Showing posts with label charity - non-profit. Show all posts
Showing posts with label charity - non-profit. Show all posts

10 Things for Human Rights Day

I just got an email from an acquaintance working for Amnesty.ca.

I reproduce it below:













Today is


International Human Rights Day


- 10 things you can do
on December 10 -


Robyn Sayer and Madeleine Pawlowsk at Writeathon in St Albert's AlbertaIt's a time to reflect.

It's a time to act
.


Shine your own light on human rights by taking at least one action to mark December 10th, the anniversary of the signing of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights



giant pen1. Write a letter! You can choose from more than 20 urgent cases - some that allow you to write directly to a person wrongfully detained or a human rights defender at risk, and others that allow you to write to a person in a position of influence -
Link to number one



video2.. Learn about the impact of letter-writing by watching and sharing Amnesty’s short, powerful videos on Write for Rights TV - Link to number two


shi tao3.Help get Chinese poet and journalist Shi Tao released. Sign the e-petition, and a have a chance to bring Alex Neve to your community for Alexa day - Link to number three


"He has only done what a courageous journalist should do. That is why he has got the support and the sympathy from his colleagues all over the world who uphold justice …

I am proud to have such a son as Shi Tao
" - Shi Tao's mother, Gao Qinsheng, addressing international journalists.


Maher and Monia4.Tell a friend about Human Rights Day by sharing Maher Arar & Monia Mazigh's invitation to join Amnesty International's Writeathon - Link to number four


5. Invite a friend to become a member of Amnesty International- Link to number five


tasers6. Sign Amnesty’s electronic appeal calling on a moratorium on taser use - Link to number six


girl7. Donate $10 - or whatever you can afford - to help Amnesty International build the world you want - Link to number seven




facebook8.
Spread the word about human rights day on Amnesty's open facebook group
- Link to number eight


gift of freedom9. Give someone an Amnesty Gift of Freedom instead of a store-bought gift this holiday season - Link to number nine



10. Be a part of Amnesty International’s global writeathon – mapget together with a few friends, work on your own or look on our map for one of the nearly 1,000 organized Write for Rights events from coast to coast in Canada - Link to number ten




"Amnesty's work is of enormous value to those suffering from political oppression. It is perhaps more important than you yourselves have ever realized"


- Wei Jinsheng, a released Chinese Prisoner of Conscience



Corrections

none so far!

Read More to See the Light...

Massive, unfixed security flaw at Passport Canada

We just learned about a very serious security flaw in the Passport Canada website accepting online applications. Other people's information can be easily accessed by simply applying for a passport and then altering characters in your browser's address bar. The flaw was discovered by Jamie Laning, an IT worker at Algonquin Automotive, in Huntsville, Ontario. The available data includes SINs, driver's licence numbers, mailing addresses, business and phone numbers, federal ID card numbers and even a firearms licence number. Says Carlisle Adams, professor at U of O:

This is exactly how identity theft happens. If you want to take out a mortgage, for example, this is the type of information the bank is going to ask for to make sure you're really the person you're claiming to be. Then all of a sudden there's a mortgage in someone else's name.
Although Mr. Laning alerted Passport Canada of the problem last week and the site was suspended through yesterday, the problem has not been fixed, despite Passport Canada's claim to the contrary. While the security flaw in itself is not the most terrible thing, it is deeply unsettling to learn that Passport Canada was unable to fix it within one week, that it deceptively claimed it fixed it and that Canadian law does not even require disclosure of privacy breaches. This means that there may be many more security breaches that happen but we do not know about them, unless somebody makes a FOF request.
The security breach follows two significant events concerning personal information. On Nov. 21, Justice Minister Rob Nicholson introduced legislation making it an offence to obtain, possess or traffic in people's identity information for the purposes of committing a crime. Just two days earlier, Britain's tax and customs service announced it had lost disks containing banking and personal data of 25 million people.

