Security quotes of the week
The tech companies, data brokers, and advertisers behind this surveillance,
and the technology that drives it, are largely invisible to the average
user. Corporations have built a hall of one-way mirrors: from the inside,
you can see only apps, web pages, ads, and yourself reflected by social
media. But in the shadows behind the glass, trackers quietly take notes on
nearly everything you do. These trackers are not omniscient, but they are
widespread and indiscriminate. The data they collect and derive is not
perfect, but it is nevertheless extremely sensitive.
— Bennett
Cyphers and Gennie Gebhart in the introduction to an EFF study on the
"technology of corporate surveillance"
Captain Elle Ekman is a US Marine Corps logistics officer; in a New York
Times op-ed, she describes how the onerous conditions imposed by
manufacturers on the US armed forces mean that overseas troops are not
permitted to fix their own mission-critical gear, leaving them stranded and
disadvantaged.
— Cory DoctorowInstead of fixing their equipment as armies have done since the time of the Caesars, US armed forces personnel ship their faulty gear back to the USA for warranty repair, waiting months to get it back into service. She describes maintenance bays full of broken equipment and idle 3D printers, water-jets cutters, and lathes that were once used to effect field repairs. Now, the gear just waits to be shipped stateside.