TWEET ALIEN
Breaking News

Motion Post Sample

Wednesday 17 August 2011

Police averted riots at Olympic sites and Oxford Street by monitoring Twitter

Riots at Olympic sites and major shopping centres were foiled by police following “chitter chatter” on Twitter and BlackBerry Messenger.

Chiefs said they considered trying to temporarily shut down Twitter during last week’s crisis.

But they told MPs monitoring the social media websites helped avert attacks on the Olympic venue, Oxford Street and the Westfield shopping centres in East and West London.



Assistant Commissioner Lynne Owens told the Commons Home Affairs select committee there was so much traffic on Twitter and BBM the Met at times was overwhelmed.

She said: “We were able to secure all those places and indeed there was no damage at any of them because of our live-time monitoring.”

Acting Metropolitan Police Commissioner Tim Godwin said: “I contemplated seeking the authority to switch [Twitter] off. The legality of that is very questionable and it is a very useful intelligence asset.

“It’s a massive amount of information and some is obviously wrong.”

 

Read More

Tuesday 16 August 2011

MI5 joins social messaging trawl for riot organisers

The security service MI5 and the electronic interception centre GCHQ have been asked by the government to join the hunt for people who organised last week's riots, the Guardian has learned.

The agencies, the bulk of whose work normally involves catching terrorists inspired by al-Qaida, are helping the effort to catch people who used social messaging, especially BlackBerry Messenger (BBM), to mobilise looters.

A key difficulty for law enforcers last week was cracking the high level of encryption on the BBM system. BBM is a pin-protected instant message system that is only accessible to BlackBerry users.

MI5 and GCHQ will also help the effort to try to get ahead of any further organisation of disturbances. The move represents a change as officially MI5 is tasked with ensuring the national security of the United Kingdom from terrorist threats, weapons of mass destruction, and espionage, with the police taking the lead on maintaining public order.

However, they have a statutory right to target criminals or those suspected of being involved in crime, officials have said.

Police struggled to access the BBM network last week, though some who were sent messages planning violence were so outraged they passed them on to law enforcement agencies.

GCHQ's computers and listening devices can pick up audio messages and BBM communications. MI5 and the police can identify the owners with the help of mobile companies and internet service providers. The agencies can intercept electronic and phone messages, identify where they have been sent from and their destination. That allows other investigations to take place and other efforts to develop intelligence.

One source said: "The hope is this will boost the intelligence available. It always useful to get some boffins in."

In his speech on Monday David Cameron made no mention of his threatened clampdown on social media. Last week in the House of Commons emergency debate, he said: "There was an awful lot of hoaxes and false trails made on Twitter and BlackBerry Messenger and the rest of it. We need a major piece of work to make sure that the police have all the technological capabilities they need to hunt down and beat the criminals." One of MI5's functions under the 1989 Security Service Act is to support "the activities of police forces … and other law enforcement agencies in the prevention and detection of serious crime".

MI5 intercepts communications though officially can only do so with warrants signed by ministers. It seeks technical help from GCHQ.

GCHQ's functions, according to the 1994 Intelligence Services Act, include "to monitor or interfere with electromagnetic, acoustic and other emissions and any equipment producing such emissions and to obtain and provide information derived from or related to such emissions or equipment … "

It can do so "in support of the prevention or detection of serious crime".

On its website, MI5 stresses such a distinction: "For the most part the activities of domestic extremists pose a threat to public order, but not to national security. They are generally investigated by the police, not the Security Service."

For law enforcement, the difficulty with BBM is that it boasts semi-private – and instant – access to a network of like-minded users.

BlackBerry handsets are the smartphone of choice for the 37% of British teenagers, according to Ofcom. BBM allows users to send the same message to a network of contacts connected by "BBM pins". For many teenagers, BBM has replaced text messaging because it is free and instant.

Unlike Twitter or Facebook, many BBM messages are untraceable by the authorities. And unlike Facebook, friends are connected either by individual pin numbers or a registered email address. In short, BlackBerry Messenger is more secure than almost all other social networks.

