The statement “I’ve nothing to hide” is a clear and simple statement of privilege. It says that one is currently totally in line with existing culture power structures, that one is not a minority, or marginalized, or being sought by security forces. Privileged individuals who have no fear of persecution by cultural power structures are usually content to conduct their affairs in the open. These people have a moral obligation to use their privilege to help those who’re marginalized and in the minority, use secure services, encryption and so on to provide cover traffic for the rest.
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Bio
I love how Op-Ed articles in the New York Times always have a mini-bio at the end. I guess they’re there to help you evaluate a source, as a sort of prompt for how many grains of salt should be taken with any given piece. It makes sense for political articles, of course, but the Times runs all kinds of articles, including essays on writing, relationships, anxiety, and so on. All of these have bios. Why? It’s important to know that a rant about how wonderful GMOs are written by the CEO of Monsanto might be biased, but if I want to know what else the clever essayist behind that article about waiting in line at Starbucks has written, I can google their name. Those italic bona fides at the bottom of the article scream, “This is a real writer! Look, she’s been published and everything!” As though I can’t tell by reading an essay whether or not the essay is worth reading.
I love those little bios, though. I often wonder who writes them. What a great job that must be! A tired, grumpy, old newspaper editor chomping at an unlit cigar finally chooses which of the 10,000 submissions to run today, googles the writer, and distills all the major accomplishments of her career into one or two glowing sentences: “Jane Austen is the author of Sense and Sensibility and Pride and Prejudice, among other works. She is widely considered to be one of the greatest English writers of all time.” The editor drops his cigar, smiles for a brief moment, emails his final layout, then lets his face settle back into a well-worn scowl as he reaches for his hip flask. When he goes home after work he dreams of writing praises for the common man and uplifting words for all the budding talent in the world, but he has been transferred to the police desk, and his skills will now be wasted spellchecking the names of victims of senseless crimes.
I wonder if writers who submit articles have any say in what goes into their bios. If I were ever published in the Times, I wouldn’t want one of those terse hagiographies. I’d want my bio to read like a litany of all my flaws and failings: Sebastian Naugahyde, a high school dropout, has never worked hard at anything in his life. This article, the greatest piece he has ever written, stands as the single, soaring exception to prove the rule of his abysmal mediocrity. It’s about shoelaces. May he rest secure in the knowledge that it’s all downhill from here.
Some loser: “Please don’t watch the history of japan video AGAIN! You’ve watched it 83 times already!
Me:
Holy shit you’re right.
El Chapo’s Arrest
I set out to debunk some false narratives around the capture of el Chapo. For example that it is the fault of Sean Penn and his farts, or because of BlackBerry, or because of too many tacos.
There are good reasons that Guzman got arrested, and it is interesting to see why it happened.
Part 1: The Futile Fugitive
TSA transparency activist seeks injunction against mandatory full-body scanners
Ever since the TSA broke the law and abused him, Sai has been suing them over their illegal conduct, forcing them into court and then demonstrating to the court that the agency refuses to play by any rules, even its own.
Last week, the TSA announced that its agents, at their sole discretion and without any published guidelines, would be able to force people through the “optional” full body scanners, even if they opted out.
Sai has filed a motion for an emergency preliminary injunction/temporary restraining order in the First Circuit, seeking to have a court prohibit the TSA from forcing travellers through its scanners.
Sai represents himself at court, and is seeking pro bono counsel and amici. You can also support his Patreon fundraiser.
http://boingboing.net/2015/12/24/tsa-transparency-activist-seek.html
I’m going to start posting here more often.
Ironically, modern surveillance states are baffled by people who change countries
Scott Smith and his family moved from the USA to the Netherlands and discovered that despite living in the most heavily surveilled moment in human history, neither his old country nor his new one can figure out how to relate to them.
I’ve gone through this myself, in both directions, repeatedly, over a decade, moving back and forth between Canada, Europe and the USA. It’s not just the kafkaesque process of getting working papers and figuring out how to pay your taxes (try convincing the British not to charge you tax on the income you paid tax on in California!), it’s all the rest of it: establishing credit, and, especially, working out access to all the clouds.
I have a Kindle account that I established with a US credit-card, which meant that, while I lived in the UK, I was able to buy US ebooks (but not UK ones, even after I established UK credit-cards too). For a while, the Amazon MP3 store would sell to me from its US branch, then not at all, then from its UK store. Now that I don’t have any UK credit-cards, I can’t buy from it at all again.
Phones are the worst. I changed my UK-based Three SIM to a pay-as-you-go plan, but I can’t top it up with a US-based credit-card (I used to have this problem with my Rogers Canada SIM, too, but then I switched to Wind, which lets me top up with a card from anywhere). I’m in Germany today, and I’ve made a dozen calls and online attempts to figure out how to get my phone working – and now I’ve been locked out of my account.
Did I say phones are the worst? No, utility bills are the worst. Getting set up with the local gas and power companies – a prerequisite, weirdly, for enrolling our daughter in public school! – was a bizarre process of showing up with money-orders (sometimes) or cash (sometimes) and handing it across the counter, getting stamped pieces of paper, bringing them to other windows, and…
Actually, banking is the worst. I got set up with my local credit union (who also needed those utility bills!), only to discover that I couldn’t install their app on my phone. The nice thing about a local credit union is that level-two tech support is the CTO. My CU’s CTO put me in touch with the company’s mobile app developer, who told me that they had deliberately locked their apps so that they wouldn’t install on Android devices that were registered to non-US Gmail accounts, and that Googlerequired them to do this.
Luckily, I know some very senior googlers. But they shamefacedly told me that as far as Google Play and its Android services were concerned, I would always be a UK resident, because I’d turned on merchant services for my Gmail account, so that I could accept payments. Once that bit has been flipped, it could never be unflipped. If I wanted to have a US Android domicile, I’d need to set up a new identity, buy all my apps all over again, and, depending on how I wanted to do things, get all new devices to run that identity on.
Plan B: I got the head of communications for Google Play to give me an on the record statement that said that Google Play doesn’t require region-locking of its vendors, and in fact, it actively discourages the practice. Armed with this statement and the evidence that my CU’s vendor had built apps for half a dozen other US financial institutions that could be installed on UK-based devices, I spent five months helping my credit union’s CTO lobby the vendor to turn off its region-locking bit. As of last week, I have my credit union’s app on my phone.
This all may sound like First World Problems, but it’s just the reverse. The vast numbers of refugees fleeing conflict zones have all of these problems and more, because they’re traumatized and broke as well as disoriented and tempest-tossed. They don’t know senior googlers. They struggle with language barriers. They don’t have high-priced immigration lawyers who go to battle on their behalf.
Changing countries is very nearly impossibly bureaucratic for people with agency, money, connections, and the luxury of time to plan and think. When I get cut off from my SIM, I can pick up another one and email my relatives to let them know how to reach me. But if your relatives are refugees in a distant camp, losing your phone number can mean losing your family (possibly forever).
The borderless world of money and business is, ironically, a world of ever-more-imposing borders for humans. For example, governments have made ineffectual gestures at getting multinationals to pay their taxes, creating systems that assume an adversary with a huge and well-oiled accounting machine. The resulting system is virtually impossible for individuals to understand or comply with.
This is getting worse, not better. I’ve been a country-swapping expatriate for all of this century, and it keeps getting harder – even as the number of people who’re doing what I did, involuntarily, without the support and resources I have, continues to grow.
http://boingboing.net/2015/12/01/ironically-modern-surveillanc.html