Beware of those promoting kill switches as enhancing security

Security Matters: I’ve Seen the Future, and It Has a Kill Switch

Bruce Schneier is a wise man and it would be wise to heed his warning on this topic. The presence of remotely accessible kill switches in electronic systems is an extremely dangerous idea. There are a lot of people who would love to have total control over every facet of your life. The more connected you are, the more vulnerable you may be in the future. (and arguably today as well) One of the things that’s always turned me off about OnStar is the big brother aspect of it. The same for Lo Jack. While it would certainly make those in control happy, the potential for abuse is too great to ignore. (and too great for human nature to resist IMO…)

House passes FISA amendment, holds match to constitution

There’s been a lot of talk in the mainstream media and blogs such as talkingpointsmemo about the recent passage of the FISA Amendments Act of 2008. Unless you’ve actually read the text of the version passed by the House, it’s difficult to understand exactly what’s going on. Basically, every politician in congress is scared to death of the possible consequences of not renewing most of the FISA amendments. There’s also been the threat of a presidential veto if the bill didn’t include protection for telecoms who participated in the warrantless surveillance of U.S. citizens. Unfortunately, the house did what it always does: pass a quick and dirty bill so they can go on break and look like they got something done. While the wording of the section protecting telecoms has been watered down, it still does exactly the same thing. If this version of the legislation is enacted as is (which is now quite likely) it will truly be a sad day for our country. The constitution of our country was blatantly violated by the administration and they are going to get away with it because almost no member of congress has the backbone to stand up to them.

Apple finally fixes Leopard with 10.5.3 update

It’s taken a little over 6 months, but Apple has finally fixed some of the nagging issues in their flagship OS. I’ve loved the Leopard experience thus far with one small exception, browsing windows shared folders. So long as you were only browsing folders with a few files, there was no problem. If you’re like me and you tend to archive all your digital photos on one machine and share them over the network this was a real problem. Just attempting to open one subfolder in my digital photo library meant looking at a spinning progress wheel for anywhere up to 20 minutes. Yikes! With 10.5.3, that’s all history. This is great for me because the the new photo browsing features of Leopard are just wonderful. Thank you Apple!