Innovation by Govt: Panic button

The US State Department is working promoting a "panic button" application that pro-democracy campaigners can press to "wipe out the phone's address book and emit emergency alerts ot other activists" reports NYT.  Apparently there's been a specific budget ($50m since 2008) for promoting technologies for social activists, particularly "circumvention" technology.  There has also been training in new technologies.  The obvious concern here comes back to the old adage: one man's terrorist is another man's freedom fighter.  
- sezflom
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There are reports of Libyan rebels tweeting the locations of pro-Gaddafi forces and requesting outside forces to bomb them. No word on whether the foreign air forces are following through on the requests, but its probably safe to say this was not something that the developers of Twitter expected.

"1) Since yesterday I’ve recorded a certain number of tweets providing attack coordinates of loyalist forces in the Misratah area for the coalition planes. A couple of examples (Tom Cooper of ACIG deserves a special thanks for the “head up”):

@LibyanDictator: CONFIRMED: Coordinates for positions of more Gaddafi forces near #Misrata: 32261441N, 14541639E and 32115581N, 15053800E #Libya #Feb17

@LibyanDictator: CONFIRMED: Coordinates for positions of more Gaddafi forces near Misrata: 32125190N, 15050767E – HIT THESE TOO! #Libya #Feb17

Withouth considering the problem of the authentication of the improvised JTAC (Joint terminal attack controller) – what if the account broadcasting the coordinates of the Gaddafi forces is not owned by a rebel, but used by a loyalist to deceive the coalition planes and to induce them to drop their bombs on the revolutionaries? - those tweets draw a new scenario (the one of smartphones with integrated GPS and Internet connectivity to forward targeting details) and move the fights between rebels and loyalist forces into the cyber battlespace"

http://cencio4.wordpress.com/2011/03/25/operation-odyssey-dawn-explained-day-6/