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Terrorist Attempt May Strip Fliers of More Privacy

Backscatter advanced imaging units -- machines that basically let TSA screeners see through airline passengers' clothing -- are under new scrutiny following Christmas Day's plane bombing attempt. The machines are in limited use now, but more are on the way. Privacy advocates call them "virtual strip-searches." Will greater use of this technology actually make air travel safer?


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Back in early October -- nearly three months before Umar Abdulmutallab tried to blow up a jetliner bound for Detroit -- the Transportation Safety Administration's blog cheerily announced it had received US$355 million of Recovery Act money for "a lot of really nifty improvements to aviation security."

backscatter machine
Susan Hallowell holds up a side arm that was detected by the "backscatter" machine at the TSA in Egg Harbor Township, N.J. (AP file photo, June 25, 2003)

Included in that amount: $25 million to pay for 150 backscatter advanced imaging units which allow screeners to detect threats under people's clothes.

"This deployment follows a successful pilot phase, during which 46 imaging technology units were deployed at 23 airports and passengers opted to use imaging technology for primary screening 98 percent of the time," according to the blog post. "It is important to note that this technology is always optional to passengers."

The "optional" aspects of airport security, and just how effective whole-body scanning technologies can be, are back in the headlines this week following President Obama's vow to review airline security procedures in the wake of a failed attempt to blow up a Northwest Airlines (Nasdaq: NWAC) jet. Abdulmutallab is accused of trying to use explosives sewn into his underwear.

Whole-body scanning has so far been done away from public security areas at airports, and TSA employees never see a passenger's face during the scan; in most cases, they aren't even in the same room.

Debate about the scannners has come up before in the years after Sept. 11, but their full implementation in airports has been delayed by privacy concerns. Groups like the ACLU call them "virtual strip-searches" and have suggested that the potential for abuse and civil rights violations outweighs any security benefits.

Virtual Strip-Searches Effective?

There's nothing new in this week's reexaminations of the pros and cons of whole-body scanning, despite the Obama administration's promise to take a second look at current security measures, according to Mike German, ACLU privacy counsel.

"What's missing from the debate now is whether [whole-body scanners] are more effective in detecting plastic explosives than any other technology," German told TechNewsWorld. "This seems sort of a knee-jerk reaction. There's no scientific evidence that it's going to be more effective in detecting events like what happened recently" on the Christmas Day attempt. "It's putting into practice a technology that has a huge privacy downside for the vast majority of people going through security."

One week before Abdulmutallab's attempt, another privacy advocacy group, the Electronic Privacy Information Center, sued the Justice Department in an attempt to gain access to images taken by the scanners and how they are used by the TSA. In June, Utah Congressman Jason Chaffetz introduced a bill that would ensure that whole-body scanning would only be used if a traditional metal detector raised the need for more screening. That bill is pending Senate action. [*Correction - Dec. 30, 2009]

Nineteen airports currently use the whole-body scanners as secondary screening machines, with only a handful using them as primary sources of threat detection. The TSA's intention to use its Recovery Act money to buy 150 more machines, coupled with the latest incident, raises more concerns with ACLU officials.

"If you are going to do this, do you have to use it on every single traveler?" German asked. "There should be a graduated response based on facts that give rise to reasonable suspicions before invasive techniques are used. And if you are going to use them, there has to be adequate oversight to make sure they're not used in a discriminatory manner, or violative of civil rights and privacy."

Smarter, Not More, Use of Technology

Privacy need not come at the cost of security, nor vice-versa, according to Brad Jansen, an adjunct scholar at the Competitive Enterprise Institute. "If we're smart about it, those two can go hand in hand," Jansen told TechNewsWorld.

Jansen, who is also director of the Center for Financial Privacy and Human Rights, has testified before Congress on security measures taken in the wake of the Sept. 11 attacks. There are other ways to use the existing methods and technologies to enhance security, he said, such as using passenger profiling based on behavior/individual suspicions and to let the airlines and airports take the lead on security versus governmental agencies.

When it comes to whole-body scanners, "if we're going to use them, use them smarter," Jansen said, "where these machines are used as secondary screening based on behavior profiling for individual suspicions. The policies we've got now -- the longer lines, the gross violations of people's privacy where there are no indications of individual suspicions -- don't

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ParAccel's Bid to Build a Better Data CruncherParAccel's Bid to Build a Better Data Cruncher

For a lot of companies, gathering massive amounts of data is the easy part. They're drowning in it, in fact. What's tricky is mining that data -- sifting through it to gain actual, usable intelligence. ParAccel is battling much larger competitors in the data mining market by approaching the database in a different way. For ParAccel, it's all about columns, not tabs.


