the plan would entail at this point. And, knowing the government's penchant for secrecy, it's unlikely that we'll get any more details after it is formally proposed next month as part of Bush's budget. However, you can be sure that it will to some degree focus on the passive monitoring of Internet traffic, something that will frustrate privacy advocates to no end.

The question now is, of course, what amount of privacy lost and money spent is a worthy trade for the prevention of American networks from attack? An outage here caused by an attack like that seen in Estonia would have a devastating effect on our already soft economy. That is, of course, assuming there's a group of malicious hackers out there powerful enough to do such a thing here. Our networks are, after all, a bit more redundant than those in Estonia.

From WSJ.com

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More American 'World of Warcraft' Players Than Farmers, Stats Say

World of Warcraft Stats Show Shifting U.S. DemographicsWhen you ponder the phrase "Real American," what do you think of? (Other than the various Bud Lite radio commercials, that is.) Chances are, if you're a politician at least, "Real American" equates to blue collar rural farmer or the like. However, an interesting statistics-riddled post helps to shed a little light on just how far off base that notion is.

According to the piece at Kung Fu Monkey, which pulled numbers from the USDA, two million Americans work on farms or ranches. Compare that to the three million computer and mathematical scientists in the U.S., or the four million American 'World of Warcraft' players, and you see that perhaps it's time for a bit of a shift in our perceptions of just what a "real" American is. That's not to say, of course, that Farmers are lame and should be ignored by the media, but when President Bush says he's going down to his ranch Texas to "stay in touch with real Americans" while working with Indian leaders to send more tech jobs off-shore, it's hard not to think of him as more than a little off-base.

Thankfully, our current selection of candidates set to take the reigns in '08 are a little more savvy in appealing to the tech-friendly crew. Most of them, anyway ...


From Boing Boing and Kung Fu Monkey

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Geek Gifts for Bush's Birthday


Franklin Speaking Language Master Believe it or not, President George "Dubya" Bush turns 61 years young today. And just in case one of his pals/cronies is stuck on what to buy him, we've made a few suggestions.

Franklin's Speaking Language Master

One bit of information that we picked up early in the president's career -- he's not too proficient with his native English language. Sure, it makes for good late night TV jokes, but the poor guy has got to be a bit embarrassed. At last, he can find the words he needs and have them pronounced for him phonetically before a big speech -- now no one will ever misunderestimate him again.

Albanians Love Bush('s Watch)

President Bush's recent visit to Albania was met with much fanfare, love, and ... petty theft. Bush wasn't met with any anti-American protests, but unfortunately he did run into a pickpocket who grabbed his watch during what appears to have been an otherwise warm reception.

Watch the video, and pay special attention around 0:55 -- you'll notice that his presumably expensive watch disappears into the throng. Yes, they love us. And our expensive watches.

Thanks, Adam.

UPDATE: According to Reuters, U.S. and Albanian officials deny that Bush "lost" his watch. Photographs show the President putting his hands behind his back so one of his five bodyguards can remove the watch. Okay, can we please see those photographs?

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