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Will Apple's New Patent Push Delete on Ability to Record Police? |
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Friday, 08 July 2016 08:27 |
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Ozer writes: "Imagine: You pull out your phone to record police misconduct - suddenly, your camera just doesn't work. Turns out, your phone's camera has been disabled by an infrared emitter."
Woman films the police at a protest. (photo: YouTube)

Will Apple's New Patent Push Delete on Ability to Record Police?
By Nicole A. Ozer, American Civil Liberties Union
08 July 16
magine: You pull out your phone to record police misconduct—suddenly, your camera just doesn’t work. Turns out, your phone’s camera has been disabled by an infrared emitter. Apple’s newly patented technology may make this possible. The technology places an infrared sensor in your phone that has the potential to be disabled remotely. While the technology is being promoted as a tool to prevent the filming of copyrighted material, we think it has the potential to undermine efforts to hold law enforcement accountable.
Smart phones have played an important role in raising awareness of police misconduct, especially when it comes to the disproportionate treatment that people of color and LGBT individuals face by law enforcement. It was a smart phone video, after all, that revealed that a police officer lied when filing his report after fatally shooting Walter Scott in South Carolina. Such videos have also played a role in the investigations of other instances of criminal misconduct, including the death of Eric Garner and the fatal shooting of Mario Woods by SFPD. Smart phones captured police officers pepper spraying peaceful protestors at UC Davis. The list goes on. It’s not just smart phones either: Police departments everywhere have either considered or implemented the use of body cameras to keep both law enforcement and citizens accountable for their actions. In short, video evidence is proving to be an invaluable tool for keeping law enforcement in check—that’s why we need more of it, not less.
Here in California, technology is playing an important role in efforts to hold police accountable. Last year, the ACLU of California launched a mobile application that streamlines the process for recording law enforcement and reporting misconduct directly to the ACLU. Moreover, efforts made by lawmakers this year sought to make internal police records—including videos—subject to public disclosure. Though these efforts have not moved as quickly as many would like, they represent a step in the right direction. The possibility that infrared emitters can be used by law enforcement, however, is a step in the wrong direction.
Concerns have already been raised regarding the potential for this infrared technology to censor dissidents during political protest. The problem is also a local issue. If law enforcement gets a hold of this technology, it could be used to prevent individuals from recording traffic stops, arrests, and other interactions between law enforcement and the public. Depending on if and how Apple’s new patent becomes a technological reality, that’s a very real possibility.
With law enforcement's recent focus on circumventing user protections in Apple products, it would be prudent for Apple and any other companies to strongly consider the civil rights impact before moving forward with this technology.

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Washington Has Been Obsessed With Punishing Secrecy Violations - Until Hillary Clinton |
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Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=29455"><span class="small">Glenn Greenwald, The Intercept</span></a>
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Thursday, 07 July 2016 12:55 |
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Greenwald writes: "Secrecy is a virtual religion in Washington. Those who violate its dogma have been punished in the harshest and most excessive manner - at least when they possess little political power or influence."
Hillary Clinton. (photo: Molly Riley/AP)

Washington Has Been Obsessed With Punishing Secrecy Violations - Until Hillary Clinton
By Glenn Greenwald, The Intercept
07 July 16
ecrecy is a virtual religion in Washington. Those who violate its dogma have been punished in the harshest and most excessive manner — at least when they possess little political power or influence. As has been widely noted, the Obama administration has prosecuted more leakers under the 1917 Espionage Act than all prior administrations combined. Secrecy in D.C. is so revered that even the most banal documents are reflexively marked classified, making their disclosure or mishandling a felony. As former CIA and NSA Director Michael Hayden said back in 2000, “Everything’s secret. I mean, I got an email saying, ‘Merry Christmas.’ It carried a top-secret NSA classification marking.”
