Laptop searches by Customs to continue

In another continuation of Bush administration policies, the United States will continue its program to search selected laptops at the border. There seems to be no standard regarding which laptops are searched. Still, a few formal rules have been adopted to increase the speed of return of seized laptops to their owners. Disappointing. And, if you are traveling abroad, you may want to securely wipe your personal data from the computer before returning to the US to avoid the disclosure of items like financial records or confidential information. Should you do so, of course, be sure you have copies of the information back at home or work.

Rhetoric aside, in reality, not much has changed. Laptops and electronic gear can still be seized and held indefinitely; there’s no requirement that they be returned to their owners after even six months or a year has passed, though supervisory approval is required if they’re held for more than 15 days. The complete contents of a hard drive or memory card can be perused at length for evidence of lawbreaking of any kind, even if it’s underpaying your taxes or not paying parking tickets.

If you are traveling abroad, you may want to securely wipe your personal data from the computer before returning to the US to avoid the disclosure of items like financial records or confidential information. Should you do so, of course, be sure you have copies of the information back at home or work.

Snow Leopard incompatibilities

A few applications will not launch after Snow Leopard is installed. Apple has compiled a listing of the problem apps, with links to vendors to seek upgraded versions that will run. Fortunately, the list is very short.

There is also a very detailed (but unofficial) compatibility list here.

Ordering your copy of Snow Leopard via these links will also help support Bits & Pieces.

And you might also want to pre-order what I consider to be the must-have reference work for Mac OS X from David Pogue.

Andrew Sullivan on the new torture revelations

Taking a break from his summer vacation, Andrew Sullivan reacts to the recent disclosure about America’s embrace of torture under Bush and the Holder investigation. He is right that the effort to bring to justice those who tortured in the name of America is critical to restoring the traditional values of America.

One political party in this country is now explicitly pro-torture, and wants to restore a torture regime if it regains power. Decent conservatives for the most part simply looked the other way. Unless these cultural forces in defense of violence and torture are defeated – not appeased or excused, but defeated – America will never return the way it once was. Electing a new president was the start and not the end of this. He is flawed, as every president is, but in my view, the scale of the mess he inherited demands some slack. Any new criminal investigation which scapegoats those at the bottom while protecting the guilty men and women who made it happen is a travesty of justice. If it is the end and not the beginning of accountability, it will be worse than nothing.

But it need not be the end of the story. Indeed, it can be the beginning if we make it so. We cannot stop this sad and minuscule attempt to restore a scintilla of accountability to some individuals low down on the totem pole. Eric Holder is doing what he can. But we can continue to lobby and argue for the extension of accountability to the truly guilty men who made all this happen and still refuse to take responsibility for war crimes on a coordinated scale never before seen in American warfare, and initiated by a presidential decision to withdraw from the Geneva Conventions and refuse to abide by their plain meaning and intent.

Photo of the day

From a Dallas protest against healthcare reform (via Wonkette) comes this shot of insight. This engaged citizen believes we should fix Medicare and Medicaid before we fix healthcare. My head hurts. Of course, I agree with her first item on the list. Close the post office.

fix healthcare last

Rendition to continue under Obama

According the New York Times, the Obama adiministration will continue the practice of rendition, sending suspects to overseas unrelated justice programs.

The Obama administration will continue the Bush administration’s practice of sending terror suspects to third countries for detention and interrogation, but will monitor their treatment to ensure they are not tortured, administration officials said on Monday.

What the New York Times fails to ask, shamefully, is why rendition is ever appropriate if torture is not the purpose. Why render at all?  Why don’t we conduct our own interrogations of suspected wrong-doers that we capture under newly enforced standards to avoid torture (supposedly reviewed by the FBI)? How can the New York Times, which virtually never uses the word “torture” for torture, continue to claim that it covers “all the news that is fit to print”? Where is the independent reporting on issues like this? The entire approach is sickening and the continuing failure of the MSM to directly confront the government on this issue is highly alarming.

This country is in deep trouble when we continue for years to allow torture of individuals we capture. We need to restore our honor. And we need to do so now. This was one of the key reasons that I voted for President Obama and, as is true in other areas, he is failing in many ways to meet my expectations.

Block Pirate Bay: good luck with that

A Swedish court orders The Pirate Bay blocked. Can you guess the outcome? Wired has the details. As of this moment, I was unable to connect to the site. I expect the battle will continue for several days, but I have no doubt about the ultimate result: Pirate Bay will be accessible.

The Pirate Bay, the world’s most notorious BitTorrent tracker, was unavailable Monday after a court ordered a leading Swedish ISP to block access. But some users were able to reach the site again just hours later.

Information wants to be free.

Apple’s silly response to not allowing Google Voice on iPhones

Apple has posted its response to an inquiry by the FCC as to why Apple has not allowed the use of a Google Voice application on the iPhone.   It actually makes for good reading, especially the section on other applications that Apple has rejected.

On an aside, it is very annoying that they won’t approve this application as the application they describe looks great.  I think Apple’s handling of this situation shows a complete misunderstanding of the next generation of phone technology.  If I owned Apple stock, I’d be selling it.

Holder to appoint prosecutor to investigate torture (updated x2)

Eric Holder is going to appoint a career prosecutor to investigate special prosecutor to examine whether Bush administration interrogations conducted by the CIA were legal. Good for him. But the real question is whether the prosecutor will have the authority to examine not only (or even primarily) the front-line interrogators, but whether the prosecutor is free to climb the ladder of authority should his investigation warrant it, even if the climb is to the highest levels in the Bush administration. The leadership clearly set the tone and directed a strained legal interpretation that was the basis of the programs

Update 2: Andrew Sullivan correctly feared precisely this result. And Glenn Greenwald is properly outraged.

Official: Snow Leopard on sale August 28

It is now official. Apple will sell Snow Leopard beginning August 28.

Snow Leopard looks to be a great upgrade to Mac OS X and it is now available for pre-order at Amazon for only $29 via the links below. Ordering via these links will also help support Bits & Pieces.

And you might also want to pre-order what I consider to be the must-have reference work for Mac OS X from David Pogue.