So-called "broadcasts" can be sent to hundreds of disparate users within minutes, away from the attention of law enforcement agencies.

In the 12 years since it released the first BlackBerry, Research in Motion (RIM) has built a formidable reputation for the impenetrable security of its smartphones. RIM has always struggled to explain to the authorities that, unlike most other companies, it technically cannot access or read the majority of the messages sent by users over its network.

One of the biggest problems for law enforcement in the digital age is the inability to get real-time access to messages sent by potential criminals.

In England, RIM has said it will actively cooperate with law enforcement as they investigate those behind the unrest. Although it cannot hand to police the contents of rioters' messages, it can disclose information that could assist any investigation.

A clause in the Data Protection Act allows RIM to disclose the names, contacts and times of prominent BlackBerry Messenger users in a certain area and at a certain time.

 

Read More

Scotland Yard foiled riots on the Olympics site by monitoring "chitter chatter" on Twitter and BlackBerry Messenger.


Police chiefs also considered seeking powers to shut down Twitter on a temporary basis amid concern about social networking websites' role in last week's crisis, MPs were told.

Attacks on Oxford Street and the two Westfield shopping centres in east and west London were averted as detectives scoured the mobile phones of people arrested during the riots, officers said.

Assistant Commissioner Lynne Owens told MPs on the Commons Home Affairs Select Committee there was so much traffic on Twitter and BlackBerry Messenger (BBM) that at times the Met was overwhelmed.

"There was intelligence that the Olympic sites, that both Westfields and Oxford Street were indeed going to be targeted," she said

"We were able to secure all those places and indeed there was no damage at any of them.

"All those locations were protected and we were able to respond because of our live-time monitoring of Twitter and BBM."

Asked about Twitter's role during the escalating violence in London, Acting Commissioner Tim Godwin told the committee: "I contemplated seeking the authority to switch it off. The legality of that is very questionable and additionally it is also a very useful intelligence asset.

"The only problem with it is it's a massive amount of information that you need to synthesise and some of it is quite obviously wrong and rather silly.

"As a result of that we did not request that that was turned off but it is something we are pursuing as part of our investigative strategy."

Read More

Saturday 13 August 2011

22 more fake Apple stores found in China

The search goes on for fake Apple stores in China and the new numbers have risen to a staggering 22 so far. China’s appetite for Apple products seems very high, as all of these 22 fake stores have now been discovered in a single Chinese city.
Soon after the first reports of a fake store emerged on the media, the Chinese authorities went on a hunt to uncover the copycats in Kunming. After a fierce search exercise they have been able to discover at least 22 more fake stores pretending to represent Apple.

 

Read More

Friday 12 August 2011

Twitter blocking: the technical and legal issues

It will probably take hundreds court hearings over several months before we have an clear view of the role played by social media and smartphones in this week’s riots. Nevertheless, David Cameron has already said the government already wants to explore new controls on these technologies.
“We are working with the police, the intelligence services and industry to look at whether it would be right to stop people communicating via these websites and services when we know they are plotting violence, disorder and criminality,” he told MPs on Thursday.
The Prime Minister was talking about users of the two dominant social networks, Facebook and Twitter, and BlackBerry Messenger, RIM’s instant messenger service, which is particularly popular among urban youths.
Though very light on detail, the plans immediately raise myriad technical and legal issues.
Most obviously, how would authorities know which people are using smartphones and social media to encourage riots?

 

Read More

TWITTER STANDS ITS GROUND

It seems totalitarian states like Egypt and Libya aren’t the only ones struggling with the impact of social media and the desire to muzzle services such as Twitter and Facebook. In the wake of the riots in London, the British government says it’s considering shutting down access to social networks—as well as Research In Motion’s BlackBerry messenger service—and is asking the companies involved to help. Prime Minister David Cameron said that not only is his government considering banning individuals from using social media if they are suspected of causing disorder, but that it has also asked Twitter and other providers to take down images and posts that are contributing to "unrest."

