DOJ lawyer who leaked Bush spy program is censured for ethics failure

Enlarge / Disclosing the warrantless surveillance program won Thomas Tamm the “Ridenhour Prize for Truth-Telling.” (credit: War on Whistleblowers/YouTube)

The Justice Department lawyer who disclosed the secret and warrantless surveillance program then-President George W. Bush adopted in the immediate aftermath of the Sept. 11 terror attacks was publicly censured Thursday by a federal appeals court for breaching legal ethics. As a Lawyer for the Justice Department’s Intelligence Policy and Review unit, Thomas Tamm violated professional conduct rules for disclosing to The New York Times “confidences” and “secrets,” the US Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit concluded. (PDF)

As part of his Justice Department duties, Tamm was tasked with requesting electronic surveillance warrants from the secret Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court. The District of Columbia Court of Appeals Board of Professional Responsibility said Tamm became aware in 2004 that certain applications to that FISA Court for national security surveillance authority “were given special treatment” and he leaked details of the program to the newspaper.

Tamm, who could have been disbarred, but now can continue practicing law as a Maryland state public defender (he resigned from the Justice Department in 2006), said he learned that “these applications derived from special intelligence obtained not pursuant to prior applications to the Court, but from an extra-judicial source referred to as ‘the program.'” After digging into it, he “concluded that it was probably illegal as it was not court-supervised.”

Read 7 remaining paragraphs | Comments



Source: Ars Technica – DOJ lawyer who leaked Bush spy program is censured for ethics failure

Man (Allegedly) Bathes In Bathtub Full Of Hot Sauce

bathing-in-hot-sauce.jpg

Seen here demonstrating the face someone makes when their penis is melting, Youtuber CemreCander bathes in the equivalent of 1,250 bottles of hot sauce. Plus some chili peppers tossed in for good measure. He even completely submerges himself and proceeds to lose his mind. Is it actually hot sauce? I dunno, you only see the stuff in buckets, not in bottles (allegedly the sauce was about to go bad so it was free). From the visible skin irritation and his reaction though, I half believe him. I’ve had hot sauce in my anus before and I can confirm it’s no walk in the park. It’s not even an uncomfortable butt-clenched jog through the park. It’s an uncontrollable jetpack ride through the park propelled by projectile diarrhea. I want you to close your eyes and imagine one of those water jetpacks that are so popular right now. I caught air. Yeah, it’s like that.

Keep going for the video, then leave a Youtube comment telling him to buttchug a shampoo bottle full of this stuff or clean the area around his tub, it’s gross.

Source: Geekologie – Man (Allegedly) Bathes In Bathtub Full Of Hot Sauce

Intel Aims To Snatch Apple From TSMC’s Claws To Produce A-Series Chips For 2018 iPhone 8

Intel Aims To Snatch Apple From TSMC’s Claws To Produce A-Series Chips For 2018 iPhone 8
We learned earlier this month that Intel had purchased its very own ARM license and will soon be manufacturing ARM-based processors for third-parties. Intel, which has remarkable chip fabrication capabilities, however, won’t be producing ARM chips of its own design.

This newest development already has analysts stirring the pot when it comes

Source: Hot Hardware – Intel Aims To Snatch Apple From TSMC’s Claws To Produce A-Series Chips For 2018 iPhone 8

The Cashback Sites That Are Actually Worth It

Some money-saving habits pay off more than others, and that goes for money-saving tools, too. Some rebate sites, for example, are often more trouble than they’re worth. Kyle James of Rather-Be-Shopping researched and ranked the cashback sites that are actually worth it.

Read more…



Source: LifeHacker – The Cashback Sites That Are Actually Worth It

Squirrel Girl Shows Us Computer Science Can Be Extremely Metal

In a quest to continue being the go-to comic for creating the most nonsensical blogs, this week’s issue of Squirrel Girl uses basic computer science and counting in binary to deliver a splash page so fundamentally rad it should probably grace the cover of a mid-’80s metal album. Suffice to say, it’s rather brilliant.

Read more…



Source: io9 – Squirrel Girl Shows Us Computer Science Can Be Extremely Metal

Theater Trying To Pop Popcorn Using A Lightning Rod

Obviously this is just a publicity stunt but even so, I really want to see if this works. I might not want to eat any, and I definitely wouldn’t want to try this at home, but I still want to see if it works.


If you’ve ever wondered what would happen if lightning struck a giant bag of unpopped popcorn with a lightning rod mounted in it, you may soon have your answer. Cineplex Entertainment has placed a six-metre-high blue popcorn bag containing unpopped popcorn and a lightning rod near Hwy. 401 between Windsor and Tilbury.

Comments

Source: [H]ardOCP – Theater Trying To Pop Popcorn Using A Lightning Rod

AT&T explains why it sometimes delays Google Fiber access to poles

Enlarge (credit: Google Fiber)

Google Fiber has been battling AT&T over access to utility poles for a few years now. During a dispute in Austin, Texas late in 2013, AT&T said it could deny access to its poles because Google wasn’t a “qualified” telecom or cable provider.

Things have gone a bit smoother since then because the companies signed a nationwide agreement granting Google Fiber access to AT&T poles on a city-by-city basis. But in Nashville, Tennessee, Google Fiber construction has stalled partly because the new ISP still has problems getting access to AT&T poles. AT&T confirmed to Ars earlier this month that the terms of the previous nationwide agreement cover Nashville, but it declined to explain why there are still holdups.

An AT&T executive has now detailed the telco’s objections in an interview with FierceTelecom. Google Fiber has been making mistakes in engineering drawings that it needs to submit before attaching fiber to AT&T poles, according to Joelle Phillips, president of AT&T Tennessee.

