Wednesday, June 08, 2022

Techdirt: Daily Deal for June 8 2022 (from good-deals-on-cool-stuff department)

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Daily Deal: StackSkills Unlimited

from the good-deals-on-cool-stuff dept

StackSkills is the premier online learning platform for mastering today’s most in-demand skills. Now, with this exclusive limited-time offer, you’ll gain access to 1000+ StackSkills courses for life! Whether you’re looking to earn a promotion, make a career change, or pick up a side hustle to make some extra cash, StackSkills delivers engaging online courses featuring the skills that matter most today, both personally and professionally.

From blockchain to growth hacking, to iOS development, StackSkills stays ahead of the hottest trends to offer the most relevant courses and up-to-date information. It’s on sale for $99.

Note: The Techdirt Deals Store is powered and curated by StackCommerce. A portion of all sales from Techdirt Deals helps support Techdirt. The products featured do not reflect endorsements by our editorial team.

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CHAIN-OF-COMMAND CORRUPTION: Former Leader of U.S. and NATO Forces in Afghanistan Under Investigation

News of the potential case against Allen caused an immediate stir.
> Steve Schmidt, a former Republican operative and co-founder of the anti-Trump Lincoln Project, called the story “shocking” and “a disgrace for the US Marine Corps”, adding: “The credibility of the Brookings Institution is on the line … Washington DC corruption has reached epic and unprecedented levels.”
> FBI agent, Babak Adib said Allen misrepresented his role in the lobbying campaign and failed to disclose “that he was simultaneously pursuing multimillion-dollar business deals with the government of Qatar”.
> “At the same time he was lobbying US government officials on behalf of Qatar, Allen pursued at least one multimillion-dollar business deal with the Qatari government on behalf of a company on whose board of directors he served,” the affidavit said. . .

1

FBI seizes retired US general’s electronic data over alleged illegal Qatar lobbying

<div class=__reading__mode__extracted__imagecaption>Gen John Allen led US forces in Afghanistan before heading the Brookings Institution thinktank. Photograph: J Scott Applewhite/AP<br>Gen John Allen led US forces in Afghanistan before heading the Brookings Institution thinktank. Photograph: J Scott Applewhite/AP</div>

 

2 The court filings detail Allen’s alleged behind-the-scenes efforts to help Qatar influence US policy in 2017 when a diplomatic crisis erupted between the gas-rich Persian Gulf monarchy and its neighbours.

FBI investigates former US general over Qatar lobbying role

According to FBI probe, Allen had financial incentives for helping Qatar and maintained strong ties to its top leaders.

"The FBI has seized the electronic data of a retired four-star general who authorities say withheld “incriminating” documents and lied about his role in an illegal foreign lobbying campaign on behalf of Qatar.

New federal court filings obtained Tuesday outlined a potential criminal case against former Marine General John R Allen, who led United States and NATO forces in Afghanistan before being tapped in 2017 to lead the influential Brookings Institution think-tank. . .

[    ] Allen declined to comment on the new filings. He has previously denied ever working as a Qatari agent and said his efforts on Qatar in 2017 were motivated to prevent a war from breaking out in the Gulf that would put US troops at risk. . .

> The Qatari foreign ministry and the Qatari embassy in Washington, DC have not commented on the matter.

>. . .Allen also had other financial incentives for helping the Qataris and maintaining strong ties to its top leaders, the FBI said. . ."

READ MORE >> https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2022/6/8/fbi-investigates-former-us-general-over-qatar-lobbying-role

First Look: "Call of Duty: Modern Warfare II"

Intro: Reporter Andrew Webster is careful to note, "Given the current state of the world, with an ongoing war in Ukraine and a sudden focus on gun violence in the US, Modern Warfare II is launching at a tricky time. (That’s not even mentioning the many, many lawsuits faced by Call of Duty publisher Activision Blizzard.)
In a preview for press ahead of the announcement, Infinity Ward co-studio head Patrick Kelly explained, “We’re telling fictional stories. But it is inspired by real-world military events that shape the world we live in.
This is a sensitive one for me because with the events going on in the world, the war on Ukraine, it’s important to me that we be sensitive on this one.” He explained that one of the goals was to present the game’s characters as “heroic but also human.”
> This philosophy appears to be a change from the previous Modern Warfare, which tended to more sensationalist depictions of war.