People who leak to media outlets for the selfless purpose of informing the public — Daniel Ellsberg, Tom Drake, Chelsea Manning, Edward Snowden — face decades in prison. Those who leak for more ignoble and self-serving ends — such as enabling hagiography (Leon Panetta, David Petraeus) or ingratiating oneself to one’s mistress (Petraeus) — face career destruction, though they are usually spared if they are sufficiently Important-in-D.C. For low-level, powerless Nobodies-in-D.C., even the mere mishandling of classified information — without any intent to leak but merely to, say, work from home — has resulted in criminal prosecution, career destruction, and the permanent loss of security clearance.
This extreme, unforgiving, unreasonable, excessive posture toward classified information came to an instant halt in Washington today — just in time to save Hillary Clinton’s presidential aspirations. FBI Director James Comey, an Obama appointee who served in the Bush DOJ, held a press conference earlier this afternoon in which he condemned Clinton on the ground that she and her colleagues were “extremely careless in their handling of very sensitive, highly classified information,” including top-secret material.
Comey also detailed that her key public statements defending her conduct — i.e., that she never sent classified information over her personal email account and had turned over all “work-related” emails to the State Department — were utterly false; insisted “that any reasonable person in Secretary Clinton’s position … should have known that an unclassified system was no place for that conversation”; and argued that she endangered national security because of the possibility “that hostile actors gained access to Secretary Clinton’s personal email account.” Comey also noted that others who have done what Clinton did “are often subject to security or administrative sanctions” — such as demotion, career harm, or loss of security clearance.
Despite all of these highly incriminating findings, Comey explained, the FBI is recommending to the Justice Department that Clinton not be charged with any crime. “Although there is evidence of potential violations of the statutes regarding the handling of classified information,” he said, “our judgment is that no reasonable prosecutor would bring such a case.” To justify this claim, Comey cited “the context of a person’s actions” and her “intent.” In other words, there is evidence that she did exactly what the criminal law prohibits, but it was more negligent and careless than malicious and deliberate.
Looked at in isolation, I have no particular objection to this decision. In fact, I agree with it: I don’t think what Clinton did rose to the level of criminality, and if I were in the Justice Department, I would not want to see her prosecuted for it. I do think there was malignant intent: Using a personal email account and installing a home server always seemed to be designed, at least in part, to control her communications and hide them from FOIA and similar disclosure obligations. As the New York Times noted in May about a highly incriminating report from the State Department’s own Auditor General: “Emails disclosed in the report made it clear that she worried that personal emails could be publicly released under the Freedom of Information Act.”
Moreover, Comey expressly found that — contrary to her repeated statements — “the FBI also discovered several thousand work-related emails that were not in the group of 30,000 that were returned by Secretary Clinton to State in 2014.” The Inspector General’s report similarly, in the words of the NYT, “undermined some of Mrs. Clinton’s previous statements defending her use of the server.” Still, charging someone with a felony requires more than lying or unethical motives; it should require a clear intent to break the law along with substantial intended harm, none of which is sufficiently present here.
But this case does not exist in isolation. It exists in a political climate where secrecy is regarded as the highest end, where people have their lives destroyed for the most trivial — or, worse, the most well-intentioned — violations of secrecy laws, even in the absence of any evidence of harm or malignant intent. And these are injustices that Hillary Clinton and most of her stalwart Democratic followers have never once opposed — but rather enthusiastically cheered. In 2011, Army Private Chelsea Manning was charged with multiple felonies and faced decades in prison for leaking documents that she firmly believed the public had the right to see; unlike the documents Clinton recklessly mishandled, none of those was top secret. Nonetheless, this is what then-Secretary Clinton said in justifying her prosecution:
I think that in an age where so much information is flying through cyberspace, we all have to be aware of the fact that some information which is sensitive, which does affect the security of individuals and relationships, deserves to be protected and we will continue to take necessary steps to do so.
