Steve Aftergood: DoD Warns Employees and Contractors — Classified Published Online Is OFF LIMITS

Government, Military
Steven Aftergood
Steven Aftergood

DoD Warns Employees of Classified Info in Public Domain

As a new wave of classified documents published by news organizations appeared online over the past week, the Department of Defense instructed employees and contractors that they must neither seek out nor download classified material that is in the public domain.

“Classified information, whether or not already posted on public websites, disclosed to the media, or otherwise in the public domain remains classified and must be treated as such until it is declassified by an appropriate U.S. government authority,” wrote Timothy A. Davis, Director of Security in the Office of the Under Secretary of Defense (Intelligence), in a June 7 memorandum.

“DoD employees and contractors shall not, while accessing the web on unclassified government systems, access or download documents that are known or suspected to contain classified information.”

“DoD employees or contractors who seek out classified information in the public domain, acknowledge its accuracy or existence, or proliferate the information in any way will be subject to sanctions,” the memorandum said.

Yoda: America the Refrigerated Nation — What Happens When….

01 Agriculture, 03 Economy, Commerce, Cultural Intelligence
Got Crowd? BE the Force!
Got Crowd? BE the Force!

Interesting, this is.

CABINET, Issue 47 Logistics Fall 2012

The Coldscape

Nicola Twilley

More than three-quarters of the food consumed in the United States today is processed, packaged, shipped, stored, and sold under artificial refrigeration. The shiny, humming stainless steel box in your kitchen is just the tip of the iceberg, so to speak—a tiny fragment of the vast global network of temperature-controlled storage and distribution warehouses cumulatively capable of hosting uncounted billions of cubic feet of chilled flesh, fish, or fruit. Add to that an equally vast and immeasurable volume of thermally controlled space in the form of shipping containers, wine cellars, floating fish factories, international seed banks, meat-aging lockers, and livestock semen storage, and it becomes clear that the evolving architecture of coldspace is as ubiquitous as it is varied, as essential as it is overlooked.

. . . . . . . .

To engineer a consistent supply of a highly perishable product, Big Juice (Tropicana, Florida’s Natural, and their ilk) pasteurize, de-oil, and then strip the oxygen from their OJ before chilling it to 32°F and pumping it into million-gallon, refrigerated, epoxy resin-lined, carbon steel, aseptic storage tanks.

Read full article with photos.

Berto Jongman & Jon Rappoport: NSA & Big Money — Could Wall Street, Elite Pedophiles, CIA, Political Crime Families & the Vatican Want NSA Crippled?

Civil Society, Commerce, Corruption, Government, Law Enforcement, Military
Berto Jongman
Berto Jongman

Big Money and the NSA Scandal … How Dangerous is the “Security/Digital Complex”?

Richard Eskow

Institute of Ethics & Emerging Technologies, June 10, 2013

It should be self-evident that recent NSA revelations bring up some grave concerns about civil liberties. But they also raise other profound and troubling questions – about the privatization of our military, our inflated expectations for digital technology, and the increasingly cozy relationship between Big Corporations (including Wall Street) and Big Defense.

Are these corporations perverting our political process? The campaign war chest for Sen. Dianne Feinstein, who today said NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden committed “treason,” is heavily subsidized by defense and intelligence contractors that include General Dynamics, General Atomic, BAE Systems, Northrop Grumman, and Bechtel.  One might argue that a politician with that kind of backing is in no moral position to lecture others about “treason.”

But Feinstein’s funders are decidedly old-school Military/Industrial Complex types. What about the new crowd? This confluence of forces hasn’t been named yet, so for the time being we’ll use a cumbersome label: the “Security/Digital Complex.”  With computers and communications encompassing an ever-larger portion of human activity, we may someday learn that this new force dwarfs even its predecessors in the Feinstein camp when it comes to its impact on our democracy, our economy and our values.

There’s much we don’t know yet, so it’s wise to be cautious in describing this new force. But Edward Snowden’s revelations, and the reactions to them, are offering us a glimpse into rarely-seen intersections of Wall Street wealth, information technology, and the national security state.

Read full article.

Jon Rappoport
Jon Rappoport

Did someone help Ed Snowden punch a hole in the NSA?

by Jon Rappoport

June 11, 2013

Ed Snowden, NSA leaker. Honest man. Doing what was right. Bravo.

That still doesn’t preclude the possibility that, unknown to him, he was managed by people to put him the right place to expose NSA secrets.

Snowden’s exposure of NSA was a righteous act, because that agency is a RICO criminal. But that doesn’t mean we have the whole story.

How many people work in classified jobs for the NSA? And here is one man, Snowden, who is working for Booz Allen, an outside contractor, but is assigned to NSA, and he can get access to, and copy, documents that expose the spying collaboration between NSA and the biggest tech companies in the world—and he can get away with it.

If so, then NSA is a sieve leaking out of all holes. Because that means a whole lot of other, higher NSA employees can likewise steal these documents. Many, many other people can copy them and take them. Poof.

If the NSA is not a sieve, it’s quite correct to suspect Snowden, a relatively low-level man, was guided and helped.

Does that diminish what Snowden accomplished? No. But it casts it in a different light.

Continue reading “Berto Jongman & Jon Rappoport: NSA & Big Money — Could Wall Street, Elite Pedophiles, CIA, Political Crime Families & the Vatican Want NSA Crippled?”

Mother Jones: Latin American Nations Distance Themselves from USA, Debate Legalizing Marijuana

01 Brazil, 07 Venezuela, 08 Wild Cards, Civil Society, Commerce, Cultural Intelligence, Ethics, Government, IO Deeds of Peace, IO Sense-Making

"Do Not Piss Me Off!"Latin American Nations Debate Legalizing Pot

—By

Mon Jun. 10, 2013

At last week's annual summit of the Organization of American States, Latin American leaders distanced themselves from the United States' drug policies and agreed to consider the widespread legalization of marijuana.

