Category Archives: Tech Outside The Cave

Take a break from the 21st Century…

… to check out how the boffins and TV presenters in 1967 thought we would live now. These delightful clips get real close to our modern lifestyles. There’s just the one logical deduction they overlook. They get most of it right. For example, they haven’t put any books on the bookshelves, though they’re obviously not sure what the ornaments of the future will look like? “Chess or blind man’s dominoes“, the producer must have thought. The printed version of the newspaper looks almost prophetic of the difficulties lying ahead for that industry.

The obvious flaw is the insistence on having lots of different screens and their accompanying bespoke machines. Oddly, the weather forecast is considered to be sufficiently similar to the stock market to avoid the need for another machine again. Yet, despite apparently realising that machines could double up, we’re still presented with at least four machines and we haven’t yet made it out of the first room! Aside from the fact that all these functions can be deployed by one machine and carried in your pocket (from room to room), its a pretty good effort at prediction.

1967′s best guess at the modern living room is more accurate. Gone is the obsession with what a man can do with technology. Instead, we get what technology can do for a man. Apparently it can give us home cinema and subtle lighting conditions. Did we, the future people want for more? Not really.

Irradiated” foods are stored next to the frozen stuff in some area off camera? Kitchen expectations were decidedly sketchy. They wanted us to abandon the subtle meditative pleasures of cooking a meal. All human input has been cleared away, like the washing up. This bastard would have me out of a job. How on earth could I have made Cooking in the Cave with this sort of crappy attitude?

Many Brighton & Hove citizens use Linux but their city does not

Linux Penguin

The symbol of Linux

Linux is an operating system for computers. 99% of the internet runs on servers (a computer which serves data on request via the internet) using Linux. Linux works just as well on your desktop computer. There are many different ‘flavours’ of Linux because the code used is open source, free, and isn’t a proprietary system. The rest of this paragraph will assume that you don’t know what that means. Open source means that anyone can obtain a copy of the computer code. You can get a copy for yourself, read it (if you understand the language it is written in), tweak it, do whatever you want with it. Most open source software which is useful has been produced as a result of a collaborative effort. Linux is free as in freedom and also free as in beer, although most of its advocates point out their own factual pedantry by denying the beer bit because there is almost inevitably some tiny costs involved. For example, you probably had to pay for your internet connection, which you downloaded in through, or the disc you first burnt it to before using it. Proprietary software is computer code which is privately owned, such as Microsoft’s Windows or Apple’s operating systems. Not only can you not see the source code for these and not redesign them, you also have to pay for them and cannot redistribute them without the proprietor’s permission. That’s hardly surprising, of course, why should any company make something and then give it away for free?

Canonical is a company which oversees the development of a version of Linux called Ubuntu and gives it away for free. They’ve been committed to this project for a long time and appear to be in for the duration. They collaborate with numerous other interested parties in the project. It’s almost certainly fair to say that more people have and are working together in tweaking Ubuntu than work for Microsoft and Apple put together. I’m one of them, in my own modest way. The system is set up for you to help, regardless of your level of technical know how. To borrow an old slogan, it is a case of from everyone according to their ability, to everyone according to their need. There’s a single word which neatly sums up that maxim: socialism.

You can download Ubuntu as a disc image file, burn the image to a disc (which is different to just burning the file to the disc) and then use it as a Live CD to test run Ubuntu, without having interfered with your computer’s existing operating system. If you like it, you can then install it either in place of or alongside your existing operating system; it’ll run much faster if you do that because your computer’s hard drive or memory cards are much faster than its external disc drive. I’ve been using Ubuntu for many years. Although there isn’t an equivalent for every type of proprietary software and freeware that is available for Windows, you have to have pretty obscure interests to be unable to find a suitable equivalent. All the software that you use with Ubuntu is also free. Free as in beer. With the sole exception of flashing a new ROM (changing the operating system) to my Android ‘phone, which relies on a piece of software which is only compatible with Windows (it was leaked from Samsung), everything else I have every wanted to do with a computer over the last half decade has been done on Ubuntu. This means I have been able to spend more money on my hardware, because all the software was free.

Of course, you can easily get free software for any operating system illegally. Whilst countless individuals take that route, very few companies and institutions are prepared to take the risk of getting caught. In certain industries, notably music and video editing, the proprietary companies selling the standard software deliberately (and unofficially) make a cracked version available, so that start up companies will use their software. Then, when the company makes good with that new low budget film they were working on, they can afford to and, it seems, do pay for an official version. Small companies in certain industries without much room for industrial espionage can get away with this sort of behaviour but larger companies and public institutions cannot. There are just too many people who might blow the whistle on them, in return for some kind of payment, for a competitive advantage or just out of spite. Thus, almost all cities around the world waste millions of pounds on proprietary operating systems which they themselves cannot update or improve and which (particularly in the case of Windows) are prone to security problems.

Not so Munich. Munich’s political administration has taken the radical approach of deciding to migrate all of its computers to Linux. In November, Munich announced that it had saved €11,000,000 by switching from Windows to Linux. The switching programme began in 2006 was originally scheduled to last ten years. So far, 87% of Munich’s computers have been migrated from Windows NT to the city’s own ‘flavour’ of Linux, called LiMux. That’s 13,000 out of 15,000 computers. Whilst the migration programme has been followed, Munich has been developing LiMux. Now it is said to be comparable in strength to Windows 7. Every year from now on in there will be savings because LiMux doesn’t cost any licensing fees.

Any reasonably sized city can easily hire a few seasoned Linux developers to pull off this stunt. Linux lends itself to that sort of tweaking. Microsoft seems to be rattled by Munich abandoning its business. Munich has 1,420,000 citizens. If every city the size of Munich followed suit, Microsoft would probably go out of business. If the financial hit didn’t put it out of business, it would certainly deal it a very damaging blow. It’s share price would collapse and it would lose the funds necessary to fight the ongoing and increasingly large patent wars which have consumed the proprietary tech world.

Bill Gates looking sleazy

Bill Gates, the face of Microsoft

Microsoft commissioned a study, which was carried out by HP on the ground, to prove that Munich has not saved that much money. A German employee of HP leaked the report to a German publication. Karl-Heinz Schneider, head of the Munich’s municipal IT service IT@M, asked Microsoft for a copy of the study’s report but Microsoft refused. Now Schneider obviously has an interest in the matter and wanted to see the evidence for himself. Instead he has been obliged to garner what he can from the press reports. He is reported to have claimed that those press reports cast considerable doubt on the validity of the study. For example, the study apparently overlooked the vast majority of Munich’s savings by excluding the licence fees the city would have had to pay to Microsoft: €7,000,000. It doesn’t look like anyone outside one particular journal in Germany, HP or Microsoft is going to be able to scrutinise the report, to check its integrity. Microsoft has refused to publish the study! If the study could withstand decent scrutiny, you’d think Microsoft would be promoting it all over the planet. Since they’re not, it is hard not to draw the obvious conclusion that Munich has saved a considerable sum.

