Academia apparently wasn’t spicy enough for a pair of university professors accused of running an online prostitution ring. F. Chris Garcia, a political science professor and former president of the University of New Mexico and David Flory, a physics professor at New Jersey’s Fairleigh Dickinson University, have been arrested for…
Continue reading …The skateboarding world is mourning a man who played a major role in creating the massive subculture that exists today. Thrasher magazine co-founder Eric Swenson shot and killed himself in front of the Mission police station in San Francisco. Friends believe the 64-year-old could no longer cope with the the…
Continue reading …Old, young and people with chronic conditions at risk – and despite rainy June the drought is not over Get the latest UK weather reports A heatwave could hits parts of Britain by the end of the weekend and early next week, with temperatures topping 30C (86F) in some places, the Met Office has warned. It has issued a heat-health alert for the east Midlands, east of England and the south-east, warning of the dangers of high temperatures, particularly for the very old, the very young and those with chronic conditions. The predicted hot weather will come after days of unsettled conditions, with more expected later on Friday as a band of rain spreads across the country from the west, delivering more wet conditions for the Glastonbury festival and Wimbledon. So far this month, some areas have had well above average rainfall for June, with the south-west receiving 130% of the normal level and the south-east having 118% so far. Even central and eastern England, the areas worst hit by months of dry weather, have had 75% and 83% respectively of the month’s average rainfall so far in June. After months of little rain, the unsettled weather does not mean the drought in parts of eastern England, or the risk of it elsewhere, is over, the Environment Agency said. Lincolnshire, Cambridgeshire, parts of Bedfordshire and Northamptonshire and western Norfolk remain in a state of drought. While many rivers have responded to the rainfall, there are still a number below normal levels for this time of year, including the Dove and the Derwent in central England, Ely Ouse in East Anglia, Malmesbury Avon in the south-west and the Kennet and Coln in the Thames Valley. There has been some relief for farmers in Kent, with the agency putting on hold notices issued to land managers in the Walland and Romney marshes to stop abstracting water from 20 June. Trevor Bishop, the head of water resources at the agency, said: “The wetter weather has helped to lessen impacts on the environment this week. However, after months of little rain, the recent unsettled weather does not mean the drought or risk of drought is over. Without further sustained rainfall, river flows will quickly drop again and our teams remain on alert to respond to the environmental impacts of drought.” He urged people to continue to use water wisely. The Met Office said the temperatures forecast for the coming days will peak across East Anglia, the east Midlands and south-east England on Monday, with highs of 32C (90F) possible. The head of health forecasting at the Met Office, Patrick Sachon, said: “There is the possibility of daytime and night-time temperatures reaching trigger thresholds. These temperatures, together with high humidity, pose a risk to vulnerable people, such as those with underlying health problems.” But the next few days will see varied weather across the UK as a whole, with some places experiencing unsettled conditions and temperatures in the low 20s. The chief forecaster at the Met Office, Andy Page, said: “There is a 60% chance of some places in East Anglia, the east Midlands and south-east England reaching 30C on Sunday and Monday. However, it is important to note that not all places will see the hot weather. Cooler weather is expected to spread across all parts of the UK by the middle of next week.” Weather Health Drought Rivers Children Older people guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Deputy leader says she submitted proposal because women ‘are still a long way from being equal’ in the Labour party The deputy Labour leader, Harriet Harman, has proposed a rule change to ensure that the party’s “default position” of men filling the leader and deputy leader role comes to an end. Harman said she had submitted the proposal because women “are still a long way from [being] equal” in the party. She outlined the case in the Times as the Labour leader, Ed Miliband, decided to abolish elections to his shadow cabinet, leaving him free to appoint his own team. Miliband – who said during the leadership campaign that he wanted half the shadow cabinet to be women – also wants to see an end to gender quotas for