Tuesday, November 13, 2007

How to take a holiday in Pakistan

By Hugh Sykes BBC News, Pakistan

Suicide bombs, battles in tribal areas, and states of emergency tend to put off casual tourists. But the impression such events convey can often be misleading and unrepresentative of a country as a whole.


A few days ago I was sitting in a cafe sipping best Italian espresso and reading a news magazine.
The front page was full of furious faces and clenched fists under the headline, The Most Dangerous Nation in the World isn't Iraq, it's Pakistan.

The cafe was in a smart bookshop in Pakistan's capital, Islamabad.


I sighed and turned to the article inside.


It was a revealing analysis of some penetration of a few places in Pakistan by the Taleban and al-Qaeda.


I pondered the magnifying-glass effect of dramatic news coverage.

The suicide bomb attack on Benazir Bhutto's homecoming parade in Karachi in October, which killed an estimated 140 people, and the assault on a Taleban pocket in the Swat valley, a tourist destination, took place while I was in Pakistan.

But neither event had a noticeable effect on the general sense of security and stability where I was in Islamabad or on the road.

The notion that Pakistan is more dangerous than Iraq is absurd.
Until recently suicide bombs, murder, and kidnapping were routine in Iraq.
And there is no way I would do there what I have just done in Pakistan: take a holiday.

Never alone

I hired a car in Islamabad and headed out onto the partially completed M2 motorway that will eventually connect Lahore (near the Indian border) with Peshawar (the last city on the road to the Khyber Pass and Afghanistan).

But motorways are boring, so I left the M2 and re-joined the ancient Grand Trunk Road, which links most of the main towns of northern Pakistan.

For much of the route it is lined with eucalyptus trees, their almost-autumn leaves and silvery bark shining in the clear October sun as I drove along.
Driving in Pakistan is fast and sometimes chaotic, but not competitive.

They even hoot politely. And one great danger at home you hardly ever have to contend with in Pakistan is drunk drivers and people with concentration blurred by hangovers.

My destinations were Chitral, an isolated valley in the far-north-west on the Afghan border and Gilgit, close to China and Tajikistan.

The round-trip was more than 1,200 miles (nearly 2,000km) and included mountain passes almost half as high as Everest.

And although I was driving alone, I was hardly ever on my own.

There is public transport but not a lot. So, people walk long distances along these high stony roads and if a car passes, they hold out a hand hoping for a lift.

Twelve-year-old Kashif, one of Hugh Sykes' companions on his road trip

One morning, 12-year-old Kashif sat with me for a while.
He had been expecting to walk for more than an hour to the nearest town, to buy a new pair of shoes.

He showed me the pair he was wearing. The right shoe's upper was half split away from the sole.
Kashif spoke almost perfect English, good enough to warn me as we turned a tight bend, "Be careful, uncle, road badly damaged round next corner from earthquake."

Earthquake damage from 2005, still unrepaired.

I spent the night at a hotel next to the old fort at Mastuj, near the snowy Hindu Kush peak Tirich Mir which is 7,690m high (25,200 feet).

The hotel consists of small timber and stone cabins set in a wood of walnut trees and poplars and a plane tree reputed to be 200 years old.

I woke to autumn colours every bit as wondrous as anything I have seen in Kew Gardens or New England.

My next hitch-hiking companion was Mohammed, an English Literature student at Peshawar University.

"So you study Shakespeare?" I asked.

Mohammed, an English Literature student at Peshawar University

"Yes, and Wordsworth."

And John Donne, I wondered?

"Ah, John Donne," he raptured.

"John Donne... the poetry of love."

I do not know any Donne by heart but when I attempted Shakespeare's Seven Ages of Man from As You Like It, Mohammed completed every line as we bumped along the dusty road.
Parts of Pakistan are deeply conservative, devoutly Muslim places, and I was not signalled for lifts by many women.

But there were some.

A mother and grandmother, sitting in the back, their heads covered but not their faces and one-year-old Anis and his father Samir in the front with me.

He protested when I took a photograph of the two women but they did not object and posed happily as they waited for the flash.

When I delivered them to the Gilgit hospital where the little boy had an appointment with a heart specialist, his father was so pleased and grateful he gave me a bear hug, and a massive smile that erased his earlier stern objections to taking a picture.

I gave lifts to more than 20 people, learned how to say "You're welcome" in Urdu (Koi Batnahi), and had to hold back tears when two children said thank you for their lift and offered me money to help pay for the petrol.

Friday, April 20, 2007

The 15 Nastiest Rivalries in Sports

From: Maxim, Apr 2007

Sportsmanship doesn’t sell tickets. It’s the expectation of devastation and general hatred that puts asses in chairs. Check out these grudge matches.


