Saturday, July 13, 2002"Attack of the Cyber-Terror Studies"The Reg on academia's over-hyping of cyber-terror threats:Created at Dartmouth College, the report Law Enforcement Tools and Technologies for Investigating Cyber Attacks (reg req'd) starts with an assumption that is not substantiated within the document: cyber attacks are a significant threat. It implicitly suggests that because the digital forensic tools are so bad, law enforcement will be unable to protect us from these attacks. The explicit conclusion is that there must be a national agenda for the research and creation of law-enforcement specific investigation tools.
Full story here.... It's easy to envision the staff at Dartmouth brainstorming topics for interesting research topics that would help put their new Institute for Security Technology Studies on the map. Did they deliberately design a survey that would inevitably conclude such research topics were vital to national defence? This report, bankrolled by the US Department of Justice, gives that impression. It will now be used as evidence to justify requesting additional public money on security software, an area where 25 years of government sponsorship has resulted in virtually no useful technology. Full post and comments below the fold. Posted by Andrew Grossman at 4:36 PM (0 comments) Friday, July 12, 2002More Guns, Less CrimeCrime is on the rise in Britain, despite strong regulations against firearms. While the chances of having your house burglarized may be down, your chances of being raped or murdered in your home are on the rise.Full post and comments below the fold. Posted by Ryan at 10:11 AM (0 comments) Thursday, July 11, 2002The Immutable Laws of DowdThis came out a little over a month ago, but is still worth reading (and when it stops being so, we'll throw a party). A peek inside the mental mechanics of everyone's favorite columnist.To be fair, she did publish her first ever tolerable column last week, about a fish. Full post and comments below the fold. Posted by Andrew Grossman at 11:09 PM (0 comments) We're #1Dartmouth's Stephen Brooks and William Wohlforth in Foreign Affairs: "If today's American primacy does not constitute unipolarity, then nothing ever will. The only things left for dispute are how long it will last and what the implications are for American foreign policy." Full text here.Also: Dartmouth's Rajesh Aggerwall on Bush's compensation from Harken: below-prime loans "are not unique, but are by no means widespread." From the Washington Post. Full post and comments below the fold. Posted by Andrew Grossman at 2:30 PM (0 comments) Wednesday, July 10, 200270 Virgin StrippersTerrorists "having a good time" at San Antonio's XTC Cabaret threaten to blow up military bases. Never fear though, while I can tell you the SAPD is severly lacking, Texas vigilante justice is world renowned.Full post and comments below the fold. Posted by Ryan at 9:41 AM (0 comments) Sunday, July 07, 2002Dartmouth Indian/Atlanta BraveMike Remlinger '88 will represent the National League in the All-Star Game .Full post and comments below the fold. Posted by alex at 11:29 PM (0 comments) WWFI know the professional wrestling company is now known as WWE, but honestly, the World Wildlife Fund is way nuttier than the old World Wrestling Federation.Full post and comments below the fold. Posted by alex at 4:38 PM (0 comments) Academic FreedomThe fine folks at NRO found this gem about what academic freedom means in Britain at the moment. Due to how absurd this Prof. Baker is, we can play the fun game of "find the most ridiculous sentence in the article."Full post and comments below the fold. Posted by Christian at 3:55 PM (0 comments) |
Dartlog ToolsHanover NewsDartmouth LinksNota BeneArticles of note—culled from the Internet by TDR. Grim. How important is the libretto? Nothing thrills a classical music crowd more than a new piece of music that doesn't make them physically ill. "Irony, it turns out, does cross the Hudson River." You don't say. Child rape, pt. II. Dartmouth BlogsFavorites
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