Sunday, June 21, 2009

Congressional Scandal Videos: Sokol Testimony, Markey Apology


As mentioned in my articles of 16, 17 and 21 June, 2009, Congressman Ed Markey has been accused of witness intimidation during the dissenting testimony of MidAmerica Energy CEO David Sokol.

Following are videos relating to the issue:

Sokol Questions Cap and Trade ( a very small portion of Sokol’s testimony):


Markey explanation and apology:

Larry Kudlow of CNBC interviews Sokol on the witness intimidation issue:













Update! Articles pertaining to the scandal may be found at these links:
Congressman Intimidates Congressional Witnesses
Congressional Witness Intimidation: David Sokol Video Interview
Is The Media Covering Up A Political Scandal?
Why The Media Blackout Of Congressional Scandal?
GOP Press Release On Congressman Markey Scandal
Congressional Scandal Videos: Sokol Testimony, Markey Apology (this article)

GOP Press Release On Congressman Markey Scandal

The original press release may be found here.

Press Release

Intimidation Has No Place in Government, Republicans Tell Waxman, Markey

‘Witnesses have every right to expect that in exchange for their honesty with us, they will not be subjected to sanction, retribution and vengeance simply because the facts and opinions they offer do not square with those of the committee’s members’

June 12, 2009

WASHINGTON – Intimidation and abuse of witnesses who disagree with ruling Democrats must not be permitted in the Energy and Commerce Committee, 20 of the panel’s Republicans told Chairman Henry Waxman, D-Calif., and subcommittee Chairman Ed Markey, D-Mass., Friday. At issue is the curious case of an energy company executive who, within hours of challenging the cost analysis of Waxman-Markey global warming legislation, found himself the target of a Federal Energy Regulatory Commission inquiry requested that day by Chairman Markey.

“Our committee has a responsibility to the American people to ensure that when we exercise our constitutional powers, we do it fairly and in a manner that engenders public confidence and leads to the truth. When citizens appear voluntarily before this committee to testify, we expect them to tell the truth,” the Republican lawmakers wrote. “Our witnesses, in turn, have every right to expect that in exchange for their honesty with us, they will not be subjected to sanction, retribution and vengeance simply because the facts and opinions they offer do not square with those of the committee’s members. Exercising the power of the majority requires a special responsibility to protect witnesses.”

“No company in America or its employees should be harassed. We are confident that you agree with us on the basic protection all witnesses before our committee have a right to expect.  Respectfully, we ask for a meeting with both of you and at your earliest convenience to address this issue,” they added.

A copy of the Republicans’ letter to Waxman and Markey can be found here.
A copy of Markey’s original letter to FERC can be found here, and his second letter here.
A copy of FERC’s response can be found here.

Update! Articles pertaining to the scandal may be found at these links:
Congressman Intimidates Congressional Witnesses
Congressional Witness Intimidation: David Sokol Video Interview
Is The Media Covering Up A Political Scandal?
Why The Media Blackout Of Congressional Scandal?
GOP Press Release On Congressman Markey Scandal (this article)
Congressional Scandal Videos: Sokol Testimony, Markey Apology

Why The Media Blackout Of Congressional Scandal?

News media keeping public in the dark about witness intimidation

As mentioned in my 17 June article, the media has been conspicuously not covering the congressional witness intimidation undertaken by Congressman Ed Markey.

To recap, I composed a brief email:
Why is the media silent about Congressman Markey's witness intimidation?
GOP members of Congress have accused Congressman Ed Markey of witness intimidation during the Waxman-Markey H.R. 2454 hearings.
Markey has admitted that, during testimony by dissenting witness David Sokol, Markey sent a letter to the FERC which would launch an investigation of Sokol, Warren Buffet and their company, MidAmerican Energy Holdings.
These are very serious charges, yet the media is completely silent on this matter.
Why?
That email was sent to these news organizations:
ABC News
Associated Press
BBC News
Bloomberg
CBS News
CNN Headline News
Fox News
NBC/MSNBC news
New York Times
NPR Morning Edition
Reuters
United Press International
Washington Post
The same day I threw in emails to the Wall Street Journal and two reporters who ran stories on the disgrace in the Salt Lake Tribune and the Omaha World-Herald.