Filed under: Gaming Entertainment Tech            

Here’s your first look at Call of Duty: Modern Warfare II

The game comes to PlayStation, Xbox, and PC (including Steam) in October

Here’s your first look at Call of Duty: Modern Warfare II              

It’s no secret that Infinity Ward has been working on a sequel to 2019’s Call of Duty: Modern Warfare, and, now, the studio is finally unveiling its next blockbuster. It’s called Modern Warfare II, and it features both a single-player campaign that’s a direct sequel to the previous game as well as multiplayer including a new tactical co-op mode.

[.    ] Modern Warfare II is scheduled to launch on October 28th for a large range of platforms, including the PS4, PS5, Xbox One, Xbox Series X / S, and PC via both Battle.net and, for the first time in years, Steam."

Feds Seize SSNDOB

Intro: ". . .As security company Sophos noted in a story on yesterday's shutdown, "an SSN doesn't actively identify you," but "knowing someone's SSN (or the equivalent personal identifier in your country) is a good starting point if you're an identity thief, because it can often be combined with other personal information to get past identity checks."
. . .Security company Chainanlysis also wrote that the SSNDOB shutdown is "the latest in a string of darknet market closures over the past year. .

Feds seize SSNDOB marketplace that listed personal data of 24 million people

SSNDOB websites taken down by seizure orders, but no arrests have been made.

<div class=__reading__mode__extracted__imagecaption>Enlarge/ Seizure notice on ssndob.ws.

Federal law enforcement agencies say they shut down a group of websites that made over $19 million selling Social Security numbers and other personal data.

A Justice Department press release yesterday announced "the seizure of the SSNDOB Marketplace, a series of websites that operated for years and were used to sell personal information, including the names, dates of birth, and Social Security numbers belonging to individuals in the United States." SSNDOB apparently operated for about a decade, and the Justice Department said it listed the personal information of about 24 million US residents.

The announcement described how the SSNDOB operation was run:

The SSNDOB administrators created advertisements on darkweb criminal forums for the marketplace's services, provided customer support functions, and regularly monitored the activities of the sites, including monitoring when purchasers deposited money into their accounts. The administrators also employed various techniques to protect their anonymity and to thwart detection of their activities, including using online monikers that were distinct from their true identities, strategically maintaining servers in various countries, and requiring buyers to use digital payment methods, such as bitcoin.

Seizure orders

The seizure operation was led by the IRS and FBI, with the agencies working in "close cooperation with law enforcement authorities in Cyprus and Latvia." On Tuesday, "seizure orders were executed against the domain names of the SSNDOB Marketplace (ssndob.ws, ssndob.vip, ssndob.club, and blackjob.biz), effectively ceasing the website's operation," the announcement said.

No arrests were announced, but the press release said the US plans to conduct asset forfeiture as the investigation continues. The IRS said agents "will continue to work with the US and international law enforcement community to end these complex scams, regardless of where the money trail leads them."

> The seized domains seem to be part of the same operation as one detailed by security journalist Brian Krebs about nine years ago. In September 2013, Krebs wrote that SSNDOB "has for the past two years marketed itself on underground cybercrime forums as a reliable and affordable service that customers can use to look up SSNs, birthdays and other personal data on any US resident." Krebs was swatted shortly after one of his articles on SSNDOB, which used the ssndob.ru domain at the time.

> SSNDOB operators got their data in part by infiltrating LexisNexis, Dun & Bradstreet, and Kroll Background America. Hackers used data from SSNDOB to gain control of Xbox Live accounts held by some Microsoft employees, according to another Krebs report in 2013. . .

SSNDOB was big on bitcoin

Security company Chainanlysis, which markets "investigation software that connects cryptocurrency transactions to real-world entities," wrote that "SSNDOB's Bitcoin payment processing system has been active since April 2015" and "has received nearly $22 million worth of Bitcoin across over 100,000 transactions."

"Perhaps most interesting of all though is the activity we see between SSNDOB and Joker's Stash, a large darknet market focused on stolen credit card information and other PII that shut down in January 2021," Chainanlysis wrote. "Between December 2018 and June 2019, SSNDOB sent over $100,000 worth of Bitcoin to Joker's Stash, suggesting the two markets may have had some relationship to one another, including possibly shared ownership."

> Chainanlysis also wrote that the SSNDOB shutdown is "the latest in a string of darknet market closures over the past year. ... Over and over, illicit services that embrace cryptocurrency have opened themselves up to law enforcement scrutiny and been shut down, in large part because of the inherent transparency of blockchains."

