In the Journals - Fossils revealing ancient behaviour

A pair of recent issues of Science plonked into my mail box this week.  Among the items that caught my eyes was an exciting brief communication in Science shows a rare example of what appears to be fossil evidence of behaviour. These are Waptia-like arthropods from the Lower Cambrian, which appear to have been preserved while engaged in some form of processionary behaviour. Unlike known present day processionary arthropods, these chains of individuals appear to be physically linked - you can see in the figure that there is overlap between an individual's carapace and the preceding individual's telson. The authors propose the chains reflect migratory behaviour rather than feeding or reproduction.

X.-G. Hou, D. J. Siveter, R. J. Aldridge, D. J. Siveter (2008). Collective Behavior in an Early Cambrian Arthropod Science, 322 (5899), 224-224 DOI: 10.1126/science.1162794

Doper news

Blood dope cheat Ivan Basso's back in action after serving his 16 months ban handed down for depositing blood in the Fuentes blood bank clinic.  He's riding for Liquigas, though it's not clear how this squares with the rule that riders busted for doping violations are not to ride for Pro-Tour teams for two years after they return from their ban.

Bernhard Kohl, the second CERA cheat (after Stefan Schumacher) on the soon-to-be-defunct Gerolsteiner team has confessed to doping, and has not requested the B sampled be tested.  Sadly the two Gerolsteiner positives continue to have a negative effect on German cycle sport:  Cyclingnews.com reports the Tour of Deutschlandand the Stuttgart Six have been cancelled as sponsors pull out of the sport.  Two German TV channels have announced they won't broadcast the Tour de France.  Well done Kohl and Schumacher, and other pro cyclists who decide to cheat - see what the consequences are?

One week in - Review of Zen Broadband

As a direct result of BT's infuriating dalliance with the despicable Phorm system, I chose to leave BT, and joined Zen Broadband, with the switchover on 8th October. 

I selected Zen from the myriad of other ISPs out there for several reasons - good reviews (in both press and in the internet); reasonable pricing; clear upfront description of service; rapid response to my equiry about Phorm; no lock-in to lengthy contract.

Over the first week of being with Zen Broadband, I've been very satisfied (having said that, over the years I was with BT Broadband, the service was generally good as well).  Specific points:

  • Increased download speed.  As I posted earlier, by download speed increased from 1.9 Mbps with BT to more than  6Mbps with Zen.  I've tested this at different times of day, and it seems to be consistent.
  • No Phorm.  I emailed Zen about this and they confirmed no plans to implement Phorm.  I appreciate commercial pressures may force them to change - if that happens, I'll be on my way as I only have a 1 month commitment
  • Zen have an excellent Customer Portal for monitoring and setting up all sorts of aspects of their broadband service.  As I write, I am still investigating what's available.
  • As far as I can see, my btinternet.com email address is still functional, presumably because it's run by Yahoo!
I did receive a peculiarly worded letter from BT about my upcoming departure from BT Broadband on 8th October (bizarrely not delivered until 11th October), and suggesting I rethink my choice, and making it sound as though my phone line would be disconnected when the switch was made.  This is patently not the case.

 

Home Secretary = Big Brother (updated)

Home Secretary Jacqui Smith is planning to implement even more draconian snooping powers that previously reported, according to a report in the Telegraph

In an astonishing non sequitur, Smith is quoted as saying that communications data of the sort which helped convict Soham killer Ian Huntley and the 21/7 bombers was not at present being routinely stored, and needed to be if terrorists and serious criminals were to be prevented from striking.   So what Smith appears to be saying is that phone call evidence of the type that was used to convict people after committing a crime could be used to collar them before committing a crime.  Now here we have a distinct sense of thoughtcrime

Apparently the plan does not include recording the content of messages, and would be subject to appropriate  safeguards (though I doubt that what I regard as appropriate would map exactly to Smith's).

Public consultation will begin in the New Year: expect a few more terror scares to bounce public opinion to sleepwalk into ever greater surveillance of our communications.

The original proposals were due to be presented in the Communications Bill next month.  In actual fact, if this bill was to contain the previously reported measures, it's hard to see how they could be any more draconian. Communication Service providers already store much data for billing purposes, but the security services need to make a case to access these data, under RIPA regulations.  It appears they want untrammelled access to our private communications and access to social networking sites

More on this from the Guardian:

The government is drawing up plans to give the police and security and intelligence agencies new powers to access personal data held by internet services, including social network sites such as Facebook and Bebo and gaming networks. 

JUST BECAUSE THE TECHNOLOGY EXISTS TO INTERCEPT AND RECORD OUR COMMUNICATIONS DOESN'T MEAN THEY SHOULD BE ALLOWED TO.  

Vile, vile, vile - and don't expect the next government (or whatever party) to do away with these systems.

Updates 16/10/08

Report on the BBC News website - nice quotes from the LibDems; a bit of a wishy washy response from the Conservatives.

Jacqui Smith:

There are no plans for an enormous database which will contain the content of your emails, the texts that you send or the chats you have on the phone or online. 

No plans now, but next year?

Nor are we going to give local authorities the power to trawl through such a database in the interest of investigating lower level criminality under the spurious cover of counter terrorist legislation.

Local authorities do not have the power to listen to your calls now and they never will in future. You would rightly object to proposals of this kind and I would not consider them.

Oh yes?  We've already had local authorities using RIPA powers to spy on people!  Ever heard of function creep?

Dominic Grieve (Conservative):

"These proposals would mark a substantial shift in the powers of the state to obtain personal information on individuals," he said, adding: "The government must present convincing justification for such an exponential increase in the powers of the state."  

Chris Huhne (Liberal Democrats):

The government's Orwellian plans for a vast database of our private communications are deeply worrying.
Ministers claim the database will only be used in terrorist cases, but there is now a long list of cases, from the arrest of Walter Wolfgang for heckling at a Labour conference to the freezing of Icelandic assets, where anti-terrorism law has been used for purposes for which it was not intended.
Our experience of the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act suggests these powers will soon be used to spy on people's children, pets and bins.
These proposals are incompatible with a free country and a free people. 

The Independent weighs in.

 

42 day detention defeated in the Lords

Some excellent news - another astonishing attempt to encroach on our civil liberties has been defeated in the House of Lords - by a majority of 191 votes. This debate has been somewhat overshadowed by the global financial turmoil.

Above - Liberty's newspaper advert published in newspapers in the run-up to the House of Lords vote

Above - Liberty's newspaper advert published in newspapers in the run-up to the House of Lords vote

The fact that the government sees fit, in so many ways, to throw our long held liberties away is nothing short of a disgrace.  The following links give considerable background to the situation.  My opinion is that the security services should not be arresting people unless that have enough evidence to charge them with an offence.  Don't forget that the last week has seen the application of anti-terrorism laws to Icelandic banks (last I saw there was little or no terrorist activity there); local councils have used anti-terrorism legislation to spy on people; an elderly protester was ejected from the Labour party conference a couple of years ago - using anti-terror regulations.  If this is the way the UK continues to go, the terrorists have won. The next encroachment on our liberties and privacy will the the Government's proposal to eavesdrop on our telephone, email and web browsing communications.

BBC news report

Liberty's reaction

The Guardian report

The Times online