I received a “read” receipt from the Omaha World-Herald reporter:
Your message

To: Morton, Joseph
Subject: Re: Sokol: Markey seeks to intimidate
Sent: Thu, 18 Jun 2009 00:17:24 -0500

was read on Thu, 18 Jun 2009 05:49:57 -0500
Other than that read receipt, and the read receipt from the Associated Press along with the auto-replies mentioned in the 17 June article, I have received no correspondence or acknowledgements on this matter.

Save for an 18 June article in the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review there as been absolutely no coverage on this scandal in any news media I have been able to find since 13 June.

The Pittsburgh Tribune-Review had this to say:

Republican allegations that U.S. Rep. Ed Markey violated House ethics rules by intimidating a key witness -- who testified against the lawmaker's cap-and-trade scheme -- demands an investigation.

But even at that, the damage already is done…

Whatever the outcome, this ugly episode could chill future expert testimony to the truth: that cap and trade feeds the government's tax lust, exponentially drives up energy costs and does virtually nothing to reduce carbon emissions. A Heritage Foundation analysis finds it would increase electricity rates by 90 percent.

Candid congressional testimony that's followed up with a witch hunt only reinforces the fraud that is cap and trade.

Hear, hear.

So. It’s been 12 days since the scandal began, and 4 days since my emails to the major news media which merely served to confirm that they were, indeed, aware of the matter.

Not a peep from any major news organization: They all know about it and they are all remaining silent—apparently, lest you know as well.

I’ve said all I have to say about this in the previous articles, so I’m going to throw in a few quotes from Robert A. Heinlein which seem appropriate to the issue:

  • Don't ask me why it was top secret, or even restricted; our government has gotten the habit of classifying anything as secret which the all-wise statesmen and bureaucrats decide we are not big enough girls and boys to know, a Mother-Knows-Best-Dear policy. I've read that there used to be a time when a taxpayer could demand the facts on anything and get them. I don't know; it sounds Utopian.
  • A committee is the only known form of life with a hundred bellies and no brain.
  • In a mature society, "civil servant" is semantically equal to "civil master."
  • Love your country, but never trust its government.
I feel certain Heinlein wouldn’t object to my expanding that last quote:

Love your country, but never trust its government—or it’s media.
Update! Articles pertaining to the scandal may be found at these links:
Congressman Intimidates Congressional Witnesses
Congressional Witness Intimidation: David Sokol Video Interview
Is The Media Covering Up A Political Scandal?
Why The Media Blackout Of Congressional Scandal? (this article)
GOP Press Release On Congressman Markey Scandal
Congressional Scandal Videos: Sokol Testimony, Markey Apology

Wednesday, June 17, 2009

Is The Media Covering Up A Political Scandal?

As noted in my 16 June article, Congressman Ed Markey has been accused of witness intimidation during the dissenting testimony of MidAmerica Energy CEO David Sokol.

Save for a video report by CNBC’s Larry Kudlow, the vast majority of the major media has remained irresponsibly silent on the issue.

Too busy? Too slow? Too dumb? Covering up the disgrace?

Well, the media managed to discover that the city of Omsk, Siberia is using a cutout of Brad Pitt to slow speeding motorists.

Perhaps they are so busy gathering facts about a two-dimensional actor, ( no pun intended, seriously), they hadn’t time to find out about congressional corruption.

So, to help out the poor, overworked journalists,

I emailed them.

The following is the text of the email:
Why is the media silent about Congressman Markey's witness intimidation?
GOP members of Congress have accused Congressman Ed Markey of witness intimidation during the Waxman-Markey H.R. 2454 hearings.
Markey has admitted that, during testimony by dissenting witness David Sokol, Markey sent a letter to the FERC which would launch an investigation of Sokol, Warren Buffet and their company, MidAmerican Energy Holdings.
These are very serious charges, yet the media is completely silent on this matter.
Why?
Brief, informative, to the point, and accusatory, I’m sure you’ll agree: Surely enough to elicit action if they aren’t too busy to cover so trivial an issue as intimidation of congressional witnesses.

