Using Your Privacy Against You 355
guttentag writes: "Christian Science Monitor Reporter Warren Richey suspects he may have stumbled onto a credit card fraud ring that uses Internet merchants to quietly funnel night-vision rifle scopes to Middle Eastern terrorists and privacy policies to cover their tracks. Even if these are isolated incidents, it's worth noting that the privacy rules intended to protect us can also work against us."
Also a hammer... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Also a hammer... (Score:2)
These merchants will suffer as much as the rest of us if the fraudulently-acquired goods are used against, say, the USA.
Everybody loses when terrorism's involved.
Where are we heading to? (Score:3, Funny)
Today: Credit cards might make us pay for terrorist actions.
Tomorrow: Windows might actually be an act of terror. Umm.. Nah, that wouldn't be news. We knew that all along.
You don't say... (Score:5, Interesting)
If I had the points I'd be giving it Flamebait with all five points....
Jesus Christ. Yes, it's true that privacy helps criminals do crimes, but it's not like I'm going to install a camera in my bedroom so that the police know in case a crime happens to occur within the bounds of my room.
I know of a similar group that had the general mantra that Security compromises Freedom, and quite frankly The Party in 1984 scared me more than two liner jets flying into the World Trade Center ever did.
Point of the matter is the only way to ensure stuff doesn't get smuggled to the Enemies of State is to keep your eyes on the entire populous 24 hours a day. Unfortunately, then we forfeit our general human decency of free will.
Honestly, every person who is capable thereof has a right to commit a crime. They also have a right to face the consequences of that crime. And that is what a lot of these security-mongers don't seem to understand.
Don't get me wrong, I'm not saying we SHOULD go out and kill people and break every law in the book. What I'm saying is that with our free will we should be perfectly well allowed to do it to our capabilities and face the consequences. Me, personally, I don't think I'd want to go to jail, so as a result I won't do any crimes that would get me there. But there are crimes I break. I smoke Marijuana, I drive above the speed limit and I serve alcohol to minors (not all at the same time, mind you...). But I'm well aware of the consequences and I feel it is my right to break those laws, just as it is the government's right to punish me for doing so.
Re:You don't say... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:You don't say... (Score:2)
Laws are rules. Break the rules, face the consequences, whether it be the long arm of the law, Karma, a mellow high or whatever.
Re:You don't say... (Score:2)
Re:You don't say... (Score:2)
Heaven forbid we have liberty!
What you mean is to punish people who act outside of their rights.
To live in a (somewhat) safe and (somewhat) ordered society, we surrender some rights. In an orderless society, I would have the right to kill and steal. I (involuntarily) surrender these rights for the privelidge of living in this society. I see no problem with this. What other rights do I give up, and what further benifits do I gain by doing so? These are the big questions.
Past the first steps of giving up the right to do obviously cruel and harmful things to others, I don't think giving up freedom for safety is ever a very good idea. If a man threatens me, I can deal with him on more or less equal footing (go out and buy a gun, intimidate him, etc.) if the government threatens me, I am powerless within the law. At such a point my friends and I excercise the 2nd amendment and perhaps the greatest lesson of 20th century urban warfare: resistance by an armed populace is frighteningly hard to control. Guerilla warfare, baby, the last tool of the true citizen.
Re:You don't say... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:You don't say... (Score:2, Insightful)
Prohibition doesn't work. Never has, never will.
I would prefer to get my pot from a pharmacist, who in turn, got it from a government controlled farm. Why? Simply because I could be sure that I am getting a quality product and the government could have a pretty high increase in tax income, instead of spending money on catching and prosecuting users and small-time traffickers. Organized crime (yes, and terrorist groups, rogue nations etc. think of the political lobbying that is possible right now...) wouldn't get its share, and I would be happy about it.
Just because something is legalized doesn't mean that you wouldn't be able to control accessability for minors. You could argue in fact that it is _now_ impossible to control the availability to minors, because the government doesn't control anything regarding to pot. I think it is even more dangerous to have it prohibited: It is proven that pot is not an entry drug (i.e. users will eventually move on to stronger drugs like cocaine etc.) medically, but it is one sociologically. Think about it, the government says that marijuana is dangerous, the average kid sees his or her friends smoking it, and they don't die instantly because of it. Instead it makes them feel good. He or she decides to try it, eventually wants to buy it as well. Where to get it? From your friendly (uncontrolled) neighboorhood dealer, who also happens to be engaged in hard drug traffiicking. Well, this guy (mostly guys in this business) offers something stronger. Our drug apprentice thinks that he was fed lies about drugs before and might just as well try something else
It is this disinformation.strategy that is a lot more dangerous than pot can ever be. Look at the Netherlands for example, where pot is legal to own (in small quantities) and where the number of first-time drug users (and drug related deaths) is declining. AFAIK, the Netherlands is the only country in the EU (and probably world-wide) where this is the case.
Re:You don't say... (Score:2)
A few years back we had some numbers on that. About 1 million people had used/still used marijuana. Of these 160.000 were regular/heavy users. These numbers had shown a significant growth over the time the survey was taken.
In the same time period, the number of users of 'hard' drugs (heroin, cocaine, amphetamines) had stayed fairly constant.
In other words, this study showed quite clearly that the 'stepping stone effect' that opponents of legalisation use, does not exist.
I can't be bothered to look up the exact links now, but I believe the study was released by our Central Statistics Agency (CBS, Centraal Bureau voor de Statistiek). If you can read Dutch, you might want to try and search their website [www.cbs.nl] for more recent numbers. Or you might try our Health Ministry [minvws.nl].