The OAS summit “was really a tipping point for this movement” to end the war on drugs, said Pedro Abramovay, a campaign director for Avaaz, a global nonprofit group that has petitioned the OAS to liberalize its drug policies.

The move comes as Uruguay debates a bill to legalize the production and sale of pot (it is already legal there for personal use) and as Chile considers decriminalizing it. Latin American leaders also have kept a close eye on how Colorado and Washington, having legalized marijuana, will go about regulating its consumption.

At the summit, which wrapped up on Friday in Antigua, Guatemala, delegates reviewed a recent OAS study that explores a range of options for a new regional drug policy that might include legalizing or decriminalizing cannabis, and even abandoning the fight against the coca production in some areas. “Never before has a multilateral organization engaged in such an inclusive and intellectually legitimate analysis of drug policy options,” Ethan Nadelmann, executive director of the Drug Policy Alliance, said in a statement. The delegates agreed to create a high-level commission to debate the study and make policy suggestions.

Read full article.

Koko: US Uranium Mining on Tribal Lands — Poisoning the Bread Basket, Decades of Human Rights and Health Abuses

05 Energy, 07 Health, 07 Other Atrocities, 08 Proliferation, 11 Society
Koko
Koko

Sad.

America's Secret Fukushima Poisoning the Bread Basket of the World

Margaret Flowers and Devin Zeese

truthout, 5 June 2013

Early in the morning of July 16, 1979, a 20-foot section of the earthen dam blocking the waste pool for the Church Rock Uranium Mill in New Mexico caved in and released 95 million gallons of highly acidic fluid containing 1,100 tons of radioactive material. The fluid and waste flowed into the nearby Puerco River, traveling 80 miles downstream, leaving toxic puddles and backing up local sewers along the way.

Although this release of radiation, thought to be the largest in US history, occurred less than four months after the Three Mile Island partial nuclear meltdown, the Church Rock spill received little media attention. In contrast, the Three Mile Island accident made the headlines. And when the residents of Church Rock asked their governor to declare their community a disaster area so they could get recovery assistance, he refused.

Read full article with many links.

Also see:
Video footage here and here (time-stamped) from John Pilger's documentary “Utopia,” that tells of the Australian government/mining industry's discovery of uranium & precious minerals on aboriginal land and the deception & betrayal dealt to them.

Stephen E. Arnold: SRCH2 Poised to Take Industry by Storm

Advanced Cyber/IO
Stephen E. Arnold
Stephen E. Arnold

SRCH2 Poised to Take Industry by Storm

Posted: 10 Jun 2013 05:31 PM PDT

We came across a recent press release that posed an interesting question. At this point, can any vendor in the enterprise realm produce a search solution disruptive to Google? SRCH2 might be an outfit to keep an eye on, according to the information we learned from an interview with Dr. Chen Li in the Arnold Information Technology Search Wizards Speak series.

SRCH2’s niche in the landscape of search options is geared towards corporate sites and apps. Their plan is to build “Google style” solutions.

The press release offers a summary of what Chen said in the interview in regards to the problem that SRCH2 wants to solve:

“‘SRCH2 offers clear differentiation when you also consider complexity and time to market. When you add in-memory performance to this, SRCH2 offers a killer combination for these use cases.’ A key innovation in the SRCH2 method concerns the speed with which content can be processed and then accessed to generate a response to a user’s or subsystem’s query. Speed, particularly in mobile applications, is essential. Latency can drag down response time. SRCH2, like Google, knows that speed is often more important than some other considerations.”

Apparently, SRCH2’s clients are using their technology in a number of different contexts and for a variety of devices. If there is even a major global handset manufacturer porting it to the kernel across millions of handsets, what other uses will be found? Only time will tell.

Megan Feil, June 11, 2013

Sponsored by ArnoldIT.com, developer of Beyond Search

SmartPlanet: Internet 2017, Mind-Control of Devices

Advanced Cyber/IO

smartplanet logoThree fascinating facts about the Internet of 2017

Every year Cisco publishes its Visual Networking Index, a vast collection of information about Internet traffic, speeds and connection types. While most people focus on the big impressive numbers — 1.4 zettabytes is equivalent to nearly one billion DVDs every day for a year — the really interesting stories are found deeper in the data.

Here are three fascinating facts from this year’s report.

1. Long distance traffic goes local

2. The U.S. reigns supreme

3. Internet traffic will fracture across billions of new connections

Phi Beta Iota:  This is a US centric understanding.  While useful, we see the real value of the Internet exploding in the Southern Hemisphere and leveraging dumb simple hand-helds initially, backed up by call centers and infinitely scalable human networks all connected via the hand-helds and the call centers where human-centric mass computing can be orchestrated.

Pilot a copter with just your thoughts

Using their thoughts alone, five people have successfully maneuvered a flying quadcopter through a 3-dimensional obstacle course. Further developments in this field of brain-computer interfaces may lead to mind-controlled wheelchairs, prosthetic arms, and exoskeleton suits. Popular Mechanics reports.

Phi Beta Iota:  Fascinating and worthy.  The hidden danger is the corruption of the electromagnetic environment.  Soviet and Chinese emission control standards are ten times higher than those of the USA, which very incompetently clutters the electromagnetic specturm to the point that secret and non-secret systems keep jamming each other.  Electromagnetic pollution and contamination will have to be recognized as a hot topic before anything other than tethered mind control can be considered.

noble gold