Educational CyberPlayGround NetHappenings Headlines and Resources
1.
Africa's digital poster child - Jonathan Fildes, BBC News
There
is a race to connect the next billion people worldwide and one of the
main arenas where it is being played out is Nigeria, the most populous
country in Africa. In the West African nation, home to more than 140m
people, humanitarian efforts rub shoulders with commercial schemes to
bridge the digital divide. The Ministry of Education is currently
evaluating schemes from Microsoft, Intel and the
One Laptop per Child
group to give the country's 30 million school-aged children access to
computers. Although no decision has been made about which, if any, it
will buy into on a large scale, some schemes are already starting to
move ahead.
I bought one to see what the technology is like. <Karen>2.
American Airlines will be announcing that starting next year, many
transcontinental 767-200s will be equipped with Wi-Fi and broadband
access via Aircell -
all for free.3.
Here we go again! Remember when they spent all that money to integrate their gov't fbi/cia computers and failed?
Story :
National Security Agency is drawing up plans for a new domestic
assignment: helping protect government and private communications
networks from cyberattacks and infiltration by terrorists and hackers.
Securing info systems could cost $28 billion, budget office says
Story:
The Congressional Budget Office estimates that the E-Government
Reauthorization Act could cost the government about $29 billion over a
four-year period, mainly for securing agencies information systems. The
Office of Management and Budget said agencies spent about $5.5 billion
in fiscal 2006 to meet the Federal Information Security Management Act,
according to a CBO cost estimate report released today about the
reauthorization legislation.
Continuing the same updates, FISMA
requirements would consume $27.9 billion of the $29 billion that the
legislation would cost the government between 2008 and 2012, which
includes adjustments for anticipated inflation, according to CBO. It
also estimates that continuing current activities and starting new
programs authorized by bill would make up the remaining $1.1 billion.
Cyber hackers hit ORNL; thousands potentially affected
OAK RIDGE - Oak Ridge National Laboratory was the target of a
sophisticated cyber attack that potentially gave hackers access to the
personal information of thousands of visitors to the lab from 1990 to
2004, the laboratory confirmed today.
ORNL Director Thom Mason informed lab staff members of the issue earlier
this week and said the lab would attempt to notify as many persons as
possible whose personal information may have been stolen.
Lab spokesman Billy Stair said today about 12,000 letters had been sent
to potential victims.
US helps enhance cops skills vs cyber-terrorismDAVAO CITY - The United States is helping enhance the capabilities of
policemen in Southern Mindanao in the fight against cyber-terrorism,
which has been widely used by terrorists in their operations.
Air Force pushes cyber warrior training
The Air Force is establishing a professional force of cyber operators
and developing cyber career paths for officers, enlisted personnel and
civilians. The new Air Force Cyber Command and the Air National Guard
are among the focal points of the plan.
4.
Forrester Loses Laptop Containing Personnel DataThe incident appears to be a clear case of, "Do as I say, not as I do."
Thieves stole a laptop from the home of a Forrester Research employee
during the week of Nov. 26, potentially exposing the names, addresses
and Social Security numbers of an undisclosed number of current and
former employees and directors, the company said in a letter mailed to
those affected on Dec. 3.
Hackers may have accessed Duke informationDuke Law School announced this week that it has alerted 1,400 people that their
Social Security numbers may have been stolen
by identity thieves. The numbers were on a school Web site that was
hacked. The people were prospective applicants requesting information
from the school
Educational CyberPlayGround: How to Get your Credit Report Repair,Get your CreditIf
you suspect you're a victim of identity theft: FIX ERRORS ON ...
companies now offer identity theft protection policies. Privacy ...
want to consider identity theft insurance to cover
Educational CyberPlayGround: Online credit card fraud and how to fix your credit...From a company that provides anti-identity theft tools. Getting information ... reporting point possible.
Identity Theft Turning Point? 7 ... point in the identity theft wars.
Can a school or college use my Social Security number as an identification number? Do I need to provide my SSN to the school?Publicly-funded
schools and those that receive federal funding must comply with the
Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act in order to retain their
funding (FERPA, also known as the "Buckley Amendment," enacted in 1974,
20 USC 1232g). One of FERPA's provisions requires written consent for
the release of “educational records” or personally identifiable
information, with some exceptions. The courts have stated that SSNs
fall within this provision. (See Krebs v. Rutgers, 797 F. Supp. 1246
(D.N.J. 1992)).
Student rights to privacy and K12 School Rights vs. Students Online privacy rights. Selling student information is a common practice.EDUCATION Selling K-12 student INFORMATION and their rights to privacy Privacy and disclosing student information.
