sâmbătă, 30 aprilie 2011

Diver flown for 'bends' treatment

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A diver has been airlifted to hospital with a suspected case of decompression sickness, coastguards said.

The diver was picked up from St Abbs in the Scottish Borders on Saturday afternoon by a helicopter scrambled from RAF Boulmer in Northumberland.

He was suffering from breathing difficulties and was taken to Aberdeen Royal Infirmary, which is the nearest site with decompression facilities.

A Forth Coastguard spokesman said no further details were available.

This article is from the BBC News website. � British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/uk-scotland-south-scotland-13248811

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Ten in 'overloaded' boat rescued

Coastguard. Pic: MCARescuers also recovered three people from a pedalo
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Ten people had to be rescued after a "dangerously overloaded" motor boat broke down, coastguards said.

The speed boat had launched at Port Edgar to cross the Firth of Forth on Friday.

But at about 1340 BST Forth Coastguard received a 999 call reporting three people in the water.

The men were recovered by an RNLI lifeboat from Queensferry and two were taken to hospital suffering mild hypothermia.

The vessel, thought to be about 15ft (4.6m) long, was towed into Dalgety Bay.

Simon Ward, a watch officer at Forth Coastguard, said: "Small leisure vessels come with a carrying capacity as recommended by the manufacturer, which should not be exceeded.

"With ten people on board this small sports boat it was dangerously overloaded."

Forth Coastguard also received a 999 call reporting a pedal craft with three people on board was in difficulty just outside Elie harbour in Fife.

Anstruther RNLI lifeboat recovered the individuals and towed the pedal craft ashore.

Mr Ward added: "Taking a water craft without consent is an offence, and pedalos are for fun in a designated area.

"Both of these incidents could have ended in different ways, had it not been for the callers ashore who spotted these people in difficulty."

This article is from the BBC News website. � British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/uk-scotland-edinburgh-east-fife-13248411

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vineri, 29 aprilie 2011

Great escape

 
May pole and dancersDancing round the May Pole is a May Day tradition

The government is considering scrapping the May Day Bank Holiday and creating a new public holiday in April or October. But what is the origin of our bank holidays and what do they tell us about the UK?

It seems almost too good to be true. Waking up to another four-day weekend, the second in a row for England, Wales and Northern Ireland. Feels just a little bit indulgent.

But after an Easter weekend steeped in sunshine, most of us are only too happy to gobble up a double helping of bank holiday pudding, in the shape of the Royal Wedding and May Day.

But not everyone is feeling hungry for seconds. Not at Westminster anyway, where MPs have tabled a bill to scrap the May Day Bank Holiday in England and Wales and replace it with a new national day.

Under the proposals, the festivities would be moved to St George's Day in April in England and St David's Day in March in Wales, or a Trafalgar Day in October.

Ministers said the move would lengthen the tourist season, while business leaders are keen to spread out holidays to avoid a repeat of this year's 11-day bonanza, which some analysts estimate will cost the UK economy £30bn.

Spring and fertility

But the threat to May Day has riled both trade unions and rural traditionalists, for whom the first Monday is an agricultural festival whose roots stretch far beyond its modern association with Labour Day.

The curious history of our official bank holidays begins in 1871, when they were first recognised in an Act of Parliament authored by Sir John Lubbock. He was a banker who, it is said, was so keen on cricket he chose dates when village matches were played in his home county.

Mods and rockers in Brighton in the 1960sMods and rocker would clash on Bank Holidays in the 60s

In truth, "St Lubbock's Days", as they were briefly known, were all associated with important religious festivals and agricultural holidays, says Prof John K Walton, a historian of British and Spanish tourism and national identities at the University of the Basque Country.

"Our bank holidays were made by the Victorians, but they are rooted in traditions which run far deeper than the holidays themselves. They underlined existing days of celebration. Mid-August, for example, was a traditional time for seaside bathing holidays, even before the advent of the railways."

December holidays are often thought of as Christian inventions, but the dates coincide with holidays which predate Jesus' birth, says Prof Bernard Capp, a historian at Warwick University.

"When the puritans abolished Christmas in 1647, they banned it twice over because it was both pagan and Popish. They looked back in history and saw that Christmas was predated by the Roman Saturnalia."

The public responded violently to the ban, particularly in Canterbury where rioting and looting broke out.