The British PM said further that he has asked the police whether they need any new powers to stop the violence, including the ability to shut down social networks or communications services if they believe these tools are being used to incite unrest. Police in Britain have reportedly already begun arresting people based on their use of social media, such as Twitter and Facebook, charging them with suspicion of inciting violence and/or disorder for posting tweets, status updates, and photos. In his statement to the House of Commons, Cameron said:

"[W]e are working with the police, the intelligence services, and industry to look at whether it would be right to stop people communicating via these websites and services when we know they are plotting violence, disorder, and criminality."

It’s not clear, however, how the British government plans to identify who is "plotting" to commit violence or criminal acts using social media. Would posting a photo of a burning car be enough? Would retwittering someone who admitted to causing violence get a user’s account shut down or result in questioning by the authorities? The Prime Minister didn’t say. Meanwhile, British Home Secretary Theresa May is reportedly meeting with Twitter, Facebook, and BlackBerry to discuss their "responsibilities" during such events.

TWITTER STANDS ITS GROUND
For its part, Twitter has said it has no intention of blocking any users’ accounts or removing their posts. A spokesman who talked to The Telegraph about the issue referred to a Twitter blog post earlier this year entitled "The Tweets Must Flow," in which co-founder Biz Stone and Twitter’s general counsel Alex Macgillivray said: "We don’t always agree with the things people choose to tweet, but we keep the information flowing irrespective of any view we may have about the content."

Those comments were made during the popular uprisings in Tahrir Square in Egypt, when the Egyptian government shut down access not just to social networks and mobile communications networks, but eventually to the entire Internet: an attempt to smother dissent that ultimately failed—and may have actually accelerated the revolution in that country. Britain’s Prime Minister and his government would no doubt argue that there is a world of difference between what they are doing and what Egyptian dictator Hosni Mubarak did, but free-speech advocates aren’t likely to agree.

As we’ve pointed out before, the role that Twitter and other social tools have played in the London riots is identical to the role they played in the uprisings and demonstrations in Tunisia, Egypt, and other countries. In other words, they have allowed people to connect with each other and distribute information quickly and easily to tens of thousands of users of these services. That’s the power of real-time networks.

Obviously, that has allowed some to spread misinformation and plan acts of violence—but it has also allowed others to correct that information and to coordinate positive moves as well, such as planning a cleanup detail in the wake of the London riots.

Read More

Thousands sign 'no benefits for rioters' petition

The online petition can be signed by members of the public and calls for convicted rioters to have their social security benefits stopped.
The threshold for the government 'e-petition' to be referred to the Commons backbench business committee - which can table debates - is 100,000.
The petition on the Number 10 website states, "No taxpayer should have to contribute to those who have destroyed property, stolen from their community and shown a disregard for the country that provides for them."
The petition has now been formally referred to a committee which will decide whether to debate the issue.

 

Read More

Tuesday 9 August 2011

Celebrities have taken to social network site Twitter to offer their messages of hope to the riot-ridden communities

Celebrities have taken to social network site Twitter to offer their messages of hope to the riot-ridden communities reports Sky News.



Twitter Wayne Rooney Justin Bieber London
The riots in London began on Saturday (August 6) in Tottenham and spread to south London on Sunday (7).

Last night (August 8), parts of Hackney, Croydon and Camden were also affected, while violence and looting was reported in Birmingham, Manchester and Liverpool.

Many have been urging residents to get out on the streets and help with the clean-up operation.

Broadcaster Richard Bacon praised the positive use of Twitter to promote the clean up. "Do have a look at / follow @RiotCleanUp. One of the best and most positive uses of Twitter I've ever seen. (Well, apart from @CatBinLady)," he enthused.



Stephen Fry tweeted: "I do hope that if I was in London now I'd be as good & brave & kind as all those who are agreeing to meet & help clean up #RiotCleanup".

Justin Bieber tweeted: "WHOAH...been out of the loop all day. To all the people of the UK I hope you are ok. My prayers go out to you and the amazing people there."

Beverley Knight tweeted: people to "be safe" and "look out for one another"

Jessie J tweeted: "Calling all #heartbeats please go to www.riotcleanup.com and see where you can help get London back to how we all deserve it to be. #riotcleanup".

