Andie's Log

My name is Andie Nordgren and I use my knowledge of games, participation and web development to work on many things.

This is my tumble log, where I post good stuff I find around the net and some original content as well. Here's a list of original writing.

About

I'm currently working for RjDj in London.

rjdj

RjDj creates mind twisting hearing sensations by weaving your environment into music, using the sensors on your music player. If you have an iPhone or iPod Touch, try it, or read more and see some video of it in action over at rjdj.me.

Some of my other projects include the geek girl revolution at Geek Girl Meetup, relationship anarchy at Dr Andie, Nordic larp community blog Nordic Scene, and change-through-participation art zine/think tank/activist group Interacting Arts.

I live and tinker in the Shoreditch Hacker House.

Contact

Email: andie.nordgren@gmail.com, Twitter: nordgren, Jabber: andie@jabber.hackerspaces.org, Skype: andienordgren, MSN: andie.nordgren@home.se, Facebook: Andie Nordgren, Swedish Phone: +46702288652, UK Phone: +447751805188

There are photos on flickr, bookmarks on delicious and needle crafted things at ravelry.

Some previous fun

In 2007 I produced the game part of Interactive Emmy Award winning project The Truth About Marika, and I will some day finish a masters thesis in Computer and Systems Science at the Interactive Institute Game Studio about the tools we built to game master the reality game.

I have a Bachelor's Degree in Computer and Systems Science from Stockholm University.

Jun 16, 2008
Permalink

Cory Doctorow vs FRA

Christoph Andersson i DN: Sveriges eget Stasi

I intervjun låter han förstå att mejl med krypterat innehåll är särskilt intressanta för FRA. Eventuella terrorister lär knappast skriva i klartext var de ska slå till - och med vilken sprängkraft.

Cory Doctorow, Little Brother:

What you can do is find out who is sending way, way more encrypted traffic out than everyone else. For a normal Internet surfer, a session online is probably about 95 percent cleartext, five percent ciphertext. If someone is sending out 95 percent ciphertext, maybe you could dispatch the computer-savvy equivalents of Booger and Zit to ask them if they’re terrorist drug-dealer Xnet users.

This happens all the time in China. Some smart dissident will get the idea of getting around the Great Firewall of China, which is used to censor the whole country’s Internet connection, by using an encrypted connection to a computer in some other country. Now, the Party there can’t tell what the dissident is surfing: maybe it’s porn, or bomb-making instructions, or dirty letters from his girlfriend in the Philippines, or political material, or good news about Scientology. They don’t have to know. All they have to know is that this guy gets way more encrypted traffic than his neighbors. At that point, they send him to a forced labor camp just to set an example so that everyone can see what happens to smart-asses.

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