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Archief voor Juli, 2007
Dinsdag, 31 Juli, 2007
Door David Gutierrez
Slechts vijf staten en het District van Colombia vereisen dat de giften van het farmaceutische bedrijvenrapport die zij aan tot artsen hebben gemaakt, en zelfs in deze jurisdicties de wetten zijn zo slecht afgedwongen dat de details van deze transacties blijven een de facto geheim, volgens een studie gepubliceerd=wordt= die in het Dagboek van de Amerikaanse Medische Vereniging.
Onderzoekers […]
Binnen gepost Het breken |
Dinsdag, 31 Juli, 2007
AP
Het recentste controleverslag aan Congres over de wederopbouw van Irak zegt corruptie in het land, met inbegrip van fraude, belemmeren de diefstal en het afromen van bedragen aan „tweede insurgency“ de het herbouwen inspanning.
Stuart Bowen, die het driemaandelijkse rapport schreef, vertelt de Geassoci�ėrde Pers dat behalve veiligheid, de corruptie de grootste uitdaging voor de Iraakse te overwinnen overheid is.
Mislukking […]
Binnen gepost Breaking |
Tuesday, July 31st, 2007
By Anne Broache
A recent report documenting computer scientists’ ability to hack into voting machines certified for use in the state of California has already begun reverberating on Capitol Hill.
Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.), who happens to be one of the chief sponsors of a bill that would prohibit paperless voting machines by the 2010 federal elections, […]
Posted in Political |
Tuesday, July 31st, 2007
A House committee is requesting Justice Department documents on a data-mining project that identified the senders and recipients of calls and e-mails intercepted via the National Security Agency’s eavesdropping program.
In a Monday letter, Rep. John Conyers, chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, asked Attorney General Alberto Gonzales to hand over “all opinions, memoranda and background materials, […]
Posted in Surveillance |
Tuesday, July 31st, 2007
By Gemma Simpson
The ID cards scheme has cost more than £30m over the past financial year.
During the year ending 31 March, 2007, the government spent £30.9m on setting up the National Identity Scheme (NIS) — up from the £27.7m expenditure in the previous year, according to Home Office figures.
The £30.9m NIS-incurred expenditure was short of […]
Posted in Surveillance |
Tuesday, July 31st, 2007
By Sarah Spiller
The government’s ID card system will give thousands of “false matches” when more than six million people are registered on its database, an academic has claimed.
Biometric data holding a person’s unique physiological characteristics will be stored on a microchip in the cards.
But Professor John Daugman, said using fingerprints as a […]
Posted in Surveillance |
Tuesday, July 31st, 2007
Guidelines raise concerns over security, consent and access
By Dinah Greek
MPs have criticised new guidance from Becta that shows schools can fingerprint pupils without first asking for parental permission.
Although the guidelines from Becta, the Government’s schools ICT agency, say schools should “fully involve parents in any decision to introduce biometric or fingerprint technology”, it is not […]
Posted in Surveillance |
Tuesday, July 31st, 2007
By Andrew Grice
Gordon Brown has paved the way for the withdrawal of British troops from Iraq by telling George Bush he would not delay their exit in order to show unity with the United States.
After four hours of one-to-one talks with the US President at his Camp David retreat, Mr Brown told a joint press […]
Posted in Breaking |
Tuesday, July 31st, 2007
By Ben Bold
Britain’s defence chiefs are spending millions of pounds on more than 1,000 spin doctors to improve the public image of the armed forces, but admit that they have no idea who these PRs are or whether they are having an impact.
The startling admission was made in a report called The Defence Communications Strategy, […]
Posted in War & Terrorism |
Tuesday, July 31st, 2007
Section has more related reportsHelp keep RINF going..
Posted in Breaking |
Monday, July 30th, 2007
by Adam Thomas
US President George W. Bush today asked for more powers to wiretap without warrants, in effect retroactively legalizing the unlawful National Security Agency wiretapping, which the President ordered in 2002.
The NSA wiretapping order is illegal under the terms of the The Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, but Bush administration, led by Attorney General Alberto […]
Posted in Surveillance |
Monday, July 30th, 2007
By Adam Thomas
The Department of Defense is planning to implant microchips in soldiers’ brains for monitoring their health information, and has already awarded a $1.6 million contract to the Center for Bioelectronics, Biosensors and Biochips (C3B) at Clemson University for the development of an implantable “biochip”.
Soldiers fear that the biochip, about the size of a […]
Posted in Sci Tech, Surveillance |
Monday, July 30th, 2007
War, Technology Drive Up Spending
By Renae Merle
Several of Washington’s largest defense contractors said last week that they continue to benefit from a boom in spending on the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan as well as sustained government demand for information technology, defying predictions that the sector’s expansion would begin to slow.
Profit reports from Northrop Grumman, […]
Posted in War & Terrorism |
Monday, July 30th, 2007
David Batty
Monday July 30, 2007
Guardian Unlimited
Police want to drop the field impairment test for drivers suspected of drug driving. Photograph: Niall Carsonpa/PA
Anyone who drives after taking illegal drugs should be prosecuted, senior police officers said today.The Association of Chief Police Officers (Acpo) called for the law to be changed so that penalties could be imposed […]
Posted in Breaking |
Monday, July 30th, 2007
By Matthew Moore
It is a conspiracy theory worthy of a Dan Brown novel.
New claims that Leonardo da Vinci’s The Last Supper contains a hidden image of a woman holding a child are provoking a storm of interest on the internet.
The figure allegedly appears when the 15th Century mural painting is superimposed with its mirror image, […]
Posted in Breaking |
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