Monthly Archives: March 2006


More RFID tag problems

RFID (radio frequency identification) tags are being used increasingly as a means to track people and stuff. Walmart for example is demanding that all their suppliers embed rfid tags in every item they ship to walmart. Walmart can then use this track inventory. Of course they can also this track the stuff you have in your shopping cart to offer you other deals. Another use of RFID tags that has been proposed is in passports. The US government has demanded that all new passports issued by October of this year have to have rfid tags embedded in them. The reason given is try and prevent counterfeiting of passports and to speed processing. An rfid tag is a basically a chip with information programmed into it that can be read remotely by a radio frequency reader. The problem is that anyone with a reader can pick up the information from such a passport if they are within 30 or so feet of you. The passports are supposed to come with a sleeve to shield them but you know that people will not always use it and the passports have to be removed to go through security. At these times anyone could pluck the information and grab your identity. Bad guys that use technology are usually a lot smarter than the government officials who mandate these changes. It is a given that if you provide a doorway like this for someone to sneak through they will use for something bad long before officials ever figure out what hit them.

Well now there is another new problem with rfid tags. Viruses. I just found this item via digg.com. Researchers at Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam in the Netherlands have created a self replicating rfid tag virus as a proof of concept. In order for rfid tags to be useful there needs to be some back-end database software running connected to the readers. The researchers demonstrated that they could create virus code small enough to fit in the limited memory of an rfid tag. When the tag is read the code is copied back to the database, and fro there it is copied to other tags that are read. This could can be used to cause all kinds of havoc. They give an example of an airport baggage handling system.

For example, airports are considering using RFID tags to track baggage. But Tanenbaum warned that this application could pose a large problem if an RFID tag is read and delivers a much larger set of data in return. A false tag on a piece of baggage could exploit a buffer overflow to deliver a virus to the RFID middle-ware. Once the virus code is on the server, it could infect the databases and corrupt subsequent tags or install back doors — small programs that allow for the extrication of data over the Internet, Tanenbaum said.

“You can hide baggage,” Tanenbaum said. “You can reroute baggage to the wrong place — all kinds of mischief. That’s I think a very, very serious thing that even has national security implications.”

Rfid tags definitely fall into the category of new technologies that create a lot of unintended consequences. With most new technology the unintended consequences aren’t discovered until after the fact. Here we have an example that we know about as the technology is just being rolled out. It is not too late to stop some of these implementations until we come up with some solutions before something really bad happens. Using technology to make things easier is not always a good idea. Let’s slow down and think about we are doing for a change.


Free Music

I was listening to Insomnia Radio #69 the other day heard something really amazing. Lorenzo’s Music is a band I’ve heard on quite a few music podcasts over the past year. The band has really latched on to podcasting, and have come to the realization that the more people hear their music, the more they can make money by getting people ot shows, selling merchandise, and selling cds. They have realized that people sharing music is actually a good promotional vehicle. Because of this they have decided to make all three of their cd’s available for free download under a creative commons non-commercial share-alike license. This means that anyone is free to download, burn and share the music and use it for any non-commercial purpose. This band has a really unique sound that they describe like this:

Lorenzo’s Music is Tom Ray (vocals), Mark Whitcomb (guitar), Scott Beardsley (drums), Bryan Elliott (saxophone), and Chris Boeger (bass). They are not a punk band experimenting with 30’s-style swing, an indie rock band trying their hands at Chicago-style blues, or a hardcore band exploring their love of latin rhythms. They are simply a group of talented guys who obviously see no reason why they can’t just do all of the above.

Their sound is a really unique blend with almost Tom Waits like vocals. Here is a sample from their latest album Solamente Tres Palabras. If you like it go over and download them all. Then tell your friends.


Still more war profiteering.

We all know about money Haliburton has been swindling from American taxpayers through all their no-bid contracts to do stuff that the military has traditionally done themselves. Well it looks like AT&T is ripping off American soldiers in Iraq directly now. AT&T has an exclusive contract to install pay-phones for the use of troops in Iraq. AT&T is charging $0.21/minute to call home when their wholesale price is less than $0.01/minute. On top of that, soldiers can’t even buy cheaper calling cards and use them because AT&T is blocking access to other carriers 800 numbers so soldiers can’t use the other cards. Why are we letting huge corporations get away with this shit. The mass media won’t report on it, congress won’t investigate it, most people don’t even know about it. Could it have anything to do with the millions of dollars that huge corporations give to politicians in campaign contributions? How about the millions they spend on advertising on mass media? As usual it all comes down to the almighty dollar. The old saying is that you have spend money to make money, and you have spend big money to make big money. Well the biggest corporations have the most money to spend and they get to make the big bucks.


Frappr Map

If you read many blogs or listen to podcasts you probably know what a frappr map is. Frappr uses the google maps api to allow people to create group maps. I’ve now created my own frappr map over on the right column. I’d like to know where people are reading this blog from. Just go over an click on the map and add yourself to the group.