1. Matt Hughes vs. Georges St. Pierre





Last November St. Pierre stripped Hughes of his UFC title, evening their vendetta at one win each. “The belt puts a target on him for me and everyone else,” says Hughes. “When I retire, I want to go out on top.” With both fighters in their prime, this could be a best-of-seven series.



2. Andrew Peters vs. Brian McGrattan



“We’ve fought a bunch of times,” says the Sabres’ Peters of the Senators’ McGrattan. “But enforcers aren’t just dumb Neanderthals who drop their gloves and fight. We have a reason and purpose. If our teams need a boost, when the time comes we’re both ready to go.” Makes you want to lace up some skates and grow a mullet, eh?



3. David Stern vs. Mark Cuban








Stern has slapped Cuban with over $1.3 million in fines. Lucky for us Cuban suffers from both diarrhea of the mouth and the checkbook.



4. Levski vs. CSKA



CSKA, a soccer squad initially sponsored by the Bulgarian army, sports a contingent of neo-Nazi skinhead fans known as the CSKA S.S. Front, whose motto, “Drink beer, fuck, and fight,” pretty much sums them up. Fans of the blue-and-white Levski squad antagonize the anti-Semites across the stadium by waving Israeli flags at their crosstown rivals. They do seem to agree on setting their stadiums on fire.




5. Jose Luis Castillo vs. Diego Corrales



In their May 2005 bout, Corrales (left) rose like Freddy Krueger off the canvas twice in the 10th to TKO Castillo. An overweight Castillo returned the favor in their controversial rematch. But the third bout never happened, because Castillo failed to make weight. Start praying Jose makes a stop at fat camp.




6. India vs. Pakistan








The Indo-Paki hatefest got so intense that for 15 years India refused to play in Pakistan. Not to say the Indians don’t have a few world-class hooligans. Before a 1999 match in Calcutta, Hindu fundamentalists threatened to disrupt the match by releasing poisonous snakes into the stadium and setting themselves on fire. No one seems to have figured out it’s just cricket.

7. Takeru Kobayashi vs. Joey Chestnut



Chestnut, the only American eater to truly challenge the “Tsunami,” came within 1.75 wieners of preventing Kobayashi from taking his sixth consecutive Nathan’s Famous title in 2006. At least Joey can still celebrate his two rib eating titles, two chicken wing titles, and the fact that his butthole still manages to keep his guts on the inside.

8. Pete Weber vs. Walter Ray Williams Jr.

Weber sums up their rolling death match: “I have the utmost respect for Walter Ray. But the only thing I can think of is kicking his ass.” As of January, Walt led the all-time PBA Tour money list at $3,801,246, with Weber in second at $3,031,864 earned over his 28-year career. Which tells you, if you want to go pro at a leisure sport, pick golf.

9. Jeff Gordon vs. the Earnhardt Family








Gordon locked fenders with Earnhardt Sr., a family tradition Dale Jr. readily continues. After the Talladega race last October, Dale Jr. responded to Gordon’s complaints about his bump drafting with, “There is so much grip here, my mom could drive these cars. But I guess it makes Jeff Gordon a little nervous.” You gonna take that, Jeff?



10. Ohio State vs. Michigan






Michigan leads 57-40-6, but the interstate conflict predates the sport of football itself. The Toledo War of 1835 between Ohio and the Michigan territory went the Buckeyes’ way, giving them a thin strip of land at their northern border including, as you guessed, Toledo. Does history bore the hell out of you, too?



11. Maria Sharapova vs. Anastasia Myskina

During a 2004 match, Myskina complained about Sharapova receiving coaching from her father on the sideline. “He was yelling and screaming to her, and I thought he just might jump right on the court,” Myskina whined, netting Sharapova a reprimand from the chair. If only they would French-kiss and make up…



12. Travis Pastrana vs. Jeremy “Twitch” Stenberg

The two kings of freestyle compete with respect. When Pastrana hit a double backflip at the 2006 X Games, Stenberg had to watch from the sidelines. His reaction? “I was sitting there in my wheelchair with two broken legs, and I stood up. I give him mad props. He has balls.”


13. Derek Jeter vs. A-Rod

The ice storm hit when A-Rod said of his future teammate, “He’s never had to lead. You never say, ‘Don’t let Derek beat us.’” Still, Alex’s .154 average over the past three postseasons makes him less worrisome than a speed bump in the stadium lot.

14. Longview Lobos vs. Marshall Mavericks



This 96-year East Texas battle, at 50-41-5, is one of the most tightly contested rivalries in the Lone Star State. Catch the real Friday-night lights this fall and see why Texas high school football separates the men from the boys better than most land wars.



