BP Photoshopping Pictures
The photo contains data suggesting it was taken in 2001, not July of 2010 as claimed on BP's Web site. That would suggest, at least one possibility is, that BP took an old photo and Photoshopped new pictures of the oil spill over it, to make it look "new." I guess if you're doing fake crisis response, you might as well fake a photo of the crisis response center. Why do they need a fake photo at all? Don't they have a real crisis response center they could have used..?
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Who's Watching? Electronic Eyes Everywhere In Pittsburgh

"Electronic eyes are everywhere, and whether we think about it or not, we're all often under surveillance in Pittsburgh.

But local law enforcement and other agencies can use views from private and public cameras as crime-fighting tools.

Channel 4 Action News' Bob Mayo reported that a recent example involving a caught-on-camera clash in a White Oak store provided compelling video evidence that Allegheny County District Attorney Stephen Zappala said is a powerful prosecution tool.

'Quite frankly, Bob, that's what jurors want to see,' Zappala said. 'You know, they're used to TV...'"

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Labour’s Surveillance Society

"Councils have even used anti-terrorism powers under the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act to spy on families they suspect of petty offences...
Bolton Council used the Act to check a person’s mobile phone records as part of an investigation into unburied animal carcasses.
Kent County Council carried out 23 telephone subscriber checks during two inquiries into storing petrol without a licence and into a resident it suspected of bringing a dog into the UK without putting it in quarantine.
Sandwell Metropolitan Borough Council in the West Midlands carried out 16 phone and email checks, six of which involved an attempt to locate and identify an alleged bogus faith healer..."

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Wednesday, July 14, 2010
Ticket to Ride: Just Don't Drive!

"SERGEANT Matt Rees says it is "the best bit of kit … since radar". But privacy advocates warn it poses great risks.

The technology - automatic number plate recognition - has been around for about five years.

But now the (AUS) government will buy 100 mobile units for the 400 highway patrol vehicles - a move which, a trial suggests, could double the number of unregistered cars detected. In a five-month trial, eight cars detected nearly 4000 unregistered or uninsured cars, raised more than $2 million in fines, and drivers were charged with more than 3000 criminal offences..."

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The Fourth Amendment Right To Delete
"For years the police have entered homes and offices, hauled away filing cabinets full of records, and searched them back at the police station for evidence. In Fourth Amendment terms, these actions are entry, seizure, and search, respectively, and usually require the police to obtain a warrant. Modern-day police can avoid some of these messy steps with the help of technology: They have tools that duplicate stored records and collect evidence of behavior, all from a distance and without the need for physical entry. These tools generate huge amounts of data that may be searched immediately or stored indefinitely for later analysis. Meanwhile, it is unclear whether the Fourth Amendment’s restrictions apply to these technologies: Are the acts of duplication and collection themselves seizure? Before the data are analyzed, has a search occurred?"
(read the article - click on "bypass this message")