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BananaBread – a browser-based 3D shoot ’em up

Le Monde Informatique reports that the Mozilla Foundation has published a shoot ’em up game – BananaBread – to demonstrate the capabilities of its Javascript libraries. If it works in Mozilla’s Firefox browser, all Javascript-compatible browsers are affected by these developments. No plug-in needs to be downloaded since everything is implemented in the browser. The only thing that has to be downloaded is the Javascript code (which explains why the game loads slowly).

screenshot of BananaBread

In terms of technology it is an improvement of the asm.js module produced by Mozilla using Epic. The Emscripten compiler has enabled conversion of a game built with the Unreal Engine 3 game engine written in C++ into a Javascript/WebGL assembly.

Mozilla has also announced full support for the WebRTC (Web Real Time Communication) standard in Firefox 22. This standard enables real-time peer-to-peer audio and video communications. WebRTC is used for chat between players in BananaBread.

All the code in this project is open (and practically all the art assets), so others can learn from this effort and use this code to create their own browser games.

There’s a demo available if you fancy your chances or are just curious.

The snoopers are already here – without a charter

image of eye staring back from screenAs an organisation, Bristol Wireless has been closely involved in campaigning against the UK government’s plans for mass communications surveillance under the Communications Data Bill, also known as the “Snooper’s Charter” by its opponents (news passim).

It now appears that all this work might have been in vain. Amongst the revelations that have come to light as a result of US whistleblower Edward Snowden‘s disclosures to The Guardian and The Washington Post was the news that for many years, GCHQ, the British state’s eavesdroppers, have been running a programme called Tempora, which has been hoovering up internet traffic and communications data from undersea cables before they make landfall in the UK.

GCHQ has been sucking up this data from millions – if not billions – of internet and telecommunications users at the rate of 600m phone calls and 39m gigabytes of data a day.

In spite of this damning evidence, Foreign Secretary William Hague has been trotting out the same old “if you’ve nothing to hide, nothing to fear” mantra. We have some advice for Mr Hague: try telling that to the family of Stephen Lawrence, who have just discovered 20 years after his killing that part of the British state called the Metropolitan Police tried to smear and discredit the family after they’d mishandled Stephen’s murder investigation.

However, there is a bit of positive news that has emerged today: Liberty – the human rights organisation – has today announced that it has issued a claim against the British intelligence services over their suspected involvement in the PRISM and Project Tempora privacy scandal.

Liberty believes that its electronic communications – and those of its staff – may have been unlawfully accessed by the likes of the Security Services and GCHQ.

Liberty will be ask the Investigatory Powers Tribunal (IPT) whether the British intelligence services have used PRISM and/or Tempora to bypass the formal UK legal process which regulates the accessing of personal material. The human rights group has issued a claim in the IPT, contending that rights under Article 8 of the Human Rights Act (the right to respect for a person’s private and family life, home and correspondence) have been breached.

Furthermore, Liberty is also concerned that the British Intelligence Services have used PRISM and Tempora to evade legal checks and balances and monitor people in the UK and may be treating internet communications as international rather than domestic to evade closer scrutiny and receiving material from their US partners to evade scrutiny altogether.

James Welch, Legal Director for Liberty, said: “Those demanding the Snooper’s Charter seem to have been indulging in out-of-control snooping even without it – exploiting legal loopholes and help from Uncle Sam.”

Finally, all this Anglo-Saxon surveillance has not gone down too well with some on the European mainland. Earlier this week, German Justice Minister Sabine Leutheusser-Schnarrenberger wrote the following in the international edition of Der Spiegel:

The more a society monitors, controls and observes its citizens, the less free it is. In a democratic constitutional state, security is not an end in itself, but serves to secure freedom.

Quite.

Contrast that civilised view with the control freakery displayed by UK Home Secretary Theresa May.

Australian government shelves data retention scheme

Big Brother is watching you posterIn the midst of all the recent revelations about the US National Security Agency’s Prism surveillance programme and GCHQ’s Tempora snooping on telecommunications and internet traffic, comes a small but welcome bit of good news. the Sydney Morning Herald reports that a controversial Australian government data retention scheme that would have required Australians’ internet and telephone activities to be stored for up to 2 years for law enforcement purposes has been shelved by the federal government after an inquiry recommended that the scheme should not go ahead.

