• scissors
    July 4th, 2009WandaUncategorized

    A carrier pigeon was captured by Colombian officials today after attempting to smuggle cell-phone parts into a high-security prison via a tiny suitcase on its back. This is bad. Very bad. [CNN]

    • Share/Save/Bookmark
  • scissors
    July 3rd, 2009WandaUncategorized
    General Dynamics Information Technology's ViPS business sector has been awarded a task order worth approximately $45 million by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), an agency within the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. The task order, awarded under a CMS Enterprise Systems Development (ESD) contract, has a five-year period of performance.

    As the prime contractor, General Dynamics Information Technology's ViPS
    will provide computer software services and system maintenance for CMS' Drug Data Processing System (DDPS) and the Payment Reconciliation System (PRS). Work performed will include system design, software enhancements, technical improvements and support for ongoing management reporting and processing of prescription drug events for the Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit (Part D) program.

    The award builds on ViPS' 30-year history of delivering healthcare
    information technology and informatics that improve healthcare operating
    efficiencies and quality of care. To date, General Dynamics Information
    Technology and ViPS have processed more than 4.5 billion prescription drug event transactions for the Part D program.

    "General Dynamics is delighted to continue our support to CMS and lend
    our extensive experience with large systems to achieve CMS' mission," said Marcus Collier, senior vice president of General Dynamics Information Technology's Civilian and Homeland Security Solutions Division. "We are pleased to support CMS in its efforts to ensure that Medicare beneficiaries receive quality care and to develop better evidence on risks, benefits and costs of prescription drugs using claims data."

    • Share/Save/Bookmark
  • scissors
    July 2nd, 2009WandaUncategorized

    Compared with last year, the consumer price index fell 0.4%, which is the first annual decline since August 1955. Most prices were even lower than that however, as a tax driven 11% rise in tobacco prices boosted the index higher than it otherwise might have been. The core CPI, which excludes things you eat and energy prices, actually rose a smidge--0.2%--in March. Overall, prices slid 0.1% last month.

    The most important measure of inflation, the rise in the supply of dollars, increased last month. The fact that this has not yet appeared as a general rise in prices does not indicate that inflation is not already underway.

    By the way, our own experience suggests that the divergence in cigarette pricing is driving multiple black markets, as smokers try to escape the taxes by ordering online or buying from smugglers bringing packs in from lower tax states.

    • Share/Save/Bookmark
  • scissors
    July 1st, 2009WandaUncategorized

    Dr. Kathleen Ward noticed something odd when she examined the mammogram of a patient who had recently undergone breast cancer surgery.

    The Loyola University Health System radiologist saw a suspicious pattern of white specks, much like grains of salt. The specks were calcium deposits similar to microcalcifications that sometimes are a sign of early breast cancer. But it was too early for the patient's breast cancer to have returned because it had been only a month since her lumpectomy.

    • Share/Save/Bookmark
  • scissors
    June 30th, 2009WandaUncategorized

    Mark Nicas has given some of his best years to spittle. He builds models – the mathematical kind – of how someone else's slobber ends up on you. The size of the particles, whether they come out in a dry cough or a wet sneeze, their evaporation rate, air speed – these are all complications, reasons why people like Nicas can spend careers piling up academic papers, all the while building up a healthy respect for pathogens.

    • Share/Save/Bookmark
  • scissors
    June 29th, 2009WandaUncategorized

    Here is an excerpt from Michael Isikoff and Suzanne Smalley's article in Newsweek:

    "In the past, national political leaders might have raised troubling questions about how...an unstable character could obtain easy access to high-powered weapons... Or given that Mexico's insanely violent drug cartels are arming themselves with high-powered assault weapons purchased at U.S. gun stores and later smuggled south of the border. Yet many past champions of stricter gun-control measures are silent. These include top Obama White House officials who have squelched any talk within the administration about pushing further gun-control measures. Running for president in last year's Democratic primaries, Barack Obama promised to restore a federal ban on certain semiautomatic assault guns—a position that's still on the White House Web site. The ban was originally passed by the Democratic-controlled Congress in 1994 and lapsed five years ago. In recent years the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives has also lifted virtually all restrictions on imports of foreign-made assault weapons, permitting a flood of cheap Romanian, Bulgarian and other Eastern European AK-47s to enter the country, according to gun-control groups... But Obama and top White House aides have all but abandoned the issue. Emanuel helped orchestrate passage of the original assault-weapons ban when he worked in the Clinton White House. Now he and other White House strategists have decided they can't afford to tangle with the National Rifle Association at a time when they're pushing other priorities, like economic renewal and health-care reform, say congressional officials who have raised the matter." Link to Full Article
    • Share/Save/Bookmark
  • scissors
    June 28th, 2009WandaUncategorized

    Cyberspies have penetrated the U.S. electrical grid and left behind software programs that could be used to disrupt the system, according to current and former national-security officials.

    The spies came from China, Russia and other countries, these officials said, and were believed to be on a mission to navigate the U.S. electrical system and its controls. The intruders haven’t sought to damage the power grid or other key infrastructure, but officials warned they could try during a crisis or war.

    “The Chinese have attempted to map our infrastructure, such as the electrical grid,” said a senior intelligence official. “So have the Russians.”

    The espionage appeared pervasive across the U.S. and doesn’t target a particular company or region, said a former Department of Homeland Security official. “There are intrusions, and they are growing,” the former official said, referring to electrical systems. “There were a lot last year.”

    Many of the intrusions were detected not by the companies in charge of the infrastructure but by U.S. intelligence agencies, officials said. Intelligence officials worry about cyber attackers taking control of electrical facilities, a nuclear power plant or financial networks via the Internet.

    Authorities investigating the intrusions have found software tools left behind that could be used to destroy infrastructure components, the senior intelligence official said. He added, “If we go to war with them, they will try to turn them on.”

    Officials said water, sewage and other infrastructure systems also were at risk.

    “Over the past several years, we have seen cyberattacks against critical infrastructures abroad, and many of our own infrastructures are as vulnerable as their foreign counterparts,” Director of National Intelligence Dennis Blair recently told lawmakers. “A number of nations, including Russia and China, can disrupt elements of the U.S. information infrastructure.”

    Officials cautioned that the motivation of the cyberspies wasn’t well understood, and they don’t see an immediate danger. China, for example, has little incentive to disrupt the U.S. economy because it relies on American consumers and holds U.S. government debt.

    But protecting the electrical grid and other infrastructure is a key part of the Obama administration’s cybersecurity review, which is to be completed next week. Under the Bush administration, Congress approved $17 billion in secret funds to protect government networks, according to people familiar with the budget. The Obama administration is weighing whether to expand the program to address vulnerabilities in private computer networks, which would cost billions of dollars more. A senior Pentagon official said Tuesday the Pentagon has spent $100 million in the past six months repairing cyber damage.

    Overseas examples show the potential havoc. In 2000, a disgruntled employee rigged a computerized control system at a water-treatment plant in Australia, releasing more than 200,000 gallons of sewage into parks, rivers and the grounds of a Hyatt hotel.

    Last year, a senior Central Intelligence Agency official, Tom Donahue, told a meeting of utility company representatives in New Orleans that a cyberattack had taken out power equipment in multiple regions outside the U.S. The outage was followed with extortion demands, he said.

    The U.S. electrical grid comprises three separate electric networks, covering the East, the West and Texas. Each includes many thousands of miles of transmission lines, power plants and substations. The flow of power is controlled by local utilities or regional transmission organizations. The growing reliance of utilities on Internet-based communication has increased the vulnerability of control systems to spies and hackers, according to government reports.