Canadian law does not require organizations to disclose when they've suffered security breaches. In the United States the majority of states have enacted legislation requiring organizations to disclose security breaches within a specified period of time.
"I think it's very clear that a strong, mandatory security-breach law is long overdue in this country and it's cases like these that highlight it," said Michael Geist, a law professor at the University of Ottawa.
This is not the first negative media report to hit Passport Canada. Only a couple of months ago, Canadian Press issued the following:
Passport Canada is reporting continued long delays in processing mailed-in passport applications, despite a streamlined renewal process and hundreds of new employees. And there is concern those delays will only get longer as the busy winter travel season approaches.It now takes a minimum of six weeks to get a passport through the mail; two weeks longer than the agency's benchmark of four weeks.
And that doesn't include the time it takes to get applications and documents through Canada Post.
The way our secretive, inept government works, we would not be surprised if Mr. Laning would be charged with terrorism. It is much easier to find a scapegoat than hiring a knowledgeable IT security firm and have the problem fixed.

UPDATE: Brian Masse (NDP) raised this issue in Question Period and Minister Maxime Bernier was told by CEO Gérard Cossette that the website is now "among the most secure".
IT Business published an article citing concerns that the privacy breach will lead to ID theft.

Source: Passport applicant finds massive privacy breach, Globe and Mail

Read More to See the Light...

OLPC - charity or 3rd world profiteering?

What if we told you that you can buy a cheap laptop and, for the price you would normally pay for a Windows based one, you can get a laptop running a much more stable operating system AND send a similar laptop to a child in Africa?


What if that laptop would be useless to a thief?

Finally, what if this laptop, called XO, was not only rugged & child-proof, but was actually designed to be used even by a child?

This offer was initially available only until the end of November, and we covered the XO in the past, but it has now been extended until the end of December. Some people have purchased a laptop for a child they know instead for their own child, effectively donating 2 laptops. Although I do not need yet another laptop, I am very tempted to get this one...

You might think there isn't really a need for a laptop where people have nothing to eat, and you are not alone. Although Lybia's rulers have committed to give each child a laptop, India has resisted (even at $100/laptop) and decided to build their own, without releasing details. From the FAQ:
You're expecting this to be a magic bullet for poverty.
False: Not at all. It is simply a tool for education and communication and only helps, in part, in contributing to the entirety of aid programs where these laptops are distributed. Nevertheless it provides access to education, health, technology, economic opportunity, and more, and a few children will be able pull themselves out of poverty with no other assistance.
You're forcing this on poverty stricken areas that need food, water and housing rather than a laptop.
False: Not at all. Like it was said earlier, this is only a tool and should not be seen as more than that. We agree that other more urgent matters must be attended to before you insert high tech into the situation of poverty.
Not everybody agrees with that idea. Some think that access to the Net is the fastest way for poor people to get the political clout to require their governments to provide services to them. Or to get the education for real jobs that take them out of poverty completely. Or access to innovative technologies for providing food, water, clothing, shelter, energy, etc.
But we believe education and communication with the modern world to be important as well. Food, water, clothing and other necessities come first. Nevertheless, a world view and good education can do wonders for a child's mind and continued health. Computers, especially those that are networked, have shown to be development 'multipliers', that is they help to improve the delivery of medical, educational and communication services.

If you are doubting that the XO laptop is needed in the first world, I can assure that a laptop is far better for a child than the TV (the most used and abused babysitter), simply because a laptop is interactive.
If you buy the XO for Canada, shipping is $35 and the $200 used to send the 2nd laptop to an African child might be tax deductible against your US income:
A Canadian donor may claim charitable tax credits for a gift to a recognized US charity, provided that the charity would have qualified in Canada if it had been a Canadian charitable organization. The charitable credit is limited to the donor's US-source income, and subject to the normal donation ceiling. Any excess credits can be carried forward and used in subsequent taxation years. (Article XXI(6) Canada-US Income Tax Convention)