Wayne Rooney tweeted: "These riots are nuts why would people do this to there own country. Own city. This is embarrassing for our country. Stop please."

Dermot O'Leary tweeted: "Out and about this morning. Already seeing strangers being more considerate/friendly to each other. Makes me proud. #londonwillprevail".

Jamie Oliver tweeted: "God bless the communities getting together to sort this out #RiotCleanUp People who care about their country!!"

Tinie Tempah tweeted: 'the more riots the more repressive action will take place & the more we face the danger of a right-wing & eventually a fascist society' MLK'

Lily Allen tweeted: ''people aren't born evil. Yes, these kids might be past the point of help, but we need to take responsibility for future generations''

Read More

They might be far away, but many expats are using Twitter to share their thoughts on London's riots.

@kubull As an expat Brit, it's hard to see London look like this, but know it's strong enough to over come and be awesome again! #LondonRiots
@beriyani As a UK expat in Berlin I can only recommend rioting the german way. Every year on the same day in the same place. Civilised. #londonriots
@raitapaita I'm so glad I'm an #expat, no regrets at all about no longer living in #UK! #LondonRiots
@hayley_turner Just received a message from friend in Singapore. Everyone is celebrating their national day - she's embarrassed to be British #londonriots
@irategreek #Greece RT from expat @Elikas: Here in Amsterdam we don't need to worry about riots. Rain is the ultimate repression mechanism.
@afrequentflyer Watching the news here in Spain. These images don't seem real... I hope nothing will happen tonight, this has to stop already #londonriots
@pamrobertson Lots of rules I know, but police seem overwhelmed and as an expat I am struggling with seeing it continue from here. #londonriots
@stevemcconvict I feel sick. Just got into work in Australia and it's not got better it's got worse. #londonriots Hope all family and friends are safe.
@Turnip_King On Twitter for 1st time in months. Wtf is happening back home?! Not to sound like a typical expat but it's better here...Sunshine, no riots!
@rosecoloma Saddened to hear about riots in my once temporary home, my other sentimental love, LONDON! Stay safe (expat & local) Londoners.
@aneholawson As a hackney born and bred expat lastnight reminded me of 80's UK.

 

Read More

London police hold the line but looters free to steal

The thin blue line of police held in Woolwich -- but their job was to protect firefighters tackling blazing businesses, not prevent looters in this poor southeast London district from emptying the shelves of stores they usually shop in.

Half a dozen police officers in riot gear and their trademark dark blue uniforms guarded fire crew hosing down the blazing Wetherspoons bar, too few to prevent the wholesale looting of Powis Street just a stone's throw away.

Paving stones piled in the street for workmen giving the rundown area a facelift were seized upon by the looters to stave in the windows of mobile phone shops, pawnbrokers, jewellers, electronic goods and gaming stores, clothing boutiques and designer footware stores.

Looters made off with their haul in suitcases stolen for the purpose. Others emerged from shattered store fronts with armfuls of women's clothing or boxes of designer sports shoes.

Some balanced flatscreen televisions or gaming consoles on their heads, slowly edging down the street, more afraid of slipping on the broken glass than arrest.

Many wore hoods or masked their faces but many more made no attempt to hide their identity from a police force they knew was too stretched to intervene.

Far from being angry or edgy, the atmosphere when the looting was at its height was mostly relaxed, with many in the crowd giggling or looking on in wonder at the flames, queuing up to take photographs or shoot video of the burning stores on their mobile phones and cameras.

Prime Minister David Cameron promised to mend 'Broken Britain' when he came to power in May last year, but some local residents blamed his austerity policies for the violence sweeping London and other British cities.

"The people are angry," explained Joshua, a Nigerian resident of Woolwich who has lived in Britain 38 years. But that view was not universal.

David Hill, 33, who works in the financial services sector, said: "They have burned out the places that they drink in, that's the funny thing about it. I can understand the jewelry, that's fair enough, but this is absolutely outrageous."

Simon Mills, manager of a pawnbroker and jewelry firm that claims to be the oldest business in Woolwich, said he had lost goods worth upwards of 60,000 pounds ($98,000).