    The sophistication of the U.S. intrusions — which extend beyond electric to other key infrastructure systems — suggests that China and Russia are mainly responsible, according to intelligence officials and cybersecurity specialists. While terrorist groups could develop the ability to penetrate U.S. infrastructure, they don’t appear to have yet mounted attacks, these officials say.

    It is nearly impossible to know whether or not an attack is government-sponsored because of the difficulty in tracking true identities in cyberspace. U.S. officials said investigators have followed electronic trails of stolen data to China and Russia.

    Russian and Chinese officials have denied any wrongdoing. “These are pure speculations,” said Yevgeniy Khorishko, a spokesman at the Russian Embassy. “Russia has nothing to do with the cyberattacks on the U.S. infrastructure, or on any infrastructure in any other country in the world.”

    A spokesman for the Chinese Embassy in Washington, Wang Baodong, said the Chinese government “resolutely oppose[s] any crime, including hacking, that destroys the Internet or computer network” and has laws barring the practice. China was ready to cooperate with other countries to counter such attacks, he said, and added that “some people overseas with Cold War mentality are indulged in fabricating the sheer lies of the so-called cyberspies in China.”

    Utilities are reluctant to speak about the dangers. “Much of what we’ve done, we can’t talk about,” said Ray Dotter, a spokesman at PJM Interconnection LLC, which coordinates the movement of wholesale electricity in 13 states and the District of Columbia. He said the organization has beefed up its security, in conformance with federal standards.

    In January 2008, the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission approved new protection measures that required improvements in the security of computer servers and better plans for handling attacks.

    Last week, Senate Democrats introduced a proposal that would require all critical infrastructure companies to meet new cybersecurity standards and grant the president emergency powers over control of the grid systems and other infrastructure.

    Specialists at the U.S. Cyber Consequences Unit, a nonprofit research institute, said attack programs search for openings in a network, much as a thief tests locks on doors. Once inside, these programs and their human controllers can acquire the same access and powers as a systems administrator.

    The North American Electric Reliability Corporation on Tuesday warned its members that not all of them appear to be adhering to cybersecuirty requirements. Read the letter.

    The White House review of cybersecurity programs is studying ways to shield the electrical grid from such attacks, said James Lewis, who directed a study for the Center for Strategic and International Studies and has met with White House reviewers.

    The reliability of the grid is ultimately the responsibility of the North American Electric Reliability Corp., an independent standards-setting organization overseen by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission.

    The NERC set standards last year requiring companies to designate “critical cyber assets.” Companies, for example, must check the backgrounds of employees and install firewalls to separate administrative networks from those that control electricity flow. The group will begin auditing compliance in July.

    • Share/Save/Bookmark
    • Share/Save/Bookmark
  • scissors
    June 27th, 2009WandaUncategorized
    North Korea's threat to test fire a missile could be aimed at strengthening its hand at the negotiating table in new talks on its nuclear programme, South Korea's president said Thursday.



    • Share/Save/Bookmark
  • scissors
    June 26th, 2009WandaUncategorized
    India has bought a spy satellite from Israel with day-and-night viewing capability to boost surveillance capabilities in the aftermath of the Mumbai militant attacks, a report said Friday.



    • Share/Save/Bookmark
  • scissors
    June 25th, 2009WandaUncategorized

    Seven “leading members” of a Queens, NY church have been charged by the SEC for defrauding more than 80 investors, most of whom were elderly parishioners, out of 12 or so million dollars. Isaac Ovid, Aaron Riddle, J. Jonathan Coleman, Stephen Cina, Cory Martin, Timothy Smith and Robert Riddle are all accused of “promising returns as high as 75 percent” in two hedge funds (the Logos Fund and the Donum Fund, which have separately charged for their role in the scam). Apparently little if any money was actually invested, but instead used by the group to purchase items like “expensive watches” and Bentleys, and to fund a bunch of vacays.

    • Share/Save/Bookmark
    • Share/Save/Bookmark
  • « Older Entries

    Newer Entries »