Monthly Archive for October, 2005

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Blackout shows Net’s fragility

By John Borland – CNET
Story last modified Thu Oct 06 14:15:00 PDT 2005

Since early Wednesday, Phil Bradham, the network engineer at Boston’s Museum of Fine Arts, has been cut off from the parts of the Internet he needs the most.

He can’t reach his Web hosting company to update his site. Critical e-mails aren’t going through, and some aren’t reaching him. He can’t get to some important sites on the Net, such as the popular Wikipedia encyclopedia.

The source of Bradham’s difficulties is a feud between two big backbone Internet companies–the long-haul networks that most consumers and even most businesses ordinarily have little to do with. One of these companies, Level 3 Communications, has cut off direct communications with rival Cogent Communications, causing many of each company’s customers to lose access to potentially significant swatches of the Net.

“We’ve been working with both (companies), but neither one will do anything until the other one budges,” said Bradham. “It’s very frustrating that two top companies would try to resolve this with a standoff like this.”

In theory, this kind of blackout is precisely the kind of problem the Internet was designed to withstand. The complicated, interlocking nature of networks means that data traffic is supposed to be able to find an alternate route to its destination, even if a critical link is broken.

In practice, obscure contract disputes between the big network companies can make all these redundancies moot.

At issue is a type of network connection called “peering.” Most of the biggest network companies, such as AT&T, Sprint and MCI, as well as companies including Cogent and Level 3, strike “peering agreements” in which they agree to establish direct connections between their networks.

That means that when a Cogent customer wants to visit a Web site hosted by Level 3, the data can take a short, fast path, instead of winding its way around the broader Internet.

Typically, peering agreements are made without any money changing hands, since each company expects to hand off a roughly comparable amount of traffic. Smaller network companies buy what are called “transit” agreements with larger companies, in order to hand off their customers’ traffic to the big networks.

Peering gone wrong

These collegial peering relationships among big companies allow traffic to flow efficiently across the Net without most customers knowing anything about the under-the-hood relationships. But when these relationships go sour, the feuding parties’ lack of flexibility can result in blackouts like the one that occurred this week.

In this case, Level 3 says that it believes it is substantially larger than its rival, and told Cogent as long as 90 days ago that it was planning to sever the direct connection between the two networks. The connection could be re-established if Cogent were to pay Level 3 access fees for use of its network, the company says.

For its part, Cogent contends that it is similar in size to Level 3, and that it makes no sense to pay for the kind of peering relationship that it maintains with many other companies. Cogent is offering any Level 3 user who can’t get to Cogent sites free Internet service for a year, in an attempt to attract its rival’s customers.

“Our goal is to have this problem go away, whether through Level 3 reconsidering, or their customers coming to us,” said Dave Schaeffer, chief executive officer of Cogent.

As of mid-Tuesday, both sides said they were committed to their position, showing no willingness to budge, despite complaints from customers on both sides around the Net that they can’t reach Web sites or can’t send e-mail to some addresses or receive it from others. This means that there is no immediate fix ahead, unless customers (or their ISPs) find an alternative or auxiliary network provider.

The scale of the problem

It’s impossible to say precisely how many people are affected. Many customers of the two companies, and customers of the ISPs

that use one of the networks, buy connections from several providers simultaneously to avoid outages of this kind.

However, many businesses, individuals and even some ISPs have so-called single-homed network connections, which means they depend on a single provider to reach the Internet. (Think of this as a town with a single road leading in and out, instead of several different highways.)

These single-connection customers are the ones hardest hit by Level 3′s decision. Because Level 3 and Cogent each uses direct connections to other networks to exchange traffic–rather than paying a third party to provide redundant or backup transmission service–there is no alternate route for data from one network to reach the other.

The result: blackouts such as those Bradham and other customers are seeing.

According to Cogent, between 5 percent and 10 percent of its customers were affected. Level 3 did not provide an estimate. Because some of those customers could be ISPs with thousands or hundreds of thousands of their own customers, the number of people affected could range into the millions.

CNET News.com readers have reported problems with businesses and home connections, however.

William Steele, a senior network engineer for Syncro Services, said his company noticed one such problem Wednesday morning.

“There are some people I can’t send an e-mail to,” Steele said. “At home I have Road Runner as an ISP, and wasn’t even able to remotely connect in order to manage our servers.”

A spokesman for Time Warner Cable confirmed that many of the company’s Road Runner cable modem customers would be affected.

“That means some sites they might normally visit are not available to them right now,” the company said in a statement. “We are working to find alternate pathways so our customers can be reconnected with these Web sites as soon as possible.”

In the past, network outages stemming from this kind of private contract dispute have prompted some to call for regulatory oversight, or at least legal action.