15. Bill Belichick vs. Eric Mangini






Now that Bill Parcells and Andy Reid’s jiggly joust to 85 percent body fat is over, the Mangini-Belichick AFC East rivalry is the only NFL coaching clash worth watching.

Wednesday, April 11, 2007

Is it that time?















wow...

From the BBC:

By Monica Chadha
BBC News, Mumbai

Women civil servants in India have expressed shock at new appraisal rules which require them to reveal details of their menstrual cycles.

Under the new nationwide requirements, female officials also have to say when they last sought maternity leave.

Women civil servants say the questions are a gross invasion of privacy. One told the BBC she was "gobsmacked".

Annual appraisals and health checks are mandatory in India's civil service. The ministry was unavailable for comment.

But one of its most senior bureaucrats was quoted in the press as saying the new questions had been based on advice from health officials.

'No words'

The questions at the root of the controversy are on page 58 of the new appraisal forms for the current year issued by the federal Ministry for Personnel, Public Grievances and Pensions.

Women officers must write down their "detailed menstrual history and history of LMP [last menstrual period] including date of last confinement [maternity leave]," the form says.

Women working in the civil service told the BBC the government had no need for this kind of personal information.

"I am completely shocked!" said Sharwari Gokhale, environment secretary in western Maharashtra state.

"I have absolutely no words to describe how I feel and I have no intention of telling them anything about my personal life.

"It's gob smacking."

Ms Gokhale said she had also served in the personnel department at the ministry which drafted the new forms and, while the health of officials was always a concern, asking such questions never crossed their minds.

'Natural phenomenon'

Maharashtra's joint secretary for general administration, Seema Vyas, agreed that the new questions were uncalled for.

"Menstrual cycles are a natural phenomenon, they are not an aberration. One does not object to questions related to fitness levels - they are important as they can affect work.

"But there is no need for these details as this does not have any bearing on our work," she told the BBC.

"When we apply for maternity leave, we put in the appropriate application and the government already has those records so why ask again?"

She said she and her colleagues were thinking of writing a letter to the authorities protesting at the questions.

Despite repeated attempts, the BBC was unable to speak to the head of the personnel department, Satyanand Mishra.

The Hindustan Times newspaper quoted him as saying the questions were based on advice from the Ministry of Health.

"We sought the ministry's help to draw up a health-history format. I assume this will help evaluate the officer's fitness," he told the paper.

Sunday, March 18, 2007

Coach Woolmer


Who would have thought that the latest casualty of Pakistan cricket would be the very likable coach, Bob Woolmer. Most Pakistanis like myself might have stopped checking the news after our shock loss to Ireland, expecting nothing but criticism regarding the team's performance. However, what was not expected and never really is, was our coach passing away.

These past few years have been some of the lowest in the Pakistani cricket team's history, and this latest loss might be the lowest yet. All Pakistanis know that Coach Woolmer tried his best with a team that had no shortage of insatiable egos and poor work ethic and we wish we could have told him how much we appreciated his work.

Our prayers are with his family.

Tuesday, February 13, 2007

Feel good cabbie story!


Bangladesh cabbie is toast of NYC
By Salim Rizvi BBC News, New York


A Bangladeshi immigrant taxi driver in New York is the toast of the Big Apple after returning a $500,000 lost bag of diamond rings to their rightful owner.

Osman Chowdhury's honesty has made him an instant celebrity, propelling him onto the city's airwaves to receive the plaudits of the great and the good.
He says that he is proud of what he did, because cab drivers are honest.
In the same week, a cab driver of Indian origin in New York returned a wallet containing nearly $6,000.

Owner traced

Forty-one-year-old Mr Chowdhury - a Bangladeshi green card holder - was plying his trade as usual in Manhattan on Monday evening, when a female passenger boarded his cab at a midtown Hotel.

The passenger got off at an apartment building on 35th street.

She paid $11 for the $10.70 fare. But she left a bag full of diamonds in the boot of the vehicle.

When the next set of passengers tried to put their luggage in the boot, Mr Chowdhury found the bag. But with the help of the New York City Taxi Workers' Alliance, a cabbies' advocacy group, the bag was opened to reveal around 30 diamond rings, neatly tucked into cases. There were some loose diamond rings too. There was also a laptop and some business papers.

Next Mr Chowdhury, with the help of the taxi workers' alliance, had to contact the owner. Eventually they found a Texas phone number in the bag, and after repeated calls they traced the mother of the bag's owner.

She in turn contacted her daughter, who came over to the alliance office and thanked Mr Chowdhury profusely. She tried to reward him, but he refused, saying that he had only done his duty. "I never thought about any reward or anything in return. I can never keep anything that belongs to any other person. I have been this way all my life," he said.

