Feral Jundi

Thursday, January 22, 2009

Technology: The Sectera Edge, or the BarackBerry

Filed under: Cool Stuff,Technology — Tags: , , — Matt @ 10:02 AM

    This is pretty cool, and it’s cool to see the industry answer the call for this kind of technology. Although the price tag is beyond belief–$3350?  Wow, that is an expensive phone and I certainly hope it works as advertised.  Thanks to Doug for sending me this one.  –Matt

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Obama ‘to get spy-proof smartphone’

January 22, 2009

(CNN) — Self-confessed BlackBerry addict Barack Obama may not have to kick the thumbing habit after all, despite the concerns of a notoriously technophobic White House.

The new U.S. president was often seen hunched over the mobile e-mail device during his election campaign and even featured at No. 2 on one celebrity Web site’s list of obsessive BlackBerry users.

But, like previous Oval Office incumbents, Obama had been expected to take a vow of technological celibacy following his inaugural oath on Tuesday, despite telling CNBC in an interview that security officials would have to “pry it out of my hands.” He protests that a mobile device would help him stay in touch with the real world. Should President Obama be allowed to keep his BlackBerry? Tell us what you think

E-mail has long been treated with suspicion by the Secret Service because of fears it could be hacked into by foreign espionage agencies, or that sensitive information could reach the public domain via a single mis-stroke of the “send” key.

President George W. Bush was forced to give up using e-mail when he took charge, while President Bill Clinton sent just two e-mails during his administration — one to test that the system worked and the second to veteran astronaut John Glenn before his trip into space in 1998.

There are also concerns that mobile devices such as BlackBerries, which contain built in GPS technology, could be hacked into, revealing the president’s location within a few feet.

But according to reports Thursday, Obama could now be in line to receive a spy-proof alternative to his favorite toy.

Writing on his blog for the Atlantic magazine, Marc Ambinder reports that the National Security Agency has approved a $3,350 smartphone — inevitably dubbed the “BarackBerry” — for Obama’s use.

The exclusive Sectera Edge, made by General Dynamics, is reportedly capable of encrypting top secret voice conversations and handling classified documents.

But Obama may have pushed his Secret Service handlers’ technological patience far enough. Ambinder also reports that instant messaging in the White House will still be a definite no-no.

(more…)

Monday, January 19, 2009

Video: Security Unprecedented for Obama Inauguration

Filed under: Estate Security,Executive Protection,Video,Washington DC — Matt @ 7:25 PM

Legal News: Bush Commutes Prison Sentences of 2 Ex-Border Agents

Filed under: Law Enforcement,Legal News — Tags: , , — Matt @ 2:27 PM

   This is fantastic news, although I would have liked to have seen a pardon for these guys instead of just commuting the sentences.  I am sure the families are happy, and this was still pretty cool.  –Matt 

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Bush Commutes Prison Sentences of 2 Ex-Border Agents 

By Roger Runningen and James Rowley

Jan. 19 (Bloomberg) — President George W. Bush, on the eve of leaving office, commuted the sentences of two former agents of the U.S. Border Patrol who were convicted of shooting an unarmed Mexican drug smuggler as he attempted to flee.

Ignacio Ramos and Jose Alonso Compean were sentenced last November. Compean was given a 12-year term on charges including assault with a dangerous weapon and aiding and abetting a crime; Ramos was given a term of 11 years and one day on similar charges. The commutation reduces their prison terms to time- served as of March 20.

Their case became part of the debate over illegal immigration and attempts to rewrite U.S. immigration law.

They were convicted of assaulting an unarmed Mexican national, Osvaldo Aldrete-Davila, who was shot in the buttocks in 2005 as he attempted to flee back to Mexico after being stopped inside the U.S. border with a van loaded with marijuana, according to the U.S. attorney’s office.

In a Sept. 11, 2008 statement about the case, U.S. Attorney Johnny Sutton said the two agents “shot 15 times at an unarmed man who was running away and posed no threat.” The agents “lied about what happened, covered up the shooting and then proceeded to write up and file a false report,” he said.

Aldrete-Davila was sentenced to nine years and five months in prison for conspiracy to import more than 100 kilograms of marijuana and related charges.

(more…)

Podcasts: G. Gordon Liddy Show Talks with Blackfive Media about Raven 23 Radio Logs

Filed under: Iraq,Legal News,Podcasts — Tags: , , , , — Matt @ 2:08 PM

An interview between G. Gordon Liddy Show and Jim Hanson of BlackFive Media in regards to the radio logs of the Blackwater Nisour Square shooting.  The media now has copies of these radio logs, and it is pretty apparent that these guys were being attacked.  Why this is important is that the DoJ has made the claim that these guys were not attacked, and fired on civilians.  The logs and pictures of bullet riddled vehicles will be very helpful to this case.

 

Link to Podcast and Blackfive here

Sunday, January 18, 2009

Quotes: Hillary Clinton and Security Contractors

Filed under: Quotes — Tags: , , — Matt @ 4:19 PM

   Way to call that one Doug.  There is politics, and then there is reality. We are an essential part of the big picture. –Matt

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“These private security contractors have been reckless and have compromised our mission in Iraq,” Clinton said in a prepared statement, referring to private security companies performing traditionally military missions. “The time to show these contractors the door is long past due.” –Hillary Clinton during presidential campaign.

 

I expect she’ll back off her hard line campaign rhetoric on the issue. She will be keen not to paint Obama into a corner by demanding unrealistic timetables or requirements for ending the use of private security. Not sure how her folks at State would take losing their primary security force in Iraq overnight . . .-Doug Brooks, President of IPOA.

 

“Our civilian employees need to be protected. As we withdraw our troops, we have to get assurances of their protection by Iraqi troops, or we have to use contractors.”-Hillary Clinton at her confirmation hearing at the Senate for Secretary of State.

 

More here at Democracy Arsenal blog.

 

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