j’s blog

March 15, 2005

William Fisher: Blogging In The Middle East

Here’s a good overview on the lack of freedom of speech in many countries, especially the Middle East. Would you be brave enough to write what you do if there was the possibility of punishment such as 14 years in an Iranian prison? Don’t take your freedom of speech, if you have it, for granted:

Scoop: William Fisher: Blogging In The Middle East

Tuesday, 15 March 2005

By William Fisher

In democracies throughout the world, ‘blogging’ - setting up personal websites, known as weblogs, able to receive comments from readers - has grown exponentially over the past few years.

In the United States, there are literally millions of ‘blogs’. Their growth has been accelerated by five main factors.

1. First, the number of home computers has grown enormously. Some 61% of adults in the U.S. have Internet access at home and 71% have computers.

2. Second, access to the online technology for creating a blog has become easier and simpler.

3. Third, the U.S. has a relatively high literacy rate.

4. Fourth, for the past decade - but particularly after the historic and controversial presidential election of 2000 - Americans have become increasingly cynical about reporting by newspapers, radio, and broadcast, cable and satellite television controlled by giant corporations.

5. Finally, America has become a deeply divided nation politically and socially. Citizens with widely divergent points of view have found blogging a way to express their ideas and join or create communities of like-minded bloggers.

When satellite television arrived, it was hailed by journalism watchers as the ‘the new media’. But, predictably, its novelty was short-lived. Now, there are indications that, over the next decade, the Internet generally, and blogging in particular, may become the ‘new new media’ - America’s primary source of news.

However, it’s not there yet - a recent survey Gallup for CNN showed that only one in four Americans are either very familiar or somewhat familiar with blogs. So the jury is still out on whether virtual reality will replace Gutenberg. However, trends point in that direction.

Not yet in the Greater Middle East, though there are many parallels. For example, blogging technology is available to anyone with access to the Internet, and content can easily be created in Arabic, Hebrew, Persian and other languages. While home computer ownership is still embryonic, there is pretty solid anecdotal evidence of deep suspicion of government-owned ‘mainstream media’ that spurred growth in the ‘blogosphere’ elsewhere.

But there is at least one critical difference. In most of the countries in the Greater Middle East, using a personal weblog to express political dissent can land you in jail as easily as taking part in an unauthorized political protest in the public square.

Iran is one of the worst offenders. Recently, an Iranian weblogger was jailed for 14 years for ’spying and aiding foreign counter-revolutionaries’ after using his blog to criticize the arrest of other online journalists. Despite the risks, an estimated 75,000 Iranians among its five million Internet users maintain online ‘blogs’. Especially among middle class youth, they have become an important way for Iranians to express dissatisfaction. As in Iran, most countries of the region impose varying degrees of restriction on weblogs.

Saudi Arabia, where authorities block some 400,000 websites, is among the most restrictive. It is unclear how many blogsites there are in the Kingdom, but those that are accessible focus largely on political dissent.

Typical is a site called "The Religious Policeman". One recent posting said, "What Reforms? There aren’t any Reforms! The government promised to set up a higher commission on women’s affairs, guaranteed women participation in the recent National Dialogue Forum… .and in the National Human Rights Commission… the National Dialogue Forum… agreed to change nothing, the ‘team photo’ had no women in it, anyone with any sense left in tears."

In Iraq today, there are hundreds of blogsites, most run by Iraqis, some by American and other coalition soldiers. They are communist, monarchist, Kurdish, Assyrian, Islamist, Shiite, Sunni, nationalist and secularist. Their political positions range from full support for the U.S. invasion and occupation to rabid calls for jihad against the Americans.

For example, on the one-year commemoration of the start of the Iraq war, a 24-year-old woman computer programmer wrote in her "Baghdad Burning" blog, "Occupation Day, April 9, 2003: The day we sensed that the struggle in Baghdad was over and the fear of war was nothing compared to the new fear we were currently facing. It was the day I saw my first American tank roll grotesquely down the streets of Baghdad - through a residential neighborhood. And that was April 9 for me and millions of others…and the current Governing Council want us to remember April 9 fondly and hail it our ‘National Day’ … a day of victory … but whose victory?"