His honesty has led to a barrage of media interviews, with American newspapers and TV stations - including international channels - wanting to interview the "honest cabbie".

Reward

For the last two days he has also been interviewed by scores of news organisations in the US and across the globe.

In addition, the New York City Taxi and Limousine Commission has honoured him with an Achievement Award for 2007. Even the City Council of New York City has joined in, by given him a citation praising his honesty.

And the word is that the New York City Mayor, Michael Bloomberg, may announce a reward for him.

Mr Chowdhury is unfazed.

At his residence in Sunnyside, Queens in New York, he was his usual humble self.

"I never imagined that I will be the centre of so much media attention.

The cab driver is the talk of the town

"I'm proud of what I did. I hope my next generation will remember what I did and follow me. I also want to tell people that New York taxi drivers are honest," he says.

The members of the Bangladeshi community in New York are proud of this son of the soil.


"There are good and honest people in every community. But with his deeds Osman has made us all Bangladeshis very proud," neighbour Shafiq Alam said.

Mr Chowdhury came to the US in 1992 to work as a taxi driver in New York.


Distraught

Back home in Bangladesh he used to work as a contractor. He is still unmarried, but lost his parents recently and has to provide for his family which includes many sisters.

He does not even own a cab, but rents it for 12 hour shifts.

The job is so stressful that it has affected his health. He suffers from high blood pressure, and kidney problems.

"But I have always maintained that no matter what the problems we face in life, we should not resort to dishonesty," he said.

And in what has been a good month for South Asian taxi drivers in New York, a taxi driver of Indian origin returned a wallet containing $5,950 to a passenger.

"If money doesn't belong to me, I don't keep it," said Vinod Mago, 55, an Indian immigrant.

"I know God is watching everybody, every second." Mr Mago had just started his shift when his taxi controller called to say a distraught man was missing his wallet.

He found the wallet in the back seat and raced to the airport in time to return it to the owner, who gave him and the taxi coordinator $100 each in gratitude.

Tuesday, January 23, 2007

No cricket in the US for the time being!

According to cricinfo, there will no cricket series in the US in 2007. I haven't been to a cricket match in 6 years, the last being in Singapore between Pakistan and New Zealand, but how awesome would it have been to have a game going on here, especially if it was a Pakistan-India-Australia tri-series.


India-Australia won't be in New York in 2007
Stillborn in the USA

Martin Williamson
January 23, 2007

Contrary to reports at the weekend, it is highly unlikely that a planned one-day series between India and Australia in North America will be able to include matches in the USA. At present, there are no venues in the country approved by the ICC to host a one-day international. In fact, there are none even close to being recognised.

While Canada might conceivably host a few games at the quaintly named Cricket, Skating and Curling Club, the failure of Project USA - which was intended to develop the US market - has set the game back in the continent at least until 2008.

A new deal between the largely dysfunctional USA Cricket Association, whose utter inability to run the game led to its suspension by the ICC, and a marketing company called Centrex should give cricket in the USA a commercial stability hitherto absent. But it won't happen in time for this series.

To many - mainly the marketing men who so dominate the way cricket is run - the USA remains the untapped Holy Grail. Crack that, so the thinking goes, and the rewards are almost unlimited. Millions of dollars of income - up to $6 million per game for up to seven matches - was touted as a likely reward for the venture. Up to 10 million first-generation Asians make for a lucrative market, even if the average American doesn't care one jot for the game.

There are three main centres in the USA - New York , Florida and California. The speculation over the Australia-India series centred on New York, but there is not a venue there that could host a match. There was talk that an NFL stadium might be used, but that shows the lack of credibility of the reports. The major NFL stadiums are astroturf, and even if the organisers laid an artificial wicket, such a surface would not be approved for an ODI. There is one other minor detail. NFL pitches are far too narrow.

That leaves baseball grounds, and only one - the Mets' Shea Stadium - could conceivably be used. However, the cricket season in New York runs slap bang in the middle of the baseball season, so that's not an option. And drop-in-pitches are not a short-term solution as there are strict rules about transportation of soil and grass across state lines. The raw materials available in New York are just not good enough.

With that in mind, California has been earmarked as the ideal centre for the game, with the right climate and good soil. In the short-term, the venue at Burbank is the nearest to being ready. There are two grounds in Florida - at Fort Lauderdale and Broward County - but neither has pitches nearly good enough for international matches. The grass pitches they have crumble too easily. One expert told Cricinfo that soil with the right amount of clay needed to be imported, probably from Georgia, and that meant a mountain of red tape to be overcome before the project could even start.

