Technology Impacts

Social and Ethical Information Technology Impacts in a Global Society (ITGS)

Archive for October, 2009

Homeland Security Could Block Websites During Swine Flu Pandemic

Posted by Richard On October - 28 - 2009

dhsWashington - Securities exchanges have a sound network back-up if a severe pandemic keeps people home and clogging the Internet, but the Homeland Security Department has done little planning, Congressional investigators said on Monday.

The department does not even have a plan to start work on the issue, the General Accountability Office said.

But the Homeland Security Department accused the GAO of having unrealistic expectations of how the Internet could be managed if millions began to telework from home at the same time as bored or sick schoolchildren were playing online, sucking up valuable bandwidth.

via Homeland Security Could Block Websites During Swine Flu Pandemic — Signs of the Times News.

Slow PC? Top 8 Programs That Can Make Your Computer Run Faster

Posted by Richard On October - 28 - 2009

It’s a common problem among computer users: after a few months, our computers become weighed down by programs and all sorts of other junk, and inevitably become sluggish. For the less tech-savvy users, this may induce thoughts like “Why is my computer so terrible?” or “I guess I could always upgrade this… what-cha-ma-callit RAM thing”.

ccleanerCCleanerDownload
Revo UninstallerDownload
DefragglerDownload
PidginDownload
FirefoxDownload
ChromeDownload
Foxit ReaderDownload
VLC PlayerDownload
Foobar2000Download
Refreshing News: Top 8 Programs That Can Make Your Computer Run Faster.

Bank customer’s privacy anger

Posted by Richard On October - 12 - 2009

BANKING giant ANZ has admitted a branch manager breached privacy regulations to access a customer’s personal information.

But the woman whose private details were “inappropriately” viewed by the manager - who is also her next door neighbour - is demanding the man be sacked according to the bank’s own code of conduct regulations.

At the very least, Golden Grove resident Susan Clayton wants ANZ manager Phillip Saredakis transferred from her local Golden Grove branch.

“This is a serious breach of my privacy. I was brought up to believe you could trust a bank manager but I feel violated and he should be sacked,” Mrs Clayton, a 46-year-old hairdressing salon owner, said.

“It’s bad enough to live next door to him let alone having to see him at my local branch after what he did.”

AdelaideNow… Bank customer’s privacy anger.

cctv_1427656cCitizen spies will be given the chance to win up to £1,000 by watching CCTV cameras on the internet and reporting people they suspect of committing crimes.

The new scheme, called Internet Eyes, involves web users scouring CCTV cameras installed in shops, businesses and town centres across Britain looking for offenders.

The cameras’ owners will be charged a fee for putting live footage from their cameras online, while members of the public who help catch criminals can win cash prizes.

The project will be trialled in Stratford-upon-Avon, Warks, next month, but the consortium behind the idea hopes that it will eventually attract a global audience of viewers monitoring Britain’s 4.2 million security cameras.

However, it has already provoked criticism from civil liberties campaigners, who claim that it will create a “snoopers paradise” and erode people’s privacy. Read the rest of this entry »

Airports screen body signals? Researchers hope so

Posted by Richard On October - 7 - 2009

artscreeningtechnologycnnThe days of being able to walk through airport security checkpoints while wearing shoes and a jacket could return if an experimental program proves successful, some Department of Homeland Security officials say.

Project officials hope various sensors, such as this one that tracks eye movement, can help security screeners.

The Homeland Security-funded project is Future Attribute Screening Technology, or FAST. Instead of focusing on whether you have hidden explosives or whether you’re carrying a weapon, sensors and cameras located at security checkpoints would measure the natural signals coming from your body — your heart rate, breathing, eye movement, body temperature and fidgeting.

Those physiological signs, measured together, will indicate whether you might have the desire or intent to do harm, project manager Robert Burns said.

“There’s been a large field of research that ties your physical reactions to your mental state, your emotional state. We’re looking for those signals that your body gives off naturally,” Burns said. Read the rest of this entry »

Windows 7 Spying: Will Let Microsoft Track Your Every Move

Posted by Richard On October - 7 - 2009

spy_fullFrom FireEagle to iPhone apps that use your current location, everyone it seems is racing to get on the geo-aware software bandwagon. So far most geo-aware features have been opt-in and offer reasonable privacy controls (FireEagle is a good example of this), but Microsoft’s upcoming Windows 7 plans to offer developers location tools at the operating system level and the company doesn’t seem to think users care about control or privacy.

Before you freak out at the thought that Redmond will soon be tracking your every move, keep in mind that the new features will be disabled by default. That’s the good news.

The bad news is that if you turn the geo features on, there are very few controls available and, yes, Microsoft could easily track your every move. Now you can freak out.

Windows 7 Will Let Microsoft Track Your Every Move - Webmonkey.

In-store webcams tap into consumer trend for details

Posted by Richard On October - 2 - 2009

stab-cctv2Asda’s plans to introduce webcams to its factories and stores may anger civil liberty campaigners over the perceived advance of a surveillance society. But it may also lead to a few red faces.

Police this month received a video of a former Asda worker licking and stamping on a raw chicken before putting it back on a shelf.

Webcams are only one tool in Asda’s drive for transparency: a new store in Wales will take that objective to its literal conclusion by using glass bricks.
Read the rest of this entry »

Big Brother is watching you shop

Posted by Richard On October - 2 - 2009

_46481352_surv-spl226A surveillance state, with cameras on every street is commonplace but now Big Business is also turning to Big Brother.

Face recognition, behaviour analysing surveillance cameras, biometric profiling and the monitoring and storing of our shopping patterns has made snooping into our habits, movements and private lives ever easier.

Dismayed at its shrinking power to market to us via traditional media or even the internet, the private sector is now proposing to reach potential customers in ways that critics say should have us all concerned.

“There is an enormous pent-up demand for personalised location advertising, whether it is on your cellphone or PDA, on your radio in your car, or on the billboards you walk by on the streets and inside stores,” says Bruce Schneier, chief security technology officer of BT.

“This is yet another technological intrusion into privacy. And like all such intrusions, it will be taken as far as the owner of that intrusion finds it profitable.”

via BBC NEWS | Technology | Big Brother is watching you shop.

dn17887-1_300A robotics expert, a physicist, a bioethicist and a philosopher have founded the International Committee for Robot Arms Control (ICRAC) to campaign for limits on robotic military hardware.

Roboticist Noel Sharkey at the University of Sheffield, UK, and his colleagues set up ICRAC after a two-day meeting in Sheffield earlier this month. Sharkey has spoken before of ethical concerns about military systems that make their own decisions.

“Robot weapons are likely to change the character of warfare,” Sharkey told New Scientist. “We seem to be rushing headlong into the development of autonomous weapons systems without any real concern for the long-term impact on civilian populations.”

Read the rest of this entry »

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Mr Richard is the Head of ICT at a leading Bilingual International School in the Middle East and keen privacy advocate.

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