The committee looking into the proposal as part of an inquiry into national security delivered its report on Monday. Most of those making submissions to the inquiry did not support the proposal. The federal police and the Tax Office were among the few who did. The report was scathing about the lack of information provided by former Attorney-General Nicola Roxon and her department, saying this had hampered the inquiry.

Peter Lee, chief executive of the Internet Industry Association, said, “It’s not so much a win for industry but more a win for commonsense,” whilst John Stanton, chief executive of the Communications Alliance, said the government’s response was “good news” for consumers and the industry.

After the report’s release, Australia’s current Attorney-General Mark Dreyfus said the government would not pursue data retention legislation “at this time”.

Reposted from the chief scribe’s blog.

Italy’s South Tyrol region migrating 7,000 PCs to LibreOffice

Südtirol coat of armsWith the migration from MS Office to LibreOffice, public sector organisations in Italy’s mostly German-speaking South Tyrol region are making their first major steps towards using freien software. Over the coming 3 years, will convert 7,000 PC workstations and thus save some €600,000 in licensing fees.

Free software gained entry to Italian public sector organisations just under 20 years ago, but has so far only gained a niche presence. This has now come to an end as all public sector organisations in the South Tyrol shall in future be using the LibreOffice instead of Microsoft’s proprietary paid-for office suite. Over the next 3 years the regional government alone will be converting 7,000 computer workstations to the free software package, in addition to which several thousand more workstations in municipalities and the health sector will also be migrated.

image of LibreOffice Mime type icons
LibreOffice for all your office suite needs: word processing, spreadsheets, presentations, database, drawing and formulas

“With the introduction of free software for standard applications, this of course means saving for us, but not just that by a long way: free software also makes us more flexible and flexibility is of major importance in a quickly changing field such as IT”, says the regional government member responsible for IT, Roberto Bizzo on the philosophy associated with the change to free software.

Bizzo, Kurt Pöhl, head of the regional government’s IT department, free software expert Patrick Ohnewein of TIS and trade unionist Erwin Pfeifer gave a presentation yesterday the public sector’s new software strategy.

Goodbye MS Office: announcing the migration to LibreOffice
Goodbye MS: announcing the migration to LibreOffice

A working group was established in February in which TIS’ experts – in concert with the regional government, municipalities and the health sector – sounded out how free software could be used in all public sector organisations. The result of the consultations is the gradual introduction of free software, starting with LibreOffice. The ODF format has also been defined as the standard public sector document exchange format.

Read the original press release in German or Italian.

This article is a repost from the chief scribe’s blog.

Connect Lockleaze project wins prizes for tackling digital exclusion

The Connect Lockleaze project is being widely recognised for its achievements in helping people who do not have online access to vital services.

The project brings together UWE Bristol, Hewlett-Packard (HP), the Lockleaze Neighbourhood Trust (LNT), Lockleaze Primary School and Early Years Centre and the North Bristol Advice Centre (NBAC). It has created three state-of-the-art information technology (IT) venues where Lockleaze residents can come to learn what the digital world has to offer, or refresh and develop their skills.

Almost one in three UK homes does not have an internet connection, meaning these members of society are potentially disadvantaged and in danger of being left further behind as more services are moved exclusively online.

image of award presentationThe project has just won the Partnership Award for its work on IT and skills training in Lockleaze at the recent West of England Community Learning Partnership Awards. Gail Bowen-Huggett, Training Development Coordinator for the Project accepted the award on behalf of the partners.

She said, “Connect Lockleaze is giving people the skills and tools to help themselves. This is what can happen when an international corporation, a University and neighbourhood organisations all get together.”

Connect Lockleaze also ran an event for Spring Online Week 2013, a national campaign to raise awareness of the need to stay digitally updated. Out of 107 events entered, this event was chosen as one of the finalists and was awarded a runner’s up prize presented by Joan Bakewell at the National Digital Conference in London.

Jo Earl, Project Officer at UWE, said, “Connect Lockleaze is a brilliant initiative where a local community is given the resources needed to combat digital exclusion.