Reference: https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2022/06/feds-seize-ssndob-marketplace-that-listed-personal-data-of-24-million-people/

 

ADVOCATING FOR FREE EXPRESSION WORLDWIDE

Flash-back to Fahrenheit 451

Praise be: unburnable copy of The Handmaid’s Tale fetches $130,000

<div class=__reading__mode__extracted__imagecaption>Author Margaret Atwood using a flamethrower near an unburnable copy of The Handmaid's Tale.  Photograph: Sotheby's/AFP/Getty Images<br>Author Margaret Atwood using a flamethrower near an unburnable copy of The Handmaid's Tale.  Photograph: Sotheby's/AFP/Getty Images</div>

The special edition of Margaret Atwood’s novel was auctioned by Sotheby’s and is made of Cinefoil, a treated aluminum product

A specially commissioned, unburnable edition of Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale has been auctioned for $130,000, Sotheby’s announced on Tuesday.

Proceeds will be donated to PEN America, which advocates for free expression worldwide. The 384-page book consists mainly of Cinefoil, a specially treated aluminum product, and was announced last month at PEN’s annual fundraising gala.

To help promote the initiative, Atwood agreed to be filmed attempting – unsuccessfully – to incinerate a prototype with a flame thrower.

“I’m very pleased that the one-of-a-kind Unburnable Book of ‘The Handmaid’s Tale’ has raised so much money for PEN America,” the Canadian author said in a statement.

“Free speech issues are being hotly debated, and PEN is a sane voice amidst all the shouting. The video of the book being torched by me and refusing to burn has now had a potential 5bn views. We hope it raises awareness and leads to reasoned discussion.” . .

READ MORE >> https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2022/jun/07/unburnable-the-handmaids-tale-margaret-atwood

UTERUS SURVEILLANCE

Intro: To be fair, there’s nothing new about uterus surveillance. Anti-abortion activists may be stuck in the past when it comes to reproductive rights, but they have always been adept at using modern technology to further their goals. . .
The wonders of the modern world mean there are a mind-boggling number of ways in which you can now identify anyone who might be thinking about an abortion. To begin with, there’s location data. Vice media recently reported that a data location company is selling information related to Planned Parenthood facilities (many of which provide abortions). The data shows where groups of people visiting the locations came from, how long they stayed and where they went afterwards. That data is aggregated so it doesn’t provide the names of individuals; however, de-anonymising this sort of information is not very difficult. There is plenty of evidence that location data is almost never anonymous.

Will anti-abortionists use ‘uterus surveillance’ against women in the US?

<div class=__reading__mode__extracted__imagecaption>Protesters at the Defend Roe v Wade Emergency March in San Francisco, US, last month. Photograph: Michael Ho Wai Lee/Sopa Images/Rex/Shutterstock<br>Protesters at the Defend Roe v Wade Emergency March in San Francisco, US, last month. Photograph: Michael Ho Wai Lee/Sopa Images/Rex/Shutterstock</div>

"If you are looking for a cheerful column that will make you giggle and distract you from everything that is wrong with the world, click away now. This week I have nothing but doom, gloom and data trackers for you. If you are hoping to sink into a well of existential despair, maybe let out a few screams into the void, then you’ve come to the right place.

Here goes: the US supreme court, as you are no doubt aware, is expected to overturn Roe v Wade and the federal right to an abortion very soon. At least 13 Republican-led states have “trigger laws” in place, which means that the moment Roe is overruled, abortion will be fully or partly banned. Other states will follow suit. According to the Guttmacher Institute, a pro-choice research organisation, 26 states are certain or likely to ban abortion when Roe falls.

Perhaps you are the glass half-full sort. Perhaps you are thinking: “Well, at least people can travel to a state where abortion is legal.” Unfortunately, it’s not that simple. There are the obvious logistical and financial constraints, for one thing. Then there’s the fact that we live in a world of mass surveillance: pretty much everything we do these days leaves a digital footprint – one that anti-abortion extremists will not hesitate to weaponise. . .

READ MORE >> https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2022/jun/07/will-anti-abortionists-use-uterus-surveillance-against-women-in-the-us-roe-v-wade

 

UNINTENDED CONSUEQUENCES + RISKS OF COLLATERAL DAMAGES: El Erian | Project Syndicate

A look at almost everything

MOST RECENT TODAY

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1 hour ago · Mohamed El-Erian, Allianz and Gramercy advisor and president of Queen's College, joins ...
Duration: 3:44
Posted: 1 hour ago

Mohamed A. El-Erian Bloomberg Opinion Columnist

Mohamed A. El-Erian is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist. A former chief executive officer of Pimco, he is president of Queens’ College, Cambridge; chief economic adviser at Allianz SE; and chair of Gramercy Fund Management. He is author of “The Only Game in Town.”