I agree that prohibition is a losing proposition. However, the pro-legalisation side of the debate should never lose sight of the downsides of a permissive soft-drug policy. These downsides have been used by conservatives in the Netherlands to try to make the goverment retract our current policies.
MartRe:You don't say... (Score:3, Insightful)
certain people are predisposed (for whatever reason) to liking narcotics and not really minding the idea of breaking the law.
a sequential chain of events *does not* mean a causal chain. just because A happens before B does not mean that A causes B, and any argument based on that assumption is very very flawed.
what i'm saying is, the of course the kids who do heroin are smoking weed. but i bet they drink too. hey i bet most of them work in fast food places. i bet they smoke cigarettes. why is pot the cause of the heroin and not anything else in their life.
the only "gateway" aspect to pot is the mental barrier to breaking the law. a pot smoker (and i'm talking from experience here) begins to see the law as an arbitrary social construction that is to be creatively avoided as opposed to blindly obeyed. the mental barrier to doing hard drugs becomes much lower after this realization.
now, i'm smart, i've read up on the side effects of other drugs and i wan't nothing to do with it. the only permanent damage pot does is too your lungs. and trust me after 3 years of smoking (including pretty heavy smoking during the summers) i have no greater desire to do coke than i ever did. pot does not increase cravings for narcotics. that doesn't even make medical sense. it's a cannabinoid, which is a very different chemical from hallucinagins, amphetamines, steroids, alcohols, and opiates (the chemicals in most other drugs) it's like saying that drinking coffee will get you hooked on cigarettes or alcohol.
Re:You don't say... (Score:2)
Honestly, the only thing people who know something about pot (and not just what was taught in D.A.R.E) can say to argue why you shouldn't use it is that you could go to jail if you do.
Re:You don't say... (Score:2)
Re:You don't say... (Score:2)
To make all laws which shall be necessary and proper for carrying into execution the foregoing powers, and all other powers vested by this Constitution in the government of the United States, or in any department or officer thereof.
I think that about sums it up.
Re:You don't say... (Score:2)
Re:You don't say... (Score:2)
But we can get there faster by speeding. Did you have a point here? Everybody wants police on the road to stop idiot dangerous drivers.
"minors can get their own damn booze
Um, no they can't and that's the problem. I am a parent, and I love my children. But I want them to learn about the dangers and pleasures of wine and beer from me, not be droped headfirst into drinking at the unstable age of 21 amidst floudering loosers in bar scenes. The missinformation purposfully spread by anti-youth drinking campaigns is destabalizing our culture. Besides, this is unquestionable discrimination by age, something outlawed by the government. When I was 18 I was ten times more mature than any 21 year old I have ever met. That's not to brag, but rather because I had been through more crap than most 18 year olds.
"and everyone (IMHO) can do without night-vision rifle scopes."
Except the government. Perhaps you missed this part, but the right to bear arms wasn't granted for hunting, but to protect us from those that wanted to take away our other rights. They couldn't find a way to keep us from having the right to own and bear arms, so they just changed it to be that we couldn't own and bear any arms that were worth anything against the people in power. Effectively destroying the purpose of the right without removing the right completely. People are correct when they say this right has no reason for being anymore: it's been rendered worthless.
Re:You don't say... (Score:2)
If the population of New York City decided to go into open revold, holed themselves up in buildings with only small arms and rifles, the government would have a bloody mess of a time doing anything about it.
People underestemate their ability to resist opression.
Re:You don't say... (Score:2)
I'm sorry, but laws "to protect us from ourselves" are wrong and always have been. Their existence does not make them right.
Laws against drinking and driving are to protect others from you, and are OK. IMHO, the seatbelt law penalties should just be that no insurance will cover you if you get hurt from not wearing one. If you kill yourself because you don't wear a seatbelt that's YOUR problem. Seatbelt laws requiring you to secure your children are again OK since children are to young to understand the ramifications - but even this gets close to the line of acceptability. Again, skateboards, kitchen knives, etc. Where do you stop? It's clear our government doesn't know.
Re:You don't say... (Score:2)
Second, falling off a swing can break your neck and make you a parapalegic for life. Likelyhood doesn't change the analogy.
Bottom line is that most of our laws are fucking stupid, written by stupid people who feel they need to sick their big noses in everyone elses personal life. Rather than just enforce the basic commense sense that you are liable for you own actions or inactions, they feel that people need hand-holding.
Watching TV, (peoples court, ricky lake, opra, etc.) you get the feeling that the entire country is full of fucking morons. While there are lots of morons, they are in the exploitable (for entertainment purposes) minority which makes them great targets for TV. The average person on the street does have some common sense, and is reasonably intelligent. Our laws don't give the majority credit for having any brains.
The fact is, stupid people will continue to be stupid regardless of law. Making criminals out of stupidity serves no purpose than to fill our court system and jails with you and me picking up the tab.
Re:You don't say... (Score:2)
Seatbelts and helments are required because road injuries cost the government tons of money, and you don't have any sort of constitutional right to a car, and you don't own the road, so the state can set whatever requirements it likes on driving.
Meanwhile, most ways I can choose to hurt myself are perfectly legal. I can stick a razor blade into my leg and the cops won't have anything to say about it.
And the argument that pot impairs judgement and should thus be illegal is silly. Alcohol impairs judegement far worse. Most people who get too stoned just sit on a chair and stare off into space or at the TV, really drunk people attempt far crazier stunts.
So if pot should be illegal because it creates a public nuisance of impaired stoners, then alcohol should be made illegal as well.
Re:You don't say... (Score:3, Interesting)
Further proof that the modern American government in *no way* resembles the government described in the constitution.
Re:You don't say... (Score:2)
Re:You don't say... (Score:2)
The closest thing that the North American governments do is make verbal threats illegal. But that's about it.