Brighton & Hove has a very well established technology sector, which drives much of its home grown economy. Plenty of these people and other like minded souls use Linux. As you might expect, there is no demographic data on precisely what proportion of our city use Linux either domestically or professionally. However, it seems very likely that it is used by a higher proportion of people in Brighton & Hove than in, say Grimsby, which isn’t well known for being stuffed with techheads. Brighton & Hove City Council provides webcasts of all its public meetings, whether they be full councils or various committees. These webcasts are maintained by a company called Public-i. Only two days ago Public-i published a blog post which congratulated itself on how great these webcasts are. Previously, they could not be watched on Linux but various concerned citizens contacted the City Council and Public-i and the problem was cured. Evidently, both the City Council and this private company thought that it was important that the City’s Linux users could also see their local democracy in action. Presumably that meant that both the Council and the company concluded that there were a significant number of Linux users locally.

The question is how much money could Brighton & Hove City Council save by migrating its own computers to Linux? The short answer to this is whatever it currently pays Microsoft or Apple, less whatever it spends on Linux. It could choose to develop its own version, like Munich did, or it could just use Ubuntu, which is free, rock solid and virus free. Oh, I feel a Freedom of Information Request coming on… or maybe I’ll just politely ask one of my friends in the Green Party. Watch this space for the figure. Whatever it is, those savings could be replicated across the country, saving all of us considerable sums of money and helping to break the stranglehold that the capitalists have over our software. We probably need capitalists to make the hardware but software is best made by socialists. In other words, when faced with a choice between Bill Gates and a penguin, I’ll take the penguin every time.

Review of VisitBrighton App

Official Description

The Brighton Official Visitor City Guide is the essential visitor guide to Brighton & Hove, England.

Developed by VisitBrighton, the city’s official tourism department, the app contains all the essential information you need to make the most of a trip to the city; it’s like having a mini-guidebook in your phone.

With sections covering Things to See & Do, Food & Drink, What’s On, Where to Stay and Shopping the app contains listings for hundreds of businesses, which each include an image, full description, opening times, admission prices, location and complete contact details including email and web links where appropriate.

The Brighton Official Visitor City Guide also contains information on the “city villages” that make up Brighton & Hove and suggested itineraries covering different themes, giving you the opportunity to explore areas that most visitors don’t know about.

The app also includes a ‘Favourites’ functionality enabling you to build up your own personalised itinerary of places to visit, restaurants to dine at and things to do during your trip.

 

Useability

Pointless page on VisitBrighton app

Pointless page on VisitBrighton app

Cutting straight to the chase of how to enjoy Brighton, begs the question of how to swiftly find what’s happening, where and when, with some costings thrown in or a map of how to get to or away your home for the night. This app seeks to serve all that up in one handy tool. Commercial sponsorship of the town’s economy. Note, town, not the city Brighton & Hove now is. Opened the app presents the Android owner with a pointless tap-through screen. Thereafter, there is the basic menu: Food & Drink, What’s On, See & Do, Where To Stay, Shopping, City Villages, Essentials, Itineraries. Each one of these categories (a whole page) loads a submenu. Each submenu has type and location filters type and location to narrow searches. Each listing has detailed information about its official address, hours, prices, whatevers, including phone numbers, email and links to its website, a nice little photograph and a heart sign.

The heart sign notes your interest in some place and stores it on the last main menu item, the neatly named Itineraries. Its filter doesn’t go by place and price, but by thematic times to be had: by the name ‘Ideas’ ~ My Itinerary, 24 hours, 48 hours, 72 hours, Family, Gay & Lesbian, Green, as if they follow in sequence with your own rough ideas to start with, then the suggestion that you might spend an entire 24 hours in town. From 24, to 48 and then, wahey, make a weekend of it. It’s a sales strategy but also, perchance something more. The list continues to imply that instead of just visiting you have your family here. You live amongst us. Asylum seekers from London (a suburb of Brighton anyway, to be fair) constantly driving up houseprices or holding them up harder in hard times. Thanks for that. After living amongst us, what is the logical progression? That’s right, you will go queer. However after that you will be a committed Greenie, saving the planet and your conscience along the way.

Just a map, nothing more

Just a map, nothing more

All this is fine, assuming you need an app at all for it ~ I’ll come to this point later but it needs to be said here. It’s somewhat clunky. It’s all big pictures and extra screens to pop through, as if we read full screen pictures faster that icons and text. On my Samsung Galaxy S2, which loads every other app, instantaneously it spends a little while loading. Although everything is beautifully mapped, making use of Google’s mapping technology, you can’t switch through that to using your Google accounts directions tool or address book or whatever. The point being that it means you have to go another app in order to use this tool with the rest of your phone. In a worst case scenario you’re thrown back onto a paper map. Just imagine.

That said, I’m a fussy appreciator. Sorry about that. If your elderly rellies were coming to Brighton or you spend all day long on Facebook and don’t know how the actual internet really works or you’re an Iphone user (see below, as mentioned above) who popped down to the seaside for a day and now are getting loved up by our town, then this might be your rescue guide to the galaxy we’ve got lined up for you, most of which is, of course, not yet contained in this app anyway, I bet. Doubtless the content is kept up to date, so far as is humanely possible but it will change

Content

  • Food & Drink submenu: 75 venues
  • What’s On: 13 listings
  • See & Do, 60+ venues
  • Where to stay 60+ venues
  • Shopping: about 50 shops.

Essentials: in sequence, a variety of suggested itineraries, helpful links and numbers, parking information and the like, followed by seven podcasts. Oddly, even though I’m reviewing the Android version the podcasts can only be downloaded with Apple’s Itunes Store. Here’s an app to make Apple’s shop work on Google’s phone. Somewhere in here. I can’t be bothered to rummage for it. The whole thing is ridiculous. Why can’t we just download it from the council as a simple MP3? Frightened we’re going to nick it. Come off it.

City Villages: a neat way of summing up that Brighton & Hove (for that matter) is often called one big village but in fact it is a cluster of villages. This was, historically true as much as it is culturally now. The app calls them 13 in number.

Missing Content

Seven Dials cannot be photographed?

Seven Dials cannot be photographed?

