wow, quite the discussion. the efforts of national governments to hide things are getting ever harder.
Tag: security
Shot Spotter
Last year there were 148 homicides in Oakland. Today, when someone fires a gun on a city street, a network of hidden microphones kicks in — triangulating the exact location. And alerting police. Can a tech startup help put a dent in violent crime?
the march towards a transparent society continues with a sensorweb install. some military installs combine this with automatic fire response, just like in the movies.
Identicon
I’ve just added preliminary 9-block IP identification feature to Daily, my blog server to enhance commenter identity beyond name and website. Basically, what I am doing is using a privacy protecting derivative of each commenter’s IP address to build a 9-block image and displaying it next the commenter’s name.
creates a unique graphic per ip. people get excited about the look of their ip 🙂
terrorist webteam

Message Vault
alan’s standalone js content encrypter
Beirut and contradiction

I believe that the photo is stunning in the metaphor it creates about war photography. It tells us about the voyeurism of the photographer, of the act of taking photos in tragic situations: if there is a contradiction, it is in the encounter between art, beauty and tragedy. Covering a disaster in order to create a striking image is what Robert Capa did best, he became an icon for it and we, the viewers are becoming addicted to this art form.
The Art Of War
There are, obviously, no police inworld. Sometimes, self-defense is all you’ve got. Before now, I’ve had to draw a weapon and blow people off my land to discontinue attacks. Look at that sentence again. It makes me sound like I’m living on frontier land, or, perhaps, like I’ve become a mad farmer with a shotgun. Is there a case to be made for Second Life as the lawless digital Wild West, where sometimes a man has to slap leather to defend his person and his homestead from the badmen and the road agents? It’s more than a little absurd. On the other hand, being ejected out of the world is a little more inconvenient than some freak running his mouth on a messageboard.
the state of SL weaponization
Lithium scarcity
A world dependent on lithium for its vehicles could soon face even tighter resource constraints than we face today with oil. Lithium-rich South America would become the new Middle East. Concentration of supply would create new geopolitical tensions
2021-06-28: Lithium 3x cheaper
“Over an 18-month period, only 30% of the available lithium is captured because the lithium co-precipitates out of the brine with other salts. By using membranes, we can now control this mechanical separation process, avoid the co-precipitation that causes 60% of that loss, and achieve a 90% recovery rate”
Battery capacity has to scale at least 1000x in the next decade, and Lithium prices are one bottleneck.
2022-05-20: Demand is growing 2x faster than supply.
- Demand for lithium from the EV industry is growing at 2x the rate of lithium production. As a result, lithium prices have skyrocketed over the past 6 months — 4x last year’s prices in tight markets. By 2025, the US could need up to 75k tonnes per year of lithium to supply new gigafactories.
- The US currently produces only 1% of global lithium production — 1k tonnes of lithium content. This currently comes from a single brine operation: Albemarle’s Silver Peak site in Nevada.
- The US theoretically has enough lithium in the ground to meet the growing demand. The USGS reported that the US has 750k tonnes of economically recoverable lithium in 2021. This estimate will continue to grow as new reserves are proven; as recently as 2018, the US had only 30k tonnes of established domestic reserves.
- The Thacker Pass project in Nevada has received all required permits to begin construction and is the closest to bringing new US lithium production online (5k tonnes of lithium content in Phase 1). Because the lithium at Thacker Pass is found in clay rather than in a brine, it can be extracted quickly with relatively standard technology once facilities are constructed.
- The heated brines pumped out of the ground for geothermal power in California’s Salton Sea region also contain significant amounts of lithium — 24k tonnes of lithium content passes through these plants a year by NREL’s estimate. Extracting this lithium is hard because of the wide range of other minerals present, combined with relatively low lithium concentrations and elevated temperatures. However, building out more geothermal capacity is an amazing BOGO opportunity: clean energy + lithium, and lots of it!
- 3 challenges prevent the USA from achieving lithium independence. The first is the long development times needed to bring a new resource to production (4–10+ years). The second is the low average lithium concentration of US deposits, which make them more complicated and expensive to process than Chilean brines, for instance. The third is creating a streamlined (and appropriately staffed) permitting process that ensures that environmental impacts are kept to a minimum, while enabling a predictable outcome for responsible parties.
2023-09-13: The market solved it.
When I first read about the discovery of a vast new deposit of lithium in a volcanic crater along the Nevada-Oregon border, I can’t say that I was surprised. Not because I know anything about geology — but because, as an economist, I am a strong believer in the concept of elasticity of supply.
It’s worth dwelling on the significance of this find, which could help limit climate change and ease geopolitical tensions. The find, 20-40m tons, would be larger than the current largest, 21m tons beneath the salt flats of Bolivia. (The discovery awaits final confirmation, but at least 1 company says it expects to start mining this supply in 2026.) And lithium is of course a crucial ingredient in batteries for electric vehicles, demand for which is surging and which are an important part of any plan to fight climate change.
Pointless Satellite censorship
I’ve been told off (politely) via email for showing terrorist readers of Ogle Earth how to get to the imagery that used to be in Google Earth by publicizing the Google Maps API tile comparison tool in my previous post. The argument was that these things may be easy for me, but not for the average Iraqi, and that what I did was akin to posting information on how to pick locks. I only partly agree. I think my previous post was more like pointing out that there is no door to lock. 10 minutes ago I gave myself the task of getting hold of recent imagery of Basra without access to Google Earth or the Google Maps API. I got what I was looking for on the first try. Tell me if what I just did is not accessible to anyone with dial-up internet, a point to prove, and a positive IQ.
debunking the ‘OMG terrorists’ nonsense
Unwilling trip
Unbeknownst to Glickman, the clubfooted man had spiked his drink with LSD. The aftereffects of the acid trip sent him into a lifelong tailspin of psychosis, electroshock therapy, and terrifying hallucinations. He had no idea what had happened to him—this was 1952, at least 10 years before most people had even heard of the drug.
mk-ultra tell-all