Light/Breezes

Light/Breezes
SUNRISE AT DEATH VALLEY-Photo by Tom Cochrun

Monday, June 24, 2013

CAN IT BE TURNED BACK?

WE ARE SUFFERING SELF INFLICTED WOUNDS
     It is as though we've crossed a "Rubicon" and now worry about the consequences. Big Data, Surveillance, Algorithmic Analysis, NSA, etc, etc.
     Now FaceBook confirms that up to six million users' personal data, even that which is not public, has been seen and or gathered by third parties.  Many have argued those who post so much personal information willingly have themselves to blame when that data is hijacked, hacked, sold or used to either bug or defraud you.
     A couple of experts are now saying that analyzing big data needs to be more effectively used by federal authorities.  They contend the alleged Boston bombers history of viewing violent or terrorist prone on-line videos should have led to an interdiction before they acted out what they were thinking.  Thought police? 
     Being a First Amendment advocate, I've been posting about this crunch since I entered the blogosphere.
      Here's an earlier set of thoughts, dealing with this idea of thought police. The Eli Pariser video should be must viewing for anyone who spends anytime in cyberspace.
      The point is our privacy suffers, by our own hand, by commercial enterprises, by government agencies and by information pirates. It is just out there and all to easy to overlook or put out of mind.  But like most things,it grows.  What can, what should we do about it?


Jon Stewart
The Diplomat
     Those of you who appreciate the satire of Jon Stewart
know he is off this summer, directing a film in the Middle East.  Well, he's made an interesting appearance.

See you down the trail.

Friday, June 21, 2013

THE WEEKENDER-SUN FUN AND SUMMER

SUN TIME
     Apropos this first day of summer 2013.
Sun Sizes
 Imagine the sun flowers basking in that super star!
FREE JOY
        A red letter day indeed for our youngest cat, Miss Joy.
  She's a type of "mutt," of a generous mix of bloodlines, small, vocal, a bit timid but adorable and can manifest a great contented purr.  However she has been confined to the cone as she heals from a throat tear inflicted by a large and menacing neighbor cat.
        This was her sad gulag state the last few days.
     Today the cone is gone as she continues to mend.
She seems quite pleased, though she had developed an ability to scratch at that cone with a drummers precision.
      See you down the trail.

Wednesday, June 19, 2013

AS GOOD AS IT GETS

YOSEMITE
A MATTER OF VIEW
     With vacation travel season upon us and the visit of friends, the magnetic draw of Yosemite is building.





     See you down the trail.

Monday, June 17, 2013

PEACE, LOVE & DIRT and HOW TO USE THE NSA DATA

CYBER BOMB THE THIEVES
   Since they've got the data, why not create an algorithmic analysis to interdict and then shut down all of those phishers, scammers, identify thieves and that Kenyan who wants to give you 1.3 million dollars.
   While rounding up and tracking terrorists, the NSA and FBI should find these internet hustlers who steal, extort and are at their best, annoying. Then let the CIA or Cyber Command send a counterstrike that evaporates their illicit program and network, melts their computers and shocks the scammers into the next county. Then maybe Seal Team 6 can capture them and paint a red bulls eye on their forehead.
   Well, at least the first part of that eh?!
peace, love & dirt
LIVE OAK 25
   25 years of Father's Day Weekends at Live Oak Music Festival.

   People who came first as children are now volunteers
of the KCBX event that is quintessential California.
 Music, sun, friends and good vibes under the beautiful
oaks near Lake Cachuma.

 The logo quilt was a hot item in the silent auction.

    Entertainment and grins and just doing your thing.





   Owing to California's wine culture, there are amenities the old festivals may not have had.
   I watched as one of the performing musicians tuned and played the first guitar in the left rack.  She made it sound great.  She ended by smiling and saying, "this thing would make me crazy."



      Later, another of the players had R2D2 sounding pretty good. It would have rocked the Star Wars cantina.
      Those live oaks shelter a lot of great memories and have heard some extraordinary music.
 and an occasional nap.
      Some chair, huh?
      See you down the trail.

Wednesday, June 12, 2013

FREEDOM OR SECURITY-TALK IS NEEDED-Dangerous or Otherwise

FEELING MANIPULATED?
or as though someones listening in?

