Battlestar Season 3 Premiere

Filed under: Television — one October 8, 2006 @ 12:36 am

Wow! I thought the season 2 finale was insane, but what an opener! I'm not sure if we lost two major characters or not, we'll likely find out next week.  I recall reading that at least one major character was going bye-bye this season but I didn't think it would be in the first episode!

Normally I would post a spoiler alert and go over the finer points in great detail, but this really is a show you've got to experience for yourself.  For those of you who have yet to see an episode I understand your skepticism.  Let me assure you it is misplaced.  You do not need to be a science fiction fan to be shocked, awed, wowed and entertained (and I use that last work in the farthest sense from "Will and Grace" possible) by the new Battlestar Galactica.

The target audience for this show is anyone who lives on this planet, reads the news occasionally and doesn't like what they see.  For those of you that meet the criteria, you will find this show strikes chords in you like no show you've ever watched, and as a die-hard Star Trek fan (and a fan of 24, LOST and many more) my recommendation does not come lightly.

- one

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Operation Vista: An Exercise in Greed

Filed under: Technology — one October 7, 2006 @ 1:24 pm

I know, it's all too popular to slam Microsoft and these days it's especially common to slam Windows Vista, but hear me out because I'm going to do my very best to approach this even-handedly.

If you've been reading tech news in the past few weeks you assuredly know all about how Symantec and McAfee have made public claims that Vista is insecure.  You may not have heard that F-Secure is also on-board with them.

The playing field is confusingly split, however. Some big security firms like Sophos are defending Microsoft and casually dismiss concerns by other security software vendors.  Russian security outfit Kaspersky has categorically stated that Microsoft has done absolutely nothing to make it difficult for third parties to develop security software on the Vista platform.

So what the heck is going on?  Well, the uproar is primarily over two things.  One is a feature called "Patch Guard" which locks the kernel (the core of the operating system) to prevent it from being modified.  From a security standpoint, this could be a very good thing providing no malware is developed that can break through and modify the kernel anyway.  If that happens the good guys will have some difficulty removing the virus from the kernel because Patch Guard will still be keeping every other piece of software, including them, out.

In any other situation, no piece of software should ever need to modify the kernel.  Due to that, and the fact that Microsoft unrealistically believes their Patch Guard to be virtually impenetrable, not even "good guys" will get the code they need to get past it.  Some security firms are fine with this because in their judgement the danger of a kernel breach is low and if (or when) it happens Microsoft can release a patch that corrects the issue.

In fact, Microsoft has regularly scheduled patches for all its currently-supported operating systems.  The fact that they need to release new patches every few weeks is frightening in itself, but with the Internet Explorer VML bug two weeks ago the regularly scheduled patch day played an even more dangerous role as Microsoft played down security concerns over the exploit and initially insisted there was no need to release a patch for the problem any sooner than the next scheduled patch date — more than two weeks away.

The flaw in the VML allowed a remote website to download and run spyware on the users' local machines, but only if the website being visited was serving the trojan up to visitors.  The exploit appeared on sites of ill-repute from day zero, but the black-hat cowboys behind the plot had a trick up their sleeve in the form of a cPanel exploit, allowing them access to sites on web servers running that particular software.  Very shortly there were over a thousand innocent sites whose operators had no idea they were infecting every IE visitor that browsed through.

Yet, Microsoft continued to play down the scope and severity of the problem.  They did eventually relent to outside pressure and release a patch for the IE bug prior to their regular update, but only after a week had passed.  ZERT, an independant group of engineers, released an unofficial patch for the problem much earlier in the crisis, but Microsoft counseled their customers not to use it.

Microsoft's track record on security is not good. Before this VML exploit there were many, many other examples of poor security response by Microsoft including their regularly scheduled habit of releasing new operating systems that are not, by most professional standards, ready to be released.

So there is certainly cause for concern, and McAfee, Symantec and others are not completely daffy.  On the other hand, there really is no immediate problem.  Patch Guard works.  In fact, it's not even new.  It has already been incorporated into the 64-bit version of Windows XP and Windows 2003.  That being the case begs the question, why is this suddenly an issue now?

To explore that let's take a look at the second of our two reasons these security firms are upset: The Vista Security Panel.  This feature has essentially the same purpose as the security center found in the control panel of Windows XP, but with some differences in functionality. The biggest difference, as far as Symantec, McAfee and the entire European Union are concerned, is the fact that third-party security software won't be able to turn it off.

According to Microsoft it can be turned off manually by the user (no information on how easy or difficult this is to do), but cannot be disabled by software.  There are legitimate security reasons to support the decision to do this, but at the same time this poses a bit of a problem for any security software vendor who want to use their own customized and branded security panel.  The computer will have two security panels running at all times and the average computer user could become confused and frustrated.

This is a major reason why the playing field is split.  Security vendors who specialize in direct-to-consumer products have an additional hurdle to overcome while companies focusing primarily on corporate and enterprise solutions, or security products that are just plain not-as-flashy are unaffected.

At its heart, this issue is about Microsoft using its muscle (as opposed to superior product offering) to squeeze itself deeper into the security software industry.  What's at stake is, all other concerns being unrealized as of yet, branding.

Personally, I find Symantec and McAfee's consumer products abhorrent.  They drain system resources and their pop-up messages are beyond annoying.  But the point remains that these companies represent recognizable brands; Brands whose sales are in-part driven by brand-reinforcement such as found throughout the products in question.

What does it all come down to?

