NZ BREAKING NEWS ——>
M.P. (Ministers Of Parliament)
POLICE
ALL GOVERNMENT OFFICIALS
NOT TO MENTION THE WHOLE NATION OF NEW ZEALAND
PASSWORDS AND E-MAILS STOLEN BY GOOGLE
(U.S.A.) NATIONAL SECURITY AGENCY
NZ BREAKING NEWS ——>
N.S.A. (Google) BALLOON SPY NETWORK
& MASSIVE POLLUTION TO NSTALL, MAINTAIN
NUMEROUS BALLOONS -- ARE HAZARDOUS POLLUTION
AGAINST ALL MARINE LIFE, AND LAND POLLUTION
ᵃᶰᶻᵘˢ ᵃᶰᶻᵘˢ ᵃᶰᶻᵘˢ ᵃᶰᶻᵘˢ ᵃᶰᶻᵘˢ ᵃᶰᶻᵘˢ ᵃᶰᶻᵘˢ ᵃᶰᶻᵘˢ ᵃᶰᶻᵘˢ ᵃᶰᶻᵘˢ ᵃᶰᶻᵘˢ ᵃᶰᶻᵘˢ
1. 'Google' (N.S.A.) National Security Agency Front-Company
Created That Way From The Start
2. (N.S.A.) Numerous Balloon Pollution All Over The Lower Hemisphere
Planned Pollution, No Removal Plans Whatsoever
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/technology/google/10120198/Googles-internet-balloons-offer-remote-areas-web-access.html
3. (N.S.A.) U.S. Government Spying On NZ Citizens
A.N.Z.U.S.
http://www.exorcist.org.nz/nz_sis_gcsb_evil_racist_spying.html
4. GOOGLE NETWORK = U.S. GOV'T SPY AGENCY
U.S. GOV'T SPY ON NEW
ZEALANDERS
5. Google Finally Admits That Its Street View Cars
DID Take E-Mails And Passwords From Computers
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-1323310/Google-admits-Street-View-cars-DID-emails-passwords-computers.html
5. GOOGLE = SITTING ON HELLISH TOXIC GASES (Mtn. View, CA)
THE HELL FIRES:
http://www.exorcist.org.nz/music_mafias.html
ᵃᶰᶻᵘˢ ᵃᶰᶻᵘˢ ᵃᶰᶻᵘˢ ᵃᶰᶻᵘˢ ᵃᶰᶻᵘˢ ᵃᶰᶻᵘˢ ᵃᶰᶻᵘˢ ᵃᶰᶻᵘˢ ᵃᶰᶻᵘˢ ᵃᶰᶻᵘˢ ᵃᶰᶻᵘˢ ᵃᶰᶻᵘˢ
GOOGLE'S 'INTERNET BALLOONS' OFFER REMOTE AREAS WEB ACCESS.
Google has released 30 balloons above New Zealand in a project to bring
internet to remote areas.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/technology/google/10120198/Googles-internet-balloons-offer-remote-areas-web-access.html
The project, created by the same Google X team who made self-driving cars
and Google Glass, aims to bring internet to the two-thirds of the global
population currently without web access.
A pilot launch this morning in Christchurch, New Zealand, was the first
public balloon release and is the beginning of Google's plans to build a
ring of balloons that would fly around the globe at twice the altitude of
aeroplanes and send 3G-speed internet to the earth below.
Mike Cassidy, director of the plans known as Project Loon, told The Daily
Telegraph that the internet balloons were a Google "moonshot" – a radical
solution to a huge problem.
He said: "It almost sounds like science fiction when you hear about what our
proposal is."
Speaking to The Daily Telegraph yesterday from New Zealand, Mr Cassidy said
the balloons, which are shaped like a giant pumpkin and roughly the size of
a small aircraft, could solve the problem of internet access world wide.
He said: "I think one of the most stunning facts I've heard in the past two
years is two thirds of the world does not have internet access today. Places
like China and India, there's over a billion people combined in those two
countries that don't have internet access. And then if you look at all the
entire southern hemisphere, in two thirds of the countries in the southern
hemisphere the monthly cost of internet is higher than the average monthly
income for someone in those countries.