   The big yap yap now over the NSA disclosures at least
has people talking.
     And there is a lot of that going around.(Friend and reader Beverly noted, the bovine above is not a bull. Indeed, as a careful look will inform you. But just sort of go with it)  
      A question is, How do we want it?  What are the boundaries?
      Are we willing to give up liberty to feel safe? The conversation is needed and all of us, from voters to the intelligence community, need to weigh in. 
      I'm hung up on a couple of points.  Why is so much of our top clearance, security and intelligence work being done by private contractors? When and how did we decide to job it out and for who's benefit?  We are now paying private sources more money to do work that should be the exclusive franchise of US Government employees.
      Eisenhower had it right about the "military-industrial complex."  The modern codicil is "intelligence-industrial."  So a high school drop out, army wash out, can get hired by the CIA and get clearance and then quit only to be hired by a private contractor, paid reportedly a $ quarter million a year and have his ticket punched so he can purloin some of our most secret and sensitive information. Yea, that's intelligent isn't it!  Where are the adults?
      It's not an easy riddle. Americans voluntarily give up more private and specific data to social media, banks, in online purchases and e-mail than what the NSA has gathered in bundles. Private business knows more about you than do the spooks and some in the intelligence community  can't figure why that is, or why the current flap.
      Intelligence and security people reason they've been tasked with keeping us safe from harm and in their mind they cannot have too much information. But in the old days raw and irrelevant data got purged.  Now files are kept forever. Is that right?  It's another choice we have to make.
      The panel of Judges who guide the intelligence community in their acquisition of data also need to be heard from. It would be good for the Republic to hear the mind set and thinking of those who frame these vitally important considerations.
      And a word about Snowden as a leaker.  As a one time investigative reporter I could bore you with countless details about how a whistle blower or leaker helped get information to the public. In my experience there were many instances where the public good was served.
     Examples-an elementary school being built over a "forgotten" hazardous material dump, a grand jury being used to punish political enemies, mental patients being poisoned by inept or non existent medical supervision in over or wrong medication, Ku Klux Klansmen working on a city payroll as a result of extortion, managers of public housing selling material meant to improve housing projects out of the back door and profiting huge sums, a KGB officer trying to infiltrate a public office holder's staff, security breaches where some of this nation's most deadly nerve agent is stored, toxic poison leaking into a public water resource.
      I would not have been able to get that information onto the public agenda, had it not been for state, city and federal employees getting information to me-data, records, documents that had been buried, hidden, over looked, forgotten or in some cases "destroyed." 
      In my own little footnotes to history, our work prompted investigations, prosecutions, regulations, new statutes, and informed conversations. 
      We all would be well served by a robust conversation now about privacy, safety, expectations, propriety, and who should be minding our secrets.
       There's a great thought, attributed to both Benjamin Franklin and Thomas Jefferson.  I'm comfortable with quoting them both-
       "Those who surrender freedom for security will not have, nor do they deserve, either!"

   See you down the trail.

Monday, June 10, 2013

TREASURES DESTROYED & THE REAL DEAL

IDIOTS OF THE PERNICIOUS SORT
    A New York Times piece by Felicity Barringer got my blood boiling.  She detailed the work of vandals in National Parks, Monuments and other priceless settings. Perhaps before we knew better we carved our initials in a tree or on an old log. While it may have been a bit destructive, it is nothing like the senseless or stupid desecration of wilderness done by spray painting or cutting, or malicious damage. Shame on the idiots and their friends or family who condone it.  
      Warning!  If I see you up to this pernicious behavior, you will be confronted.  A couple of years ago, in the height of fire season, I saw an Hawaiian shirt bedecked German tourist wandering off the path, despite warning signs, collecting pine cones, despite prohibition warnings, his hands and arms full while a cigarette dangled from his lip. Though I speak no German, he understood my castigation, the look on his face revealed that.  Impishly I smile a bit about that fool's wandering from the path in his shorts and flip flops as he waded through a healthy patch of poison oak!
THE REAL DEAL IN MORRO BAY
     Authentic California fishing village scenes still play out in Morro Bay.
   Fewer boats operate out of the town, landmarked by the Morro Rock, than when we first wandered into the water front for a supply of fresh sea food many years ago.


  But it is still an operating fishing port and I'm fascinated by the work and activity there.

  Tourists who flock to the embarcadero as well as locals have some great choices for fresh sea food and dining. Giovanni's and Tognazzini's are both sure bets.

   On an ancient trip up the coast, when we were still mid-westerners, I thought the "stacks" at the power plant were a blight on the sea front.  Now that we've been out here for several years, we've adopted the attitude of most of the locals and natives, they are part of the land and sea scape-a kind of marker on the coast.
  See you down the trail.

Friday, June 7, 2013

THE WEEKENDER-WILD

A TALE OF TWO WILDS
     A couple of viewing experiences for you this weekend, both occurring just a couple of hours from each other.
     One for meditation, the other for motivation, sort of.
the exquisite peace of Big Sur

the wildest ride ever in San Francisco
       have great weekend.  See you down the trail.