When Andy Atkinson, the ICC's pitches guru, was consulted by the bosses of Project USA, he estimated that with the right soil and the will, a pitch could be laid and ready in around eight or nine months. Australia and India's commitments mean that the only spare dates for a North American series is June, and there is no way on earth that any grounds in the USA could be ready by then. As the flamboyant boxing promoter Don King loves to say: "it's got two chances ... slim and none, and slim just left town."

That leaves the one ICC-approved venue in Toronto, which hosted several one-day series in the late 1990s. It offers a foothold on North American soil, but a long series there would have limited appeal, and it's the USA not Canada that whets the two boards' appetites. In terms of TV coverage, they might as well play in some more established neutral centres such as Kuala Lumpur or Sharjah.

Martin Williamson is managing editor of Cricinfo

Wednesday, January 17, 2007

A solution for Muslim women that wanna get their soak on:

become a ninja....




according to a report on CNN:


In a lycra revolution, a cover-all swimming costume is bringing Muslim women on to Australian beaches as lifeguards, unzipping tensions which divided parts of Sydney little over a year ago.


The two-piece "burkini", popular in the Middle East, is proving key to a reshaping surf lifesaving Down Under -- once a bastion of white Australian culture and still a heartland of the country's sun-bronzed, heroic self-myth.


"I am Australian so I always have the Australian life style, but now with the burkini it just allowed me to participate in it more. We used to always go to the beach, but now that I have the burqini I can actually swim," Mecca Laalaa, 22, told Reuters.


Laalaa is one of 24 young Australians of Arab heritage who recently signed up to a 10-week training course run by Surf Life Saving Australia aimed at widening the racial mix on beaches.
The shift follows race riots between ethnic Lebanese Australians and white Australian youths at Cronulla Beach in Sydney's south in the lead-up to Christmas in 2005.


Cars, shops and churches were damaged in the violence, which followed an attack on a pair of beach lifeguards.


Laalaa, whose ethnic background is Lebanese-Australian, is relying on a home-grown burkini -- a compromise between a burka and a bikini -- to keep her covered on Cronulla's sands.
The full-length lycra suit with hijab head-covering is not too figure hugging to embarrass, but is tight enough to allow its wearer to swim freely. It will soon be manufactured in the iconic red and yellow of Australia's surf life saving movement.


"We are surrounded by water all over Australia, it is totally encouraged for us from all the schools, no matter what school you go to," burqini manufacturer Aheda Zanetti said.
"So when these girls decide and choose to wear the veil, they decide to stop doing that. We didn't want to do that."


The burkini is making its appearance during the 100th anniversary of surf life saving in Australia, which began on Sydney's famous Bondi Beach and has grown to count 115,000 volunteers in more than 300 clubs.


Women were only allowed membership in 1980 and some clubs patrol inland lakes, including Lake Jindabyne near the snow-capped southern Australian Alps.


Zanetti, who sells her burqinis for up to A$200 ($160), hopes to widen the garment's appeal beyond Muslim women at the beach.


"We are also encouraged in Australia to cover up not due to modesty but for sun protection, so this is not just a modesty aspect swimming suit, it is also a protection against the sun, surf and sand," she said.

Friday, January 12, 2007

Beckham mania in the the US?

Like most Americans, I don't watch soccer. With Beckham moving from Real Madrid to L.A. Galaxy, I am still pretty sure I wont watch soccer here. Not because I don't think he's a great player, he certainly is, but soccer in the US is just not fun to watch. Besides, with College football, NFL playoffs, March Madness, NBA finals, MLB playoffs and then back to college football (the way I watch sports in the US), I can't be bothered to watch Beckham or anyone play soccer.

According to the Guardian:

Beckham: Money not the motive


Press Association


Former England captain David Beckham has denied his £128 million move to the United States is purely for money, saying he wants to boost the game's popularity.


The multi-millionaire footballer is to play for LA Galaxy in a massive deal which will see him earn more than £70,000 a day.


The five-year deal is bigger than anything any footballer has signed and experts believe it will also help protect Beckham's status as a global marketing brand.


But his decision to turn down a host of major British and European clubs may be seen by some as the beginning of the end of his career as one of the world's top players.


"People will be turning round saying, 'He is only going there to get the money'. It is not what I am going out there to do," Beckham, 31, said.


He said the decision to join the club had been "extremely difficult" but he was excited by the challenge of "growing the world's most popular game" in a country where it has little status compared with American football, baseball or basketball.


The move should also appeal to Beckham's pop star wife Victoria, who counts Tom Cruise's new wife Katie Holmes among her Hollywood friends.


