St Kitts & Nevis Anguilla National Bank in St Kitts & Nevis. Seriously.

follow the money: 3 banks process 95% of spam transactions

If you want to stop spam then going after the banks and payment processors that enable their lucrative trade may be your best bet, according to research performed by a team from the University of California-San Diego, the University of California-Berkeley, and the Budapest University of Technology and Economics. After examining millions of spam e-mails and spam Web sites—and making over 100 purchases from the sites advertised by the spammers—the research team found that just three banks were used to clear more than 95 percent of spam funds.

Follow the money

Rather than focus on filtering spam at mail gateways and taking down botnets responsible for sending countless billions of junk e-mails, the researchers decided to focus on the heart of the problem: money. Spammers send spam because sending spam makes them money. That money comes from the online purchases of the products the spam advertises: drugs, counterfeit software, and knock-off merchandise.

By examining the entire chain from spam receipt to delivery of goods, the researchers found that in spite of the huge diversity in spams received—which poses a substantial problem for filters—and the vast number of URLs and domains used to direct people to the shady online vendors, there weren’t that many ways for money to get into the spammers’ hands. The spammers themselves generally serve only as advertisers, separate from the affiliate networks that provide online storefronts to manufacturers and distributors. The affiliate networks provide all the relevant technology to the manufacturers: shopping carts, analytics, and billing systems. The cut the spammers take is significant, typically 30-50 percent.

The researchers visited the URLs spammers sent them, following their redirects until they reached an actual online store. Almost one billion URLs were received in spam, but these led to just 45 different affiliate networks. The researchers made 120 purchases from the different affiliate networks to track the actual money. 76 payments were authorized by the credit card networks, and of those, 56 payments completed. 49 products were actually delivered.

Find the bottlenecks

At every part of the process, bottlenecks, where the behind-the-scenes infrastructure was much less diverse than the spam itself, were identified. The Rustock botnet, for example, was responsible for about a third of all spam sent globally, with the result that killing just one botnet caused a substantial drop in global spam levels. However, there are many other botnets able to take its place, which makes it hard to defeat spam by going after botnets alone. Affiliate programs were relatively few, with just 45 identified, but efforts to take these down have proven difficult in the past.

Web hosting and domain registration also showed up as significant bottlenecks, with more than 60 percent of spam domain registrations dependent on five registrars, and 50 percent of DNS and Web hosting spread across a few dozen hosts. However, these bottlenecks also prove difficult to seal off; though many hosts and registrars want nothing to do with spam operations, there are many hundreds of companies offering such services, and the cost of switching to a new host or registrar if often minimal. Even if some hosts can be taken down, the spammers will switch.

However, when it comes to banking, the bottlenecks are far more severe, and switching is far more difficult. One bank alone was used to settle more than 60 percent of all transactions, and the top three banks—Azerigazbank in Azerbaijan, St Kitts & Nevis Anguilla National Bank in St Kitts &Nevis, and Norwegian-owned DnB Nord in Latvia—together accounted for more than 95 percent of all money paid to spam vendors. The implication is that many banks simply won’t deal with spam outfits. Even when switching does occur, it’s disruptive, with payment processors typically introducing delays of days or weeks for due diligence to be performed.

The Latvian bank’s Norwegian owners say that the spam customers were inherited when they bought the bank, and claim that they have terminated their relationship with the spam affiliate programs.

Taking down botnets is good from a computer security perspective, but the long-term impact it has on spam is low. Going after hosts and registrars shows a similar story; it can be done, and has a short-term effect, but it’s easy for the spammers to find alternative arrangements and bounce back.

But where those efforts have had only short-term success, work against the banking bottleneck may well prove more fruitful. If dealing with the handful of banks were made impossible—for example, if Western banks refused to settle certain kinds of credit card transactions with banks known to be spam-friendly, an approach already used in the US to block access to online gambling sites—it would severely diminish the ability for the spam vendors to get paid, sucking the cash out of the spam business. And given the time and complexity of setting up new merchant agreements, this might be one area where the good guys can move faster than the spammers. Killing spam won’t be easy, but going after the money could be our best bet for an end to the junk mail menace.

from ars technica 

Yuma shootings: 5 people killed; gunman dead

Yuma authorities said five people were killed in a series of shootings.