I searched the websites of each of the news organizations in the list below. None, not one of them had posted a story on this matter as of shortly before this writing, so I sent the above email to each:
ABC News
Associated Press
BBC News
Bloomberg
CBS News
CNN Headline News
Fox News
NBC/MSNBC news
New York Times
NPR Morning Edition
Reuters
United Press International
Washington Post
Now, Dear Reader, now we know they have been informed of the issue. It will be very interesting indeed to see if any of them act on the information.

So far, I have received the following emails in reply:

A “read” confirmation from the Associated Press:

Your message
To: INFO
Subject: Why is the media silent about Congressman Markey's witness intimidation?
Sent: Wed, 17 Jun 2009 11:53:58 –0400
was read on Wed, 17 Jun 2009 13:04:01 -0400
Final-Recipient: RFC822; INFO@ap.org

[Emphasis mine]
A curious auto-reply from Reuters’ “customer service team,” (it wasn’t sent to the customer service team):

Thank you for contacting Reuters. We have received your query, and a member of our customer service team is currently reviewing it. Your feedback is invaluable to us as we continue to improve the website and develop the best user experience. We hope you continue to enjoy Reuters.com/reuters.co.uk.

[Emphasis mine]

Discussion Thread

Customer
17 06 2009 03:13 PM

GOP members of Congress have accused Congressman Ed Markey of witness intimidation during the Waxman-Markey H.R. 2454 hearings.
Markey has admitted that, during testimony by dissenting witness David Sokol, Markey sent a letter to the FERC which would launch an investigation of Sokol, Warren Buffet and their company, MidAmerican Energy Holdings.
These are very serious charges, yet the media is completely silent on this matter.
Why?
An auto-reply from NPR Morning Edition:

Dear Listener,

Thank you for contacting NPR's Morning Edition.
We are grateful for your comments to NPR News. Your message has been received and it will be read by the Morning Edition staff.NPR is always delighted to hear from listeners. Should you require additional assistance or have a question, please respond to this e-mail and we will do our best to assist you.
Thank you for listening to Morning Edition, and for your continued support of public broadcasting. For the latest news and information, visit NPR.org.
Sincerely,
Morning Edition
[Emphasis mine]

[Edit plea for donation}
Message Information:

Message #:
5607-9217982

Date Created:
6/17/2009 11:47 AM EDT

Subject:
Why is the media silent about Congressman Markey's witness intimidation?

Body:
GOP members of Congress have accused Congressman Ed Markey of witness intimidation during the Waxman-Markey H.R. 2454 hearings.
Markey has admitted that, during testimony by dissenting witness David Sokol, Markey sent a letter to the FERC which would launch an investigation of Sokol, Warren Buffet and their company, MidAmerican Energy Holdings.
These are very serious charges, yet the media is completely silent on this matter.
Why?
A syrupy auto-reply from ABC News:

Dear , (sic)

Thanks for sending us the feedback. We read every piece of information we get from our users, and will forward your contribution to the right people here at ABC News. Please stay in touch.
Sincerely,The ABCNEWS.com team

[Emphasis mine]
An auto-reply from CNN:

Thank you for contacting CNN. This email is to notify you that your news tip has been received and will be reviewed in a timely manner. You will be contacted if the news tip is valid and we need further information and verification.

We appreciate your news tip and thank you for choosing CNN as your breaking news source.
Sincerely,
CNN Viewer Communications Management

[Emphasis mine]

Let’s all keep tabs on them to see if these news organizations get off their keesters and do their jobs.

Update! Articles pertaining to the scandal may be found at these links:
Congressman Intimidates Congressional Witnesses
Congressional Witness Intimidation: David Sokol Video Interview
Is The Media Covering Up A Political Scandal? (this article)
Why The Media Blackout Of Congressional Scandal?
GOP Press Release On Congressman Markey Scandal
Congressional Scandal Videos: Sokol Testimony, Markey Apology

Congressional Witness Intimidation: David Sokol Video Interview

As reported in my 16 June article, GOP Congressmen have accused Congressman Ed Markey of witness intimidation during the dissenting testimony of MidAmerica Energy CEO David Sokol.

Although the vast majority of the media has remained ominously—and unconscionably—silent, Larry Kudlow of CNBC interviewed Sokol on the matter.

