Jonathan Turley ~ Things That Tick Me Off: Apple

Jonathan Turley’s blog May 8 2013

apple logoI have previously written about the deteriorating level of support at Apple Computer and the shocking treatment of customers who fell victim to a defect in the iPhone. This week, I had the third power cord for my MacBook Pro fail. Every cord has developed exposed wires due to common bending with the machine. In seeking to remedy the situation, I ran again into the same customer service wall that I experienced earlier with the defective iPhone. In order to get a new cord (under warranty), I had to see a “genius” as opposed to the dozen “specialists” standing around. But before I see a “genius” I had to have an appointment and there were no appointments available for hours. I stopped there before I was told that I also had to bring them the ruby slippers to gain entry to the “genius.”

This is all too familiar. Recently, Apple agreed to a multimillion dollar settlementover its iPhone controversy. You may recall that years ago, I posted an account of an ordeal over a relatively new iPhone that stopped functioning. When I took it into the store, they promptly informed me that I got the phone wet and refused to repair or replace it. When I told that that it was impossible that the phone had been “submerged” or saturated as they claimed, they opened the phone and confirmed that only one of two indicators showed water damage but still said that it voided any obligation of the company. Though I eventually got a new phone, my posting attracted many people around the world who said that they had the same experience. Well, Apple (without admitting guilt) is now agreeing to a settlement in a class action for people who were told they had such water damage. As suspected, it appears that the water damage indicators were defective. I read the settlement to mean that the company knew that people like me were experiencing a common defect but allowed their “geniuses” to basically tell us we were lying or stupid — and that Apple would not help us. That takes a truly horrific corporate culture among Apple executives and an equally horrific view of their customers. The settlement came with no apology or acceptance of responsibility. While a contractor (3M) took blame for a possible defect, Apple never explained why it continued to instruct “geniuses” to play dumb and blame customers.

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Mike Adams ~ 100% Foolproof Solution To Stop The TSA From Stealing Valuables Out Of Your Carry-On Bag

Natural News | January 9 2013

I keep hearing horror stories of people getting things stolen out of their carry-on luggage by the TSA. Thefts of valuable electronics, precious coins, cash and other items by TSA agents are ridiculously common, and seemingly countless numbers of TSA employees have been caught red-handed stealing from travelers (see headlines, below).

I’ve never had anything stolen by the TSA thanks to a foolproof anti-theft system I developed when I used to travel to South America, where theft of valuable electronics is also extremely common.

Headline: Convicted TSA agent who stole more than $800K worth of goods from passengers says stealing from bags is very common

My TSA anti-theft method allows you to travel safely and securely with all the following items in your carry-on luggage, without them being stolen by TSA thieves!

• Thousands of dollars worth of gold coins
• Cash
• Jewelry
• iPads, iPhones and other electronics
• Laptop computers
• Valuable optics such as rifle scopes

… and so on.

I explain it all in this simple video you can view here

Headline: TSA agent admits to stealing cash from passenger as punishment

Another headline: Top 20 airports where TSA thugs are most likely to steal your stuff

How it works

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J. D. Heyes ~ FEMA Shelters In Northeast Resemble Police State Prison Camps

Natural News | November 15 2012 | IntelHub

Doom, gloom and despair is growing in the Northeast in the weeks following super storm Sandy, as winter sets in with thousands of New Yorkers and New Jersey residents still reeling from the loss of their homes and property.

For many, the despair has grown into an intense anger, as tent cities set up by the Federal Emergency Management Agency begin to resemble prison camps.

Moreover, the aftermath of Sandy is a story the mainstream media is largely ignoring, unlike Hurricane Katrina(http://www.alternet.org)

Stressed residents who spoke to the Asbury Park Press talked bitterly about the cold, harsh conditions in tent cities with Blackhawk helicopters buzzing overhead.

“Sitting there last night you could see your breath,” Brian Sotelo, a Seaside Heights resident who was at Pine Belt Arena in Toms River with his wife and three kids a half-hour before the shelter opened as superstorm Sandy approached last week, told the small press.

“At (Pine Belt) the Red Cross made an announcement that they were sending us to permanent structures up here that had just been redone, that had washing machines and hot showers and steady electric, and they sent us to tent city. We got (expletive).”

This is where people start falling through the cracks

Sotelo is at a makeshift shelter that is called – ironically – “Camp Freedom.” But no one there feels free or secure – or comfortable.

“The elections are over and here we are. There were Blackhawk helicopters flying over all day and night.

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Anti-Sec Claims FBI Spies On Apple Customers [Video]

RTAmerica | September 5 2012

Anti-Sec, an offshoot of the hacker collective Anonymous, has got its hands on millions of Apple’s customer profiles. On Tuesday, the hacker group made the info public after they claim they obtained the material from an FBI agent’s laptop. Apple and the FBI are denying the allegations and say exchanging customer information isn’t part of their procedures. So who’s telling the truth? RT’s Web Producer Andrew Blake joins us to break down the happenings.

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Google And Facebook Accused Of Bypassing Iphone’s Privacy Settings To Spy On Owners To Build Advertising Profiles

Rob Waugh | Mail Online | February 17 2012

Google and Facebook may have used a computer ‘trick’ that allows them to monitor web browsing via Apple’s Safari browser to build up advertising ‘profiles’ – circumventing Apple’s safety measures.

The search giant bypassed privacy settings built into Apple’s Safari web browser on iPhones,  PCs and Macs, according to a recent report.

Other advertising companies, and Facebook, reportedly used a similar method.

Safari is the most popular mobile web browser, used in all models of Apple’s iPhone and iPad.

Google allegedly circumvented the protection to build up profiles of web users, using a ‘cookie’ that collected advertising information.

The move has caused outcry among privacy advocates.

It comes shortly after EU privacy groups wrote to the search giant to ask it to ‘halt’ a new privacy policy that would allow it to ‘share’ customer data between services such as Search, Gmail and YouTube.

Google allegedly used a ‘trick’ which sends a blank message to the browser to make it accept unauthorised ‘cookies’.

Read more @ Mail Online

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The New Cyber-Industrial Complex Spying on Us

Pratap Chatterjee (Guardian UK) | RS_News
December  4 2011

WikiLeaks’ Spy Files reveal the frightening scale and ambition of the industry now devoted to surveillance of all our daily lives.

FOCUS | We live digital lives now, flitting from Facebook to YouTube, checking our iPhones and BlackBerries, and chatting with our loved ones on Skype. Very few of us worry too much about tweeting our personal opinions on politics or chatting with a new social network “friend” on the other side of the world, whom we barely know and often forget in a matter of a few hours or days.

Yet all these interactions have become fodder for a new industry that secretly vacuums up the data and preserves it forever on high-end servers that hold many petabytes (a million gigabytes) of information. This industry offers new tools to search that data and reconstruct our past, and even our real-time movements via our mobile phones, in a way that could well come back to haunt us.

WikiLeaks has just released the Spy Files – a trove of almost 300 documents from these companies that shine a light into this industry. At the Bureau of Investigative Journalism, where I work, we trawled through these documents, and tracked down yet more material which our research team – Matthew Wrigley, David Pegg, Christian Jensen and Jamie Thunder – used to create an online database that will soon cover over 160 companies in some 25 countries.

It’s worth spending some time browsing through this material because what this new industry offers to do is nothing short of Orwellian.

“We all aware of traditional spy stories of intelligence agencies like MI5 bugging the phones of one or two people,” Julian Assange, the founder of WikiLeaks, told the Bureau. He continued:

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