Beckham quit as England captain following last summer's disappointing World Cup and has fallen out of favour with Real Madrid coach Fabio Capello.


New England manager Steve McClaren has also snubbed the former favourite, failing to even consider him for friendlies.


Beckham joins the illustrious list of football stars, including Pele and Franz Beckenbauer, to spend their twilight years plying their trade Stateside.

Thursday, January 11, 2007

Firms Fret as Office E-Mail Jumps Security Walls

Interesting....

From the NYTIMES


SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 10 — Companies spend millions on systems to keep corporate e-mail safe. If only their employees were as paranoid.

A growing number of Internet-literate workers are forwarding their office e-mail to free Web-accessible personal accounts offered by Google, Yahoo and other companies. Their employers, who envision corporate secrets leaking through the back door of otherwise well-protected computer networks, are not pleased. “It’s a hole you can drive an 18-wheeler through,” said Paul D. Myer, president of the security firm 8E6 Technologies in Orange, Calif.
It is a battle of best intentions: productivity and convenience pitted against security and more than a little anxiety.

Corporate techies — who, after all, are paid to worry — want strict control over internal company communications and fear that forwarding e-mail might expose proprietary secrets to prying eyes. Employees just want to get to their mail quickly, wherever they are, without leaping through too many security hoops.

Corporate networks, which typically have several layers of defenses against hackers, can require special software and multiple passwords for access. Some companies use systems that give employees a security code that changes every 60 seconds; this must be read from the display screen of a small card and typed quickly.

That is too much for some employees, especially when their computers can store the passwords for their Web-based mail, allowing them to get right down to business. So far, no major corporate disasters caused by this kind of e-mail forwarding have come to light. But security experts say the risks are real. For example, the flimsier security defenses of Web mail systems could allow viruses or spyware to get through, and employees could unwittingly download them at the office and infect the corporate network.

Also, because messages sent from Web-based accounts do not pass through the corporate mail system, companies could run afoul of federal laws that require them to archive corporate mail and turn it over during litigation.

Lawyers in particular wring their hands over employees using outside e-mail services. They encourage companies to keep messages for as long as necessary and then erase them to keep them out of the reach of legal foes. Companies have no control over the life span of e-mail messages in employees’ Web accounts. “If employees are just forwarding to their Web e-mail, we have no way to know what they are doing on the other end,” said Joe Fantuzzi, chief executive of the information security firm Workshare. “They could do anything they want. They could be giving secrets to the K.G.B.”

Hospitals have an added legal obligation to protect patient records. But when DeKalb Medical Center in Atlanta started monitoring its staff use of Web-based e-mail, it found that doctors and nurses routinely forwarded confidential medical records to their personal Web mail accounts — not for nefarious purposes, but so they could continue to work from home.
In the months after the hospital began monitoring traffic to Web e-mail services, it identified “a couple hundred incidents,” said Sharon Finney, DeKalb’s information security administrator. “I was surprised about the lack of literacy about the technology we depend on every day,” she said.
DeKalb now forbids the practice, and uses several software systems that monitor the hospital’s outbound e-mail and Web traffic. Ms Finney said she still catches four to five perpetrators a month trying to forward hospital e-mail.
The Web mail services may also be prone to glitches. Last month, Google fixed a bug that caused the disappearance of “some or all” of the stored mail of around 60 users. A week later, it acknowledged a security hole that could have exposed its users’ address books to Internet attackers.

Even the security experts most knowledgeable about the risks of e-mail forwarding to personal accounts acknowledge doing so themselves. “Of course I do it; who doesn’t?” said Kimberly Getgen Bargero, vice president for marketing at Sendmail, an e-mail software company in Emeryville, Calif. Ms. Bargero said she often used her Yahoo Mail account on business trips so she does not have to access her corporate network remotely.

It is difficult to quantify exactly how many otherwise model employees are opting to use services like Yahoo Mail or Google’s Gmail over their company’s authorized e-mail programs. Sophisticated users at the companies most lax about e-mail security can automatically forward all of their work e-mail to their personal accounts, hopscotching over the various requests for passwords meant to ward off intruders.

The more casual e-mail scofflaws send only the occasional message to their personal accounts — or just “cc” messages to their Web in-boxes to preserve them for later use — even when the messages contain sensitive company information.

Some companies frown on office use of any Web-based accounts, even for personal messages. At the business software maker BEA Systems, Anthony Bisulca, a senior security analyst, estimated that around 30 percent of his employees were using private e-mail accounts in the office, even though the company’s Internet policy clearly prohibits it.

But it is not easy to wean people off of their online mailboxes. “Of course they scream,” said Todd Wilson, an operations manager at the Bloomberg School of Public Health at Johns Hopkins University. “They look at me like I have three heads.”

