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Obama's Cybersecurity Czar Resigns From Post


Two months after delivering a speech that outlined sweeping cybersecurity plans, President Barack Obama and his staff are still struggling with just how to protect the country from electronic terrorists and spies. With the resignation of the woman many people thought could take the reigns, things won't get any easier, either.

Melissa Hathaway, who led a cybersecurity review in April, resigned Monday for personal reasons from her implicit post as the acting cybersecurity czar, The Wall Street Journal reports. Hathaway says she laid the groundwork for what the Obama administration needs to do in order to shore up the country's cybersecurity. However, Hathaway's departure is troubling news since the White House must now presumably begin a new search for someone to fill the post. A couple of names have emerged as leading contenders: Franklin Kramer, assistant defense secretary under President Bill Clinton, and Howard Schmidt, a former eBay top security officer.

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Video Games

President Obama Says Put 'Away the Xbox'


It's official; people are playing video games more than ever before. Whether that's a good thing is an argument that will probably never end, but when the President speaks, people tend to listen.

While speaking to the NAACP recently, President Barack Obama said it's high time we got to "putting away the Xbox." According to Game Politics, the remark was meant to encourage parents to become more involved with their children. Obama said in the speech that "we must accept our own responsibilities," adding that parents should read to their kids and help with homework. So, no, the President isn't declaring a war on video games. He just wants some solid parenting.

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Cell Phones, Web

Quacking Ringtone Interrupts Obama Press Conference


When's the most embarrassing moment possible for your cell phone to ring? During a church service? How about a college lecture? A funeral, maybe? Nope, nope, and nope. Try being the poor sap whose phone not only rang, but quacked, during a recent press conference by President Obama.

During a live broadcast of a speech about gay rights yesterday, a White House correspondent's cell phone quacked like a duck. After a look of disbelief (and who can blame him?), Obama asked, "Who's duck is back there?" The press corps laughed, but then the president delivered a real zinger when he said, "Where do you guys get these ringtones, by the way? I'm just curious." Ouch, burned by the President. [From: Wonkette]

Cell Phones, iPhone

White House CTO Aneesh Chopra Gives Speech, Tries Out Palm Pre



President Obama may have ushered in the era of the BlackBerry at the White House, but plenty of folks who work for him use iPhones on the side. "The White House is officially BlackBerry, though many folks also own iPhones," said Aneesh Chopra, the first-ever Chief Technology Officer (CTO) and Director for Technology in the White House Office of Science and Technology (yes, that's his official title).

Just two weeks into the job, Chopra made a public appearance as the keynote speaker at this week's CEA Line Shows and Digital Downtown conference, a sort of mini-CES held earlier this week (on Thursday) just around the corner from the Empire State Building in New York City. In his speech, Chopra outlined "four pillars," which essentially boiled down to using innovative technology to create jobs, carry-out Obama's initiatives on health care and education, create a national broadband network that's safe and secure, and facilitate a more open government (for more info on that go to www.whitehouse.gov/open).

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Web

U.S. Nuclear Site Info Accidentally Posted Online by Government



Uh oh. There's a new leak on the Internet and it's more interesting than a naked celebrity. On May 6th, the government accidentally posted a 266-page document, some of which was marked "highly confidential," that contained detailed information about hundreds of the country's public and private nuclear facilities. Although not actually classified according to National Nuclear Security Administration head Thomas D'Agostino, the document was in fact revealed on the Government Printing Office Web site by mistake, the Associated Press reported on Wednesday.

Government sources have stressed that none of the information poses a national security risk, but D'Agostino is worried that the list could make uranium storage facilities and other sites related to the country's nuclear programs easy to locate.

The document had just been reviewed by President Obama and was bound for Congressional review when it was unintentionally posted online. The document has since been taken down, but information about a uranium storage facility in Oak Ridge, Tennessee and nuclear reactors in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania and Washington State have already made it out -- if only through the AP's article. We'd think that, with all the energy the Feds are putting into the White House and Pentagon cybersecurity initiatives, they could at the very least keep their secrets, well, secret. [From: AP, via Scientific American]

Celebrities, Web

'Obama Time Capsule' Book, Authored by You, Online

Customizable Obama Book Lists You as Author
Look out respectable citizens, because here comes 'The Obama Time Capsule.'

What is it, you say? Well, 'The Obama Time Capsule' is a $35 coffee table photo book, available through Amazon, that can be customized with images and words of your choosing. It's like some bastard love child of Web 2.0, grassroots politics, and those cheesy 'put-your-kid-in-a-story-book' carts at our local mall.