A 73-year-old Yuma man on Thursday shot and killed five people, including an attorney who was clearing his office for retirement, before turning the gun on himself, authorities said. A sixth person was reportedly wounded and taken to a Phoenix-area hospital.

Authorities identify the gunman as Carey Hal Dyess, and said he was found about 11:30 a.m. — some two hours after reports of the first shooting — in the area of Blaisdell Road and U.S. 95, with what appeared to be a have been a self-inflicted gunshot wound.

Questions abound, including the relationship between Dyess and the others who were shot, the sequence of events and a motive.

Yuma police Sgt. Clint Norred said four of the fatal shootings happened in the county and one happened in the city of Yuma. The southwestern Arizona city is some 185 miles southwest of central Phoenix.

The shootings forced a lockdown of several elementary schools and the Yuma County Courthouse.

Norred said police responded to a shooting call around 9:30 a.m. Thursday at an office in the 300 block of South Second Avenue, where one person was shot and killed.

via Yuma shootings: 5 people killed; gunman dead.

 

Bangladeshi woman cuts off rapist’s penis and gives it to police

A 40-year-old Bangladeshi woman cut off a man’s penis during an alleged attempted rape and took it to a police station as evidence, police in a remote part of Bangladesh said Monday.

The woman, a married mother of three, was attacked while she was sleeping in her shanty in Jhalakathi district, some 200 kilometres (120 miles) south of Dhaka, on Saturday night, officers said.

“As he tried to rape her, the lady cut his penis off with a knife. She then wrapped up the penis in a piece of polythene and brought it to the Jhalakathi police station as evidence of the crime,” police chief Abul Khaer told AFP.

The woman has filed a case accusing the man — who is also 40 and a married father of five — of attempted rape, saying that he had been harassing her for six months.

The severed penis has been kept at the police station and the rape suspect was undergoing treatment in hospital.

“We shall arrest him once his condition gets better,” Khaer added.

via Bangladeshi woman cuts off rapist’s penis and gives it to police | The Raw Story.

electronic media creates reality? virtual newscasts

Algorithms producing journalism? What might sound like a futuristic setting is already becoming reality. Journalistic texts are characterised by a certain structure that algorithms can be programmed to imitate. The first tests still read or sound like early prototypes, but they’re already around in sports journalism, with finance or local news to come next.

In the US, two different projects have started work on algorithm produced journalism. Last week the sports statistics website StatSheet announced a plan to produce completely automated sports content as of this summer. The algorithm produced content will take the form of blogs, with a target that at least 90% of the readers should think the content was created by a human. And in a partnership with the Medill school of journalism, the Intelligent Information Laboratory of the McCormick School of Engineering at Northwestern University has developed an algorithm called StatsMonkey that publishes game stories.

Automated journalism can basically be understood as search algorithms programmed to look out for certain key findings. then to put them into a certain structure. For a report on a football game for example, the StatsMonkey calculates the narrative based on the numerical data.

via In the US, algorithms are already reporting the news | Media | guardian.co.uk.

news at eleven – virtual newscast

the rest of the article:

Using the score, the algorithm captures the overall dynamic of the game, highlights the key plays and key players, looks for quotes, and generates a text out of these elements. In addition, it configures an appropriate headline and a photo of the most important player in the game – and there goes a very rough sketch of a sports article.

Michigan State silences Notre Dame, 3-0

SOUTH BEND, Ind. — Tony Bucciferro put the Michigan State Spartans on his back Sunday and spurred them to a 3-0 win over the Notre Dame Fighting Irish (7-11) at Frank Eck Stadium.

Bucciferro kept the Fighting Irish off the board during his nine innings of work for Michigan State (12-4). He struck out five and allowed one walk and three hits.

Senior Matt Grosso was not able to take advantage of a big opportunity for the Irish in the ninth inning.

After freshman Frank Desico walked, Ryne Intlekofer doubled and Ryan Connolly was hit by a pitch, the Fighting Irish were trailing by three when Grosso came to the plate against Bucciferro with one out and the bases loaded, but he flew out.

