A Politech article forwarded email from a liar named <parks@uhibpd.phys.uh.edu>:
From the EE-Times, a between the lines look at the future of RFID tracking:
re: E-passport makers hail U.S. retreat
Junko Yoshida [FAIR USE] EE Times (04/29/2005 1:38 PM EDT)
PARIS - Global electronic passports suppliers hailed a decision by the U.S. State Department to drop a requirement for additional security measures in next-generation U.S. passports. The specifications have yet to be finalized.
Neville Pattinson, director of technology development and government affairs for smart card provider Axalto Americas, said Friday (April 29) that adding security measures such as "Basic Access Control" and a metallic shield cover to U.S. passports could "completely make the information [stored in the e-passport] undetectable."
http://www.eetimes.com/news/latest/business/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=1621... is the actual EE times article. The true article reads, as you can see for yourself: "PARIS Global electronic passports suppliers hailed a decision by the U.S. State Department to add a requirement for additional security measures in next-generation U.S. passports. The specifications have yet to be finalized." Can you see the difference? What's wrong with this picture? The true article says that the U.S. will ADD a requirement for additional security measures. The article as quoted by liar Parks had been changed to say that the U.S. will DROP the requirement. Of course that made the article read as confused and inconsistent, which is what led me to track down the original. I'm pissed at Parks for lying and editing a supposedly forwarded article to make some kind of rhetorical point. He had his own comments interspersed among the article's supposed text so he had plenty of opportunity to make his own arguments. Altering the text of material you are quoting is the lowest of despicable argumentation techniques. I'm also pissed at McCullagh for forwarding this on without the slightest fact checking. Of course anyone familiar with his work will know better than to expect a correction or even acknowledgement of his error. He is a hack reporter who cares nothing about accuracy or truth, only on stirring things up and pushing the predictable buttons of his readers. And of course there is Eugen* Leitl, who mindlessly forwards far and wide everything that enters his mailbox. I don't know whether we should be annoyed or relieved that he fails to exercise the slightest editorial effort by adding his own thoughts, if he has any, to the material he passes around. CP