Thursday, May 28, 2009

More data lost... The UK government really fails!

Too exasperated to report this  myself, but here's the latest example of sheer incompetence from the guys who are set to manage a national database - with all our intimate details included!

Here's a story from BBC News... the contents beggar belief! 
 

In short, they couldn't organize an orgy in a brothel.. .. yet they continue to issue fake reassurance and whinge on about terrorism.. the asseholes!



http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/london/8071601.stm

Monday, May 25, 2009

The technology of surveillance

The technology of surveillance

With millions of CCTV cameras and one of the largest DNA databases in the world, the UK is among the most watched places in the world.
But how does the technology work?
Below is a guide which explains how some of the main types of surveillance operate:

Unmanned aerial vehicle
Drone
ANPR cameras
ANPR
CCTV camera
CCTV
A man listening to a bugging device
Bugging
Car tracking device
Trackers
A hard drive
Databases
A Key logger
Key loggers
DNA
DNA



An eye
SURVEILLANCE DRONES

Unmanned surveillance drones were first used by the police in 2008.
Unmanned aerial vehicle
The drones are lightweight weighing around 1.5kg, relatively quiet being battery powered, can carry different cameras and are remote controlled.
They can fly or hover while transmitting live images to an operator on the ground and can operate during the day or at night.
Unmanned aerial vehicles or UAVs can be used for many different activities such as searching for firearms or missing persons, road traffic accidents and surveillance after a terrorist attack.
The police are already using drones for aerial surveillance in Merseyside, Essex and Staffordshire.
NUMBER PLATE RECOGNITION
Automatic number plate recognition, or ANPR, was invented in the mid 1970s.
ANPR
Initially used to combat terrorism, it was being used by the police in England in the mid 1990s. Only in the last few years has the system been used on a large scale.
ANPR cameras in fixed or movable sites read vehicle registration plates, then cross check them with police databases. If anything is spotted, from no tax or connection with a crime, the system sounds an alert.
The police can attach markers called "information reports" to electronically tag a vehicle that is of special interest to them.
The system works by recording every number plate regardless of who the driver is, no matter how mundane the journey. Every journey is then held for two years and can be held longer if considered necessary.
Although the cameras are not concealed the police will not reveal how many cameras they have or where the cameras are.
What is known is that the system already reads between eight and 10 million number plates a day, and around 2% of checks spot something of interest to the police.
CCTV
Closed-circuit television, or CCTV, has become a standard part of the urban landscape.
CCTV camera
First used for guarding premises, since the 1980s the cameras have quickly spread to cover most towns and cities.
Most CCTV cameras are private, but national and local government also deploys many thousands of cameras. Recently talking CCTV cameras have been introduced in several cities, such as Middlesbrough.
It is not known how many CCTV cameras there are now in the UK. One estimate put the figure at 4.2 million. The estimate is based on the number of cameras found on Putney High Street in London in 2002 and then extrapolated to provide a figure for the United Kingdom.
Research suggests CCTV is not effective in preventing crime.
A Home Office report in 2005 revealed that CCTV had not been a success. It did not stop crime, it just moved it away from the cameras and it did not make people feel safer.
TRACKING DEVICES
A host of devices now allow your current position to be tracked.
Tracking device
Mobile phones emit a signal to nearby phone masts even when a call is not being made and the strength of the signal allows positions to be plotted.
Other devices use satellite navigation technology to track locations.
In the same way a GPS (global positioning system) in a car pinpoints your current location, these devices can also track a vehicle. Car trackers can be placed covertly on a vehicle enabling it to be easily traced wherever it goes.
DATABASES
The government has a huge number of databases that record every aspect of our lives, such as health, education, welfare and law enforcement.
A hard drive
The number and size of government databases has increased rapidly in recent years with advances in computer technology.
Critics have rounded on several recent large projects including ContactPoint (containing biographical and contact information for every child in England and recording their relationship with public services), NHS Detailed Care Record (holding GP and hospital records) and ONSET (a Home Office database designed to predict which children will offend in the future).
A recent report by Joseph Rowntree Reform Trust examined 46 major government databases and concluded that 11 needed to be scrapped or redesigned immediately, and more than half were deemed to have significant problems with privacy or effectiveness.
READ ROWNTREE REPORT
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Perhaps the most controversial database is the National Identity Register which will store biographical information, biometric and administrative data linked to an ID card. It will also make it much easier to link other government databases according to a single ID number.
Databases are also increasingly used by private companies for everything from banking to loyalty cards. Databases are governed by the Data Protection Act which is overseen by the Information Commissioner's Office.
There have been numerous recent examples of data loss by government and private databases.
In 2007 the government lost two computer discs containing a copy of the entire child benefit database with the personal details of all families in the UK with a child under 16. The discs held the details of 25 million people, including name, address, date of birth, National Insurance number and where relevant bank details.
KEY LOGGERS
Key logging allows every key stroke and mouse operation to be recorded.
Key logger
The most obvious type of key logger looks like a standard memory stick. It can transmit data wirelessly or upload data via the internet. There are other types of devices which are more difficult to install but which are much more difficult to detect.
Keylogging can be used to trace computer faults and to monitor employees, for example to determine productivity.
They are also used by law enforcement agencies and criminals to obtain passwords and bypass other security measures.
DNA DATABASES DNA                                                                                                                             
In the UK more than 4.7 million people have their DNA stored on the National DNA Database (NDNAD).
DNA
The database for England and Wales was set up in 1995 and is the largest DNA database in the world per head of population.
It contains DNA profiles of 7.4% of the UK population, the next largest is Austria with about 1%, the USA database has about 0.5%.
In England and Wales anyone who is arrested and aged 10 or over will have their DNA taken and the record is retained indefinitely, even if no charge is then made or even if a person is later acquitted.
There are around 850,000 innocent people on the database, including many children and even a baby.
EUROPEAN COURT OF HUMAN RIGHTS
The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

