Month: March 2019

Geologist Accuses Apple of Political Bias in Removing App Countering Climate Alarmism

By Paul Homewood

 

Geologist Gregory Wrightstone has accused Apple of political censorship:

 

 image

Political figures who support the so-called Green New Deal and other proposals to restrict carbon dioxide emissions are up against some “inconvenient facts” that Americans may access immediately through a smartphone application, a geologist and author says.

But there’s one big problem. 

The app, called Inconvenient Facts, is available only to Android users through the Google Play Store. Since March 4, users of Apple’s iPhone no longer can access the app through the tech giant’s App Store.

Why is that?

Gregory Wrightstone, a geologist with more than three decades of experience, told The Daily Signal in an interview that he has his own opinion about what may have transpired inside Apple.

Wrightstone is the author of the book “Inconvenient Facts: The Science That Al Gore Doesn’t Want You to Know,” which served as the basis for the information available from the app.

He notes that former Vice President Al Gore, a leading proponent of the view that mankind’s activities propel dangerous climate change, is a board member of Apple.

“It’s very rare for an app to be approved and then taken down unless there is offensive material or some other extreme issue,” Wrightstone said of Apple’s action in a phone interview with The Daily Signal, adding:

We thought at first it may have been our fault. But I did a search on climate change and global warming in the Apple App Store and pulled up a whole bevy of pro-man-made global warming apps that are really bad. They are not formatted, they have incorrect spellings and no links. 

But I suppose they have the political narrative right. Compared to these, our app is the gold standard. I made sure we had charts and links and references to the source for our data. This is all right in the palm of your hand.

A total of 60 facts in Wrightstone’s book are available through the Inconvenient Facts app to Android users. Complete with data, charts, and videos, they challenge the premise of alarmist theories about climate change that link man-made emissions to dangerous levels of global warming.

Gore’s ongoing campaign to convince the public that rising levels of carbon dioxide emissions could trigger catastrophic global warming was the subject of the 2006 documentary “An Inconvenient Truth” and the 2017 follow-up, “An Inconvenient Sequel: Truth to Power.”

Before reversing itself March 4, Apple initially approved the Inconvenient Facts app for sale Feb. 3. Since that time, the app has been downloaded 13,000 times, according to figures Wrightstone provided.

He also points out that the app has earned positive reviews.

“A key takeaway here is that Apple has a monopoly over iPhone apps and the Apple App Store is the only place to get them,” Wrightstone said. “It appears that Apple has chosen to weaponize its control over purchasing apps to stifle science that doesn’t conform to its politically correct notions.”

The Daily Signal sought comment from Apple’s media relations office by phone and email, asking whether the company would address Wrightstone’s allegations of political bias. Apple had not responded by publication time.

The Daily Signal also sent inquiries to Delaware-based Carthage Group LLC, with which Gore is associated, and to the Climate Reality Project, which Gore founded, seeking his comment for this article. Neither organization had responded by publication time.

Users who tap on the Inconvenient Facts app have access to images and data that run counter to much of what was presented in Gore’s documentary films. Some examples:
Inconvenient Fact No. 53: “There are more polar bears now than we’ve had for 50 years.”

Inconvenient Fact No. 10 cites a “Recent Inconvenient Pause of 18 years in warming, despite rise in CO2.”

Inconvenient Fact No. 12: “Modern warming began long before SUVs or coal-fired plants.”

Inconvenient Fact No. 21: “The current warming trend is neither unusual nor unprecedented.”

The Cornwall Alliance for the Stewardship of Creation, a Christian public policy group that favors free market approaches to environmental policy, published a commentary Friday that is critical of Apple. It concludes that the company’s decision to reject the Inconvenient Facts app “smacks of censorship.”

The study of geology provides important insights into the study of climate change because it considers short-term trends within the larger context of Earth’s history, Wrightstone told The Daily Signal.

