Technology Impacts

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

Archive for the ‘Social & Ethical Issues’ Category

School Spycam Case Raises FBI Eyebrows

Posted by Richard On March - 6 - 2010

48706285-500x499-0-0Somebody’s fibbing in the case of a Pennsylvania school that using Webcams in loaned laptops, and now the FBI may have to sort out the truth.

CNN reports that federal authorities are investigating the case of 15-year-old Blake Robbins v. the Lower Merion School District in Pennsylvania, a class action lawsuit uncovered by BoingBoing last week. The FBI hasn’t confirmed the investigation; CNN’s report comes from an anonymous police official, who says the feds will look into whether federal wiretap or computer intrusion laws were violated.

In the lawsuit, Robbins claims that an assistant principal at Harriton High School used photos from his laptop’s Web cam to accuse him of “improper behavior.” He later told an ABC News affiliate that the school mistook a pill-shaped Mike & Ike candy for drugs.

http://www.networkworld.com/news/2010/022210-school-spycam-case-raises-fbi.html

One in four Germans wants microchip under skin: poll

Posted by Richard On March - 6 - 2010

human_csipIt sounds like something from a sci-fi film, but one in four Germans would be happy to have a microchip implanted in their body if they derived concrete benefits from it, a poll Monday showed.

The survey, by German IT industry lobby group BITKOM, was intended to show how the division between real life and the virtual world is increasingly coming down, one of the main themes of the CeBIT trade fair that kicks off Tuesday.

In all, 23 percent of around 1,000 respondents in the survey said they would be prepared to have a chip inserted under their skin “for certain benefits.”
http://rawstory.com/2010/03/germans-microchip-skin-poll/

Mobile fingerprint scanners for ALL UK Police

Posted by Richard On March - 6 - 2010

_45158541_pa_fingerprint203Every police force in England and Wales will be equipped with mobile fingerprint scanners to check the identity of suspects in the street.

Up to 3,000 devices, the size of a mobile phone, will enable officers on patrol to cross-reference prints with national records.

Senior officers claimed the scheme would speed up criminal inquiries, bring more people to justice and save thousands of hours of police time.

But fears have arisen the technology could contribute to the so-called “surveillance state” and encourage random searches.

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/crime/police-to-be-equipped-with-mobile-fingerprint-scanners-1916123.html

binLondon - Monitored by millions of cameras and spied on by a secretive domestic intelligence network, Britons could be forgiven for feeling up in arms over the latest threat to their privacy: Intelligent garbage bins that can monitor how much they throw out.

Although the technology is already nearly a decade old, a U.K. privacy rights group says the number of local authorities fitting their trash bins with sensors of some kind has risen dramatically in the past year - affecting at least 2.6 million British households.

Big Brother Watch says the practice could lead to Britons being charged for how much they throw out - and effectively allow the government to go through their garbage.

“Placing microchips in bins capable of monitoring the content of weight of household refuse produces yet another piece of data for the state on an individual’s private life it has no right to have,” the group said in a report published Friday.

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/nationworld/sns-ap-eu-britain-waste-watchers,0,3791290.story

‘Fake fingerprint’ Chinese woman fools Japan controls

Posted by Richard On December - 9 - 2009

japan fingerprintA Chinese woman managed to enter Japan illegally by having plastic surgery to alter her fingerprints, thus fooling immigration controls, police claim.

Lin Rong, 27, had previously been deported from Japan for overstaying her visa. She was only discovered when she was arrested on separate charges.

Tokyo police said she had paid $15,000 (£9,000) to have the surgery in China.

via BBC News - ‘Fake fingerprint’ Chinese woman fools Japan controls.

climategate_mousepad-p144092557295885696td22_210There was growing speculation [or distraction from the main issue of Global Warming fraud?] on Sunday that hackers working for the Russian secret service were responsible for the theft of controversial emails in the ‘Climategate’ scandal.

Thousands of emails, from the University of East Anglia’s Climatic Research Unit (CRU) were first published on a small server in the city of Tomsk in Siberia.

So-called ‘patriot hackers’ from Tomsk have been used in the past by the Russian secret service, the FSB, to attack websites disliked by the Kremlin, such as the “denial of service” campaign launched against the Kavkaz-Tsentr website, over its reports about the war in Chechnya, in 2002.

via Climategate: was Russian secret service behind email hacking plot? - Telegraph.

Webmasters fume as Google profiles signed-out searchers

Posted by Richard On December - 8 - 2009

googleGoogle is now “personalizing” results even when users have not logged into its web-dominating search site. And SEO types aren’t too happy about it.

Personalization is a euphemism for a Google-controlled practice that involves tweaking your search results according to your past web history. Mountain View was already doing this with users who had signed in to a Google account so they could use non-search services like Gmail and Google Calendar. But now it’s targeting results for all users - whether they’re logged in or not.

Webmasters fume as Google profiles signed-out searchers • The Register.

Is Your Facebook Profile As Private As You Think?

Posted by Richard On November - 2 - 2009

facebookMuch has been made in recent years of the so-called Facebook generation, which supposedly consists of 20-somethings who like to go online and spill their guts without regard for privacy. The reality is more complex.

Yes, social network users post a lot of personal information. But they’re sharing it within a circle of online “friends.” And they fiercely resist outsiders’ attempts to get a peek.

Last summer, city administrators in Bozeman, Mont., began requiring job applicants to provide usernames and passwords to their social networking accounts, as part of the background check. The new requirement caused such an uproar, the city manager held a press conference to apologize.

Is Your Facebook Profile As Private As You Think? : NPR.

FDIC Warns Banks to Watch for ‘Money Mules’ Duped by Hackers

Posted by Richard On November - 2 - 2009

baby_muleBank customers are increasingly being duped into acting as “money mules” for hackers, unwittingly laundering cash stolen from business bank accounts, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation warned the nation’s financial institutions on Thursday.

Using specialized Trojan horse malware, cybercrooks have been intercepting web-banking credentials from the computers of small and midsize businesses, and then initiating wire transfers to mules around the country. The mules are consumers who’ve been lured into fake work-at-home scams, in which their employment involves receiving money transfers and then forwarding the funds to Eastern Europe, either directly or through other mules.

FDIC Warns Banks to Watch for ‘Money Mules’ Duped by Hackers | Threat Level | Wired.com.

Europe plots black boxes for cars

Posted by Richard On November - 2 - 2009

car black boxThe European Commission’s study into feasibility of fitting black box recorders to cars to record 20 types of data in case of accidents looks set to recommend the devices are fitted to all European cars.

Project Veronica, which began in 2003 and cost £2.4m, has dismissed privacy concerns because the boxes only record data in the event of an accident. The boxes will be triggered by sudden deceleration and will only record movement in the 30 seconds prior to an accident, and a few seconds afterwards.

The Commission hopes the boxes will have an impact on road safety by improving accident reconstruction, as well as helping police and insurance companies.

via Europe plots black boxes for cars • The Register.

VIDEO

TAG CLOUD

About Me

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

Twitter

    Photos