"I just don't know if we'll be able to bounce back from it. I don't think terrorists could have done a better job than what they have done here," he said. "But when you look over the road at Wetherspoons you think it could have been worse."

Some store owners said they had closed early on Monday due to rumors that Woolwich, a down-at-heel district on the southeastern banks of the Thames, would be next to "kick off."

"To be honest, people knew it was coming, so if everybody knew it was coming, why did they (police) leave it so late to disperse people?" asked shop manager Grace, 26.

Mills said he had watched the looting unfold on YouTube postings and said the military should have been deployed: "I think the army should have been called in if they knew what was going to happen. They should have sealed off the area."

According to bystanders, the looting was organised on Twitter and the instant messaging network of a popular mobile phone network. However, many accounts smacked of hearsay.

Nigel Fletcher, deputy leader of the borough's opposition Conservative Party defended police and brushed off suggestions that 'Broken Britain' had somehow spoken out against cuts in public services through the overnight orgy of looting.

 

Read More

Numerous independent record labels fear they have lost a catastrophic amount of stock in a fire at a distribution warehouse in north London during the riots in the capital

Numerous independent record labels fear they have lost a catastrophic amount of stock in a fire at a distribution warehouse in north London during the riots in the capital on Monday night. A three-storey, 20,000 square-metre building in Enfield, owned by Sony DADC and holding stock to be distributed by the Pias Group, was burned to the ground.

The fire will potentially impact labels such as Domino, as well as film production companies with DVD stock. Pias is the UK's largest independent sales, marketing and distribution company.

Other labels that may be affected include 4AD, Warp and Beggars Banquet. Beggars Group chairman Martin Mills confirmed his group had stock at the site, but told Music Week that he and other larger labels would be less affected by the disaster than smaller counterparts because they carried stock in other locations. Nevertheless, Mills called the latest setback for the indie sector "horrible, horrible" and added that many labels would also now face manufacturing issues to replenish destroyed stock.

A statement on the Pias website read: "There was a fire last night at the SonyDADC warehouse which services the physical distribution for Pias in the UK and Ireland. Pias is working closely with SonyDADC who are implementing their emergency plans. Pias's UK offices in London and all other areas of our business are unaffected. More information will be communicated shortly to all our labels and partners."

Industry analyst Paul Scaife said: "Physical retail is still absolutely crucial to many in the independent sector and if – as seems quite likely – several smaller labels aren't covered by insurers, this could be the difference between survival and going out of business."

The musician James Vincent McMorrow tweeted that the fire was "absolutely devastating potentially to so many indie labels", while label boss and festival promoter Rob Da Bank said it seemed that all the stock for his company Sunday Best had burned in the blaze.

Alex Kapranos of the band Franz Ferdinand also tweeted: "Thoughts go out to all the labels who have lost their stock in Pias fire".

Kapranos also questioned where the prime minister was during the looting, asking: "Where the fuck are the Bullingdon boys?.... Would you only end your holidays if it were Fortnum & Mason being looted?"

Other musicians to express their views on the riots included poet and musician Scroobius Pip, who said: "This is Britain punching itself in the face. Repeatedly."

Rapper MIA apparently tweeted, "im going down to the riots to hand out tea and mars bars #london", provoking anger from many of her followers before the comment subsequently appeared to be taken down from her Twitter account.

The full list of labels distributed by Pias is as follows:

1234

2020 Vision

Accidental

Ad Altiora

Adventures Close to home

Alberts

All City

Alt Delete

Ambush Reality

Angular

Ark

ATC

Atic

Atlantic Jaxx

Azuli

B Unique

Backyard

Bad Sneakers

Bandstock

Banquet

Beggars

Big Chill

Big Dada

Big Life / Nul / Sindy Stroker

Boombox

Border Community

Boysnoize

Brille

Bronzerat

Brownswood

Buzzin Fly

Can You Feel It

Catskills

ChannelFly

Chemikal Underground

City Rockers

Counter

D Cypher

Dance To The Radio

Deceptive

Def Jux

Dirtee Stank

Divine Comedy

Domino

Drag City

Drive Thru

Drowned in Sound

Duophonic

Eat Sleep / Sorepoint

Electric Toaster

Emfire

F. Comm

Fabric

Faith And Hope

Fantastic Plastic

Fargo

FatCat

Feraltone

Finders Keepers / Twisted Nerve

Fingerlickin'

