From CNN:
CIA Director John
Brennan apologized to the Senate Intelligence Committee today and admitted the
agency spied on computers used by its staffers who prepared an investigation of
the controversial post-9/11 CIA interrogation and detention program.
The episode was the subject of an unusual public dispute between the panel and
the spy agency over access to classified information.
The CIA had accused the committee staffers of getting access to internal agency
documents and of improperly handling classified material.
The Justice Department looked into it at the request of the CIA and decided
there wasn't enough evidence of a crime to warrant further investigation.
But the CIA's inspector general, a watchdog, found that some agency employees
"acted in a manner inconsistent with the common understanding"
reached between the intelligence panel and the CIA in 2009 regarding access to
information, the CIA said in a statement.
Thursday, July 31, 2014
Thursday, July 24, 2014
Verizon on Netflix: We're not the problem. Oh alright, it is us
Techdirt documents the back and forth where:
1. Netflix describes how Verizon is at fault
2. Verizon lays out in astonishing detail how they're not the problem

3. Level 3 Wades in and uses their data to show that, yes they are
4. And Verizon admits yes, indeed, it's their fault
While I haven't read everything, unfortunately I think it's not really Verizon's fault - It's that video has broken the Internet.
When the (censored) big ISP's claim "up to XX Mb/sec", they're not lying - they're leaving out an important point "depending on availability".
Their claimed speed doesn't hold up if everyone wants it at the same time, and certainly not going to the same site, and it wasn't designed for HD video for all of them.
Like I've always said. If everyone on the planet wants video at the same time, we need a new internet.
Take that, cord cutters!
1. Netflix describes how Verizon is at fault
2. Verizon lays out in astonishing detail how they're not the problem
3. Level 3 Wades in and uses their data to show that, yes they are
4. And Verizon admits yes, indeed, it's their fault
While I haven't read everything, unfortunately I think it's not really Verizon's fault - It's that video has broken the Internet.
When the (censored) big ISP's claim "up to XX Mb/sec", they're not lying - they're leaving out an important point "depending on availability".
Their claimed speed doesn't hold up if everyone wants it at the same time, and certainly not going to the same site, and it wasn't designed for HD video for all of them.
Like I've always said. If everyone on the planet wants video at the same time, we need a new internet.
Take that, cord cutters!
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