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Data mining is becoming a crowded field filled with software providers using similar strategies. Their basic goal is always the same. The analytics platforms are designed to slice and dice data to make sales Download Free eBook - The Edge of Success: 9 Building Blocks to Double Your Sales trends and buying opportunities more evident.

The firms that can deliver this product more accurately and more rapidly grow their reputations and entice new customers from lesser-producing competitors. Even when relative newcomers such as ParAccel introduce innovations, what they provide to their customers is essentially a better, faster way to dissect digital data.

For example, ParAccel announced in early December its next-generation Scalable Analytic Appliance II. This latest hardware appliance is intended to boost performance and efficiency by integrating flash-based server arrays.

ParAccel's founders are Barry Zane, cofounder of database heavy Netezza; CEO and President David J. Ehrlich, former senior vice president and marketing and chief strategy officer at NetIQ; and Bruce Scott, former vice president of Engineering at SenSage. Earlier, Scott was one of four cofounders of Oracle (Nasdaq: ORCL), serving as the principle engineer and architect of the Oracle database's first three versions.

"ParAccel has been around since 2006 in a very crowded and fast-growing market that quickly deploys business intelligence. It has data warehousing appliances with pre-configured software to deliver its Web analytics specialty via a variety of platforms," James Kobielus, senior analyst at Forrester, told TechNewsWorld.

Hanging On

Perhaps the trait that most distinguishes ParAccel from some of the largest data mining vendors in the market -- think Oracle and IBM (NYSE: IBM) -- is its software, which uses a columnar data base. This is a different way of structuring the database for faster response. The information is structured by columns rather than tabs.

With just about a dozen customers -- including OfficeMax, Merkle, Fidelity National Info Systems, Nielsen AIG and Price Chopper -- ParAccel is competing against a number of companies with a much larger customer bases.

However, the columnar database concept may help draw more in. It can be deployed as a stand-alone product or in front of an existing database to speed up the results. This approach saves on storage costs, and its ability to quickly load data enables it to handle terabytes per hour.

"It's fast due to the strong compression and highly parallel processing platform optimized for EMC (NYSE: EMC), Sun and HP (NYSE: HPQ) platforms," Kobielus said.

A Better Mousetrap?

Many companies today have more data than they can process. They're drowning in data they can't mine without costly and time-consuming manipulation. Extracting intelligence from raw data requires significant man-hours to write programs for complex queries and then days more to run them.

Seeing these limitations first-hand drove ParAccel's founders to develop a different approach to analytic database management, one they believe enables companies to ask virtually any question of their data on the fly and get an answer in minutes. Companies really will be able to respond in real time to changing market trends and consumer patterns.

"The idea to do commodities-type analysis on hardware began when I was still at Netezza. I was against that idea with that company. Its market strategy was working well. If something is succeeding, you don't mess with it," Barry Zane, CTO of ParAccel, told TechNewsWorld.

Early Moves

However, the idea still held Zane's interest, so he agreed to join the other founders and pursue a company to develop that product. He moved to San Diego to set up a base of operations and pursue initial funding.

With enough cash in hand from a capital venture source, Zane set out to put a team of 18 engineers together. That task proved daunting.

"It was a task to find young, energetic engineers who weren't polluted in orthodox thinking. It takes a lot of engineering talent to solve problems involving large systems," said Zane.

Salvaging Success

The defining moment for ParAccel's proof of concept came some four months into the new company's product development efforts, noted Zane. That was back in 2005, when Zane was still showing the company's potential as a proof point to get early venture funding.

The development team was running its proprietary software on 48 servers. The heat factor set in. Zane remembers scampering around to move the server farm into a larger room. He had to run to a local store and carry out a number of large floor fans to cool the overheating servers.

Such incidents are typical of startups, Zane quipped. He emphasized that his engineers solved that problem and no longer have that issue in any of its appliances. ParAccel products now run on much larger server systems.

Quality Control

Another incident that Zane sees as defining moment was his new company's reliability for high performance involved a POC (Proof of Concept) bid he submitted. The engineering took 10 days, and led to a contract offer -- but he declined it.

"We had the best performance but knew we couldn't meet [the potential client's] long-term demands," he explained.

Changing Spaces

Zane and his fellow cofounders saw a change in the marketplace and aimed their product to meet that niche. The nature of what people do with their data is evolving, he noted.

"Traditionally, companies make very simple analytical questions. For example, a store chain will want to know what products sold well at a particular time of the year. Clearly, a more interesting tend is the correlation of information," said Zane.

For instance, modern day data mining activities push the envelop on the concept of market basket analysis.

Did you ever notice a beer display teamed up with baby diapers in a store? How do the store's marketers know which products to team up? That's what data analysis is all about today.

