Google、Fuchsia OSを初代Nest Hubにロールアウト

3 months 2 weeks ago
headless 曰く、Googleが9to5Googleに対し、初代Nest HubにFuchsia OSのロールアウトを開始したと伝えたそうだ(9to5Googleの記事、 The Vergeの記事、 Android Policeの記事、 Neowinの記事)。 Googleが非LinuxベースのFuchsia OSを開発していることは2016年に明らかになり、Androidを置き換える可能性など、たびたび話題になっている。これまで実際のデバイスに一般提供されることはなかったが、5月初めにBluetooth SIGのリストでソフトウェアバージョン「Fuchsia OS 1.0」のGoogle Home Hub(初代Nest Hub発売当初の名称)が見つかっていた。 新UIも話題になったFuchsia OSだが、ユーザーがOSの変更に気付かない可能性もあるという。Nest HubのUIは複数のプラットフォームにアプリを一貫して提供可能にするフレームワーク「Flutter」を用いて構築されており、OSがLinuxベースの「Cast OS」からFuchsia OSに変わるだけで外見も機能も変わらないためとのことだ。

すべて読む | ITセクション | Google | OS | デベロッパー |

関連ストーリー:
Googleの新OS「Fuchsia」の公式Webサイトが公開される。なぜか配色は緑。 2019年07月02日
Googleが開発中の「Fuchsia」は5年後にはAndroidを置き換える? Googleは否定 2018年07月25日
Google、Pixelbookにマルチブートオプションの追加を計画? 2018年04月22日
Googleが開発中という新UI「Armadillo」 2017年05月10日
Googleの謎OS「Andromeda」の正体は「Fuchsia」だった 2017年02月17日
Googleが非Linuxベースの新OS「Fuchsia」を開発していることが明らかに 2016年08月16日

nagazou

携帯電話基地局施設の柵の鍵はORゲート方式

3 months 2 weeks ago
回線網を自社で所有している大手キャリア(MNO)などの所有する携帯電話の基地局は、ほかの施設に間借りして設置されていることが多い。また手続などの都合から、同じ場所に複数社の基地局が設置されることもある。Twitterでその基地局のある敷地へ出入りするための柵の鍵の管理方法が話題になっていたようだ(電波やくざさんのツイート)。 電波やくざさんのアップした写真によれば、東京電力の送電線鉄塔にau基地局がついていたという事例では、東京電力とauがそれぞれの所有する鍵で施設内には入れるように、左右の棒の端に南京錠を付けるという構造になっていた。これで2社間で鍵の貸し借りをしなくても施設内に入ることができるとしている。 こうした工夫はほかの施設でも行われているそうで、電波やくざさんは、ドコモ、au、SoftBankがオプテージの鉄塔を借りている4社が共有する施設の鍵も関しても写真をアップしている。その写真のレスでは海外の同様の施設の鍵の管理方法なども紹介されている。同様に鍵の貸し借りナシで施設内に入れるように工夫されているようだ。昔の記事だが、らばQでもこうした鍵の話が紹介されたことがあったようだ。

すべて読む | セキュリティセクション | セキュリティ | 携帯電話 | 携帯通信 |

関連ストーリー:
楽天グループ、日本郵政との協業を発表。中テンセント、米ウォルマートからも資本調達を実施 2021年03月16日
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nagazou

東京の大規模接種センター、26日にシステムに通信障害が発生などのトラブル続く

3 months 2 weeks ago
大規模接種センターで、引き続き様々なトラブルが起きているようだ。26日午後4時ごろに東京の大規模接種センターでは、受け付けや接種の予約を行うシステムに通信障害が発生した。障害は午後5時40分に解消されたが1時間ほどの間、接種を待つ人の行列ができたとしている(朝日新聞、NHK)。 また東京新聞によれば、予約システムに予約して一度認証されたにもかかわらず、再度確認したところ勝手に予約が消えるという事例も発生していたそうだ。岸信夫防衛相は25日の記者会見で、このトラブルが起きたことを認めているとのこと(東京新聞その1、その2)。 また運用面でも二重予約が多発していることが指摘されている。NHKの報道によれば、25日に接種を受けた東京・世田谷区の高齢者の21.7%にあたる173人が、区の接種会場にも予約する二重予約状態になっていたという。区はワクチンがむだにならないよう手作業で予約を取り消すとしているそうだ(NHKその2)。

