terrorist in Mecca escaping from the Sauds
Grok Headline matches for terrorist in Mecca escaping from the Sauds
The Road to Tech Mecca
The Road to Tech Mecca
07/02/2004 05:09 AMOpen markets and oil, satellite nets and Islam. Welcome to the
city-state of Dubai, the new media capital of the Middle East. By Lee
Smith from Wired magazine.
Newest Gay Mecca Is Less of Key West,
More of Mayberry
Newest Gay Mecca Is Less of Key West,
More of Mayberry
05/15/2004 04:26 AMWilton Manors, a Florida city that is about 40 percent gay, has
eschewed resort town cachet in favor of a more Middle American style.
HBO Emerges as a Mecca for Maverick
Filmmakers (Los Angeles Times)
HBO Emerges as a Mecca for Maverick
Filmmakers (Los Angeles Times)
09/19/2004 05:53 AMLos Angeles Times - Independent filmmakers have complained for years
that Hollywood's specialized film companies have grown from artistic
gamblers into cautious corporations, as former art-house heroes like
Miramax Films turn to $100-million epics and splashy star
vehicles.
No escaping from ourselves
No escaping from ourselves
10/29/2003 12:12 AM It came as a shock to read Salon's article on Neil Postman and
realise that he had died last...
Why There's No Escaping the Blog
Why There's No Escaping the Blog
12/27/2004 10:51 AMFortune Dec 27 2004 1:44PM GMT
"Why Theres No Escaping the Blog"
"Why Theres No Escaping the Blog"
12/28/2004 10:49 AMEscaping the jaws of Microsoft
Escaping the jaws of Microsoft
07/07/2004 07:41 AMSince taking the reins of Germany's SAP last year, Henning Kagermann
has hardly had a dull moment.
Technology - Why There's No Escaping the
Blog - FORTUNE
Technology - Why There's No Escaping the
Blog - FORTUNE
12/28/2004 03:30 AMFortune explains "why there is no escaping the
blog."
fortune.com/fortune/technology/articles/0,15114,1011763,00.ht
ml
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"Technology - Why There's No Escaping
the Blog - FORTUNE"
"Technology - Why There's No Escaping
the Blog - FORTUNE"
12/28/2004 09:33 PMUnified Hyperstructures for
Bioinformatics: Escaping the Application
Prison
Unified Hyperstructures for
Bioinformatics: Escaping the Application
Prison
07/25/2004 05:51 AMUnified Hyperstructures for Bioinformatics: Escaping the
Application Prison by Adam Moore and Tim Brailsfordhttp://jodi
.ecs.soton.ac.uk/Articles/v05/i01/Moore/AbstractThe Next Big Thing in hypertext will
be unifying different applications in bioinformatics through the
ZigZag paradigm, allowing this field to live up to its promise of
revolutionising the pharmaceutical industry. The paper outlines
ZigZag, Ted Nelson's unique hyperstructural paradigm, and illustrates
how, by examining a current bioinformatics task such as
structure/binding prediction, the application of this novel paradigm
has the potential to revolutionise bioinformatics completely by
allowing a unified approach to a task currently fulfilled by
fragmented data and applications. This has been added to
Biological
Informatics Subject Tracer™ Information Blog.
Escaping Palm HotSync Installation Hell
(30-Aug-2004; 5.5K)
Escaping Palm HotSync Installation Hell
(30-Aug-2004; 5.5K)
08/30/2004 10:39 PMGuardian Unlimited Politics Special
Reports Escaping the geek ghetto?
Guardian Unlimited Politics Special
Reports Escaping the geek ghetto?
12/05/2003 07:51 AMreview of developments in British political blogs .. Harry Hatchet ..
today
politics.guardian.co.uk/egovernment/comment/0,12767,1099845,00
.html
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Larry Lessig on Escaping the Country of
Blindness (O'Reilly E-Tech, Part 4)
Larry Lessig on Escaping the Country of
Blindness (O'Reilly E-Tech, Part 4)
03/19/2005 02:32 AMTechnology Review Mar 19 2005 4:37AM GMT
Terrorist DoS?
Terrorist DoS?
10/30/2003 11:31 AM Someone posted this as a comment on my skeptical blogging of a
reported denial of service attack on a group that "outs" what it
thinks are terrorist sites. This arabic site looks like it is planning
a DoS against Internet Hagannah to me. It is a list of ip addresses.
That page has been removed for "administrative purposes."...
Are You a Potential Terrorist?
Are You a Potential Terrorist?
05/21/2004 05:31 AMA Florida company that helped the government launch Matrix also
provided the feds with the names of 120,000 people who, according to
its statistics, were likely terrorists.
Suspected Terrorist
Suspected Terrorist
02/10/2004 02:35 AM[](http://www.aaronsw.com/2002/suspectedTerrorist/)?