Some changes

I upgraded my wordpress installation from 1.5.2 to 2.0.1. Since I was making changes anyway I decided to change the base address too. Previously this blog was located at http://abuelsamid.com/blogs/sam/wordpress. During some recent experiment with my site settings I realized I could create some sub domains. So I set up https://sam.abuelsamid.com. For a couple of months I have been redirecting this url to my original one. Now I have swapped them around, so this blog is at the new subdomain. The original address will re-direct here so that is not a problem. However, if you have been subscribing to the RSS feed you will need to update that. The new feed urls are over in the left hand column with the new standard rss feed icons.rss icon
Thanks for reading all the stuff I write hear.


EPIC 2015

Have you ever seen the short film EPIC 2015? It was originally published in the fall of 2004 as EPIC 2014 and updated last year. It’s only about 8 minutes long and definitely worth watching. It is told from the perspective of the year 2015, looking back to 2004 and reviewing the series of events that occured during that time interval. It culminates in the formation of an entity known as GoogleZon (google + amazon merge) operating the google grid, and the NY Times decides to go offline and become a print only newsletter. Some very interesting sites have already come into being since this film first appeared that definitely fit into the landscape described by the creators. The film describes online news sites where the readers are editors, and social networking technology tailors the news delivery, to the individual reader and their interests. To get a look at what this is like check out digg.com and newsvine.com. Both of these sites have come into being since EPIC was published. As for the google grid, Google is already offering gmail with vast amounts of storage, and there are hacks that use the gmail interface to provide large quantities of free online storage for any kind of file. With some recent concerns about Amazon’s profitability, a google takeover in the not to distant future may actually be a real possibility. Another site that already exists and that could fit into the media landscape described by epic is Ourmedia.org where anyone can upload and store any and all media files for free forever.

In an ideal world a lot of the stuff that is actually happening along with some of the things that EPIC describes might not be a bad thing. Ubiquitous access (through universal wi-fi) to all your data, could be very useful. However, given the actions our increasingly big brother-esque republican government, including open-ended requests for search records from google, yahoo and microsoft, and warrentless spying on Americans, I am becoming more and more dubious about storing everything online under the control of someone else. I am not a conspiracy theorist, I don’t believe in alien abductions and I don’t think any omniscient being exists. But I do see increasing signs that a wealthy corporate elite rapidly trying to grab control of everything important. I will probably continue to use free services like gmail and gdrive and digg to provide remote backup of a lot of non-private stuff that I nonetheless don’t want to lose track of. I will use sites like ourmedia to publish media files that I want to make available to people without having to incur huge bandwidth expenses. But I will also maintain my own personal private servers with encrypted connections so that I can have the ubiquitous access that I find so useful.

There is definitely a tremendous amount of potential in the personal media revolution that is happening today. I will do everything I can to promote it. But I think that people need to maintain personal control over at least some of their data. If we don’t, then we may find that we will lose it all at some point.

update: I forgot to mention, that although I have been following the development of internet services along the lines described by EPIC 2015 for over a year, this particular post was prompted by reading this item on techcrunch this morning.


has Shrub ever told the truth about anything

This video obtained by the associated press and linked from crooks and liars shows shrub sitting in via video conference on a FEMA briefing the day before Hurricane Katrina made landfall. During the briefing the director of the national hurricane center talked about the potential of the New Orleans levees being breached. Even Mike Brown seemed to be on top of things. But once the storm hit nothing happened. Meanwhile shrub outright lied about no one anticipating the levees failing. Come on people, let’s impeach the guy. He is clearly a liar, and incompetent. He shouldn’t be running a hot dog cart, much less a country. Give him the boot.


Estabrook Oratorical Society 4

Estabrook Elementary School in Ypsilanti has had an oratorical society for the last three years. The students who participate do some research and select a speech that they like. Sometimes they are poems or passages from a book, other times they are famous speeches. They learn about the original writer/orator and learn the speech. They meet weekly from October through February and then do a presentation for the whole school and then again for parents. During their meetings they learn public speaking techniques and present their speeches for each other. The club has been organized by Estabrook teacher Debbie Wilbanks who was also assisted this year by fifth grade language arts teacher Kelly Brzak. The members of the Ypsilanti High School Key Club also volunteered and helped coach the kids and were a big help. Max has been participating in the group for three years and this year he selected a speech delivered by legendary radio and television journalist Edward R. Murrow to the 1958 Radio and Television News Directors Association meeting. If you saw the movie Good Night and Good Luck, this was the speech shown at the opening and closing of the film. This year’s presentation took place on February 13, and all the kids did a great job. I taped the presentation and I finally got the edited version uploaded to Ourmedia.org. The video runs about 35 minutes and is a 300MB file so please be patient.