“We have done a lot of work over the last year with people wanting to get some basic IT skills and learn to do things online that many people take for granted. With an estimated 26% of households in Lockleaze and Horfield without an internet connection, the fact that we can offer free and open access to three computer suites with WiFi is of huge potential benefit to the local community.

“UWE students have been volunteering in a variety of roles, from tutoring basic IT skills to providing technical support to maintain the PCs. They have run drop-in sessions for people who want to ask questions or try out something new in an informal environment. In a recent collaboration with MShed, they assisted members of the public in creating digital stories, piecing together interviews and images into short videos. They have helped us to provide a broad range of activities and learning opportunities.”

The project has also been shortlisted for a Nominet award, which will be announced in July, and for the Institute of Money Advisers (IMA) Performance award for Best New Initiative.

Linda Bell is new Bristol Wireless Chair

image of Linda Bell, BW Chair
Linda Bell, BW Chair
Yesterday Bristol Wireless held its Annual General Meeting (news passim). About 10 members attended along with 2 guests.

Part of the proceedings inevitably included the election of the committee and we’re very pleased to announce that Linda Bell has agreed to be our Chair. Linda has been a Bristol Wireless member for many years and first became interested in our work when we were based at St Werburghs Community Centre, where Linda used to be the Director (she retired last year. Ed.).

Whilst at St Werburghs Community Centre, Linda oversaw its £1 mn. refurbishment and extension scheme, which was funded by the National Lottery.

Earlier this year, Linda was awarded the Lord Mayor’s medal for her services to Bristol and is a very well respected figure in Bristol’s voluntary and community sector.

Thanks for coming forward, Linda; we hope you enjoy your involvement with Bristol Wireless.

The other officers of the co-operative, the treasurer and company secretary, are still held by Julien Weston and Steve Woods respectively.

European Parliament adopts open data strategy

EU flagYesterday, in the final stage of the EU approval process, the European Parliament formally adopted updated EU rules on the re-use of public sector information.

The Council of Ministers had already agreed to the new rules at last week’s Telecoms Council.

European Commission Vice-President Neelie Kroes said: “Today we can celebrate our efforts to bring government data closer to citizens and businesses in Europe. We are finally getting the much needed legal framework to boost the economy and create new jobs.”

After this final endorsement, the Commission will start developing a series of guidelines on the most relevant elements addressed in the Directive, such as licensing, datasets and charging arrangements (it’s public sector information produced with taxpayers’ money; it should be available free of charge. Ed.).

Member States will have 24 months from the date of entry into force of the revised Directive to implement it in domestic legislation. Once fully implemented, the Directive will boost the data market in Europe by making all the generally accessible public sector information available for re-use. Developers, programmers, creative citizens and businesses will be able to get and re-use public sector data at zero or very low cost in most cases. Prospective users will also have access to more exciting and interesting content since materials in national museums, libraries and archives now fall under the scope of the Directive.

Originally posted on the chief scribe’s blog.

eBay to offer free wifi this summer on French beaches

beach wifi imageFrench computing news site Le Monde Informatique reports that online tat merchants eBay will be organising a tour of French beaches from 22nd July to 17th August 2013, during which holidaymakers will be able to benefit from free wifi, as well as a space dedicated to this well-known auction site.

On each of the tour beaches the presence of the eBay Hotspot Tour will be apparent from the setting up of a relaxation area and the presence of ambassadors. These easily recognisable eBay Watchers will enable wifi connection to the internet by scanning the QR code printed on their T-shirts.

In addition, anyone visiting the official eBay Hotspot Tour tent with the eBay app on their mobile will be able to try and win €100 shopping money. Nevertheless, all holidaymakers will be able to benefit from this area to get online via several tablet computers, discover the latest functionality offers by eBay and win “goodies”.

The eBay Hotspot Tour will start on the beaches of the Côte d’Azur (aka the French Riviera. Ed.) before swinging round to the coast of the Basque country then travelling up the Atlantic coast as far as the Loire-Atlantique department.

German Parliament tells government to apply strict limits to software patents

The Free Software Foundation Europe (FSFE) reports that on 7th June the German Parliament (Bundestag) passed a joint motion to limit software patents (PDF, German).