In 2001, a similar contract dispute led Cable & Wireless to cut off its connection to PSINet, one of the oldest Net backbone companies. After outcries by customers, the connection was restored several days later, however.

Even Cogent says it prefers to handle this kind of problem without government getting involved.

“We don’t think there should be any involvement in terms of regulatory oversight,” Cogent spokesman Jeff Henriksen said. “These are individual contracts based on specific needs of individual providers.”

As the outage stretches on, however, it highlights fragility in what seems like a deeply interconnected Net. Many people remain unaware of the problem, and it can be expensive for users to address it.

“I have been pushing for years to have a redundant ISP for our traffic,” Bradham said. “But we’re a nonprofit. We don’t have the money available to do that.”

©1995-2005 CNET Networks, Inc.

Ohh, there it is…

A new track to follow: Katrina/Rita money

Hurricane victims keeled over in the Houston heat Wednesday while FEMA, once again caught off-guard, kept them waiting in line. It’s so much cooler to be a Bush administration insider who can shove to the front of the line for the $200 billion Congress may provide in disaster aid.

As in Iraq, Halliburton — which Vice President Cheney once ran — is one of the most aggressive. The Washington Post reports that Halliburton, which already is benefiting from a $500 million contract to remove debris, sponsored a Katrina Reconstruction Summit hosted by Sen. Mel Martinez, R-Fla., to explore “opportunities for private-sector involvement.”

Iraq is a model — but of what not to do. There, Halliburton is accused of rampant overbilling and of poor work on such crucial projects as restoring Iraq’s oil industry, for which the company has received more than $10 billion as part of a five-year, no-bid contract. Oversight of U.S. spending in Iraq has been dismal to nonexistent. Billions of dollars are unaccounted for.

The Bush administration might be incapable of doing things any other way. The New York Times reported that 80 percent of the first $1.5 billion in aid after Hurricane Katrina was awarded with little or no competition. AshBritt, a Pompano Beach company, got a $568 million debris removal contract. AshBritt is a client of the lobbying firm for which Haley Barbour, Mississippi’s governor and a former chairman of the Republican National Committee, used to work.

The Bush administration swears that it will carefully audit spending. But it’s as well prepared to do that as FEMA was to provide timely hurricane relief. In the emergency bill to provide the first $60 billion in hurricane aid, Congress expanded the administration’s ability to award no-bid contracts. That came at the request of the administration’s chief procurement official, David Safavian. Mr. Safavian since has resigned after being indicted for lying to investigators about his ties to also-indicted lobbyist Jack Abramoff, a great friend of also-indicted Rep. Tom DeLay, R-Texas.

Mr. Safavian got his job overseeing $300 billion in annual government spending because of his ties to Mr. Abramoff and anti-tax Bush ally Grover Norquist. According to Time magazine, experts consider Mr. Safavian one of the least qualified procurement officials ever appointed. That makes him at least as qualified as former FEMA Director Michael Brown.

While profit motivates many pursuing easy Katrina and Rita money, ideology motivates others. As The Post reported Wednesday, the administration is pushing a plan to spend $488 million for private-school vouchers. The plan should alarm anyone familiar with Florida’s voucher programs, which dole out $140 million a year with little academic or financial accountability.

After 9/11, the Bush administration and Homeland Security Department rushed to spend money on equipment and programs that boosted contractors’ bottom lines more than they boosted national security. Those profiting in Iraq have faced even less scrutiny. Until Congress starts watching the money, hurricane victims will keep feeling the heat while well-connected profiteers have it made in the shade.

New Orleans Sacks 3,000 Workers (where’s all that “federal aid” $ going?)

The US city of New Orleans is sacking 3,000 workers, about half of its workforce, after the devastation caused by Hurricane Katrina.

Mayor Ray Nagin said he wished he could keep the employees on the payroll, but added that the city was not earning enough revenue.

The sacked employees would be laid off in the next two weeks, Mr Nagin said.

Meanwhile, officials have ended the door-to-door search for victims of the hurricane in the state of Louisiana.

The death toll in the state stood at 972 – substantially smaller than the 10,000 victims some feared.

The number of dead in Mississippi remained at 221, according to the authorities in the state.

Louisiana officials said more searches would be conducted by a private company hired by the state, if someone reported seeing a body.

‘Pretty permanent’

Mr Nagin said it was “with great sadness” that New Orleans was “unable to hold on to some of our dedicated city workers”.

The city had “searched high and low” for the funds and had asked for help from the state and federal governments, he said.

“We’ve talked to local banks and other financial institutions, and we are just not able to put together the financing necessary to continue to maintain our city hall staffing at its current levels,” he said.

The mayor described the dismissals as “pretty permanent”.

Those workers not contacted to return to work should consider themselves part of the layoff, an official statement said.

Only non-essential employees would leave and no firefighters or police would be among those let go, Mr Nagin added.

