Feral Jundi

Wednesday, May 13, 2009

Technology: In Attics and Closets, ‘Biohackers’ Discover Their Inner Frankenstein

Filed under: Technology — Tags: , — Matt @ 1:50 AM

   Thanks to Doug for sending me this one.  I had no idea that this kind of DIY was going on, but it makes sense.  And where as I am sure there are most that only wish to do good, there is always the one percent of one percent that will use this for some evil stuff if they could.  

   I guess the concern I would have, is for these closet Frankensteins to actually get good enough at their hobby to be interesting enough for terrorists or criminal elements to kidnap or extort. Or these hackers simplify the concepts and procedures, and make it easy for enemies to DIY.  I would be very curious to see who is reading the blogs and websites that these guys are conversing on and I would bet that the blog and others like it get high traffic, and from some very obscure places in the world. –Matt 

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In Attics and Closets, ‘Biohackers’ Discover Their Inner Frankenstein

Using Mail-Order DNA and Iguana Heaters, Hobbyists Brew New Life Forms; Is It Risky?

MAY 13, 2009

By JEANNE WHALEN

In Massachusetts, a young woman makes genetically modified E. coli in a closet she converted into a home lab. A part-time DJ in Berkeley, Calif., works in his attic to cultivate viruses extracted from sewage. In Seattle, a grad-school dropout wants to breed algae in a personal biology lab.

These hobbyists represent a growing strain of geekdom known as biohacking, in which do-it-yourselfers tinker with the building blocks of life in the comfort of their own homes. Some of them buy DNA online, then fiddle with it in hopes of curing diseases or finding new biofuels.

But are biohackers a threat to national security?

That was the question lurking behind a phone call that Katherine Aull got earlier this year. Ms. Aull, 23 years old, is designing a customized E. coli in the closet of her Cambridge, Mass., apartment, hoping to help with cancer research.

She’s got a DNA “thermocycler” bought on eBay for $59, and an incubator made by combining a styrofoam box with a heating device meant for an iguana cage. A few months ago, she talked about her hobby on DIY Bio, a Web site frequented by biohackers, and her work was noted in New Scientist magazine.

That’s when the phone rang. A man saying he was doing research for the U.S. government called with a few polite, pointed questions: How did she build that lab? Did she know other people creating new life forms at home?

The caller said the agency he represented is “used to thinking about rogue states and threats from that,” recalls Ms. Aull, a recent Massachusetts Institute of Technology graduate.

(more…)

Saturday, May 9, 2009

Job Tips: Iron Key Secure Flash Drive

Filed under: Job Tips,Technology — Tags: , , , , , — Matt @ 10:33 PM

      This is not only cool, but it is essential stuff for contracting.  And what I really like about this encrypted flash drive is that it self destructs.  So if you lose it, and someone picks it up and attempts to break into it, it will erase after tampering or ten attempts at a password. Not to mention that it is mil spec.   

     But if you are out there on contract, and your company loses their gig and you’re rolled over to another company or you hop on over to a better deal, having your important stuff stored on a device like this and ready to send is vital.  I would also save your documents on an encrypted email account like Hushmail or some other secure online service where you can store documents.  Have the stuff easy to get to, that is safely stored and secure, and in different places, can make the difference between getting a job or not when you are out on the road. –Matt

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SECURE YOUR FILES AND PROTECT YOUR IDENTITY

IronKey Personal is a revolutionary personal security device designed to protect your data, passwords and online identity on any computer.

Hardware Encryption and Malware Defenses for Bullet-Proof Security

All data stored on an IronKey Personal drive is encrypted with high-speed military-grade hardware encryption. Unlike software-based encryption, this “always-on” protection cannot be disabled and is protected against cold-boot and brute force attacks. No one can access files stored on an IronKey unless they authenticate with the correct password. All encryption and password verification are performed in hardware, and it cannot be disabled by worms, viruses or other malware.