The 200-page book is filled with over 140 professionally shot photos, and includes essays from Colin Powell, Joe Klein, Arianna Huffington, and quite a few others. So why do we care about a politics book? After ordering it, you'll get an e-mail with a link to the book's Web site, where you can customize your copy. You can write the dedication, have your name listed as an author on the cover, and upload your own images to put in the book.

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Cell Phones, BlackBerry

Obama Getting New Super-Secure BlackBerry


Soon, Barack Obama will finally be getting a beefed-up BlackBerry worthy of his office, the Washington Post reported yesterday.

The President, whose affection towards his BlackBerry is well documented, has actually been using a combination of two devices (a regular BlackBerry and an NSA-supplied security attachment called the Sectera Edge) while awaiting delivery of his uber-secure, top-secret Blackberry 8830. The new phone will be equipped with SecureVoice -- a high-security software developed by Genesis Key, Inc. that turns any Blackberry 8830 or Curve into a hacker-proof line of communication.

When Obama finally receives his new phone (expected to be within a few months), he will be able to call, e-mail and text other people who have appropriately secure BlackBerry models. It is expected that top aides to the President, along with his wife Michelle, will be among the recipients.

We are sure the President is thrilled to be getting his new toy; we just hope that the thing is as secure as advertised. [From: Washington Times]

National Broadband Plan Starts Rolling Out


Hey, what do you know? All those meetings over the proposed National Broadband Plan has amounted to something: a "yeah, we should probably hit this up." Today, the FCC has kicked off an immensely ambitious project to bring "high-speed internet access to every corner of the United States." $7.2 billion of the economic stimulus package has already been allocated for the task, but it'll be ages before anything becomes of this. For starters, the FCC is asking for input from consumers, businesses, etc, yet it doesn't require a response until February of 2010. Meanwhile, nations like South Korea, Japan and Australia are all looking to implement similar rollouts, albeit with much higher speeds. You see, the FCC currently defines "broadband" as 786Kpbs, which obviously isn't anywhere near median rates in some of the aforementioned countries. Pardon our skepticism in this becoming a reality, but at least we'll be extra elated if our rock-bottom expectations are met.

Car Tech, Web

'Car and Driver' Apologizes for Obama/NASCAR Hoax

We've heard it said that you can't trust everything you read on the Internet, and that's especially true on April 1st.

In the last few years, the Web has taken April Fool's Day to new heights, with everybody from Qualcomm to Google, from Cash4Gold to The Guardian, getting in on the mischief. Although most Web pranks are regarded as harmless fun, the wheel-mag Car and Driver backfired yesterday when it "reported" that President Obama had banned Chevrolet and Dodge from participating in the 2009 NASCAR season.

The flash of anger and dissent from Obama detractors and NASCAR fans alike was strong enough to force Car & Driver to pull the article and apologize for having a sense of humor. The apology wasn't enough for Dodge, apparently, whose motor sports public relations lackey Denny Darnell told USA Today: "I've been in this business more than 30 years and have never seen a story so irresponsible."

We think that everybody ought to lighten up and be glad that there's still some journalistic mirth out there. After all, with venerable news outlets dropping like flies, the journalism industry is in no better shape than the auto industry. As showcased by the Car and Driver crew, at least some of us still laugh about it. [From: USA Today]

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Celebrities, iPod

President Obama Offers iPod to the Queen of England


No, this isn't an April Fool's joke. President Obama met today at Buckingham Palace with the Queen, and our forward thinking commander-in-chief brought along a little tech for gifting purposes. Obama presented Elizabeth II with an iPod containing video from her 2007 visit to the States. In return, the first family received what is apparently a standard present for visiting dignitaries to the Palace -- a silver-framed photo of the Queen and her husband. At a glance, it seems like Obama has a thing for gadgets (and related media); he recently handed off a set of DVDs featuring classic American films to Prime Minister Gordon Brown... who was unable to play them due to incorrect region encoding. Regardless, the Queen appears pleased with the music player, telling the President during their 25 minute tea that she "Finally has something to listen to [her] Pantera records on."

Obama to Astronauts: "Glad [You're] Using the Hands-Free Phone."



President Obama took some time out of his hectic schedule yesterday to speak with a higher authority.