Re:You don't say... (Score:2)
OTOH
It means that I give up some of my fredome, ie the fredome to take a gun and shoot who the hell I want, to the government as they have the right to protect the population at large.
How ever in exercising that right the Government also has the responcibility of stopping other people from being able to do the same to me.
Re:You don't say... (Score:4, Insightful)
Their 'privacy' policy is irrelevant, they're laundering money for terrorists and destroying evidence. What does this have to do with privacy?
Read the story, people
At long last! (Score:2)
BTW, all of you folks rambling on about what rights the government should have might want to look at the US Constitution. The feds have NO RIGHTS. The federal government has powers and authority. The People and the States have all of the rights.
The way credit card transactions work (Score:2)
And they're not actively destroying evidence either, I'd assume, they just keep these records for a limited time.
But all this doesn't matter and here's why:
If the merchant can't provide a valid customer signature with the credit card info, the entire risk of the transaction is with the merchant. Anyone who ever worked in e-business knows this is standard credit card company policy. They get their money back and it's the merchant who ends up being frauded.
Which, by coincidence, has lead many online merchants to check the billing address listed with your credit card record, or even stricter only ship to that billing address. Because this info is harder for simple scamsters to obtain (though not impossible, stealing your wallet will do, but then the card is usually blocked completely).
So the conclusion of this whole lame story is that the merchant of these rifle scopes loses a lot of money because they are not careful enough about their shipping addresses. And they will likely go out of business if they keep this up.
Big deal. Personally I think they deserve it, for stupidity even more than for helping possible terrorists if you ask me.
Re:You don't say... (Score:2)
Well every once in a while we get a super genuis like R. Kelly who did.
Ahem, where did we abandon reason? (Score:2)
I, for one, believe that we need to seriously re-evaluate our approach to privacy in light of MODERN terrorism. To BLINDLY use the exact same legal principles and laws today that we used more than 100 years ago without any discussion of the dramatic shift in threats to our security is just plain FOOLISH. First and foremost, we have weapons of destruction that can cause hundreds of thousands of deaths and can be obtained and used by a handful of determinated individuals unlike anything before. Secondly, we have known groups of individuals that seek to do just this sort of destruction. Thirdly, we have vastly increased access to this country by foreign groups that may seek us harm between our immigration policy, our modern open economy (i.e., massive international shipping), and our various forms of high speed transit. Fourthly, we have far more dense population centers where terrorists can inflict much greater harm on us with the same weapons. In short, what was an acceptable risk during the 1800s, or even 1950s, may not be today. I'm not proposing wholesale abandonment of our laws with respect to privacy and individual rights, but we should, at very least, DEBATE some very particular laws.
(No, 9/11 did not somehow create this threat and it's not just a reaction on my part. I've been saying this for a long time. However, it has made the threat real for a large number of Americans and, consequently, given many the resolve to do what they were previously unwilling to do. It's also demonstrated to the skeptics that the terrorists are both willing and capable of killing thousands of people without warning in one fell swoop.)
Re:You don't say... (Score:2, Flamebait)
Just because someone becomes in contact with a crime doesn't mean that they demand the release of basic human free will...
Re:You don't say... (Score:3, Insightful)
I live in California, so it is against the law.
I have permenant nerve damage as a result of this incident.
The basic of the story was that I was in the cross walk and I was hit. The girl I was walking with lost her ability to breed.
Just because I was a victim does not mean I want stricted rules, infact quite the opposite.
A loss of liberty is not a straight across trade for safety.
Most of the time you do not gain physical security, rather you think you gain mental security as a result of simple psychological tricks.
So as a victim of crime, with family and friends also victims, I feel I have the right to say this: I do not need to be a victim to have a point of view.
Re:You don't say... (Score:2)
Prevention is a matter of deterrent. If there is enough of a deterrent, most people will be deterred. No amount of deterrent will stop a fanatic.
It's like computer security. There is a continuum on which one end approaches complete security, and the other end approaches complete insecurity. If we let things go towards the complete freedom end, having no laws and no deterrent to crime, individual ethics will not save us. If we let things go towards the complete security end, we have no freedom to do anything.
In real life, just like computer security, the trick is to find the point where we are secure enough and free enough simultaneously.
Without locking the world down completely, we will always have to deal with those on whom deterrents are ineffective.
I prefer to remain free and be assumed innocent of a crime until such time as I am proven guilty of one. Some people may use their freedom towards evil ends...the solution is not to lock us all up, rather it is to raise us up to a better level...to educate, create socially responsible governments, and raise all peoples out of poverty.
In short, until humans evolve into a better species...we're fucked.
Re:You don't say... (Score:2)
privacy vs. control (Score:2, Insightful)
Even if these are isolated incidents, it's worth noting that the privacy rules intended to protect us can also work against us.
Well, yeah, that's the whole problem the governemnts have with privacy... The more privacy is guaranteed, the harder it is to track such things as financial operations or observe people or institutions. Somebody who wants privacy but doesn't see this needs a hit with a clue-stick. It's a question of choosing between two equally bad extremes: A privacy so harsh that even police is not allowed to search anything, no matter what (that's going to hurt crime investigation big time), or the police state where the police knows about everybody and everything. The truth lies,as always, somewhere in the middle, and more importantly: It is up to every society to decide where they want to draw the line. There is no such thing as the best equilibrium for everybody and everything. To sum up my reaction to the above sentence: d'oh.
Re:privacy vs. control (Score:2)
The more privacy is guaranteed, the harder it is to track such things as financial operations or observe people or institutions. Somebody who wants privacy but doesn't see this needs a hit with a clue-stick.
I proudly present my head to your clue-stick. What definition of government does one have to subscribe to in order to believe that governmental monitoring of people and institutions is a good thing?