They all have some justification as being worth visiting in themselves but one of them is impossible to photograph prettily. Regular readers will recall my video tutorial on how to walk directly across the quirky roundabout at the heart of Seven Dials. Truth is its a great area but impossible to photograph diplomatically without considerable effort. I’d have pitched for an aerial shot. The City Council’s app solved the problem by simply not bothering with a picture at all, leaving us with an ugly white space and the words “No Images Available”. Makes the app look unfinished. Perhaps these spaces (there are others) will be updated soon?

Challenged Areas

Size of listings. What’s On certainly underpopulated, as is Where To Stay and Shopping. In the legendary North Laine, there are over 300 shops. That’s just one part of town. Most unconventionally, See & Do advertises places away from Brighton. The very first item in the list is the Ashdown Forest Llama Park, well over 20 miles away.

Concept re Iphone & Android

Skip this paragraph if you can’t stand learning about phones and the internet. Basically, Apple make its customers use an app for all sorts of things which could just be mobile web pages. The problem began with the late Steve Jobs deciding that Flash, which was used to encode much of the video on the web, could not appear on iphones because it was a security risk. The perceived risk was that using Flash, which is capable of interactive programming as well as making graphics move, someone else could set up an alternative itunes shop and sell apps to you, instead of Apple. Mr Jobs couldn’t have that, which proves he was a control freak, a ruthless businessman and a coward of competition. Google’s Android phones have taken the opposite approach, by allowing Flash and allowing their users to accept apps which do not appear in their app shop, now confusingly called Play. Add to the mix the fact that Android was late to the party and the upshot is that people have become accustomed to use an app. This entire app, which simply must have introduced an extra layer of updating, could be binned in favour of surfing Brighton online.

Summary

Notwithstanding the fact that they should be sold in the Early Learning Centre rather than to adults as useful tools, Iphones are used by their owners in such a way that an app like this is necessary. The insistence that the podcasts are downloaded from an itunes account, reinforces this notion on Androiders. Weather app? Met office online. Rail times app? Rail times online. Find a hotel app? Any search engine, online. I could go on and on but that’s the point. Only one app is needed for hundreds of the most commonly uses for phones. A browser to surf the net properly. This is really an app for owners of Apple’s iphone. It’s best suited to our elderly relatives or friends who you don’t want to spend that with. You could recommend it to them and fuck off for the weekend.

Apple is the rich man’s McDonald’s

Apple: litigious and asking for trouble

See what I did here?

After weeks of twitchy excitement from techie lawyers like myself, fervent curiosity from geeks and total indifference from Joe Public, an American civil court case between Apple & Samsung has now ended. Both companies were suing each other for infringements of patents and cash (Of course!), in relation to so-called smart phones. The US jury had 33 issues to decide and was expected to spend some time in deliberation before pronouncing its verdicts. Instead, a couple hours later it returned to say that it rejected every one of Samsung’s claims and agreed with almost all of Apple’s case and none of Samsung’s. Then it awarded Apple more than $1Bn in damages (it had asked for $2.5Bn). The money won’t matter to Samsung. The reputational damage might.

The real reason the late Steve Jobs launched this litigation against Samsung was because of the success of another company altogether – Google. Google’s mobile platform, Android, has been a runaway success. It directly competes with the Iphone in clever ways: it is free to use and open source, which allows the phone manufacturers to concentrate on what they do best – make phones – safe in the knowledge that they need not spend a penny on their firmware. Google updates each generation of the source code but independent coders dramatically improve it (Cyanogen is the best all rounder, though some specialistroms are better for certain devices), with the result that all the groovy tech people use Android with some customised firmware. The Iphone increasingly looks like the phone that you buy if you’re scared of learning. There’s lots of people in that boat but Jobs wanted everyone to get on board. By suing Samsung for the look and feel of some of its mobile products, Jobs sought to warn it and other firms away from Android.

The look and feel of any Android phone has got very little to do with Android. Android is an operating system and can be dressed up any which way you want. Android isn’t going to collapse as a rival to the Iphone because of this case. It is far too commercially useful to far too many companies for that to happen. In that sense, Jobs’ case was misconceived. Some of the US jury’s decisions in the case are as amusing as they reveal how far patent law has been allowed to develop.

Clearly it has gone far too far. Now we are told, by this verdict, that Apple owns rectangles with rounded corners on mobile devices. This is absurd. It is also a red rag not just to the hacker community but also to anyone who cares about the free internet. Apple have taken the concept of a locked down universe to the nth degree. You can choose any colour so long as they approve it. You can have any shape so long as Apple get paid for it. The internet and all its attendant freedom could not have come into being had Apple been a big player in the project early on. Luckily for us, they couldn’t run their own business properly back then. Apple stands against other companies or people playing around with ideas, concepts or technologies. If you have an Apple in your pocket, perhaps now is the time you might want to think about which company you support with your cash. Even back in the day when we all complained about Microsoft attempting to dominate the internet, they didn’t go this far.

We’ve long expected the innovation of the early part of the digital revolution to give way to litigation. The same commercial curve happened with the industrial revolution. To begin with the various inventors and their companies were running around inventing new stuff. When the pace of creation began to slow, they set about suing each other for cheating. In other words, there’s always more money to be made in making the world a better place but if you can’t do that, you can make more money by stopping someone else from doing it either, possibly.

This is just the beginning. There’s a wave of big cases coming between the giant firms involved in mobile technology. Then there’ll be bigger waves behind that. Most of this litigation will be settled out of court. Most of it will be pointless.

The point is that we have long proved to ourselves that people will do what they want, regardless of what big companies tell us. When electricity was first invented, it was used to power light bulbs. Electrical supply companies created sockets for light bulbs. Other companies came along and created other devices which plugged into these sockets and, well, there were fires… … and governments introduced Wiring Regulations. A British inventor created the pocket calculator but a Japanese company improved it. What someone makes, someone else will better. We just can’t help ourselves. Apple’s shortsighted action will now provoke us to make jokes at its expense everywhere. It will become the bogeyman of the internet age. (Microsoft executives are reportedly having a late breakfast this morning.)

Like McDonald’s, every product from Apple is the same. Everything does what it says on the tin but none of them are wholesome, nutritious or helpful to the wider community. Like McDonald’s it will now find itself at the centre of a last shit storm of popular activism. This will not happen overnight. Muggles will continue to buy Apple products, just as McDonald’s ‘restaurants’ are often full. Yet, the trouble will come and it won’t go away. The world’s love affair with the shiny products that Jobs made has already waned a little. Now we’ll see it descend into a slow terminal decline. There were two reasons for Apple’s extraordinary success: beautiful products which worked straight out of the box and a devotional customer base. Loads of products from all sorts of companies pass the first test now. Apple’s benchmark has been bettered. The devotional customer base cannot survive when the base includes everyone. We can’t all get into the same boat.