Mona El Tahawy, a columnist at the daily Asharq Al Awsat, writes that bloggers in Iran and Iraq "have inspired others in the Arab world… Despite working in an elite medium, requiring a computer and literacy", she said, "bloggers are the voice of the true Arab street, especially the young." But free expression comes at a price.

In Egypt, authorities have tightened their control of the country’s 600,000 web users. The webmaster of the English-language Al Ahram Weekly was sentenced to a year in prison for posting a sexually-explicit poem, and a 19-year-old student was sentenced to a month in jail for "putting out false information" after reporting a serial killer on the loose in Cairo.

In Syria, one blogger asked others to sign an online petition addressed to " The White House" and "The Elyses" (palace). "With the killing of Hariri in Lebanon" it said, "Syrian Ba’athists are out of control. Who’s next? Syria is inciting civil war in Lebanon." Another Syrian, calling himself "Kafka", wrote that President Assad’s speech "made the Syrian people forget that (he) "never cared to give a damn about us since he came to power… ."

In Tunisia, President Zine el-Abidine ben Ali has been determined to stamp out all cyber-dissidence. Among many others, a prominent lawyer was arrested for posting an article online. In Bahrain, two online forum moderators were arrested. Nonetheless, a Bahraini blogsite, called "Sabbah’s Blog" was busy organizing a "Middle East Bloggers Meetup". Dozens of enthusiastic comments were posted by readers.

Even in Afghanistan, poorest of the poor, blogging is beginning to catch on. One Afghan blog reports, "During the Taliban we didn’t have the Internet, but now there are about 25 net cafes in Kabul, and also some in Herat, Kandahar, and Balkh provinces. People are really interested to use the Internet but it’s too expensive… only rich people can afford it."

If political dissent via blogging has not yet risen to the level of "new, new media" in the western democracies, it is at least not yet constrained by government regulation (though Congress and the Justice Department have floated various proposals to do just that). In fact, there may be a bizarre inverse relationship between the suppression of free expression and the proliferation of blogs. In the U.S., the number of blogs has increased significantly during the Bush Administration, when millions of Americans feel passionately that their civil liberties are being eroded by the ‘war on terror’. That outcry has generated equally passionate response from bloggers on the right.

Maybe the lesson for heads of state in the Middle East is: Increase freedom of speech and reduce the challenge and expense of having to deal with this cyber uproar.

*************
William Fisher has managed economic development programs in the Middle East for the U.S. State Department and the U.S. Agency for International Development. His weblog is THE WORLD ACCORDING TO BILL FISHER (http://billfisher.blogspot.com/)

Meet the real online pirates

Category: Crime, I.D. Theft

Meet the real online pirates

3/15/2005 3:40:57 PM, by Hannibal

Baseline is running a fascinating series on organized cybercrime, i.e. groups of hackers, phishers, phreakers, and the like who trade in stole credit card numbers, SSNs, and other forms of stolen identity.

Crime is now organized on the Internet. Operating in the anonymity of cyberspace, Web mobs with names like Shadowcrew and stealthdivision are building networks that help crackers and phishers, money launderers and fences skim off some of the billions that travel through the Web every day.

The players and their games change so quickly it’s hard to piece together who they are and how they work together. But that picture’s becoming more clear, as the U.S. Secret Service, the FBI and other law-enforcement agencies crack open the networks and prosecute those that run them.In this special report, writers Deborah Gage and John McCormick map out how the networks get started, how they work, what they steal, and how the feds stay on their tails.

The article likens these guys to the offline mafia, and I guess the analogy is apt in a few ways, i.e. they’re criminals, they’re organized, and they have colorful nicknames. But while the offline mob has its fingers in all sorts of unsavory pies, the number one way that the mafia has made its money since time immemorial is the protection racket. In contrast, the online thieves described by the article, who steal large amounts of personal data and sell it in underground auctions to the highest bidder, are more properly pirates. They prey on the networks that make commerce possible, and they smuggle and traffic in illicit "cargo." The problem is that "pirates" is already wrongly taken by Big Content, who use it to apply to file sharers. But whatever you call these guys, they’re costing us billions.

