May 242013
 

Police arrest owner of SUV in hit-and-run that killed officer

KPHO News 5
by Steve Stout
May 21, 2013

Daryl Raetz, 29, was a six-year veteran of the Phoenix Police Department. (Source: Phoenix police)

Daryl Raetz, 29, was a six-year veteran of the Phoenix Police Department. (Source: Phoenix police)

 

PHOENIX (CBS5) -

Phoenix police arrested an undocumented immigrant in connection with the hit-and-run that killed a Phoenix police officer early Sunday morning.

A Phoenix police officer and a city firefighter have been killed in two separate incidents, city officials said a news briefing Sunday morning.

Jesus Cabrera Molina, 24, is the registered owner of green Ford SUV that was tied to the scene where Officer Daryl Raetz was struck and killed early Sunday morning.

Raetz was assisting other officers in processing a DUI suspect about 3:30 a.m. Sunday near 51st and Cambridge Avenues when he was hit by the dark green SUV.

 

Surprise police found the suspected hit-and-run vehicle on Sunday.

Surprise police found the suspected hit-and-run vehicle on Sunday.

 

Surprise police later stopped the SUV with Molina at the wheel and found damage to the hood and grill consistent with that described by Phoenix police after it left the scene.

Police said Molina consented to a search and while he removed items from his pockets, they noticed a small plastic bag of white powder, later identified as cocaine, fall to the ground.

Phoenix police later arrived at the scene were able to match vehicle parts at the scene of the hit-and-run to the Ford.

Molina was taken to Maricopa County Jail and later identified by an off-duty police officer as the driver of the vehicle that left the fatal scene.

Molina was booked into jail on one count of felony drug possession.

Molina told investigators he was in the U.S. illegally, according to his initial court paperwork.

 

****   VIDEO from CBS 5 – KPHO

 

The investigation continues.

The Arizona Department of Occupational Safety and Health said in a statement on Tuesday, “At this time ADOSH is evaluating whether or not to open an investigation.”

Raetz, 29, was assigned to the 81K squad in the Maryvale Precinct. He was an Iraqi war veteran. He leaves behind a wife and young child.

People wishing to help the family can make online donations at the 100 Club of Arizona.

 

Bradley Harper, 23, was a two-year veteran of the Phoenix Fire Department. (Source: Phoenix fire)

Bradley Harper, 23, was a two-year veteran of the Phoenix Fire Department. (Source: Phoenix fire)

 

Raetz died hours after Phoenix Firefighter Bradley Harper was killed while battling a mulch fire near Lower Buckeye Road and 35th Avenue.

 

** Related: Vehicle that struck, killed Phoenix officer found

 

Click here to donate to the 100 Club’s Survivor Fund in memory of Harper and Raetz.

Direct Link: http://www.kpho.com/story/22300512/police-arrest-owner-of-suv-in-hit-and-run-that-killed-officer

May 242013
 

Chinese hackers said to have accessed law enforcement targets

Cyber marauders sought more than just information on activists — they wanted access to FBI, DOJ investigations on spies in the U.S.

Computer World
by John P. Mello Jr
May 21, 2013

 

Chinese hackers said to have accessed law enforcement targets

Chinese hackers said to have accessed law enforcement targets

 

CSO -

In January 2010, Google shocked the cyber world by confessing it had been the target of an advanced persistent threat lasting months and mounted by hackers connected to China’s People Liberation Army.

“[We] have evidence to suggest that a primary goal of the attackers was accessing the Gmail accounts of Chinese human rights activists,” Google Senior Vice President and Chief Legal Officer David Drummond wrote in blog post at the time.

Now, more that three years after that posting on what came to be known as Operation Aurora, it appears that the cyber marauders were after more than just information on activists. They were also after information on investigations on Chinese spies in the United States being conducted by the FBI and U.S. Department of Justice.

The Aurora hackers gained access on Google’s servers to a database that contained information on U.S. surveillance targets, the Washington Post reported on Monday, citing former and current government officials as sources for the story.

Such information would be invaluable to China because it would allow its intelligence operatives to destroy information before counter intelligence agents got their hands on it and allow the spies to evade capture and prosecution.

The database included years of surveillance information, including thousands of court orders issued to law enforcement officials around the nation seeking to monitor suspects’ email, as well as classified orders targeting foreign subjects and issued under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act.

The incident set off a tiff between Google, the DOJ and FBI, the Post reported, because the federal agencies wanted to access the company’s technical logs and other information about the breach to assess the potential damage done to its counter espionage efforts.
** Also see: Opinion varies on action against Chinese cyberattacks


Google representative Jay Nancarrow said in an email that the company is not commenting on the matter at this time.

Google wasn’t a lone target in Operation Aurora. More than 20 companies were attacked, including Adobe Systems, Juniper Networks, Rackspace, Yahoo, Symantec, Northrop Grumman, Morgan Stanley and Dow Chemical.

Last month, a Microsoft executive said that the Aurora bandits had also breached his company’s servers snooping for accounts it had lawful wiretap orders on. Since that time, the executive has recanted those remarks.