Congressman Joe Barton, (R-Texas), appears, in committee, at the beginning of the video, questioning Markey’s actions.

Sokol states that in a conversation with the Congressman, Markey suspiciously maintains that—though his signature was on the letter to FERC—he had no knowledge whatsoever of the letter until after it was sent.

Below is an embedded video of the Kudlow-Sokol interview, (you may have to suffer a brief advertisement at the beginning). Shockwave-flash is required to view the video.













Update! Articles pertaining to the scandal may be found at these links:
Congressman Intimidates Congressional Witnesses
Congressional Witness Intimidation: David Sokol Video Interview (this article)
Is The Media Covering Up A Political Scandal?
Why The Media Blackout Of Congressional Scandal?
GOP Press Release On Congressman Markey Scandal
Congressional Scandal Videos: Sokol Testimony, Markey Apology

Tuesday, June 16, 2009

Congressman Intimidates Congressional Witnesses

Congressional witnesses intimidated, major news media silent

Rep. Ed Markey, (Dimwit, Massachutsetts)
The individual you see on the right is Congress-critter Ed Markey, (D-Mass.), one of the co-authors of the Waxman-Markey bill, (AKA Cap-and-Trade bill), H.R. 2454. On Tuesday, 9 June 2009, Markey’s subcommittee held hearings on the bill.

Among the witnesses heard by the subcommittee on that day was David L. Sokol, Chairman of MidAmerican Energy Holdings Company, who testified on behalf of GOP opposition.

Mr. Sokol spoke against the bill on his company’s website:
“The Waxman-Markey bill is a cap and trade program that will force our customers to pay two expensive costs,” Sokol said. “First, they will pay the cost of emissions allowances purchased on a complex auction market that will do nothing to reduce greenhouse gas emissions; and second, they will pay the cost of replacing our existing fossil-fuel generation facilities with low-carbon alternatives.”
As a result, Sokol said MidAmerican could not join the Edison Electric Institute in endorsing Waxman-Markey. The House Committee on Energy and Commerce began legislative consideration of the measure today. “Cap and trade will have a profoundly negative impact on people who are struggling to make ends meet in an economy still in distress[.]”
David L. Sokol, CEO MidAmerican Energy Holdings Company
David L. Sokol
Mr. Sokol said that and much more in his testimony before the subcommittee, apparently provoking a criminal response from Markey, according to The Hill:
Energy panel Republicans are levying accusations of witness intimidation against Democratic Rep. Ed Markey (D-Mass.), one of the key authors of the contentious House climate change bill.
Republicans have seized on a letter – a copy of which was obtained by The Hill – that Markey penned to Federal Energy Regulatory Commission Chairman Jon Wellinghoff asking FERC to investigate the actions of a major energy company on the same day that the company’s CEO was set to testify before the energy panel on the dangers of a carbon cap and trade system.
According to the June 9 letter, Markey requested that Wellinghoff probe how thoroughly MidAmerican Energy Holdings – a $41 billion company in which Warren Buffet is a major investor – followed up on promises to invest as much as $15 billion in electric transmission expansion in the wake of the repeal of the Public Utility Holding Company Act in 2005.
In fact, Markey singled out MidAmerican Energy to also ask FERC to look into his concerns “that the repeal of PUHCA has also freed large multi-state public utility companies to diversify into other potentially risky business, to the potential detriment of utility investors and consumers.”
“For example, MidAmerican Holdings has acquired the second largest real estate brokerage company in the country,” Markey wrote in his six-page letter. “What protections have been put in place to prevent utility shareholders, such as those of MidAmerican Holdings’ regulated utilities, to prevent them from rate increases, higher costs for borrowing, or other risks with might be associated with unsuccessful or failed diversifications?”
The Hill continued:
Rep. Fred Upton (R-Mich.), the ranking Republican on Markey’s Energy and Environment Subcommittee, received a copy of the letter.
GOP sources confirmed that Republicans reacted furiously when they saw that the letter was sent the very same day that MidAmerican’s CEO, David L. Sokol, was testifying as a Republican witness before Markey’s subcommittee.
I should add: Markey’s letter was sent during Sokol’s testimony.

