Wednesday, April 17, 2024

What Maryland Police Thought About the Grateful Dead

It's no secret that the police generally did not like the Grateful Dead. There were exceptions (the police in Hamilton, Ontario were quite cool as I recall), but the travelling crowd of Deadheads that followed the band were often subjected to harassment.

Here's a report from 1991 posted on Reddit titled: The Grateful Dead And LSD A Study Into The Phenomenon by The Maryland State Police Criminal Intelligence Division.

Unfortunately, it's presented as a slideshow so I can't copy out excepts but in a nutshell it tries to make the case that Deadheads are LSD fiends and the parking lot scene is full of drug vendors. 

As several commenters pointed out, the parking lot scene was generally peaceful and there were more arrests at an average NFL football game. 


Monday, April 15, 2024

Featured Links - April 15, 2024

Links to things I found interesting but didn't want to do a full blog post about.

Living the life on the bay

  • Trump’s Brain Is Not Okay. "An expert’s view of Trump’s mental slide into dementia." I doesn't look good.
  • How a science fiction obsession led me to psychological war. Annalee Newitz talks about her forthcoming book about psychological warfare. There is a long discussion about the life of Paul Linebarger, aka the science fiction writer, Cordwainer Smith. 
  • What Chinese Outrage Over ‘3 Body Problem’ Says About China (gift link). "The Netflix series showcases one of the country’s most successful works of culture. Instead of demonstrating pride, social media is condemning it."
  • Crying Myself to Sleep on the Biggest Cruise Ship Ever. (archive link) "Seven agonizing nights aboard the Icon of the Seas." 
  • Drones are crowding Ukraine’s skies, largely paralyzing battlefield (gift link). "So many drones patrol the skies over Ukraine’s front lines — hunting for any signs of movement — that Ukrainian and Russian troops have little ability to move on the battlefield without being spotted, and blown up." The prevalence of drones on the front is changing the way war is waged.
  • Election Workers Are Drowning in Records Requests. AI Chatbots Could Make It Worse. "Experts worry that election deniers could weaponize chatbots to overwhelm and slow down local officials."
  • RocketStar Successfully Demonstrates FireStar™ Nuclear Fusion-Enhanced Pulsed Plasma Propulsion Drive. "The potentially groundbreaking device upgrades the company’s base water-fueled pulsed plasma thruster by injecting particles into the drive’s exhaust plume, resulting in a fusion reaction that dramatically increases the base drive’s power output."
  • There Appears to Be a Huge Problem with SpaceX's Starlink. "Did Elon Musk fib about the service breaking even."
  • Sunday, April 14, 2024

    Photo of the Week - April 14, 2024

    This week's photo is of what appears to be a black hole in the centre of the lower level court at our local mall. I took this with my Pixel 8 Pro and boosted the colours slightly by using the Enhance filter in Google Photos. 

    The black hole at the mall

     

    Saturday, April 13, 2024

    Saturday Sounds - Somi - Zenzile: The Reimagination of Miriam Makeba

    Earlier this week, I was listening to the jazz channel on SiriusXM and they played a song that really grabbed me by an artist who goes by the name of Somi. I found her on Spotify and am listening now to her latest album, Zenzile: The Reimagination of Miriam Makeba

    Spotify has this to say about her: "Somi Kakoma is a Billboard charting and Grammy-nominated vocalist, composer, and writer. Born in Illinois to immigrants from Uganda and Rwanda, she is known in the jazz world simply as ‘Somi’. Having built a career of transatlantic storytelling, she is the first African woman ever nominated in any Grammy jazz category (2021 Best Jazz Vocal Album) for her live album Holy Room." 

    I like African music and have seen several major African performers (among them Femi Kuti, Hugh Masekela, King Sunny Ade, and Miriam Makeba, the inspiration for this album). But I had never heard of Somi until now, and I am very glad that I have discovered her music. 

    Zenzile is a lovely album and I recommend it highly, especially if you like jazz vocalists or African music. If you don't have time to listen to the whole album, I recommend 'Kwedini'; it's gorgeous. 

    Friday, April 12, 2024

    We're Toast 48

    This post is a collection of links that support my increasingly strong feeling that the human race (or at least our technological civilization) is doomed. It is part of an ongoing series of posts.