Time to abandon Swindon, in the name of science

An empty motorway - has anyone ever seen one of these in the day light hours?

The M2 in the UK. Road closed for the photograph.

Years ago I asked an archeologist friend of mine, who occasionally comments on this blog under the nom de plume “Bob”, how long it would take for nature to overrun our motorways, completely, if they were utterly abandoned? He thought the process would be about a century long, although, as he pointed out, the shape of the cuttings and bridges would persist for much longer. I was angry at the wanton destruction of our remaining greenery by the then increasing motorway network. The thought of all that concrete being gone in one hundred years calmed me.

These days we all agree that we pump far too much carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, which warms the planet and will make our life impossible. Practically all scientists agree about this and most people trust science more than opinion (thank God, whoops). There are, of course, people who don’t agree with these prophecies. These people fall into two main camps. Firstly, there are the so-called climate change deniers. These people are not scientists and have no basis to deny anything but they have a clear interest in none of it being true. They tend to be funded by car manufacturers, mining corporations et cetera or are old people who have been very consumptive in their lives and can’t deal with the guilt and the like.

Secondly, there are a big bunch of people who just don’t want to think about the problem because it makes their lives too scary. Instead of thinking about it, they find it so much easier to chuck a whole load more coal on the fire etc., This group doesn’t really have a name, so I’ll make one up. Let’s call them the Fearful No Thinkers. It’s a crap name. Clearly we need a better one. The fearful no thinkers are well aware of the problem but almost all have children and want their kids to have the same sort of materially based heavenly upbringing that they had themselves, regardless of whether it is appropriate to the next generation’s well being.

The scientists also generally agree that we have a small window which closes in about five years time to fix the problem, otherwise we’re fucked. If that’s true, then there’s little point in all us Green Party activists bothering the deniers or fearful no thinkers any longer with our irritating facts. The only way we’ll know if its true is by reference to the soothsayers of today, the scientists.

There is a third group who accept that climate change exists, agree that by conventional methods we’ll only have these next five years to deal with it but remain hopeful that science itself will dream up a solution to the problem. They place their hope in technology, to cure the crisis. Broadly speaking, these technicians various proffered plans are called geoengineering. There’s a lot of different approaches. None of these schemes have been tested on a large scale and when reviewed by scientists using their computer modelling they all fail to deal with the problem. However it seems likely that our society will have to employ some of these methods because the chances of us waking up to the emergency facing us in time to rescue ourselves seems very slim. When you’re at a great party do you leave it in time to make the next day’s work feasible or do you have that extra drink and dance with the pretty girl/boy a little longer? Yup, you take the drink and suffer the consequences…

Here’s a list of the various ideas which loosely fall under the name geoengineering:

  • solar radiation management – to reduce the net incoming short-wave (ultra-violet and visible) solar radiation received, by deflecting sunlight, or by increasing the reflectivity (albedo) of the atmosphere.
  • carbon dioxide removal – to remove greenhouse gases from the atmosphere, and thus tackle the root cause of global warming.
  • heat transport – to mix cooler deep water and warmer surface water.

Trees remove carbon dioxide from the atmosphere naturally. The problem is that they can’t keep up with the rate at which we produce it. They just work fast enough! Wallace S. Broecker (a climate scientist) and Robert Kunzig (a science writer) have proposed covering the world with artificial trees which scrub the atmosphere more efficiently. Klaus Lackner (a researcher at the Earth Institute, Columbia University) is developing such a tree. There are unverified claims that his artificial trees will soak up the unwanted carbon a thousand times faster than regular trees. The idea is that the carbon is then stored somewhere useful. Perhaps inside pencils?

Swindon is not famous for its architecture. It's not famous for anything.

Swindon is not famous for its architecture. It’s not famous for anything.

This is where Swindon comes in. Everyone agrees that it is a nasty place, even the people who live there. Its name is a combination of old Anglo-Saxon words meaning pig hill. Much of central Swindon was originally designed for pedestrians but when the motor car became popular, the inhabitants gladly abandoned their wide pavements in favour of more lanes for cars. The result is a ghastly experience for people and not much better for motorists. The Swindonians’ devotional attitude to cars was underscored by their local authority’s decision in October 2008 to ban fixed point speed cameras. It is also the only place I have even been spat on whilst hitchhiking. Can there be a better candidate for the planet’s regeneration than Swindon? The costs of resettling the lost souls of Swindon would be moderate because domestic property there is cheap compared to household income. The people should compensated for the loss of their crappy lives, encouraged to settle elsewhere and then we can use this unwanted, unproductive land as a giant test bed for the artificial trees.

The Swindon Tree Park won’t solve global warming, it won’t stop us wanting to party on forever but it will give the UK post-apocalyptic green economy a head start. Successive governments have been unafraid of upsetting the Christian moralising lobby when deciding to allow stem cell research or the animal rights lobby when deciding to approve animal experiments. The time has come to upset the Swindon diehards in the name of positioning ourselves for the time when other countries will be crying out for more efficient trees and a good supply of pencils. We have nothing to lose, except Swindon!

Partially successful repair on Samsung Galaxy S II

Some time ago my SGS2 developed a problem. It would not turn off. Given the heavy use I put my phone too, this was a serious problem. A little reading online, revealed that this was a fairly common problem, now emerging with this particular device. The problem seemed to stem from corrosion in the USB port. Further research revealed that both my phone company and Samsung would regard the issue as one caused by me, because it related to water penetration, even though I have been fastidious in keeping it dry. That meant I would have to pay for the repair! The fact is that the corrosion has been caused by atmospheric moisture.

Then I discovered this video, showing how to replace the USB port:

I bought a replacement USB port (£7.50) and the screwdrivers etc., from ebay (£2.50), watched the video again, took a deep breath and went to work.

First of all, I removed the back plate of the phone:

Inside a Samsung Galaxy S II

Inside a Samsung Galaxy S II

Then I popped out all the ribbon cables and unscrewed all the inner screws. Unfortunately I lost one of these little screws. I find it hard to believe that this caused the later problems. There just isn’t that much room inside this phone. Everything must be tightly packed together.

The blue PCB at the bottom of the phone is the bit that needed removing. It was glued in but a little teasing lifted it up:

Samsung Galaxy S II with USB port being replaced.