Flock

Free Range

From The Basement

Full Time Hobby

Goldsoul

Gronland

Groove Attack

Halftime

Hassle

Heron

Hum&Haw;Independiente

Info UK

Join Us

Kartel

Kensaltown

Kitsune

Kompakt

Laughing Stock

Leftroom

Lex

Lo Max

Loose

Love Box

Lowlife

Lucky Number

Marquis Cha Cha

Memphis Industry

Merok

Metroline

Mute

Naïve

Nation

Navigator

New World

Ninja Tune

Nuclear Blast

One Little Indian

Output / People in the Sky / Process

Pale Blue

Palm

Peacefrog

PIAS Recordings

PIP 555 Productions

Play To Work

Powerhouse (T2)

Propaganda / Ho Hum

Raw Canvas

Red Grape

Red Telephone Box

Rekids

Renaissance

Respect Productions (PES digital)

Reveal Records

RMG

Rock Action

Roots

Rough Trade

Rough Trade Comps

Rubyworks

Ruffa Lane

Search And Destroy

Secret Sundaze

Secretly Canadian / Jagjaguwar / Dead Oceans

Sell Yourself

Setanta

Shatterproof

Sideone Dummy

Slam Dunk

Smalltown

Soma

Something In Construction

Sonar Kollectiv

Soul Jazz

Southern Fried

Stranded Soldier

Subliminal

Sunday Best

TARGO

Taste

Ten Worlds

Thrill Jockey

Total Fitness

Touch And Go

Track And Field

TriTone

Trouble

Try Harder

Turk

Turnstile

Twenty 20

Underworld

Union Square

Urban Torque

Vagrant

Vice

Victory

Wagram

Wall Of Sound

Warp

Wi45

Wonky Atlas

Word And Sound

Xtra Mile

You Are Here

Read More

The instant messaging service on BlackBerry smartphones, thought to be used by London rioters to organise themselves, may be shut down at the request of the police tonight,

The instant messaging service on BlackBerry smartphones, thought to be used by London rioters to organise themselves, may be shut down at the request of the police tonight, as Benjamin Cohen reports.

The riots rocking the UK have been organised in part using the BlackBerry Messenger system (BBM for short), resulting in calls for the system to be suspended in an effort to stop rioters organising their gatherings.

While social media outlets such as Twitter are on the most part searchable and accessible to the police, BBM is a closed system where users have to mutually agree to contact each other.

It's incredibly popular with teenagers because BBMs can be sent for free to anyone with a BlackBerry from anywhere in the world. BlackBerries are considerably cheaper than rival smart phones from Apple, or those running the Google Android system. These two points mean that a lot of the teenagers taking part in the riots are BlackBerry users. An Ofcom report last week confirmed that BlackBerries are the most popular mobile devices among 16-24-year-olds.

It is pretty clear that teenagers are using the "personal message" feature to add effective status updates - shared with all of their contacts - which streets, shops or buildings to attack. This is rather like a Twitter update, except it is only seen by the people you wish to see it.

Similarly, users can create groups of their friends to send messages to, perhaps announcing a change in location, or to discuss what to do next. However, unlike Twitter, these conversations are completely private and therefore not available to the police.

The Regulatory Investigative Powers Act (RIPA) gives the police powers to request information from mobile phone companies and from the owners of BlackBerry - Research in Motion (RIM) - in order to detect and prevent crime. We understand that the police are accessing these messages.

There is some speculation that police may request RIM to switch off the BBM service during this evening, essentially creating some sort of curfew. However, sources pointed out to me that this could lead the rioters to switch to other forms of closed messages such as Facebook or the mobile app WhatsApp.