“I was referring to statements in the media from the January 2010 timeframe,” Dave Aucsmith, senior director for Microsoft’s Institute for Advanced Technology, said in a statement.

“My comments were not meant to cite any specific Microsoft analysis or findings about motive or attacks, but I recognize that my language was imprecise,” he added.

Matt Thomlinson, Microsoft’s general manager for trustworthy computing and security added in an email, “The so-called ‘Aurora’ attacks did not breach the MS network.”

The Chinese government has denied being behind Aurora. It has noted that cyber attacks and espionage are against Chinese law and has done all it can to combat such online activities.

While an attack on the database is feasible, because of the breadth of Aurora, it’s unlikely it was a specific target, reasoned Jeffrey Carr, CEO of Taia Global and author of  “Inside Cyber Warfare: Mapping the Cyber Underworld.”

“Google was only one of 20-plus companies attacked at the same time by the same group,” he said in an interview. “So I would be surprised if the database was the objective of the attack. It was likely a crime of opportunity.”

It’s also an object lesson for organizations dealing with cloud storage that’s operated by a third party, added Alan Brill, senior managing director for Kroll Advisory Solutions.

 ”There’s more trust being given to cloud services than some of them deserve,” he said in an interview. “It has become so easy [to store data somewhere else] that you might store something somewhere without thinking whether or not you really ought to do that.”

Direct Link:  http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/9239440/Chinese_hackers_said_to_have_accessed_law_enforcement_targets?taxonomyId=82

May 202013
 

Google Glass: Privacy, policy violation worries arise with wearable gadget

New York Newsday
by Newsday Wires
May 19, 2013

 

Photo credit: AP | Google co-rounder Sergey Brin wears Google Glass glasses at an announcement for the Breakthrough Prize in Life Sciences at Genentech Hall on UCSF’s Mission Bay campus in San Francisco. (Feb. 20, 2013)

Photo credit: AP | Google co-rounder Sergey Brin wears Google Glass glasses at an announcement for the Breakthrough Prize in Life Sciences at Genentech Hall on UCSF’s Mission Bay campus in San Francisco. (Feb. 20, 2013)

 

Google staged four discussions expounding on the finer points of its “Glass” wearable computer during this week’s developer conference. Missing from the agenda, however, was a session on etiquette when using the recording-capable gadget, which some attendees faithfully wore everywhere – including to the crowded bathrooms.

Google Glass, a cross between a mobile computer and eyeglasses that can both record video and surf the Internet, is now available to a select few but is already among the year’s most buzz-worthy new gadgets. The device has geeks all aflutter but is unnerving everyone from lawmakers to casino operators worried about the potential for hitherto unimagined privacy and policy violations.

“I had a friend and we’re sitting at dinner and about 30 minutes into it she said, ‘You know those things freak me out,’” said Allen Firstenberg, a technology consultant at the Google developers conference. He has been wearing Glass for about a week but offered to take them off for the comfort of his dinner companion.

On another occasion, Firstenberg admitted to walking into a bathroom wearing his Glass without realizing it.

“Most of the day I totally forget it’s there,” he said.

Many believe wearable computers represent the next big shift in technology, just as smartphones evolved from personal computers. Apple and Samsung are said to be working on other forms of wearable technology.

Some 70 million connected wearable gadgets will be sold in 2017, up from 15 million this year, according to Juniper Research. While the devices are now mainly fitness monitors from brands such as Nike Inc. and Fitbit Inc., Apple has a team working on a watch-like device, people familiar with the company’s plans said in February. Samsung said in March it was also developing a wristwatch.

The test version of Glass looks like a clear pair of eyeglasses with a hefty slab along the right side. Since it began shipping to a couple thousand carefully selected early adopters who paid about $1,500 for the device, it has inspired a bit of ridicule – from a parody on “Saturday Night Live” to a popular blog poking fun at its users.

Other industry experts take a more serious tack, pointing out the potential for misuse because Glass can record video far less conspicuously than a handheld device.

Glass also has won many fans. Google and some early users maintain that privacy fears are overblown. As with traditional video cameras, a tiny light blinks on to let people know when it is recording.

Several Glass wearers at the developers conference said they whip the device off in inappropriate situations, such as in gym locker rooms or work meetings. Michael Evans, a Web developer from Washington, D.C., attending the Google conference, said he removed his Glass when he went to the movies, even though the device would be ill-suited for recording a feature-length film.

“I just figured I don’t want to be the first guy kicked out of the movies,” he said.


NO GLASS ALLOWED

A stamp-sized electronic screen mounted on the left side of a pair of eyeglass frames, Glass can record video, access email, provide turn-by-turn driving directions and retrieve info from the Web by connecting wirelessly to a user’s cell phone.

Google Executive Chairman Eric Schmidt dismissed concerns about the brave new world of wearable computers during a talk at Harvard University’s Kennedy School of Government in April.

“Criticisms are inevitably from people who are afraid of change or who have not figured out that there will be an adaptation of society to it,” he said.

Schmidt acknowledged that there are certain places where Glass will not be appropriate but that he believed new rules of social etiquette will coalesce over time. Firstenberg said it will take time for all sides to get comfortable with the new technology.