Secure & Private Web Browsing

IronKey drives come pre-configured with a portable version of Mozilla’s popular Firefox Web browser. All data, cookies, and Web history are maintained locally on the drive. The optional IronKey Secure Sessions service protects your privacy on the Web by triple-encrypting all of your Web surfing traffic, and provides secure DNS services to help assure that you are not visiting a spoofed website.

(more…)

Sunday, March 22, 2009

Technology: The Unmanned Little Bird (ULB)

Filed under: Technology — Tags: , , , — Matt @ 9:03 PM

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

Technology: War Robots, Ethics, and the Book ‘Wired for War’ by Peter Singer

Filed under: Books,Technology — Tags: , , , — Matt @ 11:24 AM

   What can I say?  We are now having this discussion, and it blows me away.  And as I speak, drones are killing folks in IraqAfghanistan, and Pakistan, and have been doing so for awhile.  The only safety measure is that they are so far not really autonomous.  But what happens when we cut the cord and let some robot or drone operate on it’s own?  What happens if that robot has a glitch and accidently kills the good guys?  Do you charge a robot with manslaughter, are they covered by the Geneva Convention, do we give them full burial honors at Arlington Cemetery when they pass?

  On a side note, I did get a chance to pick up Peter Singer’s book, and I read through it a little.  I will not give a full review, but there were some parts that were interesting.  Especially the section that discussed ground robots, and the first ever drawing of blood in this war by a ground robot.  Basically some soldiers put a Claymore mine on a MARCbot, and drove it into a pack of insurgents and blew them up. The total cost for that kill, about $8,000, plus whatever it costs the military for a claymore.  I think I could make or buy a cheaper Claymore carriage at a hobby store, but still, that field expedient weapon is a whole lot cheaper than launching a Javelin at the enemy. (and if it hurt the enemy and/or saved lives, bravo!)

   The insurgents came up with a similar type deal using a skateboard according to the book.  I guess they made an explosive laden skateboard with motors on the wheels.  The insurgents powered it up, and set it rolling slowly towards a patrol, thinking the patrol would not pay attention to a slow rolling toy.  Luckily the patrol locked on to the thing, because it was moving against the wind.  The total cost of this weapon was way cheaper than the MARCbot, but could have easily succeeded if used properly.

   So with these humble beginnings of ground combat robots, will we one day see a robot that thinks on it’s own?  I do know that the desire for these things is driving the market big time.  With a highly competitive robotics market and a war that is not going away anytime soon, we will begin to see these kinds of autonomous war robots that science fiction, and now academics are talking about.  Good or bad, the future is now. –Matt

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Military robots must be taught a warrior code

16 Feb 2009

Autonomous military robots must be taught a strict warrior code or they could turn on their human masters, a US report warns.

I, Robot: Military robots must be taught a warrior code

The warnings of a potential revolt, as envisaged by the science writer Isaac Asimov in his chilling I, Robot series of stories, appear in the first major report on robot ethics Photo: 20TH CENTURY FOX

The warnings of a potential revolt, as envisaged by the science writer Isaac Asimov in his chilling I, Robot series of stories, appear in the first major report on robot ethics.

The report, by researchers from the Ethics and Emerging Technologies Group at California Polytechnic State University, was funded by the US navy office of naval research.

Mindful of the US deployment in two major theatres of war, the military is keen to pursue alternatives to manpower, including Terminator-style armed robots.

(more…)

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

Technology: World News Connection

Filed under: Technology — Tags: , , — Matt @ 4:04 PM

    This is a cool little resource for gathering news and stories throughout the world.  Although Google does a pretty good job of finding stuff, this little gem might catch the off hand stuff that Google misses.  Check it out. –Matt

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About World News Connection

An extremely valuable research tool for anyone who needs to monitor non-U.S. media sources, the material in WNC is provided to the National Technical Information Service (NTIS) by the Open Source Center (OSC). Analysts from OSC domestic and overseas bureaus monitor timely and pertinent open-source materials.

WNC is the only news service that allows you to take advantage of the intelligence gathering experience of OSC. 

 

Link Here

Wikiepedia for OSC

Story about OSC Here

 

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