Re:privacy vs. control (Score:2, Insightful)
What are you going to do when your attitude allows a facist, anti-semetic dictator to spring up here? I'll tell you, nothing. Why...because you will just let them in to your home to do what every they want like a good little patriot. And yes I am an American.
It is scary how much the banks don't track (Score:5, Interesting)
In both cases, the police did absolutely zero.
In the end I got my money back so why should I care? Well I saw first hand how not only do the institutions not actively track these criminals, they actually activily put road blocks in place so you cant track them.
I mean, why would my bank burn checks the same day they got them? And why were they unable [as they told me] to track further checks that came in on that (now closed) account? Given the evidence I had (video tape at circle K), and notifying the banks and police within hours of the crime, I would have thought they would have had a good chance at catching the crooks. But they refused to do anything at all; even though supposedly this the way terrorists are being funded.
If I ever get into financial trouble, I now know an easy way to steal money with no fear of being tracked down...
Sorry sir, regulations! (Score:4, Insightful)
See, for example if an extended check storing facility costs 10'000'000 $ per year and check fraud costs them 7'000'000 $ per year. They're 3'000'000 $ better off to burn canceled checks and cheerfully refund your money.
CC companies are even worse, since the merchant always bites the bullet; so they don't really give a shit! There's really no incentive here to invest big into fraud detection systems.
This is a rotten attitude of course. Because ultimately we all pay through higer prices. What's even worse (and grossly unfair) is that as a merchant even if he verifies the CC data and the shipping address of the order and the CC company OKs it, the merchant still pays if something goes awry.
The fincancial service industry is rotten and they don't give a shit about their customers as long the bottom line looks OK.
Re:It is scary how much the banks don't track (Score:3, Interesting)
LEXX
RTFA please (Score:4, Informative)
Synopsis: Journalist travels to Middle Eastern country. While there, orders stuff on his Amex. Amex receipt (I assume? Article not too clear on this) was used to purchase military equipment. Sucks, but such is life. This doesn't have anything to do with Privacy in the US, as far as I can see.
As a side note, when I was in the Middle East, (USMC--Oohrah!) we were instructed to make purchases only in their currency, so scams (which is all it really is) wouldn't happen.
Lastly, why the hell wasn't his card cancelled? Is he that stupid?
I seriously doubt this story is real at all, come to think of it.
Re:RTFA please (Score:2, Insightful)
You are right, it doesn't have anything to do with privacy in the US, but along with the majority of your fellow countrymen, you seem to have forgotten that there are still a few humans on this planet who have not yet managed to obtain US citizenship.
Re:RTFA please (Score:2)
And, as someone who has been all over the world, yes, I do realize there are a lot of people out there that aren't as blessed (yes, I said blessed) to be American. We have our issues, sure, but so does every other country.
Re:RTFA please (Score:2)
Re:RTFA please (Score:2)
Re:RTFA please (Score:2)
then, as an investigative reporter (which is what he is in this case) he should have went to them and found out why they weren't helping him. One phone call and that's it? It's a wonder this dude ever got his cable service hooked up. Serious lack of effort on his part, story sounds like a woe-is-me, feel-sorry-for-me sob story.
All I am saying, he made 1 frigging phone call and then has the cajones to bitch about it? Gotta love democracy in action, eh?
Re:RTFA please (Score:2)
I was scammed overseas, I tried to correct it, and no one would help. I bugged the FBI day in a day out for X-amount of weeks, etc., and no one helped me, why is this?
why he didn't go for this angle, I can only guess. Probably because terrorism is "in" right now, and it was the vogue thing to do. Anyway, that's what I think. You?
Re:RTFA please (Score:2)
Kids, please (Score:3, Interesting)
Instead of shouting back and forth 'it does', 'no it does not', could you please be so kind as to tell the rest of us who *DID* read the article, where it says anything in that direction.
I'm sorry but the string 'priv' doesn't even appear 1 time in the article.
Privacy verses Terrorism (Score:5, Insightful)
But would it be worth it to give up our privacy to maintain a false feeling of security? Terrorists will always be able to get their hands on weapons and other stuff to use against us. Whether it is through buying stuff with stolen creditcards or use of a malafide dealer or manufacturer. Weapons and other military stuff are being produced all over the world.
In the light of 9/11 would we have to give up our privacy? For what? The hijackers used frigging hobby knives and some of them weren't even known terrorists. The absense of privacy is not a threath to them. It is to us though...
What's more important is that our governments will not be a totalitarian one and our every move would not be under scrutiny by the government. I like my privacy although i know that my name and other information is going through hundreds of databases [databasenation.com] each day. I would never like the idea of a government knowing every little thing i say or do though. What's preventing a government of misuse of all that information?
Re:Privacy verses Terrorism (Score:2)
Not to mention the so-called Patriot Act and its provisions to make electronic intrusion a "terrorist act."
All this in the name of fighting terrorism. Someone mod this guy back up. -1 Flamebait, my ass.
Freedoms (Score:4, Insightful)
Why do these stories suddenly become new or shocking when the word "terrorist" is connected to them? Are so many people really that ignorant about the basics of how freedoms work and the costs that come with them? This stuff is so simple that it could be taught to first graders and they would fully understand it in less than an hour.
TV commercials. (Score:4, Funny)
Now Id really like to see a new mastercard commerical along those same lines:
Hotel room in Jordan: $125 a night.
Crispy waffle breakfast: $5
Knowing your MasterCard helped Al Qaeda terrorists buy weapons: Priceless.