Brandon Eckerle was perfect at the plate for the Spartans. He went 4-4 at the dish. Eckerle singled in the first, third, fifth and ninth innings and walked in the seventh inning.

Michigan State scored in two innings to claim the victory. The Spartans scored one run in the first and two runs in the third. In the first, senior Eric Maust gave up one run on a double by Jeff Holm. In the third, Maust gave up one run on a single by Holm. Later that inning, a run came in when Bo Felt reached on a fielding error by third baseman Adam Norton.

Maust took the loss for Notre Dame. He went six innings, gave up one walk, struck out three, and allowed three runs. Michigan State’s next game is on Friday, March 26 at Oakland.

As programming semantics got better and better in the recent years, automated journalism will become more widely available.

“Sports is an unbelievable ground for this because it’s data intensive,” says Kristian Hammond, co-director of Intelligent Information Laboratory in Illinois. “The system knows how to go off and find information, it knows how to find quotes, it knows how to collect data, but then a traditional journalist has to bring his or her perspective to that story. It will only provide journalists with a starting point.”

Both projects emphasise that they are working in areas where journalists aren’t working.

The Lab in Illinois for example is testing its StatsMonkey algorithm in a pilot with The Big Ten Network which is dedicated to covering college and university sport. “We are the premier publisher of women softball stories,” says Hammond.

The Intelligence Information Laboratory is also interested in programming algorithms to cover local stories. As the local news outlets are struggling to stay alive, they might have better chances if they can expand their news coverage, to additionally expand their advertising, Hammond says. “We see it as an engine that is increasing the scope what is out there and what is publishable.”

Apart from StatsMonkey, which is focused on data-intensive information, the lab also programmed a system that automatically generates a virtual show designed to be funny, focusing on light news like celebrity gossip or movie reviews. The system, supported by the National Science Foundation, collects, parses, edits and organizes news stories and then passes the formatted content to artificial anchors for presentation.

The outcome is sometimes barely comprehensible, but gives a rough idea of what is possible. Picking up opinions using the comments of people, the anchors have a dialogue to balance the pros and cons. If everybody likes the film, they talk about different aspects of it.
The programs are just early prototypes, but will improve quickly with the further development of intelligent semantics. The team of the Intelligence Information Lab is already working on a couple of related projects – Brussell, for example, helps people track developments in ongoing news situations, and Beyond Broadcast is watching television with the user to be able to search for deeper content when asked.

“We know enough intelligent semantics to guide intelligent information systems. We don’t want to give them a list of links, so we started working on machine generated content. The next step is finance where we are often looking at data and raw numbers. You can create a graph, or you can write a story out of that,” says Hammond.

While the first prototypes stutter a lot, it is likely that algorithms will change journalistic tasks in the long term, although they won’t replace journalists, just as much as spell-checking programs haven’t replaced secretaries.

“As far as I can tell, journalists are terrified and needlessly so,” says Hammond.

In the future, writing might not be something anymore that is entirely done by humans, and that surely needs to be debated.

Apart from the man v machine issue, there are a lot of other topics. Should it be made transparent if a text is written by a human or an algorithm? Who controls what the algorithms finds? Is an algorithm more or less open to influence than a journalist? And as the algorithm partly uses what was already written, what happens with copyright?

And last but not least, assumed the programming is getting better: do algorithms steal the work of journalists – or help them to cope with information overload?

this article originally appeared in the guardian, u.k.

do androids dream of electric sheep – the android sisters

Legendary CIA Airline Now in Danger of Crashing

oh, i'm bringing home a baby bumblebee...

There was a time, not so long ago, that CIA-linked contractor Evergreen International Aviation was doing quite well for itself. So well, in fact, that the company offered to deploy its workers, free of charge, as election day sentries that would “detain troublemakers” at polling places.

Today, the venerable intelligence-helpers have fallen on hard times. The other day, it had to unload its 200 million square foot maintenance facility in southern Arizona in order to help pay off its debts. The company’s credit rating has fallen to CCC, just one step below rock bottom, Evergreen hometown paper, the News Register, reports. Pro bono head-knocking is now out of the question.