Samsung Galaxy S II with USB port being replaced.

After a bit of fiddling around, I got the new port board into place and put the whole thing back together. I’m pleased to report that this cured the problem! However, while testing the phone, I discovered that I someone at the other end of the line could no longer hear me properly unless I used speaker phone. The inconvenience of that however was far outweighed by the camera not working properly. I only got this phone because of the amazing camera. I am now officially annoyed. Let this be a salutory lesson to all other newbie phone repairers!

How far has policing political protest evolved in Brighton?

Sussex Police wantonly attacked a peaceful political demonstration on 24th August 1996 in Brighton. The occasion was billed as a Reclaim The Streets. For the uninitiated, that’s a celebratory protest against car culture, which makes its mark with peaceful protestors physically standing in the road. It was intended to be a beach party. As far as I could tell, the word was to attend dressed for the seaside and be ready for beach games.

That morning I had a wisdom tooth extracted. Head full of anaesthetic and minus one large tooth, I strolled into town to join in with the fun. I was expecting a nice fluffy event and a rare break from my legal training. I had returned home to live with my parents so as to be able to afford my studies and this was exactly the sort of thing I imagined that they most feared – me apparently returning to old party driven lifestyle. Nowadays, I look back on the rock ‘n’ roll years of being a fire-eater and fondly call them The Soft Years. Back then, I was as keen as my folks were to see the back of them. All the same, I chose not to mention this protest party to them, lest they got the wrong idea.

When I arrived in Churchill Square, there was a rather tense atmosphere. There were a lot of police. Hundreds of them. There were also a few hundred people standing in a loose group some distance from the police. I asked someone what was happening. They explained that a couple of Legal Observers had just been arrested and the others had been warned that they would be arrested too. That resulted in all of them taking off their orange bibs and concealing them. One of them had apparently been arrested for handing out leaflets explaining a person’s rights on arrest. I didn’t like the sound of that.

Whilst I was digesting this information and wondering what to do about it, someone else told me that the people with the sand had been arrested in a pre-dawn raid. Their idea had been to arrive at the Clock Tower with a massive truck and tip a huge quantity of sand onto the road around it, so that we could have a genuine beach party. I was never all that convinced by the merits of this plan. It would have been a very dramatic form of defiance. It could easily have created dangerous road conditions in the wet. Drivers could hardly be expected to foresee slippery sand on this junction, on a hill or deal with it competently in busy traffic. Overall, although I could see that it would grab the headlines and probably get a photographs onto the front pages (we still read newspapers in those days), it was very provocative. Having sniffed the story out, the police were bound to come down hard on those they perceived responsible.

The sand boys had been frustrated but the police were probably wondering what other ideas were up which sleeves. Reclaim The Streets, Critical Mass and similar events were a direct response to legislative changes designed to curtail demonstrations. Since official organisers would get into serious trouble in so many scenarios, people just abandoned any attempt at official organisation for anything. The resulting chaos was and is much harder for the police to cope with. Like the original Dangerous Dogs Act 1991, it was a classic knee-jerk law-making; arguably it created more problems than it solved. These days, the police have become a little used to the idea that we do not trouble ourselves with organising committees. Back then, they found our new methodology simply incredible. Their view seemed to be that the organisation had gone underground: organisers had become conspirators. Instead, an idea was launched and people made their own arrangements around that.

The police and the protesters continued to eye each other nervously. I borrowed a Legal Observer’s bib. Various people, none of whom I knew, urged me not to put it on. I didn’t know anyone there. I crossed the physical space between the two groups and spoke to the police officer in charge: Chief Inspector Streeter. I told him my name and address. I told him that I was about to start the Bar Vocational Course at the Inns of Court School of Law and asked him why the Legal Observers had been arrested. He declined to comment. I said that in the absence of any explanation as to why a Legal Observer should be arrested, I intended to become one there and then. I explained that I had borrowed a bib from a stranger. I suggested that if he wanted to arrest me, perhaps he could let me know. He said, “So long as you don’t play any part in the demonstration, you won’t be arrested.” I put the bib on and walked back.

The police moved to the other side of Western Road. The crowd exhorted itself to get the show on the road. We collectively tiptoed after the police. Just as we got to the kerb, someone shouted, “They’re not going to stop us!” Suddenly beach balls were being thrown in the air, the traffic was blocked and there was partying on the road.

It was a short lived party. The police lined up into ranks and advanced. West Street seemed to have been closed off for our benefit. Looking back now, I wonder whether the people who shouted that we were being allowed to take over West Street were in fact undercover officers. We were corralled down West Street. As we did the police at the bottom advanced towards us. Then the police appeared on both sides of us. The police on all sides pushed and shoved us into an increasingly small rectangle until there was only just room to turn on the spot. I didn’t know to call it a kettle then.

People were shouting and asking for more room. It got very ugly, very quickly. Pleas to leave were ignored. Between us and the police was a thin strip of space. It was as wide as the length of a copper’s arm. Anyone straying into this region was attacked by the police, physically. Realising that this was not going to end well, I decided to ask a police officer if I could leave. Hands by my side, I asked the nearest officer. His neighbouring colleague drew his truncheon and stabbed it into my chest repeatedly.

The standard issue truncheon had just been replaced. He stabbed me four or five times and only stopped when I pushed the tip of his weapon away. I said, “There’s no need for that, I only asked to leave. You could just say no.” Whatever was going through that man’s mind is anyone’s guess. Perhaps he was worried about being obliged to defend himself from having to articulate a response with his extendible rod? He raised it and tried to beat the top of my head with it! I caught the end of it in my hand and said, “What do you think you’re doing? If you can’t talk, you could just ignore me. There’s no need to try to kill me. You must know the risk of death or serious injury involved in hitting someone on the head?” As I said those words, we played an absurd version of unbreakable crackers. He yanked his end of the truncheon and I pulled back at the offensive end. When I let go, he knew it was because I had chosen to. He looked sheepish and put his weapon away. I asked him again if I could leave and he ignored me, avoiding eye contact.

One of his colleagues ordered me to move away. “Where am I supposed to go? You’ve left me no room to move.” He could see my point. There were people standing directly behind me and people behind them. At this point I felt someone tap me on the shoulder from behind. I turned around. A large furry microphone was pushed in my face. Next to the boom operator was a man holding a large video camera. A woman asked me if I wouldn’t mind being interviewed for French television. “Sure, I don’t have anything else to do.