What's Your Terrorist Quotient?
What's Your Terrorist Quotient?
05/20/2004 02:45 PMEarlier this year there was a lot of talk about the "MATRIX"
(Multistate Anti-Terrorism Information Exchange) that would link up a
variety of databases for law enforcement officials to get faster
access to data about possible criminals and criminal activity. There
has been a loud backlash against the system by privacy activists - and
while that's made some states back off, others have moved forward.
Defenders of the system insist that since all they're doing is making
use of information that is already available to them, there are no
privacy questions. All they've really done is made it faster to get
useful information for investigations. However, now a story has come
out that the original system went well beyond that
to give people a "terrorist quotient" suggesting how likely they
were to be a terrorist. The article also notes that the initial test
of the system came up with 120,000 potential terrorists - and helped
trigger a number of law enforcement actions. If it really is just
analyzing data that is already available, and simply flagging
individuals for further investigation, is that really such a big deal?
It's just a more data intensive version of profiling. The real risk
with such a system is that it would allow people who shouldn't have
access to get data on people they shouldn't have data on. However, if
it's actually being used to track down criminals, what's the problem?
Obviously, if law enforcement relies to strongly on the "terrorist
quotient" as an indicator of guilt, that would be a problem. But, if
it's just used to alert them to potential problems, and is using data
they already have available, the privacy issue doesn't seem to be as
big a deal. If the system is used properly, it's not that
problematic. The real issue is having some openness about what data
is being included, who has access to the system, and how the data is
being used.
Suspected Terrorist
Suspected Terrorist
01/18/2004 06:00 PM"Brown Equals Terrorist"
"Brown Equals Terrorist"
07/11/2004 04:41 AMAmerica's Internet terrorist
America's Internet terrorist
04/15/2004 10:29 PMStraits Times Apr 16 2004 2:13AM GMT
Brown = Terrorist - Part II
Brown = Terrorist - Part II
07/19/2004 03:06 PM
Brown = Terrorist - Part II With Bush running about the
country telling us how much safer we are, it's fun to look at some of
the so-called terrorists we're being protected from:
"Five
Mexican citizens who stole cans of baby formula from store shelves
throughout Iowa and sold them to a man of Arab descent for later
resale." Terrorist Alert Level: Red Herring!
Terrorist Alert Level: Red Herring!
08/03/2004 04:13 AM
Terrorist Alert
Level: Red Herring! The New York Times reported today that much of
the information that led to the heightened alert in New York and
Washington D.C. is actually
three or four years
old and that authorities have no evidence or recent
communications indicating an upcoming terrorist attack.
George Pataki and Michael Bloomberg, who are both speaking at the
upcoming Republican convention,
are making political hay off of
people's fears of another 9/11. Some New Yorkers are
worrie
d about the enormous cost of the alert to the local economy, as
bridge traffic snarls to a crawl.
Who needs foriegn terrorism when we can just make our own! Are we
scared yet?!
Read any good terrorist books lately?
Read any good terrorist books lately?
09/21/2004 01:05 PMAmong many other unfortunate provisions in the Patriot Act, passed in
haste and hysteria in the immediate aftermath of 9/11, there's one
that's especially loathsome to American values: It gives the
government an unprecedented and scary carte blanche to paw through
library and bookstore records to see what you've been reading. If you
believe that such records might actually help the government nail the
next wave of al-Qaida terrorists, then you don't have to do anything.
But if you believe, as I do, that this particular power is useless for
that goal -- but might prove handy for John Ashcroft and successors
should they decide that, for example, citizens who read too many books
about subject X might warrant close surveillance -- then you should
go here and sign the petition
by the
Campaign for Reader
Privacy, a coalition of booksellers, librarians and writers, to
push Congress to change this un-American law.
This particular part of the Patriot Act is one of those stealth
provisions that simply invites government abuse. Consider:
"The FBI may request the records secretly; it is not required to prove
that there is 'probable cause' to believe the person whose records are
being sought has committed a crime; and the bookseller or librarian
who receives an order is prohibited from revealing it to anyone except
those whose help is needed to produce the records."
This isn't the sort of power we should trust in any government's
hands; given the current administration's record, it's even scarier.
The Secret World Of Us Terrorist Prisons
The Secret World Of Us Terrorist Prisons
06/14/2004 12:30 AMFree Internet Press Jun 14 2004 4:13AM GMT
"RACHID: Inside The Mind Of A
"Terrorist""
"RACHID: Inside The Mind Of A
"Terrorist""
08/09/2004 08:37 PMFBI Investigates Terrorist Teddy Bear
FBI Investigates Terrorist Teddy Bear
06/22/2004 08:44 PMFree Internet Press Jun 23 2004 0:43AM GMT
Britain Charges 8 Terrorist Suspects
(AP)
Britain Charges 8 Terrorist Suspects
(AP)
08/17/2004 03:27 PMAP - British police charged eight terrorist suspects Tuesday of
conspiring to commit murder and use radioactive materials, toxic
gases, chemicals or explosives to cause "fear or injury" in a case
involving an alleged top al-Qaida operative at the center of a U.S.
terror alert this month.