“Geologists are probably the most skeptical of all the sciences concerning a man-made link to temperature changes,” the geologist said, adding of carbon dioxide:

Just to be clear, I don’t, and my colleagues don’t, dispute that CO2 is increasing, and I agree that it has to have some slight warming effect on the atmosphere. But I argue that it’s modest and overwhelmed by the same natural forces that have been driving temperatures since the dawn of time. …

Looking out across Earth’s history, CO2 levels are extremely low. I always argue we are actually CO2 impoverished.

Information about Wrightstone’s book and the Inconvenient Facts app may be found here as well as on YouTube and Facebook.

https://www.dailysignal.com/2019/03/11/inconvenient/

 

Please share this story via the Facebook and YouTube links.

via NOT A LOT OF PEOPLE KNOW THAT

https://ift.tt/2F2bZrf

March 13, 2019 at 07:10PM

Dr. Will Happer is the Right Person to Lead an Objective Federal Climate Commission

By Sterling Burnett The left-wing media’s rumor mill has been rumbling in recent weeks like an upset stomach in need of an antacid at the thought President Donald Trump will soon form a Presidential Commission on Climate Security (PCCS) to objectively examine the science behind the oft-repeated claim humans are causing dangerous climate change. A…

via Watts Up With That?

https://ift.tt/2VWAYDd

March 13, 2019 at 06:07PM

Karim Baratov and cyber incidents misattribution

This case of Karim Baratov is another refutation of the conspiracy theory of cyber incident attribution. This theory lamps together multiple network security breaches, performed by many unrelated individuals or small groups. Then it attributes these breaches to a small number of alleged government backed hacker groups. This theory was introduced by CrowdStrike, and promoted by CrowdStrike and FireEye (FEYE). One of apparently decent attribution criterias is use of the same network infrastructure — domain names and/or IP addresses — in multiple breaches. But even this criteria doesn’t work, because cyber criminals specialize and divide labor vertically. Spear-phishing incidents using the same deceptive domain and/or IP address are not necessarily connected to a single beneficiary entity. An owner of the domain name can steal passwords from many victims for many unrelated clients, knowing nothing about the clients, like this case. 

  1. Canada-based dual citizen of Canada and Kazakhstan, Karim Baratov owned the domain accounts-google.net. He offered services such as stealing passwords and content from individual webmail accounts for $60 a pop. See Krebs on Security for technical details.
  2. The DOJ and FBI (under Sessions and Comey, respectively) left no stone unturned (not sure about Roger Stone) in their attempts to connect Baratov’s hacking to Russian intelligence. They commingled his case with a mega-breach of Yahoo mail accounts, and they connected him to three Russian citizens who are alleged to be FSB officers. These three Russians live in Russia beyond the reach of US justice, so the DOJ can say anything about them without the risk that they would dispute it. DOJ also found a payment of $104 from one of them to Baratov, and emails showing that Dokuchaev (one of the “Russians”) ordered hacking of 80 accounts — out of 11,000 accounts, actually hacked by Baratov. Neither this disparity nor weakness of the claim that Dokuchaev was an FSB officer deterred the DOJ, which declared it found another example of hacking by the Russian government.
  3. Krebs on Security reported: “In September 2016, Yahoo first disclosed the theft of 500 million accounts that is being attributed to this conspiracy. But in December 2016, Yahoo acknowledged a separate hack from 2013 had jeopardized more than a billion user accounts.” I guess that Yahoo was happy to blame its negligence on activities of the Russian state.
  4. The Fake News falsely accused Russia of the mega breach of Yahoo mail, contrary to the evidence and the verdict (APNews: Hacker gets 5 years for Russian-linked Yahoo security breach. ABC News: Canadian who helped Russians hack half a billion Yahoo accounts get 5 years in jail).

Baratov was not connected to the Podesta email gaffe.