posts. At present, a ballot paper is only valid if at least six votes for women are cast. Miliband’s aides said he would appoint a large number of women as a matter of course, and he is reportedly supportive of his deputy’s call that the rules be changed to ensure the party “doesn’t slip back” to a men-only leadership. Harman believes the proposed change would send a strong message to women voters. “An all-male leadership is not acceptable to the party of equality. A team is best when it is made up of men and women,” she said. Miliband is also seeking greater control over his team with plans to abolish elections to the shadow cabinet, ending a decades-long Labour tradition of Labour MPs deciding the makeup of the party’s frontbench. He will address Labour MPs about his proposals on Monday, and expects a secret ballot to be conducted among them. The proposal also has to formally be endorsed by the party conference in September. Aides said Miliband had taken the step to make his top team focus on the task of holding the government to account. They believe repeated internal elections make some shadow cabinet members as concerned about their popularity among their colleagues as about their impact on
Continue reading …King also warns banks may be providing ‘misleading picture of their financial health’ during first briefing from the financial policy committee The crisis enveloping the eurozone is a “mess” that poses the “most serious and immediate” risk to the UK banking system, Mervyn King warned on Friday as he called for banks to provide more information on their exposures in the region. In his new role of chairman of the financial policy committee (FPC), the new “guardian of the resilience of the UK financial system”, King also warned that banks may be providing a “misleading picture of their financial health” if they were not making big enough provisions for borrowers having difficulty repaying loans. So-called forbearance has taken place in up to 12% of mortgages including 30-80% in the commercial property sector. Bank shares led the FTSE 100 index lower amid fears of new bad debt losses by the sector and after King called on banks to build up more capital when financial conditions allowed rather than pay out dividends to shareholders or in bonuses to staff. “In good times, banks should retain more of those earnings rather than distribute them to shareholders or as compensation,” King said. King was asked whether the crisis gripping the markets – caused by fears that Greece may default – could spark a meltdown on the scale of the one caused by Lehman’s collapse. He replied: “I am not sure that the sovereign crisis now and what happened in the case of Lehman Brothers have much in common, other than the fact that it is a mess.” UK banks’ exposure to Greece directly was “remarkably small”, he said, but he warned that the bigger risk was a “crisis of confidence”. “There is always uncertainty about the scale of exposures… which counter-parties out there are the ones which are heavily exposed,” he said. “That uncertainty can lead at various points for funders of banks… to draw back and there can be a crisis of confidence in sentiment.” He said more data was needed about exposures to allay any unnecessary concerns. As governor of the Bank of England, he is automatically handed the chairmanship of the FPC, a key plank of the coalition’s response to the financial crisis. When legislation grants it new powers next year, the FPC is expected to be able to stop bubbles being created by, for example, forcing banks to hold more capital. It met for the first time last week and held the first of its quarterly press conferences on Friday, setting out the worry-list of its members, drawn from the Bank of England and the Financial Services Authority (FSA) along with four external members. All members were unanimous in setting out their first six recommendations intended to help tackle the threats to financial stability: • Permanently improve banks’ disclosure of sovereign and banking sector debt exposure. • Advise the FSA to compile the exposure of smaller banks which are not part of current EU stress tests. • Establish the forbearance practices of banks to households and corporates globally. • “Monitor closely” the risks of “opaque funding structures”. • Advise banks to build up their capital when they are profitable. • Advise the FSA to ensure banks set enough capital aside during profitable times. A record, rather than minutes, of the FPC’s meeting showed members discussed whether the FSA should set out a limit for the size of dividends and bonuses that can be paid out of earnings but they decided against any such clampdown. King, who will this weekend travel to a meeting of banking supervisors in the Swiss city of Basel to discuss global capital rules, called on