Edward Snowden Deserves Protection From Prosecution: UN Rights Chief

File photo of UN Human Rights Chief Navi Pillay

"Those who disclose human rights violations should be protected. We need them," tPillay told reporters.

"And in the case of Snowden, his revelations go to the core of what we are saying about the need for transparency, the need for consultation," she said as she launched a report on the right to privacy in the digital age.

Pillay, a former judge at the International Criminal Court, declined to call on US President Barack Obama to pardon Snowden.

Pressed repeatedly on the issue, she said: "I'm not going to say whether he should be pardoned. He's facing charges, and as a former judge I know that if he's facing judicial proceedings, we should wait for that outcome."

"I'm raising some very important arguments that could be raised on his behalf so that these criminal proceedings are averted," she added.

"If he's given a fair trial and all these points are raised about him, about the way people view his role, that would also be a good outcome," the former South African high court judge said.

Snowden's leaks last year sparked a massive row over the huge Internet and phone data sweeps conducted by US National Security Agency, including of allied nations and their leaders.

"We do owe it to him for drawing our attention to this issue," Pillay said.

"I think that his revelations have also encouraged national authorities to be more accountable," she added.

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Edward Snowden Deserves Protection From Prosecution: UN Rights Chief

NSA Whistleblower Snowden Criticizes UK Emergency Surveillance Bill

Former US National Security Agency whistleblower Edward Snowden has criticized a new surveillance bill that British lawmakers are pushing to pass this week, The Guardian reported.

The law, drafted in response to alleged domestic security threats, would allow for storing and tracking the publics telephone calls, text messages, and Internet use. UK Prime Minister David Cameron said the government was forced to act, adding that he is not prepared to address the people after a terrorist incident and explain that I could have done more to prevent it."

In April, the European Court of Justice struck down an EU directive requiring telephone and Internet companies to retain communications data saying it entails a wide-ranging and particularly serious interference with the fundamental rights to respect for private life and to the protection of personal data.

In an exclusive interview with The Guardian in Moscow, Snowden expressed concern about the rush to pass the new legislation, more than a year after his initial revelations about the scale of government surveillance in the US, the UK and around the world.

Snowden also marked the lack of public debate, fear mongering and what he said was increased powers of intrusion.

"I mean we don't have bombs falling. We don't have U-boats in the harbor," Snowden said, adding that suddenly it had become a priority, after the government had ignored it for an entire year. "It defies belief."

The bill, that has to be passed in the same manner that a surveillance bill in the US was passed in 2007 without any substantial open public debate, looks like it was written by the National Security Agency, Snowden said.

"I mean the NSA could have written this draft," he said. "They passed it under the same sort of emergency justification. They said we would be at risk. They said companies would no longer cooperate with us. We're losing valuable intelligence that puts the nation at risk," Snowden said.

Snowden fled the US in June 2013, after leaking information about the extensive electronic surveillance programs conducted by the US government around the globe, including eavesdropping on US citizens and foreign leaders. The revelations have sparked domestic controversy and strained relations between the US and its partners worldwide. The Guardian, to whom Snowden sent his files, published a large amount of the materials.

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NSA Whistleblower Snowden Criticizes UK Emergency Surveillance Bill

Snowden Deserves Protection From Prosecution: UN Rights Chief

Fugitive US intelligence agent Edward Snowden deserves shielding from prosecution for having thrown the spotlight on state snooping, UN human rights chief Navi Pillay said today.

"Those who disclose human rights violations should be protected. We need them," Pillay told reporters.

"And in the case of Snowden, his revelations go to the core of what we are saying about the need for transparency, the need for consultation," she said as she launched a report on the right to privacy in the digital age.

Pillay, a former judge at the International Criminal Court, declined to call on US President Barack Obama to pardon Snowden.

Pressed repeatedly on the issue, she said, "I'm not going to say whether he should be pardoned. He's facing charges, and as a former judge I know that if he's facing judicial proceedings, we should wait for that outcome."

"I'm raising some very important arguments that could be raised on his behalf so that these criminal proceedings are averted," she added.

"If he's given a fair trial and all these points are raised about him, about the way people view his role, that would also be a good outcome," the former South African high court judge said.

Snowden's leaks last year sparked a massive row over the huge Internet and phone data sweeps conducted by US National Security Agency, including of allied nations and their leaders.