Thousands of people have returned to the city in recent days, after the parts least affected by flooding from Katrina re-opened.

Schoolchildren went back to classes on Monday.

Some businesses have also re-opened and power supplies are partially working – but only a few parts of the city have drinking water.

The mayor has established a commission to draft a rebuilding plan for New Orleans and has asked for tax breaks to help to revive the city.

Story from BBC NEWS
Published: 2005/10/05 07:34:17 GMT

Did Bush administration attack peace movement with military grade biological bacteria?

By Bob Fitrakis – Columbus Free Press
October 4, 2005

What do we make of the Saturday, October 1 Washington Post headline “Poison Found in Air During Anti-War Protest”?

Washington D.C. Public Health Director Greg A. Pane posed the right question in the Post article, “Why that day? That’s what is not explained.” Pane pointed that it was “just this 24-hour period and none since.”

The Post noted that Pane found “. . . it was puzzling that the finding was from a day when the mall was packed with people.”

Puzzling? Indeed. Biohazard sensors detected tularemia bacteria at the mall on Saturday, September 24.

Equally puzzling was an earlier Post report: “Weekend protesters hit travel snags.” The article reported that Amtrak trains from New York City were turned back, cancelled or delayed from heading to the nation’s capitol for the biggest peace demonstration since the Vietnam War era. Also, Metro subway cars coming into the capitol were disrupted by repairs.

Federal officials are still pondering the death of five people on U.S. soil and scores of others who were infected with U.S. military-grade anthrax in the fall of 2001.

The wholly implausible “working hypothesis” put forward by Pane is that the bacteria found in rodents, rabbits and other small animals just happened to occur on the same day the trains failed to run on time and more than quarter of a million people assembled to directly challenge the Bush regime’s illegal war in Iraq.

Coincidence theorists. You gotta love ‘em and their great faith in believing in the statistically improbable occurrence of events, rather than an alternative hypothesis: that friends of Bush (FOBs) planted the tularemia bacteria, just as they most likely sent anthrax to Democratic senators and the media.

Tularemia is one of six major bacterial bioterrorism agents, according to the Sherlock Bioterrorism Library serving the U.S. Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases at Ft. Detrick, Maryland.

The BBC notes that tularemia is “one of the most infectious germs known to science,” and that it “takes just 10 microbes to bring on disease in humans.”

Tularemia emerged as a “plague-like disease” during a 1911 outbreak of “rabbit fever” in Tulare Lake in California. The disease progresses rapidly in humans with patients suffering from headache, fatigue, dizziness, muscle pains, loss of appetite and nausea. The disease progresses to inflamed and reddened face and eyes. The disease next attacks lymph nodes and glands, often with life-threatening complications.

Fortunately, tularemia is relatively rare in nature. According to the Illinois Department of Public Health there are generally five or fewer cases that occur each year naturally. The Kansas City Missouri Health Department tells us that most cases that occur naturally are found in “south, central and western states,” not Washington D.C.

Unfortunately, tularemia has been long used as a military biological weapon. We should consider the presence of tularemia a shot across the bow to the peace movement from an administration willing to cheat, steal, torture, lie and kill to further its political agenda. Karl Rove, the president’s brain, brags of his worship of Machiavelli and will do anything to keep his Texas prince in power.

This history of tularemia suggests it is a long-standing weapon used by fascists, militarists and authoritarians.

Japanese germ warfare research units operating in Manchuria between 1932-45 admit to possessing the tularemia bacteria.

The Sunshine Project reported in May 2003 that the German Ministry of Defense “remains engaged in a controversial biodefense research project involving tularemia bacteria that has been genetically engineered to withstand antibiotic treatment.”

Both the United States and the Soviet Union possessed the military strain Francisella tularensis during the Cold War. Dr. Kenneth Alibek (formerly known as Kanatjan Alibekov) the number two man in the former Soviet Union’s biochemical operations describes in great detail in his book “Biohazard” how the Soviets deployed Francisella tularensis against the Nazis in the Battle of Stalingrad.

In another one of those bizarre coincidences, Ken Alibek was also involved in the U.S. anthrax project run by the nonprofit Battelle Memorial Institute in Columbus, Ohio. Considered the DIA’s and the CIA’s favorite nonprofit contractor, Battelle has been involved, according to the New York Times and the Columbus Dispatch, with manufacturing the infamous trillion spores per gram Ames (as in Iowa) silica-impregnated anthrax. Officially, the work is done for “defensive” purposes in order to produce a vaccine.

Battelle was in partnership with BioPort of Lansing, Michigan in officially producing the anthrax vaccine for the United States.

The New York Times reported in 1998 that BioPort’s owners included Admiral William Crowe, Jr., a former chair of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff and Ambassador to Britain during the Clinton years. One of Crowe’s partners is the mysterious Fuad El-Hibri, a German citizen of Lebanese descent and a reported business associate of the bin Laden family.