the eurozone to “set out a very clear road map” for the solution to its debt crisis. In the opening paragraphs of its financial stability report, the FPC said: “Market concerns remain over fiscal positions in a number of euro area countries and the potential for contagion to banking systems. Any associated disruption to bank funding markets could spill over to UK banks.” The FPC illustrated its concern by highlighting the exposure of France and Germany to the eurozone: “In conditions of severe stress in the eurozone, this could increase the risk of losses to UK banks, given that their combined claims on France and Germany represented around 130% of their core tier one capital, with close to that accounted for by claims on banks.” King again stressed that he did not regard the crisis as one of liquidity but as one about solvency and “the buildup of very large amounts of debt where concerns crept in on the ability of the borrowers to repay that debt.” He warned that the FPC would not be able to prevent another catastrophe: “Focusing – as the FPC must – on risks to the financial system can leave one feeling rather depressed. We can’t hope to prevent financial crises from happening, but we can build institutions that help to ensure that our financial system is more resilient in the future.” Financial policy committee Financial crisis Global recession Banking European debt crisis European banks Bank of England Economic policy Jill Treanor guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Leaked IRC logs identify LulzSec members and show a disorganised group obsessed with its media coverage and suspicious of other hackers • LulzSec IRC leak: the full record It was a tight-knit and enigmatic group finding its feet in the febrile world of hacker collectives, where exposing and embarrassing your targets is just as important as protecting your own identity. But leaked logs from LulzSec’s private chatroom – seen, and published today , by the Guardian – provide for the first time a unique, fly-on-the-wall insight into a team of audacious young hackers whose inner workings have until now remained opaque. LulzSec is not, despite its braggadocio, a large – or even coherent – organisation. The logs reveal how one hacker known as ” Sabu “, believed to be a 30-year-old security consultant, effectively controls the group of between six and eight people, keeping the others in line and warning them not to discuss what they have done with others; another, ” Kayla “, provides a large botnet – networks of infected computers controlled remotely – to bring down targeted websites with distributed denial of service (DDoS) attacks; while a third, ” Topiary “, manages the public image, including the LulzSec Twitter feed . They turn out to be obsessed with their coverage in the media, especially in physical newspapers, sharing pictures of coverage they have received in the Wall Street Journal and other papers. They also engineered a misinformation campaign to make people think they are a US-government sponsored team. They also express their enmity towards a rival called The Jester – an ex-US military hacker who usually attacks jihadist sites, but has become embroiled in a dispute with Anonymous, WikiLeaks and LulzSec over the leaked diplomatic cables and, more recently, LulzSec’s attacks on US government websites, including those of the CIA and the US Senate. The group’s ambitions went too far for some of its members: when the group hit an FBI-affiliated site on 3 June , two lost their nerve and quit, fearing reprisals from the US government. After revealing that the two, “recursion” and “devrandom” have quit, saying they were “not up for the heat”, Sabu tells the remaining members: “You realise we smacked the FBI today. This means everyone in here must remain extremely secure.” Another member, “storm”, then asks worriedly: “Sabu, did you wipe the PBS bd [board] logs?”, referring to an attack by LulzSec on PBS on 29 May , when they planted a fake story that the dead rapper Tupac Shakur was alive. If traces remained there of the hackers’ identities, that could lead the FBI to them. “Yes,” Sabu says. “All PBS logs are clean.” Storm replies: “Then I’m game for some more.” Sabu says: “We’re good. We got a good team here.” Documenting a crucial five-day period in the group’s early development from 31 May to 4 June, the logs – whose authenticity has been separately confirmed through comments made online by LulzSec’s members – are believed to have been posted online by a former affiliate named “m_nerva”. They contain detailed conversations between the group, who have in recent weeks perpetrated a series of audacious attacks on a range of high-profile targets, including Sony, the CIA, the US Senate, and the UK’s Serious Organised Crime Agency (SOCA). LulzSec threatened m_nerva