"There is no public safety in public ignorance"

08/06/2004 - SUSPICIONS OF CLOSING US SOCIETY RISE; OPENNESS TESTED
Publishers of the Constra Nostra Times, like many of us, had the inkling suspicion that although laws guaranteeing access to such things as police blotters were commonplace, that in practice, such access was actually being routinely blocked. This charge is a major premise of Openness.org, so I was excited to read about the newspaper's project that ultimately put the notion of public access to the test. Remember, any public access law that exists does not distinguish between reporters for corporate media and you. In fact, more and more these days, that fine line is disappearing anyway. Still, the people who acted as average Joes seeking public access as part of this experiment were nonetheless stonewalled and in some cases, treated with suspicion and questioned. Some were evidently asked if they were reporters.

A link to the actual newspaper report appears in this otherwise user friendly article I'm linking you to.

'OPEN RECORDS' OFTEN CLOSED TO PUBLIC
04/04/2004 - CALLING ALL CITIZENS, A FEEL GOOD PIECE ON SCANNING
From the trolling around files this weekend, here's a human interest piece which leads that scanners are good for a community. Ultimately it winds up little more than the profile of a scannist and how to scan, basically. But it shows there's still some good press out there.
CALLING ALL CARS: POLICE SCANNERS KEEP CITIZENS IN COMMUNITY INFORMED
04/03/2004 - PROFESSIONAL STATEMENT FOR OPENNESS
This little piece has been out since 2001 but I only found it on the web tonight. It's an article reflecting on the move toward closed public safety radio systems by Kathleen Kirby, a lawyer with Wiley, Rein & Fielding in Washington. It is posted at the Radio-Television News Directors Association's Website (link below) but was originally published in The Communicator according to its own byline.
POLICE SCANNERS IN THE DIGITAL AGE
03/03/2004 - NEW FLARE UP IN CAUSE OF OPEN BROADCASTING
The right or the fight to recognize the value of open public safety radio broadcasts is the very foundation of Openness.org. However, there hasn't been any notable challenge against a closed system in quite a bit, largely due to new technology which temporarily puts average citizens back in the game. That is, until this story playing out now in San Antonio Texas. Turns out that due to a few technical choices implemented by its host, the trunked system mentioned in the story below isn't monitorable by trunk tracking scanners or any of the new digital breed radios. That leaves only a policy committment to keep the public tuned in which, as you'll note in Lindsay Blanton's report:

..."The City and County indicate there is no media or public access policy in place"...

The link below points to Lindsay's effort to obtain crucial technical information about the system that, once known, may once again restore true safety to the public in San Antonio.

Lindsay's site details his ongoing pursuit of a public information request for information. It is always useful for activists in other areas to review and follow the progress of others, and Lindsay is doing a great service by posting his effort. Like it or not, policy is where it's all at folks.

THE ANATOMY OF A PUBLIC RECORDS REQUEST
02/14/2004 - PRIVATE CITIZENS ASK FOR PUBLIC RECORDS
This article puts an uneasy spotlight on the unwillingness of low level clerks and institutions in general to honor public records access laws.

Of key point is the apparent willingness of public records personnel to faciliate the process of public records requests for media representatives, but not for average citizens regarded as "pesky". The laws themselves do not distinguish between media forums and individuals in most cases, yet everyday, it seems hinted, stewards of public records illegally make just such a call at the expense of public interest.

PRIVATE CITIZENS ASK FOR PUBLIC RECORDS
12/22/2003 - POLICE SCANNER TELLS MAN HIS CAR IS STOLEN
Seems a little weird, but here's a story running about a scannist who actually learned about his car being stolen only after overhearing his name being used by police during a police chase! Thanks to the scanner, the owner was on the phone in minutes providing information to police about the circumstances behind it.
THE ARTICLE AS APPEARING IN THE EVENING TIMES
10/25/2003 - SCANNIST NAILS ARMED ROBBER
In those areas where police openly patrolcast their operations, the scanning public becomes an extension to the ears of an otherwise limited number of law enforcement personnel. This report reminds just how valuable the public can be in countering criminals on the run when they are given the same opportunity to know of the same threats in their community that public safety does.
2 WOMEN ARRESTED AFTER ARMED ROBBERY AT CONVENIENCE STORE
10/11/2003 - WHEN OPENNESS IS CONTIGENT ON COSTLY TECHNOLOGY
I thought this article was interesting in that it addresses the cost of accessibility to online court records. There is an assumption, and I'm certainly guilty of making it if no one else is, that once information is online it is somehow guaranteed to equalize access to it. Never mind the cost of PCs or the uniformity of material priority that leads everyone to seek purchase of one. The fact is, swaths of our society can't afford a PC while still others don't want them. This question could become ammunition for those seeking to isolate and 'premiumnize' open access.

There are a couple of points of contention, some of which I address in an earlier article I wrote on this very matter. Generally speaking, though, I consider it a non-issue. Online court records assure saturation of information which increases the odds that everyone can review them. Even if I don't own a PC personally, I can take a mere two block walk to the nearest public Internet terminal to access those records versus a 5 mile bus trip during very particular hours to do the same thing.