“I don’t think we should go into the conversation assuming that Glass is bad,” he said.

Indeed, previous technology innovations such as mobile phones and wireless headsets that initially raised concerns are now subject to tacit rules of etiquette, such as not talking loudly on the bus and turning a ringer off in a meeting.

Still, some have decided to leave nothing to chance.

Casino operator Caesar’s Entertainment recently announced that Glass is not permitted while gambling or when in showrooms, though guests can wear it in other areas. In March, Seattle‘s Five Point Cafe made headlines for becoming the first bar to ban Glass. “Respect our customers privacy as we’d expect them to respect yours,” says a statement on the café’s website.

The California Highway Patrol says there is no law that explicitly forbids a driver from wearing Glass while driving in the state. But according to Officer Elon Steers, if a driver appears to be distracted as a result of the device, an officer can take enforcement action.

PRIVACY TRACK RECORD

Lawmakers are beginning to consider Glass.

On Thursday, eight members of the U.S. Congress sent a letter to Google Chief Executive Larry Page, asking for details about how Glass handles various privacy issues, including whether it is capable of facial recognition.

According to Google, there are no facial recognition technologies built into the device and it has no plans to do so “unless we have strong privacy protections in place.” During one of this week’s conference sessions – an open discussion about Glass – members of the Glass team answered a question about privacy by noting that social implications and etiquette have been a big area of focus during the development of the product, which is still a test version.

Some of the Glass-phobia may stem from Google’s own track record on privacy. In 2010, Google revealed that its fleet of Street View cars, which criss-cross the globe taking panoramic photos for the Google Maps product, also had captured personal information such as emails and web pages that were transmitted over unencrypted home wireless networks.

“The fact that it’s Google offering the service, as opposed to say Brookstone, raises privacy issues,” said Marc Rotenberg, the executive director of the Electronic Privacy Information Center, a non-profit privacy advocacy group, citing Google’s history and its scale in Internet advertising.

Rotenberg says his main concern centers on the stream of data collected by the devices – everything from audio and video to a user’s location data – going to Google’s data centers.

Ryan Calo, a University of Washington law professor who specializes in privacy and technology, said Glass is not very different from other technologies available today, whether it is a smartphone or “spy” pens that secretly record audio.

But Glass is on people’s faces, so it feels different.

“The face is a really intimate place and to have a piece of technology on it is unsettling,” Calo said. “Much as a drone is unsettling because we have some ideas of war.” For all the hand-wringing, some early adopters are sold.

Ryan Warner, who recently graduated from college and who has developed a recipe app for Glass with Evans, said he was surprised by the reaction he got when he went to a bar.

“I was like, ‘I don’t know if I should have it on or not.’ I was kind of in that phase,” he said, “and the bouncer was like, ‘Oh, my god, is that Google Glass?’ He was excited.”

 

Direct Link:  http://newyork.newsday.com/business/technology/google-glass-privacy-policy-violation-worries-arise-with-wearable-gadget-1.5292623

May 202013
 

Google Glass gets apps for Facebook, Twitter, Tumblr and more


NBC News

by Rosa Golijan
May 16, 2013

Google Glass gets apps for Facebook, Twitter, Tumblr and more. (Tony Quintano / NBC News)

Google Glass gets apps for Facebook, Twitter, Tumblr and more. (Tony Quintano / NBC News)

 

While very few folks have access to Google Glass, a wave of apps is already available for the futuristic headsets.

On Thursday, during a developer session at the Google I/O conference in San Francisco, Timothy Jordan, a senior developer advocate at Google, unveiled the latest apps available for Glass. Joining the New York Times and Path apps, there are now apps for Facebook, Twitter, Evernote, Elle, Tumblr and CNN.

With the Twitter app, Glass users can post photos (which are flagged with a “Just shared a photo #throughglass” caption). It’s also possible to keep up on tweets, including mentions and direct messages, and you can also reply, retweet, and favorite.

Google Glass Screenshot

Google Glass Screenshot

 

The CNN app sends news stories and videos to Glass, in user-specified categories, which are updated at user-selected intervals.

Similar to CNN, the Elle app sends the latest news right to Glass. It mainly focuses on headlines, so you can easily add items to reading lists for later (though you can also have articles read aloud by Glass).

The Facebook app is fairly limited, mainly allowing you to share photos directly from Glass to Facebook, along with captions. If you accidentally share an item, the app allows you to quickly remove it right away through Glass.

Google Glass App

Google Glass App

 

The Evernote app seems to revolve around two activities — sending photos or videos to Evernote and sending notes from the Web version of Evernote to Glass, so the content is available for later reference. There’s no way to do any elaborate editing via Glass just yet.

With the Tumblr app, you can get updates just as you might in your Tumblr dashboard. You can adjust how often you get updates and also post your own, including videos, text and photos.

Those who already have Glass can enable these new apps by heading to google.com/myglass.

 

Direct Link:  http://www.nbcnews.com/technology/google-glass-gets-apps-facebook-twitter-tumblr-more-1C9959298