on Tuesday in a tweet saying “Remember this tweet, m_nerva, for I know you’ll read it: your cold jail cell will be haunted with our endless laughter. Game over, child.” As an explanation, they said : “They leaked logs, we owned them [took over their computer], one of them literally started crying for mercy”. The leaked logs are the ones seen by the Guardian. The conversations confirm that LulzSec has links with – but is distinct from – the notorious hacker group Anonymous. Sabu, a knowledgeable hacker, emerges as a commanding figure who issues orders to the small, tight-knit team with striking authority. Despite directing the LulzSec operation, Sabu does not appear to engage in the group’s public activity, and warns others to be careful who and how they talk outside their private chatroom. “The people on [popular hacker site] 2600 are not your friends,” Sabu warns them on 2 June. “95% are there to social engineer [trick] you, to analyse how you talk. I am just reminding you. Don’t go off and befriend any of them.” But the difficulty of keeping their exploits and identities secret proves difficult: Kayla is accused of giving some stolen Amazon voucher codes to someone outside the group, which could lead back to one of their hacks. “If he’s talking publicly, Kayla will talk to him,” Sabu comments, bluntly. Topiary, who manages the public image of LulzSec – which centres around its popular Twitter feed, with almost 260,000 followers – also acted previously as a spokesman for Anonymous, once going head-to-head in a live video with Shirley Phelps-Roper of the controversial Westboro Baptist Church , during which he hacked into the church’s website mid-interview. His creative use of language and sharp sense of humour earns praise from his fellow hackers in the chat logs, who tell him he should “write a fucking book”. On one occasion, after a successful DDoS attack brings down a targeted web server, Topiary responds in characteristic fashion to the hacker responsible, Storm: “You’re like our resident sniper sitting in the crow’s nest with a goddamn deck-shattering electricity blast,” he writes. “Enemy ships being riddled with holes.” But while LulzSec has a jovial exterior, and proclaims that its purpose to hack “for the lulz” (internet slang for laughs and giggles), Sabu is unremittingly serious. Domineering and at times almost parental, he frequently reminds the other hackers of the dangers of being tracked by the authorities, who the logs reveal are often hot on their heels. During one exchange, a hacker named Neuron starts an IAmA (Q and A) session for LulzSec on the website Reddit for “funzies” and to engage with the public. This immediately raises the ire of Sabu, who puts an angry and abrupt halt to it. “You guys started an IAmA on reddit?” Sabu asks in disbelief. “I will go to your homes and kill you. If you really started an IAmA bro, you really don’t understand what we are about here. I thought all this stuff was common knowledge … no more public apperances [sic] without us organizing it.” He adds: “If you are not familiar with these hostile environments, don’t partake in it.” The logs also reveal that the group began a campaign of disinformation around LulzSec. Their goal was to convince – and confuse – internet users into believing a conspiracy theory: that LulzSec is in fact a crack team of CIA agents working to expose the insecurities of the web, headed by Adrian Lamo, the hacker who reported the alleged WikiLeaks whistleblower Bradley Manning to the authorities. “You guys are claiming that LulzSec is a CIA op … that Anonymous is working to uncover LulzSec … that Adrian Lamo is at the head of it all … and people actually BELIEVE this shit?” writes joepie91, another member. “You just tell some bullshit story and people fill in the rest for you.” “I know, it’s brilliant,” replies Topiary. The attempts did pay off, with some bloggers passing comments such as: “I hypothesize that this is a government ‘red team’ or ‘red cell’ operation, aimed at building support for government intervention into internet security from both the public and private sectors.” The group monitors news reports closely, and appears to enjoy – even thrive – on the publicity its actions bring. But the logs show that the members are frustrated by the efforts of a self-professed “patriot-hacker” known as the Jester (or th3j35t3r), whose name is pejoratively referenced throughout. The Jester is purportedly an ex-US military hacker, and was responsible for high-profile attacks on WikiLeaks prior to the release of US diplomatic cables in November. In recent weeks he has made LulzSec his principal target, describing them as “common bullies” . Topiary in turn dismisses The Jester as a “pompous elitism-fuelling blogger” – but the group is always worried that The Jester or his