Comey’s announcement also takes place in a society that imprisons more of its citizens than any other in the world by far, for more trivial offenses than any Western nation — overwhelmingly when they are poor or otherwise marginalized due to their race or ethnicity. The sort of leniency and mercy and prosecutorial restraint Comey extended today to Hillary Clinton is simply unavailable for most Americans.
What happened here is glaringly obvious. It is the tawdry byproduct of a criminal justice mentality in which — as I documented in my 2011 book With Liberty and Justice for Some — those who wield the greatest political and economic power are virtually exempt from the rule of law even when they commit the most egregious crimes, while only those who are powerless and marginalized are harshly punished, often for the most trivial transgressions.
Had someone who was obscure and unimportant and powerless done what Hillary Clinton did — recklessly and secretly install a shoddy home server and work with top-secret information on it, then outright lie to the public about it when they were caught — they would have been criminally charged long ago, with little fuss or objection. But Hillary Clinton is the opposite of unimportant. She’s the multimillionaire former first lady, senator from New York, and secretary of state, supported by virtually the entire political, financial, and media establishment to be the next president, arguably the only person standing between Donald Trump and the White House.
Like the Wall Street tycoons whose systemic fraud triggered the 2008 global financial crisis, and like the military and political officials who instituted a worldwide regime of torture, Hillary Clinton is too important to be treated the same as everyone else under the law. “Felony charges appear to be reserved for people of the lowest ranks. Everyone else who does it either doesn’t get charged or gets charged with a misdemeanor,” Virginia defense attorney Edward MacMahon told Politico last year about secrecy prosecutions. Washington defense attorney Abbe Lowell has similarly denounced the “profound double standard” governing how the Obama DOJ prosecutes secrecy cases: “Lower-level employees are prosecuted … because they are easy targets and lack the resources and political connections to fight back.”
The fact that Clinton is who she is: that is undoubtedly what caused the FBI to accord her the massive benefit of the doubt when assessing her motives. Her identity, rather than her conduct, was clearly a major factor in his finding nothing that was — in the words of Comey — “clearly intentional and willful mishandling of classified information; or vast quantities of materials exposed in such a way as to support an inference of intentional misconduct; or indications of disloyalty to the United States; or efforts to obstruct justice.”
But a system that accords treatment based on who someone is, rather than what they’ve done, is the opposite of one conducted under the rule of law. It is, instead, one of systemic privilege. As Thomas Jefferson put it in a 1784 letter to George Washington, the ultimate foundation of any constitutional order is “the denial of every preeminence.” Hillary Clinton has long been the beneficiary of this systemic privilege in so many ways, and today, she received her biggest gift from it yet.
The Obama-appointed FBI director gave a press conference showing that she recklessly handled top-secret information, engaged in conduct prohibited by law, and lied about it repeatedly to the public. But she won’t be prosecuted or imprisoned for any of that, so Democrats are celebrating. But if there is to be anything positive that can come from this lowly affair, perhaps Democrats might start demanding the same reasonable leniency and prosecutorial restraint for everyone else who isn’t Hillary Clinton.

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FOCUS: There's a Reason Someone Is Supposed to Keep an Eye on Massive Mergers |
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Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=11104"><span class="small">Charles Pierce, Esquire</span></a>
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Thursday, 07 July 2016 11:25 |
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Pierce writes: "David Sirota has been all over an interesting story of crony capitalism involving a massive $54-billion proposed merger negotiated between Cigna and Anthem, two giant healthcare insurance companies, and the involvement in that merger of a good chunk of Connecticut's political elite, including Democratic Governor Dan Malloy."
U.S. senator Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., tried to block a number of big healthcare mergers. (photo: Pete Marovich/Getty)

There's a Reason Someone Is Supposed to Keep an Eye on Massive Mergers
By Charles Pierce, Esquire
07 July 16
week ago, Forbes informed us that the IBTimes was going through another brutal round of layoffs in its newsroom, cutting at least 30 people from a staff that already had lost 15 people only three months ago. This strikes me as a shame because the IBTimes, through the work of David Sirota, has been all over an interesting story of crony capitalism involving a massive $54-billion proposed merger negotiated between Cigna and Anthem, two giant healthcare insurance companies, and the involvement in that merger of a good chunk of Connecticut's political elite, including Democratic Governor Dan Malloy.