HoustonChronicle.com - I write badly,
therefore I am a would-be terrorist
HoustonChronicle.com - I write badly,
therefore I am a would-be terrorist
07/09/2004 12:02 PMscribbling possible dialog for your novel in the margin of your
crossword .. novelist was placed on Homeland Security's watchlist .. I
write badly, therefore I am a would-be terrorist .. people are
detained for writing the word
bomb
chron.com/cs/CDA/ssistory.mpl/editorial/outlook/2660471
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FDA Warns of Terrorist Drug Tampering
(AP)
FDA Warns of Terrorist Drug Tampering
(AP)
08/12/2004 04:16 AMAP - "Cues from chatter" gathered around the world are raising
concerns that terrorists might try to attack the domestic food and
drug supply, particularly illegally imported prescription drugs,
acting Food and Drug Administration Commissioner Lester M. Crawford
says.
Britain Charges Eight Terrorist Suspects
(AP)
Britain Charges Eight Terrorist Suspects
(AP)
08/17/2004 09:35 PMAP - British police charged eight terrorist suspects Tuesday with
conspiring to commit murder and use radioactive materials, toxic
gases, chemicals or explosives to cause "fear or injury" in a case
involving an alleged top al-Qaida operative at the center of a U.S.
terror alert this month.
IRA offshoot designated as terrorist
group
IRA offshoot designated as terrorist
group
07/13/2004 03:28 PMAl-Qaeda cyber terrorist panics US
Al-Qaeda cyber terrorist panics US
08/02/2004 12:17 PMWeapons of mass inconvenience
New Cooperation and New Tensions in
Terrorist Hunt
New Cooperation and New Tensions in
Terrorist Hunt
08/17/2004 11:18 AMThe apprehension of Muhammad Naeem Noor Khan was wrapped up with
almost no notice, but it would have enormous global repercussions.
Stanford: My So-Called Terrorist Life
Stanford: My So-Called Terrorist Life
03/26/2005 07:55 PMMarch 1 Written for a class assignment. The email arrived Thursday
afternoon. “The terrorist cell simulation has begun”, it
read….
Hezbollah TV on US Terrorist Exclusion
List
Hezbollah TV on US Terrorist Exclusion
List
03/14/2005 05:53 PM
One of the things I'm going to talk about on the panel today is the
addition of al-Manar, the satellite TV station of Lebanon-based
Hezbollah to the Terrorist Exclusion List on December 17,
2004. The TEL limits immigration for foreigners associated with
organizations on the list. This is not the worst of the various lists
to be on, but according to
Jack Shafer, they are the first media company to be added to this
list. My understanding is that al-Manar represents the Hezbollah party
in Lebanon. It is an official party with democratically elected
politicians. While the content of al-Manar may be objectionable to
many people, stifling the voice of a democratically elected party in a
foreign country by calling them terrorists goes against the spirit of
freedom of expression. The US constitution's First Amendment rights
only cover Americans, but I believe that in a democracy the
competition of ideas and free speech should combat beliefs that it
does not agree with - more speech and debate, not censorship.
Another issue is the chilling effect that this has. Although
talking about or talking to people from al-Manar might not land you on
the Terrorist Exclusion List, it could easily land you on the no-fly
or similar list and cause you to be perpetually harassed when
traveling in the US. I imagine that people from al-Manar will have a
very difficult time finding anyone to talk to or have lunch with. I
feel a chill running down my spine just writing this post.
Comment -
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Database Tagged 120,000 as Possible
Terrorist Suspects
Database Tagged 120,000 as Possible
Terrorist Suspects
05/21/2004 02:31 AMThe "high terrorism factor" scoring system was also a critical selling
point for the involvement of the database company, Seisint Inc., in
another criminal information project.
Terrorist jitters: responders weigh in
Terrorist jitters: responders weigh in
02/14/2003 05:40 PMWollstein's guide isn't the only one of its kind – although, judging
from its prominence on a Google search, it is one of the more popular.
Jordan 'thwarts terrorist attack'
Jordan 'thwarts terrorist attack'
04/13/2004 11:47 PMKing Abdullah praises intelligence officers for foiling an attack he
said could have killed thousands of people.
"Lull In Terrorist Chatter Worries
Officals"
"Lull In Terrorist Chatter Worries
Officals"
08/08/2004 02:09 PMGrok Description matches for terrorist in Mecca escaping from the Sauds
GrokA matches for terrorist in Mecca escaping from the Sauds
terrorist in Mecca escaping from the Sauds