It’s a big fall for Evergreen, the multi-faceted firm that’s serviced government agencies for more than a half-century. The company flew the Shah of Iran around in 1980, and ran mysterious missions to El Salvador and Nicaragua shortly thereafter. The flights to Afghanistan began just a few months after the American invasion, in February, 2002.

In 2006, Evergreen’s parent company ferried Bill O’Reilly into Kuwait, according to SourceWatch. That same year, Evergreen denied it had anything to do with the CIA’s “rendition” flights that took terror suspects to torture-friendly regimes. In 2009, the company won a $158 million contract to supply the Air Force with helicopters.

But Evergreen handled more than military or intelligence community work. Its supertankers put out fires from Israel to Mexico. Its unmanned systems division flew drone flights over disaster zones — well, until Evergreen was forced to sell it off. NASA hired it to operate its flying infrared observatory. Evergreen even started a vineyard and a hazelnut farm.

But Evergreen wasn’t a business built on biscotti. One of the cornerstones of the company, once 4,500 people strong, was a freighter contract with Boeing. When Boeing switched from Evergreen to rival Atlas Air last year, the News Register reports, “Evergreen responded by filing a suit alleging the action would cost it $175 million in profit.”

The business was already falling on tough times, with S&P downgrading Evergreen’s credit rating to a B. But after the Boeing deal, things got much, much worse. S&P dropped Evergreen to a triple-C, and said it could only claw back to a B-  if the company got itself a $320 million loan and $10 million revolving line of credit. At the times, Evergreen’s chief financial officer told the News Register that “we are not concerned about the future of the company.” Perhaps things have changed, since then.

via Legendary CIA Airline Now in Danger of Crashing | Danger Room | Wired.com.

from the News Register:

Evergreen sells Marana air base 

Laboring under a difficult debt load, landing it on a national credit watch list, McMinnville-based Evergreen International Aviation has liquidated a major asset for the second time in recent months.

The diversified aviation company announced Tuesday the sale of the Evergreen Maintenance Center, which covers 200 million square feet of Southern Arizona desert, to Relativity Capital, a private equity firm with more than $2 billion under active management. Terms were not disclosed.

The move follows Evergreen’s September divestiture of its UAV, or unmanned aerial vehicle business, to the VT Group, a division of the multibillion-dollar British firm Babcock International Group PLC. Terms of that transaction also went undisclosed.

The center, located near the Pinal County community of Marana, specializes in the maintenance, repair, renovation and storage of commercial cargo and passenger aircraft. It is capable of housing up to 400 planes at a time for commercial airlines, cargo carriers, leasing companies and government agencies, making it the largest such facility in the world.

The site began life in the early stages of World War II as an Army Air Corps base. Later, during the Vietnam War, it served as home base for CIA aviation operations around the world.

The facilities include the Pinal Air Park, which features three hangars and a runway substantial enough to accommodate the largest, heaviest Boeing 747 in current service. Evergreen — which provides air cargo, ground support, aerial firefighting and helicopter services through its various divisions — took over in 1975.

Evergreen, which operates a multimillion-dollar fleet of 747 cargo carriers, has struggled with debt load off and on for years.

Standard & Poor’s, one of the two leading national credit rating services, downgraded the company’s bond rating to B in early 2008 and placed it under a credit watch.

In the interim, Evergreen’s financial situation has worsened to the point where Standard & Poor’s renewed its warning on Dec. 9, 2010. In the process, the agency dropped Evergreen’s credit rating to CCC, just a notch above the bottom rating of D on a scale peaking at AAA.

AFGHANISTAN US MARINES

the international “war on drugs” is a failure

A high-level international commission has declared the global “war on drugs” to be a failure, and has urged countries to consider legalising certain drugs, including cannabis, in a bid to undermine organised crime.

The Global Commission on Drug Policy, in its report released on Thursday, called for a new approach to the current strategy of reducing drug abuse by strictly criminalising drugs and incarcerating users.

It said the new approach should focus on battling the criminal cartels that control the drug trade, rather than targeting drug users.

“The global war on drugs has failed, with devastating consequences for individuals and societies around the world,” the report said.

The study urged “experimentation by governments with models of legal regulation of drugs”, adding: “This recommendation applies especially to cannabis, but we also encourage other experiments in decriminalisation and legal regulation.”