She asked me if I was hurt. I said no. Then she mentioned that they had seen the police hitting me with his truncheon. I said something about him not wanting to let me leave and go home. She pressed her point and asked, more insistently, that it must have hurt me. Although not keen to help the police at this point, I didn’t want to lie either so I said, “Oh no, it was nothing.” Her face was incredulous, as if she was annoyed that I hadn’t immediately complained of maltreatment by the heavy hand of authority. She pressed again, saying that I looked really badly hurt and I replied that I wasn’t, that there was nothing to worry about. She pointed to the blood running down my chin. Wiping my chin, I discovered that I there was blood on it. I felt the back of my mouth. Realising that this wasn’t too hygienic, I pulled my hand out and wiped it on my hankerchief, which I then wiped my lips with. It turned from white to red. The interviewer said something like, “Look, you are bleeding quite badly! You are hurt!” My reply must have reinforced every cultural stereotype possible about the British stiff upper lip: “I’m telling you, this blood has got nothing to do with anything. I’m not hurt.” Her face was complete confusion.

I realised that I could use the blood as a means to escape the inevitable fracas. I approached the police again. I pointed out that I was bleeding, took off my bib and asked to be allowed to attend hospital. That worked. On the way home, the anaesthetic wore off and the pain kicked in. Sitting in my kitchen at home, my Mum asked me what I’d got up to that afternoon. “Nothing much“, I replied. Then she told me that one of our neighbours had seen me on BBC South Today in the middle of a riot. Oh dear. The neighbour had related the whole incident to her. “Better not tell your Father“, was all she said.

Now that’s my personal recollection of the events on the day. Luckily, there were people taking a proper record of what actually happened. I’m the Legal Observer mentioned at 14:50 at that link. The following day there were extensive press reports, focussing in particular on the exceptionally high arrest rate. The police broke the law repeatedly that day. The demonstrators did not. Although the Human Rights Act had not yet been drafted, the UK was a signatory to the European Convention on Human Rights: it was the first country to sign it and the last to legislate. The legislation made remedial action swifter and clarified the relationship between the Convention and all our other laws to some extent but it didn’t actually introduce any new rights. The police broke those rights over and again. Let me be completely objective about this: the policing was a bloody disgrace.

I knew no-one at the protest. I went back to my studies. I kept my newly acquired bib. Since then I’ve moved house over sixty times. I’ve given away all my possessions, lost stuff, sold stuff and been separated from stuff. I’ve treasured the bib. When I was completing my barristerial training in London I sometimes turned up at events like Critical Mass. I put my bib on and watched the police very very carefully. I would hear people say things like, “Who’s he? The other observers don’t know him.” Other people would note that a few words from me and the police would change their behaviour. A little. Normally Legal Observers have training to ensure they remain in role. I never did. Effectively, I acted as a freelance observer. I’m not pretending to have saved any days but I did contribute to keeping the peace on a few occasions. I wish I could say the same for the police. I’ve observed them breaking whatever laws they want until they heard me recording everything into a time stamped dictaphone.

At Occupy London the police attacked us on the first night. However, a combination of events kept them at bay after their initial foray. One was the fact that the City of London Police had little experience at dealing with civil disobedience. Another factor was that man of the cloth turfing them off the Cathedral steps first thing in the morning, creating the possibility of a political crisis between the City and the Church of England. There are more factors than I care to name in this essay but one of them was the fact that they knew that right from the start we had an excellent legal team. Once more I had turned up on my own and put my legal head to work. On the first night I recruited John Cooper QC (to advise me on behalf of Occupy London). I suggested warning them via twitter that there were children asleep in the tents and that they ought to read the Children Act before piling in. The tweet went out. A moment later, their lines pulled back. It could have been a coincidence, of course.

The biggest factor was almost certainly their knowledge that no matter how much they filmed and photographed us, we were capturing their every movement and streaming it directly to the world. Probably with better cameras than them. The name Ian Tomlinson was doubtless on every officer’s mind. His death was a tragedy. It was also part of a pattern. The police have form for injuring and killing people at protests. People they are supposed to protect. Previously, they got away with murder because they could cover up the evidence and we couldn’t collect it ourselves. There’s no point stopping people handing out leaflets explaining your rights on arrest any more because everyone has a video camera.

Back to Brighton. Sussex Police have recently developed a new approach to policing protests. They deploy protest liaison officers. We first saw them used when they turned out in force at Brighton Uncut‘s Never Mind The Jubilee Street Party in Churchill Square. Elsewhere in the town, large numbers of officers kept a close eye on a day trip to the seaside by the EDL. Afterwards, Sussex Police made attempts to discuss this new form of engagement with people interested in the protests, by talking to them via twitter. Some of us, myself included, tried to engage with them. Others rejected the approach out of hand. Others still were indifferent. After all, the police have a lot to prove. It is them who have to win trust, not the people.

Although there is a long way to go before this new initiative could be described as a turning point in the relationship between the police and people protesting their rights and their political views, we have also come a long way since 1996. The Brighton Uncut street party was just as unlawful as the ‘beach’ party, yet the police did not just pile in, beat anyone who dared to speak to them and arrest as many people as their cells could hold. Instead they talked to us. That looked like an improvement to me.

Unfortunately, after that the new look protest policing faltered. The protest liaison officers were next deployed at a demonstration by the SmashEDO campaign, which protested against the possibility of war with Iran on 4th June 2012. Sussex Police have been coy about the behaviour of the protest liaison officers on this occasion. It has become clear that they tried to mingle with the protesters and only left the crowd when the protesters mocked them so much that their continuing presence had become inflammatory. Having already discussed the new strategy with the police via twitter, shortly after that protest I asked them whether those reports were true. Instead of replying that they were waiting for reports to be filed and would answer later or admitting it or denying it, instead the police tried to duck the question. (10th paragraph at that link & screenshots of conversation below it.)

These people work for us! They are public servants. I’ve paid tax. I’ve paid their wages. Why they think that they should treat any enquiry much as a politician treats a journalistic question is baffling. I fear it reveals much about police culture. Close ranks, cover up and kill the story. When will they understand that these old tactics won’t work? We have video. We own the internet. The more intelligent approach would be to get straight to the point and admit the truth. Then the merits of the facts could be discussed.