Sorry, court records belong online. Maybe not exclusively, of course. Fortunately while the linked article below highlights this problem, it points out that no one is about to retract this bonanza of information liberation that online court records have initiated!

POOR LEFT OUT AS COURTS ENTER WEB AGE
09/03/2003 - TRANSPARENCY COUNTERS, NOT CULTIVATES, RUMORS AND CONSPIRACIES
An underlying thesis of Openness.org is that every effort to pursue an agenda of transparency pays off in unexpected ways. This article from Reuters Technology underscores the phenomena of acceptance when people are fed as much of the facts as there are available. When everyone can review the same thorough information, it's more difficult to slant, color, or outright lie. Facts, it seems, keep away Quacks.
UK IRAQ DOSSIER FLAP EXPOSES SPIN IN E-MAIL ERA
08/24/2003 - POLICE SCANNER INSTRUMENTAL IN SPOTTING LOST BOY
In many parts of America and beyond, police departments are experimenting with or implementing digitally scrambled radio systems to keep the monitoring public from listening in on their calls, as has been the rule for nearly 60 years.

In those regions that do so, police argue that restricting police communication to the local public safety clubset is better and safer for a community than otherwise. However, occassionally we are reminded that wide area communication interceptable by everyone is more beneficial and makes better sense. In this one, a two year old boy reported lost is spotted by a man listening to his police scanner.

Attempts to mock the efficiency of open broadcasting are often translated into noble projects such as Amber Alert Systems. But really, the question must always stand as to why it isn't better for you or I to have an opportunity to know about a dangerous situation the moment a public safety worker or some agents of the media do?

TWO-YEAR-OLD FOUND ALONE ON STREETS
08/24/2003 - WORKING WITH TECHNOLOGY TO MAINTAIN TRANSPARENCY
This article from the Hanover Mariner goes into some detail about how a burglary suspect was pulled over with a plethora of scanning equipment mounted inside his car. The otherwise consensual search turned into an arrest after other articles supporting a burglary trade were found.

What makes the story interesting to me, however, is not the knee-jerk reaction to a common scanner radio that led to more suspicion, but a point at the end about something called PocketCop. Explicitly calling attention to the police scanner as evidence of how burglars are becoming more technologically advanced, Police Chief Hayes indicated that they too needed advanced technology to thwart them. I braced myself to read that they needed a digital radio system to scramble the public out of their patrolcasts, but instead read how they were turning to PocketCops to run registrations and so forth with more confidentiality.

This example is striking a balance between some aspects of police work and shutting out the public entirely. If more selective digital communication were applied, many police departments would see that it is unnecessary as well as unsafe to blanket encrypt everything.

POLICE NAB BURGLARY SUSPECTS
08/11/2003 - WEBCAMS KEEPING SCHOOLS SAFE?
This article details the wiring up of one school in the US of A to hundreds (or does it say thousands - hm) of webcams in classrooms. This is bringning transparency to the daily activities of students and teenagers, and presumably encouraging better behavior. Not sure if this counts as an example of Openness or not, but generally speaking, I'm all for digital cameras in public places.
USA ARTICLE
06/08/2003 - SEEKING NEW OWNER FOR DIGITAL SCANNERS
I currently own the Yahoo Group "Digital Scanners". I am looking to transfer ownership of that group to someone more in touch with the evolution of digital radio scanning technolgy. If you think that is you, please be sure to contact me. I'll consider anyone for a controlled transfer of ownership who has a solid web presence in the area of public safety monitoring.
MY CONTACT PAGE
05/27/2003 - JAY WALKER ENDORSES DISTRIBUTED NOTIFICATION...
Jay Walker is the founder of PriceLine.com. His latest venture involves distributed notification techniques - an idea touted by this website years ago after the SETI thing to shore up homeland security. The idea? Use webcams and legions of cheaply hired people monitoring them to spot on and report suspicious activity.

In Tampa I actually asked the police department to do the same thing approximately 5 years ago when they first installed the Ybor City cameras. Rather than counting on police to monitor public cameras, let the public monitor public cameras. The idea sounded crazy then, so it helps to be vindicated by this guy's idea today.