Rather than try to summarize all of Sirota's work on the subject, here are the links to the stories he's produced along with brief summaries of what each story is about.
Secret Records And Lack Of Hearings Raise Concerns In Merger Review (IBT, 7/5/16)
Increased Pressure On Malloy As Another State Democrat Demands Commissioner's Recusal (IBT, 6/30/16)
Groups Say Connecticut Controversy Requires Federal Intervention As GOP Demands Hearings (IBT, 6/29/16)
Controversy Over Gov. Malloy's Insurance Commissioner Creates Role Reversal For Republicans (IBT, 6/29/16)
Malloy's Regulator Told Ethics Officials She Was Not Involved In Cigna Issues, Even As Her Agency Was (IBT, 6/27/16)
Blumenthal Calls On DOJ To Block Merger While His Home State Spearheads State Reviews (IBT, 6/22/16)
Gov. Malloy's Administration Offered Cigna Help In Lead-Up To Merger Review (IBT, 6/21/16)
Connecticut Ethics Probe Spotlights Similar Conflict-of-Interest Charges From The 1990s (IBT, 6/17/16)
Connecticut Officials Vote To Launch Ethics Review Of Gov. Dan Malloy's Insurance Regulator (IBT, 6/16/16)
Anthem And Cigna Boost Spending On Lobbying As Lawmakers Review Merger (IBT, 6/16/16)
Connecticut Ethics Officials To Vote On Conflict-Of-Interest Controversy (IBT, 6/14/16)
Gov. Malloy Signs Secrecy Bill That Could Shield Insurance Information From Public Release (IBT, 6/13/16) Dem & GOP Lawmakers Demand Malloy's Regulator Be Removed From Controversial Merger Review (IBT, 6/10/16)
Obamacare Architect Kathleen Sebelius Questions Proposed Healthcare Insurance Mergers (IBT, 6/10/16)
Connecticut Rejects Request For Records About Anthem-Cigna Merger (IBT, 6/7/16)
Connecticut Groups Call For Dan Malloy To Remove Insurance Regulator In Anthem-Cigna Merger (IBT, 6/2/16)
Will Cigna And Anthem Merge? How Health Insurance Companies Pump Money Into Politics (IBT, 6/1/16)
Right now, in part because of the work that IBTimes has done, Connecticut politics are at something of a high boil as, around the country, people look with a baleful eye at a merger between two health insurance giants like Cigna and Anthem. On Tuesday, an editorial in the Connecticut Post deplored the lack of transparency that had attended the huge transaction, and the cozy culture within which the merger seems to have been accomplished.
Commissioner Katharine L. Wade's controversial refusal to recuse herself from ruling on the Anthem-Cigna insurance merger has provoked a reappraisal of ethics regulators, who heavily rely on the self-reporting of public officials, and an ethics code that may be clearer to lawyers than lovers of English. No one from the Office of State Ethics challenged Wade when she sought approval on Feb. 26 for her husband, Michael T. Wade, the associate chief counsel for litigation at Cigna, to sell company stock as his options vested from Feb. 25 to March 5—something he would be barred from doing if the commissioner was considering a matter involving Cigna.Wade, a former Cigna vice president of government affairs, did not try to hide the fact that her staff, at that very moment, was reviewing Anthem's 5-month-old "Form A application" to acquire Cigna for $54 billion, a massive transaction involving the second- and fourth-largest health insurers in the United States. "The application is currently under review by Department staff," Wade wrote in an email to the Office of State Ethics. "On behalf of the Department, I signed a contract with an independent economist to assist Department staff in their review of the Anthem Form A application. Presently, there are no Cigna matters before me." Wade declined to say Friday on what basis she concluded there were no Cigna matters before her under the meaning the state ethics code, given that she already has asserted her intention to rule on the merger.