You may download a scanned copy of Markey’s letter to the FERC as a PDF at this link.

In the 11 June 2009 edition of the Omaha World-Herald, Sokol said he was “he was singled out by name” in the letter, (indeed, he was, as were his company and it’s primary shareholder), and accused Markey of trying to intimidate him into backing off on the Cap-and-Trade issue.

Rep. Lee Terry, (R-Neb.), a member of the Energy and Environment committee, said Markey's letter was retaliation for Sokol's testimony and intended as a message for future witnesses:
"Having Warren [Buffet] and Dave's credibility questioned like that—the whole result of that is to intimidate the next witness.”
Rep. John Shadegg (R-Ariz.), also a member of the Energy and Environment Subcommittee had this reaction:
“I am deeply troubled by the message this sends, whether it was accidental or intentional… If I had gotten that letter, I would have gotten the message that it was sent to intimidate me.”
“It is essential that witnesses be allowed to come forward and give candid testimony.”
On Friday, 12 June 2009, Markey dismissed the GOP’s concerns, claiming his letter to the FERC was in process days before he knew Sokol would be testifying: Yet, he sent it anyway, surely realizing how it would be perceived—realistically, how on Earth could he possibly not?

If you, gentle reader, were sitting on that committee, listening to testimony which could reduce or help reduce your bill to a smoking, useless ruin, and you knew your letter was going out within moments, singling out the witness by name and launching an investigation into his company in particular, would it never, ever occur to you that such letter and subsequent investigation would be regarded as nothing other than direct and retaliatory intimidation—intimidation not only of this witness but of all future dissenting witnesses sitting before congressional committees?

Of course it would occur to you; and I submit it beggars credulity to suppose it did not occur to Markey or his staff.

In a grammatically-disgraceful attempt at damage control, Markey said:
“I would never seek to intimidate or retaliate against a person from having to come in and having to testify before this subcommittee.”
And in a hasty—this time, merely grammatically-awkward—follow-up letter to the FERC, Markey wrote:
“I did not intend for the Commission to focus on just one company but rather on the industry as a whole.”
My friend, if you buy into that steaming pile of horse-hockey, you must still be dazed from your fall off the turnip truck.

Other than Sokol, Buffet and their company, no other companies or individuals—outside of government—are mentioned or alluded to in Markey’s entire 6-page letter to the FERC.

Yet Markey maintains he didn’t intend to focus on Sokol’s company? This must be some new and esoteric use of the word “focus” about which I haven’t been informed.

Few things are more important in a free society than the sovereignty of a witness.

If a witness—any witness, anywhere, in any court or governmental venue—fears personal or professional reprisals due to his testimony, unless he is a very special individual he will simply parrot what he believes will please his questioners and the truth be damned.

Any behavior—intentional or otherwise—which threatens the sanctity of official testimony threatens our freedom, threatens our society, threatens our families, threatens us as individuals and simply cannot be tolerated in the slightest.

Even if you believe Markey so incredibly stupid as to be oblivious to the timing and implications of his action, the fact is—by his own admission—he did it!

Any witness before a congressional committee—now, and long into the future—will think twice before he opens his mouth.

Markey has done an awful thing. A frightful thing. An intolerable thing.

For Congress to maintain whatever credibility, legitimacy and efficacy it may have left, Markey has to be called before the mast.

Markey must be punished and Congress must see to it that he is. Publically.

For all that, there is another—equally disturbing—issue here:

Clicking this link will take you to a Google News search for the keywords: Markey intimidation.
At that link, you will see that not one major media outlet is giving this scandal any coverage whatsoever!
In point of fact, as of this writing, 16 June, only The Hill, the Omaha World-Herald and the Salt Lake Tribune—out of all the major and minor newspapers and TV news outlets—have even mentioned this, and those three have been utterly silent since 13 June.

How can this be? How can this possibly be?

President Clinton did the smokey-pokey with a dumpy intern and the whole world knew about it! They must have heard of it on Pluto for pete’s sake!

Yet, members of the Congress of the United States have accused a sitting congressman of intimidating a congressional witness during hearings on a presidentially-approved, trillion-plus-dollar bill and no national media outlet is giving it so much as a brief mention?