"We do owe it to him for drawing our attention to this issue," Pillay said.

"I think that his revelations have also encouraged national authorities to be more accountable," she added.

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Snowden Deserves Protection From Prosecution: UN Rights Chief

IEEE Projects 2014 |A Lightweight Encryption Scheme for Network-Coded Mobile Ad Hoc Networks – Video


IEEE Projects 2014 |A Lightweight Encryption Scheme for Network-Coded Mobile Ad Hoc Networks
Including Packages ======================= * Base Paper * Complete Source Code * Complete Documentation * Complete Presentation Slides * Flow Diagram * Datab...

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IEEE Projects 2014 |A Lightweight Encryption Scheme for Network-Coded Mobile Ad Hoc Networks - Video

eCommerce Tips, Trends, and Technologies: Summer Webinar Series

Dallas, TX (PRWEB) July 16, 2014

Broadleaf Commerce, the open source software provider for building customized solutions, is excited to announce the schedule for the Summer Webinar Series. The webinar series will focus on eCommerce tips, trends and technologies. The series will be hosted largely by Broadleaf Commerce and will integrate other industry leaders, including Credera.

eCommerce veterans from Credera and Broadleaf Commerce will join on July 22nd at 10am CST for the first of the three webinars. Key Considerations and Tips for an eCommerce Replatform will examine enterprise options, common missteps and best practices in setting goals and objectives for an eCommerce replatforming project.

Digital Experience Management with Broadleaf Commerce will launch at 10am CST on August 5 with a focus on how users can deploy a low-cost, holistic platform to deliver true customer personalization across disparate technologies and business goals.

The final summer webinar will review Broadleafs powerful capabilities in creating an Enterprise-level custom solution for businesses running multiple sites, multiple tenants, and in deploying marketplaces to fit any businesses plan for growth. The final webinar, entitled Multi- Site, Multi-Tenancy and Marketplaces with Broadleaf Commerce, will begin at 10am CST on August 26.

Broadleaf Commerce VP of Marketing and Partners, Brad Buhl, remarked, There are a myriad of technology solutions available on the market today. We're excited to demystify the eCommerce industry, creating a clearer path for business owners to attain revenue goals while also lowering costs.

Registration for the summer webinar series may be found at: https://broadleafcommerce.webex.com/mw0307l/mywebex/default.do?siteurl=broadleafcommerce.

About Broadleaf Commerce, LLC Broadleaf Commerce is the owner of an open-source eCommerce framework targeted at facilitating the development of enterprise-class, commerce-driven sites by providing a robust data and services model, a rich administration platform, and specialized tooling that takes care of core commerce functionality providing the framework for companies such as The Container Store, Pep Boys, Waste Management, and Vology. For more information, visit: http://www.broadleafcommerce.com.

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eCommerce Tips, Trends, and Technologies: Summer Webinar Series

Overreliance on the NSA led to weak crypto standard, NIST advisers find

The National Institute of Standards and Technology needs to hire more cryptographers and improve its collaboration with the industry and academia, reducing its reliance on the U.S. National Security Agency for decisions around cryptographic standards.

Lack of internal expertise in certain areas of cryptography and too much trust in the NSA led NIST to ignore security concerns about a pseudorandom number generator called Dual_EC_DRBG (Dual Elliptic Curve Deterministic Random Bit Generator) in 2006, technical experts who reviewed the organizations standards development process said in a report released Monday.

Media reports last year based on secret documents leaked by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden claimed that the NSA used its influence over NIST to insert a backdoor into Dual_EC_DRBG and possibly weaken other cryptographic standards. The revelations called into question the integrity of NISTs standard-making processes and damaged the organizations reputation in the cryptographic community.

The new report by NISTs Visiting Committee on Advanced Technology (VCAT) is based on assessments by a panel of outside technical experts including Internet pioneer Vint Cerf, who is vice president and chief evangelist at Google; cryptographer and Massachusetts Institute of Technology professor Ron Rivest, who co-authored the widely used RSA encryption algorithm; Edward Felten, professor and director of the Center for Information Technology Policy at Princeton University; Ellen Richey, executive vice president and chief enterprise risk officer at Visa; Steve Lipner, partner director of software security at Microsoft; Belgian cryptographer and cryptanalyst Bart Preneel, who works as a professor at the University of Leuven; and Fran Schrotter, senior vice president and chief operating officer of the American National Standards Institute.