Mr. Wilson said that the use of the Web services had become a “huge concern,” partly because copies of the forwarded messages sit untouched on the school’s servers, taking up space.
Many corporate technology professionals express the fear that Google and its rivals may actually own the intellectual property in the e-mail that resides on their systems. Gmail’s terms of service, however, state that e-mail belongs to the user, not to Google. The company’s automated software does scan messages in Gmail, looking for keywords that might generate related text advertisements on the page. A Google spokeswoman said the company has an extensive privacy policy to ensure no humans at Google read user e-mail.

Paul Kocher, president of the security firm Cryptography Research, said the real issue for companies was trust. “If you can’t trust employees enough to use services like Gmail, they probably shouldn’t be working for you,” he said.

Many companies apparently do not have that level of trust. In a survey conducted last year, the e-mail security firm Proofpoint found that 37 percent of companies in the United States used software to monitor office use of Web mail.

The Internet companies themselves are looking to take advantage of consumer preferences for Web based e-mail services. This year, Google plans to introduce a more secure version of Gmail for use in large companies.

But Microsoft and other providers of traditional internal e-mail systems, which the research firm Radicati says generated $2.5 billion in sales last year, are helping companies combat employee use of the Web services.

The new version of Microsoft’s corporate e-mail service, Exchange Server, offers administrators improved tools to monitor the content of employee mail and block forwarded messages.
At the same time, upgrades to Exchange and Microsoft’s e-mail program Outlook have made it easier for traveling employees to access e-mail on the corporate network from a Web browser. Microsoft also recently began urging corporate technology departments to give employees more storage space in their e-mail accounts.

But the Web services are improving as well, and employees will no doubt continue to find them tempting. “We have as high a security standard as any company,” said Ms. Bargero of Sendmail, “and sometimes it is just too difficult to access our e-mail.”

Monday, January 08, 2007

BCS BLOWOUT

GATORS OWN THE BUCKEYES.






I don't like either team, but I hate those buckeyes. As a Michigan fan, you just need to travel to Columbus for a MICHIGAN-ohio state game like I did this year to understand what this rivalry is all about.

I feel so damn good that they lost!! For all those Michigan fans talking about this win being for the big 10. You all need to understand that the win would have been for osu, not the big 10 and we would have said the same thing if we had 5 more minutes on Nov 18. So what if Urban Meyer went on this media blitz of Michigan. In hindsight, we should have done the same.

Enough said. Hopefully our season does all the talking for us next year.

Sunday, January 07, 2007

FAN TALK: U-M football

From the Detroit Free Press

We gave fans one last chance to vent about U-M's stunning Rose Bowl loss.


Derrick Little, Riverview, 24


Thoughts on the Rose Bowl? Disappointing loss; there was no passion on offense or defense.
Did losses to Ohio State and USC make this season a failure? No. They grew well as a team, and the young players really matured.
Is it fair to put Lloyd Carr on the hot seat after going 11-2? Not at all by looking at his career stats, but he needs to get his players to react better in bowl games.
Who else would you like to see coach U-M? Steve Mariucci.
Biggest change you want to see next season? Finish the way you started the season.
Prediction for next season? They will finish strong at 12-1.


Brandon Ferguson, Southgate, 24


Thoughts on the Rose Bowl? We were outcoached. Morgan Trent on Jarrett you CANNOT DO IT, and the secondary was bad.
Did losses to Ohio State and USC make this season a failure? Failure is such a harsh word. Disappointing fits the description.
Is it fair to put Lloyd Carr on the hot seat after going 11-2? It is -- his bowl record says it all.
Who else would you like to see coach U-M? Nick Saban or Mike Shanahan.
Biggest change you want to see next season? A better passing game.
Prediction for next season? First in the Big Ten, 12-1.


Michael Raupp, Huron Twp., 21


Thoughts on the Rose Bowl? Disappointing. The Big Ten needs to delay their season because the layoff is too long.
Did losses to Ohio State and USC make this season a failure? Yes, you are judged by the big games.
Is it fair to put Lloyd Carr on the hot seat after going 11-2? Yes, bowl record and big-game losses prove it.
Who else would you like to see coach U-M? Ron English.
Biggest change you want to see next season? More of an unpredictable offense and put away opponents when the opportunity is there.
Prediction for next season? 12-1, lose to USC in the national title game.
Brandon Monzon, Southgate, 22
Thoughts on the Rose Bowl? Typical Michigan team cannot win out on the West Coast.
Did losses to Ohio State and USC make this season a failure? Yes, your measuring stick is always the rivalry games.
Is it fair to put Lloyd Carr on the hot seat after going 11-2? Yes ... you have to win down the stretch.
Who else would you like to see coach U-M? Ron English.
Biggest change you want to see next season? Little bit more explosiveness on offense.
Prediction for next season? 10-3, will lose to OSU.