"For every 10 per cent additional proportion of the population that gets
internet access, their annual GDP, gross domestic product growth, will go up
by 1.4 per cent. Most countries in the world, their typical GDP rate is 3 or
4 percent."
Balloon internet could also be used after a natural disaster, like an
earthquake or tsunami, when communication systems often shut down.
A Google balloons will bring internet to remote areas, such as mountain tops
The balloons expand as they reach higher altitutdes. When fully inflated,
they look like a giant pumpkin.
Mr Cassidy, who has been working on the project for a year and a half, said
the balloons would be controlled by raising or lowering their altitude
slightly.
He said: "Because at each different altitude the winds go a slightly
different direction and a slightly different speed, so you can create this
sort of algorithm to tell you if you want the balloons to be covering Christ
Church at 10 o'clock tomorrow morning, you need to launch them at a certain
altitude, and if you're missing a little bit you can just increase or
decrease the altitude a little bit and correct it by getting to a slightly
different wind direction. And this is a really cool piece of technology we
worked on."
The balloons themselves are self-powered by solar panels and can cover an
area of about 460 square miles. Users below have an internet antennae they
attach the side of their house, with the mobile data from balloons working
in a similar way as a hotspot that won't interfere with normal Wi-Fi
delivery.
Those balloons released today will travel from west to east off the coast of
New Zealand and continue over Chile, Argentina, Australia and eventually
South Africa and Uruguay.
Mr Cassidy said Google had not yet considered a business plan but the Loon
Project could be affordable for those who don't have internet.
He said: "The cool thing is, the technology we used to build this is mostly
the cost of shelf parts, pretty simple plastic film about as thick as a
piece of paper, the electronics are sort of off the shelf electronics. So we
think there's very good promise of being able to have a service that's
affordable and helps people who can't afford internet today."
ᵘˢᵃ ᵘˢᵃ ᵘˢᵃ ᵘˢᵃ ᵘˢᵃ ᵘˢᵃ ᵘˢᵃ ᵘˢᵃ ᵘˢᵃ ᵘˢᵃ ᵘˢᵃ ᵘˢᵃ ᵘˢᵃ ᵘˢᵃ ᵘˢᵃ ᵘˢᵃ ᵘˢᵃ ᵘˢᵃ ᵘˢᵃ
GOOGLE FINALLY ADMITS ITS STREET VIEW CARS
DID TAKE EMAILS AND PASSWORDS FROM COMPUTERS
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-1323310/Google-admits-Street-View-cars-DID-emails-passwords-computers.html
28 October 2010
Google was accused of spying on households yesterday after it admitted
secretly copying passwords and private emails from home computers.
The internet search giant was forced to confess it had downloaded personal
data during its controversial Street View project, when it photographed
virtually every street in Britain.
In an astonishing invasion of privacy, it admitted entire emails, web pages
and even passwords were 'mistakenly collected' by antennae on its high-tech
Street View cars.
Privacy breach: Google has admitted that its Street View cars also took
people's emails and passwords
Privacy campaigners accused the company of spying and branded its behaviour
'absolutely scandalous'.
The Information Commissioner's Office said it would launch a new
investigation. Scotland Yard is already considering whether the company has
broken the law.
Google executive Alan Eustace issued a grovelling apology and said the
company was 'mortified', adding: 'We're acutely aware that we failed badly.'
Google cameras photographed this oblivious gardener with his top off as he
painted his fence
Caught out: Google cameras photographed this oblivious gardener with his top
off as he painted his fence
Critics seized on the admission as the latest example of technology's
ever-expanding ability to harvest information about ordinary households,
often without their knowledge or consent.
Google sent a fleet of specially equipped cars around Britain in 2008, armed
with 360-degree cameras to gather photographs for its Street View project.
There were immediate complaints that the pictures were a security risk,
after householders complained that house numbers and car registrations were
easily identifiable.
Privacy fears followed when it emerged that individuals could be seen,
including a man emerging from a sex shop in London's Soho, three police
officers arresting a man in Camden, North London, and children throwing
stones at a house in Musselburgh, Scotland.
Earlier this year the California-based firm admitted that the cars' antennae
had also scanned for wireless networks, including home wi-fi, which connect
millions of personal computers to the internet.
Google registered the location, name and identification code of millions of
networks and entered them into a database to help it sell adverts.
