
Hypocrisy abounds this episode as new methods of tracking citizens by governments have been revealed & the campaign to shut down cop reporting on Waze has gone public.
Plus the amazing mesh network in Cuba, bullet proof vest for batteries in a smartphone & much more!
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Show Notes:
France Seeks to Sanction Web Companies for Posts Pushing Terror
President Francois Hollande said Tuesday in Paris the government will present a draft law next month that makes Internet operators “accomplices” of hate-speech offenses if they host extremist messages.
Researchers Tie Regin Malware To NSA, Five Eyes Intel Agencies
Researchers at Kaspersky Lab have discovered shared code and functionality between the Regin malware platform and a similar platform described in a newly disclosed set of Edward Snowden documents 10 days ago by Germany’s Der Spiegel. The link, found in a keylogger called QWERTY allegedly used by the so-called Five Eyes, leads them to conclude that the developers of each platform are either the same, or work closely together. “Considering the extreme complexity of the Regin platform and little chance that it can be duplicated by somebody without having access to its source codes, we conclude the QWERTY malware developers and the Regin developers are the same or working together,” wrote Kaspersky Lab researchers Costin Raiu and Igor Soumenkov today in a published report.
Police Organization Wants Cop-Spotting Dropped From Waze App
“The Register reports on a request from the US National Sheriffs’ Association, which “wants Google to block its crowd-sourced traffic app Waze from being able to report the position of police officers, saying the information is putting officer’s lives at risk.” From the article: “‘The police community needs to coordinate an effort to have the owner, Google, act like the responsible corporate citizen they have always been and remove this feature from the application even before any litigation or statutory action,’ AP reports Sheriff Mike Brown, the chairman of the NSA’s technology committee, told the association’s winter conference in Washington….Brown called the app a ‘police stalker,’ and said being able to identify where officers were located could put them at personal risk. Jim Pasco, executive director of the Fraternal Order of Police, said his members had concerns as well. ‘I can think of 100 ways that it could present an officer-safety issue,’ Pasco said. ‘There’s no control over who uses it. So, if you’re a criminal and you want to rob a bank, hypothetically, you use your Waze.'”
DEA cameras tracking hundreds of millions of car journeys across the US
A U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration program to keep tabs on cars close to the U.S.-Mexican border has been gradually expanded nationwide and is regularly used by other law enforcement agencies in their hunt for suspects.
The extent of the system, which is said to contain hundreds of millions of records on motorists and their journeys, was disclosed in documents obtained by the American Civil Liberties Union as part of a Freedom of Information Act request. Much of the information disclosed to the ACLU was undated, making it difficult to understand the growth of the network, which is different from the cameras used to collect traffic tolls on expressways.
Batteries Made With Bulletproof Kevlar Fibers May Never Explode
The researchers at the University of Michigan layered nanofibers extracted from Kevlar on top of each other to create very thin insulating sheets. And it turns out the microscopic pores on this new material are actually far too small to allow the tips of those fern-like dendrite structures to poke through and make contact with other electrodes. Individual lithium-ions can still squeeze through as needed, but nothing else.