As it stands, should the police wish, they can in theory access the messages currently being sent using BBM. This may be harder with systems such as WhatsApp, a Silicon Valley-based company with no base in the UK, which means it may be harder to request information from it under RIPA legislation.

In a statement, Patrick Spence, managing director of global sales and regional marketing for RIM said: "We feel for those impacted by this weekend's riots in London. We have engaged with the authorities to assist in any way we can.

"As in all markets around the world where BlackBerry is available, we cooperate with local telecommunications operators, law enforcement and regulatory officials. Similar to other technology providers in the UK, we comply with The Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act and co-operate fully with the Home Office and UK police forces."


Read More

Celebrities have come out in force on Twitter to condemn the rioting in London and other cities and urge residents to help with the clean up operation.




Singer Jessie J is among the stars appealing for help with the clean up
Jessie J, Wayne Rooney and Stephen Fry are among the stars who have hit out at the gangs behind the violence on Twitter.
Footballer Wayne Rooney wrote: "These riots are nuts why would people do this to there own country. Own city. This is embarrassing for our country. Stop please."
Piers Morgan remarked: "Millions of people are suffering in this financial crisis, but not looting/rioting/pillaging - no sympathy for these yobs whatsoever."
TV and radio personality Dermot O'Leary had a positive message for his followers.
"Out and about this morning. Already seeing strangers being more considerate/friendly to each other. Makes me proud. #londonwillprevail".

A crowd wait for the start of the clean up in Clapham Junction
Many have been urging residents to get out on the streets and help with the clean up operation.
Singer Jessie J tweeted: "Calling all #heartbeats please go to www.riotcleanup.com and see where you can help get London back to how we all deserve it to be. #riotcleanup".
Phillip Schofield was full of praise for the volunteers. "The best of what we can be. My respect to @Riotcleanup".
In a similar vein Stephen Fry wrote: "I do hope that if I was in London now I'd be as good & brave & kind as all those who are agreeing to meet & help clean up #RiotCleanup".
Broadcaster Richard Bacon lauded the positive use Twitter to promote the clean up. "Do have a look at / follow @RiotCleanUp. One of the best and most positive uses of Twitter I've ever seen. (Well, apart from @CatBinLady)," he enthused.

Read More

Twitter Riots put the Surveillance Society on trial

The time lines for the Tottenham Riots and subsequent assaults on Enfield, Walthamstow and Brixton show clearly how Twitter enabled small groups to rapidly develop tactics for distracting the police while their elders looted the local trading park. Now we will see whether the technologies used to enable the Iranian secret police to track down and incarcerate dissident Twitterers are used to do likewise to those who organise the incineration of inner city shopping centres for criminal gain. If not we will know that the great RIPA debate was, and is, dishonest: even if the technologies work, we do not have the competance and will to use them, or they are being used for the security of the state, not of its citizens.

In my previous blog entry on the riots I referred to the use of footage from the surveillance cameras and the RFID chips and serials numbers to track and trace the looters. It has been put to me that the torching of the Jewellers in Tottenham and later of Aldi and Carpetright was to destroy the evidence being logged by the surveillance cameras while the discarding of packaging was to "lose" the RFID chips. That raises the interesting question of whether surveillance cameras that do not transmit in real-time to a remote location are more of a threat than a benefit. It also indicates the need to put the RFID chips inside the product rather than the packaging.

And what about looting raids which begin by taking out the communications infrastructure, as happened when the IRA was actively "fund-raising"? And what about when shutting down "civilian" mobile communications is part of the response?  This adds a new dimension to Broadband and Communications debates, particularly with regard to infrastructure sharing, resilience and business standby routines.    

The immediate question is, however:

Will the suppliers of surveillance technology give the police the skills they have not got (quantity and well as quality) to use the evidence available to arrest most of the arsonists and looters to short order so that are in custody awaiting trial in time to enable the Notting Hill Carnival to be a joyous celebration?

If so, we should be able to rapidly rebuild confidence that the Surveillance Society works for good as well as ill - despite the many problems that will still have to be addressed.  

If not ....

 

Read More