The firm - which uses the slogan 'Don't be evil' - was able to record the
location of every wireless router and network without alerting households
because wi-fi signals are 'visible' to other internet devices, including the
cars' antennae.
Google played down the significance of the wi-fi mapping and insisted it had
not collected or stored data from personal computers.
It then backtracked and said its software had 'inadvertently' collected
fragments of data which were being transmitted as the cars criss-crossed
Britain.
The cars' antennae skipped networks five times a second, it said, meaning
each network was only accessed for one-fifth of a second.
But it has now emerged that entire emails, web pages and passwords were
copied and stored during that split-second.
The information was only gathered from wireless networks which were not
password-protected.
But it means the antennae potentially harvested millions of private emails
and passwords around the country. It is not known how many householders have
unprotected wireless networks.
Simon Davies, director of Privacy International, said: 'It's absolutely
scandalous that this situation has developed and so many people have had
their communications intercepted.
MICHAEL HANLON: Google whacked - what on Earth were they thinking?
Google's mapping master plan halted by Ordnance Survey
Technology isn't everything: The picture that proves even the Google Street
View team get lost sometimes
'The company must launch a full inquiry and produce a public report on
exactly what happened, as well as release the audit it has already
undertaken.
'There are a lot of questions that need to be answered about how and why the
company did this.'
Google's cars collected wi-fi network locations in more than 30 countries.
The firm insisted the private data was not analysed or used for any
commercial purpose.
It has previously blamed an engineer who inserted a rogue computer code in
the Street View cars' software, and said it was a 'clear violation' of the
company's code of conduct.
The Street View project has triggered privacy investigations around the
world. In Australia, the country's communications minister Stephen Conroy
said the data harvest was the 'single greatest breach in the history of
privacy'.
Privacy regulators in seven countries analysed the data following complaints
about the Street View scheme, and it was their investigations which forced
Google's latest admission.
In Britain, Privacy International lodged a complaint with Scotland Yard
earlier this year. Officers are still considering whether a crime has been
committed.
The Information Commissioner said it would investigate Google's latest
admission. If the firm is found to have breached privacy, it could face a
fine of up to £500,000.
Google, which made a profit of £4.5billion last year, said its Street View
cars no longer collected any type of wireless information, and promised to
improve its privacy policies.
Daniel Hamilton, campaign director at privacy group Big Brother Watch, said:
'The harvesting of sensitive personal information like this is completely
unacceptable.
'Google is fast developing a reputation as a company that cares little for
privacy or data security.'
Paul Allen, editor of Computeractive magazine, said Google's antennae could
'see' any information that was not protected by encryption.
Secure websites, such as banking sites, could not be accessed and any
activity on password-protected networks was also safe.
He said: 'Google should have realised at the outset that this was possible,
and taken steps to guard against it. But consumers should also ensure their
network has a password.'
Google's new director of privacy, Alma Whitten, said: 'We are profoundly
sorry for having mistakenly collected payload data from unencrypted
networks.
'As soon as we realised what had happened, we stopped collecting all wi-fi
data from our Street View cars and immediately informed the authorities.
'This data has never been used in any Google product and was never intended
to be used by Google in any way. We want to delete the data as soon as
possible and will continue to work with the authorities to determine the
best way forward.'
†
†
†
ﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣ
Ras Mikaere Enoch Mc Carty
Maangai Kaawanatanga - Tainui Kiingitanga - Te Aotearoa
http://www.exorcist.org.nz Ko te Mana Motuhake
http://www.exorcist.org.nz/earthquake.mp3
http://www.exorcist.org.nz/nz_sis_gcsb_evil_racist_spying.html
http://www.exorcist.org.nz/iankahi_eriya_nation_john_frum.html
ﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣ
" Mr. Edward R. Murrow, As Far Back As Twenty (20)
Years Ago, Was Engaged In Propaganda For Communist
Causes, For Example The Institute Of International
Education, Of Which He Was The Acting Director --
Was Chosen To Act As A Representative By Soviet
Agency To Do A Job Which Would Normally Be Done
By The Russian Secret Police"
" Mr. Murrow's Organization Acted For The Russian
Espionage And Propaganda Organization Known
As V.O.K.S. "
— Senator Joseph Mc Carthy (R)
April 6, 1954
C.B.S. / 'See It Now'