すべて読む | ITセクション | ソフトウェア | バグ | 医療 | IT | 政府 |

関連ストーリー:
平井デジタル大臣、ワクチン接種証明書は自治体が発行との見通し。また五輪選手向けアプリでGPS機能は搭載しないとも 2021年05月24日
大規模接種センターの予約システム、正しい番号でも予約できない不具合 2021年05月21日
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大規模接種センターの予約システム、予約番号も地域も関係なく誰でも予約が可能な欠陥 2021年05月18日

nagazou

[B] サンケン電気による弾圧と不当逮捕に抗議

3 months 2 weeks ago
埼玉県に本社を置くサンケン電気本社が,子会社である韓国サンケンの解散を決定し,これをホームページで発表したのが2020年7月9日。それから「韓国サンケン労組と連帯する埼玉市民の会」や「韓国サンケイ労組を支援する会」などの市民団体が,毎週木曜日に本社前での抗議行動を行ってきた。そんな中、今月10日に話し合いを求める抗議行動への参加者が,不当に逮捕される事案が発生。21日には不必要な家宅捜索までもが行われることとなった。(岩本裕之)
日刊ベリタ

European Court on Human Rights Bought Spy Agencies’ Spin on Mass Surveillance

3 months 2 weeks ago

The European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) Grand Chamber this week affirmed what we’ve long known, that the United Kingdom’s mass surveillance regime, which involved the indiscriminate and suspicionless interception of people’s communications, violated basic human rights to privacy and free expression. We applaud the Strasbourg-based Grand Chamber, the highest judicial body of the Council of Europe, for the ruling and for its strong stance demanding new safeguards to prevent privacy abuses, beyond those required by a lower court in 2018.  

Yet, the landmark decision, while powerful in declaring that UK mass interception powers are unlawful, failed to protect journalists, and lacked legal safeguards to ensure British spy agency GCHQ wasn’t abusing its power, imprudently bought into spy agency propaganda that suspicionless interception powers must be granted to ensure national security. The Grand Chamber rejected the fact that mass surveillance is an inherently disproportionate measure and believed that any potential privacy abuses can be mitigated by “minimization and targeting” within the mass spying process. We know this doesn’t work. The Grand Chamber refused to insist that governments stop bulk interception--a mistake recognized by ECHR Judge Paulo Pinto de Albuquerque, who said in a dissenting opinion: 

For good or ill, and I believe for ill more than for good, with the present judgment the Strasbourg Court has just opened the gates for an electronic “Big Brother” in Europe.

The case at issue, Big Brother Watch and Others v. The United Kingdom, was brought in the wake of disclosures by whistleblower Edward Snowden, who confirmed that the NSA and GCHQ were routinely spying on hundreds of millions of innocent people around the globe. A group of more than 15 human rights organizations filed a complaint against portions of the UK's mass surveillance regime before the ECHR. In a decision in 2018, the court rejected the UK’s spying programs for violating the right to privacy and freedom of expression, but it failed to say that the UK's indiscriminate and suspicionless interception regime was inherently incompatible with the European Convention on Human Rights. EFF filed a Declaration as part of this proceeding. The court, however, acknowledged the lack of robust safeguards needed to provide adequate guarantees against abuse. The Grand Chamber’s decision this week came in an appeal to the 2018 ruling. 

The new ruling goes beyond the initial 2018 decision by requiring prior independent authorization for the mass interception of communications, which must include meaningful “end-to-end safeguards.” The Grand Chamber emphasized that there is considerable potential for mass interception powers to be abused, adversely affecting people’s rights. It warns that these powers should be subject to ongoing assessments of their necessity and proportionality at every stage of the process; to independent authorization at the outset, and to ex-post-facto oversight that should be sufficiently robust to keep the “interference” of people's rights to only what is “necessary” in a democratic society. Under powers given to UK security services in 2000, they only needed authorization by the Secretary of State (Home Office) for interception. The Grand Chamber ruled that, in lacking adequate safeguards like independent oversight, UK surveillance law did not meet the required “quality of law” standard and was incapable of keeping the “interference” to what was necessary.

In its ruling, the Grand Chamber assessed the quality of the UK's bulk interception law and developed an eight-part test that the legal framework of new surveillance laws must meet to justify authorization of bulk interception. The legal framework must make clear and consider the following: the circumstances in which an individual’s communications may be intercepted; the procedure to be followed for granting authorization; the procedures to be followed for selecting, examining and using intercept material; the precautions to be taken when communicating the material to other parties; the limits on the duration of interception, the storage of intercept material and the circumstances in which such material must be erased and destroyed; the procedures and modalities for supervision by an independent authority of compliance with the above safeguards and its powers to address non-compliance; the procedures for independent ex post facto review of such compliance and the powers vested in the competent body in addressing instances of non-compliance.