The Bundestag is urging the German Government to take steps to limit the granting of patents on computer programs. Software should be covered exclusively by copyright and the rights of copyright holders should not be devalued by third parties’ software patents. The only exception where software patents should be allowed are computer programs which replace a mechanical or electromagnetic component. In addition, the Bundestag stressed that government actions in relation to patents must never interfere with the legality of distributing free software.

“This is an important step to fix the software patent insanity. The FSFE greatly welcomes this decision. It’s great to see that all of Germany’s major parties understand that software patents are a huge problem and that they are acting accordingly,” said Matthias Kirschner, FSFE’s co-ordinator for Germany.

Tens of thousands of software patents in Germany and Europe present enormous cost and liability risks, especially for SMEs. Several German SME associations welcomed the Parliament’s decision. However, they warn against giving all the responsibility to Brussels, as the EU has been
consistently incapable of providing software developers with legal certainty. “Germany now has to implement this decision in law, to send a strong signal towards Brussels,” said Johannes Sommer of BIKT, the German Information & Communications Technology Association.

At an expert meeting in the Bundestag on 13th May, BIKT and fellow industry association BITMi proposed changes to German copyright and patent law. These proposals would also affect software patents that have already been granted. The first proposal is to add a “protective shield” clause to German copyright law, introducing a blanket ban on the enforcement of software patent claims. The second proposal to be implemented in German patent law makes provision that the effect of patent claims shall not be extended to works protected independently by copyright. Both proposals would prevent software patents being enforced against software developers.

Raspberry Pi boot camp in Bristol this weekend

This Saturday 15th June a Raspberry Pi boot camp will be taking place at At-Bristol, Anchor Road, Bristol BS1 5DB (map) from 10.30 am to 4.30 pm.

Entry to the event is free, but does not include access to the exhibits of At-Bristol.

image of RaspberryPi
Raspberry Pi. Picture courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.

The event aims to provide fun hands-on workshops for beginners through to intermediate level as well as allowing experts to share ideas with others.

Activities planned for the boot camp will include:

  • A drop-in centre for those who have just got their Pi out the box but don’t know what to do next;
  • Workshops on some basic applications for your Pi that you can build in 90 minutes;
  • Advanced workshops to build cool applications involving LEDs and an internet radio;
  • A chance to meet experts and see what advanced applications they have built.

In addition to the above activities, local web agency Simpleweb, will be hosting ‘Rails Girls’ an all-day Ruby on Rails programming workshop aimed at women.

More details are available from the University of Bristol.

Barncamp 2013 – the post-match report

Yesterday, the Bristol Wireless members of the production crew returned to Bristol from this year’s Barncamp event (the fifth that has been organised. Ed.) after clearing out all the kit. Barncamp is a joint event organised by HacktionLab, Bristol Wireless and FLOSS Manuals, and has been described by our friend Charlie as follows:

…hanging out with some of the coolest people in the UK to talk about information security, tech politics, eco-friendly computing and all that. There is vegan food and sunshine and beautiful countryside. And a barn full of laptops. How could life get any better?

The view up the valley from Barncamp
The view up the valley from Barncamp

This year’s Barncamp – the first since 2011 (we had a year off in 2012. Ed.) – attracted a total of some 80 Barncampers, the highest number ever; and the feedback received so far has been positive.

The Bristol Wireless mobile event LTSP suite (picture below) went along with us and was well used, both informally, as well as for the hands-on Linux command line for beginners workshop given by your ‘umble scribe.

The Bristol Wireless LTSP suite at Barncamp 2013. Photo by Ludwig van Standard Lamp
The Bristol Wireless LTSP suite at Barncamp 2013. Photo by Ludwig van Standard Lamp.

Other Bristol Wireless members also gave of their expertise: BenG did his hugely popular wild food walk, identifying edible and medicinal plants. If the only guise in which you’ve seen BenG is that of server administrator, this is quite a revelation. One thing Ben won’t do is starve if dropped in the countryside with no resources.

In addition to BenG on wild food, Acesabe gave a workshop on hacking Android devices. Acesabe’s rationale was that many of us now have these items, so let’s find out a bit more about maximising their potential, limiting the security pitfalls that come with them and learn more about just what useful things these mini computers can be made to do.

