Covers to broadsheet@broadsheet.ie
Via Independent_ie and Rory Noonan
Bluebox Security, a stealth security startup claims to have discovered a flaw in Google’s Android operating system which can enable rogue apps to gain full access to the Android system, read all data, harvest passwords and create a botnet and also turn any legitimate application into a malicious Trojan, completely unnoticed by the app store, the phone, or the end user.
Potentially, this could affect any Android phone manufactured in the last 4 years, some 900 million devices.
The flaw enables a hacker to modify the Master Key or APK code without breaking the cryptographic signature. A hacker could have access to any or all permissions on a device.
Everyone stay cool.
Uncovering Android Master Key That Makes 99% of Devices Vulnerable (Bluebox Security blog)
More to follow.
Covers to broadsheet@broadsheet.ie
Thanks Joe Leogue, Jane Last, Nick Sutton, Mike Hogan 4FM, Enda Cunningham, Meliosa Fitzgibbon and Joe Donnelly.
(Pix: Oisín Kane)
UPDATE: well that escalated quickly…
UPDATE:
Somebody’s kid tried to climb the gates. When the guards pulled him down off the railings the Sinn Fein protestors started swiping the Gardai with their flags. The crowd responded well with chants of “peaceful protest”. Normalcy has resumed.
Update:
Not a kid and not Sinn Fein supporters…
Enter Ming…


Above: property tax hunger striker Tony Rochford.
(Pix: Oisín Kane)



Thanks Paul Reynolds (Rabble.ie)
Jim Corr outside court says he wants to get back to what he does best. An intrepid reporter asked him “What’s that Jim?”.
— Richard Chambers (@newschambers) July 3, 2013
Ah here.
Jim Corr settles with ACC Bank over loan (Francesca Comyn, Newstalk)
(Laura Hutton / Photocall Ireland)
Via Donal Lyons
24 TDs voted against legislation to provide abortion strictly when women’s *lives* are at risk. Think about that.
— Ruth NíE (@rowfas) July 2, 2013
From top: Brian Walsh, Billy Timmins, Terence Flanagan and Peter Mathews being met by Caroline Simons of the Pro Life Campaign outside Leinster House last night.
The four Fine Gael TDs were expelled last night from the parliamentary party after voting against the second stage of the Protection of Life During Pregnancy Bill.
So what is happening to the bill?
Abortion legislation debate to resume in Dáil (RTE)
Extract via Politics in the Republic of Ireland. Edited by John Coakley and Michael Gallagher Fifth Edition (Routledge)
(Laura Hutton / Photocall Ireland)
More to follow.
Covers to broadsheet@broadsheet.ie
Thanks Nick Sutton, Jane Last, Aidan Ellis, Mike Hogan 4FM and Joe Donnelly.
John Robert writes [via BS app]:
Ballinteer Community School evacuated and army bomb disposal there. Suspicious material found in lab.
Anyone?
Army Bomb Disposal Team made safe unstable #dinitrophenylhydrazine in #Ballinteer #Dublin http://t.co/RgGgGOx0pR pic.twitter.com/0wek4RRKDy
— Irish Defence Forces (@defenceforces) July 2, 2013
“There is an emerging consensus in Ireland which suggests that having a sense of morality has something to do with the Catholic Church. It is automatically assumed that if you consult your conscience, you are essentially consulting with Rome. This is deeply worrying. It is a lazy way of attempting to undermine the worth of an argument, without actually dealing with the substance. This is not just a Catholic issue, any more than it is a Protestant or Muslim issue. This is not a religious issue. It is a human rights issue.”
Lucinda Creighton in her Dáil speech yesterday claimed her view on the abortion bill is not a religious one.
Feminist activist, Anthea McTeirnan had this to say last weekend at the Empowering Women Through Secularism conference:
The Catholic Church in Ireland stands alone on the issue of reproductive rights.
What do human rights organisations such as Amnesty Ireland and the Irish Council of Civil Liberties (ICCL) have to say?
Dr Alan Brady of the ICCL said the following at the Oireachtas hearings in January:
Ireland is legally obliged under Article 46 of the European Convention on Human Rights expeditiously to implement judgments against it by the Strasbourg Court.
The Government must now, at an absolute bare minimum, introduce abortion legislation and regulations, including in relation to the issue of suicidal ideation. This is no longer a matter for debate.
The most recent case law from the Strasbourg Court on the issue of reproductive rights indicates that Council of Europe states are obliged to ensure that women seeking lawful terminations are not exposed to inhuman and degrading treatment contrary to Article 3 of the European Convention on Human Rights.
Applying this principle in an Irish context, it seems clear to the ICCL that the current treatment of women with pregnancies involving a defined set of fatal foetal abnormalities (i.e. where it is clear that carrying a foetus to term will not result in a viable life) potentially falls foul of Article 3 of the Convention.
Amnesty Ireland is also clear in its stance:
“While government deliberates the legislative and regulatory steps in response to the European Court of Human Rights decision in the A, B & C case, it is obliged under international human rights law to take all necessary steps immediately to ensure women’s access to lawful abortion.”
Amnesty International stressed that any legislative action that falls short of affirming the X case or which seeks to restrict lawful abortion would constitute a row back of human rights.
“Human rights law is also clear on the issue of decriminalisation,” noted Colm O’Gorman, Executive Director of Amnesty International Ireland.
(Sam Boal / Photocall Ireland)