Figuring Futures

From Zane's perspective, ParAccel has a clear lead in understanding how to build these columnar database systems.

"We've never been beaten on performance. We don't leave road kill behind," said Zane. "I don't see that changing."

Name recognition is not a problem; he has deliberately kept ParAccel fairly low-key in the media. "It took solid engineering to get here," he said.

That approach will allow the company to make the most of success in the $6 billion information market place, he said.

Hardware Endeavor

In what could be the next big step forward in reaching future goals, ParAccel announced earlier this month its adoption of new, fast flash storage technology. The ParAccel Scalable Analytic Appliance II (SAA II), the company's latest hardware appliance, incorporates the speed and efficiency of flash storage technology with breakthroughs in performance optimization and enterprise manageability of the new ParAccel Database (PADB) 2.0.

SAA II is designed for companies seeking massive scale and performance from their data warehouses while leveraging the enterprise-class capabilities of SAN environments. The appliance is designed to dramatically improve the performance of SAN-attached data warehouses.

SAA II is powered by EMC and ParAccel. It dynamically balances I/O and storage across direct-attached compute nodes and the SAN to achieve greater I/O throughput and CPU utilization.

Android Goodies Tucked Away?

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Beyond the Nexus: Does Google Have More Android Goodies Tucked Away?

Google seems to have held little back about its Nexus One smartphone, if leaked documents are the real deal. That has led to speculation that it may have more surprises in store for its Android-related press event scheduled for next Tuesday. Changes to the open source mobile operating system, perhaps? More handsets built by other manufacturers?


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Google (Nasdaq: GOOG) will be introducing its Nexus One smartphone device next Tuesday, it appears certain. Not that Google has said as much: All the the company has announced is that it will hold an "Android related" press conference on Jan. 5, a day identified in prior rumor accounts as the Google phone's launch date.

The expectation of a Nexus One announcement has been bolstered by screenshots containing pricing information and other details published by Gizmodo.

Google's Nexus One
This photo of Google's Nexus One Android smartphone was posted online by Cory O'Brien earlier this month.

If the leaked documents are accurate, Google plans to sell the HTC-manufactured phone directly -- unlocked and unsubsidized -- for US$530. It will also be available through T-Mobile for $180 with a two-year contract.

Just one rate plan -- about $80 per month -- reportedly will be available to customers with one line. Existing customers who have family plans, Flexpay, SmartAccess or KidConnect accounts will be required to buy the phone unlocked and unsubsidized for $530, according to Gizmodo.

Google will sell the phone at google.com/phone, starting at 9:00 a.m. on Tuesday, reported TmoNews, the unofficial T-Mobile blog.

Google did not respond to TechNewsWorld's request for comment by press time.

Jan. 5 happens to be two days before the start of the Consumer Electronics Show, the tech industry's major trade and conference expo -- a good time to release a blockbuster product, which the Nexus One is likely to be. The widespread consensus is that it will garner major buzz at the event.

It Feels Right

Everything about the announcement -- the timing of it, prior leaks about the strategy Download Free eBook - The Edge of Success: 9 Building Blocks to Double Your Sales, and the expected Tuesday preview -- makes sense.

"They are being smart announcing it before CES," Scott Testa, a business professor at Cabrini College, told TechNewsWorld.

There will almost certainly be several mobile announcements of comparable excitement value at the conference, he suggested. "The future of computing is mobile -- the industry knows that and is moving towards it."

Former Partners?

The only surprise left is how -- or whether -- Google intends to soothe its Android partners' bruised feelings, said Testa. "This is something that could easily cause a rift with partners that took a chance on Android, invested in it, only to see Google compete with them. If I am Motorola (NYSE: MOT) or T-Mobile, I would not be happy right now at all."

Google appears to have no shame, however, he remarked. "If anything, this shows it is willing to go aggressively after the markets it wants."

Still, it will probably want to make some kind of overture to keep its partners happy, he said.

More Than One

With so much about its Nexus One plans already revealed, speculation in some quarters is turning to what else Google may have up its sleeve for Jan. 5.

"There is certain to be more than one announcement," Greg Sterling, principal of Sterling Market Intelligence, told TechNewsWorld.

Changes in the Android OS, for example, are one possibility. How many handset makers Google is working with -- or will be working with -- is another, he said. It is possible Google may be unveiling more than one device -- or perhaps one device with a road map for additional products.

What appears certain is that Google will be unveiling its own phone.

"The handset has been widely photographed and written about," noted Sterling. "The secrecy behind it can't go on much longer or it just won't be news anymore, and Google will have lost

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hello it is my first post

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my name is waqas
i am from faisalabad

i am a new to blogging

I joined blogging oday on 30th December 2009