Category Archives: Technology
Technology
Your Tax Dollars at Work…Careful What You Tweet
Here’s an example of your tax dollars at work. It appears that three staffers from Rep. Rick Larsen (D-Wa.)’s office were tweeting about their wild escapades of drinking during work hours and insulting their boss.
You can read about the exchange here, but below is a little example of the tweets.
“My coworker just took a shot of Jack crouching behind my desk. We have unabashedly given up on just about all things work related. #D2R
D2R was referred to as December to Remember, which was to mark their month of debauchery. Now, these three staffers are going to have a rough time convincing future employers that they will not fall prey to the behavior they displayed at Rep. Larsen’s office.
Lessons learned from this: Don’t be a dumbass and tweet about your bad behavior while on the job. Social networking can be fun and provide essential news/information, but it was not designed to air your dirty laundry.
The Digital Story of the Nativity
In spite of the marketing geared towards technology and purchasing gifts, have we forgotten the real reason why we celebrate? This video shows the real reason why we celebrate Christmas (except in technological terms).
Cybersecurity is Critical to Our National Security
Guest Post by Rep. Bob Goodlatte (R-Va.)
This week the U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission issued their annual report to Congress. The report, which details all aspects of the relationship between the United States and China, contained disturbing but not unsuspected revelations that the Chinese government is behind the numerous computer hacking incidents involving many U.S. government and military sites.
Specifically, the report highlights an incident from April 2010, when for 18 minutes nearly 15 percent of the world’s Internet traffic was redirected through computer servers in China. Emails and Internet traffic to and from such vital government sites as the U.S. Senate, the Department of Commerce, NASA, the Office of the Secretary of Defense, and the Departments of the Army, Navy, and the Air Force as well as commercial sites such as Dell, Yahoo, Microsoft and IBM were hijacked and manipulated by China Telecom, a state-controlled Internet carrier.
This report follows recent testimony by the General Accounting Office (GAO) that the U.S. information technology infrastructure is vulnerable to attack. It has been estimated that the Pentagon’s computer system gets 360 million unauthorized scans or attacks a day. Cybersecurity is without a doubt a homeland security threat and our government must take the appropriate steps to protect our vulnerable systems. This week Defense Secretary Gates announced that the Department of Defense and National Security Agency will be working together more closely to address the growing cybersecurity threats faced by the federal government.
In addition, folks must realize just how important it is for individual Americans to take cybersecurity seriously, not just as a matter of personal safety, but as a matter of our country’s security as well. Those who take it upon themselves to implement relatively simple security measures are not only protecting themselves and their families, but are in effect contributing to our national efforts to secure critical infrastructures like telecommunications, energy, manufacturing, water, health care, transportation, and emergency and financial services. Weaknesses in your personal computer systems can affect the entire country. In fact, 90 percent of the nation’s critical information infrastructure is operated by the private sector.
While technology has brought tremendous improvement to our quality of life, these advances have also brought significant vulnerability. These recent attacks on government networks have served to increase awareness that cybersecurity is not just about protecting computers, but also has implications for our national security and economic well-being. Just as the federal government heavily relies upon computers to carry out their business, so do our local hospitals, firefighters and police, just to name a few. Computers are vital to the safety of the American people and as Co-Chair of the Congressional Internet Caucus and Chairman of the House Republican High Tech Working Group, I will continue working with the Administration and the leadership in Congress to see that our nation’s information networks are protected from future cyber attacks.
The Push for Government Transparency is Growing
Today, Sunshine Review launched a new website called Sunshine Standard, which is a new online platform designed for legislators and activists that will become a national model for launching transparency reforms across the country and will assist Americans in holding their legislators accountable.
Mike Barnhart, President of Sunshine Review, said in a statement:
“Most state and local governments do not embrace transparency. Even fewer proactively share information.”
Transparency exists largely at the munificence of officials, with the burden of negotiating complex and costly FOIA petitions resting squarely on the shoulders of citizens and journalists.
Barnhart stressed that “state and local governments, and school districts, have an affirmative obligation to transparency reforms that proactively share the information people need to hold officials accountable for how tax money is spent and how the people’s business is conducted. We must set the bar for state and local government transparency.
Sunshine Standard is a guide to these reforms being implemented across the country.”
Sunshine Standard model transparency legislation was endorsed by state legislators, who attended the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC) Annual Meeting earlier this year.
Transparency, at the local, state, and federal levels, is needed now more than ever. When Barack Obama was campaigning for President in 2008, he promised the nation that he would allow people to access a more transparent government. Unfortunately, this has been a promise that has been mostly unfulfilled by the President and Congress.
Cross posted at Bearing Drift
TRON: Legacy
I am too excited about TRON:Legacy, which is opening in movie theaters on December 17th. Maybe, it is because of the awesome soundtrack accompanying the movie.
Apologies…
Readers,
Please accept my apologies for being so quiet lately. Right now, I am without a laptop for the first time in my adult life. My computer’s video card stopped working, and thus, the end had arrived sooner than originally thought. It might alarm you that I would be computer-less, but I was able to take a technology-free vacation for the most part. It was the first time in a long time where I was able to enjoy a vacation, and got to see some cool stuff. The previous post shows a sign I saw in Burton, Ohio, and the rest of the trip was spent between Seneca and Cayuga Lakes in upstate New York enjoying some great wines and good cuisine. (I need to make a shameless plug for my new favorite winery, Bagley’s Poplar Ridge… visit and see why.)
On a positive note, I should have a new computer by the weekend. If you have any suggestions, leave it in the comments section.
In the meantime, I leave you with my new favorite political ad of the year. Move over, Basil Marceaux! Jimmy “Rent is too damn high” McMillan will prove the point. Personally, I think this guy is hilarious.
H/T to Yankee Phil
Thanks for reading. I’ll be back online shortly.
~Crystal Clear Conservative
The Ultimate B@!*#slap
Pardon my language, but this ticks me off. Philadelphia is requiring bloggers to pay $300 for a business license. In a time, when local governments are scraping for money, they have found a way to generate money for their coffers by imposing such outrageous fees. Are they afraid of bloggers exposing the real truth about what is happening at town hall?
This is another case of the nanny state at work. Just another regulation imposed and the liberty of speech is being suppressed daily.