Illegal drug use

About 250 million people worldwide use drugs that are currently deemed illegal, with less than a tenth of them classified as “dependent”. Millions are also involved in the cultivation, production and distribution of drugs, according to the United Nations estimates quoted in the report.

The study said decriminalisation initiatives have not been accompanied by a significant spike in drug use, citing the implementation of such policies in Australia, Portugal and the Netherlands.

“Now is the time to break the taboo on discussion of all drug policy options, including alternatives to drug prohibition,” Cesar Gaviria, the former Colombian president, said.

The commission called for the urgent implementation of fundamental reforms in national and international drug control policies.

In particular, it recommended that the focus of drug control policies be moved from users as well as “farmers, couriers and petty sellers”, and onto the large criminal organisations involved in the drug trade.

It called on governments to “end the criminalisation, marginalisation and stigmatisation of people who use drugs but who do no harm to others”.

“Arresting and incarcerating tens of millions of these people in recent decades has filled prisons and destroyed lives and families without reducing the availability of illicit drugs or the power of criminal organisations,” the report said.

Treatment services recommended

It said that drug users who need health and treatment services should be offered them.

“Let’s start by treating drug addiction as a health issue, reducing drug demand through proven educational initiatives and legally regulating rather than criminalising cannabis,” Fernando Cardoso, the former Brazilian president, said.

The changed approach would focus law enforcement resources more against violent organised crime and drug traffickers, while providing alternative sentences for small-scale or first-time drug dealers.

The report said “vast expenditure” had been spent on criminalisation and repressive measures.

“Repressive efforts directed at consumers impede public health measures to reduce HIV/AIDS, overdose fatalities and other harmful consequences of drug use,” it said.

The 19-member panel includes current Greek prime minister George Papandreou, former UN secretary-general Kofi Annan, British businessman Richard Branson and former US secretary of state George Shultz.

Other members include former Mexican president Ernesto Zedillo, former Swiss president Ruth Dreifuss, former EU foreign policy chief Javier Solana and former US Federal Reserve chief Paul Volcker.

Report Documents Fake Terror Threats Concocted by FBI and NYPD

 

the gestapo

 

Shahawar Matin Siraj immigrated to Queens, N.Y., from Pakistan with his family when he was 16. Siraj began working at his uncle’s Islamic bookshop in Queens where, soon after 9/11, an undercover police officer began coming around and engaging Siraj in conversations about politics and religion. Whatever Siraj said to the officer in those conversations, it was enough for NYPD to soon assign another undercover officer to befriend the young man as well.

That second officer showed Siraj images of victims of American wars in the Middle East and of Guantanamo Bay, and began making up stories about secret terrorist organizations inside the U.S. Over the next year, the undercover agent prodded Siraj to devise a plan to detonate a bomb in New York City, as a means of responding to the U.S. government’s violence. Siraj first agreed but eventually refused to actively participate in the plot, saying, “No, I don’t want to do it.” But after more repeated prodding of the young man, Siraj finally agreed to act as a lookout for others.

A week later, Siraj was called by the NYPD to a police station to deal with an outstanding misdemeanor charge. Upon arrival, he was arrested and charged with conspiracy. He was sentenced to 30 years in prison. The next day, Immigration and Customs Enforcement arrested and detained Siraj’s mother, sister and father. His mother and sister spent 11 days and his father six months in a New Jersey detention center.

A new report, released last week by New York University’s Center for Human Rights and Global Justice, documents Siraj’s case alongside two others in which law enforcement has used legally suspect policing practices which conjure imaginary terrorism plots, and are used to target and entrap Muslims living in the U.S. In each of the three cases the report explores in depth, the defendants were sentenced to 25 years to life for planning terrorist plots that didn’t exist prior to the police or FBI goading them into existence. The FBI and NYPD designed the plots, pushed them on vulnerable young men who had not been involved with terrorist organizations and, once the previously law-abiding young men were hooked, triumphantly foiled the supposed danger.

The government’s use of paid, untrained informants, concocted plots and racial profiling of Muslim communities in its frantic effort to stop so-called homegrown terrorism has raised serious human and civil rights concerns.

via Report Documents Fake Terror Threats Concocted by FBI and NYPD – COLORLINES.