In Washington, Democratic senators, including Richard Blumenthal, Democrat of…wait for it…Connecticut, are looking to squash not only this merger, but another proposed one that would combine Aetna and Humana with a price tag of $33 billion. And the mergers also have drawn the attention of antitrust regulators as well. Per The Wall Street Journal:
In the meeting earlier this month, Justice Department officials outlined key areas where they say a combination of Anthem and Cigna could hurt competition, the people said. A major concern is the national employer market. The Justice officials said they believed the deal would shrink the number of competitors to three from four. In addition to Anthem and Cigna, that list includes Aetna and UnitedHealth Group Inc. Anthem said at an investor conference in May that the national-account business is more competitive than a simple calculation would imply because big employers often divvy up their business regionally among different insurers. Another area of concern, the people said, is the market for individual insurance plans, the coverage sold on the exchanges that are at the heart of the Obama administration's signature health law. Anthem is a major player in individual markets in 14 states. Cigna has a smaller presence but is participating in seven Affordable Care Act exchanges this year and said it plans to expand into new states in 2017.
Meanwhile, out there in the world, some healthcare professionals are getting nervous about what might occur if the merger goes through. In Missouri, for example, the heads of the state's hospital association and the state's medical association co-authored a cautionary letter to The Missouri Times.
An analysis by the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation shows that Missouri is one of only five states in which Anthem already has at least a 33 percent share in the individual, small group and large group insurance markets. More specifically, in 21 of 28 Missouri metropolitan statistical areas, Anthem and Cigna would combine to hold more than one third of the total market share. And, in 23 of the MSAs, the merger would create a presumptively anti-competitive market. The same holds true in rural Missouri. Under federal metrics, Anthem and Cigna combined would control more than one third of the total market share in 44 out of 59 rural counties. In 49, the merger would create a presumptively anti-competitive market, and in two others it would result in a highly concentrated market.
This kind of consolidation needs to be regulated very carefully, and all indications from the IBTimes series are that the merger was being hustled through without even the minimal concerns for obvious conflicts of interest. Right now, healthcare is not a field that anyone ought to try to turn into the Wild Kingdom.

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FOCUS: Don't Move (Don't F#%king Move) |
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Thursday, 07 July 2016 10:24 |
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Kelly writes: "Two major news stories here in the U.S., both chilling, point out how readily U.S. authorities will murder people based on race and the slightest possibility of a threat to those in places of power."
Alton Sterling was shot and killed by Baton Rouge Police. (photo: NBC News)

Don't Move (Don't F#%king Move)
By Kathy Kelly, Common Dreams
07 July 16
wo major news stories here in the U.S., both chilling, point out how readily U.S. authorities will murder people based on race and the slightest possibility of a threat to those in places of power.
On July 5th Baton Rouge police killed Anton Sterling in a Louisiana parking lot. Sterling was a 37-year-old Black father of five selling CDs outside of a local storege. As captured on widely seen cellphone video, two officers tased him, held him with their hands and knees down on the ground and then shot him multiple times at close range. The officers pulled a gun out of Sterling’s pocket after they had killed him but witnesses say Sterling was not holding the gun and his hands were never near his pockets. The situation might have escalated further but clearly little concern was shown for the sanctity of a human life deemed a threat to officers. In the witness-recorded video one officer promises, "If you f---ing move, I swear to God!"
Police departments in the U.S. often arrest and all too often kill citizens on U.S. streets based on "racial profiling." Young men of certain demographics are targeted based on their "patterns of behavior" for confrontations in which officers' safety trumps any concern for the safety of suspects, and which easily ramp up to killing.