Notorious day

"The repercussions led eventually to a rebellion and a second Civil War," says Capp.

But while Christmas survived the reformation, many other traditional holidays were lost, he adds.

"Before the protestant reformation every village had its saint. But the reformers got rid of that and smashed the places of worship. Saints' days were wiped out, but somehow St George survived. He became a national figure and his identity was enough to outweigh the Pope."

UK public holidays 2011
Girl on a beach
UK-wide

New Year's Day; Good Friday; Royal wedding; May Day; Spring Bank Holiday; Christmas Day; Boxing Day

England and Wales

Easter Monday; Last Monday in August

Scotland

2 January; First Monday in August; St Andrew's Day

Northern Ireland

St Patrick's Day; Easter Monday; The Twelfth; Last Monday in August

May Day only became an official bank holiday in 1971, associated strongly with International Workers' Rights day, which some think has marked it out as a political target.

But its roots as a holiday stretch back to pre-Christian pagan festivals, and the Gaelic Beltane. The familiar rituals of dancing around the Maypole and the crowning of the May Queen made it a popular seasonal celebration in medieval England.

"May Day is associated with spring and fertility, the sowing of the seeds. It is a rural tradition," says Julie-Marie Strange, senior lecturer in Victorian Studies at the University of Manchester.

"It's things like May Day that remind us we were once an agricultural community. We've clung on to these traditions and I'm not sure why we'd want to get rid of them now."

When the industrial revolution came, working hours were no longer ruled by the agricultural seasons - they were ruled by the clock.

"For the factory bosses, the harvest had no relevance," says Strange. "It was all about getting as much work done in the daylight as possible. But the factories drew their workforce from the rural areas and that's where you get the clashes over time off."

Mondays were the biggest bone of contention, with working-class people deciding to take their own Monday holidays - known as Saint Mondays.

"It was a rural custom of taking Mondays off, or easy, that persisted in an industrial context", says Strange. "Although most employers tried to stamp it out."

Nostalgia

Bank holidays quickly got a bad reputation and were associated with working people drinking too much. The August bank holiday was especially notorious.

"With the hot weather and beer combo, fights would break out," says Strange. "And if you look right up to the 1960s, you see that mods and rockers tended to clash more on Bank Holiday Mondays too, down at the seaside in Margate."

Morris dancers protest over the threat to May Day People have protested over the threat to May Day

But the holiday Mondays were not just about drinking, they were family days, rich in childhood memories and nostalgia.

"If you read Victorian autobiographies, bank holidays were always special," says Strange. "They were red letter days when you got a free day out of the everyday routine."

In working-class areas especially they were important for family and community cohesion. But as working culture changes, it has become harder and harder for everyone to get time off on the same day, says Walton.

"In the 1960s we had local town holidays, the days when the local factories closed. But once the factories went we lost all those, and with it that predictable holiday pattern.

"With the loss of Sunday, it's getting more and more difficult for families to arrange a holiday. The bank holiday is our last remnant of that culture where we could all go on holiday together."

Strange agrees: "The fashion today is for choice, but there are good things about our bank holidays. They remind us where we came from."

But will politicians agree with the historians? And more to the point, does the nation? It could be too close to call.

In a web-poll of over 4,000 Britons, less than half (43%) would like the May Day bank holiday left as it is. A third (36%) supported replacing it with a Trafalgar Day in October, while a fifth (18%) supported replacing it with a St George's Day public holiday in April.

Enjoy yourself this May Day. It may be one of your last.

This article is from the BBC News website. � British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/magazine-13217242

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joi, 28 aprilie 2011

Primary school roof catches fire

Photo of the scene taken by Helen CoyThe fire is in the roof of the school

More than 60 firefighters are tackling a blaze at a Birmingham primary school.

A fire service spokesman said the roof was on fire at Harborne Primary School, in Station Road.

A spokeswoman for Birmingham City Council said all staff and pupils had been moved to a safe place where parents could collect their children.

She added Station Road, Emerson Road and Wentworth Road had been closed and traffic disruption could be expected in the surrounding area.

The cause of the fire is not yet known.

Parents have been asked to collect children who attend the infants section from St John's church hall and children who attend the juniors section from the Gala Bingo Hall.

Both are in Harborne High Street.

