2017年4月4日 星期二

week3- The imitation Game

The Imitation Game: how Alan Turing played dumb to fool US intelligence

  On 12 November 1942, the mathematician Alan Turing arrived in New York, bound for Washington DC and the headquarters of the US Secret Service, an organisation now known as the CIA. More than 500 American ships had been sunk by German U-boats since the US began sending supplies across the Atlantic to Europe in 1941 and naval authorities were growing impatient with Britain’s reluctance to share more than cursory details of progress at decrypting messages sent by the German high command and encoded by the Enigma machine.
  Officially, Turing was meant to disclose everything he and his team at Bletchley Park knew about the workings of Enigma. In reality, he was under strict instructions from MI6 to act as its official liar and keep the Americans in the dark as much as possible. It was a strange role for a Cambridge mathematician with a fondness for crossword puzzles, but Turing’s wartime work had landed him in the midst of a game of high-stakes diplomacy.
  Unknown to the Americans, Britain had been deciphering messages to and from the German U-boat fleet since the summer of 1940. Within weeks of arriving at Bletchley Park, Turing had invented an electromechanical machine called the Bombe that could break any Enigma-coded message. The machine required two things – knowledge of the Enigma hardware and a plain-text “crib” of around 20 characters likely to be in the message, inferred using facts such as the weather and key dates such as Hitler’s birthday.
   Few were allowed to know. Most government officials and British naval officers believed the vital information was coming from an MI6 master spy codenamed “Boniface” who reportedly controlled a network of agents throughout Germany. Boniface and his team of spies were entirely fictional.
    One of those who knew the truth was the future author of the James Bond novels, Ian Fleming, who was then working as a lieutenant commander in Britain’s naval intelligence division. Fleming was involved in devising operations based on intelligence received from Bletchley Park, but judging from his diary entries at the time, it is clear that he and Turing didn’t see eye to eye.
    “One of the reasons how we know Turing was so heavily involved with MI6 during the war is due to Fleming’s diaries,” says Graham Moore, scriptwriter and producer of The Imitation Game, which is finally released in the US on Friday. “Most of the time he’s writing about how annoyed he is with Turing. Fleming was regularly proposing plans and Turing was apparently in a position to be able to reject them. Fleming makes it clear he doesn’t like the look of him. There’s a memorable extract where he writes ‘Turing came in like an undertaker’ and shot down whatever he was saying. One imagines they were two very different sorts of British gentlemen.”
   MI6 was especially wary of letting its American allies into the loop, fearing not only that the information would leak but that Britain would receive little of value in return. With the US Navy and US Army operating almost entirely independently, often plotting against each other, British intelligence was convinced the information would be used unwisely.
Turing’s role in Washington was to liaise with the leading American cryptanalysts and convince them that Britain was struggling to match their expertise while taking note of the machines they were developing, in particular a speech encryption system being developed for private conversations between Winston Churchill and Franklin Roosevelt. Judging by the minutes of the meetings, it’s a role he played perfectly, in a stark contrast to his common portrayal on screen as someone incapable of judging the nuances of social situations.
    “He absolutely hated it because he had to play dumb while being grilled by these mathematicians,” Moore says. “He had to pretend to be wowed by the progress the Americans were making even though they were light years behind the British at that point. But he had them convinced.”
    Turing’s own reports from Washington are filled with disdain for what he saw as America’s overreliance on technology rather than thought. “I am persuaded that one cannot very well trust these people where a matter of judgment in cryptography is concerned,” he wrote. “It astonished me to find that they make these elaborate calculations before they had really grasped the main principles. [But] I think we can make quite a lot of use of their machinery.” 
網址:https://www.theguardian.com/science/blog/2014/nov/28/imitation-game-alan-turing-us-intelligence-ian-fleming

 Structure of the Lead
who;Alan Turing 
what:More than 500 American ships had been sunk by German U-boats since the US began sending supplies across the Atlantic to Europe in 1941 
when:on 12 November 1942
why:
where:In German
how:

keywords:

2017年3月6日 星期一

week-two Flight 1549 emergency landing

2009: Flight 1549 crew praises smart, calm passengers

week-one same-sex marriage

Gay marriage declared legal across the US in historic supreme court ruling

    Same-sex marriages are now legal across the entirety of the United States after a historic supreme court ruling that declared attempts by conservative states to ban them unconstitutional.
    In what may prove the most important civil rights case in a generation, five of the nine court justices determined that the right to marriage equality was enshrined under the equal protection clause of the 14th amendment.
    Victory in the case – known as Obergefell v Hodges, after an Ohio man who sued the state to get his name listed on his late husband’s death certificate – capped years of campaigning by LGBT rights activists, high-powered attorneys and couples waiting decades for the justices to rule. It immediately led to scenes of jubilation from coast to coast, as campaigners, politicians and everyday people – gay, straight and in-between – hailed “a victory of love”.
    The ruling, in which Justice Anthony Kennedy cast the deciding vote, means the number of states where gay marriage is legal will rise – albeit after some stalling – from 37 to 50.
    “They ask for equal dignity in the eyes of the law,” Kennedy wrote in his opinion for the majority. “The Constitution grants them that right.”
    Speaking from the White House after calling one of the plaintiffs, Barack Obama said the decision would “end the patchwork system we currently have”.
    “This ruling is a victory for America,” the president said. “This decision affirms what millions of Americans already believe in their hearts: when all Americans are treated as equal, we are all more free.”
    Four liberal justices and Kennedy rejected claims made by lawyers during the legal argument in April that marriage was defined by law solely to encourage procreation within stable family units – and therefore could only meaningfully apply to men and women.
“The Constitution promises liberty to all within its reach, a liberty that includes certain specific rights that allow persons, within a lawful realm, to define and express their identity,” wrote Kennedy.
    “The petitioners in these cases seek to find that liberty by marrying someone of the same sex and having their marriages deemed lawful on the same terms and conditions as marriages between persons of the opposite sex,” he added.
    Crucially, the majority ruling argues that the court has frequently exercised jurisdiction over the definition of marriage in previous cases and is not overstepping its constitutional role by intervening now.
    “This Court’s cases have expressed constitutional principles of broader reach. In defining the right to marry these cases have identified essential attributes of that right based in history, tradition and other constitutional liberties inherent in this intimate bond,” wrote Kennedy.
網址:https://www.theguardian.com/society/2015/jun/26/gay-marriage-legal-supreme-court
 Structure of the Lead
who: gay people
what: Same-sex marriages are now legal across the entirety of the United States 
when: not given
why: a victory of love”
where: US
how: right based in history, tradition and other constitutional liberties inherent in this intimate bond

keywords:
supreme court 最高法院
conservative 保守黨黨員
unconstitutional違反憲法的
argument 爭論





2017年1月7日 星期六

week eight-Brexit

Brexit was the right thing for Britain — and the rest of Europe

2017年1月4日 星期三

week nine-Muhammad Ali

Muhammad Ali to be memorialized Friday in Louisville

 He was born in January 1942 as Cassius Clay. He began boxing as an amateur after his bicycle was stolen and a police officer offered to train him. Clay won a gold medal as a light heavyweight at the 1960 Olympics then turned pro, fighting his bout in his hometown.
  In 1964 he became heavyweight champion (the youngest ever at the time) with a surprising knockout of Sonny Liston. That year he joined the Nation of Islam and changed his name.
  Ali's sparkling career was interrupted for 3½ years in the 1960s when he refused induction into the U.S. Army during the Vietnam War and was convicted of draft evasion. The Supreme Court overturned the conviction.
  Ali was prepared to go to prison, King said.
  He stood his ground on who he was," King said. "He'd rather go to jail than break what he believed in."
  During his boxing hiatus, Ali spoke frequently about racism in America.
 Muhammad Ali, known as "The Louisville Lip" as he began his ascension to boxing greatness, will be celebrated in his Kentucky hometown with ceremonies on Thursday and Friday, a family spokesman said.
  A public memorial is scheduled for Friday at 2 p.m. ET at the Yum Center, a basketball arena in the city where Ali grew up and began his amateur career as a 12-year-old. Information on tickets will be released later. The Yum Center has just more than 22,000 seats.
   Spokesman Bob Gunnell said former President Bill Clinton, longtime sportscaster Bryant Gumbel and comedian and close Ali friend Billy Crystal will be among those delivering eulogies.
  The immediate family will have a private gathering Thursday. They released a statement Saturday afternoon.
  "Muhammad Ali was truly the people's champion and the celebration will reflect his devotion to people of all races, religions and backgrounds. Muhammad's extraordinary boxing career only encompassed half of his life. The other half was committed to sharing a message of peace and inclusion with the world. Following his wishes, his funeral will reflect those principles, and be a celebration open to everyone."
  "Muhammad Ali was truly the people's champion and the celebration will reflect his devotion to people of all races, religions and backgrounds. Muhammad's extraordinary boxing career only encompassed half of his life. The other half was committed to sharing a message of peace and inclusion with the world. Following his wishes, his funeral will reflect those principles, and be a celebration open to everyone."
  Before the service, Ali's body will be driven through the streets of Louisville. He will be interred at Cave Hill Cemetery.
  Ali, 74, died Friday night at 9:10 MT with Parkinson's disease, the result of septic shock due to unspecified natural causes, Gunnell said.
  The three-time heavyweight champion had been at HonorHealth Scottsdale Osborn Medical Center in Scottsdale, Arizona, with what Gunnell initially had described as a respiratory issue.

網址:http://edition.cnn.com/2016/06/04/us/muhammad-ali/
 Structure of the Lead
who: Muhammad Ali
when: Friday night at 9:10 MT. 
what: Ali was passed away
why: Parkinson's disease
where:not given
how:The three-time heavyweight champion

keywords:
boxing 拳擊手
amateur 業餘的
heavyweight 重量級拳擊手
prison 監獄
Parkinson's disease  帕金森症
funeral 喪禮