This disruptive product has been in design since 2005 and it was a cause championed by Negroponte, who stated:
"From my point of view, if the world were to have 30 million" laptops made by competitors "in the hands of children at the end of next year, that to me would be a great success," he said in a recent interview. "My goal is not selling laptops. OLPC is not in the laptop business. It's in the education business."
Strangely enough, a Nigerian company is suing OLPC for infringement of some copyright on its keyboard. As the old saying goes, no good deed goes unpunished. Writes alsee in the ensuing /. debate:
Lawsuit states that keyboards were purchased and illegally reverse engineered.
The only way that could be true is if Nigeria has a seriously defective legal system (quite possible), but even then the "truth value" of that statement would only exist within Nigeria.
Like someone who illegally wears a t-shirt that says "Vote".
The phrase "illegally reverse engineered" only weighs in favor of a case of this company being a "patent troll", it is not an argument to refute that label.
A further note is that all uses of the word "invention" appear to false. According to the article this is a design patent. At least in US law, design patents are not for new useful inventions, design patents are not for functional aspects, design patents are for aesthetic and ornamental aspects. Design patents are about "our product looks cool and distinctive". Design patents are trivial to work around, you just change the shape or arrangement of your product to any of a zillion other equally reasonable equally functional looks.
...ok a little Googling and yes Nigerian RD#### patent are "Registered Design" patents. This is not an invention patent, this is an ornamental design patent. It also turns out that there is no official website to look up Nigerian patents, not only is there no website for it but the Nigerian Patent Office official contact point is a Yahoo email address.
This company is suing a charitable high-tech project to aid 3rd world children, and doing it based on an ornamental patent registered with a government operating from a Yahoo email address. I don't know whether to laugh or cry.
Most commentators seem to believe that this is either a lawsuit backed by the Wintel Hydra who is upset that the project uses Linux and AMD chips, whereas others think that this is simply an attempt by a dishonest corporation to scam some money out of anything they can. In response, Intel has designed a laptop called "Classmate" which sells for more than double the price of XO, which its marketing team claims it is far superiour. For its part, Microsoft has claimed that the cost of software is not an important issue in the developing world. The Wall Street Journal writes that the XO was seriously derailed by the marketing push of the two big tech giants, while BBC places the blame on "politics". Anyway, if you are enraged by Microsoft and Intel's products, your best course of action would be to vote with your wallet and boycott their products. Luckily, their competition is good to excellent.

Perhaps the funniest outcome of this silly lawsuit would be a new class of Nigerian/419 scams, as shown in Mateo LeFou's comment:
Dear Honest Individual
I am Stella McBride, aged 21years old the daughter of Late Darl Makoba a politician
,gold and software merchant from Angola. I and my mother now residing in Senegal dakar west africa.
As a result of the on-going problem in our country, we must relocate US$500 million of intellectual property to an overseas account...
A secondary outcome is that the price of all laptops will come down and in fact it has already.

Echoes
Ecoble
/.
wsj

Read More to See the Light...

Web Investigative Journalism

Although it missed Paul Jay's Independent World News television (perhaps because it's not fully operational yet), SplashCast has an interesting listing of web-based investigative journalism outfits and how they make their money. Here's the short list:


  1. Democracy Now!, a work of historic proportions, daily 1h broadcast funded by donations and filmed in NYC
  2. Alive in Baghdad the streets of Baghdad - solicit donations
  3. Alive in Mexico made by Small World News, just like the Baghdad show
  4. Talking Points Memo TV liberal political blog paid for by Next New Networks, which raised 8 million in venture capital
  5. Collateral News low-budget production by "irksome" Philly based Woodshop Films, who also make commercial video production;

    The rest are "honourable mentions"

  6. Journeyman Pictures self-described as "London’s leading independent distributor of topical news features"
  7. People of the Web from Kevin Sites of the Hote Zone series
  8. Hot Air with Michelle Malkin "offensive content" (?)
  9. LinkTV "don't understand it, but it looks good" :)

Some other sources not mentioned in the SplashCastMedia review (I haven't read them all, but I provide them here:

Another good article connected to this subject is Wikipedia's article on Citizen Journalism.
A la prochaine!

Read More to See the Light...
© Copyright 2004-2008 ConsumedConsumer.org. All Rights Reserved. Garland theme created by Steven Wittens and Stefan Nagtegaal. Long live Drupal!