It doesn’t matter who is right or who is wrong—this is nonetheless a very serious matter, but the media is keeping mum.

Why?

They must know about it: I do, you do, the mentioned newspapers do.

You might think that some journalists are ignoring the scandal because they want Markey’s climate bill to pass and to hell with propriety; but not all of them support this or, indeed, other climate bills. Yet, they are silent as well.

It’s quiet—too quiet.

There’s something going on here that I don’t like—and you shouldn’t either.

Update! Articles pertaining to the scandal may be found at these links:
Congressman Intimidates Congressional Witnesses (this article)
Congressional Witness Intimidation: David Sokol Video Interview
Is The Media Covering Up A Political Scandal?
Why The Media Blackout Of Congressional Scandal?
GOP Press Release On Congressman Markey Scandal
Congressional Scandal Videos: Sokol Testimony, Markey Apology

Wednesday, June 3, 2009

Has Microsoft Sneaked Malware Into Your Computer?

Routine Windows security update invisibly creates security holes in Firefox browser

Millions of computer users may be at risk

Should Microsoft’s hackers be jailed?

The 800-pound gorillas at Microsoft, notorious for releasing perhaps the most poorly tested, security-deficient commercial software in the known universe, have taken it upon themselves to shoot holes in the security of third-party software as well.

In February 2009, the bumbling twits at Microsoft released a—I actually hesitate to use the term, for reasons which will become apparent—“Security Update” for the Microsoft .Net Framework, specifically, “Microsoft .NET Framework 3.5 Service Pack 1.”

Outrageously, this update also installs the Microsoft .NET Framework Assistant 1.0 extension (add-on) into Firefox without asking the user’s permission.

Yeah? So What?

image

Well, if you use the Mozilla Firefox browser, you will now find, (actually, you may not—until it’s too late), that websites can now—without your knowledge or consent—download, install and run software on your computer! That’s right, the default settings of this add-on permit websites to install software without notifying you.

WHAT?

Yep! That’s what it does. Microsoft has seen to it that the users of third-party browsers can now have the same sort of security problems which plague users of Microsoft’s—much reviled—Internet Explorer!

But wait, there’s more! The add-on reports the .NET version installed on your computer to every website you visit in the User-Agent string.

The add-on makes use of “ClickOnce” technology, which is expressly designed to allow the installation and execution of software, simply by clicking a link on a webpage—whether or not the link legitimately indicates it is pointing to a software package.

Well, Wikipedia says ClickOnce is a secure technology. So, why shouldn’t I trust it?

Considering the fact that Wikipedia is the world’s largest repository of laughably erroneous data, and that said data is often provided by parties with a vested interest in skewing the information, lets look instead at a quote from InformIT.com’s page on ClickOnce security:

“The problem with the default security model for an enterprise [business] environment is that it puts the trust decision of whether to elevate permissions or not into the users' hands. If an application needs elevated permissions, it prompts the users, and if they click the Install button, the application can elevate its permissions all the way to full trust if it wants to, effectively removing the runtime protections that ClickOnce is capable of providing… Many users do not have the experience to discern a true high-risk scenario from one that is acceptable.”

Indeed, given Microsoft’s abysmal security track-record over the years, (they permitted one XP security hole to remain unpatched for seven years—though they knew about it all along), are you willing to bet that there isn’t a malicious hacker out there who can defeat whatever ClickOnce really has for security and take a peek at your credit card numbers or your financial data? Or watch over your shoulder as you do online banking?

If you have “Automatic Updates” enabled, and you are a Firefox user, you may have the .NET Framework Assistant installed on your computer.

image

To add insult to maliciousness, should you, while perusing your Firefox add-ons, run across the Microsoft .NET Framework Assistant extension in the list and wonder, “what the hell is that and how did it get into my Firefox?” I’m sure you will be equally bemused to find that the “Uninstall” button is disabled.

So, what is Microsoft .Net Framework? To simplify somewhat, .Net Framework, (yes, that .dot is supposed to be there), is a collection of software which can be used by Windows and third-party programs to perform various functions which would otherwise have to be coded into each application: It helps programmers by cutting down on their code-work and helps you by reducing the overall size of programs which require such routines.

