Bringing Bandwidth To Iraq 230
jemevans sends us a link to his nonfiction tale of two California cypherpunks who went to Baghdad to seek their fortune and bring the Internet to Iraq. A much abridged version ran in Wired a while back. From the original: "Ryan Lackey wears body armor to business meetings. He flies armed helicopters to client sites. He has a cash flow problem: he is paid in hundred-dollar bills, sometimes shrink-wrapped bricks of them, and flowing this money into a bank is difficult. He even calls some of his company's transactions 'drug deals' — but what Lackey sells is Internet access. From his trailer on Logistics Staging Area Anaconda, a colossal US Army base fifty miles north of Baghdad, Lackey runs Blue Iraq, surely the most surreal ISP on the planet. He is 26 years old."
Bringing Bandwidth To Iraq (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Bringing Bandwidth To Iraq (Score:5, Funny)
Re: (Score:2)
Need employees (Score:5, Insightful)
We take a lot of our technology for-granted. Bringing modern technology to a war-torn, outdated country could be both a dream and a nightmare.
Re: (Score:2)
Is the abuse department hiring? And when we find spammers... how much do we get to abuse them?
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
I think it will trickle sooner than you think. Developing countries and developing markets are targets for (and need) infrastructure that competes. Wireless carriers are going to need to be rebuilt, internet, cable, voip, phone, everything. This is a pie with a few million slices the westerners can carve up any way they wish, but the Iraquis need to hurry up and eat it. I thi
Re:Need employees (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Need employees (Score:5, Funny)
Follow the money... the US military that is! (Score:5, Interesting)
Of course, you need the skills, and the connections.
You also need balls, since Iraq IS a war-zone you are essentially risking your life every minute you are there.
I know of one contractor who was kidnapped in Iraq and subsequently released once his company payed an undisclosed 'ransom', although that was more than a year ago. Lets just say after than incident they beefed up their security just a tad. Kidnapping is a big money maker in Iraq/Afghanistan. Of course, that entails you surviving an attack long enough to be kidnapped in the first place! Most likely death would be as quick as hitting an IED and its GAME OVER.
Then there are others who are smart. They go over there and stay in their armored compounds (as opposed to foolishy driving around in the open) and are protected by security. They do their assignments, stay for a few months, and make a nice chunk of change at the end.
Truthfully, many contractors are getting rich there but the majority of them are not accomplishing much of substance. All of it is dictated by the whims of the Americans. The Iraqis have little real input. Most of it is completely unsustainable. As the linked article states, even these Internet gurus are under no illusion that what the US is doing is only aggravating the civil war.
So essentially it's all blood money. Frankly, if there is a choice between making the 'easy' money or keeping your integrity intact by not 'selling your soul' to the man for a quick buck, I would say it's not worth it in the long run. I mean, you still have to live with yourself years from now. Right?
PS. There are good jobs in Afghanistan and its not nearly as dangerous as Iraq...though that is now changing. A few years ago suicide bombings in Kabul were a rare occurrence, but things seem to be hotting up there more every day - unfortunately.
God bless the American tax payer.
Re: (Score:2)
Thing is, market rate for my skillset is $1200-$1500/day contract in the middle of London right now.
You don't be going to Iraq for the money.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
The US is a popular currency because we've got a 200+ year record of not defaulting on our debts. Virtually nobody else can match that and people will bid up our money to absurd lengths to buy in
Re: (Score:2)
Mostly a nightmare...and the universe of people that would be willing to sign-up for the headache is miniscule. When they get done they can move on to Afghanistan, Sudan, East Timor and all the other places where human life is cheaper than any randomly selected piece of "modern technology" - and "human life" includes the lives of the people that work on "modern tech
Re:Need employees (Score:5, Interesting)
I would. I'm socially liberal, Canadian, a Buddhist, and I try to live as a pacifist... so I might not fit in with the gun-nut rednecks, but despite the danger and the possibility I might have to defend my own life, I'd love to go over and do something constructive, something REAL, not just the 9-5, where's-my-stapler bullshit that we have over here. The money doesn't hurt, but mostly it's the chance to be involved in something that could change millions of peoples lives for the better.
Of course, the high wages help too... it's just a question of finding someone who'll hire our particular skillset.
I got pinged once (not SSI/BI) , turned them down. (Score:5, Interesting)
I turned them down.
Yes, it sounded like a technically sweet gig. Yes, the pay and benefits were very, very solid. Could I handle a morning and evening commute that includes pitched gun fights and car bombs? Would the security where I sleep be as good as where I would work? Would I adapt well to wearing body armor and carrying at least one if not several weapons to do something as simple as buying toilet paper? Would I want to get beheaded for my troubles? Would I want my next of kin to profit from blood money should I bite it; would I feel comfortable accepting money for supporting something I found morally abhorrent? Would I have gone through those paranoid years of deployment without becoming irrevocably changed in ways that would make it difficult to reintegrate to mainstream society (PTSD is No Fucking Joke)? I asked myself questions like that and got too many negative answers to feel comfortable taking them up on their offer. Maybe other people would have a different situational calculus, I don't look down on them for asking themselves questions and coming up with different answers.