BioPort is partly owned by a top-secret British biowarfare consortium Porton International. Laura Rozen pointed out in a salon.com article that El-Hibri, then BioPort’s CEO, “made a fortune” for Porton International from its monopoly on the anthrax vaccine during the first Gulf War.

The New York Times reported that the CIA ran a top secret anthrax project through Battelle code-named “Clear Vision.” There was also another anthrax project at Battelle’s central Ohio West Jefferson labs called “Project Jefferson.”

Alibek has been listed as both a classified consultant with the CIA and Battelle. A 1998 New Yorker article outlines the joint work of Alibek and William C. Patrick, III. Patrick wrote a report on the potential of sending anthrax through the mail.

Unless federal officials are willing to think the unthinkable, but obvious, and have the tularemia samples independently tested, we’ll never know whether a deliberate attack occurred against peaceful U.S. citizens exercising their First Amendment rights, or some freakish and bizarre coincidence occurred.

In another coincidence, it was the Battelle Memorial Institute that “botched” the exit polls in the 2002 election that would have served as protection against the unexplainable defeat of Senator Max Cleland of Georgia who was up 9-12 points in the tracking polls just prior to Election Day.

The Free Press calls for an independent investigation of the tularemia bacteria found on the mall on September 24, not to be conducted by any federal officials in the Bush administration or Battelle. With Minister Louis Farrakhan calling for a Million More March on Washington for October 14-16, it is more important now than ever.

Bush Nominates Loyal Advisor (who’s never been a judge) for Supreme Court

There has been a collective scratching of heads on Capitol Hill at President George Bush’s decision to nominate a member of his inner circle with no experience of being a judge to fill the vacancy on the US Supreme Court.

Harriet Miers, 60, is a long-time confidante of the president who is described as a trailblazer for women and who has held a variety of impressive posts.

But politicians from both sides of the political divide are concerned about a candidate with no public profile whose views are unknown on the contentious issues that the court deals with, like abortion and gay rights.

Ms Miers would replace Justice Sandra Day O’Connor – the holder of a key swing vote on the bench – and her nomination augurs for a fierce confirmation hearing.

Even less is known about her opinions than those of John Roberts, the new chief justice who skilfully dodged questions over how he would rule on contentious cases when he testified before the Senate earlier this month.

Leading Democrats say they will put pressure on the new nominee to answer questions about her judicial philosophy and legal background before any vote.

But Ms Miers is also something of an unknown quantity to Republican lawmakers.

Senator Sam Brownback of Kansas – a conservative – has said he would vote against a nominee who was not “solid and known” on cultural issues like abortion, same-sex marriage and religion in public life.

‘Think outside’

Yet in some ways the president’s decision should not be a surprise at all as he has a track record of rewarding the loyalty of his inner circle.

Ms Miers was the president’s lawyer in Texas, and he has given her a string of jobs since – from the head of Texas Lottery Commission, to his Deputy Chief of Staff and now White House counsel.

She is a trusted adviser with a reputation for discretion, essential in someone who vets all the papers that come across the president’s White House desk.

Mr Bush could have picked a hardcore conservative in an attempt to reach out to core supporters at a time when his national approval ratings are at record lows, and the Republican Party itself is reeling from scandals surrounding two of its leading members.

Yet he appears to have reached out to the middle ground – by picking a woman to replace a woman – and by consulting with Democrats, some of whom suggested her as a potential candidate.

Ms Miers is an unusual Supreme Court nominee in that she is the first for more than 30 years not to have been a judge.

One administration official said some senators from both parties thought it was important for Bush to “think outside the Appeals Court” by picking someone who could offer a different perspective on the job.

Another unusual aspect of Ms Miers nomination is that her office has led the vetting and recommendation of candidates for the Supreme Court vacancy.

Mr Bush reportedly organised a private consultation on Ms Miers suitability for the position and offered her the opportunity over dinner at the White House on Sunday evening.

The president seemed to try to answer any critics by emphasizing Ms Miers’ legal successes in what some commentators saw as a defensive announcement of her nomination.

Story By Matthew Davis BBC NEWS
Published: 2005/10/03 16:29:39 GMT
© BBC MMV

Pets Evacuation and Transportation Standards of 2005

Time to act on the lessons learned. Urge your U.S. representative to support House Resolution 3858, the “Pets Evacuation and Transportation Standards of 2005.” The bill—which would require local and state emergency preparedness authorities to include in their evacuation plans details on how they will accommodate companion animals—has been assigned to the Committee on Transportation & Infrastructure.

You can register your support of H.R. 3858 with this committee’s members by calling 202-225-9446.

[Text, Status, and CoSponsors for HR 3858]
[CNN article on this legislation]