Hilarious: You can tell surveillance cameras are implanted into mannequin heads when they wear… sunglasses!

Hilarious: You can tell surveillance cameras are implanted into mannequin heads when they wear… sunglasses!

Good old Sascha Lobo über was die Zukunft bringt: Die gesellschaftlichen Auswirkungen von umfassender Quantifizierung und vollautomatischer Überwachung aller Lebensbereiche. (in German)
Interesting in this context: Nassim Nicholas Taleb’s book The Black Swan: The Impact of the Highly Improbable, in our library now. No, not the Natalie Portman vehicle. About how humans can’t handle uncertainty and randomness. Statistically impossible events shape our lives. See Black Swan Theory.
All the cameras on the Curiosity probe:
http://mars.jpl.nasa.gov/msl/multimedia/interactives/learncuriosity/index.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Curiosity_rover
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mars_Science_Laboratory


Frank Rieger about the look of tomorrow’s wars (in German), and an interview with Daniel Suarez, author of „Kill Decision“.
Talking points & new terms learnt today:
Plus: Screenshots from Spiegel Online today:




News about your own personal trojan horse in your pocket. Whether on iOS or Android, Windows Mobile or Symbian, big data knows what you do (and where you are and why). But this is new, although it has been suspected for a while: Government spyware on mobile phones.
The fun part is that they pretend not to have sold their suppression-ware to Bahrain. No, it has been stolen by hackers! That’s a security company you can trust.
1.
Kluger Artikel von Frank Rieger, einem der Sprecher des Chaos Computer Clubs.
Er versucht, eine Lösung zu finden zum Problem der immer weiterführenden Automatisierung und damit einher gehenden Selbst-Abschaffung der menschlichen Arbeitskräfte.
2.
Eben Moglen: Time To Apply The First Law Of Robotics To Our Smartphones
auf deutsch: Eben Moglen findet, wir sollten mal Asimovs Robotergesetze umsetzen.
Can someone translate please? We should give a seminar about this.