Birmingham City Council said about 630 pupils attend the school.

This article is from the BBC News website. � British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/uk-england-birmingham-13212758

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miercuri, 27 aprilie 2011

Fifth parcel bomb 'aimed to harm'

Victoria Street has been closed for the second timeThe discovery of the fifth package caused a security alert in Belfast
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Police investigating parcel bombs sent to Celtic manager Neil Lennon and two fans believe a recently found fifth package could have caused "real harm".

The package, which was addressed to Glasgow-based republican group Cairde Na h'Éireann was intercepted by postal staff in Northern Ireland.

Strathclyde Police said it was similar to devices sent to Mr Lennon, Paul McBride QC and former MSP Trish Godman.

The fifth device is believed to have been posted in Scotland.

It was found at the National Return Letter Centre in Belfast, where mail which has not been delivered and has no return to sender address is retained by Royal Mail.

Part of Belfast city centre was closed following the discovery and the package was later taken to a Police Service of Northern Ireland station where it was examined by bomb disposal experts.

Strathclyde Police were later notified and are linking its discovery to four devices already found in Scotland.

Cairde Na hÉireann (Friends of Ireland)

Cairde Na hÉireann states that it is a national body for republicans in Scotland. Its aims are:

to campaign for a united Irelandsupport sister organisations in Irelandimprove conditions for the Irish community in Scotlandcampaign against sectarianism and racism

The organisation acts as an umbrella group for other Irish republican groups, such as the James Connolly Society. Its members take part in the the annual James Connolly march through Edinburgh and the Bloody Sunday march in Glasgow.

The force said it appeared to be "similar to the ones already being investigated" and had been "designed to cause fear, alarm and furthermore real harm".

Ch Sup Ruaraidh Nicolson, of Strathclyde Police, said: "Naturally the public are going to be concerned about the latest discovery, however, we would like to emphasise that this device is not a new one - it entered the postal system at the end of March, around the same time as two of the other packages.

"Like the others, it was addressed to individuals / organisations that have experienced high-profile media attention lately and it was certainly a viable device.

"We continue to have daily dialogue with Royal Mail, and their continued vigilance has been invaluable."

Ch Sup Nicolson described the level of support and co-operation from the public as "extremely positive" but stressed that more help was needed.

He added: "Someone out there knows who is behind this irresponsible and appalling crime, and we will continue to work round the clock until the individual or individuals are brought to justice."

Officers have again appealed for help in tracing a young couple who were seen in Kilwinning, North Ayrshire, on 15 April.

Both were last seen in the town's Montgomerie Terrace at about 1410 BST boarding a Stagecoach number 20 bus which travels to Ardrossan.

Police have now established that the couple got off the bus at Kilwinning train station a short time later, and then boarded a train to Glasgow Central Station.

CCTV in Glasgow shows them arriving but it is not known where they travelled after this.

Officers also do not know if the couple live in Kilwinning or were passing through.

The man is described as white, in his early 20s and has dark coloured hair. He was wearing a distinctive light blue and white top with horizontal stripes and jeans.

The woman is described as white, in her early 20s and was wearing a dark coloured padded jacket.

This article is from the BBC News website. � British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/uk-scotland-glasgow-west-13212276

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Fire school's head in dual role

Keith Adams with fellow retained firefighters. Pic: Highland CouncilHead teacher Keith Adams with fellow Lochaline retained firefighters
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The head teacher of a new school being built in Lochaber will also be a retained firefighter at a fire station being constructed on the same site.

Lochaline Primary is being demolished in phases and will be replaced by a new two-classroom building with a fire station next to it.

Keith Adams is head teacher of the 21-pupil school and one of the local area's nine volunteer firefighters.

He said: "I will have no excuse now for being late for a fire call out."

Mr Adams said the new school building had been eagerly awaited.

He added: "The pupils will really enjoy the new facilities and having the fire station incorporated in the school building."

Highlands and Islands Fire and Rescue Service has contributed £300,000 towards Highland Council's £3.2m project.

Work has started on the project and was expected to finish next summer.

McGregor Construction (Highland) Ltd, which operates from Inverness and Fort William, was awarded the contract.

Pupils helped to gather rare slow worms from the site of their new school last year.

The legless lizards were found by an ecologist asked to survey the new school site nearby.

