Two down, three to go

And that concludes the second out of a total of five exams this semester. Today I had a three hour written exam in Strategic Cost Accounting, following up the prior exam, Strategy. The three remaining exams are product management, business and society II and Finance, out of which the latter is the only one interesting, but then again, it is really interesting enough to cover the other two.

Project Management was actually supposed to be an elective subject, but as it turns out, out of seven originally planned subjects, only two were offered, China Studies, involving a month's travel to china, and project management. Safe to say I don't feel like there was enough real selection oppertunity for it to be named an elective study, one could as might as well just say that it was elementary.

The Echelon program mentioned in Prison Break

In Prison Break the National Security Agency's (NSA) Echelon program was mentioned. As mentioned in the TV-series the program is suspected to catch email traffic, faxes and phone conversations, not only as they say across the country, but across the world.

The European Parliament conducted an investigation against the Echelon-system in a periode between 1999 and 2004, the final report might be read at http://cryptome.org/echelon-ep-fin.htm. But what is this echelon thing?

In the greatest surveillance effort ever established, the US National Security Agency (NSA) has created a global spy system, codename ECHELON, which captures and analyzes virtually every phone call, fax, email and telex message sent anywhere in the world. ECHELON is controlled by the NSA and is operated in conjunction with the Government Communications Head Quarters (GCHQ) of England, the Communications Security Establishment (CSE) of Canada, the Australian Defense Security Directorate (DSD), and the General Communications Security Bureau (GCSB) of New Zealand. These organizations are bound together under a secret 1948 agreement, UKUSA, whose terms and text remain under wraps even today.

The ECHELON system is fairly simple in design: position intercept stations all over the world to capture all satellite, microwave, cellular and fiber-optic communications traffic, and then process this information through the massive computer capabilities of the NSA, including advanced voice recognition and optical character recognition (OCR) programs, and look for code words or phrases (known as the ECHELON "Dictionary") that will prompt the computers to flag the message for recording and transcribing for future analysis. Intelligence analysts at each of the respective "listening stations" maintain separate keyword lists for them to analyze any conversation or document flagged by the system, which is then forwarded to the respective intelligence agency headquarters that requested the intercept.

Here you can see a map of the listening stations
Echelon

Now, many will probably say that its not a problem that the government conducts surveilance on them, as they have nothing to hide. If you just had this thought, please read the final report. Chapter 10.7. Published cases include some reading material for you. One case worth to mention is one of Airbus versus Boeing in 1994. Where NSA obtained "Information on an order for aircraft concluded between Airbus and the Saudi Arabian national airline" using the means of "Interception of faxes and telephone calls between the negotiating parties" with the goal of "Forwarding of information to Airbus's US competitors, Boeing and McDonnell-Douglas", which resulted in "The Americans won the contract (US$ 6 bn)"

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Number of emails increasing

Now, I've always gotten my fair share of emails, but recently it has started getting of hand. A quick analysis of my logfiles shows that I had received a total of 115,799 emails between 27th of January and 22nd of October. Out of this 49,195 emails were marked as ham, while 66,604 got marked as spam, leaving a spam percentage of 58 percent.

What is more scary though is the development
spam development

Thankfully my spamfilter does a good job classifying spam messages, and my email filters a nice job of categorizing the incoming emails so that the information in them can make any kind of sense. Many are, thankfully, related to domain registrations through http://www.passive12.net , new client signups, reseller signups, pending orders, renewal notices, et cetera.

On top of that is a couple of mailing lists, GnuPG ( http://www.secure-my-email.com ) being one of them, SANE being another ( http://www.scanners-on-linux.com ).

After the introduction of RSS I've thankfully moved most news sites over to it, they used to account for the majority of emails before.

Due to a mistake on my behalf I don't have statistics from the 22nd of october untill today, and I hadn't noticed as I haven't checked the stats before now, but at least I jump-started it again, so I'll have more charts forwards.