So, this Firefox add-on thing is necessary to the functioning of my software then, Right?

Not in the slightest.

The average Windows user will likely never install software that requires the .Net Framework. Even if a user does have applications that require it, the “ClickOnce” add-on to Firefox is completely unnecessary, representing more of a security risk than it creates a convenience for the user.

Indeed, Annoyances.org, a website which relies on user input to find and fix problems related to Microsoft applications and operating systems, has this to say about the .NET Framework Assistant add-on:

“This update adds to Firefox one of the most dangerous vulnerabilities present in all versions of Internet Explorer: the ability for websites to easily and quietly install software on your PC. Since this design flaw is one of the reasons you may've originally [chosen] to abandon IE in favor of a safer browser like Firefox, you may wish to remove this extension with all due haste.”

Ditch the Firefox add-on, ditch it now.

Removal instructions may be found at Annoyances.org and Microsoft Support. WARNING! Microsoft has seen to it that there is no easy way to remove this malware! The removal instructions require registry editing which—if done incorrectly—may result in software malfunctions or Windows refusing to start altogether! Follow the instructions precisely.

If you are unwilling or unable to remove the offender according to instructions, open Add-ons in Firefox, right-click “Microsoft .NET Framework Assistant” select “disable” and restart Firefox. Hopefully, it will stay disabled.

Don’t think you are safe with the Microsoft malware enabled in Firefox so long as you don’t visit “questionable” websites: Here is a short sample of the many, many legitimate websites which have been hacked in the recent past:

Al Gore's climate crisis website hacked by Viagra sellers (Had to put Chicken Little at the top of this list)

Obama Website Hacked: Users Redirected To Clinton Campaign

Cybercrooks plant phishing scam on crime reduction website

Cern Website Hacked

Computer security Firm Kaspersky's website hacked

Security Software CA's website hacked to point users to Chinese malware

Another police website hacked

Security firm Trend Micro website hacked

Sony website hacked

Thousands hit in broad Web hack

Half-Million Sites Mostly Running PHPBB Forum Software Hacked In Latest Attack

So just what the hell did Microsoft think they were doing? According to Brad Abrams at this site they claim they were doing you a favor:

“A couple of years ago we heard clear feedback from folks that they wanted to enable a very clean experience with launching a ClickOnce app from FireFox. [I wasn’t one of them, Brad, nor, I’ll just bet, were the vast majority of Firefox users] James Dobson published FFClickOnce and got very good reviews, but we had many customers that wanted ClickOnce support for Firefox built into the framework… so in .NET Framework 3.5 SP1 we added ClickOnce support for Firefox! This made ClickOnce apps much more accessible to a wide range of customers.

We added this support at the machine level in order to enable the feature for all users on the machine. Seems reasonable right? Well, turns out [translation: ‘We knew it couldn’t be uninstalled and did it anyway’] that enabling this functionality at the machine level, rather than at the user level means that the "Uninstall" button is grayed out in the Firefox Add-ons menu because standard users are not permitted to uninstall machine-level components.”

Makes you wonder what the hell else these bozos have sneaked into your computer without your knowledge, doesn’t it?

Are Microsoft programmers like many journalists? Do they have to flunk an intelligence test before they are hired?

Brad, Microsoft, no. It sure as hell isn’t reasonable in any way, shape or form, to hack someone’s computer without their knowledge or consent. If there is some fool out there who wants to give websites the ability to silently run their software in his computer, he should manually install it from the Mozilla add-ons site—where Microsoft should have posted this disgrace in the first place. Microsoft has no business hiding this in an otherwise legitimate “security” update.

I work with clients whose companies are locked into Windows; consequently, I have to have at least one computer for my business which runs Windows so I can follow along with those clients—remotely—as I try to solve a problem they just discovered.

I go to a very great deal of trouble, indeed, to make certain that malicious software never takes a foothold on that computer—including the use of the more secure Firefox browser. The very last thing I need is for Microsoft—or other software companies—to waste my time, make my life more difficult and make my computer less secure by introducing yet more potential security holes while hacking my third-party applications!