Let’s park the issue of Sussex Police being unable or unwilling to just confirm the facts on the ground. The decision to deploy officers charged with engaging with protesters uninvited inside the protesters’ ranks must be categorised under “Undiplomatic”. There is a deep seated suspicion amongst many political activists that these officers are simply on an intelligence gathering mission. For my part, I suspect that even the police would realise this technique would be an utter waste of resources. Last year’s half a million plus requests to snoop on our communications was much more likely to bear fruit than donning a uniform and walking amongst us. Film is more useful than individual personal recollection. Undercover agents who are still allowed to rape their way around the activist community will certainly acquire more information than watching people wave donuts on sticks at you. The average plod may not be the brightest soul in the force but surely those further up the chain of command cannot have really intended these particular officers to gather intelligence? It’s much more likely that the decision to deploy them like that was a bungled attempt at public relations and the slowness to withdraw them a reflection on the reflexes of the command structure. After being pinned down on this issue, Sussex Police later implied to me that their officers had as much right to the public space as anyone else. That’s true but it isn’t the way to develop new community relations. It’s like the landlord turning up at your birthday party and telling you he owns the house.

Many local political activists point to the officers wearing the liaison bibs being the same people employed on more pernicious tasks. There’s not much mileage in that point. These liaison officers are not a completely separate unit from the rest of the police. They’re just performing a role on the day. Performing different roles is a feature of professional life. Rather than picking on the people involved, we should point out the problems with the new role in the hope that they can be ironed out.

It is early days still. The gap of understanding between the two sides is wide. There is too much distrust on both sides. There will always be some political activists who view the police as a front line in their battle for regime change. There will always be some police who regard anyone who isn’t shopping for retail therapy to be a troublemaker. In between, there are many who would like to find a better approach. The problem is that the police have all the power. The ball is in their court. My guess is that they get a few more chances to serve us properly but only a few. If they fail to get those right, this new initiative will crash. They’ve come a long way from mindlessly attacking everyone in sight but that’s happened because we have empowered ourselves. As Marx argued, a change in technology has ushered in a change in the relationship between the powerful and the weak. Therefore, the police don’t get any credit for abating their traditional methods. They need to win credit by backing off.

At Occupy London the City of London police won much sympathy with the protestors by keeping their distance. Sure, they walked through our camp but only in ones and twos and even then only occasionally. They stood back. I knew when they followed me through the streets because they weren’t that clever about it. I expected them to anyway. Often they followed me and other conspicuous people whilst others took on more important tasks, online. These days we don’t talk to the people we’re standing next to by using our voices. We use direct messages on twitter, off the record encrypted channels, the tor project and various other methods.

Brighton & Hove is now officially a City. It is run by the Green Party, which openly welcomes citizens’ asserting their democratic rights to protest. The City Council has explicitly stated that everyone has the right to protest and they expect the police to facilitate those protests. Thus the EDL was allowed to march under the cover of the so-called “March for England“, even though every member of the local administration is deeply opposed to everything they stand for. That event was bound to carry big risks of trouble. There were people determined to disrupt the march, themselves exercising their lawful right to a static demonstration without advance permission. There was trouble. Bottles were thrown at the racist EDL. Some EDL supporters attacked local people (myself included). The police had a complicated job to do that day and on the whole they managed it very well, which is why I have not pursued a complaint against them for failing to arrest the man who attacked me. They probably didn’t deploy sufficient numbers to cope with the predictable stress lines across town that day. No doubt lessons are being learnt for next year.

The point the police have to grasp is that it is not for them to control demonstrations, let alone become involved in them to any extent. Their job is to maintain the peace. Nothing more, nothing less. If a protest group doesn’t want to engage with them, there’s nothing they can do about it. Without any threat of violence, there’s no need whatsoever for more than half a dozen police officers. Two at the front, two at the back and one walking along either side. If they want to park greater numbers around the corner, to be ready for spontaneous trouble, fine. Barging in on a political demonstration which they cannot support is not engagement, it is incitement. If the police don’t understand this, they need to take a long hard look at themselves and their role in our society. We all know what it should be – to keep the peace, not to keep control.

Rather than try to stop political protests, the police should allow people to make their point and, if necessary, use their power to arrest people for a breach of the peace. Peaceful activists will not resist that type of arrest. Activists will make more impact by getting arrested for civil disobedience than for fighting. The police need to make a judgment call on when such arrests are justified. We can have the arguments in court later, rather than on the ground. If an activist is released, they should be allowed to move freely again. If the police lack the resources to deal with large numbers of protestors in this way, then they have a political argument with the government.

People must be able to talk to any police officer, without fearing violence. If there is a role for specific protest liaison officers, the police need to spell out how it differs from all other police officers. Having justified that distinction, it must be maintained cogently. Bibs on bobbies is meaningless unless there’s a properly understood role. At the present time, the purpose of the new role is far from clear. I’d like to see Sussex Police complete their journey from their nasty behaviour in the nineties, to transform themselves from being political tools to being the protectors of the peace. To promote the chances of their success, several sections of the activist community are giving them the benefit of the doubt, for now. The next outing of the new protest liaison officers will be watched very closely indeed. The pressure is on the police to behave like concerned citizens, not control freaks.

Neil Armstrong gives good account of himself

At last, after all these years of waiting, the interview none could catch. Some cunning Australian accountants did the math and talked the ultimate engineer, Neil Armstrong out. So to hell with good blogging, and over to them. Don’t read me – watch the four short episodes in turn and … imagine.

Myself, Mr Armstrong’s point never seemed more gigantic, more courageous and more aduous than listening to him describe a last minute fix to get off the moon. After describing his suit’s Frankensteinesque maneouverability’s combination with the cumbersome backpacks, Mr Armstrong notes that “his colleague” has knocked into a circuit breaker. It looks a bit damaged. Trouble is, that’s the breaker for the main thrust. He says it looks okay but there must be some doubt because they decide to strengthen it by jamming a marker pen into it. He’s travelled to the moon, manually landed with only 20 seconds of fuel left and now he’s performing electrical work into order to leave. To think that I have been grumbling about my own electrical issues. On the moon!

Neil Armstrong Interview in four parts.

Seriously. Look what we can do. Now look at what we are doing. If we can put ourselves on the moon, we can sort out the climate problem. Seriously. Imagine.

How to protect your privacy online and stop data miners

These days, whenever you look at a web page you can be accidentally sharing a lot of personal data. As has been well reported in the media, web pages frequently store little files on your computer – cookies – which then report back when you visit the webpage next time around. You can set your browser to delete cookies but the problem doesn’t end there. The internet cannot work without your computer sharing its IP address with the server of the web page – it has to know where to send the page requested. These IP addresses can be and are stored by servers and data about what IP requests what is therefore stored. Over the last few years, public concern about the implications for this have been growing.

We tend to see the problem as an individual matter. We tell ourselves that so long as we are careful not to reveal too much about ourselves, we won’t get caught out revealing too much. If only it were that simple. Your browser gives out lots of information about the machine you are using and, over time, taken together, this information is capable by clever of algorithms of generating a fingerprint about your web browsing. The commercial industry which profits from this information gathering is called data mining. Data miners collect both personal information and information about the collective behaviour about certain demographic groups. They buy and sell it. We’ve all been mined.