-Una
Re:TV commercials. (Score:2)
Partial solution CC fraud: volutary limits (Score:3, Interesting)
I am thinking in the first place about firearms. These are usually sold in specialised stores which can be easily identified in the credit card transaction databases. Most people do not buy firearms very often and certainly not with a credit card.
This could also apply to other goods.
Data Quality (Score:2, Insightful)
From a data processing pov it would be incredible hard to implement, specifically based on current systems.
True story: MCI was not able to authorize a 10$ purchase via the phone on my non-us credit card. They wanted a zip code. No zip-code no authorization. Now, if the cc authorization systems really rely on 5 digit zip codes in order to authorize a 10 dollar purchase it's beyond my comprehension just how much those systems must suck.
So, When does somebody actually reveal the truth? (Score:2, Interesting)
Waiting for the truth. Still waiting. And still...yeah, right...
Slashdot summary totally wrong (Score:4, Insightful)
The privacy policy was never intended to protect us. From the article:
The privacy policy is a contract, and its purpose is to protect the merchant (which in this case, may also be the perpetrator).
With all due respect, it is rare that I ever see a privacy policy intended to protect me. Usually, privacy policies have so many loopholes, that they do not constitute a privacy policy at all. There general purpose is to protect the merchant from liability. Even if there were a privacy policy to protect the author, that policy would not have impeded the investigation.
Finally, the article wasn't even about privacy policies. The article was about credit card fraud. The privacy issues just happened to be mentioned in the third-to-last paragraph.
Nothing to see here ... (Score:3, Insightful)
Kids have been stealing credit card numbers for years. Fraud investigations on stolen credit cards have ended when the CC company gets the money back. Story time.
Someone at my place of employment either stole a Visa debit card from my personal posessions or from my wife's purse, or I left it in an ATM machine, or something. They wiped my checking account clean of well over $3000 plus my overdraft protection, buying beer, shoes, gasoline, and in general living it up and having a good time.
When I discovered what was going on (because checks started coming back), I reported the card compromised, closed the account, did a police report, the whole bit.
If it had been stolen from the ATM machine, the security camera might have snapped a shot of the person who took it. In any case, the establishments that took the card might have had security cameras picking up someone committing fraud with my card to the tune of three grand.
The police took the report and filed it under "Theft Under $100" (because the cash value of the card is less than a dollar), and that's the end of it. My employer didn't care either, because it didn't cost them any money. My bank closed the account after charging back the merchants who took the money.
The only people who lost here were those merchants. Nobody cares. Write it off as a cost of business.
The only thing that makes this different is that it happened to two people in the same office. They could have bought rocket launchers, and it wouldn't matter.
As for the privacy policy ... well, that's CCBill's problem. Someday they'll get slapped with a subpoena they can't fulfill because they don't keep records for the length of time they should, and then they'll be a huge Congresscritter investigation about privacy on the Internet with people storming that there shouldn't be any, and then the EFF and CDT will have to get all worked up and lobby some more. Until then ... business as usual.
FUD by idiots (Score:5, Insightful)
Let me get this straight: this author use two unique instances to conclude that 1) piracy helps terrorists, and 2) Internet merchant helps terrorists.
This is incredibly idiotic, how could
To author:get a clue! The goods was NOT magically shipped to Middle East electronically, it's sending to a real address physically. The supplier must be well aware what goods is to be shipped to what destination. Just because the paymant is done on the Internet and he concluded that Internet merchant is to be blamed?
Also I'm not convinced that piracy helps terrorists in any way in this case. If the supplier shipped suspicious goods to problematic countries without question, then they should take full responsiblity.
We have enough news sites that crowded with editors who have subliminal intelligence and clue. I'm very annoyed that
Re: (Score:2)
Selected quotes from the article (Score:2)
Hahaha, this one sounds right out of The Matrix [imdb.com]. Priceless.
Duh, who would ordes waffles over the internet. Just drive to the nearest waffles outlet and buy one. Or ask your wife/goflfriend to bake you some :-)
Re:RTFA (Score:2)
Did it occur to you how I got the quotes in the first place ? ;)
Great irony. (Score:2)
Credit cards suck, and I don't plan on getting one unless I have to.
And in other Credit Card News... (Score:3, Insightful)
Hmmm. $1 for a movie, extra for the night-scope to go?
Article's Real Issue (Score:3, Informative)
Actually, the ccnow bit might be the only interesting piece of the entire article. The fact that the reporter couldn't get information is probably a good sign that the policy is actually being followed as promised. But it hardly means the information is not available to appropriate parties. CCNow's privacy statement [ccnow.com] reads in part:
There is more detail in their client agreement [ccnow.com] which notes in Section 7 (emphasis mine):
So really - what we have is another non-issue. If / when the FBI, CIA, or other lawfull agency makes the appropriate request for this information, CCNow will apparently present it (and furthermore requires their clients to also comply with such requests). The privacy policy is not inhibiting this case at all, despite the reporters horrified whispers and hand-wringing over waffles, weapons, and Al Qaeda.
Re:Article's Real Issue (Score:3, Funny)
You know, sometimes an M-16 is just an M-16.
There's another famous psychiatrist who was into terrorism, too...does the name Pavlov ring a bell?
Re:Article's Real Issue (Score:2)
Re:Article's Real Issue (Score:2)
Night Vision Scopes are not weapons in and of themselves.
Unless the buyer takes the scope and bludgeons someone to death with it, it is not a weapon by itself.
Night Vision is not a controlled substance or technology. Most countries with a military now have night vision. We, the United States, are not the sole holder of that dreadful technology.
Lastly, at $1800 US, this is not state of the art night vision, I would guess it to be about 10 year old or more technology.
Re:Article's Real Issue (Score:2)
Two excellent points.