Flanked by congressmen and local area children, Obama spoke for the first time with the astronauts inhabiting the International Space Station, issuing compliments and cracking jokes. The President was upbeat throughout the conversation, joking with the astronauts that, since the space station orbits Earth at over 7,000 miles per hour, he was "glad that [they were] using the hands-free phone."

We can only imagine that Obama greeted this novel interaction as a welcome diversion from his heavier burdens, of which there are many these days! [From: Daily Mail]

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Computers, Celebrities

Once-Arrested White House CIO Steps Out, Then Back In

White House CIO Steps Aside Over 12 Year-Old Theft
Remember that new Chief Information Officer (CIO) that President Obama recently appointed? As was the case with many of the other seemingly ill-vetted appointees, it now seems like Vivek Kundra too has a couple of skeletons in his closet that almost stopped him from accepting the position for the newly created post.

As with Tom Daschle, Nancy Killefer, Charles Freeman, Ron Kirk, Timothy Geithner, and Bill Richardson before him, it looked like Kundra was going to have to step aside. This time, however, it had nothing to do with unpaid taxes. It looks like Kundra was arrested (though not convicted) on charges of theft back in 1997, and that some in his office are embroiled in a bribery scheme.

According to public records dug up by Valleywag, Kundra received probation before judgment (and a $500 fine, of which he only paid $100) for a theft of less than $300 in value. That information, along with news that Kundra had taken a leave of absence from his new post, started making the rounds on the Internet earlier this week and prompted many to assume that he would soon be gone. In fact, he had already taken a leave of absence relating to a raid by the FBI on his office last week that led to the arrest of two Washington DC officials.

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Computers, Visionaries

Obama Names New Chief Information Office for White House

Obama Names New Chief Information Office for White House
Vivek Kundra has been named the first Federal Chief Information Officer (CIO) by President Obama. The CIO for the White House is a newly created post that will carry a variety of responsibilities, not the least of which is overseeing how the technology budget is spent by the federal government.

Kundra will be responsible for making sure that federal agencies are able to communicate and share information, as well as for ensuring that data is secure in the face of hackers, leaks, and other cyber threats. The CIO will also work closely with a Chief Technology Officer (CTO) to develop and implement technology policy for the administration. That will include furthering Obama's pledge of governmental transparency through the use of tools like WhiteHouse.gov and Recovery.gov, as well as deciding how money should be invested to spur new technological developments like clean, renewable power sources.

The new CIO will be in charge of the entire federal government's $71 billion IT budget and will hopefully prevent future administrations from having to deal with the technological mess the Obama transition team encountered when it moved into the White House.

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Audio/Video, TV

DTV Coupons Begin Flowing Once More


For all of you still waiting for a little governmental assistance in buying that DTV converter box that you should've purchased months ago (we kid... a little), we've excellent news. The National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA), which is overseeing the program, has announced that it has finally begun to ship $40 vouchers towards the purchase of these very boxes once more. The waitlist has grown some 4.1 million deep since the subsidy program ran dry back in January, but the agency is hoping to have that cleared within three weeks. Of course, you better not procrastinate on your second chance -- who knows how quickly the $650 million it has left will last.

[Image courtesy of BreakItDownBlog]

Car Tech, Cell Phones, Computers, Celebrities, BlackBerry, TV, Green Tech, Visionaries

Obama's Address Filled With Techie Promises

Obama's Not-State of the Union Address Filled With Techy Promises
Last night, President Barack Obama took to the Capitol to shed some light on the massive, $800 billion stimulus bill he just signed into law. As you might expect, his not-quite-State-of-the-Union address dealt in part with technology and science, which the president believes are essential to restoring the United States' economy and securing our place in the global marketplace.

We know that some of you don't have the time to read through the hundreds of pages in the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, or even to sit through the hour-long speech, so we've done the heavy lifting for you and broken down how your tax dollars are going to be spent on technological advancement.
  • $7 billion for mass transit, including $750 million for high-speed trains
  • $7.2 billion for improving broadband infrastructure and penetration
  • $650 million for the transition to DTV
  • $2 billion to improve IT services for the health care industry, focusing on a shift to electronic medical records
  • $1 billion for NASA programs and research
  • $3 billion for the National Science Foundation
  • $2 billion for research at the Department of Energy
  • $220 million for research and grants at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST)
  • $2 billion for the development and manufacturing of advanced battery technology, particularly for vehicles
  • $15 billion a year for clean or renewable power research, including wind and solar power, biofuels, clean coal technology, and increasing the fuel-efficiency of cars and trucks

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