PROPOSAL: WEBCAMS TO KEEP HOMELAND SAFE
05/22/2003 - CRAFTY WEBMASTER SEEKS TO OPEN DAILY POLICE ACTIVITY TO PUBLIC
Police scanners are only one way of srubbing off the clouds of secrecy about daily patrol work. In Pittsburg Pennsylvania an initiating police officer put recent web publishing education to immediate use by announcing that daily patrol activity would be available via their new website.
CRIME LOG ON WEB WILL KEEP CARNEGIE CITIZENS IN THE KNOW
05/22/2003 - SEXUAL PREDATOR NAILED THANKS TO POLICE SCANNER
Open broadcasting of local police bulletins tipped off a tow truck driver that the green Saturn vehicle sitting yards from him was wanted in a child sexual assault case. While likely more interested in tow jobs, the man appeasr to habitually write down interesting bolos as broadcasted to local police agencies on open airwaves. In this particular case, that open philosophy may have saved the life or well being of a child. Many local police departments opt for closed systems believing limiting communication scope of patrol operations improves public safety rather than enhancing it.
TRUCK DRIVER HELPS CATCH FUGITIVE
05/15/2003 - WHY WORRY ABOUT WHO OWNS THE MEDIA
The point of this story link is that a centralized corporate state media has inherent flaws in the sheer distribution of emergency information to the public. In recent years public safety has "privatized" the conduits of media information to the public which is fine until it makes profitable sense not to staff a telephone or pass on critical news. The town in this story found itself in peril with this modern day logic. Wonder if they have open broadcasting in Minot North Dakota! (You'll need to scroll a bit to read the story).
WHY WORRY ABOUT WHO OWNS THE MEDIA?
04/29/2003 - SHAKEN CITIZENS KNOW WHAT'S WHAT THANKS TO SCANNER
Have you heard about that deep south earthquake that struck Georgia and Alabama earlier today? Seems some citizens, taking advantage of open broadcasting, were made aware of the situation by relatives with a police scanner.
EARTHQUAKE AWAKENS CHEROKEE RESIDENTS
04/26/2003 - FIREBUFFING AS SCANNISTS...
Many police scannists, perhaps this author included, are in fact fire or disaster buffs. It's hard to imagine that buffing soley for personal gratification can possibly serve as a cornerstone for positive police scanning, but I'm quick to remind everyone how the ranks of policemen, firemen, and journalists are actually filled up by those who started out as defacto crisis people as built by God at the outset.

The link below requires a New York Times free registration.

WITH FIRE IN THEIR EYES BUFFS FIND PASSION IN CHASING SIRENS
04/14/2003 - JACKSONVILLE SEES PUBLIC SAFETY IN PUBLIC IGNORANCE
Reducing communication to narrow streams among an audience of public safety workers, Jacksonville Police have announced that they will shut out the public from its police communications. The issue of whether or not the public (and media) will have access options is still up for discussion, but the general message to scannists is "tough".

04/12/2003 - OPENNESS AS A TOOL OF ACCOUNTABILITY
An activist's attempt at posting a webcam in the heart of Iraq to help ensure the US sticks to its promise of rebuilding the invaded oil-rich nation. It is a creative use of wide area transparancy that is sure to catch on in international conflict theaters. As the writer notes, and as in the previous headline postings, the webcam is an unbiased observer. The military-pressed conversion of Iraq to a Western-style democracy is expected to take up to 6 months or longer.
FAILED IRAQ WEBCAM PLAN STILL SHEDS LIGHT
04/05/2003 - REGARDING THE LAST POSTING
Okay, in contrast to what I wrote in the last blog entry, the cam was much more interesting when the Iraqis WEREN'T in direct control of it. As of the moment they have somehow superimposed Iraqi (patriotic?) music and citizens singing. If you click MUTE you get that clean perspective effect I was talking about.

04/04/2003 - RAPID MEDIA AND THE INVASION OF IRAQ
MSNBC has been making available live streaming video from somewhere inside Baghdad. The video is sometimes used as the display feed during its broadcasts, but when viewed as a stream is devoid of commentary and presentation. It is literally just a random standing perspective of a nation under siege.

This is an interesting experiment because it so remarkably resembles rapid media as orginally described some years ago. If you connect to this stream (Windows Media Player) you are your own man on the street! Around the camera you can hear dogs barking, Iraqis talking, and of course, the distant sound of bombs exploding. If you watch long enough, you begin to feel the anxiety as the bombs get closer and explode at a denser interval.

If it holds up, you just might see a street battle unfold before your very eyes. Ultimately, you might even see the end game when American soldiers walk right up to the camera and wave.

The camera and its stream are an excellent example of both rapid media and exactly what it can do for our perceptions of events we otherwise have handed to us by organized media.

MSNBC LIVE FEED SOMEWHERE OUT OF BAGHDAD
03/09/2003 - SCANNIST UPGRADES RADIO, SAVES LIFE IMMEDIATELY
Wide area broadcasting and easy communication access saves lives, narrow and closed communication wastes lives. This mantra was proven Feb. 11 when a scannist upgraded his radio to listen in to the otherwise digitized fire radio. The digital radio system was touted in part as able to keep scannists like this tow truck driver, Carl Ross, out of the loop. No sooner had Ross upgraded his scanner to beat the digital limitations, however, when he eventually overheard a fire dispatch near his location. Ross noticed he was within eyeshot of the fire and responded only to learn there was a woman trapped inside. Heroically, Ross forged into the flames and wound up saving her life! Had the digital intent of Philadelphia's radio system been living up to its maximum functionality in keeping people like Ross from listening, and had Ross not the tenacity to beat that digital barrier, this woman would be dead. Public safety communication is not public safety business, it's public business.
GOOD SAMARITAN SAVES OVERBROOK WOMAN FROM FIRE
03/03/2003 - OPEN BROADCASTING NAILS SHOPLIFTERS
In a criminal event too miniscule for loud media play on TV or radio, Open Broadcasting saved the day when a scannist overheard the description of a fleeing shoplifter. The shoplifter thought he only needed to escape police attention, but instant wide area notification means he really needed to dodge a hundred if not thousand extra ears instead.
SCANNER LISTENER HELPS NAB ROBBERS
02/28/2003 - 'MUM' MAY BE THE WORD IF LEWES WORKERS GET RADIO
The really great observation in this story is when someone openly wonders why anyone should be fired for discussing information overheard on a common police scanner. Police scanners are common appliances sold in many electronic stores and the mere acquisition of one in the course of one's job should not seal individuals as though their status as "common" somehow changes.
DELMARVA NOW LINK
02/10/2003 - HOMELAND SECURITY AND YOUR SCANNER
A recent posting to the Openness.org listserv was apparently widely circulated among other listservs, making the point something of a cultural hit. Openness.org hasn't had one of those in awhile. Hence, I am re-posting the text here (with slight editing) so that you may cut and paste to circulate it yourself among your private e-mail lists.