But at the same time, I don't think its too much of a jump to expect military-grade equipment being collected for militaristic purposes when they are being imported to such an unstable area of the world. The eventual buyer could be an enthusiast or collector. But considering the market, its unlikely.
The other interesting point is the nationality of the devices in question. Soviet surplus, it would seem. Old, but effective enough. And cheap. And readily available. At the fall of the Berlin Wall, I had friends who would drive in to Berlin to buy Soviet military hardware; clothes, insignia, firearms, and other equipment (grenades could be had rather cheaply too, but we weren't interested). This equipment is obviously available from plenty of sources throughout the world.
The fact that we are dealing with only night-vision scopes, items that are commonly available, does a lot to show why the FBI might not be overly concerned about this case.
Welcome... to the real world. (Score:3, Funny)
Credit card scam? ID theft? Poor journalist scammed of good ol' US$$$?
Frankly, I am not surprised.
Credit card "security" is nothing but the latest scam of the banking establishment.
In Europe, where almost every credit card carries a so-called "smart chip", banks have tried to suppress information that these cards can be broken using a few thousands of Euros worth of standard electronic equipement.
You think I am spouting nonsense? Search for "Serge Humpich" [google.fr] on Google, and see what I mean!
In the USA, most credit cards do not even offer the ridiculous security of "smart chip" -- how come you are surprised by ID or credit theft?
And are you really surprised that banks quickly destroy all traces of the fraud? This is just their way of saying: "Situation under control, Sir. Nothing to see here".
As usual, the customer is left to pay the bills: if you think the fraud is bad, wait until you see what it does to your credit report!! Not to mention finding yourself on every "terrorist list" there is out there.
And one more thing, and this is simple common sense: let's face it, most Middle-East countries have a bone (or several) to pick with the USA. How come this guy thinks he can go to Amman, Jordan, pay something with his credit card and hope that some underpaid islamic clerk in the hotel lobby is not going to swipe the card number to buy expensive little (russian) toys?
Sorry, seems to me the journalist in question is an idiotic whining moron!!!
So there. Flame all you want.
Did anybody actually READ the story? (Score:3, Interesting)
Yeah, whatever. So either the CC company didn't tell Charlie Church about a $3000 dollar rejection, or he didn't cancel his card at this point. Pick the least implausible alternative.
Anybody else here thinking that this whole story is purely or largely fictional, based on a rationalisation that this is the sort of stuff that's probably happening to other people? I note that CCnow's Privacy Statement [ccnow.com] only covers purchasers, not sellers.
You know, it seems to me that he could use the Freedom of Information Act to pursue the FBI and find out exactly what they've done with the information he allegedly gave them, and why they failed to act before the records were wiped. That sounds like it would make a much bigger and better story. I wonder why this guy will fly to the Middle East in the hope of getting the same story as everyone else, but he won't write a couple of letters to pursue an exclusive.
The real CCard owner does not loose his money (Score:2)
The responsibilities regarding credit card orders in Finland if I have understood correctly (I quess this is an international ruling) go: origin of purchase <-> credit card issuer <-> credit card holder. The losses I create, go to issuer, who seeks a compensation for the losses from origin of purchase, which seeks compensation from somewhere.
Us? (Score:2, Interesting)
Ya know, I find that comment a bit disturbing. And not just because of the obvious reason that it appears to support limiting privacy (further). I hope I don't sound like one a them trolls, but honestly, while the "Middle Eastern terrorists" that the White House likes to talk so much about are obviously engaging in activities that are immoral as a whole (death and destruction), I DO agree with them that the "us" you try to speak of, the "us" that isn't really inclusive of us at all, but of the rich and powerful that control this nation, and others, need a serious ass-whooping.
To put it another way, while I will agree with anybody who calls a terrorist bad (not "evil") no matter what his or her motives are, I will also say that I am in full support of the society that those "Middle Eastern terrorists" grew out of.
I think it's really just a matter of looking at who the real enemies are.
-Jeff
It's just a night-vision scope, folks! (Score:2)
The most dangerous thing you can do with a night vision scope is hit someone over the head with it.
With sensationalistic journalism like this, baby monitors become spy-killing machines and those X10 cameras are automatically associated with sexual predators. It's a slippery slope that I do not want us to go down!
Liberty v. Security (Score:2)
I think we know that freedom comes with a price: less security. Security comes with a price too: less freedom.
In the US, this idea was a commonplace before the Revolution. Anybody have any idea as to its earlier origins? (I'm sure it was bandied about during the English Civil War.)
Typical slashdot (Score:2)
Aren't people allowed to buy a rifle scope without it being your business?
Captain Obvious to the rescue (Score:2)
Well, at least somebody's noting it and not just jumping on the privacy bandwagon blindly, chanting "Priavcy! Privacy! Privacy!" It should be obvious, but a lot of people don't seem to realize that the privacy they so feverently wage holy wars for is a double edged sword. I've said it before and I'll say it again... Everybody loves privacy. Until you find out that your local chapter of Jihads R Us has been thriving under the same policy and cooking up plans to slaughter your peoples wholesale. Then, when those same privacy fanatics scream "FIND THOSE TERRORISTS!", ultimate irony will set in as they realize their government can't help them because it would be violating all the privacy acts these people wish existed. I'm not advocating total government oversight, but some people out there need to buy a bottle perspective. What protects you, protects them.
Freedom promotes Terrorism (Score:2)
what goes up must come down
Open source software enables cacking security
Locks are for honesty people
What we make, we can break
etc..
It's not about this thing or that thing being bad, it's about people and how they use things to be bad.
Maybe automobiles and trucks should be added to the list of terrorist tools that should be ban, along with anything that can be use to make a bomb.
In fact, why don't we just make up a list of all things that can be used to kill.....Guess that would include water....
But it's really about people, what they do, and most important WHY?
Like what is terrorist reason to do bad things?
Or Like why was a trillion dollar bet [pbs.org] allowed to happen? Hmmmm, isn't Indonesia like 80% or better muslin?
And Why is military spending not being used [osearth.com] to address and remove reasons to be a terrorist or do bad things? Certainly it cost us all alot more backing up wrongful world financial manipulations with guns, then it would in being more productive with such military labeled finances.
So yeah, on the list of things that can be used for terrorist act, we really do have to add the world militaries, as common sence will tell anyone that the majority of people living on this planet don't want war but only to live a happy and healthy life.
It's just the few creating wars and bad things, spending huges amount of money that can be far better spent.
Where is customs? (Score:2)
- Customs is able to stop the delivery of tools that MIGHT be used to hack Nintendo games
- Customs is UNABLE to stop the shipment of night vision equipment to terrorist harboring nations where it WILL be used to commit violent crimes
Yeah, we've got our priorities straight.
Have we already lost? (Score:2, Insightful)
You can have freedom or security. Choosing freedom means that you accept a certain amount of risk in order to maintain that freedom. One of our founding fathers (Too my shame I can't remember which one) said that those who are willing to trade freedom for safety deserve neither one.
Since 9/11 we have allowed our government to reduce our personal freedoms in exchange for a promise of greater security.
Stories like this one are important, since they show that there is a cost for freedom, it shouldn't be taken for granted. The events of 9/11 were part of that cost as well.
By allowing legislation like the Patriot Act to pass without fighting it lots of Americans have given tacit approval to the destruction of the country that I love.
Osama bin Ladin says he wants to destroy this country. Ironically, we seem to be doing the job for him. More and more I see people saying that we have to accept these new restrictions on our privacy.
The real war is not one of terrorism and counter-terrorism, it's a war of ideals and information. The men who attacked our country did so because they had been taught that the U.S. is a great source of evil in the world. We need to find ways to teach people what our country is really about.
We also have to accept responsibility for our mistakes and policy failings.
So yes, there is always a risk that our freedoms can be used against us. Sometimes it's high, but do we really want to trade it away?
Confusion (Score:2)
This isn't really a privacy issue so much. Every business keeps their records for a limited amount of time and then gets rid of them. 6 months is kinda short and if we want to take issue with that and force them to keep transaction records longer I'm OK with that. I still don't see any privacy issues.
To begin with (Score:2)
The right to know what's done with your name (Score:2)
The purchase was made with the stolen identity of the reporter. Therefore the right to privacy to be protected is the reporter's own. Therefore he should have full rights to the details of the transaction. Period. Any party withholding those details is complicit in the theft of his identity, and aiding a criminal. They should go to jail, for a long time.
Ran into a similar situation with AOL a few months back. Someone stole a credit card number of a housemate to buy a bunch of porno and sign up for an AOL account. AOL absolutely refused to provide any information - it required redundant effort just to get them to cancel the account and stop trying to collect on it. Why should someone who has stolen your identity have any right to privacy in what they do with your identity? Is it your identity, or not? Why should any corporation have any right to withhold from you information on what's been done using your own identity? Shouldn't you have an absolute right to full disclosure of all information that can help you protect and defend your own good name?
___
give me a break (Score:3, Insightful)
The problem: CCBill (Score:2)
Getting a real merchant account isn't that hard if you're legitimate. I've done it, and I used Bank of America, not some off-brand "Internet bank". Anybody who's willing to pay 14% instead of 3% is probably doing something suspicious.
The real issue (Score:2)
Millitaman helps terrorists!!!!!! (Score:2)
This is a non-story. I can't see what it is ever here except to be sensational.
Re:Is it just me... (Score:3, Insightful)
It's sure easy to order stuff on the Internet, but the "security" consists only of giving you your money back if they oopsed.
I also think the author of the article should be prosecuted for not cancelling his card when it was obvious it had been compromised by someone with less-than-eloquent ideas. I mean, someone tried to purchase military equipment in his name, but even the high-horse author did not take all the possible steps to prevent the actual abuse! Had he cancelled his card immediately, there would have been no second purchase.
There's something about a pot, and a kettle, and one of them being black in there.
Re:Is it just me... (Score:2)
According to my credit card company's fraud investigators, the order included one Russian night-vision rifle scope (a similar level of technology as night scopes used with deadly precision by US Marine Corps snipers during the Vietnam War),
Boy, those credit card fraud investigators sure know their weapons.
Re:Export controls? (Score:3)
Re:Export controls? (Score:2)
Re:Export controls? (Score:2)
Re:It's things like this... (Score:3, Interesting)
Draconian societies have existed and fell throughout the annals of human history. And in that history there are even civilizations that were much more open. Neither a draconian nor free society is completely novel.
And likewise, adversity is not novel to human history. In fact, modern history is chock full of times when nations' leaders pondered over the existance of their people and civilization as they knew it. And they endured. They survived. And their nations rebuilt and prospered.
Whether modern societies will endure is still very much unknown. What is known is that we will face adversity. Some will perish. Some will survive. And if we have the will, society shall prevail.
It would be interesting to note that Afghanistan was a particularly difficult target for the CIA to infiltrate. Part of the problem was Al'Qaeda's close-knit network. But another trouble was the strict police state under the Taliban which made movement within Afghanistan extreemly difficult.
Sure, the Taliban's draconian goverment made it difficult for foreign agents to work within their borders. But at what cost?
Almost every successful and stable modern society today consists of a society that allows the considerable freedoms that would also allow foreign agents to operate within their borders. And while this is not the intent of a free society, it is one of the unfortunate side effects. But it is one of the costs to freedom. And even if that cost is steep, it is worthwhile.
Re:It's things like this... (Score:2, Insightful)
I am impressed by the cleverness of Al Qaeda attacks. Specifically the double embassy bombing and the rocket fired at the British intel HQ were pretty impressive. You'd think after the Marine barracks in Lebanon were blown up we'd learn to put up a barrier, but we still didn't learn after Khobar Towers, etc. etc. Last time I walked past the Federal Building downtown it was markedly devoid of any physical barriers to stop a Ryder Truck from pulling a McVeigh. They do have an extra security guard out front, though.
The most cunning aspect of 9/11 was that we paid the rich sheiks who hate us for the oil, then we spent our own money to refine it into highly flammable jet fuel, and conveniently loaded it onto airplanes for their soldiers. Financially I bet the cost of the operation was cut in half since we provided hundreds of thousands of dollars of high explosives for them. Extraordinarily clever.
The truth is, that America's way of doing things [the free, the brave] is sadly outdated and Draconian controls are needed...but...[will] destroy what America stands for in the first place
Ay, there's the rub. The major problem we have now is that we're grasping for straws. It's pretty evident that the FBI and CIA had a bevy of information pointing to a terrorist attack, they just couldn't sort out the wheat from the chaff. Our response? Give them even more information! Search anything, just because it might have a clue. Investigate the books I checked out, even though there's ample evidence that had ANYONE been paying attention, the Arab guys who went to flight school just to learn how to turn were an obvious mark.
Meanwhile, if you need a little extra cash, now would be a good time to make a withdrawal since the FBI won't be investigating bank robberies anymore!
Looking back, it seems even more ridiculous that they ever wasted their time and my money prosecuting Dmitry Sklyarov. The guy who decided to do that (Mueller) is now the head of the FBI. Dream Team indeed.
Garbage (Score:2)
The terrorists have not done so much damage that it's caused the Empire/Republic to fall. On the contrary, the most devastating attack on the Trade Center has strengthened people's resolve to support the government. There hasn't been an incredible collapse of Federal and State governments, there hasn't been property damage on the mass scale feared during the Cold War, and there hasn't even been horrendous economic effects throwing us in to another depression.
And you know what? These things aren't going to happen because of terrorist action.
Despite being hated by much of the world, there are large portions of the world that respect the US not only because of the freedoms which we attempt to stand for (sometimes successfully, sometimes not) but also for what we've accomplished. It's no accident that the UN is headquartered in the US.
The idea that a small group of terrorists can beat a country that truly stands for freedom is laughable. Look at the history of Rome when it was a true Republic for evidence of this. When people truly believe in what their country stands for, they will defend it to the death.
The problem is that we no longer stand for freedoms in the same way. We talk about it, but the truth is that we're a far cry from Republican Rome or even the Revolutionary colonies. These days we stand for a lot more of the Draconian measures that you say will prevent terrorist attacks. Less and less people love their liberties, and with them the country that is supposed to guarantee them, and so we are weakened.
I say you are completely wrong. More Draconian measures are not needed, and in fact will do more harm than good. More freedoms are the only solution to this. The terrorists aren't going to defeat us. Like the barbarians taking Rome, it'll be our own slow suicide that will bring us to our knees. Removing our liberties in the name of Freedom will be the ruin of us all.
Re:What I posted yesterday (Score:2)
Now, one could play Devil's Advocate and play along with this troll too. But naw. Lets wait. I'm sure there will be better ones to come along. Something that actually hints at real issues without doing silly things like talking about peer review of encryption and then claim encryption has no place in civilized society.
Re:What I posted yesterday (Score:2)
Encryption and "Privacy" have no place in civilized society.
Absolutely right. Unfortunately, no human being on earth lives in a civilizied society. We all live in societies where the strong rule the weak. Encryption, and its end result, privacy, are ways for the weak to survive.
I've become convinced that "Freedom" is just an interchangeable word for "Ingsoc" nowadays.
Re:What I posted yesterday (Score:2)
Point the first is, don't use a credit card to buy a damn waffle in freaking Jordan.
Point the second is, the author provides no evidence whatsoever (nor claims to) that there is any connection to terrorism here - the whole assassin angle is pure current events hype, the credit card crooks are probably simply ordering commodities that are easy to convert into cash - in the USA script kiddies might buy Playstations for the same reason, and it's really impossible to say if they will eventually be bought by disturbed children who will use them to play violent videogames until they are whipped into a murderous frenzy and go on a killing spree.
So let's say this is an example where the privacy policies of a private company prevented a victim of fraud from receiving information on the merchant (presumably innocent until proven otherwise) involved in the fraudulent transaction. Gee, its not so damn interesting anymore now is it?
Point the third is, it's not like the privacy policy of a CC transaction company is inviolate. An appropriate authority with appropriate evidence could legally demand and receive this information. Some guy from CSM, on the other hand, is not allowed to just call up and get it (ooh, privacy laws are protecting terrorists!). I actually don't much agree with this policy as it is being applied in this case. I mean, if someone makes a fraudulent transaction with MY CC info I think that I have the right to all available information on the transaction. It was done on my account, after all. But this is hardly a case of the law getting in the way of investigating terrorism. And I hardly think it justifies the canonization in law of universal, mandatory disclosure of "all transactions" (whatever the hell that means...) as the ObviousGuy seems to be suggesting...
Re:He waited a *month* without cancelling his card (Score:2)
Nah, that's not it. The reason banks are in business is that they (temporarily) invent money. It's kind of weird, but look up what fractional reserve banking means some time. When you write a check, you're really using a form of currency created by banks. Money needs to be invented constantly and in current system this is done by banks.