Saturday, December 19, 2020

Notations From the Grid (Week-End Edition): On the Week That Was....

 




As we went to press with this weekly retrospective, we continue to assess the impact of the massive Russian Hack as the President of the United States stayed silent.    We present a snapshot below: 

 
 
Ron Johnson Ran a Grievance-Laced Puppet Show Starring the President*'s Disgruntled Devotees
 
On Wednesday, in the United States Senate, Senator Ron (Shreds of Freedom) Johnson held the latest in the ongoing series of grievance-laced puppet shows starring disgruntled devotees of the current president*. The abiding theme of this one was giving lawyers whose asses have been kicked all over every judicial system a chance to plead their threadbare cases one more time. In this, the hearing succeeded. If you think this is an open invitation for further voter-suppression activity in Republican-dominated state legislatures, backed up by similar finagling from national Republican politicians and activists, well, that means you've been paying attention. Here’s Charles P. Pierce on what transpired. Read More
 
 

A Senate hearing about irregularities in the 2020 election got upstaged by one of its own star witnesses: Christopher Krebs.

Read the full story here.


Ten years after the Arab spring

Why democracy failed in the Middle East

And how it might, one day, succeed

Related

 

→ Read more: The Arab spring at ten

Free to read | Covid-19 in 2020

The year when everything changed

Why the pandemic will be remembered as a turning-point

Bartleby

When fair play pays

A new book argues that decency pays off in business as well as in life

Daily chart

How would the American economy have fared under a gold standard?

A steadier dollar would have been outweighed by bumpier output and higher interest rates

Froth or fundamentals?

What explains investors’ enthusiasm for risky assets?

There may be more sense to recent market movements than you think

Extraterrestrial hiking

Following the tracks of NASA’s Curiosity rover

A short walk in Gale crater

Quiz

Try our Christmas quiz

Test your knowledge of ten great cities

The Intelligence

“It was clear that many companies actually benefited from lockdowns”—a capital-raising frenzy

Also on the daily podcast: the hidden, hard-working world of waste-pickers and megaphones get much more mega


Bloomberg

In the driver's seat: President-elect Joe Biden's nomination of his former presidential rival Pete Buttigieg to be his transportation secretary comes at a time when public transit systems in the U.S. are financially struggling because of the pandemic. While his background running a small American city did not make him an obvious fit, some city officials and transportation leaders are hopeful that the one-time mayor of South Bend, Indiana, could bring meaningful reform.

As mayor, he oversaw saw a $21 million “Smart Streets” project that's credited with helping economic revitalization in the city's downtown area through actions like widening sidewalks and building bike paths. Then, as a presidential candidate, Buttigieg laid out a $1 trillion infrastructure plan with city-centric transportation goals. It emphasized climate adaptation and called for boosting public transportation in both cities and rural areas, and it outlined a national “Vision Zero'' strategy to eliminate traffic fatalities.

At the same time, his record on race relations and police oversight has drawn a less optimistic response from some local racial justice advocates to his nomination. From Laura Bliss today on CityLab: What We Know About Pete Buttigieg’s Transportation Record

-Linda Poon

More on CityLab

It doesn’t take very many ultra-wealthy Americans changing their address to wreak havoc on cities’ finances. 

Here are all the transit-oriented toys, home-office gadgets, quarantine accessories and winter socializing gear we want to survive the pandemic holidays. 

In the race to deliver orders faster, Amazon, UPS, FedEx and others push deeper into cities, causing congestion, noise and more woes.

 
  • Italy to build 1,500 pop-up vaccine pavilions, designed by architect Stefano Boeri (CNN)
  • What the Dippin’ Dots "cold chain" can teach us about Covid-19 vaccines (Popular Science)
  • Prisoners have been excluded from Covid vaccine plans, and health experts are sounding the alarm (NBC News)
  • How the Biden administration can fix this part of the disaster housing crisis (Slate)
  • Do Canada geese still fly south for winter? Yes, but it's complicated (National Geographic)







Wednesday, December 16, 2020

Notations On The Grid (Mid-Week Edition): Out & About in America

 




The opening thought from Andy Slavitt said it all as we headline an image of Laguna Beach with this below courtesy the Washington Post: 

The Washington Post
The 5-Minute Fix
Keeping up with politics is easy now.
 
 

Tuesday, December 15, 2020

Notations From the Grid (Special Edition): On #Pandemic Watch

 

Data Sheet

December 15, 2020


Just when you thought 2020 couldn’t get any worse, add a digital pandemic on top of the the worst public health catastrophe in 102 years.

Cybersecurity investigators are scrambling to assess the damage caused by a widespread breach of U.S. federal agencies and private companies. A list of affected organizations includes the Treasury, Commerce, Homeland Security, and State Departments, plus the National Institutes of Health, and parts of the Pentagon, according to the latest news reports.

Yet the blast radius likely extends much farther. In addition to the government, top national labs, and hundreds of universities, many big businesses may have been targeted by the 9-month-long cyberespionage operation. SolarWinds, the little-known software company based in Austin, Texas, that’s at the center of the compromise, estimates that more than half the customers of its pervasive Orion network management products could have been affected: around 18,000 customers.

That’s according to a Securities and Exchange Commission filing SolarWinds put out on Monday, now buried under a flurry of share sales disclosures. (You can view its since-stricken customer list, captured by the Internet Archive, to get an idea of the possible breadth of the cyberattack.)

SolarWinds was patient zero. The company’s systems were hacked, and its IT tools were subverted to deliver Trojan horses all over the map. The situation, a so-called software supply chain attack, recalls the NotPetya malware attack of 2017, when Russian agents unleashed a global cyberattack by subverting the software update mechanism of a popular accounting tool developed by a Ukrainian tech company. (You can read preliminary analyses of the SolarWinds hack by digital forensics firm FireEye and Microsoft.)

Though it’s still early and investigations are ongoing, cybersecurity researchers suspect nation state hackers are to blame, due to the sophistication of the hacking campaign. In particular, they’re pointing fingers at the SVR, Russia’s foreign intelligence service and a successor to the KGB. As usual, the Russian Embassy in Washington, D.C., denied the allegations.

The Homeland Security Department’s Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, tasked with coordinating defenses across government and industry, is attempting to get a grip on the situation, issuing alerts and advising people to update their software or unplug systems that use Orion tooling. But the agency is also reeling from recent turnover after President Trump removed its founding director, Chris Krebs, who refused to play along with Trump’s baseless election fraud claims. (To nip misinformation in the bud: Dominion Voting Systems, a central target of Trump’s conspiracy theorizing, says it has never used SolarWinds’ Orion products.)

When President-elect Joe Biden takes office in January (now that his victory is electoral college-official), he is going to inherit not just the COVID-19 scourge, but this unholy mess too.

Robert Hackett