The night before last I'm clacking away at the PC subliminally listening to the police scanner at the same time. At one point a deputy tells another that his drug operation is going to be hampered because "they called in all the dogs" for the "other" need or operation. He later referenced them as bomb sniffers. I knew they were probably talking about something terrorist related so I took mental caution and moved on. Yesterday they raised the security level from yellow to orange, and today Tom Ridge pointed out that the threat was like 8 on a scale of 1 to 10 in terms of likelihood or credibility of militant attack.

Then I thought back to the scanner chatter and it occurred to me how lucky I was to be living in an open broadcasting area. Part of Homeland Security's point in making the color coding thing relevant is to enable citizens to adhere to greater diligence and due cause procedures. Thinking about it, among those who can, that includes keeping the scanner on! If there's an attack at that mall up the street from me, for example, there's a much greater chance of me being made aware of it than others might be in many other places. When the street officer knows of impending trouble I have the opportunity to know at the same time in order to maximize my personal level of appropriate response.

I hope that each of us who still lives in an open broadcast area will include regular passive monitoring of their local public safety channels as part of their high alert protocol. That extra few minutes which sometimes amounts to a half hour or more before anything hits the media can be just the information you need to lock your front doors, arm yourselves (you pro gunners), evacuate, warn other neighbors, or collect your immediate family for whatever contingency you keep at bay. In Tampa and Hillsborough County we can do this and we're much more likely to survive some terrible calamity than not as a result.

For those of you living in closed broadcast areas, areas where concern for the local tow truck driver chasing police calls somehow outweighed the concern for your family being killed in a recin attack, you'll just have to rely on authorities notifying local media, and local media in turn deciding to select the issue as worthy of broadcast. Hopefully it won't be something terrible going down at the premise of someone who advertises with the TV station since the decision to pass on bad news will be harder to make. In all, the soonest you'll know is 30 to 50 minutes at best. No matter how you're notified, nothing could be faster than the potential for you to know something when the dispatcher notifies the road deputy.

I'm being dramatic, but hopefully exemplifying. Open systems save lives! Narrow communication channels waste lives. And now more than ever every public safety facility in this country needs to be mandated to keep a portion of their radio communication in the clear and easily absorbable by the public. Public safety is not public safety business, it's PUBLIC business. And that means plenty now.

www.openness.org


01/18/2003 - INFORMATION SHOULD BE RESTRICTED TO AS FEW AS POSSIBLE
It was bound to happen. Arguments against making public information available to everyone are beginning to develop as more and more government entitities seek to make public information easily referencable. One activist is even making exclusive access rather than open access sound somehow more democratic than the other way around - not a bad feat! Still, there are good questions and issues to consider and Openness.org never believes intellectual challenges are bad. Hey, if I don't embody 'intellectual challenge', I don't know who does. Click the link below to read my best rebuttal before a cup of coffee to the major concerns those seeking to take information offline have.
PUT COURT SYSTEMS ONLINE
01/03/2003 - DIGITAL SCANNERS SHIPPING NOW
Whoa! Well, turns out some version of digital-capable scanners are shipping as I type. Break out the bubbles! An interesting point made in this article is that they got someone at the Philadelphia Police Department to admit they hadn't gone completely digital yet in order to maximize the listening effort of local crime watch groups and certain media outlets.
HOBBYISTS CAN NOW LISTEN TO POLICE ON DIGITAL RADIOS
01/01/2003 - NAACP LOOKS AT CLOSED BROADCASTING POLICIES
The Fredrick Police Department opted to hide all of its police communication from the public, and the NAACP there is crying foul. The previously open radio system assured residents that its local police department was subject to a degree of transparency. Two years ago it switched to a digital system plunging arrests and other routine police actions into the arena of secrecy and exclusivity. Citizens in Fredrick must now rely on selective reports by the department, which are in turn released to select media representatives. The article suggests that despite all the newfound security of communication, crime fighting has not improved much even while citizens bare the new cost of isolation. The department refers to loose plans to post call information on the internet (as many others have done and are spotlighted in the Openness.org National Index of Open Examples), but does not leave the reader very optimistic that such plans are really in the works - or that they would be enough even if they were. The Fredrick Police Department would be better off keeping its patrolcasts open to the public and selectively encrypting for the security and confidentiality it genuinely needs.
POLICE DEEM DIGITAL RADIO SYSTEM EFFECTIVE
01/01/2003 - READING POLICE -- GOING DIGITAL, TOO
The Reading Pennsylvania Police Department is switching to a digital radio system. The report covers this conversion to digital as a loss to scanning "hobbiests" though does quote an official from Uniden suggesting that the digital scanner will be available by late 2003. If I'm not mistaken, that's a date pushed back even further than previous delays.
READING POLICE SWITCH TO DIGITAL RADIO SYSTEM
01/01/2003 - ANOTHER CROOK FELLED BY OPENNESS
Yes it happened again. A citizen with a police scanner directly, yet safely, assisted police in capturing a local criminal. Police Chief Jeff Bock had plenty of positive commentary regarding the public use of police scanners. As in the previous story, the chief credits selective encryption with the ability to keep patrolcasts otherwise open to the public:

"It's all on the public airwaves," he said. "And we find more often that people listening to them can help us. If there's anything that we don't want to put over the airwaves, we'll call by phone or we have the capability in our radio to scramble up so that people can't hear it."

NEIGHBOR CREDITED IN SUSPECT'S CAPTURE
01/01/2003 - STORY ON PHILADELPHIA CONVERSION TO DIGITAL
This story published earlier this month by the Philadelphia Inquirer now appears verbatim at the Trunked Radio Information Homepage. It reports how citizens or the media will be unable to intercept public safety transmissions, though it does acknowledge that digital scanners are but months from reality to the general consumer. It is even encouraging that Police Commissioner Charles Brennon stipulates that certain frequencies such as those used by homicide, drug, and anti-terror squads, will be encyrpted and "never intercepted again". Without really saying so, I hope, he's suggesting that the department will only selectively encrypt traffic that needs to be rather than everything. When digital scanners are commonplace, regular patrolcasts will be monitorable to the benefit of community safety and information. Let's hope this is an accurate inference.
PHILADELPHIA FIREFIGHTERS, POLICE SWITCH TO DIGITAL RADIOS
09/23/2002 - USA TODAY ARTICLES ABOUT PRISON RECORDS ONLINE
While beefing up Openness.org content and database tonight, I came across this USA Today article that ran way back in 2000. This site, of course, indexes the kinds of databases the article talks about.
STATES LISTING PRISONERS, PAROLEES ONLINE
09/23/2002 - MORE ON SERIAL ROBBER'S ARREST, THANKS TO SCANNIST
There are few, if any, documented cases of police suffering fatally from police scanner bearing criminals. There are countless more stories about wide area notification via police scanner leading to the capture of a criminal who thought he was only eluding police rather than everyone. This is the second story about a woman who helped police zero in on a man said to be responsible for up to 7 robberies before his capture!
ROBBERY SUSPECT NABBED
09/23/2002 - SCANNER TRAFFIC RUSTLES COMATOSE OFFICER
This is an interesting one. A police scanner is wired next to the bed of a comatose police officer in the hopes it will stir up mental activity and resurrection. This heartbreaking story of creative compassion tells of how the officer's call signs are repeated hourly over the crackling radio.
COMATOSE OFFICER REACTS TO SCANNER CALLS
09/23/2002 - TOW TRUCK DRIVER, EXTRA EAR FOR POLICE
Still another success story. A tow truck driver listening to his police scanner overhears a bolo description for an armed robbery suspect. He spots the suspect, calls the police, who then soundly arrest him. Note that in some areas, tow truck drivers with scanners are a regarded nuisance. This article appears as one of the listed news briefs.
MAN PAROLED FOR MURDER CHARGED WITH STEALING DRUGS
09/23/2002 - GOOD CITIZENSHIP, NO MATTER WHAT
A woman is tipped off to robbery suspects via a police scanner. She spots the suspects, they are apprehended, and scores of crimes are cleared in the process. This article discusses when good citizenship is good citizenship, and when it's just plain snooping. Good people we are, as scannists, we realize it's a grey area. However, the balance generally weighs in favor of public safety and heroic stories.
HELP FROM CITIZENS IS A BLESSING
09/23/2002 - I-TEAM USES SCANNER TO CHECK POLICE RESPONSE
Sadly, some police departments might use this article as reinforcement against Open Broadcasting. Others might cite the power of Open Broadcasting here as an important conduit of checks and balances. A television news team boldly follows calls on the police scanner, timing response.
APD RESPONSE TIME
09/23/2002 - OPEN BROADCASTING FRIGHTENS OFF HOME INVADERS
Rhetorical convention has it that criminals can exploit Open Broadcasting to facilitate their crimes. In this case, the certainty of police response, overheard on a homeowner's police scanner as he was being robbed, scared the crooks away.
911 TAPE SHEDS NEW LIGHT ON MILLINGTON HOME INVASION
09/08/2002 - REPORTS CONCLUDING AMERICANS OKAY WITH WEB-STRIPPING DISTORTED
A report came out last week that indicated most Americans did not mind information being taken off the web that might aid terrorists. A surprising percentage of Americans in the study, 69 percent to be exact, thought there was nothing wrong with regulating people to government reading rooms, or simply not having the information available at all - if the information didn't help terrorists.