As regards infrastructure, this year’s event was a great improvement on last time. We even had 2 separate wifi APs for a change – one covering the barn itself and the other providing wifi connectivity in the ‘top’ field where we’d sited a marquee as a second workshop space and which also contained the campfire.

Barncamp 2013 saw what was perhaps the widest range of workshop sessions yet seen, ranging from using WordPress and Vim to topics that eschewed IT completely, such as forest skills and building DIY solar panels.

As the event now passes from the present into the realm of memory, those of us that worked hard to put it on seem to be suffering from a common ailment called ‘barncramp’. 🙂

Last but not least, we’d like to thank our lovely hosts at Highbury Farm for their hospitality and help and look forward to seeing them again soon (we hope Al had a splendid 50th birthday. Ed.). Anyone who attended Barncamp and wishes to thank our hosts can email them on highburyfarm (at) hotmail.com.

It’s AGM time – soon!

Wearing his company secretary’s outfit, your correspondent has just sent the following email and posted the following notice in the lab.

NOTICE OF AGM

The Annual General Meeting of Bristol Wireless for 2013 will be held at 4.30 pm on Tuesday 18th June 2012 in the Lab, Windmill Hill City Farm, Philip Street, Bedminster, Bristol, BS3 4EA. After the AGM we shall adjourn to a nearby place of refreshment.

All members are welcome to attend.

Agenda for AGM

1. Receipt of the accounts and balance sheet and the reports of the Committee and auditor;
2. Appointment of an auditor or the application of the audit exemption (in accordance with rule 54);
3. Election of committee members;
4. Application of profits:

– firstly, to a general reserve for the continuation and development of the Co-operative;
– secondly, in making payments for social or charitable purposes within the community served by the Co-operative.

We extend a warm welcome to all wishing to attend our AGM. However, voting at the AGM will be restricted to members of the Co-operative (if you wish to join, cross our Treasurer’s palm with the customary £1 investment!).

Steve Woods
Company Secretary
3rd June 2013

Internet giants line up against Snooper’s Charter

image of eye staring back from screenThe Guardian reports exclusively today that Google, Microsoft, Facebook, Yahoo! and Twitter have dismissed the UK government’s Communications Data Bill (aka the Snooper’s Charter. Ed.) and its plans to track the email, internet and social media of everyone in the UK as “expensive to implement and highly contentious”.

The revelation comes from a letter dated 18th April signed by the five companies named above to Home Secretary Theresa May that was leaked to the newspaper. The letter itself forms part of a series of continuing confidential discussions between the industry and the Home Office. It also says that May’s “core premise” to create a new retention order requiring overseas internet companies to store the personal data of all their British-based users for up to 12 months has “potentially seriously harmful consequences”.

The companies also state the Home Office’s plans would threaten the open nature of the internet and would undermine their ability to offer a global service by companies working within the legal framework of their home jurisdiction.

EFF objects formally to DRM in HTML5

On Wednesday this week the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) filed a formal objection to the inclusion of digital rights management (DRM) in HTML5, arguing that a draft proposal from the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) could stymie Web innovation and block access to content for people across the globe.

The W3C’s HTML working group is creating a technical standard for HTML5, an impending revision to the computer language that creates webpages and otherwise displays content online. The working group has accepted a draft that includes discussion of Encrypted Media Extensions (EME), which will hard-wire the requirements of DRM vendors into the HTML standard (news passim).

image with caption Stop DRM in HTML5
Hollyweb? No thanks, W3C!

“This proposal stands apart from all other aspects of HTML standardization: it defines a new ‘black box’ for the entertainment industry, fenced off from control by the browser and end-user,” said EFF International Director Danny O’Brien. “While this plan might soothe Hollywood content providers who are scared of technological evolution, it could also create serious impediments to interoperability and access for all.”

DRM standards look like normal technical standards but turn out to have quite different qualities. They fail to implement their stated intention – protecting media – while dragging in legal mandates that chill the speech of technologists, lock down technology, and violate property rights by seizing control of personal computers from their owners. Accepting EME could lead to other rightsholders demanding the same privileges as Hollywood, leading to a Web where images and pages cannot be saved or searched, ads cannot be blocked, and innovative new browsers cannot compete without explicit permission from big content companies.

