Request Your Right to Travel Records from the TSA

Ann Harrison:

In direct violation of the Privacy Act, TSA has collected over 100 million records from commercial data providers to test Secure Flight. If your records are contained in this database, you have a right to obtain them. What would happen if thousands of people requested their TSA travel records every day?

You can request your travel and commercial records under the Privacy Act, but you better do it before TSA destroys the information. TSA spokeswoman Deirdre O’Sullivan told Wired News that the TSA has only destroyed some passenger name records (PNR) from airlines and travel agents, but not information TSA gathered from commercial data bases. You can request both your PNR and commercial data with a Privacy Act request.

Businesses Fight Wisconsin’s “Unlimited” Jury Awards

JR Ross:

Businesses are preparing to launch a $2 million campaign to fight a series of state Supreme Court rulings they fear are making Wisconsin an easier place to sue doctors and manufacturers.

They want lawmakers to counter some of the rulings with legislation, and, they say, they want to educate voters on what they calls one justice’s “votes in support of frivolous lawsuits.”

Wisconsin implemented several laws in the mid-1990s in an attempt to limit jury awards for such non-economic damages as pain and suffering in malpractice and liability cases.

But last month, the state Supreme Court threw out the limits on medical malpractice awards. The next day, it cleared the way for a Milwaukee teen to sue several makers of a lead paint pigment his attorneys claim made him mentally retarded – even though they can’t prove the manufactures had any ties to the paint that may have sickened him.

Pocan Bill Proposes Paper Trail for Electronic Voting

Anita Weier:

Legislators from both political parties have authored a bill that would require that electronic voting machines in Wisconsin produce a paper ballot that could be reviewed by the voter and that would be kept in case a recount is needed.
Rep. Mark Pocan, D-Madison, Rep. Steve Freese, R-Dodgeville, and Sen. Jeff Plale, D-South Milwaukee, are circulating the bill among fellow legislators in the hope of obtaining co-sponsors.

Madison City Budget: Lisa Does the Math

Lisa S takes a look at the local Police Department’s budget communications vis a vis a 3% reduction (is this an actual reducation or a reducation in the increase?):

Personnel salaries and related expenses make up about 89% of the police department’s operating budget. The remaining 11% of the operating budget consists of minor objects and capital assets. Apparently, Chief Wray was either unable or unwilling to find any significant cuts within this other 11% of the budget.

Another interesting item in the 2005 budget is $1.6 million worth of overtime pay. When asked about the possibility of cutting overtime, one alderperson explained that this expense is hard to change because it is part of the negotiated union contracts. Chief Wray shares this sentiment

Energy Bill Offers Tax Breaks

Homa Zaryouni:

After five years of trying, Congress is expected to clear an energy bill this week that provides a range of incentives for consumers to rein in energy use.
Here’s how the energy bill could affect what we buy:
• Incentives to buy fuel-efficient appliances
• Incentives to buy hybrid vehicles
• The extension of daylight-saving time
• Expanded use of ethanol as a gasoline additive
• Reliability standards for power grid (aimed at preventing blackouts)
• Incentives for installing solar power at home

Press Release: “Senator Kohl Confronts Elderly Identity Theft and Fraud”

Senator Kohl issued a press release Wednesday discussing his Senate Special Committee on Aging’s (Kohl chairs this committee) hearing on identity theft and consumer fraud. Senator Kohl:

“Preying on the elderly is certainly nothing new”, said Kohl, “but in a day and age where many seniors are not technologically savvy, con artists have an easier time collecting personal information and using it to swindle a person out of their life savings.”

Ironically, Senator Kohl’s support of the recent National ID Act will simply make this problem worse, much worse. Contact Senator Kohl here. Senator Feingold also supported the National ID Act.

Is Your Printer Spying on You?

Electronic Frontier Foundation:

Imagine that every time you printed a document, it automatically included a secret code that could be used to identify the printer — and potentially, the person who used it. Sounds like something from an episode of “Alias,” right?

Unfortunately, the scenario isn’t fictional. In an effort to identify counterfeiters, the US government has succeeded in persuading some color laser printer manufacturers to encode each page with identifying information. That means that without your knowledge or consent, an act you assume is private could become public. A communication tool you’re using in everyday life could become a tool for government surveillance. And what’s worse, there are no laws to prevent abuse.

Payola is Pervasive

Barry Ritholtz:


“This is not a pretty picture; what we see is that payola is pervasive,” Mr. Spitzer said, using a term from the radio scandals of the 1950’s in describing e-mail messages and corporate documents that his office obtained during a yearlong investigation. “It is omnipresent. It is driving the industry and it is wrong.”

The Attorney General’s findings alleges that the illegal payoffs for airplay were designed to manipulate record charts, generate consumer interest in records and increase sales:

“Instead of airing music based on the quality, artistic competition, aesthetic judgments or other judgments, radio stations are airing music because they are paid to do so in a way that hasn’t been disclosed to the public,” Spitzer said at a press briefing.

An alternative? I think we’ll see more of this.