Scottish Natural Heritage (SNH) recommended catching and relocating them before they went into hibernation.

This article is from the BBC News website. � British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/uk-scotland-highlands-islands-13201056

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marți, 26 aprilie 2011

Brief Encounter theme tune tops poll

Celia Johnson and Trevor HowardBrief Encounter earned Johnson a best actress Oscar nomination

Rachmaninov's Piano Concerto No 2, known to many as the Brief Encounter theme, has been voted the nation's favourite piece of classical music.

The work, featured throughout the 1945 film about lost love starring Celia Johnson and Trevor Howard, came top in the poll of Classic FM listeners.

Vaughan Williams' The Lark Ascending came second in the annual poll, after coming top in the previous four years.

Mozart was the most popular composer with 20 entries in the list of 300.

Top five1. Rachmaninov - Piano Concerto No 22. Vaughan Williams - The Lark Ascending3. Vaughan Williams - Fantasia on a Theme by Thomas Tallis4. Beethoven - Piano Concerto No 55. Mozart - Clarinet Concerto

Source: Classic FM

His highest entry was number five for his Clarinet Concerto.

British composer Vaughan Williams also took third place with his Fantasia on a Theme by Thomas Tallis.

Beethoven occupied three places in the top 10 - at number four with his Piano Concerto No 5, number six with his Symphony No 6 and number 10 with his Symphony No 9.

More than 180,000 people voted in the poll which the station said proved "music written hundreds of years ago is very much alive today".

This article is from the BBC News website. � British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/entertainment-arts-13185410

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luni, 25 aprilie 2011

PM: 'Scots Tories can do better'

David Cameron, at BBC ScotlandDavid Cameron has been supporting the Tories Holyrood campaign

Prime Minister David Cameron has said Scottish Tories "can do better" by showing their "widely held" values to the rest of the country

Speaking to BBC Radio Scotland's Good Morning Scotland programme, he insisted that if you showed patience then you could perform better.

Mr Cameron praised Annabel Goldie, who is leader of his party in Scotland.

The UK Tory leader has been in Scotland over the last two days ahead of the Holyrood election on 5 May.

Mr Cameron told radio presenter Gary Robertson: "I am an optimist and I am a believer that if you show patience then actually you can perform better.

"In the end, the Scottish Conservatives can do a lot better because in the end I think the values that Scottish Conservatives hold, values of supporting families, believing in enterprise, and wanting more a dynamic private sector, of being fearfully proud of being Scottish, but also being passionate about our UK.

"I think those values are very widely shared in Scotland."

This article is from the BBC News website. � British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/uk-scotland-scotland-politics-13155096

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duminică, 24 aprilie 2011

TechCrunch Giveaway: Another Chance To Win A Ticket To Disrupt NYC #TechCrunch

Here is another chance to win a free ticket to this year's Disrupt in NYC. We have confirmed some incredible guests and speakers, a few of which we announced yesterday. We will continue to announce more as we lead up to Disrupt, along with a few special surprises as well. We also announced some other exciting news yesterday. Disrupt NYC is so big this year, we have taken over a whole pier in New York City. We will be holding this year?s Disrupt NYC at Pier 94?overlooking the Hudson River in west Midtown Manhattan. At over 133,000 sq. ft., this venue is by far the largest venue we?ve ever had and will make for an amazing event. A special congratulations to Matt MaCarty for winning last week's giveaway. This promises to be our biggest Disrupt yet. If you want a chance at winning this free ticket, all you have to do is follow the steps below.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/j5VNLneQryA/

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sâmbătă, 23 aprilie 2011

VIDEO: 'Festival village' then and now

Trowell marks 60 years since being chosen to represent the best of British village life during the Festival of Britain in 1951.

This article is from the BBC News website. � British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/uk-13168016

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US queries Haiti election results

Haitians passing election banner, March 2011The counts for 18 seats showed last-minute changes
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The United States embassy in Haiti has said it is worried about possible fraud in recent legislative elections there.

In a statement, the embassy said the Haitian government and the country's provisional electoral commission needed to explain why a number of candidates won seats in the final results, when they hadn't been leading in preliminary counts.

Of 18 such cases, it said, 16 favoured the governing Unity party - known in Haiti as Inite - of the outgoing President, Rene Preval.