Fortunately, said precautions prevented Microsoft from tinkering with my Firefox. Yours may be another matter. (And no—please don’t even think of asking what my security precautions and procedures are.)

Lets take a for instance, (I just love “for instances,” don’t you? They’re so warm and cuddly): You own a car, a Chevy, say, and you’ve paid it off—you own it free and clear. You take your car to your Chevy dealer for a 3,000-mile oil change and Chevy’s mechanic disables the third-party security device you had installed—without your knowledge or consent.

What’s the difference between our little for instance and Microsoft frivolously altering your third-party software? Save that Microsoft’s criminal tampering with private property was done via the internet—precisely, none.

If a basement-dwelling hacker did the same thing to your computer—altered your software to make it less secure—when caught, he would be arrested and charged with, at the very least, illegally accessing a computer. There is nothing in the EULA—the Microsoft End-User License Agreement—which gives Microsoft the right to tamper with your third-party software. Such tampering is illegal in the U.S. and many other countries.

"Breaking into other people's property is a crime—it makes no difference if it's a computer or a house that you're burgling."

—Graham Cluley, senior technology consultant for Sophos Anti-Virus

So, perhaps the twits at Microsoft who decided to hack your third-party software should spend a little time in the slammer, (I might recommend hard labor; smashing Microsoft Vista CDs).

“Now wait a minute,” I hear you bellow. “That’s ridiculous! You’re blowing this way out of proportion!”

Really?

Many people have their whole lives in their computers. Consider what may be found on a typical user’s system:

  • Financial records
  • Passwords to bank accounts
  • Mortgage data
  • Codes to disarm the security alarms for the house and the office
  • Medical information
  • Credit card numbers
  • Sensitive emails
  • Family photos—including pictures of the kids and the exterior and interior of the house
  • School records
  • Information which might allow someone to determine the whereabouts of children at a given time
  • Code words to be given to said children in case of emergency
  • The babysitter’s name and the dates and times she watches the kids
  • Data on what medication, money or firearms may be in the house
  • Safe combinations

Rightly or wrongly, wisely so or not, all that and more may be on someone’s computer, (which the users have reason to believe* to be as secure as possible), when Microsoft tampers with their system, allowing Jimmy-The-Crook’s website to download and run unknown software.

Given the above, maybe you’re not taking this seriously enough!

*Note: Do not infer from my statements that I consider Firefox or any other web browser to be 100% secure—that just ain’t so, folks.

Some internet sites speculate that Microsoft’s little Firefox hack job may have been a deliberate attempt to sabotage it’s competitor’s product. If this is, in fact, the case, it wouldn’t be the first time: Microsoft was brought to trial by the U.S. Department of Justice in 1998 for similar offenses.

If you find that your Microsoft security update has hacked your copy of Firefox, or if any other software company has similarly hacked your third-party software, and you reasonably believe that this activity is illegal, I strongly urge you to report the crime to:

The FBI Internet Crime Complaint Center

FYI, Microsoft isn’t the only upstart company to resort to such practices:

  • Apple’s QuickTime and ITunes updates previously installed MobileMe and Safari (63 MB and security-plagued)without user notification or permission—and pushed Apple Mobile Device Support, Apple Software Update and Bonjour.
  • The RealAudio media player's default installation includes both Google Toolbar and Google Desktop Search.
  • Sometime ago, Java's default installation included a game called "Puzzle Pirates"—then Java decided they wanted to install Sun Open Office (takes up 250 MB on your hard drive) and Yahoo Toolbar during Java updates.
  • Adobe Acrobat Reader's default installation includes the Google Toolbar.
  • The RealAudio media player's default installation includes both Google Toolbar and Google Desktop Search.

None of the extras the software providers push in these installations and updates are necessary. In truth, many of these installs and updates do give you the option of disallowing the installation of some of the software, but if you have no bloody idea what “Open Office” or “Bonjour” is, do you allow it or disallow it and hope that the software you do install will run without it?

When in doubt, take a cue from Nancy Reagan and “just say, NO!”

If you research the Google or Yahoo toolbars and decide you want one of them added to your browser, go to their sites and download them—don’t trust anything you are asked to install second-hand.