And so it is abroad. The week's other chilling news involved the long-promised release of U.S. government data on drone strikes and civilian deaths. The report covered four countries with which the U.S. is not at war. From 2009 through 2015 in Pakistan, Yemen, Somalia, and Libya the U.S. admits to its drone strikes having killed between 64 and 116 civilians, although these numbers are only a small fraction of even the most conservative estimates on such deaths made by credible independent reporters and researchers over the same period. With U.S. definitions of a "combatant" constantly in flux, many of the 2,372 to 2,581 "combatants" the government reports killed over the same period will have certainly been civilian casualties. Few eyes in the U.S. watch for cellphone video from these countries, and so the executing officers’ versions of events are often all that matters.
In June 2011 CIA Director John Brennan stated there hadn’t been "a single collateral death" caused by drone strikes over the previous eighteen months. Ample reportage showed this statistic was a flat lie. Marjorie Cohn notes that what little we know of President Obama’s 2013 policy guidelines (still classified) for decreasing civilian deaths is inconsistent even on the point of a known target having been present. Many strikes are targeted at areas of suspicious activity with no idea of who is present.
As Philip Giraldi notes, a March 2015 Physicians for Social Responsibility report claims that more (perhaps far more) than 1.3 million people were killed during the first ten years of the "Global War on Terror" in Iraq, Afghanistan, and Pakistan. Adding Syria, Libya, Somalia, and Yemen, he finds the current total might easily exceed 2 million with some estimates credibly going to 4 or beyond. He fears the data released July 1st will end up normalizing the drone program, writing: "The past 15 years have institutionalized and validated the killing process. President Clinton or Trump will be able to do more of the same, as the procedures involved are 'completely legal' and likely soon to be authorized under an executive order."
The July 1st data minimizes civilian deaths by limiting itself to countries with which the U.S. is not at war. But the United States' drone arsenal is precisely designed to project violence into areas miles from any battlefield where arrest, not assassination would before have been considered both feasible and morally indispensable in dealing with suspects accused of a crime. U.S. figures do not count untold numbers of civilians learning to fear the sky, in formerly peaceful areas, for weapons that might be fired without warning. The drones take away the very idea of trials and evidence, of the rule of law, making the whole world a battlefield.
In the U.S. neighborhoods where people like Alton Sterling most risk summary execution, residents cannot be faulted for concluding that the U.S.' government and society don’t mind treating their homes as warzones; that lives of innocent people caught up in these brutal wars do not matter provided the safety and property of the people outside, and of the people sent in to quell disorder, are rigorously protected.
My friends and sometime hosts in Afghanistan, the Afghan Peace Volunteers, run a school for street kids, and a seamstress program to distribute thick blankets in the winter. They seek to apply Mohandas Gandhi’s discipline of letting a determination to keep the peace show them the difficult work needed to replace battlefields with community. Their resources are small and they live in a dangerous city at a perilous time. Their work does little, to say the least, to ensure their safety. They aim to put the safety of their most desperate neighbors first.
It makes noone safer to make our cities and the world a battlefield. The frenzied concern for our safety and comfort driving so much of our war on the Middle East has made our lives far more dangerous. Can we ask ourselves: which has ever brought a peaceful future nearer to people in Afghan or U.S. neighborhoods– weaponized military and surveillance systems or the efforts of concerned neighbors seeking justice? Gigantic multinational “defense” systems gobble up resources, while programs intended for social well-being are cut back. The U.S. withholds anything like the quantity of resources needed for the task of healing the battle scar the U.S. and NATO have inflicted on so much of the Muslim world. If our fear is endless, how will these wars ever end?
We have to face that when the U.S. acts as self-appointed “global policeman,” what it does to poor nations resembles what those two officers did to Alton Sterling. We must temper selfish and unreasonable fears for our own safety with the knowledge that others also want safe and stable lives. We must build community by lessening inequality. We must swear off making the world our battlefield and be appalled to hear the U.S. government seem to tell the world "I will kill you if you f---ing move."

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