associates are trying to track them down. The Jester claims LulzSec are motivated by money and points to allegations that the group tried to extort money from Unveillance, a data security company. Similar accusations against LulzSec by two other groups, “Web Ninjas” and “TeaMp0isoN_”. Web Ninjas say they want to see LulzSec “behind bars” for committing “insane acts … in the name of publicity or financial gain or anti-govt agenda”. The logs do not reveal any discussion of extortion between the LulzSec inner circle; nor do they indicate any underlying political motivations for the attacks. But amid the often tense atmosphere depicted in the logs the hackers do occasionally find time to talk politics. “One of these days we will have tanks on our homes,” writes trollpoll, shortly after it emerged the US government was reclassifying hacking as a possible act of war . “Yea, no shit,” responds Storm. “Corporations should realize the internet isn’t theirs,” adds joepie91. “And I don’t mean the physical tubes, but the actual internet … the community, idea, concept.” “Yes, the utopia is to create a new internet,” says trollpoll. “Corporation free.” On Monday 20 June, Sabu’s worst fears may have been confirmed when a 19-year-old named Ryan Cleary was arrested in Wickford, Essex and later charged with a cyber attack in connection with a joint Scotland Yard and FBI probe in to a hacking group believed to be LulzSec. Metropolitan Police Commissioner Sir Paul Stephenson described the arrest as “very significant”, though LulzSec itself was quick to claim Cleary was not a member of the group and had only allowed it to host “legitimate chatrooms” on his server. “Clearly the UK police are so desperate to catch us that they’ve gone and arrested someone who is, at best, mildly associated with us,” the group tweeted. An individual named “Ryan” is occasionally referenced by the hackers in the logs, though he himself does not feature and appears to have only a loose association with the group. Scotland Yard confirmed on Thursday that it was continuing to work with “a range of agencies” as part of an “ongoing investigation into network intrusions and distributed denial of service attacks against a number of international business and intelligence agencies by what is believed to be the same hacking group”. In response to the leaked logs, LulzSec posted a statement on the website pastebin, claiming users named joepie91, Neuron, Storm and trollpoll were “not involved with LulzSec” and rather “just hang out with us”. They added: “Those logs are primarily from a channel called #pure-elite, which is /not/ the LulzSec core chatting channel. #pure-elite is where we gather potential backup/subcrew research and development battle fleet members – ie, we were using that channel only to recruit talent for side-operations.” The group has vowed to continue its actions undeterred. But they now face a determined pincer movement from the FBI, UK police, and other hackers – including The Jester, who has been relentless in his pursuit of them for more than a fortnight. If its members’ real identities are revealed, LulzSec may vanish as quickly as it rose to prominence. LulzSec Hacking Anonymous Internet Computing United States Ryan Gallagher Charles Arthur guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Syrian troops pushed to the Turkish border Thursday in their sweep against a 3-month-old pro-democracy movement, sending panicked refugees, including children, rushing across the frontier to safe havens. The European Union, meanwhile, announced it was slapping new sanctions on the Syrian regime because of the “gravity of the situation,” in…
Continue reading …Totally worth it? Just fallen over? Don’t tell mum? Revellers at Glastonbury 2011 sum up the festival in just three words John Domokos Christian Bennett
Continue reading …Owner of Argos and Homebase buys Habitant brand and flagship London stores – but rest of UK chain goes into administration The owner of Argos has bought the Habitat brand in the UK and its three top London stores for £24.5m but the rest of the UK chain has been placed in administration as part of a major restructuring that could result in more than 700 job losses. Home Retail Group chief executive Terry Duddy said it had bought the rights to the furniture and accessories brand and the Habitat website but just three of its 33 stores. He said only 150 of its 900 staff, including 50 from its 194-strong head office including the design team, would move over to work for the group, which also owns Homebase. Restructuring firm Zolfo Cooper has been appointed to find buyers for the 30 unwanted stores which will continue to trade as usual. The company said all existing orders and all customer deposits were fully protected. Duddy promised to preserve the integrity of