Baratov owned 81 domain names and provided an impressive array of “services” at very low prices:

Quality Mail hacking to order, without changing the password

    • 100% confidentiality
    • No pre-payment required
    • The lowest prices on the market
    • $60 per password [i.e., per hacked email account]
    • $25 insurance [sic!]
    • $25 for the full account copy, including all emails and folders
    • $200 for instruction in mail hacking (step-by-step)
    • Orders accepted for gmail.com and yahoo.com, among others

Contact  infotech-team@bigmir.net

Bigmir.net is a Ukrainian provider. The list of services and prices in Russian was saved in 2014.

On 2017-03-15 the DOJ announced an indictment: “U.S. Charges Russian FSB Officers and Their Criminal Conspirators for Hacking Yahoo and Millions of Email Accounts. FSB Officers Protected, Directed, Facilitated and Paid Criminal Hackers.

Buried inside of the document was the usual admission: “An indictment is merely an accusation, and a defendant is presumed innocent unless proven guilty in a court of law.” It was the most important one, because very few allegations in the indictment made it to the verdict. A mountain gave birth to a molehill. I have highlighted some of the most offensive, demented, and ridiculous statements from the press release:

The defendants used unauthorized access to Yahoo’s systems to steal information from about at least 500 million Yahoo accounts …

The charges were announced by Attorney General Jeff Sessions of the U.S. Department of Justice, Director James Comey of the FBI, Acting Assistant Attorney General for National Security Mary McCord, U.S. Attorney Brian Stretch for the Northern District of California and Executive Assistant Director Paul Abbate of the FBI’s Criminal, Cyber, Response and Services Branch.

Hadn’t Jeff Sessions recused himself from investigating “Russian interference”? Just kidding — I know that investigating Russian interference was a code phrase for investigating Trump.

“Cyber crime poses a significant threat to our nation’s security and prosperity, and this is one of the largest data breaches in history,” said Attorney General Sessions. “But thanks to the tireless efforts of U.S. prosecutors and investigators, as well as our Canadian partners, today we have identified four individuals, including two Russian FSB officers, responsible for unauthorized access to millions of users’ accounts. The United States will vigorously investigate and prosecute the people behind such attacks to the fullest extent of the law.”

“Today we continue to pierce the veil of anonymity surrounding cyber crimes,” said Director Comey. “We are shrinking the world to ensure that cyber criminals think twice before targeting U.S. persons and interests.”

Comey shrinking the world — what a picture!

The criminal conduct at issue, carried out and otherwise facilitated by officers from an FSB unit that serves as the FBI’s point of contact in Moscow on cybercrime matters, is beyond the pale,” said Acting Assistant Attorney General McCord. “Once again, the Department and the FBI have demonstrated that hackers around the world can and will be exposed and held accountable. “

Generally, hackers around the world cannot be exposed, much less brought to justice. This indictment and consequent prosecution have demonstrated just that. Preventing data loss due to hackers and insiders should be stressed with defensive measures. Security should have been the top priority. But the Obama administration steered the internet development around the Google business model, and this mentality remains. But this is another topic.

[cont.] State actors may be using common criminals to access the data they want, but the indictment shows that our companies do not have to stand alone against this threat. We commend Yahoo and Google for their sustained and invaluable cooperation in the investigation aimed at obtaining justice for, and protecting the privacy of their users.

Yes, he commended Yahoo for protecting the privacy of its users — after Yahoo allowed a compromise of half a billion to a billion of users’ accounts! This statement also indirectly acknowledged that the FBI had failed to properly investigate Yahoo for its negligence in securing users’ data.

A few months later, Canadian National Post brought a more balanced view of the case:

Emails between Baratov and his alleged contact in the Russian intelligence service show he was only allegedly hired to hack into 80 accounts, and only allegedly succeeded in accessing seven, [Baratov’s attorney] Pillay said.

Hacking into several individual accounts is “fundamentally different” from breaching Yahoo’s security system and gaining access to data from nearly half a billion accounts, Pillay argued.

