Vote USA 2004

15
Dez
2005

Congressman Dennis Kucinich: The President Is Responsible For The Dead And Injured US Troops, Dead Iraqi Civilians, Waste Of $250 Billion Taxpayer Money, and Failed Occupation

http://www.commondreams.org/news2005/1214-10.htm

A Defendants' Guide to the GOP "Revolution"

http://www.commondreams.org/views05/1214-25.htm

US Oil From Nigeria Tainted With Blood

http://www.commondreams.org/views05/1214-30.htm

Does 30,000 Mean Anything to Bush?

http://www.commondreams.org/views05/1214-29.htm

Bush Friend Linked to Top Job in Russian Oil Industry

http://www.commondreams.org/headlines05/1214-03.htm

Vandana Shiva Takes Fight Against Monsanto to Hong Kong

http://www.commondreams.org/headlines05/1214-05.htm

Pentagon Rolls Out Stealth Psych War Campaign

http://www.commondreams.org/headlines05/1214-01.htm

Tom Ridge Says Get Ready For National ID

Branding the slaves........ America's founders spinning in their graves..... The Republi-Christians vote themselves the Mark of the Beast..... Your papers please, this is AmeriKa, with a great big fat "K". The great end time Babylon marches on......

Dan 7:19 Then I would know the truth of the fourth beast, which was diverse from all the others, exceeding dreadful, whose teeth were of iron, and his nails of brass; which devoured, brake in pieces, and stamped the residue with his feet.

Milo

----------------------------

Tom Ridge, security guru disagree on national ID card

Counterpane CTO Bruce Schneier says ID card is a bad idea

By Robert McMillan, IDG News Service

Attendees of the Infosecurity computer security conference in New York heard both sides of the debate on U.S. national identification cards this week. On Wednesday, former U.S. Secretary of Homeland Security Tom Ridge told conference attendees that a national ID card was an inevitability; the next day the show's other keynote speaker, Counterpane Internet Security Inc. Chief Technical Officer Bruce Schneier, claimed that it was a bad idea.

"I think it's expensive, and it won't make us safer," Schneier said. "Yes, you've got a valid ID. All the 9/11 terrorists had a valid ID."

Schneier said that the complexity of maintaining a national database would be overwhelming, and could ultimately make the U.S. less secure. "Once you start looking at the entire system, you realize it's a nightmare."

Ridge, in contrast, said that national security requirements would ultimately make such cards a reality. He said that he hoped the controversial topic would be the subject of a civil debate between lawmakers. "We're going to need to deal with questions like the national ID," he said. Ultimately, such a card would "evolve" into existence, he predicted.

One conference attendee said that a new federal identification requirement, outlined in an August 2004 executive order from President George Bush,
http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2004/08/20040827-8.html

could be the first step in this evolution.

Though they are just starting to emerge now, once products that meet this new federal requirement are commercially available, they will "most likely" be adopted in corporate environments, said George Fitel, vice president of feasibility and assessment for Wavera, a security research firm based in Chicago.

Though there is strong political opposition to the idea of a national ID card in the U.S. right now, Fitel, like Ridge, said he believes that the idea will ultimately be adopted. "Politics are always going to be changing. There are certain things that are going to rise above politics," he said.

Schneier, for his part, said that simplicity was the key to security. Simplicity is something that should be embraced by the entire security industry, not just the proponents of a national ID card, he added.

When a conference attendee asked him what role user education should play in computer security, Schneier called the education issue "over-rated," and said that computer products should be simple enough that education becomes a non-issue. "When we say we must educate a user, we're covering up for a failure in our systems," he said.

"We have convinced the world that everybody needs a computer," Schneier added. "And at the same time, we've made computers so hard to maintain that if you don't have a sysadmin, you're doomed. You can't have it both ways. It's either a end-user, consumer item or it's not."

Copyright © 2005 InfoWorld

The war, American public opinion, and moral sensibility

http://www.ufppc.org/content/view/3777/


Informant: jensenmk

From ufpj-news

NY Times Accepts the Unacceptable

http://www.newswithviews.com/Hughes/sharon32.htm
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