there are many days when Microsoft and Google stand apart. But today our 2 companies stand together. We both remain concerned with the Government’s continued unwillingness to permit us to publish sufficient data relating to FISA orders.
Tag: google
NSA
the nsa resources deployed on the war on water / drugs:
Agencies working to curb drug trafficking, cyberattacks, money laundering, counterfeiting and even copyright infringement complain that their attempts to exploit the security agency’s vast resources have often been turned down because their own investigations are not considered a high enough priority, current and former government officials say.
2013-08-14: Hipster NSA stopped 50 terrorist attacks. You’ve probably never heard of them.
2013-09-11: Calling the NSA
2013-09-16:
What can we do to roll back this aggressive expansion of the surveillance state, and to lower the probability of it happening again in the near future? The best answer is the simplest one: abolish the NSA. Abolish it, and create an easy mechanism for abolishing agencies like it in the future.
a test if we can still muster the power to dismantle organizations that have outlived their purpose and crossed too many lines.
2013-10-30: and good luck with decrypting the network now, assholes.
This is the big story in tech today:
NSA infiltrates links to Yahoo, Google data centers worldwide
I’m just going to post my thoughts on this. Standard disclaimer: They are my own thoughts, and not those of my employer.
Fuck these guys.
I’ve spent the last 10 years of my life trying to keep Google’s users safe and secure from the many diverse threats Google faces.
I’ve seen armies of machines DOS-ing Google. I’ve seen worms DOS’ing Google to find vulnerabilities in other people’s software. I’ve seen criminal gangs figure out malware. I’ve seen spyware masquerading as toolbars so thick it breaks computers because it interferes with the other spyware.
I’ve even seen oppressive governments use state sponsored hacking to target dissidents.
But even though we suspected this was happening, it still makes me terribly sad. It makes me sad because I believe in America.
Not in that flag-waving bullshit we’ve-got-our-big-trucks-and-bigger-tanks sort of way, but in the way that you can looked a good friend who has a lot of flaws, but every time you meet him, you think, “That guy still has some good ideas going on”.
But after spending all that time helping in my tiny way to protect Google — one of the greatest things to arise from the internet — seeing this, well, it’s just a little like coming home from War with Sauron, destroying the One Ring, only to discover the NSA is on the front porch of the Shire chopping down the Party Tree and outsourcing all the hobbit farmers with half-orcs and whips.
The US has to be better than this; but I guess in the interim, that security job is looking a lot more like a Sisyphus thing than ever.
Also of note, this article from September may call some recent technical decisions into relief:
2013-11-01:
Despite Dianne Feinstein’s supposed “conversion” earlier this week about the NSA being out of control with its spying, and the associated performance of NSA folks claiming that they were screwed, it’s quickly become apparent that this was all pure theater to make people think that real reform might be coming.
2013-12-08: the low-level thugs at the NSA are polishing their resumes as we speak.
Morale has taken a hit at the National Security Agency in the wake of controversy over the agency’s surveillance activities. Former officials are dismayed that President Obama has not visited the agency to show his support.
2013-12-16: the nsa must be in deep crisis mode that they feel they have to ask for the help of this thug. tl;dr: yes we lied to congress but don’t worry, we don’t care about your data. also, please help out with my mayonnaise kickstarter.
2013-12-22:
The US national security establishment didn’t even attempt to protect us from this. Why? The folks running the show down in Washington don’t, and still don’t, consider the biggest cyber attack on US citizens to date a national security issue. As with 9/11, our expensive national defense system was totally ineffective when we needed it.
A bit hyperbolic but he is right that the thugs at the NSA had one job, and blew even that.
2013-12-26:
a time will come, someday, when we are terrified, once again. When all the “Orwellian” talk will seem far less important than empowering our protectors with any powers they claim to need. Shall we ride this roller-coaster helplessly, oscillating between submission and indignation?
2014-02-24: it’s great to see that other leakers are coming forward. a NSA busy with internal purges and ultra-paranoia will be less of a threat.
the NSA, forbidden by President Obama from tapping German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s phone directly, has ramped up its spying on her senior government officials
2014-03-20: high drama, with response by Richard Ledgett: The NSA responds to Edward Snowden’s TED Talk
2014-04-09:
Hackers are addicted to the power of controlling machines. Almost every time they compromise a new machine, their “compromise boundary” grows. The drug gets better the more you take – unlike “regular” drugs. SIGINT organizations seem to behave like addicts: Making up excuses to escalate the consumption of their favorite drug.