The European Court of Human Rights (S. AND MARPER v. THE UNITED KINGDOM 2008) called the government's DNA policy in England and Wales indiscriminate and particularly damaging to children and asked the government to change it.
Scotland and Northern Ireland have separate databases. Scotland has a different system and keeps far fewer samples. DNA profiles are destroyed if a person is not convicted. Although profiles can be kept for three years if a person is arrested for serious sexual or violent offencesB

BIOMETRICS                                                                                                                                            
Biometrics are methods which identify us on the basis of our physical or behavioural traits.
An eye
The main physiological processes are fingerprints, face recognition, iris recognition and DNA.
Behavioural biometrics can identify traits such as voice and gait.
Biometrics can be used to identify individuals under surveillance and also to provide security for access to computers, buildings or services.
Biometrics are often seen as unique identifiers but they are only as good as the information inputted, which can be incorrect. Furthermore, the technology works by identifying a set number of key parameters, which normally provide a quick means of identification, but it can also throw up false matches.

Thursday, May 21, 2009

3: The Future's Bright?? Maybe.. but not for 3!

3.. The UK's first fully digital 3G network With superfast data and video calling. within just a few years, they've built up a decent sized customer base, dut to their superior technology & much cheaper prices.
3 UK are a cellphone company set up a few years ago by Hutchinson Whampoa - a massively rich Hong Kong company. They are the same people who launched Orange back in the 90s.

3 UK became popular because of video calling, fast data and, of course, cheaper prices overall. However, it was a product called '3 Like Home' which really made it for 3 UK. This was a fantastic deal which cost nothing and allowed you to use your cellphone in some countries abroad - for no additional costs, called 'roaming charges'.

This saves holiday makers & business travellers perhaps hundreds of pounds, and for the first time ever, allowed us to use out cellphones abroad without facing terrifying bills upon out return home.

In what must be one of the most stupid business decisions ever made - a suicidal move by 3 UK, they recently announced they were finishing 3 Like Home, and would charge 'normal roaming charges' - which are actually more than the other UK cellphone companies charge. The result - it'll be too expensive to take your cellphone on holiday.

This badly formulated cock-up of a plan has gone down like a Hog Roast in a Mosque, especialy as 3 UK's lawyers have said that they're breaking their own terms & conditions, meaning that Customers can simply phone up - and cancel their contracts immediately.

Within 48 hours, 3's useless (and most frustrating) call center oven in Bombay, India has literally been swamped with angry callers, demanding cancellation and transfer codes, called 'PACs'.

Over 250,000 people have already gotten their codes, and that caused their systems to jam. There are now a similar number of requests in the queue... and 3 UK looks in danger of becoming a ghost town.. with customers hemorraging from the network like thieves from a crime scene, or MPs after an expenses claim form.

3 UK are now panicking bigtime. Up to half a million people left or leaving the network, and more to follow, awful publicity and a disasterous business decision. Hutchison Whamopoa are said to be 'fuming' with 3, and are said to be withdrawing funds. They did the same with 3 Australia - which promptly got sold off, and is now... Vodafone Oz!

The reason why 3 Like Home is being scrapped?

Could it be:

... Because people in the UK 'don't understand it'... (ie, we're too stupid!) ??
... Because it's not good value for money (ie, for them!!) ??

Well, those are the weak - and wholly unbelievable excuses offered by the morons at 3.

In reality - it's much more simple...


... Because 3 UK are greedy bastards who want more money from us, but who have badly misjudged their UK market!

Looking into TORCHWOOD's CRYSTAL BALLS... (always a revelation!)

3 UK will go into administration fairly soon.
3 UK wll cease to exist as an independent cellphone network.
3 UK will be taken over, probably by Vodafone, possibly by T-Mobile. 
 

A disastrous business decision has put 3 in real danger of collapse in the UK. Analysts now fear 3 won't survive, and global cellphone giants like the UK's Vodafone & Germany's T-Mobile are poised to take them over. 
Watch this space - but if you're with 3 UK, give em a call. If you get a bit angry & mention '3 Like Home' >> they're handing out discounts like they're going out of Fashion!

CT ;-)