the retailer which was started in the 1960s by design guru Sir Terence Conran as an antidote to the austere furniture aesthetic of postwar Britain. “There is no value in us doing anything to undermine this brand; it is about preserving its integrity,” he said. The Habitat brand with its “style-led credentials” and “strong heritage” was, he said, a significant addition to the group’s portfolio of brands, which include Schreiber, Hygena, Alba and Bush. Duddy said he did not know whether the deal had the blessing of Conran but said the design team was in contact with the founder recently and those conversations had been positive. Habitat has struggled financially for many years: the shops were a breath of fresh air when they arrived on the high street, but its clever designs were mimicked by cheaper rivals and, by the late 1980s, it was in financial difficulties. It was owned by Sweden’s wealthy Kamprad family, whose patriarch Ingvar founded Ikea, for nearly 20 years, but even their expertise could not revive its fortunes and they paid restructuring firm Hilco a multimillion pound dowry to take the loss-making business off their hands in December 2009. In the most recent set of accounts filed at Companies House, Habitat made a loss of £18.7m on sales of £74.3m in the year to March 2009. Hilco said trading conditions remained challenging for retailers of big-ticket items such as furniture. “Significant progress has been made reducing losses and refining the product mix following the installation of a new management team,” it said. “However, a return to profitability for the business in the UK appears unlikely in the near term as many of the stores are expensive and poorly located for a furniture retailer.” Home Retail is buying three London stores which are on the capital’s prime furniture shopping streets: Kings Road, Tottenham Court Road and Finchley Road. It plans to open about 25 Habitat departments in Homebase stores and has not ruled out selling the brand through the Argos catalogue. The company said it expected Habitat to deliver a small loss in its first year but then move into profit. Hilco said it was in advanced talks with a major European listed business to sell Habitat’s profitable European arm, which has 27 stores across France, Spain and Germany. Home Retail Retail industry London Zoe Wood guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Tesco cuts 3p from a litre of petrol and diesel after move to open up emergency reserves by the International Energy Agency Tesco has cut its fuel prices following a big fall in the cost of oil internationally . The supermarket slashed 3p off a litre of petrol and diesel following the opening of emergency reserves by the International Energy Agency (IEA). Tesco UK chief executive Richard Brasher said: “We know our customers are feeling the pinch at the moment, so we want to pass on the benefit of a fall in oil prices straight away.” The Tesco move will offer some respite to motorists who have seen average prices at the pumps soar to around 136p a litre for petrol and almost 140p a litre for diesel. AA president Edmund King said: “We welcome this rapid 3p reduction in fuel prices. Earlier this week the AA revealed that high fuel prices are now affecting a record three-quarters of drivers who are having to cut back on journeys, cut back on other expenditure, or cut back on both. “Reduced fuel prices will help the general economy to recover as lower prices at the pumps means more spending elsewhere.” Crude prices slumped by $6 a barrel after the IEA, whose 28 members include Britain and America, unveiled plans to release 2m barrels a day for a month from its emergency reserves to counter shortages created by the conflict in Libya. Sainsbury’s said it would be cutting fuel prices by up to 3p a litre from midnight on Friday. A spokesman for the company said: “Sainsbury’s continues to be one of the most competitive retailers on price and that includes fuel. We know that consumer budgets are stretched, so from tomorrow our fuel prices will be dropping. This is to ensure that we continue to be one of the cheapest places for motorists to fill up their tank.” Asda is also cutting its prices. From tomorrow morning the company will knock up to 3p a litre from the price of fuel, meaning drivers will not pay more than 130.7p a litre for petrol and not more than 134.7p a litre for diesel. Asda’s petrol director Andy Peake said: “Once again, Asda leads the way in saving drivers money. And unlike others our price cuts are across the board. That’s why no one will pay a premium for their petrol to fund lower prices in another town round the corner.” Petrol prices Motoring Family finances Consumer affairs Oil Oil and gas companies Energy industry guardian.co.uk
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