2014-05-09:
the NSA set themselves up for it by preventing the early internet specifications from including transport layer encryption. At every step in the development of the public internet the NSA systematically lobbied for weaker security, to enhance their own information-gathering capabilities. The trouble is, the success of the internet protocols created a networking monoculture that the NSA themselves came to rely on for their internal infrastructure. The same security holes that the NSA relied on to gain access to your (or Osama bin Laden’s) email allowed gangsters to steal passwords and login credentials and credit card numbers. And ultimately these same baked-in security holes allowed Edward Snowden—who, let us remember, is merely 1 guy: a talented system administrator and programmer, but no Clark Kent—to rampage through their internal information systems.
2015-05-23:
piecing this story together took a team that was willing to do everything from learning some fairly difficult number theory to coding up simulations to poring over the Snowden documents for clues about the NSA’s budget
Interesting musings on the diffie-hellman vulnerability.
2017-05-01:
It’s possible that someone penetrated the internal NSA network. We’ve already seen NSA tools that can do that kind of thing to other networks. That would be huge, and explain why there were calls to fire NSA Director Mike Rogers last year.
The CIA leak is both similar and different. It consists of a series of attack tools from ~1 year ago. The most educated guess amongst people who know stuff is that the data is from an almost-certainly air-gapped internal development wiki and either someone on the inside was somehow coerced into giving up a copy of it, or someone on the outside hacked into the CIA and got themselves a copy. They turned the documents over to WikiLeaks, which continues to publish it.
This is also a really big deal, and hugely damaging for the CIA. Those tools were new, and they’re impressive. The CIA is desperately trying to hire coders to replace what was lost.
For both of these leaks, one big question is attribution: who did this? A whistleblower wouldn’t sit on attack tools for years before publishing. A whistleblower would act more like Snowden or Manning, publishing immediately — and publishing documents that discuss what the US is doing to whom, not simply a bunch of attack tools. It just doesn’t make sense. Neither does random hackers. Or cybercriminals. I think it’s being done by a country or countries.
My guess was, and is still, Russia in both cases. Here’s my reasoning. Whoever got this information years before and is leaking it now has to 1) be capable of hacking the NSA and/or the CIA, and 2) willing to publish it all. Countries like Israel and France are certainly capable, but wouldn’t ever publish. Countries like North Korea or Iran probably aren’t capable.
Proper HVAC
by collecting 500M data points from the sensors in all their buildings every 24h, finding huge energy savings right away:
In 1 building garage, exhaust fans had been mistakenly left on for a year (to the tune of $66K of wasted energy). Within moments of coming online, the smart buildings solution sniffed out this fault and the problem was corrected.
2016-07-21: Cooling AI
by applying DeepMind’s machine learning to Google data centers, we’ve reduced the energy we use for cooling by up to 40%. In any large scale environment, this would be a huge improvement. Given how sophisticated Google’s data centers are already, it’s a phenomenal step forward.
this is why smart grids are one of the highest ROI investments countries could make.
Boston Dynamics
Boston Dynamics is Cyberdyne Systems
2013-11-13: Combat support

Pfc. Marcus Beedle looks over his shoulder at the robot following him. The machine’s 4 legs are eagerly stamping the grass, its sensor-laden head held high. “LS3, follow tight,” Beedle says to the robot, and the Legged Squad Support System—which stands taller than a dog but smaller than a mule—follows in the exact footsteps of its Marine Corps handler. Beedle’s backpack is outfitted with thick black bands. To follow him, the robot senses this pattern via the flickering laser in its head. LS3 also uses stereoscopic cameras to fix on the Marine’s location and can trace the path he’s taken by following a navigation device strapped to Beedle’s right shoe. As the young private first class strides forward, the LS3 obediently trots after him, exhaust from its gas engine sputtering. “Follow-the-leader is our bread and butter”.
2013-12-14: This is a far more interesting take than all the terminator jokes which are neither insightful, original, or clever.