Microsoft makes very flexible operating systems which also happen to be riddled with flaws.  C'est la vie.  They also use their operating systems to push other software vendors out of the market under the guise of offering users more features.  Internet Explorer, Unzip, Software Firewall and now these new features in Vista: It's obvious to anyone paying attention that third-party software products suffer serious blows when Microsoft adds new features to Windows.  The question to ask, though, is whether or not this is "wrong", and by wrong I mean bad for the consumer, Anti-Trust lawsuit kind of wrong.

My answer is, "yes".  The simple reason for this is that in many cases Microsoft's offerings are often inferior and they represent hurdles (which translate to time and money) for third-party vendors to overcome.

With regards to Symantec, McAfee and the rest of those criticizing Vista for the above reasons I would have to say their concerns are valid, but not cause for alarm.  Additionally, the "big stink" being made is likely fueled more by concern for their share of the security software market than by concern for average-joe computer user.  Having said that, keep in mind that they have as much of a right to defend their brand and market share as Microsoft has to diminish it.  More, in fact.

- one

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Respect My Authoritae!

Filed under: Politics — one October 6, 2006 @ 11:06 am

George W. Bush

As time passes I find myself growing more and more concerned, not with the job Bush is doing (which in and of itself is poor) but with the fact that he seems to think his job includes doing a lot of things that are relegated to other branches of government.  He doesn't seem to grasp that the position of president is not all-powerful, nor is it intended to be.

The signing statements are worrysome.  Who wouldn't be worried when the president regularly makes notes on the bottom of freshly passed laws regarding which parts of the law he intends to ignore?  What gets me is that no one says 'Boo' about it in the Congress.  They just stay meek and quiet.

So Bush treats congress the way a dictator treats his parliament — as advisors whom he can ignore at his discretion, but what of the judiciary?  Need we even ask?  He labels any judge that disagrees with him as an "activist".

But that really sums up the danger he represents right there. Anyone, and I do mean anyone, who disagrees with him is immediately denegrated.  Whether they are a "liberal" or "activist" Bush makes it clear that if anyone not in 100% agreement with his policies is aiding the terrorists through their misguided ideology.

And nothing is done.

We can, of course, chalk much of this reluctance up to the Republican-held Congress.  They're loathe to openly criticize their champion.  Unless it has to do with the Dubai Ports deal.  There our Congress proudly stood tall in defiance and said, "Mr. President, we will not do your bidding!"

Of course, while everyone was focusing on how noble Congress was for acting independantly they quietly renewed the U.S.A. P.A.T.R.I.O.T. act.  Frankly, the Dubai ports deal was  not a serious security risk but like most matters of Congress the book is judged by its cover for the sake of all the voters who get their news from the news.  And as anyone who watches the news knows, if it sounds remotely threatening you'll see the 10 second trailers all day long telling you to tune in at 11 to find out why your kids might be in danger.

It goes without saying that the the U.S.A. P.A.T.R.I.O.T. act was named as such to achieve sort of a reverse effect — it sounds good, so it must be.  After being passed it came under much criticism for certain allowances within its framework, and to be fair the portions of the act in question were by far in the minority, but still the fact remains that it was renewed almost without mention while the country was up in arms about the ports being run by a company based out of the United Arab Emirates, a U.S. ally, despite the fact that the company's role would not involve security and despite the fact that the existing security is only slightly better than none at all.

I am inclined to believe that Congress was keen on passing the act in the interests of bowing to Bush's interests and they were more than happy to seize the opportunity of the ports deal to flood the news with something else while they did it. Pay no attention to the man behind the curtain.

The lack of news coverage actually reminded me of just a few weeks after we invaded Iraq when, after waking up and turning on CNN first thing every morning to learn what I could of this war we were involved in, one day I turned on CNN and I was sadded to hear some woman in California had been murdered. To make it worse, she had been pregnant. To make things even worse, the Lacey Peterson case dominated the news from there-on-out, completely eclipsing the coverage of Iraq.

Of course what happened there was terrible, but there were hundreds of people being killed in Iraq.  It didn't matter, though.  The American Media assumes our country has the attention span of a goldfish, and through their constant coddling they've managed to lower American's expectations of themselves and their peers to the point where they have managed to steadily lower the country's intelligence.

Bush needs to realize he is not the boss of Congress and the Supreme CourtNewsweek unashamedly published three of their four editions with a cover story titled "Losing Afghanistan" a little more than a week ago. The fourth edition (the U.S. edition)  instead had a cover story on photographer Annie Leibovitz titled "My Life in Pictures". Thanks, Newsweek, for helping de-educate this great nation of ours.

President Bush has criticized Vladmir Putin for eliminating democracy at the lower levels of his government. Bush sees this as a slow move back towards authoritarianism in Russia, and I agree there is cause for concern.  There is also cause for concern in this country, as the pot calling the kettle black a.k.a. George W. Bush treads heavily over the checks and balances built into our constitution.  Of course there is no concern because everyone is too overloaded with Bush-administration-instilled fear of terrorists and watching CourtTV.

This country needs to wake up, stop listening to the party line and start ignoring the sensationalism on the news, because there is a real threat and it needs your attention.

And do your due diligence — Vote in November but don't just vote party lines.  Do a little research online.  You found this website, I'm sure you can find the website for the candidates in your area.  Find out who they are and make an informed decision.

Let's take this country back. Make good choices now and show the party leadership (of both parties) that we won't be satisfied with their book-cover judging, skin-deep rhetoric any more. Show them in November, and hopefully by 2008 we'll have two good candidates to choose between instead of two more poor ones.

God bless, and if you're not into that sort of thing, may the force be with you.

- one 

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