In the USA a campaign has begun which aims to frustrate the worst excesses of the data mining industry. It’s called Do Not Track. This is what the campaign says about itself:

Do Not Track is a technology and policy proposal that enables users to opt out of tracking by websites they do not visit, including analytics services, advertising networks, and social platforms. At present few of these third parties offer a reliable tracking opt out, and tools for blocking them are neither user-friendly nor comprehensive. Much like the popular Do Not Call registry, Do Not Track provides users with a single, simple, persistent choice to opt out of third-party web tracking.

You can enable the Do Not Track technology for three browsers: Firefox, Safari and Internet Explorer. There’s lot more information at Do Not Track‘s website.

For the last couple of weeks, I’ve been using Ghostery. It’s a browser add on. After the first install it can seem irritaing because it pastes a purple box telling you about the tracking features on every page you visit and this block stays in place for 15 seconds. I’ve changed the settings to move the position of the block on the screen and have it disappear after 2 seconds. You don’t need to have the on screen info at all. I’ve kept it for the time being because it is a useful reminder of what each web page is trying to gather. Crucially, Ghostery allows you to block whatever data mining in-page code you like – you can switch it off for web pages you want to. It also deletes so-called Flash cookies – software files placed on your computer by online videos, which are put in a different place to the commonly discussed cookies.

Ghostery breaks down the data mining scripts into these categories: advertising, analytics, privacy, trackers and widgets. If you block them all, your experience online will be very different. I don’t block adverts because I like to click on them when I like a certain blog, to reward the blogger (this is not a hint, this is me noting commonly enjoyed behaviour); I open the link in a different tab and rarely even look at it. I also don’t block analytics, partly because that might seem hypocritical (this blog uses analytics). I block under the titles of privacy and trackers. I leave widgets alone – this includes stuff live social networking ‘like’ and ‘share’ buttons, as well as comment forms. Personally, I don’t  want to return to Web 1.0.

Ghostery tells me that every Facebook page, sorry “wall” contains two privacy and tracking scripts: from DoubleClick and Media Innovation Group. Of course, this is hardly news – the company was hardly like to be able to flog itself for such an overpriced share deal if it didn’t have any way of following its users. DoubleClick is a Google product, which is geared to assist social media networks serve up the most suitable adverts to their users. The Media Innovation Group sells software which analyses the success or failure of advertising campaigns. Google can do that as well, of course, but it is probably commercially sensible to use different companies to provide the raft of data mining employed by a social network. Ghostery has been blocking these two scripts for me, with the result that Facebook has started to flail around and throw the most inappropriate adverts at me. Either that or it just now thinks that I’ve undergone a personality change and now like guns, the Royal Jubilee and racing cars!

Some information may surprise you. Of the various sites I regularly visit, the Guardian ‘newspaper’ seems to employ the highest number of tracking features.

The Guardian's tracking software. Crossed through items are the ones I've blocked. Click on image to enlarge.

Give it a go. I highly recommend Ghostery. You’ll be doing yourself a favour by preventing individual data mining. You’ll also be doing us all a favour by preventing collective data mining. To those that say that collective trend tracking is a good thing because it means that we get sold stuff we like, there is one simple response: capitalism made plenty profits before this technology came along and we all bought stuff we liked. Being put in a category and manipulated by marketing is not a good thing. Being free of snoopers is.

Fear of photographers

This morning I was prevented from photographing an advert inside the M&S “Simply Food” store in Brighton Railway Station. Apparently there’s a store policy preventing people taking pictures. That’s fair enough. Threatening to call the police before asking me to leave the store smacked of inadequate staff training more than anything more sinister. When I invited the man making that absurd threat to go ahead, he changed tack and said that photographs in Brighton station were not permitted. Really? Brighton station is world famous for its spectacular roof and is the first sight hundreds of thousands of visitors have on arrival in our city. It must have between photographed many thousands of times.

Following the terrorist attacks on 11th September in the USA, the western world has become truly paranoid about individuals taking photographs. Year on year, the restrictions and over zealous application of them has become ever more fanatical. Within days of the Occupy London protestors setting up camp in St Paul’s Churchyard, photographers were arrested for snapping the cathedral and other famous landmarks in the capital. Those arrested included established journalists, tourists and professional photographers. Long gone are the days when only a professional can afford a decent camera. The reasons for the arrests is always the same: security.

It beggars belief that anyone can truly believe that security will be compromised to any greater extent by conspicuous camera use, than it is by the relentless corporate image capturing, which the state does not challenge. Google has been allowed to photograph and publish every street and virtually every dwelling in the country. In fine detail, from ground level and from space. This visual reportage is free for anyone to look at, anytime, any place. It can be viewed from behind proxy servers or through the untrackable Tor Project. Plainly this represents more of a threat to domestic security than the picture postcard industry. Picking on individuals and not the powerful is petty and largely pointless. For a few hundred pounds anyone can buy a concealed camera for the lapel or the spectacles.

After decades of the police covering up their numbers and running amok at public demonstrations and triggering unnecessary riots (the Poll Tax riot in 1991 springs to mind), technology has caught up with events on the ground. In the UK, the police no longer attempt to stop people filming them. They understand that it would be a futile gesture, that any attempt to do so would only be fined by many more people and consequently they are obliged to tolerate people openly filming their Forward Intelligence Teams (FIT), who film everyone back in turn. Orwell was right to predict a future dominated by the all seeing camera but wrong to imagine that there would be only one pair of hands on the controls. This mass filming of everything may present a problem of scale for future historians but it helps civil society run much more smoothly. Whatever you do, wherever you go, in urban areas at least, there’s a strong chance that someone has a record of it. The anti-social, the criminals and all others who would otherwise prefer not to be caught can be brought to book much more easily. This doesn’t affect the most honourable tradition of public protest: those committed to civil disobedience want their actions known. Politics without publicity is pointless.

As with much else in the Digital Age, we’re in a transitional period. The demographical fact is that these technologies have emerged after much of our current senior management strata began their careers. Many of them probably just wish the internet would simply go away. They struggle with it, they make bad decisions based on fear and loathing.

These bad attitudes will pass with time. In times to come, you still won’t be able to photograph inside shops without permission but you won’t be patronised with the notion that you are a security risk. Whether we’ll be able to grapple with the real security risks – the unaccountable corporations controlling our data – remains to be seen.