News broke today that Google acquired my friend Marc Raibert’s company, Boston Dynamics, one of the coolest robotics companies in the world. You know Boston Dynamics because of their work building “Big Dog,” “Bigger Dog,” Cheetah and now Atlas. They’ve been the most impressive functional robots around.
What’s bigger news is that this is their 8th announced robotics acquisition in the last 6 months. Remember that Google is spending over $7B every year in R&D, M&A.
This internal robotics revolution is being led by Andy Rubin, the Google executive who developed and ran Android, the world’s most widely used smartphone software. This is being done with Larry Page’s enthusiastic support, as he and his team continue to display their impressive “moonshot thinking” by investing heavily in the future.
Don’t forget that Google is probably the No. 1 hotbed of research on artificial intelligence with the acquisition of my friend and SU Co-Founder Ray Kurzweil and the recent addition of Deep Learning creator Geoffrey Hinton.
So what do you get when you combine 8 robotics companies, the leading AI creative forces and researchers, the brilliance (and ambition) of Larry Page and a $7B R&D budget?
I think it will be the transformation of our society — how we work, how we learn, take care of our sick, conduct our commerce, explore, handle disasters, fight wars… everything.
If this level of transformation isn’t on your radar, if you are not thinking about how this will change your life, your business and your industry, then you are missing it, big time.
You need to understand the implications of this, and figure out how you are going to surf on top of this tsunami… not be crushed by it.
If you like, on January 9th and 10th, 2014, at the Ritz-Carlton hotel (Marina Del Rey, Los Angeles), I’ll be teaching entrepreneurs about robotics, AI and other exponential technologies, how you can think bold and take action globally, and how to leverage such powerful tools as crowd funding and incentive competitions.
And here are some Boston Dynamics videos, so you can see the robots in action:
Big Dog:Cheetah:
Atlas:
2016-03-18: Boston Dynamics are an evolutionary dead end
Boston Dynamics are very successful pioneers. But their algorithms are not based on Deep Learning principles. And Google is leading the world in Deep Learning and can apply it to anything they want, including robotics. DL based algorithms do not provide a complete robotics solution today but there is wide agreement that this is the best path forward for the field. Why is this important? The difference is robots that can walk vs robots that can dance ballet. The goal is “graceful locomotion” which will be an order of magnitude more adaptive, more energy efficient, and faster than the current generation of robots.
2019-04-02: Handle
Kinema’s software—which is robot-agnostic, meaning it already works on a range of robots beyond Handle—helps the machine through all these challenges. “Their system is able to look at a stack of boxes, and no matter how ordered or disordered the boxes are, or the markings on top, or the lighting conditions, they’re able to figure out which boxes are discrete from each other and to plan a path for grabbing the box.” That’s a huge part of what Handle, a robot designed to work in warehouses, needs to do.
2023-05-16: Some much needed competition. Boston Dynamics is moving at a snails pace.
Year in Search 2012
a bit self-serving but also very nicely done.
Hiring gambits
true story
Private Cities
this will be a most interesting experiment. if the essentially privately run singapore is any indication, good things will happen.
The government of Honduras has signed a deal with private investors for the construction of 3 privately run cities with their own legal and tax systems.
2017-11-20:
Google is building a small city within Toronto: Toronto has 3 km2 of waterfront property awaiting redevelopment, a huge and prime stretch of land that amounts to one of the best opportunities in North America to rethink at scale how housing, streets and infrastructure are built. The government announced that they were partnering with Sidewalk Labs to develop the site.
Bill Gates is thinking even bigger, a 100 km2 site for a new city near Phoenix that might take advantage of Arizona’s forward thinking rules on self-driving cars.
All over the world, we can see the beginnings of a move from nation-states to smaller, more decentralized and agile communities such as common interest developments, special economic zones and proprietary cities. Your Next Government is Tom W. Bell’s primer on this coming revolution.
electrical parking

the future is already here, it’s just not evenly distributed.
Google Interview
tomorrow i have a lunch interview with bryan may. i am so excited that google nyc has decided to hire a guitarist!
East Village Glass
little known fact: for this perfect vision of the future, they picked the best neighborhood in the world: east village, nyc. reprazent