“There’s no evidence that Mr. Baratov knew who (the person who hired him, Dmitry) Dokuchaev was or that he was FSB,” Pillay said. He also noted that Dokuchaev only allegedly transferred $104 into Baratov’s PayPal account. $104 is not a lot of money for his trouble. “If the applicant knew he was dealing with a government official from another country, $104 is not a lot of money for his trouble,” Pillay said.

But Crown Attorney Heather Graham said that money is only what was allegedly transferred to Baratov’s PayPal accounts, suggesting further funds could have been sent to other accounts American investigators have not been able to access.

Further funds could have been sent” but “the tireless efforts of U.S. prosecutors and investigators, as well as our Canadian partners” should have found them and brought them as evidence to the trial. Anyway, the successful breach of seven accounts would bring payment to somewhere between $420 and $770, according to the price list — about 0.1% of what Clinton received for a single speech in Moscow.

On 2017-11-28  the DOJ issued a press release with another bombshell headline: “Canadian Hacker Who Conspired With and Aided Russian FSB Officers Pleads Guilty. Russian Officers Tasked Prolific Hacker-for-Hire to Target Webmail Accounts.

Closer reading has shown something entirely different. The hacker Karim Baratov pleaded guilty only to spear-phishing. The allegation that he had taken part in the Yahoo data mega-leak was dropped. His allegedly Russian co-defendants remained in Russia and probably didn’t bother to answer allegations. Another black eye for the DOJ: “co-defendant” Alexsey Belan, listed on the Wanted by the FBI poster as Latvian, became Russian in the indictment.

As part of his plea agreement, Baratov not only admitted to agreeing and attempting to hack at least 80 webmail accounts on behalf of one of his FSB co-conspirators, but also to hacking more than 11,000 webmail accounts in total from in or around 2010 until his March 2017 arrest by Canadian authorities.  Baratov advertised his services through a network of primarily Russian-language hacker-for-hire web pages hosted on servers around the world. He admitted that he generally spearphished his victims, sending them emails from accounts he established to appear to belong to the webmail provider at which the victim’s account was hosted (such as Google or Yandex).  Baratov’s spearphishing emails tricked victims into (i) visiting web pages he constructed to appear legitimate, as though they belonged to the victims’ webmail providers and (ii) entering their account credentials into those web pages.

But neither the verdict in the case nor common sense stood in the way of the DOJ when it was grandstanding about the alleged Russian cyber-threat:

“The illegal hacking of private communications is a global problem … These threats are even more insidious when cyber criminals such as Baratov are employed by foreign government agencies acting outside the rule of law,” said U.S. Attorney Stretch.

This press release follows the same pattern as what Mueller charges: Americans (a Canadian in this case) plead out or are found guilty of something not linked to Russian intelligence; the DOJ accuses Russian citizens of being FSB officers or spying for Russia with full knowledge that they would not stand trial in the US. Even if the the individual for whom Baratov attempted to breach 80 accounts were an FSB officer, that comprises less than 0.1% of Baratov’s business, and does not establish a real link.

via Dealing with the Con in Consensus

https://ift.tt/2Hw6Nin

March 13, 2019 at 05:49PM

Extreme Livestock warning for most of North Dakota

“Extreme conditions are expected to prevail in the 6 to 18 hour range.”

“The National Weather Service has issued a “Cold Advisory for Newborn Livestock” (CANL) for portions of south-central North Dakota today, with the most severe impact coming between the next 6 and 18 hours.”

https://www.kxnet.com/news/bismarck-news/weather-service-newborn-livestock-at-risk-with-approaching-storm/1845791762?utm_medium=social&utm_source=facebook_KX_News&fbclid=IwAR3vbEZ8a0tbsf5HFjXLGkjDGl-C2GTyACz1BS9kYwIT3SqliqGaGvcmTN8

Thanks to Don Wilkening for this link

The post Extreme Livestock warning for most of North Dakota appeared first on Ice Age Now.

via Ice Age Now

https://ift.tt/2TDDBNN

March 13, 2019 at 05:45PM