At any rate, I’ll end this post with a piece of advice that a surprising number of otherwise savvy people aren’t aware of: don’t ever buy anything online with a bank card; use a credit card instead. The credit card companies are way ahead of banks when it comes to dealing with identity theft. One phone call to the card company and they’ll cancel the charges, send you an affadavit to sign, and deal with getting their money back themselves. On the other hand, when crooks from Turkey steal your bank card number and clean out your bank account, which happened to me a while back, it’s a whole different story. So always use a credit card for online transactions, and watch your statements religiously.

South Korean scientists say kimchi could cure bird flu

Category: Health, Nutrition

Yahoo! News - South Korean scientists say kimchi could cure bird flu

Tue Mar 15

SEOUL (AFP) - An extract of South Korea (news - web sites)’s famed spicy fermented cabbage dish known as kimchi could cure bird flu and other chicken diseases, scientists said.

Researchers at Seoul National University said chickens infected with the deadly bird flu virus began recovering a week after they were fed with fermented bacilli extracted from kimchi.

The experiment has yet to be scientifically proven but professor Kang Sa-Ouk said kimchi did appear to have a curative effect.

Kimchi, made by fermenting cabbage with radishes, red peppers, garlic and ginger, is a symbol of national cuisine.

“Our research showed the chickens fed with a cultured fluid of fermented bacilli extracted from kimchi were recovering rapidly from bird flu and other diseases,” Kang said.

“Only four of the 26 chickens used for our experiment died within four days,” he said.

Park said his team needs more research to see whether the extract is an effective remedy against bird flu. “We will speed up a chemical study into its constituents,” he said.

Since late 2003 millions of birds and 69 humans in Asia have been infected with bird flu. A total of 33 people have died in Vietnam, 12 in Thailand and one in Cambodia.

Kimchi consumption rose sharply two years ago when some Asian countries were hit by SARS (news - web sites). It was reputed to prevent the respiratory disease although there was no scientific proof.

A little appreciated yet great invention

Category: Environment

Yahoo! News - Smog-Busting Inventors Get Tech Award

Smog-Busting Inventors Get Tech Award

By BEN DOBBIN, Associated Press Writer

ROCHESTER, N.Y. - Three scientists who helped this car-crazy world breathe a whole lot easier have been given the nation’s highest technology award.

Their creation — a ceramic honeycomb that oxidizes auto emissions — has kept an estimated 3 billion tons of toxic pollutants out of the atmosphere over the last 30 years.

“People don’t realize how bad it was when millions of cars were spewing out deadly fumes,” said retired engineer Rodney Bagley. “Many of the cities were almost unbreathable” in the 1960s.

The soda can-sized device developed by Bagley, Irwin Lachman and Ronald Lewis at Corning Inc. in 1972 and 1973 made air pollution control practical for the first time. Its paper-thin walls were coated with precious-metal catalysts that turned lung-choking gases streaming through automotive exhausts systems into water vapor, nitrogen and carbon dioxide.

President Bush (news - web sites) awarded each of the men a National Medal of Technology during a ceremony Monday at the White House.

Theirs was possibly the most significant contribution to air pollution control, but one that “needs time to develop … before all those years of use shows up as a benefit,” Lachman said.

First fitted in 1975-model cars, the honeycombs are now used in 95 percent of the world’s autos with catalytic converters. By 2007, all new diesel vehicles on U.S. highways will need to be equipped with the smog-busting devices.

Lachman and Lewis came up with the “miracle material” — a mixture of clay, talc and alumina, an oxide of aluminum — capable of withstanding immense heat and cooling rapidly without cracking. Bagley devised the manufacturing process to create thousands of the cells.

I’m my favorite subject

Category: Blogsome

I’ve heard its a no-no to be excessively self-referential, but I can’t help it, I’m my biggest fan.

If you too hang on my every word, then you won’t want to miss my latest forum post:

www.blogsome.com :: View topic - directed to admin - ads not showing, newsletter

for my fans in a hurry, here’s the gist of the reply from admin.:

We intend that blogsome is around for a long time. The only problems we can forsee will be related to our success and growing too fast. Also we intend updating the features as WordPress develops and there may be bugs along the way. We are examing ways of doing backups and hopefully we’ll have that up and running soon. But the first priority at the moment is to get moved over to WordPress 1.5 and other upgrades.

