Think Metadata Isn’t Intrusive?

Stephan:  This essay will give you some important facts about Metadata, and give you a better sense of the level of surveillance we all live under.

You’ve probably heard politicians or pundits say that ‘metadata doesn’t matter.” They argue that police and intelligence agencies shouldn’t need probable cause warrants to collect information about our communications. Metadata isn’t all that revealing, they say, it’s just numbers.

But the digital metadata trails you leave behind every day say more about you than you can imagine. Now, thanks to two MIT students, you don’t have to imagine-at least with respect to your email.

Deepak Jagdish and Daniel Smilkov’s Immersion program maps your life, using your email account. After you give the researchers access to your email metadata-not the content, just the time and date stamps, and ‘To” and ‘Cc” fields-they’ll return to you a series of maps and graphs that will blow your mind. The program will remind you of former loves, illustrate the changing dynamics of your professional and personal networks over time, mark deaths and transitions in your life, and more. You’ll probably learn something new about yourself, if you study it closely enough. (The students say they delete your data on your command.)

Whether or not you grant the program access to your data, watch the video embedded below to see Jagdish and Smilkov show illustrations from Immersion and […]

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Managing Marijuana in Uruguay

Stephan:  Colorado and Washington have gotten most of the press, but it is Uruguay that has taken the biggest step, and that may ultimately influence the most people. Here's the latest. If Uruguay successfully creates a post Prohibition economy and legal system, it will spread through South and Central America very quickly.

MONTEVIDEO, URUGUAY — Uruguay, about to become the first country in the world where the state will fully regulate production, sale and distribution of marijuana, will spend the next few months selecting a good quality strain of the crop that can be sold at a price similar to current illegal prices.

Uruguayan President José Mujica signed law 19.172 on the regulation of marijuana on Dec. 23. But it won’t go into effect until April, 120 days after it was approved by Congress on Dec. 10, and once the government has established specific regulations for the new legislation.

Since the 1970s, consumption and possession of small amounts of marijuana for personal use have not been penalised in this South American country of 3.3 million people sandwiched between Argentina and Brazil. But cultivation, sale and distribution of the drug have been illegal up to now.

When the 44-article law enters into force, the entire sector will be under the regulation and oversight of the Institute for the Regulation and Control of Cannabis, a new government institution created by the law.

But there is much to do before April. Among the most important steps are to decide the type of marijuana to be planted, who will grow […]

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The Al Qaeda Switchboard

Stephan:  This is a perceptive essay that challenges orthodoxy, redefining who are the real villians. Another example of the point the essay makes is the comparison between Edward Snowden and the Bush Cheney necons. The one, who has killed no one, nor caused any deaths is considered a traitor, and the others whose actions led to the killing of hundreds of thousands are... what?

Edward Snowden has started a critical debate about the legality and the effectiveness of the N.S.A.’s practice of collecting unlimited records of telephone calls made to, from, and within the United States. Last month, two federal judges came to opposing conclusions about these issues. On December 16th, Judge Richard J. Leon, in Washington, D.C., ruled that the indiscriminate hoarding violates the Fourth Amendment right to privacy and its prohibition of unreasonable searches. Two weeks later, in New York, Judge William H. Pauley III ruled that the metadata-collection program was lawful and effective.

Judge Pauley invoked the example of Khalid al-Mihdhar, a Saudi jihadist who worked for Al Qaeda. On 9/11, he was one of the five hijackers of American Airlines Flight 77, which crashed into the Pentagon. In early 2000, Mihdhar made seven calls from San Diego to an Al Qaeda safe house in Yemen. According to Pauley, the N.S.A. intercepted the calls, but couldn’t identify where Mihdhar was calling from. Relying on testimony by Robert Mueller, the former director of the F.B.I., Pauley concluded that metadata collection could have allowed the bureau to discover that the calls were being made from the U.S., in which case the bureau could have […]

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Marijuana Case Filings Plummet in Colorado Following Legalization

Stephan:  This is very good news, although this is a rather snarky article. I am using it because it is the best one I have seen in terms of the basic facts. Quite predictably, but now validated with real data, we see a benefit arising from the end of Marijuana Prohibition in Colorado. It is going to save the state tens of millions of dollars and, long term considering incarceration billions. And that to say nothing of the blatant racism inherent to Prohibition. You have probably noticed that SR has had a number of Marijuana stories, and wonder why? The answer is Marijuana Prohibition, like the Alcohol Prohibition that preceded it is a very negative trend that affects in bad way the lives of hundreds of thousands of people each year. And unlike climate change which will take years of remediation a failed social program like prohibition can be changed quickly, by changing law.

Charges for all manner of marijuana crimes plummeted in the months after Colorado voters legalized limited possession of cannabis for people over 21.

According to a Denver Post analysis of data provided by the Colorado Judicial Branch, the number of cases filed in state court alleging at least one marijuana offense plunged 77 percent between 2012 and 2013. The decline is most notable for charges of petty marijuana possession, which dropped from an average of 714 per month during the first nine months of 2012 to 133 per month during the same period in 2013 – a decline of 81 percent.

That may have been expected – after all, people over 21 can now legally possess up to an ounce of marijuana. But The Post’s analysis shows state prosecutors also pursued far fewer cases for marijuana crimes that remain illegal in Colorado.

For instance, charges for possessing more than 12 ounces of marijuana dropped by 73 percent, and cases alleging possession with intent to distribute fewer than 5 pounds of marijuana dipped by 70 percent. Even charges for public consumption of marijuana fell statewide, by 17 percent, although Denver police have increased their number of citations issued for public consumption.

While marijuana prosecutions against […]

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Big Ag’s Big Lie: Factory Farms, Your Health and the New Politics of Antibiotics

Stephan:  This is a very important essay on a trend that is going to change our world, in a very difficult way -- The unholy alliance between Big Ag and Big Pharma that has created industrial animal husbandry and the overuse of antibiotics. This system is leading to the collapse of Western medicine with massive negative social implications. Once again we see profit for the few trumping wellness for the many. This story should be on the front page of every paper in the country, and a segment on every digital production. That it is not is an issue in itself.

Every September, the Animal Health Institute, the trade group of the animal pharmaceutical industry, hosts a party on Capitol Hill called Celebrity Pet Night. The AHI describes its signature social event as a night for ‘members of Congress and their staff – as well as friends of the animal health community – to gather to celebrate America’s pets.” Held in the ornate Caucus Room of the Cannon House Office Building, the party receives high marks from D.C. society columnists for its classy setting, loaded double bar and zoological star power. Recent guests of honor include the cat Lord Tubbington from ‘Glee” and the French bulldog from the Robert Downey Jr. buddy-flick bomb ‘Due Date.”

As the AHI tells it, these animal celebrities ‘bring awareness to the connection between animal health and human health.” In this way the evening functions as an extension of AHI’s public relations campaign in defense of the factory farm system and the drugs it requires to function. Most people have never heard of that campaign, which is named ‘Healthy People, Healthy Animals, Healthy Planet.” But it’s well known in the worlds of Big Ag, Big Pharma, and PR. In 2009, not long after Celebrity Pet Night featured […]

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