Story: College turns off social networking sitesFrustrated
that some students were using library computers for personal use while
others needed the machines for homework, officials at Middle Georgia
College began blocking access to social-networking sites in some campus
locations this fall. "It's not that we're opposed to people doing
social networking and socializing," said Mary Ellen Wilson, vice
president for academic affairs, in an interview Tuesday. "There are
other open labs on campus where they can do that." She says no one has
complained to her about the policy.
YOUR SSN NUMBER Security Ranked by State - IRS - General Accounting Office online Security5.
Hackers force mass website closures Hundreds of websites have been shut down temporarily by one of the
largest web hosting companies in Britain after the personal details of
customers were stolen by computer hackers.
6.
Mobile Data a Moving Liability
SAN FRANCISCO -- By his own account, Tory Skyers lives on the edge --
the storage edge.
He defines that place as the point in the enterprise network where any
kind of mobile device contributes content to the SAN. This device menu
runs the gamut from iPod, to Zune, PSP, Treo, Blackberry, Psion, laptop
or desktop computer, USB flash drive, and external hard drive, to name a
few.
He uses two incentives to get unthinking users to follow policy or stop
doing dumb things. "Fear and money are great motivators," he told an
audience here at the Storage Decisions conference this morning.
7.
Phone phreaks spoof LSD-induced multiple homicideThree more individuals have admitted they participated in a series of
phone phreak hoaxes that prompted raids by armed special weapons and
tactic police teams on the homes of unsuspecting victims.
8.
READ THIS STORY: Marcus Ranum's Wild Security Ridebest known for his pioneering work in firewalls.
He doesn't take credit for inventing the firewall -- only for
synthesizing and streamlining the concepts of a firewall into the DEC
SEAL, which he did while working on DEC's internal Internet gateway.
"This whole business of calling me the inventor is wrong... It was some
marketing BS," says Ranum, who designed and deployed the DEC SEAL in
1990, which is considered by some to be the first commercial firewall.
"The DEC SEAL was interesting because it had a part number and a manual
and corporation behind it," he says, which at the time was unique.
Personality Bytes
* What scares Ranum most: "There's a lot of outsourcing happening, and
we've de-skilled our federal workforce. That scares the hell out of
me. We should be worried about how we spend our money on the best and
brightest in the government."
* On cyberwarfare: "How can you dare talk about fighting cyberwarfare
when college kids in China can penetrate the Defense Department
network like Swiss cheese?"
* What most people don't know about him: "I'd rather be an artist."
* Biggest pet peeve: "Intellectual dishonesty."
* Biggest regret: "I wish I had patented some of my work."
* Favorite hangout: "Home."
* Comfort food: "Tapioca pudding."
* Music: "I dont download music. I buy it and rip CDs. The latest thing
I bought was Robert Plant and Alison Krause's [CD]."
* Wheels: "A '74 Belarus 547 tractor, and a GMC Suburban."
* PC or Mac: "I hate all of them... I have an eight-year-old laptop."
* What Ranum would like to be most known for: "Telling the truth."
9.
Bruce Schneier Blazes Through Your Questions
Freakonomics StoryLast
week, we solicited your questions for Internet security guru Bruce
Shneier. He responded in force, taking on nearly every question, and
his
answers are extraordinarily interesting, providing mandatory
reading for anyone who uses a computer. He also plainly thinks like an
economist:
search below for crime pays to see his sober assessment
of why its better to earn a living as a security expert than as a
computer criminal.
Educational CyberPlayGround: FUTURE TRENDS IN COMPUTING11.
STORY DUH! How stupid are these professors?who don't know that motivation starts all
learning and that play is a great motivator. How do these people get to
waste our tax dollars being this stupid!?!
"Since
what I really need is a world with lots of players in it for me to run
experiments on, I decided I needed a completely different approach."
The article says that a game on the scale of World of Warcraft costs
about $75-million to develop, so as generous as the MacArthur folks
might be, Arden may seem a little lean. Mr. Castronova is giving the
public Arden as is, says the article, along with this guidance for
other academics who think their research might translate into virtual
fun: "What we've really learned is, you've got to start with a game
first." FUN FUN FUN
The Importance of Play and Laughter in Learning Research!
The Secret to Motivation12.
Bill Gates is investing tens of his millions along with the Rockefeller Foundation, Monsanto Corporation, Syngenta Foundation and the Government of Norway, among others, in what is called the
'doomsday seed bank.' Officially the project is named the Svalbard Global Seed Vault on the Norwegian island of Spitsbergen, part of the Svalbard island group.
article by
Seabrook in the New Yorker discussion of the global seed bank