Phoenix housing bubble deflation update
The average price of homes listed for sale is $484,594. The number of pending sales is 8,125. The average price of the pending sale homes is $378,573.
(From Ben Jones' Housing Bubble Blog.)
Posted by Lippard at 3/10/2006 05:17:00 PM 1 comments
Labels: Arizona, economics, housing bubble
The Bush administration has appointed 28-year-old Douglas Hoelscher to be executive director for the Homeland Security Advisory Committee, an amalgam of 20 panels of outside experts and officials who advise the administration on homeland security matters.
Hoelscher is said to have no management experience. He came to the White House in 2001 as a $30,000-a-year scheduler.
And more at Effect Measure:Suppose you are a young 28 year old with no management experience but, according to your Friendster.com profile a good listener and someone whose favorite books include William Bennett's The Death of Outrage: Bill Clinton and the Assault on American Ideals. You aren't entirely inexperienced. In 2001 you were a $30,000 a year low level White House staffer who arranged presidential travel. Not enough for you? How about a top level job in the Department of Homeland Security? That can be arranged.(Via Tara Smith at Aetiology.)
Welcome Douglas Hoelscher, the new executive director of the Homeland Security Advisory Commitees (plural). Hoelscher is nowthe "primary representative" of department Secretary Michael Chertoff in dealing with more than 20 advisory boards. Among them is the Homeland Security Advisory Council, which includes such high-powered figures as Gov. Mitt Romney of Massachusetts, former Lockheed Chairman Norman Augustine, and former Defense and Energy Secretary James Schlesinger. (Shane Harris in the National Journal)
Posted by Lippard at 3/10/2006 04:17:00 PM 0 comments
Labels: politics
The unfolding debit card scam that rocked Citibank this week is far from over, an analyst said Thursday as she called this first-time-ever mass theft of PINs "the worst consumer scam to date."Wednesday, Citibank confirmed that an ongoing fraud had forced it to reissue debit cards and block PIN-based transactions for users in Canada, Russia, and the U.K.
But Citibank is only the tip of the iceberg, said Avivah Litan, a Gartner research vice president. The scam -- and scandal -- has hit national banks like Bank of America, Wells Fargo, and Washington Mutual, as well as smaller banks, including ones in Oregon, Ohio, and Pennsylvania, all of which have re-issued debit cards in recent weeks.
"This is the worst hack ever," Litan maintained. "It's significant because not only is it a really wide-spread breach, but it affects debit cards, which everyone thought were immune to these kinds of things."
[...]
Litan's sources in the financial industry have told her that thieves hacked into a as-yet-unknown system, and made off with data stored on debit cards' magnetic stripes, the associated "PIN blocks," or encrypted PIN data, and the key for that encrypted data.
Posted by Lippard at 3/10/2006 12:20:00 PM 0 comments
Labels: civil liberties, law, security, technology
Posted by Lippard at 3/09/2006 08:37:00 PM 0 comments
Posted by Lippard at 3/09/2006 08:24:00 PM 0 comments
Posted by Lippard at 3/09/2006 07:43:00 PM 0 comments
I do not have a personal charity. The reference was an allusion to Operation Good Neighbor, a charitable organization that I founded in 2000. Since then, I have had no control over its direction. My involvement is limited to being honorary chairman of the board -- a board that includes former Philadelphia mayor W. Wilson Goode, a prominent Democrat -- and lending my name to fund-raising events. That's it.Attytood shows, with quotes and photos, that Santorum's a liar.
After saying in January that he would end his regular meetings with lobbyists, Sen. Rick Santorum (Pa.), the third-ranking GOP leader in the Senate, has continued to meet with many of the same lobbyists at the same time and on the same day of the week.(Via Talking Points Memo and TPM's Daily Muck.)
Posted by Lippard at 3/09/2006 05:21:00 PM 0 comments
Labels: charitable giving, Cunningham scandal, dirty politicians, ethics, politics
Dear JAMES LIPPARD:Since I hadn't amended my address details, I called the Customer Service line (after I had only received three copies of the email)--and it was busy. After a few tries, I got through and waited on hold for quite some time, and then reached a human being. She informed me that this was an "error" and that the entire subscriber base had received these emails, which was the cause of the difficulty getting through on the phone.
Thank you for amending your address details.
We have updated our records accordingly and will deliver your copies of The Economist to the amended address shortly.
If you encounter any problems with the delivery of The Economist, please call Customer Service on 1-800-456-xxxx.
Sincerely,
Customer Service.
From: "Paul Rossi, Publisher of The Economist" [comcast email address omitted]I never received an email asking me to confirm address details as described in this email.
Subject: Apology from The Economist
Date: 09 Mar 2006 23:31:01 GMT
Dear Reader,
I am writing to apologise for any e-mails you may have received today from The Economist.
I sent an e-mail this morning asking you to confirm your address details. I understand that in error, we may have sent further e-mails confirming a change to your address.
This was caused by a technical error on our part and I am very sorry for the inconvenience and irritation that this may have caused you.
I want to reassure you that your address and all of your personal details have at all times been secure and will remain so.
If you did not change your details, we will continue to deliver your copies of The Economist to the usual address.
We are aware of the problem and are dealing with it. In the meantime, if you wish to contact me regarding this please e-mail [email address at economist.com omitted].
Yours sincerely,
Paul Rossi
Publisher, North America
Posted by Lippard at 3/09/2006 08:34:00 AM 0 comments
Posted by Lippard at 3/09/2006 07:57:00 AM 0 comments
Labels: spam
Posted by Lippard at 3/08/2006 08:38:00 PM 0 comments
Labels: technology