These are welcome safeguards against abuse. But the opinion doesn’t contain all good news. We are disappointed that the Grand Chamber found that the UK's practice of requesting intercepted material from foreign governments and intelligence agencies, rather than intercepting and collecting them directly, was not a violation of the right to privacy and free expression. Our friends at ARTICLE19 and others argued this, and it also reflects our views: Only truly targeted surveillance constitutes a legitimate restriction on free expression and privacy, and any surveillance measure should only be authorized by a competent judicial authority that is independent and impartial.

Back on the bright side, we were happy that the Grand Chamber once again rejected the UK government’s contention (akin to the U.S. government’s) that privacy invasions only occur once a human being looks at intercepted communications. The Grand Chamber confirmed that the legally significant “interference” with privacy begins as soon as communications are first intercepted—becoming more and more severe as they are stored and later used by government agents. The steps include interception and initial retention of communications data; application of specific selectors to the retained data;  the examination of selected data by analysts; and the subsequent retention of data and use of the “final product”, including the sharing of data with third parties. The Grand Chamber correctly applied its analysis to every step of the way, something U.S. Courts have yet to do. 

The Grand Chamber also found that the government had neglected to subject its targeting practices to enough authorization procedures. Bulk communications may be analyzed (by machines or by people) using “selectors”—that is, search terms such as account names or device addresses—and the government apparently did not specify how these selectors would be chosen or what kinds of selectors it might use in the course of surveillance procedures. It required analysts performing searches on people’s communications to document why they searched for terms connected to particular people’s identities, but did not have anyone else (other than an individual analyst) decide whether those search terms were OK.

The Grand Chamber ruled that acquiring communications metadata through mass interception powers is just as intrusive as intercepting communications content. It considers that the interception, retention, and searching of communications data should be analyzed taking into account the same safeguards as those applicable to the content of communications. However, the Grand Chamber decided that while the interception of communications data and content will normally be authorized at the same time, once obtained the two may be treated differently. The Court explained: 

In view of the different character of related communications data and the different ways in which they are used by the intelligence services, as long as the aforementioned safeguards are in place, the Court is of the opinion that the legal provisions governing their treatment may not necessarily have to be identical in every respect to those governing the treatment of content.

On concerns raised about the impact of surveillance on journalists and their sources, the Grand Chamber agreed that the UK was substantially deficient in not having proactive independent oversight of surveillance of journalists’ communications, whereby “a judge or other independent and impartial decision-making body” would have applied a higher level of scrutiny to this surveillance.

Overall, the Grand Chamber decision falls below the standards of the Court of Justice of the European Union (the Supreme Court of the European Union in matters of European Union law), although it does have some good safeguards. For instance, the Luxembourg Court of Justice of the European Union judgment, in Schrems I. v. Data Protection Commissioner, made clear that legal frameworks granting public authorities access to data on a generalized basis compromise "the essence of the fundamental right to private life," as guaranteed by Article 7 of the European Union Charter of Fundamental Rights.  In other words, any law that compromises the “essence to right private life” cannot ever be proportionate nor necessary. 

While we would like more, this decision still puts the Grand Chamber way ahead of U.S. courts deciding cases challenging bulk surveillance. Courts in the U.S. have tied themselves in knots trying to accommodate the U.S. government’s overbroad secrecy claims and the needs of the U.S. standing doctrine. In Europe, the UK did not claim that the case could not be decided due to secrecy.  More importantly,  the Grand Chamber was able to reach a decision on the merits without endangering the national security of the U.K. 

U.S. courts should take heed: the sky will not fall if you allow full consideration of the legality of mass surveillance in regular courts, rather than the truncated, rubber-stamp review currently done in secret by the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court (FISA). Americans, just like Europeans, deserve to communicate without being subject to bulk surveillance. While it contains a serious flaw, the Grand Chamber ruling demonstrates that the legality of mass surveillance programs can and should be subject to thoughtful, balanced, and public scrutiny by an impartial body, independent from the executive branch, that isn’t just taking the government’s word for it but applying laws that guarantee privacy, freedom of expression, and other human rights. 

Related Cases: Jewel v. NSA
Katitza Rodriguez