Read 9 remaining paragraphs | Comments



Source: Ars Technica – AT&T explains why it sometimes delays Google Fiber access to poles

Intel’s 140GB Optane 3D XPoint PCIe SSD Spotted at IDF

As part of this year’s Intel’s Developer Forum, we had half expected some more insights into the new series of 3D XPoint products that would be hitting the market, either in terms of narrower time frames or more insights into the technology. Last year was the outing of some information, including the ‘Optane’ brand name for the storage version. Unfortunately, new information was thin on the ground and Intel seemed reluctant to speak any further about the technology that what had already been said.


What we do know is that 3D XPoint based products will come in storage flavors first, with DRAM extension parts to follow in the future. This ultimately comes from the fact that storage is easier to implement and enable than DRAM, and the characteristics for storage are not as tight as those for DRAM in terms of break-neck speed, latency or read/write cycles.


For IDF, Optane was ultimately relegated to a side presentation at the same time as other important talks were going on, and we were treated to discussions about ‘software defined cache hierarchy’ whereby a system with an Optane drive can define the memory space as ‘DRAM + Optane’. This means a system with 256GB of DRAM and a 768GB Optane drive can essentially act like a system with ‘1TB’ of DRAM space to fill with a database. The abstraction layer in the software/hypervisor is aimed at brokering the actual interface between DRAM and Optane, but it should be transparent to software. This would enable some database applications to move from ‘partial DRAM and SSD scratch space’ into a full ‘DRAM’ environment, making it easier for programming. Of course, the performance compared to an all-DRAM database is lower, but the point of this is to move databases out of the SSD/HDD environment by making the DRAM space larger.



Aside from the talk, there were actually some Optane drives on the show floor, or at least what we were told were Optane. These were PCIe x4 cards with a backplate and a large heatsink, and despite my many requests neither demonstrator would actually take the card out to show what the heatsink looked like. Quite apart from which, neither drive was actually being used – one demonstration was showing a pre-recorded video of a rendering result using Optane, and the other was running a slideshow with results of Optane on RocksDB.



I was told in both cases that these were 140 GB drives, and even though nothing was running I was able to feel the heatsinks – they were fairly warm to the touch, at least 40C if I were to narrow down a number.  One of the demonstrators was able to confirm that Intel has now moved from an FPGA-based controller down to their own ASIC, however it was still in the development phase.



Click through for high resolution


One demo system was showing results from a previous presentation given earlier in the lifespan of Optane: rendering billions of water particles in a scene where most of the scene data was being shuffled from storage to memory and vice versa. In this case, compared to Intel’s enterprise PCIe SSDs, the rendering reduced down from 22hr to ~9hr.


It’s worth noting that we can see some BGA pads on the image above. The pads seem to be in an H shape, and there are several present, indicating that these should be the 3D XPoint ICs. Some of the pads are empty, suggesting that this prototype should be a model that offers a larger size. Given the fact that one of the benefits of 3D XPoint is density, we’re hoping to see a multi-terabyte version at some point in the distant future.



The other demo system was a Quanta / Quanta Cloud Technology system node, featuring two Xeon E5 v4 processors and a pair of PCIe slots on a riser card – the Optane drive was put into one of these slots. Again, it was pretty impossible to see more of the drive aside from its backplate, but the onscreen presentation of RocksDB was fairly interesting, especially as it mentioned optimizing the software for both the hardware and Facebook.



RocksDB is a high-performance key/store database designed for fast embedded storage, used by Facebook, LinkedIn and Yahoo, but the fact that Facebook was directly involved in some testing indicates that at some level the interest in 3D XPoint will brush the big seven cloud computing providers before it hits retail. In the slides on screen, the data showed a 10x reduction in latency as well as a 3x improvement in database GETs. There was a graph plotted showing results over time (not live data), with the latency metrics being pretty impressive. It’s worth noting that there were no results shown for storing key/value data pairs.


Despite these demonstrations on the show floor, we’re still crying out for more information about 3D XPoint, how it exactly work (we have a good idea but would like confirmation), Optane (price, time to market) as well as the generation of DRAM products for enterprise that will follow. With Intel being comparatively low key about this during IDF is a little concerning, and I’m expecting to see/hear more about it during Supercomputing16 in mid-November. For anyone waiting on an Optane drive for consumer, it feels like it won’t be out as soon as you think, especially if the big seven cloud providers are wanting to buy every wafer from the production line for the first few quarters.


More images in the gallery below.



 



Source: AnandTech – Intel’s 140GB Optane 3D XPoint PCIe SSD Spotted at IDF

The Slashdot Interview With VideoLAN President and Lead VLC Developer Jean-Baptiste Kempf

You asked, he answered! VideoLan President and Lead Developer of VLC Jean-Baptiste Kempf has responded to questions submitted by Slashdot readers. Read on to find out about the upcoming VideoLAN projects; how they keep VLC sustainable; what are some mistakes they wish they hadn’t made; and what security challenges they face, among others!

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – The Slashdot Interview With VideoLAN President and Lead VLC Developer Jean-Baptiste Kempf

Dealmaster: Save on PCs, consoles, and monitors at Dell’s Labor Day sale

Greetings, Arsians! Courtesy of our partners at TechBargains, we have many great deals to share that are part of Dell’s Early Labor Day sale. Now you can get an XPS Core i7 desktop for $685, a $100 gift card on a PlayStation 4 Call of Duty bundle, and nearly $100 off a Dell UltraSharp monitor plus a $75 gift card. Those are just some of the steals going on during the sale, so be sure to check them all out.

Take a look at the full list of deals below.

Dell Early Labor Day Sale

Read 7 remaining paragraphs | Comments



Source: Ars Technica – Dealmaster: Save on PCs, consoles, and monitors at Dell’s Labor Day sale