    During totality, looking towards the edge of the shadow

    Wednesday, April 10, 2024

    How the World Dodged a Linux Bullet

    A couple of weeks ago the world dodged a bullet. Not a giant asteroid or a super-sized solar flare, but hidden backdoor in a widely used Linux software program. If it hadn't been detected by an eagle-eyed Microsoft software developer, virtually every Linux-based computer in the world could have been at the mercy of a hacker or hacking group.

    Steve Gibson, host of the long-running Security Now! podcast, discussed the exploit at length in episode 968. This is just a bit of what he had to say (from the show's transcript):

    So the runner-up title for today's podcast, which I decided, I settled on "A Cautionary Tale," was "A Close Call for Linux" because it was only due to some very small mistakes made by an otherwise very clever malicious developer that the scheme was discovered.  What was discovered was that by employing a diabolically circuitous route, the system SSH daemon, which is to say the SSH incoming connection accepting server for Linux, would have had a secret and invisible backdoor installed in it that would have then allowed someone, anyone, anywhere, using a specific RSA public key, to authenticate and login to any Linux system on the planet and also provide their own code for it to run.  So to say that this would have been huge hardly does it justice.

    In other words, had the exploit not been discovered and gone into widespread distribution, the owner of the exploit could have shut down every affected computer on the internet with a single command.

    The exploit was serious enough that it rated coverage in the New York Times

    The saga began earlier this year, when Mr. Freund was flying back from a visit to his parents in Germany. While reviewing a log of automated tests, he noticed a few error messages he didn’t recognize. He was jet-lagged, and the messages didn’t seem urgent, so he filed them away in his memory.

    But a few weeks later, while running some more tests at home, he noticed that an application called SSH, which is used to log into computers remotely, was using more processing power than normal. He traced the issue to a set of data compression tools called xz Utils, and wondered if it was related to the earlier errors he’d seen.

    (Don’t worry if these names are Greek to you. All you really need to know is that these are all small pieces of the Linux operating system, which is probably the most important piece of open-source software in the world. The vast majority of the world’s servers — including those used by banks, hospitals, governments and Fortune 500 companies — run on Linux, which makes its security a matter of global importance.)

    Like other popular open-source software, Linux gets updated all the time, and most bugs are the result of innocent mistakes. But when Mr. Freund looked closely at the source code for xz Utils, he saw clues that it had been intentionally tampered with.

    In particular, he found that someone had planted malicious code in the latest versions of xz Utils. The code, known as a backdoor, would allow its creator to hijack a user’s SSH connection and secretly run their own code on that user’s machine.

    I highly recommend listening to Gibson's podcast, or at least the last half, where he discusses the exploit and some of its implications. They're not good.

    What has just been discovered present in Linux demonstrates that the same asymmetric principle applies to large-scale software development, where just one bad seed, just one sufficiently clever malicious developer, can have an outsized effect upon the security of everything else.  Okay, now, I'm going to give everyone the TL;DR first because this is just so cool and so diabolically clever.

    How do you go about hiding malicious code in a highly scrutinized open source environment which worships code in its source form, so that no one can see what you've done?  You focus your efforts upon a compression library project.  Compression library projects contain test files which are used to verify the still-proper behavior of recently modified and recompiled source code.  These compression test files are, and are expected to be, opaque binary blobs.  So you very cleverly arrange to place your malicious binary code into one of the supposedly compressed compression test files for that library, where no one would ever think to look.

    I mean, again, one of the points here that I didn't put into the show notes is unfortunately, once something is seen to have been done, people who wouldn't have had this idea originally, you know, wouldn't have the original idea, they're like, oh.  That's interesting.  I wonder what mischief I can get up to?  So we may be seeing more of this in the future.

    Let's hope he's wrong. 

     

    Monday, April 08, 2024

    Totality

    Toronto and the eastern GTA was just to the north of the path of totality for today's eclipse, so we drove east to Port Hope in the hope that we might have clear skies. Port Hope was just inside the path of totality, but the sky was overcast and the sun not visible at all behind a solid bank of cloud. Still, it was a cool and eerie experience. It was strange hearing the birds coming in to nest as it got dark and then realizing it wasn't really night as it got brighter again 

    These pictures were taken right around the short period of totality (maybe a minute). I used manual exposure mode on my phone as otherwise it would have made the scene brighter than it looked to the eye. These are pretty much exactly the way it looked. 

    Looking southwest as totality started

    Looking northeast during totality


    Featured Links - April 8, 2024

    Links to things I found interesting but didn't want to do a full blog post about.

    The hydro marsh