I was surprised enough to actually look at the report and found the problem. The study was very specific about what information gets pulled off the web, even though all the news coverage of this report keeps the notion of sanctioned web-stripping very generalized. In reality, the questions dealt with specifics such as information posted by chemical or nuclear facilities. When it came to public safety, such as whether or not sex offenders should be posted online, more and more Americans agreed such information should be posted. The entire report, while presented as otherwise in most reports, skips the more thorny question of what information could be construed to help radical militants or not. A conclusion that it's okay to strip governmental web content (and possibly public safety web content) is piggbacking off a common sense conclusion that it's okay not to post the formulas of nerve gas or nuclear bombs.

NETIZENS: SEPT. 11 JUSTIFIES WEB CURBS
09/08/2002 - BANK ROBBERY FOILED BY SCANNIST
Last month a bank robber was thwarted by a young man with his scanner.
SCOUT HELPS NAB SUSPECT IN ROBBERY OF BANK
08/06/2002 - DIGITAL RADIO SOUGHT OVER ANALOG
Evidently, analog public safety radios were considered the root of some communications failure during the September 11 attacks. This is a twist -- most of the information circulating through Openness.org and communication enthusiast vines reflects that digital radio is more of a headache. In fact, the digital radios were originally taken OUT of service after a short test run in New York prior to 9/11 because there were certain issues.
FDNY UNION WANTS NEW RADIOS QUICKLY
08/05/2002 - LISTSERV NEWSLETTER
The Openness.org listserv has been converted to a newsletter, headline news, and notification system for new entries into the National Index of Open Examples. I apologize for this inconvenience. I hope that if you have information to contribute you will still do so by sending that information to [email protected].

06/30/2002 - ISSUES IN CORPORATE AND CONSUMER TRANSPARENCY
The recent revelations about Enron, Worldcaomm, Xerox, and no doubt others yet to come clean, has raised the issue of the value of corporate transparency. While Openness.org typically focuses on public safety issues, it is worth noting the many applications the same philosophy can help to 'clean up' in the corporate institution. People certainly seem to be asking for more of it now. At the consumer level, one wonders if a wave of transparency solutions might also be on the verge of forming. For example, how long off is it before you can get your car repaired, and then be handed a videotape of the work being done as you pay for it? These are just thinking points!

06/21/2002 - FREELANCE JOURNALIST JAILED BY DIAGREEING JUDGE
The story of Paul Trummel has been fairly well circulate now. Apparently Trummel tapped into the publishing power of the web to distribute his commentary and other writings, only to be jailed for it. Central questions in his persecution include whether or not he was actually publishing anything, whether or not he is a journalist, and who gets to decide these questions - as if the Constitution hadn't already. This site approaches this story from that angle, and offers up disturbing proof how increasingly acceptable it is to divide commentators into "legitamite" or "non-legitamite" groups.
FREE PAUL TRUMMEL
06/18/2002 - DISTRIBUTED NOTIFICATION CONCEPT GOES ONLINE
Since the September 11 attack, interest in police scanner radios has skyrocketed as every day citizens seek to arm themselves with instant as-it-happens alerts to public safety dangers that threaten them. Tragically, in some areas, closed public safety radio systems fell into place in pre-911 days while few noticed. Those that fell back on police scanners were no doubt horrified to find that the scanners were now useless. While Openness.org hopes people will take shape, organize, and seek to promote the reopening of closed systems, some compensations exist now.

This story is about something called the "Electronic Message Alert System" which is highly geographically relevant messaging alert network that uses text paging devices (pagers, cellphones, etc.) to keep citizens aware of potential threats and inconveniences. As the report says, all any municipality needs is internet and e-mail access.

FAIRFAX OFFERING ELECTRONIC ALERTS
06/11/2002 - CITIZENS RELYING ON SCANNERS TO PROTECT AGAINST NEW THREATS
This piece reminds us how valuable police scanners can be in times of insecurity. Public radio systems in many locales are publically funded and operated. With the new threat of organized militants, many citizens are getting their money back in spades by taking advantage of knowing about the threats that confront them daily via police scanner. Openness.org advocates police scanners distributed directly to the public. Unfortunately, many areas of the country are doing the exact opposite by adopting hostile public scanning attitudes. And so far, no federal agency a part of the new homeland security effort has come out with a statement for or against police scanners at all. For many people, it's about common sense though. Open, wide-area distribution of the same threats that affect pulic safety and on-scene victims, can help to shore up against the same threat immediately.

One part of the report reads: "Now, sales of scanners and shortwave radios have increased. Mr. Smith sees his scanner as a way to get first word of an attack anywhere near his home 10 miles south of Dayton. He said the scanner will enable him to react quickly. “I would just like to have a heads-up,” he said.

