It. In an impassioned Senate floor speech yesterday, the California Democrat accused the CIA of criminal activity for allegedly searching computers used by Senate staffers. The CIA set up the computers at a secure location in northern Virginia so Senate Intelligence Committee staff could access classified documents pertaining to the CIA The link for this article located at Wired is no longer available. . A passionate address by a Californian Democrat in the Senate condemns the CIA for allegedly violating the law by probing Senate staff computer systems.. CIA Hack, Intelligence Scandal, Senate Computers, Unlawful Access. . Alex
"There's a lot of good stuff in Pd [Palladium], and a lot I like about it. There's also a lot I don't like and am scared of. My fear is that Pd will lead us down a road where our computers are no longer our computers, but are instead owned by a variety of factions and companies all looking for a piece of our wallet. To the extent that Pd facilitates that reality. . . .. "There's a lot of good stuff in Pd [Palladium], and a lot I like about it. There's also a lot I don't like and am scared of. My fear is that Pd will lead us down a road where our computers are no longer our computers, but are instead owned by a variety of factions and companies all looking for a piece of our wallet. To the extent that Pd facilitates that reality, it's bad for society. I don't mind companies selling, renting or licensing things to me, but the loss of the power, reach and flexibility of the computer is too great a price to pay." --Bruce Schneier, Cryptogram, Aug. 15, 2002 Goddesses and Horses Athena, born full-grown from the head of Zeus, was trained in the fighting arts. She accidentally killed her friend, Pallas, during a game. It saddened her so much that she appended the name of her friend to her own. A statue of Pallas Athena in full armor, known as the Palladium, stood guard over the ancient city of Troy. Legend held that as long as the statue was safe, so was the city. During the 10th year of the Trojan War, Odysseus and Diomed stole the statue. The city soon fell to the nefarious Greeks, who hid inside a wooden horse. The link for this article located at Roberta Bragg is no longer available. . Palladium technology from Microsoft enhances security and trust in digital environments but raises concerns over user autonomy and potential corporate control. Palladium, Technology Ownership, Security Risks, Software Dependency, Hardware Challenges. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
The Stoughton Board of Education Tuesday night voted unanimously to expel a Stoughton High School student for illegally gaining entrance to school computers and altering grades and attendance records. Monday night's expulsion hearing was the first of three separate hearings scheduled for this week for the three students alleged to have been the main actors in the scheme. The expulsion hearing was closed to the press and public. . . .. The Stoughton Board of Education Tuesday night voted unanimously to expel a Stoughton High School student for illegally gaining entrance to school computers and altering grades and attendance records. Monday night's expulsion hearing was the first of three separate hearings scheduled for this week for the three students alleged to have been the main actors in the scheme. The expulsion hearing was closed to the press and public. Several students have also been suspended in the case, which involves as many as 20 students, some of whom reportedly had grades changed unbeknownst to them. The link for this article located at Stoughton News is no longer available. . The Maplewood School District unanimously decided to suspend a student from Maplewood High for infiltrating their computer networks.. Stoughton High School, Cyber Misconduct, School Security, Education Policy. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Sparked by heightened security concerns since the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, the Defense Department has begun laying the groundwork to ban non-U.S. citizens from a wide range of computer projects. The planned policy--slated for adoption within 90 days--extends restrictions on . . . . Sparked by heightened security concerns since the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, the Defense Department has begun laying the groundwork to ban non-U.S. citizens from a wide range of computer projects. The planned policy--slated for adoption within 90 days--extends restrictions on foreign nationals handling secret information to "sensitive but unclassified positions," which include the swelling numbers of contract workers who process paychecks, write software, track supplies and maintain e-mail systems. The move comes amid a growing awareness of the vulnerability of government computer systems in an era when software espionage and malicious hacking have become commonplace. The Defense Department's proposal, covering a work force that accounts for one-third of federal civilian employees, would represent the most sweeping implementation of the government's restrictions on foreign technology workers. The much-smaller Justice Department instituted little-noticed restrictions in July, and the Treasury Department has had a ban on noncitizens working on its communications systems since 1998. The link for this article located at LA Times is no longer available. . Sparked by heightened security concerns since the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, the Defense Department. sparked, heightened, security, concerns, since, terrorist, attacks, defense, department. . Anthony Pell
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