Haiti's President-elect, Michel Martelly, has called for an investigation into the results and urged Mr Preval not to ratify them.

Mr Martelly, a popular Haitian singer, won the presidency in a run-off election, with over two-thirds of the vote. But his party has won only a handful of seats in the incoming legislature.

So if he is to get much-needed legislation passed, he will have to work alongside the Unity party, which will dominate the new legislature.

It will have an absolute majority in the 30-seat Senate. And it is very close to an absolute majority in the lower house, which has 99 seats.

Haitians 'deserve nothing less'

The US Embassy in the capital Port-au-Prince queried the swings in 17 seats in the lower house, and one in the Senate.

It asked why one winning candidate from the incumbent party - who had been in third place after the preliminary count - gained 55,000 votes, going "from 90,000 in the preliminary results to more than 145,000 in the final results."

It also called for international election observers to review the 18 cases to ensure the results were fair. "The Haitian people, who have participated with great patience in the two rounds of elections, deserve nothing less," the embassy states.

Mr Martelly, who will be sworn in as president next month, has also criticised the results.

"The results of the presidential elections matched the people's will," he said in a radio broadcast. "But the results in the Chamber of Deputies and the Senate seem wrong. It seems the people's vote was not respected."

This article is from the BBC News website. � British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/world-latin-america-13173055

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Thailand-Cambodia clashes resume

Fighting resumes along the border between Thailand and Cambodia, a day after clashes in which at least six soldiers were killed.

This article is from the BBC News website. � British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/world-asia-pacific-13173906

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vineri, 22 aprilie 2011

'Al-Qaeda envoy' dies in Chechnya

Map
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Russia has said that its forces have killed a senior Saudi-born al-Qaeda figure in the North Caucasus region.

Haled Yusef Muhammad al Emirat, described as al-Qaeda's chief envoy in the region, died with another rebel in a clash with troops in Chechnya.

Chechnya's president said the rebel, nicknamed Moganned, trained and funded insurgents, and planned acts of terror.

Russia is fighting against a low-level Islamist insurgency in several republics in the North Caucasus.

Russia's National Anti-Terrorist Committee said in a statement that Moganned was killed along with another militant in a raid on Thursday near the village of Serzhen-Yurt, in Chechnya's southern mountains.

It said that the militant has been operating in the North Caucasus since 1999 and that by 2005 he had emerged as the top liaison official with al-Qaeda, helping raise foreign funds, particularly from the Arabian Peninsula.

"Almost all acts of terror using suicide bombers in the last years were prepared with his involvement," a spokesman for the National Anti-Terror Committee said in a televised statement, according to AFP news agency.

The pro-rebel website kavkazcenter.com confirmed Moganned was killed on Thursday in a clash with security forces in Chechnya.

It said that at least two other militants had died in the attack.

This article is from the BBC News website. � British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/world-europe-13171399

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Groupon Hires Google VP Margo Georgiadis As COO

Googler and fellow Greek Margo Georgiadis will be leaving her job as Vice President of Global Sales and Planning at Google Chicago to join daily deals site Groupon as Chief Operating Officer, Chicago Business is reporting. She will be replacing former COO Rob Solomon, who left the company in March. At Google Georgiadis led a sales group comprised of over 1600 employees.�Prior to Google, Georgiadis�was a partner at McKinsey and Company, a CMO at Discover Card and Principal at Synetro Capital.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/WebPO65SyPI/

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joi, 21 aprilie 2011

VIDEO: Texas fires close to Fort Worth

Firefighters in the US state of Texas are battling to contain wildfires which have burnt across more than one million acres in the past fortnight.

This article is from the BBC News website. � British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/world-us-canada-13153088

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VIDEO: Nationalist election battlegrounds

Gareth Gordon looks at the nationalist vote ahead of the Northern Ireland Assembly election.

This article is from the BBC News website. � British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/uk-northern-ireland-13148745

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miercuri, 20 aprilie 2011

Private calls?

Mobile surveillance

Security researchers demonstrate the vulnerability of the GSM system. Mark Ward and his BBC colleagues agreed to have their calls monitored

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Stroll around a park making or receiving mobile phone calls and it is hard to believe that anyone could be listening in.

Who could possibly eavesdrop on your modern, digitally encrypted handset?

It should take the kind of technology and resources only available to the security services.