Regarding the inclusion of Dual_EC in its SP 800-90A recommendation, NIST failed to exercise independent judgment but instead deferred extensively to NSA, Felten wrote in his assessment. After DUAL_EC was proposed, two major red flags emerged. Either one should have caused NIST to remove DUAL_EC from the standard, but in both cases NIST deferred to NSA requests to keep DUAL_EC.

NISTs limited staffing and their lack of experience with elliptic curves, mathematical constructs that have important applications in cryptography and are used in DUAL_EC, were important factors that contributed to NISTs mistakes, according to Felten.

Internally, NIST has very limited cryptographic expertise: just a handful of cryptographers, Rivest also wrote in his assessment. The internal capabilities at NIST to develop and evaluate cryptographic standards is by itself not sufficient to produce the desired cryptographic standards, particularly given the number of standards and guidelines involved. Additional expertise is essential.

While Dual_EC is the most obvious candidate for a standard intentionally weakened by the NSA, suspicion lingers over all NIST standards that the NSA played a significant role in developing.

The panel of experts also looked at two other issues: NISTs decision to recommend NSA-chosen elliptic curves for ECDSA (Elliptic Curve Digital Signature Algorithm) in the FIPS 186 (Digital Signature Standard), and the recommendation of certain NSA-designed cipher modes for specific uses in the SP 800-38 series (Recommendation for Block Cipher Modes of Operation), despite evidence of security weaknesses.

The damage caused by a Dual_EC_DRBG backdoor may be small because few users may have actually used the pseudorandom number generator, Rivest said. However, the damage to NIST and its credibility for developing trustworthy cryptographic standards is considerable. Not only do other NIST standards developed in coordination with the NSA now need critical review, but the process for developing future standards needs re-assessment and reformulation.

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Overreliance on the NSA led to weak crypto standard, NIST advisers find

Fortune Tracks Your Bitcoin And Other Cryptocurrencies

iOS: If youre swimming in Bitcoin, Dogecoin, Peercoin or any other cryptocurrency, Fortune is a single app that can keep track all of them, as well as their net worth over time, and how much you spent on them versus how much theyre worth now.

Consider it a wallet that tracks your digital currency. Just add the type of cryptocurrency you hold, how much you spend to get it, and the number of coins you own, and it will automatically get added to your portfolio. The home screen will show you at a glance what your total net worth in cryptocurrency is, how many coins you hold in which currencies, and how much their value has changed over the past day. You can tap any one of them to review the changes in value over time, adjust your amount or edit the entry. Hit the link below to give it a try.

Fortune ($2.49) [iTunes App Store via Fortune]

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Fortune Tracks Your Bitcoin And Other Cryptocurrencies

Swedish court to rule on Assange warrant

Wednesday 16 July 2014 07.15

A Swedish court will hold a public hearing to determine if an arrest warrant against WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange for alleged sexual assault should be dropped.

A decision to cancel the warrant would be a step towards enabling the 43-year-old Australian to walk out of the Ecuadoran embassy in London, where he has been holed up for the past two years in a bid to avoid extradition.

The Stockholm District Court will review the arrest warrant, issued in late 2010, for incidents of rape and sexual molestation that allegedly took place that year, claims Mr Assange denies.

Assange sought refuge in Ecuador's embassy in Britain in June 2012 after having exhausted all legal options at British courts to avoid being extradited to Sweden.

He has said he fears that being sent to Sweden would be a pretext for transferring him to the United States, where WikiLeaks sparked an uproar with its publication of thousands of secret documents.

WikiLeaks repeatedly drove the global news agenda with startling revelations of the behind-the-scenes activities of governments around the world.

From confidential assessments by US diplomats of Chinese leaders to revised body counts in Iraq, the WikiLeaks documents provided the public with an unprecedented look under the hood of international politics.

Mr Assange's legal team has argued that Swedish prosecutors have dragged out the case unreasonably long by not interviewing him at the embassy.

"We are confident about the hearing," Mr Assange's lawyer Thomas Olsson said.

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Swedish court to rule on Assange warrant