Questions Couples Should Ask (Or Wish They Had) Before Marrying

Relationship experts report that too many couples fail to ask each other critical questions before marrying. Here are a few key ones that couples should consider asking:
1) Have we discussed whether or not to have children, and if the answer is yes, who is going to be the primary care giver?
2) Do we have a clear idea of each other’s financial obligations and goals, and do our ideas about spending and saving mesh?
3) Have we discussed our expectations for how the household will be maintained, and are we in agreement on who will manage the chores?
4) Have we fully disclosed our health histories, both physical and mental?
5) Is my partner affectionate to the degree that I expect?
6) Can we comfortably and openly discuss our sexual needs, preferences and fears?
7) Will there be a television in the bedroom?
8) Do we truly listen to each other and fairly consider one another’s ideas and complaints?
9) Have we reached a clear understanding of each other’s spiritual beliefs and needs, and have we discussed when and how our children will be exposed to religious/moral education?
10) Do we like and respect each other’s friends?
11) Do we value and respect each other’s parents, and is either of us concerned about whether the parents will interfere with the relationship?
12) What does my family do that annoys you?
13) Are there some things that you and I are NOT prepared to give up in the marriage?
14) If one of us were to be offered a career opportunity in a location far from the other’s family, are we prepared to move?
15) Does each of us feel fully confident in the other’s commitment to the marriage and believe that the bond can survive whatever challenges we may face?

Saturday, January 06, 2007

Pakistani minister asks Afghan refugees to leave

As a Pakistani, it seems to be getting more and more frustrating every time Karzai is put in front of the media. Not only was his 'government' recently rude to the Pakistani media, but his constant whining in front of the camera is just sickening.

KABUL: The Pakistani prime minister, Shaukat Aziz, said that he wanted the three million Afghan refugees still living in Pakistan to go home, as one way to end the problem of insurgents using the country as a haven.

The remarks, made Thursday after a meeting with President Hamid Karzai here in the Afghan capital, marked the first time Pakistan had been so blunt in demanding that the Afghan refugees leave. Many fled Afghanistan more than 20 years go during the Soviet occupation and have been living in Pakistan ever since.

Aziz arrived for talks with Karzai in an effort to smooth tensions between the neighbors, but after more than two hours Karzai bluntly acknowledged that relations were only growing worse.

"Unfortunately, the gulf in relations between Afghanistan and Pakistan is getting wider, and it is not getting narrower," Karzai said after their meeting.

The two leaders emerged with no agreement on the main areas of contention, namely Pakistan's plan to fence and mine the border, and Afghanistan's project to convene two tribal gatherings, or jirgas, of national representatives from both countries, to try to foster peace between the countries.

Afghanistan has repeatedly condemned the project to fence and mine the border as a diversion from the real problem of terrorism, which it says is being incubated in Pakistan. Pakistan has also dragged its feet on organizing the tribal gatherings, promising only to form a commission to work on the idea.

"The Afghan people want to remove all those obstacles which create the divide in our relations," Karzai said. "Those obstacles are created by terrorist activities which are hindering Afghanistan's reconstruction and making our schools burn.

"Security will not come to Afghanistan unless together we and Pakistan, with good and friendly relations, become tough in the fight against terrorism."

He added that he wanted to hold the gathering of jirgas so people could speak their minds.

Without offering specifics, Aziz said the two leaders had agreed to work on resettling three million Afghan refugees back in Afghanistan and removing the sanctuary that refugee camps provide to insurgents.

"Refugee camps on our side of the border sometimes are safe havens for elements who are from Afghanistan and take safe haven there after conducting activities," he said.

He also defended Pakistan's plan to fence and mine the border as one way to restrict the movement of people who represent a threat to security.

In what appears to be the first exchange with a journalist since he went into hiding five years ago, the Taliban leader, Mullah Muhammad Omar, said that he had not seen Al Qaeda's chief, Osama bin Laden, in five years, The New York Times reported from Peshawar, Pakistan.

Omar also said he would never negotiate with the U.S.-backed government of Hamid Karzai in Afghanistan. He also threatened to continue the war until foreign troops withdraw from Afghanistan.

The statements were made in written response to questions sent by e-mail messages to the Taliban spokesman, Muhammad Hanif, who often speaks to journalists by telephone from an undisclosed location. Hanif said that Omar had written the replies himself and that a courier had returned the answers on a USB computer drive.