News in the Category "Type"

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Liars & Outliers: A Book Review

  • Richard Frisch
  • RHFtech Write on Tech
  • September 12, 2012

Anthropology was one of my college majors. I preferred physical to cultural anthropology. The history of primates, as told by fragments of bones or teeth, was more interesting to me than was the glue that held societies together. I preferred learning about Zinjanthropus boisei to reading about the customs of the Yanamami people of the Amazon rainforest or the !Kung bushmen of the Kalahari Desert.

I was unenthusiastic about cultural anthropology until I read the monograph, Deciphering a Meal, by the anthropologist Mary Douglas. The article dissected meal rituals and their purposes. She looked at how being invited over for drinks meant something different than sharing leftovers at the kitchen table. There is a lengthy discussion about kosher rituals. The article had a profound effect on my thinking, particularly about human behavior…

Video: Keynote Guests discuss Technology Evolution Preparedness & Risk Management

  • HP Protect 2012
  • September 10, 2012

Paul Muller (@xthestreams), Chief Evangelist, HP Software speaks with two of the HP Protect 2012 keynote speakers about security and risk management.

Paul speaks with Bruce Schneier, Security Technologist – Author of Liars and Outliers – How societies can use security to enable the trust the need to survive. Paul and Bruce discuss:
– How can security technologists get in front of the security risks resulting from new technologies and general evolutions?
– The importance of swift reaction to inevitable breaches and exploitation tactics.
– Thinking about security in the terms of decision cycles to best anticipate and mitigate risk…

Layers of Security

  • Privacy PC
  • September 5, 2012

Bruce Schneier, the well-known American cryptographer and security specialist, gives an interview to Radio New Zealand’s Bryan Crump during his visit to the country, discussing real-world security issues and whether anti-terror measures done by the authorities worldwide are as effective as expected.

(Bryan Crump):—Bruce Schneier is a security specialist who seems to be trying to talk himself out of a job. His point is a lot of what we do to protect ourselves against terrorism is pointless. The best weapons against terror are, in his opinion, good intelligence and refusing to be terrorized. Bruce is based in the United States of America, was in New Zealand for a conference on identity and identity theft. Recently I spoke to him while he was here and began by asking what attracted him to this seemingly dry topic of airport X-rays baggage checks and the like…

Liars and Outliers: Enabling the Trust that Society Needs to Thrive

  • Paul Ekblom
  • Criminal Law and Criminal Justice Book Review
  • September 2012

Some years ago, I participated in a meeting of academic members and associates of the then recently-founded Jill Dando Institute of Crime Science at University College London (UCL). The aim was to define what exactly was meant by ‘crime science’, a new term challenging conventional criminology. In attendance was one of the originators of the term and the Institute, Professor Ron Clarke of Rutgers.

The consensus definition quickly centered on an interest in the near or proximal causes of criminal events such as opportunities and provocations, rather than traditional concerns with criminality and even more remote societal causes; a readiness to draw on evidence, theory and scientific method; an interest in multidisciplinary applications of other sciences ranging from physics to microbiology; and a practical focus on reducing risks of crime. Then I posed a seemingly straightforward question: surely, to be fully scientific, we need a scientific definition of crime itself? Otherwise, at the heart of crime science is a mushy core of”we all know what crime means…don’t we?”…

You Can’t Trust Airport Security

But don't worry: It has always been easy to cheat, steal or kill, and few people do

  • Jordan Ellenberg
  • The Wall Street Journal
  • August 31, 2012

Excerpt

When the plumber knocks at your door, why do you let him in? He’s probably bigger and stronger than you. And he has a wrench. He could easily kill you and steal your money and your stuff, which would certainly be a better deal for him than receiving a moderate payment and having to fix your toilet.

But you trust that he won’t; and trust, that mysterious and invaluable substance, is the subject of Bruce Schneier’s ambitious “Liars and Outliers: Enabling the Trust That Society Needs to Survive,” which starts with the homely parable of the plumber and builds into a treatise on every aspect of trust, from marital fidelity to transnational terrorism…

Trust: Ill-Advised in a Digital Age

  • Somini Sengupta
  • The New York Times
  • August 11, 2012

Las Vegas

Bruce Schneier ordered a Coke, no ice, at the Rio casino on a Saturday afternoon. I ordered Diet Coke, also no ice, and handed the bartender an American Express card. He said he needed to see proof of identity. Credit cards are often stolen around here, and eight casino workers had recently been fired for not demanding ID, he quietly explained. The bartender wanted to keep his job.

Mr. Schneier, 49, is a student of interactions like this, offline and on. He is a cryptographer, blogger and iconoclast in the world of computer security, and his latest subject of inquiry is trust: how it is cultivated, destroyed and tweaked in the digital age…

Security Tips from Bruce Schneier

  • Sean Michael Kerner
  • eSecurity Planet
  • August 8, 2012

Bruce Schneier knows a thing or two about security. The author of multiple books on cryptography, Schneier is widely considered to be an expert on the subject of encryption as well as the broader topic of information security. So we jumped at the opportunity to sit down with him for an in-depth interview at the Black Hat 2012 conference in late July. Here are some of the highlights of what he had to say.

The State of Encryption: “Not that great, and getting worse”

Asked to share his view of the state of encryption in this new age of cloud computing, Schneier says: “It’s not that great, and it’s getting worse.”…

Video: Bruce Schneier on the State of Encryption Today

  • InternetNewsBlog
  • August 7, 2012

Bruce Schneier talks to Sean Michael Kerner about what’s wrong with encryption today and provides insight into what the best browser and operating system to use might be.

Watch the Video on YouTube

Video: Bruce Schneier Talks about the Morality of Security

  • InternetNews
  • August 2, 2012

Bruce Schneier gives us his views on why morality might well be the key ingredient for better Internet security.

Watch the Video on YouTube

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Sidebar photo of Bruce Schneier by Joe MacInnis.