EFF filed this objection as its first act as a full member of W3C with the aim of broadening discussion of the consequences of accepting DRM-based proposals like EME for the future of the Web.

“The W3C needs to develop a policy regarding DRM and similar proposals, or risk having its own work and the future of the Web become buried in the demands of businesses that would rather it never existed in the first place,” said EFF Senior Staff Technologist Seth Schoen. “The EME proposal needs to be seen for what it is: a creation that will shut out open source developers and competition, throw away interoperability, and lock in legacy business models. This is the opposite of the fair use model that gave birth to the Web.”

A response to knee-jerk calls to revive Snooper’s Charter

image of Home Secretary Theresa May
Home Secretary Theresa May
In a typical knee-jerk response in the wake of the barbaric murder in Woolwich last week of Lee Rigby, allegedly by a couple of religious nutjobs, Theresa May, the UK’s control freak Home Secretary has threatened to revive the so-called “Snooper’s Charter” (news passim).

In this move she has been joined on the bandwagon by a couple of former Labour Home Secretaries, Lord Reid and Alan Johnson, who have backed her proposals. Furthermore, Alan Johnson suggested she should resign if she could not get cabinet backing for the stalled Communications Data Bill, as the Snooper’s Charter is better known in official circles.

In addition, these authoritarians have been joined by Liberal Democrat peer Lord Carlile, who has been making some very illiberal noises indeed and attacking his party’s defence of civil liberties: “The reason [the Bill] was vetoed, as Nick Clegg, the leader of my party, knows very well, was purely political because of demands from inside the Liberal Democrats.”

Let’s face it, the logic of those politicians mentioned above is flawless: a man hacked to death in the street therefore we obviously need more internet surveillance.

However, political commentators on both the right and the left remain unconvinced by such flawless logic.

Writing in The Spectator’s blog on Sunday, Fraser Nelson states:

Crucially, we have seen nothing in the last few days to suggest we need a Snooping Act. And although power-hungry ministers never admit it, MI5 and MI6 already have full legal powers to intercept anything that can be described as a ‘communication’- from smoke signals to SMS. The Snooping Bill was more about granting espionage powers to the taxman and other nosy government agencies.

Meanwhile at the other end of the political spectrum, The Morning Star also commented as follows on Sunday:

In truth, state agencies such as GCHQ, MI5, MI6 and Special Branch have no need of additional powers.

They have all the means required to monitor actual or wannabe terrorists in Britain, buttressed by the issue of 500,000 intercept warrants each year.

We also know that in practice the security and intelligence services have no compunction about acting outside the law should it be deemed necessary.

The insatiable nature of the UK’s law enforcement and security services for communications data is further reinforced by the fact that UK law enforcement made more requests for user data from Skype last year than any other country. In 2012 the UK was the source of 1,268 requests for Skype user information, while the whole of the USA (population 316 mn., 5 times that of the UK. Ed.) made only 1,154 requests and German police made a paltry 685. The UK was looking for information on 2,720 different users in its requests.

When will the UK’s law enforcement and security services for surveillance be satisfied? When they have reached the ultimate Orwellian scenario of state CCTV in every building in the land and all communications being monitored and their contents archived by the state?

The murder of one man – no matter how brutal – should not be used as the excuse to treat all of the 63 mn. citizens of the UK as criminal suspects.

Originally posted on the chief scribe’s blog.

Bristol IT Megameet registration extended

News has just arrived via email that registration for the Bristol IT Megameet (news passim) on 1st June has now been extended until Friday 24th May.

Bristol IT MegaMeet logo

To quote from the email:

Although we currently have over 250 people registered, with the very recent addition of a couple more sponsors, we are now able to take an extra 50, so we’re extending the registration deadline until Friday the 24th of May. If you know anyone who didn’t manage to register before the original deadline, please help us by telling them that there’s still time.

Register here.

Register for Barncamp 2013

image of barncamper
One happy Barncamper
Next month on the weekend from Friday 7th to Sunday 9th, BarnCamp 2013 – a weekend of hacktivism, workshops, entertainment, politics and fun in the sun – will be taking place.