Yet two men wearing hoodie tops have managed to crack the system.

Karsten Nohl and Sylvain Munaut don't look like secret agents, sitting behind their fold-out table next to a pile of old Motorola phones.

But these two security researchers have discovered a cheap, relatively simple way of intercepting mobile calls.

"We have been looking at GSM technology for a while and we find it to be pretty much outdated in every aspect of security and privacy," said Mr Karsten.

The Global System for Mobile Communications (GSM) is the dominant cellular phone technology, used in billions of handsets around the world.

Large parts of it were developed in the 1980s and it is now vulnerable to 21st century hackers

Mobile calls normally remain private thanks to digital encryption and because base stations rapidly change the way they identify a particular handset.

Karsten and Sylvain managed to reverse engineer the mathematical algorithm behind the encryption process, and use it decode voice calls.

Old mobile phone, BBCOld mobile technology is proving vulnerable to powerful computers and cheap storage

The tools of their trade are a laptop and a particular model of Motorola phone whose base operating system, or "firmware" had previously been pulled apart and its details posted online.

Programmers used that information to create their own customised software, capable of displaying hidden technical information on mobile phone base stations.

The pair set up a demonstration for the BBC, in which they showed how to locate a handset, track its movements from a distance of more than 500m and steal copies of all the calls made on it.

Karsten and Sylvain say they do not plan to release their eavesdropping tools, but warned that it was only a matter of time before someone else re-created them.

That could lead to vandals, criminals and snoopers going on "war drives" - travelling around scooping up interesting conversations.

Such a situation is reminiscent of the early days of analogue mobile phones, when anyone with a radio scanner could listen in on calls.

"It's a real concern," said Oliver Crofton, director of Vigilante Bespoke which provides security services to high value individuals including sports stars, celebrities and chief executives.

"It will not take long for someone else to invest time and effort in this," he said.

Vigilante Bespoke's own experiences showed that there was already an interest in getting at the phones of the famous and powerful.

About 25% of the handsets analysed by the company are found to contain software or hardware modifications capable of reporting a phone's location, texts and contacts, said Mr Crofton.

"We're not talking about teenagers in a bedroom," he said. "It's organised crime, malicious journalists and blackmailers."

The GSM Association (GSMA) said that the weaknesses found by Karsten and Sylvain related to older technologies. However, it conceded that those were still used in networks around the world.

“It will not take long for someone else to invest time and effort in this.”

Oliver Crofton Vigilante Bespoke

Charles Brookson, chair of the GSMA's security group for the past two decades, explained that when the first and second generation mobile standards were created, no-one expected them to be in use 20 years later.

"We knew that as the technology aged there was going to be more loopholes in it," he said.

Those pioneering designers, of which he was one, also had to respect strict controls on the type and strength of encryption they could use.

"It was as strong as we could make it," said Mr Brookson.

The GSMA was advising its 750 operator members to improve security on networks as they were upgraded, he explained.

It had also added functions that let people spot if they are connecting to a fake base station.

Despite the remaining weaknesses, Mr Brookson said he doubted that others could easily copy Karsten and Sylvain's hack.

"Yes, the attacks are feasible but they are not exactly the sort of thing that the average person will be doing," he said.

His view is shared by telecoms analyst Nigel Stanley who has been carrying out his own tests on mobile security.

Press photographers, GettyThe handsets of celebrities and sports stars are already being targeted by phone hackers

"It is relatively easy to set this up in a laboratory environment where you have controlled access to the technology," he said.

"The issue might be if people are out and about driving in the street maybe hoping to intercept people in a real-time live environment," he added. "I think it might be just a bit more difficult."

He pointed out that the growing focus on mobile security by researchers and criminals was leading mobile providers to take action.

"Operators have reputational risks and they do not want to be associated with running an insecure network," he said.

Those worried about mobile security can, if they have the right phone, force it to only use third-generation networks that use much stronger encryption.

Mobile owners can also opt for add-on software that encrypts calls to prevent eavesdropping.

Such applications are widely available for smartphones and include Redphone and Kryptos.

"The work that's been undertaken out there in the community looking at security algorithms and technologies is actually very good," said Mr Stanley.

"It does inform the network operators and the associations and helps them put in place a more secure infrastructure."

This article is from the BBC News website. � British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/technology-13013577

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