The Washington-based agency seems prepared to take the tawdry task of tax collecting to a higher level with state-of-the art spy equipment. A government procurement list published on a US government website states that the IRS “intends to award a Purchase Order to an undisclosed Corporation.” The list of specified equipment the tax-collecting agency is looking to procure includes four “Covert Coffee tray(s) with Camera concealment” as well as two “Concealed clock radio(s).” Another procurement item, which would make even James Bond green with envy, includes surveillance equipment to hide in plants: “Plant Concealment Color 700 Lines Color IP Camera Concealment with Single Channel Network Server, supports dual video stream, Poe, software included, case included, router included.” Other coveted items include “Remote surveillance system, Built-in DVD Burner and 2 Internal HDDs, cameras.” “The Procurement Office acquires the products and services required to support the IRS mission,” according to its website. The IRS seems in a hurry to procure the surveillance equipment: It posted the request on June 6 and ended the announcement for the tender on Monday, June 11. The government agency said the list of desired surveillance equipment is necessarily “vague due to the use and nature of the items.” “If you feel that you can provide the following equipment, please respond to this email no later than 4 days after the solicitation date,” the IRS said. However, the solicitation for the spy gear seems to have been a mere formality, since a supplier was duly selected before the announcement of the tender. “If no compelling responses are received, award will be made to the original solicited corporation,” the IRS procurement statement said. News that the IRS is looking to buy surveillance equipment comes at a particularly challenging period for the agency. In recent weeks, the IRS has been thrust into the public spotlight after Republicans complained that the government agency was motivated by politics, targeting right-wing Tea Party groups that are critical of the Democratic Party and US President Barack Obama. At the same time, the government agency is coming under fire for wasteful spending. Last week, a report by the Inspector General detailed nearly $50 million in wasteful spending by the agency on conferences, including IRS employees receiving room upgrades at luxurious Las Vegas hotels, spending $135,350 for speakers, and another $50,000 on a parody video based on the ‘Star Trek’ television show. Meanwhile, the government agency appears to have broken the very rules it sets down for taxpayers, that is, being able to prove all of its expenses. “The IRS constructed a mock set at its television studio located in New Carrollton, Maryland, at a cost of $2,400. However, SB/SE Division management does not have any documentation supporting this amount,” the report noted. Members of Congress expressed their outrage over the spending spree, much of it coming at the height of the global financial crisis. “You cannot take the money of American workers and waste it,” said Rep. Elijah E. Cummings of Maryland, the top Democrat on the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee. Last month, Obama announced that the acting commissioner of the Internal Revenue Service, Steven Miller, resigned in the wake of news that the agency had used an excessive amount of scrutiny when dealing with conservative political groups seeking tax relief. The IRS, a bureau of the US Department of the Treasury, collects over $2.4 trillion annually from around 234 million tax returns. … Read More
Users can simultaneously video chat and troubleshoot with Google Hangouts update
Another avenue for helping your parents with their borked OS just opened up in Google+ Hangouts with the addition of a remote desktop feature. The application, found in “Hangout Apps,” allows you to remotely control the computer of any member of your Hangout, assuming of course that they grant you… … Read More
Over 100,000 open servers leave U.S. infrastructure vulnerable
Since former Defense Secretary Leon Panetta last year warned of the risks of a “cyber Pearl Habor” striking U.S. infrastructure, experts have been arguing back and forth about the scale of cyberthreats facing the U.S. This week, researchers from security firm Rapid7 said that critical infrastructure, including oil and gas systems, medical devices, naval ships faced very real risks of manipulation, owing to over 100,000 open servers used for remote access into their managing systems.Via TechWeek:Continue Reading… … Read More
Daily Report: Domestic Drones on Patrol
Companies, universities and lawmakers in the United States are preparing for a world in which remote-controlled planes will be ubiquitous in civilian air space. … Read More
Private surveillance companies flock to Arizona’s annual Border Security Expo for their slice of multi-billion dollar industry
From a distance, it looked like Wyatt Nease was using a handset to operate a remote control car. However, the small wheeled vehicle zipping across the carpet was not a child’s toy but the very adult Pointman Tactical Robot. “Swat teams absolutely love it,” said Nease, an unmanned…
Drones are on the “wrong side of history”
Last week, The New York Times published a chilling account of how indiscriminate killing in war remains bad policy even today. This time, it’s done not by young GIs in the field but by anonymous puppeteers guiding drones that hover and attack by remote control against targets thousands of miles away, often killing the innocent and driving their enraged and grieving families and friends straight into the arms of the very terrorists we’re trying to eradicate.
The Times told of a Muslim cleric in Yemen named Salem Ahmed bin Ali Jaber, standing in a village mosque denouncing al Qaeda. It was a brave thing to do — a respected tribal figure, arguing against terrorism. But two days later, when he and a police officer cousin agreed to meet with three al Qaeda members to continue the argument, all five men — friend and foe — were incinerated by an American drone attack. The killings infuriated the village and prompted rumors of an upwelling of support in the town for al Qaeda, because, the Times reported, “such a move is seen as the only way to retaliate against the United States.”
Logitech reveals plans to jettison Harmony remote control division
Logitech has revealed plans to jettison their Harmony remote control and digital video security divisions. The news comes directly from newly appointed CEO Bracken P Darrell follow disappointing fiscal third quarter results. … Read More