We would put a photo up, per your request, but we’re too good looking.

Blog Ireland & Blogsome

Category: Blogsome

Blog Ireland

The folks that run Blogsome also run this service as well. Maybe Blogsome is the International version of their service.

Knoppix 3.8 and UnionFS. Wow. Just Wow.

Category: Knoppix

Knoppix 3.8 and UnionFS. Wow. Just Wow.

Knoppix 3.8 and UnionFS. Wow. Just Wow.
by Kyle Rankin
Mar. 14, 2005
URL: http://www.heise.de/english/newsticker/news/56987

Klaus has released the latest version of Knoppix, 3.8, to the crowd at CeBIT 2005. This version includes the normal round of updates including the 2.6.11 kernel by default, KDE 3.3.2, and Firefox and Thunderbird instead of Mozilla. The exciting news, however, is the addition of UnionFS. UnionFS stacks your Knoppix ramdisk on top of the read-only filesystem on the CD, the effect being that you can apt-get install, and otherwise modify all of the files on the system as though they were all writeable. Here I’ll go over why I think this is going to change Knoppix in a major way.

One of the struggles with using Knoppix day-to-day as a portable distribution has always been the fact that the majority of the CD was read-only. You had a nice ramdisk sandbox that let you write within the /home directory, and tinker in /etc if you changed some of the symlinks. If you wanted persistence, there was a nice script that created a small filesystem on writeable media like a usb thumbdrive and used it to store your home directory.
The Problem

The problem, of course, is that you couldn’t install new programs with this method. All of /usr is read-only. Over time various methods have been introduced to try to hack around this by redirecting binaries into the /home directory and changing various system paths. The live software installer that came with previous versions of Knoppix is one example, and klik is another. These worked okay, depending on the program, but in some cases relied on hacks such as using scripts to search and replace file paths within binaries.
The Solution

Enter UnionFS. With this system, basically every segment of the filesystem is read-write. UnionFS keeps track of which files you have modified (which are modified and stored within the ramdisk) and which are unmodified, all on the fly. When you access a file in the filesystem that has been modified, UnionFS points you to the copy in ramdisk instead of the copy on the CD-ROM. This means that if you, say, want to install the enlightenment window manager all you would need to do is:

knoppix@2[knoppix]$ sudo apt-get update
knoppix@2[knoppix]$ sudo apt-get install enlightenment

You can install programs just like with Debian. They all get installed to their regular locations, and if you check out the /ramdisk directory on the CD, you will see a mirror of the root directory structure (or at least the directories that have been modified) and can see all of the files that you have changed. You can even use your favorite graphical packaging program (if you have one) to install packages.

This also means that if you set up a persistent home directory, you can potentially back up all of these changes and restore them at boot. In fact, Knoppix 3.8 already has a modified persistent home script that does just this (although it’s still a beta feature so expect to see bugs here and there). Knoppix can even detect when you have done this on a drive when it boots, and will let you choose what features to restore from this image (if any). If you let it time out, Knoppix does the safe thing and doesn’t load any of the settings.

The latest persistence script also automates the process of setting up an AES256-encrypted home directory, so if you are concerned about the security of your persistent image you can enable this option, type in a passcode, and Knoppix does the rest.

I really think UnionFS is going to take Knoppix to a whole new level of ubiquitous computing. You can truly use the CD just like any other installed CD, and with the prices of usb thumbdrives continuing to drop, you can basically install anything you would like. Major changes, such as replacing KDE with Gnome, probably will still work better if you do a full remaster, but I expect all of the Knoppix-based live CDs (if they are smart) will incorporate this technology into future releases.

Can you tell that I’m excited about this? Like I said, currently it seems to be a bit buggy (on a few of my machines I seem to get some instability after I restore from an image), but I imagine that sort of thing will be ironed out once the "download version" of Knoppix 3.8 hits http://www.knoppix.org.

Kyle Rankin is a system administrator for The Green Sheet, Inc., the current president of the North Bay Linux Users Group, and the author of Knoppix Hacks.

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