POLICE RADIO SCANNERS HOT ITEM AMONG WORRIED
06/09/2002 - STRONG SIGNALS POSTS APOLOGETIC TRANSCRYPT NOTICE
The Strong Signals web site (www.strongsignals.net) is posting what was provided to it as an apology from Transcrypt Secure Technologies. Secure communication technology is critical to ensuring the future of open public safety systems. However, Transcrypt's print ad campaign (see link to ad lower on the Openness.org Blog Page) alluded that wide area open access to general communication was inherently "bad". Obviously scannists and Openness.org took serious objection to this, and if the letter is true, Transcrypt tipped its hat apologetically.
TRANSCRYPT APOLOGY
06/09/2002 - POLICE CHIEF'S STAB AT DISTRIBUTED AWARENESS FALLS FLAT
....And speaking of webcams and police, this chief had the right idea, but not the support. In an effort to curb vandals and rowdiness on one beach front, it was his idea to install a public webcam on one particularly vulnerable part of a California beach. Unfortunately, local folks didn't cheer this one!
ANGRY RESIDENTS SINK POLICE CHIEF'S SURF CAM
06/09/2002 - MEXICO NOT AFRAID OF POLICE OPENNESS
It took dramatic charges of public corruption and a vicious confirming scandal to suit, but this Mexican police department is going to openly broadcast its Tijuana police stations via webcams. Public transparency is a noble and effective step at clearing suspicion of police work. The program, says the report, has been "cheered by locals" where it has been implemented.
TIJUANA INSTALLS CAMERAS IN ITS POLICE STATIONS TO PROVE ITS COPS AREN
05/30/2002 - PREYING ON INSECURITIES OF SECURE OPERATIONS
A company specializing in communications appears to be demonizing scannists and the concept of open broadcasting in general. The company doesn't appear to acknowledge the 500+ plus lives that were saved on PATH trains thanks to communications in the clear on 9/11. It isn't that the company is selling scrambling systems to secure communications that's so apalling. After all, to enhance the freedom and openness of public safety radio systems you have to have refined methods for securing that communication which must be. It's that the company is subtracting any notion at all of the benefits of wide area transparency, pushing officials who are already hostile against the concept based on initially flimsy reasoning, away from rethinking the matter.
ACTIVISTS TARGET ADVERTISING CAMPAIGN OF IGNORANCE
05/02/2002 - SCANNIST ALERTED TO FIRE IN HIS BUILDING
This happened to yours truly, too! I was in my apartment in Tampa when I heard a police officer radio that he was going to investigate smoke coming from the back of retail establishment that immediately and directly adjoined my apartment. The fence just feet from my back window was on fire, it turned out! This story is almost a spitting image of mine and illustrates the potency of scanners and open broadcasting to give every citizen maximum advantage in meeting public safety threats.
FIRE LEAVES APARTMENT DAMAGED
04/24/2002 - WEATHER RADIO SYSTEMS, EXISTING MODEL FOR "CRIME" RADIO SYSTEMS
When you strip away the journalistic curiosity and technical thrill, one thing a scannist will concede to is how invaluable scanner radios are for keeping track of local crime activity and providing the fastest possible notification of immediate public safety threats. Established public safety rarely acknowledges this benefit, presumably because chaotic notification is not, at some level, notification at all. That's why Openness.org promotes the evolution of radio networks run by local public safety agencies that trigger devices very similar to these weather radios. Reverse 911 systems are examples to perfect the spirit of such a system, but wouldn't a nationally dedicated radio frequency and the high availability of special radios to the public that could tune in that frequency be even better? In this era of awareness about militant attackers, wouldn't such radios make great sense?
JANKLOW GETS AWARD FOR PUSHING WEATHER RADIO
04/24/2002 - UNIDEN MOVES ON WITH DIGITAL SCANNER
More information on the upcoming Uniden APCO 25 digital scanner line. It's nice to see that in addition to the groundbreaking ability to listen to digitally based public safety signals, these scanners include several innovative features such as "second scanner cloning". Scanners are due to get down and sophisticated as they gradually merge with the desktop PC and other mobile digital components
UNIDEN APCO 25 DIGITAL SCANNERS
04/24/2002 - UNIDEN MOVES ON WITH DIGITAL SCANNER
More information on the upcoming Uniden APCO 25 digital scanner line. It's nice to see that in addition to the groundbreaking ability to listen to digitally based public safety signals, these scanners include several innovative features such as "second scanner cloning". Scanners are due to get down and sophisticated as they gradually merge with the desktop PC and other mobile digital components
UNIDEN APCO 25 DIGITAL SCANNERS
04/15/2002 - WHAT'S WRONG WITH INTERROGATIONS?
An interesting point in this article talks about how the panel is going to recommend that interrogations, not just confessions, be videotaped. A lot of guilty people are put to death, but it turns out so are a lot of innocent people which besmurdges the entire death penalty process far and beyond what most people would agree is acceptable risk. This is an interesting application of social transparency because it seeks to stamp out one major stronghold of potential social injustice.
ILLINOIS PANEL SUGGESTS DEATH PENALTY OVERHAUL
04/10/2002 - MINNEAPOLIS TACKLES PUBLIC ACCESS TO POLICE
Bob Reynolds provided this information to us today:

The Metro (Minneapolis) Radio Board is tackling the issue of public radio access by floating a draft proposal to regulate how radios could be used by the media and others to monitor selected talkgroups of its digital trunked radio system. Unfortunately, the draft pretty much leaves the decision on what channels are "open" to the local participating agencies, and never comes close to stating a policy on what information should be available to the public. Local media are hoping to maintain at least what access they have now with analog radio channels. See what the Board left out at:

PDF OF PUBLIC ACCESS PROPOSAL (REQUIRES ADOBE ACROBAT READER)
03/28/2002 - SHERIFF ADOPTS SPIRIT OF OPENNESS
The Douglas County Sheriff Department makes it clear that it values citizens listening in on issues that affect them. In direct response to going digital, the department has invested in an elaborate online scanner system, citing all the right reasons! Maybe we're finally sinking into policy around here. :)
DOUGLAS COUNTY SHERIFF'S RADIO SCANNING NOW AVAILABLE ONLINE
03/24/2002 - NEWSBOT COULD OPEN CLOSED WARS
It's interesting that the creator of this device wants to post his plans directly to the internet, too. Sounds like he's tired of obediant media protocols.
A MULTIMEDIA CORRESPONDENT ON WHEELS?
02/23/2002 - HISTORICALLY OPEN LAPD GOES SILENT
It's true, there isn't much rapid media about Openness.org when important news gets passed along some 8 months after the fact. I might just as soon not say anything at all about this except that I stumbled across an excellent documentary website on the history of LAPD radio communications. The department, historically, has recognized the value of open broadcasting since the 1930s. However, on June 18, 2001, LAPD became of milestone on the road to closure when it switched to an all digital public safety communications system. The point has all the more impact in the context of LAPD communication history at the website provided here. Digital scanners are a reality on the horizon now, but will future LAPD attitude make that a relevant benefit or not?
HISTORY OF LAPD RADIO COMMUNICATIONS
02/11/2002 - UNFINISHED BUSINESS: INTERACTIVE POLICING
Here's a web page from the Grand Rapids Police Department that shows starking appreciation for the internet and its use in reaching out to the city residents directly. Note the posted quote: "Conventional Media plays an important part in our dealing with the public, and we value our interaction with them. However, to not communicate directly with the public when this method of communication is available would reflect very poorly upon us as an organization." The site portends that it will offer online information such as stolen vehicle information and current activity information - all the things Openness.org loves. The question here is, what happened? All the links are dead. Let's hope they still have a wise webmaster there working on it.
GRAND RAPIDS "INTERACTIVE POLICING" INFORMATION
02/09/2002 - CITIZENS RELY ON OPEN BROADCASTING FOR SECURITY
After a rash of burglaries, citizens in this small community are glad their local police haven't abandon the provision of open broadcasting. In communities not so fortunate, police close community access to their broadcasts dramatically decreasing public safety.
NORTHWEST NEIGHBORS SHAKEN BY BURGLARIES
02/08/2002 - CENSORSHIP BY PRESSURE
A law abiding ham group considers itself forced to remove public frequencies from its website during the Olympic visit. Acts of hostile closure against scannists is far more common than it is against hams, many of which are in fact law enforcement members themselves.
SCANNING THE SECRET SYSTEM CALLED UCAN
02/03/2002 - OPENNESS.ORG ENHANCED
This weekend I made a dramatic fiscal decision to enhance the databases of Openness.org and other webpages I master. The transfer to the new database platform is going along extremely well and is already paying off in ease and efficiency. You can expect this change to directly impact the usefulness and effectiveness of this campaign. For now, know that the headline system and National Index of Open Systems have undergone significant behind the scene changes. This message is both an announcement and a test of the new system. Thank you for your support everyone!
THE OPENNESS.ORG WEBSITE
02/03/2002 - CLOSED BROADCASTING ISSUE TAKING FORM, FINALLY
The problem of closed public safety radio communication systems is gradually taking on form in the minds of media professionals - particularly at the local level. This columnist for one industry info depot offers an open strategy playbook for dealing with the issue.
POLICE SCANNERS IN THE DIGITAL AGE
02/03/2002 - OPEN BROADCASTING GALVANIZES CHRISTMAS SPIRIT
After a routine verbal observation made on open police channels, the public in Winchester Tennessee flooded gifts and good cheer on a woman there who found herself, with son, not eating in three days and without presents over Christmas. The police official is quoted at the end of the article as saying that this is one time he was glad that the public was listening to their police scanners. We at Openness.org are not surprised, of course. Open public safety broadcasting has saved lives, preserved fundamental democractic principles, and improved public and officer safety. In some cases, as this story indicates, it has given rise to the community spirit.
HERALD CHRONICLE ARTICLE - SCANNISTS COME TO AID
02/03/2002 - SCANNING ENTHUSIASTS TAKE TO INTERNET
Scannists have found the internet to be a great way to tune into long distance police communications. Online police scanners were one of the first gee-whiz internet offerings in the mid-90s.
MONITORING POLICE SCANNERS PROVIDES NEW ONLINE HOBBY
02/03/2002 - POLICE CONSIDER PUBLIC ACCESS IN DIGITAL CONVERSION:
This article finds a police chief commenting how he would like to work to simulcast basic police communication in analog format for the explicit purpose of the scanning public. The section reads 'At least one police department is considering a plan to broadcast in analog to accommodate the scanner hobbyists. Portsmouth Police Chief Brad Russ said he would like to broadcast in both digital and analog because some scanner listeners have given useful tips to police.' Openness.org has been campaigning for 4 years to generate statements like this. Way to go!
FOSTER'S ONLINE ARTICLE

The editorial objective of this page is to present news, views, and links that jostle the sleeping controversy between open and closed public safety systems. People like you are taking notice! We recommend the following excellent websites for more direct issues involving communications, radio scanning, and manufacturing and industry reports:

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