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  • ‘AT&T Hacker’ Sentenced to Prison for Revealing Security Flaw, Digital Rights Organization Joins Appeal

    Before his sentencing hearing, Andrew Auernheimer, who was convicted on one of charge of conspiracy under the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act (CFAA) and one charge of fraud involving personal information, declared in a statement that he was going to jail for “arithmetic.”

    Twenty-six year-old security researcher, known as “Weev,” was sentenced to forty-one months in prison, three years of supervised release and ordered pay $73,000 in restitution to AT&T.

    The Verge reported that prosecutors had cited a Reddit chat he did on Sunday night when justifying the length of his sentencing. In other words, speech he engaged in where he showed no remorse for his action was used against him.

    During proceedings, Auernheimer tried to use a tablet. He was cuffed by agents. He left the courtroom and returned in shackles five minutes later.

    The Electronic Frontier Foundation announced the digital rights organization would be supporting an appeal before the Third Circuit Court of Appeals. “Weev is facing more than three years in prison because he pointed out that a company failed to protect its users’ data, even though his actions didn’t harm anyone,” EFF Senior Staff Attorney Marcia Hofmann said in a press release. “The punishments for computer crimes are seriously off-kilter, and Congress needs to fix them.”

    The appeal indicated that EFF, along with other attorneys, would be making his case a part of a legal effort to challenge CFAA. EFF Staff Attorney Hanni Fakhoury said Weev’s case shows how “problematic” the CFAA happens to be.

    The CFAA has come under scrutiny and faced calls for reform since Aaron Swartz, who was being zealously prosecuted under the law for downloading documents off an academic database, committed suicide in January.

    Auernheimer spoke to Mashable. In the interview he recounts how, in June 2010, there was an AT&T public server that he discovered was exposing customers’ personal data.

    “There was a URL in this web server with a number at the end,” he explains. “And, if you would add 1 to this number, you would see the next iPad 3G user email address. I figured it was egregiously negligent for AT&T to be publishing a complete target list of their customers.”

    According to Auernheimer, AT&T had a chance to address this security flaw in this public application programming interface (API), which is defined as a group of routines, protocols and tools for building software applications. Auerneheimer then sampled data from the API, aggregated it and gave the data to a journalist because he felt “if a company puts you at risk you deserve to know about it and they deserve to be embarrassed.”

    He only waited a few hours before handing over data, but Auernheimer said he believed there was a limited amount of time before AT&T would have issued an injunction so the company’s customers would not find out about the flaw. Also, it was out on the open Internet. He is a security researcher and believes, “You don’t have the right to say you can’t cite this thing you published,” and, “You don’t have the right to cry later about how people use it to criticize you.”

    Full article: http://dissenter.fir … zation-joins-appeal/


  • If Alan Greenspan Wants To ‘End The Fed’, Times Must Be Changing

    For a long time, gold standard advocates in the United States have had differing viewpoints about whether a new gold standard system might take place with existing institutions, such as the Federal Reserve, or whether it would take place with new institutions, and the Federal Reserve would in effect be disbanded or rendered irrelevant.

    During the 1980s or 1990s, it seemed politically impossible to even consider a situation in which the existing monetary plumbing would be torn out and replaced with some “free banking system” or other such solution. The Fed, under Greenspan and Volcker, seemed to have a pretty good handle on things. The economy was doing well and people were enjoying a Great Bull Market in both stocks and bonds. This was not the time when you throw everything overboard for some goofy new idea.

    Instead, the notion then was that the Fed was, in effect, mimicking a gold standard anyway. The end effect of Volcker and Greenspan’s management was that the value of the dollar was stable vs. gold around $350/oz. during those decades. The argument was that this goal could be achieved in a far better way by simply linking the dollar’s value to gold directly, as was the case with the $35/oz. Bretton Woods parity of the 1950s and 1960s.

    As Alan Greenspan said during his last talk before the House Financial Affairs Committee in July 2005:

    “And, indeed, since the late ’70s, central bankers generally have behaved as though we were on the gold standard.”

    Ridiculous? In July 2005, the value of the dollar vs. gold averaged $424/oz. In August 1987, when Greenspan arrived at the Fed, it averaged $450/oz. Point-to-point, over the eighteen years of Greenspan’s tenure, the result was just as if the U.S. was on a gold standard system. The problem was all the volatility and uncertainty in between. We just wanted Greenspan and the Fed to “behave as though we were on a gold standard” a little more rigorously.

    Also, the gold standard advocates of the 1980s and 1990s were a pretty kooky bunch, pounding the table for all kinds of “100% pure gold standard system” notions that were honestly rather laughable, and unusable in practice. What they called a “gold standard” did not resemble any actual gold standard system in use in the previous two centuries. Among a more sober and sophisticated crowd, these people got the attention they deserved, namely: zero.

    Today, however, the situation is different. The Federal Reserve seems to be ambling along a well-trod path to rampant currency debauchment. Historically, the currency manager in these situations is indeed replaced, whether the Reichsbank of 1920s Germany (replaced by the Rentenbank) or the U.S. Federal government-issued Continental Dollar, replaced by a free banking system and, in fact, a new Federal government.

    Also, gold standard advocates these days seem to have outgrown some of their more imaginative (read: stupid) notions of past decades. I think more progress needs to be made here, but most proposals I see today are actually quite sensible at their core.

    Let’s see what Alan Greenspan has been saying recently:

    “We have at this particular stage a fiat money which is essentially money printed by a government and it’s usually a central bank which is authorized to do so. Some mechanism has got to be in place that restricts the amount of money which is produced, either a gold standard or a currency board, because unless you do that all of history suggest that inflation will take hold with very deleterious effects on economic activity… There are numbers of us, myself included, who strongly believe that we did very well in the 1870 to 1914 period with an international gold standard.”

    In the same January 2011 interview, Greenspan apparently wondered out loud if we even require a central bank!

    When Alan Greenspan starts to talk about “End the Fed,” things are changing.

    Full article: http://www.forbes.co … es-must-be-changing/


  • Colorado sheriff: New gun laws will not be enforced

    Calling the new gun laws passed by the Colorado legislature on Friday “unenforceable,” Weld County Sheriff John Cooke said his office would not enforce them, as reported today on FoxNews.com. The bills, which are expected to be signed soon by the state’s Democratic Governor John Hickenlooper, require background checks on the private transfer and sale of firearms and limit magazine capacity at 15 rounds. Cooke said the proposed new gun laws provide a “false sense of security” and will not be enforced.

    via Colorado sheriff: New gun laws will not be enforced