Wednesday, 6 August 2008
Rudd's 'Grocery Choice' website now showing price comparisons for NE NSW
If Conroy filters the Internet online banking may grow riskier
Communications Minister Stephen Conroy has welcomed "improvements" in ISP filtering technologies, but will a broad-scale roll-out make ISPs a thief's favourite target?
The great success of the ISP filtering trial was that current technologies impose far less interference on an ISP's network than similar tests done five years ago.
Newton raised an interesting idea: for an ISP to filter HTTPS sessions it would have to engage in a Man in the Middle attack, where the attacker intercepts and changes information being transmitted between two parties...
Normally HTTPS means that data streams pass unfettered between your computer and the bank's servers, but ISP filtering would see that data unencrypted at the ISP, inspected, re-encrypted and then forwarded on to you and the bank.
Now, I don't use Dodo, Exetel or TPG, but these ISPs don't seem to be able to afford call centre staff, so can we rely on these ISPs to implement whatever technology the government approves?
And if the filtering products run on Windows operating systems, what happens if and when those systems become infected with a trojan or virus that siphon information to cybercrims?
Let's hope we find out a little more about the security and privacy implications in the "live" trials the government plans to run in the coming months.
Unfortunately for Liam and the blogosphere, it is highly unlikely that Senator Conroy or his staff have even given this issue a passing thought.
From where I am sitting, the progressing of this national ISP filtering scheme is principally about a narrow, faith-based, ideology ridden agenda.
I can't eat a web site, Mr. Rudd
"Grocery Choice" it's going to call it and this site will give us all a snapshot of the monthly cost of an average basket of groceries across 61 regions.
Fat lot of good that will do us on the Northern Rivers.
Where I live there is only one, that's right one, retail grocery store and it can charge what it likes and serve up whatever dubious quality of goods it likes.
The idea of encouraging competition and instituting unit pricing is a real laugh - since the beginning of the year this Coles store has offered at premium prices rotten potatoes, peanuts in the shell infested with insects, packaged tomatoes with splitting skins and mould, spoiled apples and cheese well beyond its shelf life.
"Grocery Choice"? Silly, silly, silly.
I can't see how Labor's Chris Bowen kept a straight face when he fronted the cameras over this one.
North Coast Pensioner
Visual feast from the NSW North Coast region
My favourite website disclaimer
Disclaimer found at an Alaskan version of The Flat Earth Society, "Deprogramming the masses since 1547".
"The Flat Earth Society is not in any way responsible for the failure of the French to repel the Germans at the Maginot Line during WWII. Nor is the Flat Earth Society responsible for the recent yeti sightings outside the Vatican, or for the unfortunate enslavement of the Nabisco Inc. factory employees by a rogue hamster insurrectionist group. Furthermore, we are not responsible for the loss of one or more of the following, which may possibly occur as the result of exposing one's self to the dogmatic and dangerously subversive statements made within: life, limb, vision, Francois Mitterand, hearing, taste, smell, touch, thumb, Aunt Mildred, citizenship, spleen, bedrock, cloves, I Love Lucy reruns, toaster, pine derby racer, toy duck, antelope, horseradish, prosthetic ankle, double-cheeseburger, tin foil, limestone, watermelon-scented air freshner, sanity, paprika, German to Pig Latin dictionary, dish towel, pet Chihuahua, pogo stick, Golf Digest subscription, floor tile, upper torso or halibut.
Copyright © 1998 Flat Earth Society Inc. All rights reserved."
Tuesday, 5 August 2008
US 08: when fat counts at the ballot box?
It seems that many political commentators are reduced to reading tealeaves at this early stage of a U.S. presidential race. One which will apparently be decided more on the basis of the voluntary turnout level at polling booths than it is by the stated preferences of current poll respondents.Image from Cleveland.com
The Oklahoma Poll found that Republican John McCain has broad support in the state to lead Obama by 32%age points, 56% to 24%. Seventy-one percent of those questioned say they are firm in their decisions.
The poll, sponsored by the Tulsa World and television station KOTV, is a statewide survey of 750 likely voters that was conducted July 19-23. The poll's margin of error is plus or minus 3.58%age points.
2008 scenario for Aussie cartoonist heaven
Cartoonists' dream scenario:

