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Patrice Chéreau: ‘It’s OK to be hated’

From outraging Wagner purists to snubbing Hollywood, Patrice Chéreau is forever going against the grain. Now the great French director has turned his sights on British theatre. Patrice Chéreau , the great French theatre, opera and film director, is in London to rehearse the first play he has ever directed in the UK. It’s a coup for the Young Vic, and its artistic director, David Lan , tells me people are hanging about near the rehearsal rooms just to feel the presence, touch the hem. I am not ashamed to admit I am one of those hem-touchers, fascinated to meet the man who changed the face of modern opera with his centenary Ring cycle at Bayreuth in 1976, when he infuriated traditionalists by replacing Wagnerian horns and bearskins with the trappings of 19th-century plutocracy. That Ring made the then 31-year-old Chéreau’s career. It remains the achievement with which he is most often linked, except perhaps by movie buffs who admire the films that have

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Human cannonball dies after stunt

23-year-old performer dies in hospital after accident at Scott May’s Daredevil Stunt Show at Kent county showground A man performing a human cannonball act at a stunt show in Kent has died after a safety net failed. The accident happened at a performance of Scott May’s Daredevil Stunt Show at the Kent county showground in Detling on Monday afternoon. The 23-year-old stuntman was taken to Maidstone General hospital by air ambulance where he died. Kent police said: “A man taking part in a human cannonball event this afternoon has died after it is believed a safety net failed to engage. His next-of-kin have been informed but he has yet to be formally identified.” A statement on the Scott May website stated: “With our apologies, due to unforeseen circumstances all shows have been cancelled until further notice.” An evening show due to start at 7.30pm did not go ahead. The show has been touring in the UK since 1991, according to the website, and features pyrotechnics, motorbike and monster trunk stunts. It has enjoyed a “100% safety record” over its 20 years, it adds. The human cannonball equipment is built on to the back of a standard 7.5-tonne truck. “The stunt performer climbs the ladder and slides down to the deep dark depths of the gigantic barrel,” the website says. “Many a seasoned stunt performer cannot cope with the claustrophobic conditions, and those who can are highly respected for ther courage and daring. “Once in position they signal to the crew that they are ready and then remain braced for the explosive propulsion to shoot them out into the fresh air. They then have to turn whilst in flight and land in the safety net. Within a few seconds of landing the performer must get down from the safety net before the poles holding the net in position crash to the ground.” Ben Quinn guardian.co.uk

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Human cannonball dies after stunt

23-year-old performer dies in hospital after accident at Scott May’s Daredevil Stunt Show at Kent county showground A man performing a human cannonball act at a stunt show in Kent has died after a safety net failed. The accident happened at a performance of Scott May’s Daredevil Stunt Show at the Kent county showground in Detling on Monday afternoon. The 23-year-old stuntman was taken to Maidstone General hospital by air ambulance where he died. Kent police said: “A man taking part in a human cannonball event this afternoon has died after it is believed a safety net failed to engage. His next-of-kin have been informed but he has yet to be formally identified.” A statement on the Scott May website stated: “With our apologies, due to unforeseen circumstances all shows have been cancelled until further notice.” An evening show due to start at 7.30pm did not go ahead. The show has been touring in the UK since 1991, according to the website, and features pyrotechnics, motorbike and monster trunk stunts. It has enjoyed a “100% safety record” over its 20 years, it adds. The human cannonball equipment is built on to the back of a standard 7.5-tonne truck. “The stunt performer climbs the ladder and slides down to the deep dark depths of the gigantic barrel,” the website says. “Many a seasoned stunt performer cannot cope with the claustrophobic conditions, and those who can are highly respected for ther courage and daring. “Once in position they signal to the crew that they are ready and then remain braced for the explosive propulsion to shoot them out into the fresh air. They then have to turn whilst in flight and land in the safety net. Within a few seconds of landing the performer must get down from the safety net before the poles holding the net in position crash to the ground.” Ben Quinn guardian.co.uk

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I guess Boss Hawg Haley Barbour realized he had about a snowball’s chance in hell of winning the GOP nomination, much less the 2012 election, since he just announced he will not be a candidate in 2012. Not that this should surprise you. I never expected him to run, because there are probably far too many skeletons in his closet and he’s one of the best fundraisers the GOP has. He’s set up a state network that was very effective in 2010, and will be best utilized by Republicans continuing to raise money behind the scenes.

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The New York Times Marks Easter Its Own Way: Gay Activism

The New York Times’s coverage of Easter Sunday was sparse, but the paper did mark the Christian holiday in its own inimitable way, by spotlighting anti-traditional gay rights activism. Reporter Liz Robbins was at St. Patrick’s Cathedral in Manhattan on Sunday morning to hear Archbishop Timothy Dolan delivers his Easter homily to nearly 3,000. St. Patrick’s also marked the “finish line” of the Easter Day parade. But her story Monday, “A Sermon Of Rebirth, And a Rally For Rights ,” was pre-occupied by a tiny band of protesters in support of gay marriage,

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The New York Times Marks Easter Its Own Way: Gay Activism

The New York Times’s coverage of Easter Sunday was sparse, but the paper did mark the Christian holiday in its own inimitable way, by spotlighting anti-traditional gay rights activism. Reporter Liz Robbins was at St. Patrick’s Cathedral in Manhattan on Sunday morning to hear Archbishop Timothy Dolan delivers his Easter homily to nearly 3,000. St. Patrick’s also marked the “finish line” of the Easter Day parade. But her story Monday, “A Sermon Of Rebirth, And a Rally For Rights ,” was pre-occupied by a tiny band of protesters in support of gay marriage,

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Smartphones prone to security risk

BT Openzone and other hotspots can be easily mimicked leaving consumers vulnerable, Guardian investigation finds Millions of smartphone users and BT customers who use Wi-Fi wireless internet “hotspot” connections in public are vulnerable to fraud and identity theft, a Guardian investigation has established. In tests conducted with volunteers – to avoid breaching telecommunications and computer misuse laws – security experts were able to gather usernames, passwords and messages from phones using Wi-Fi in public places. In the case of the best-selling Apple iPhone 4 and other smartphone handsets, the information could be harvested without the users’ knowledge and even when they were not actively surfing the web if the phone was turned on. BT, the UK’s biggest provider of such hotspots with five million of its “Openzone” connections in the UK in train stations, hotels and airports, admitted that it has known of the weakness for “years” and that it is working on a permanent fix. But it has no timetable for when it might be implemented. Using a £49 piece of communications equipment and software freely available for download from the internet, the investigation established that crooks could set up bogus Wi-Fi “gateways” to which the latest generation of mobile phones would automatically connect. Once a connection is established, all the information passing through the gateway can be either be read directly or decrypted using software that will run on a laptop. In another test, a fake Wi-Fi hotspot invited people to “pay” for internet access with their credit card – but required them to click a box to accept terms and conditions which clearly stated “you agree we can do anything we like with your credit card details and personal logins”. A number of people entered their details. The Guardian did not retain any users’ details in the experiment. Not only could the information be used to steal identities, hijack email accounts and commit fraud but also to gather information about individuals and company employees. With the information gained in our investigation, fraudsters could have bought goods online or sent multiple e-gift vouchers worth as much as £1,000 each to pre-set email addresses. It is believed that such vouchers are already being traded by crooks over the internet. The attack works because public Wi-Fi hotspots have no form of identification except their name, which an off-the-shelf device can mimic. Many smartphones are sold with automatic connectivity to BT’s Openzone Wi-Fi hotspots to enhance the contract and reduce the load on the mobile carrier’s data network from the phones, while offering faster connectivity. Jason Hart, chief executive of the security company Cryptocard in Europe, said: “An O2 iPhone will automatically connect, because BT Openzone connectivity is usually part of the package for free internet access. It will pass over its credentials and because it can see the internet through the hotspot, it will start sending and receiving data.” BT, which boasts of having 2.5 million Wi-Fi hotspots available to its 5 million broadband customers said: “This hack is known as ‘Evil Twin’ and has been known to the industry and others for some years.” The company is working with the Wireless Broadband Alliance, an industry group which aims to help hotspot providers deliver a “reliable and trustworthy” service, to introduce a security system known as 802.1x, which forces detailed authorisation when devices connect. But it is not clear whether the devices themselves will be able to detect fake hotspots. Apple, manufacturer of the top-selling iPhone series, declined to comment. O2 did not respond to requests for comment. BT broadband customers who agree to allow a part of their Wi-Fi bandwidth to be used publicly are, in turn, allowed to use the Wi-Fi of other subscribers. The resultant Wi-Fi community is called BT Fon and utilises wireless routers – boxes which broadcast the Wi-Fi signals – in people’s homes. BT Openzone users have to provide usernames and passwords. Subscribers may use both services through their smartphones. On the first use anywhere, they must give a username and password – but after that, their phones forever hunt out hotspots with the names “BT Fon” and “BT Openzone” hotspots automatically, and will join them. Stuart Hyde, the Association of Chief Police Officers’ lead on e-crime prevention, said: “We became aware of the potential for criminals to use Wi-Fi in this way last year and have become increasingly concerned. All they need is to set themselves up in a public place with a laptop and a mobile router called ‘BTOpenzone’ or ‘Free Wifi’ and unsuspecting members of the public come along and connect to them. “Once that happens, there is software out there that enables them to gather usernames and passwords for each site a user signs in to while surfing the net. And once criminals have access to your email accounts, Facebook account, Amazon history and so on, the potential for fraud and identity theft is very serious indeed. “Until there are improvements in security, I would advise people to be very wary indeed when using insecure Wi-Fi in public places.” Professor Peter Sommer, a cyber-security expert at the London School of Economics, said: “This is all very alarming. It means that literally millions of people who use Wi-Fi in public could be at risk. If criminals are able to harvest the usernames and passwords of all the websites you visit, they could do significant damage in terms of identity theft and fraud. “The safest route for existing users of mobile phones, particularly if they use BT Fon or Openzone, is to switch off their Wi-Fi when they leave home and only use it on systems they know to be secure – such as at home or at work. Everywhere else you use Wi-Fi – whether in a coffee shop, an airport, a railway station and especially out in the street – you are taking a calculated risk.” The experiment: how we set up ‘evil twin’ Experts commissioned by the Guardian conducted two exploits to demonstrate how crooks could cash in on bogus Wi-Fi gateways. In the first, Jason Hart set up his mobile Wi-Fi router, the size of a cigar packet, at St Pancras International station in London and soon saw half a dozen smartphones try to connect to it. Only the phones of our volunteers were allowed to connect. Because modern smartphones regularly “push” email and other updates automatically, they sent the owners’ usernames, passwords and messages through the bogus BT Wi-Fi gateway, in one case while the phone was in a volunteer’s pocket. Free software downloaded from the internet was then used to decrypt and display the information on a computer attached to the router. The Guardian is withholding details of this software, but was shown details of its workings, which uses the power of modern graphics chips to decode encrypted data. For the second exploit, Adam Laurie, director of Aperture Labs Ltd, demonstrated how bogus Wi-Fi gateways can be used to harvest credit card numbers. He established a fake paid-for gateway with its own website at Waterloo station. Users are allowed on to a gateway web page but must pay to use it to access the internet. First they must provide their name and credit card details – including the CCV security code on the back and the expiry date – and agree to a terms and conditions policy. Our usage policy warned potential subscribers that it provided no protection for their private information. Incredibly, during a 30-minute period in the station, three people agreed to the terms and conditions and tried to log on and provide credit card details. To avoid breaching the law, Laurie rejected all these approaches. Wi-Fi Mobile phones Telecoms Apple Internet iPhone Identity fraud Scams Internet, phones & broadband Consumer affairs BT Telecommunications industry Charles Arthur guardian.co.uk

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Star informer freed after implicating 123 prisoners

Mohammed Basardah rewarded despite unsupported claims and interrogators’ doubts about sheer number of names he gave up A star informer at Guantánamo Bay has won his freedom by making statements against at least 123 other prisoners there, according to the camp’s leaked archives. The US military describe him as an “invaluable” source who has shown “exceptional co-operation” and shared his “vast knowledge” with the camp authorities. But lawyers for other detainees have accused him of unreliability – and even some military interrogators began to have doubts as he denounced increasing numbers of his co-prisoners. The Yemeni informer, Mohammed Basardah, has now been released from Guantánamo and transferred to Spain by US request. His whereabouts are unknown. His prisoner file shows that after he confirmed a wealth of new information to interrogators Basardah was reclassified in 2008. His “intelligence value” was upgraded and his classification as a “threat” was lowered. The camp commander, Rear Admiral David Thomas, then recommended Basardah for “transfer out” of Cuba in August 2008 “based on detainee’s exceptional level of co-operation”. But he could not be sent home to Yemen. An intelligence analyst noted on his file: “Detainee has reported numerous times that other detainees have threatened to kill him due to his co-operation with intelligence officials.” Testimony from Basardah has helped to keep British resident Shaker Aamer behind bars, despite repeated UK official requests for his return. Basardah “stated he was with [Aamer] in Bin Laden’s Tora Bora mountain complex”, says his dossier. He went on to describe Aamer as “one of UBL’s more significant operatives” and claimed the British resident designed a system of changing radio frequencies during the fighting to avoid interception. Basardah made equally unsupported allegations against another British resident, Bisher al-Rawi, now released, who was abducted by the CIA in Gambia and rendered to Guantánamo in the hope he would provide intelligence about the London-based cleric Abu Qatada. Basardah claimed the two British residents in Guantánamo were “close friends” and both belonged to Qatada’s recruiting cell. He went on to claim that after Qatada was arrested in London, Rawi “broke into his London, UK, home and stole valuable papers allegedly linking [Qatada] to al-Qaida. When confronted by police, detainee reportedly stated he was in the house to repair gas service.” Statements of this kind led the US military authorities to sing Basardah’s praises. They reported, according to his detainee assessment, that Basardah “has willingly provided extensive, direct and indirect information about al-Qaida and Taliban training, operations, personnel and facilities and has proved to be an invaluable intelligence source … information which is not available from other sources.” He had, they said, “provided extensive information about the personalities and events in Tora Bora including first-hand observations on UBL’s role as a leader … has demonstrated a vast knowledge of various individuals and locations in accordance with his reported placement and access. It seems many JTF-GTMO detainees are willing to reveal self-incriminating information to him.” One analyst wrote that Basardah had identified “numerous other detainees” who had fought in the mountains. “The current US government knowledge base of the personnel and activities within Tora Bora would not have been possible without the co-operation and truthfulness of this detainee whose reporting has directly supported US tactical operations in Afghanistan.” Basardah appears to have identified many Guantánamo prisoners from photos. He repeatedly confirms that individuals were Bin Laden’s bodyguards, fought at Tora Bora, or trained at al-Qaida’s al-Faruq camp. Often he agrees that a particular individual is important or “has met Bin Laden”. Basardah was captured at the end of 2001, in flight across the Afghan border to Pakistan with many of Bin Laden’s fighters, who were under bombardment from US air strikes. But buried in the individual prisoner dossiers are repeated signs that Basardah’s information might be unreliable. One says: “In every interview where [Basardah] was questioned on detainee, [Basardah] has changed his story. Detainee’s identity as a bodyguard has not been substantiated through other known sources.” Similar notes warn: “Research into the other detainees’ timelines does not readily support [Basardah's] information,” and: “The single-source [Basardah] reporting of detainee’s training and fighting in Afghanistan has not been corroborated.” The intelligence analysts conclude that Basardah’s “first-hand knowledge in reporting remains in question. Any information provided should be adequately verified through other sources.” In January 2009 a federal judge ordered a Guantánamo prisoner, Mohammed el-Gharani, to be freed, saying he could not rely on the claim that he was an “extremist fighter” at Tora Bora. District judge Richard J Leon said the Tora Bora allegations against Gharani, who was also found to have been unconvincingly linked to Qatada’s “London cell”, came from an informer, now identifiable from the leaked prison files as Basardah. The judge, who did not identify Basardah by name in his published judgment, wrote that government personnel had questioned the informer’s credibility. The government had “specifically cautioned against relying on his statements without independent corroboration”, the judge added. Gharani was released and returned to his native Chad in June 2009. Basardah is one of a small number of detainees, some of whom were subjected to torture, whose testimony is heavily relied on in the files of numerous prisoners. Testimony from Abu Zubaydah , who was described as the head of an al-Qaida martyrs’ brigade intended to operate across Afghanistan, Pakistan and Iran, is referenced in 104 detainee records. Zubaydah’s testimony is used to implicate detainees in dirty bomb plots, forgery, and people smuggling, and to contradict detainees’ own accounts of their activities years before 11 September 2001. However, Zubaydah is one of the detainees believed to have been most severely tortured during captivity: an International Red Cross report found he was the only one of 14 high-value detainees subjected to all 12 of the US’s “enhanced interrogation” techniques., including at least eight specific identifications of detainees from photographs The Guantánamo files Guantánamo Bay al-Qaida David Leigh guardian.co.uk

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‘Don’t Say Gay’ Bill May Ban Tennessee Teachers From Discussing Homosexuality

Because if you don’t talk about something, it doesn’t exist, right? A committee in the Tennessee State Senate has green-lighted a bill that, if passed, would ban elementary and middle teachers from discussing homosexuality at school. The legislation, dubbed the ‘don’t say gay’ bill, would mandate that before ninth grade, teachers not “provide any instruction

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Hackers breach PlayStation Network

Sony says it is working to get internet-based retail service back online quickly after an ‘external intrusion’ Hackers have kept Sony’s lucrative PlayStation Network offline for a fifth day while engineers scramble to overhaul the system and make it more secure. Sony’s equivalent of Apple’s iTunes Store, PlayStation Network is the internet-based retail service that allows users of its PlayStation 3 and PlayStation Portable devices to buy games, films, music and game add-ons, and to chat with one another. Sony confirmed on Friday that the service had been attacked by hackers, describing it on the official PlayStation blog as an “external intrusion”. Patrick Seybold, senior director of corporate communications, wrote that Sony planned “a thorough investigation … to verify the smooth and secure operation of our network services”. In an update on Monday , Seybold wrote: “This is a time intensive process and we’re working to get them back online quickly.” Staff have not been given any details about the problem, which first resulted in PSN going offline last Wednesday. A weekly internal progress email mentioned the “external intrusion” but did not give any indication how long the service would remain offline. Sony’s troubles began when it removed the “Other OS” option from all PS3 consoles in March last year, which meant users could no longer choose to install and run the Linux operating system. Sony cited security concerns, but the move triggered some users to hack the PS3 so that they could still run Linux. Sony then moved to sue a group of hackers that included 21-year-old George Hotz – who had already earned a reputation after jailbreaking the iPhone – who had allegedly published a root key for the PS3 that meant any content, such as films and music, could be played on a jailbroken device. The high-profile Hotz case, which was settled out of court this month, attracted attention from the Anonymous hacking network, which pledged to target Sony. A post on the Anonymous blog on 4 April said the action against Hotz and fellow hacker Graf_Chokolo was “wholly unforgivable”. “You have victimised your own customers for merely possessing and sharing information … Your corrupt business practices are indicative of a corporate philosophy that would deny consumers the right to use products they have paid for, and rightfully own, in the manner of their choosing,” it said. Despite the threats, a later post on the blog stated “for once we didn’t do it” and said Sony could be “taking advantage of Anonymous’ previous ill-will towards the company to distract users from the fact the outage is actually an internal problem with the company’s servers”. Patrick Garrett, on the games industry blog VG24/7 , said the PSN crisis could have dire consequence for Sony if it did not adopt a more sophisticated strategy for dealing with hackers. “PlayStation’s entire 2011 so far has been marred by a single issue: hacking,” he wrote. “Sony has now allowed the issue to affect its entire audience: it has been forced to deny millions of PSN users a key PlayStation feature over a global holiday.” Garrett referred to speculation that hackers might have compromised personal information for Sony to have taken the serious step of closing PSN for five days. PSN has an estimated 75 million users worldwide, many of whom have credit card information registered with the service. “Sony’s escalation of its war on hacking could potentially threaten not only Sony’s ability to cut content deals, but, in a nightmare scenario, may compromise personal information of its millions of users. Sony must demonstrate it is capable of dealing with this situation right now. If these episodes become regular in any way, PSN’s users, core or not, will lose faith in its brand and gravitate elsewhere.” PlayStation Sony Games Hacking Internet Jemima Kiss guardian.co.uk

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