September 2025 S M T W T F S 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 Tag Cloud
-
Recent Posts
- CV19 SelfDefense Mobile Phone App now available for download
- Women are pretending to be men on Instagram to circumvent algorithmic blocking
- Breaking New Ground in Human-Computer Interactions Research
- Hackers New Tactic: Locking All the Doors at an Expensive Hotel
- DARPA’s Master Plan to Spot Facebook Terrorists?
Archives
Miami-Dade police buy unmanned surveillance drone to watch over the city
The Miami-Dade Police Department is poised to become the first large metro force using drones in its aerial missions. The department finalized a deal to buy a drone called T-Hawk from defense firm Honeywell and officially applied for permission from the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) last month to begin flying it around the county.
What’s not clear is how cops will sort out the raft of thorny privacy questions hovering around plans for using this powerful, new eye in the sky.
“At this point, it doesn’t really matter if you’re against this technology, because it’s coming,” says P. W. Singer, author of Wired for War and an expert on drones. “The precedent that is set in Miami could be huge.”
Miami New Times – 12/9/2010: http://www.miaminewtimes.com/2010-12-09/news/miami-dade-police-buy-drones/
Rest assured that citizens of Miami have nothing to fear though (so long as they don’t do anything out of the ordinary)
It’s not always a good idea to expose something bad
Ex-CIA agent detained over ‘Iran leak’
A former CIA intelligence officer has been arrested by US authorities for leaking classified information exposing Washington’s schemes to sabotage Iran’s nuclear program.
The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) arrested Jeffrey Alexander Sterling in the city of St. Louis on Thursday for disclosing national defense information to a New York Times reporter.
Details in Sterling’s indictment suggest that the case is connected to a 2006 book written by the daily’s reporter James Risen. The book, State of War: The Secret History of the CIA and the Bush Administration, contains details about the spy agency’s plans to sabotage Iran’s nuclear research program.
According to Risen, in an operation codenamed “Merlin” the United States attempted to provide Iran with flawed blueprints for key nuclear components through a Russian nuclear scientist.
However, the scientist allegedly double-crossed, cooperating with the Iranian side in revealing the flaws in the designs. The Iranians were able to “extract valuable information from the blueprints while ignoring the flaws,” the book adds.
Iranian observers, however, scoff at the report, emphasizing that the Iranian scientist do not need others to point out design flaws and that they are competent enough to detect potential flaws on their own.
Sterling, who worked at the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) from 1993 until he was fired in 2002, had served as the chief operations officer handling a “human asset” in a program related to the nuclear capabilities of a foreign country, said the indictment charges.
The United States, as the only country to have used a nuclear weapon on another state, adamantly opposes Iran’s nuclear program, claiming without any evidence that it harbors a secret military aspect.
Tehran has refuted the accusations, arguing that as a signatory to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), it has the right to benefit from the peaceful applications of the nuclear technology.
As a member of the NPT, Iran has long pushed efforts to establish a nuclear-weapons-free zone in the Middle East, insisting on a global elimination of nuclear weapons.