BarnCamp is three days of workshops, discussions, demos and practical how-to sessions looking at how technology can be useful (and dangerous) for campaigners, community activists and others.

Barncamp 2013 flyer
The view when you open the tent flap in the morning!

Barncamp will take place in the wonderful Wye Valley at Highbury Farm (directions here) and is brought to you by HacktionLab, FLOSS Manuals and Bristol Wireless.

When it comes to cost, BarnCamp costs just £35 (£32 if you pay in advance). The cost includes food (do let us know your dietry requirements), camping for up to four nights, the planned workshops and the open space Bar(n)Camp sessions. In the evenings there will be indoor and fireside entertainment and plenty of time to meet people and chill.

There is limited places so please book your place on-line today. Registration closes on 31st May, so don’t delay.

Bristol hosts South West CiviCRM meet-up

CiviCRM logoOn Thursday 23rd May, Bristol once again plays host to a South West meet-up for people who are interested in, using or developing for CiviCRM, the free and open source customer relationship manager package (as used by Bristol Wireless! Ed.).

As with previous meet-ups, this next one will be held between 4.00 pm and 6.00 pm at the Create Centre, B Bond Warehouse, Smeaton Road, Bristol BS1 6XN (map).

No agenda has been published yet and anyone requiring more details is advised to telephone 0117 9096967 or email dave (at) circle-interactive.co.uk.

Bristol IT MegaMeet registration closes tomorrow

On Saturday 1st June, UWE will be hosting the 2nd Bristol IT MegaMeet on its Frenchay Campus at Coldharbour Lane Bristol BS16 1QY (map). The event itself will be taking place in Rooms 2Q42 to 2Q50 in Q Block; more direction details and maps here. The event starts with a brew at 9.30 am, with the formal sessions commencing at 10.00 am.

Bristol IT MegaMeet logo

Bristol Wireless will be doing a session, as will lots of our local friends, such as the Bristol & Bath LUG, Bristol Hackspace/Dorkbot, Bristol Girl Geek Dinners and Accessible Bristol.

The event is free to attend, but there’s no marketing budgeting, so spread the word, but do so quickly! 🙂

Register here.

Please note that everyone attending the event needs to register and that includes speakers, groups leaders, sponsors, etc., (even organisers need to register! Ed.). This is because the organisers need to know exact numbers for catering, talk popularity (for room allocation and to reduce clashes between popular topics), printing badges with peoples interests, event bags, etc.

Privacy: another reason to avoid Skype

Some time ago we drew attention to the possible eavesdropping problems in using Skype, which is now owned by Microsoft (news passim). This has now been confirmed by German technology news website, Heise.

Anyone who uses Skype, has agreed that Skype may also read too. Heise Security has found out that Microsoft actually avails itself of this right. At the very least https URLs sent via the chat interface receive an unannounced visit from Redmond some time later.

Heise was alerted to this by a reader who pointed out that unusual network traffic was reported after a Skype chat with colleagues. The server logs pointed to a possible replay attack. As things turned out, a Redmond IP address had accessed the https URLs that had previously been sent. The Heise Security re-enacted the situation, sending each other URLs: one of the test https URLs contained login information; the other pointed to a private file sharing cloud service. A few hours after posting the team spotted the following in the the server log files:

65.52.100.214 - - [30/Apr/2013:19:28:32 +0200]
 "HEAD /.../login.html?user=tbtest&password=geheim HTTP/1.1"

Heise Security too had received a visit from an IP address registered to Microsoft.

When challenged about this behaviour, the company asserted that messages are scanned to filter out links to spam and phishing pages. However, the facts do not support this assertion: spam and phishing sites don’t normally lurk behind https URLs and Skype didn’t touch those. Furthermore, Skype is sending out head requests, which only the server’s retrieve administration data. Skype would have to examine the content of pages to investigate web pages for spam or phishing.

Heise’s conclusion is that anyone who uses Skype must only agree that Microsoft can use all the data transferred almost as it feels inclined to do. It must be assumed that this actually occurs and that the company will not reveal exactly what it is doing with this data.

Readers are therefore advised for the security of their own data to switch their communications to a client using the open source XMMP (formerly known as Jabber) protocol and free chat programs that support it.