It was a near thing for me. I almost said yes. That money could have put my SO through grad school without loans. It could have bought my ailing mother a house. It could have done a lot of things. I still sometimes wonder if I made the right choice.
Re:I got pinged once (not SSI/BI) , turned them do (Score:5, Interesting)
I've spent some time overseas. While that's nowhere near a war experience, but it was intense enough that it made me an outsider amongst my friends. Their world was so small. I had to find a new contingent of friends who had broader backgrounds. Fortunately some of my other friends have since traveled; now we can relate better. There's a reason vets hang out at the VFW. It's to be with the other guys who have lived through that experience. You would become a totally different person and you would have a new community. I'm not saying that's bad; I'm just saying that all the benefits you would imagine having as a result of becoming a contractor might have to be completely re-evaluated in light of your new path. Hopefully with your practice you would be able to find healing and mental health for yourself and other vets if/when you came back.
My grandpa was in the invasion of Normandy. He never talked about it. A decade after his death, I heard this story: He was trapped behind enemy lines. There was a guard that he had to get past to get back to the allied front. For hours, he bid his time. Finally, the guard relaxed, and sat down to read. My grandfather snuck up and strangled him with a piece of barbed wire. He look at what the guard had been reading -- a handwritten letter and a picture of a young woman. He was so distraught by the time he got back to the front, he couldn't speak. The allies were about to kill him on the spot, because they thought he was a German spy, dressed up in an American uniform as a cover.
I don't know to what extent this story is dramatized. The biggest problem is that he never talked to *anyone*, *ever* about the war. I don't know in what circumstances he told this story. My Uncle told my mom after my grandfather had died, years after, but he doesn't remember where or when he heard it. It was sort of common knowledge among the men in my family.
My mom's family would go out to picnics, and my grandfather would sometimes disappear for hours. My male relatives were hunters; even they couldn't find him. When he came back, he would have no recollection of having disappeared. Everything was normal to him, nothing odd had happened. In my dark times, I imagine him trapped behind enemy Axis lines in some Ohio field, hiding, biding his time a few yards away from a ghostly guard.
I don't think you made the wrong decision at all.
Re:I got pinged once (not SSI/BI) , turned them do (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
In the last 2 weeks, I've been offered several positions in Afghanistan, Iraq and Dubai. Some of the recruiters even attempt to brag about how "This position is in the protected Green Zone" - HA! That was for a SharePoint admin position.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
I am already out here in Iraq. There are many companies out here looking for skilled professionals who can get and maintain a security clearance. Raytheon, ITT, and General Dynamics are some of the bigger ones although there are numerous other companies, Anteon, INX, etc still hiring. Gone are the days of $300k+ year contracts, but pay is still significantly higher than
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
strike
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Re: (Score:2)
I'm not sure what your sarcasm is for... I'd be willing to bet that there are quite a few more right-wingers than left-wingers working on technology infrastructure in Iraq.
Re:Need employees (Score:5, Insightful)
Maybe due to my left-wing political views, I don't understand this question. You seem to be talking about something entirely different than supporting our troops. It seems like there are several different actions you can take, including
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Indeed, that's probably what most people think of when they hear taglines like that, but it's still an illusion. What are you ACTUALLY doing? Have you written to your congresscritters recently? Sent letters to your local newspaper, detailing your stance? Att
Re: (Score:2)
Have you ever been shopping in Indiana?
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Me, if the risk/reward ratio is right.
Re: (Score:2)
Prince Harry (Score:2)
"We have printed out many photographs of him from the internet and given them to all other groups. They know the Prince is their main objective and I have every confidence he will be targeted and attacked."
My brother wrote Iraq's insurance laws (Score:2, Interesting)
If we had just shipped Aramco-backed (aka Saudis, the people paying for Americans to be shot) solar cells and UPS systems to Iraq, we would have created more Net usage than with this approach.
Sometimes low tech is the way to go.
M
Intriguing (Score:3, Funny)
Re: (Score:2)
I can tell you that it is good Norwegian wood, isn't it?
At least, that's what I heard
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Intriguing (Score:5, Funny)
Re: (Score:2)
Not the only one (Score:5, Interesting)
mp3 [slashdot.org] avi [slashdot.org]David Coughanour - HajjiNets: Running an ISP in a War Zone
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
mp3 [notacon.org] avi [notacon.org]David CoughanourHajjiNets: Running an ISP in a War Zone
Links (Score:2)
Random Thoughts (Score:3, Interesting)
Re: (Score:2)
In regards to communications, if you drive around your neighb
Re: (Score:2)
Actually, ordinary car batteries can work fine for this task. My grandpa lives on a farm and has a stack of 5 car batteries wired up to an inverter to power the pump for the well water, in case of an outage.
I guess with a hybrid car you could use it as a generator as well... converting gas into electricity. But of course you can do that with any old car, just grab 12V from the battery and hook up your inverter to get AC.
Location, location, location (Score:2, Interesting)
Winning hearts and minds of the Iraqi people through the universal medium, Asian porn.
Doesn't the network work? (Score:2)
There are obvious differences between military and civilian applications, for example, you don't want your coms go down when you hit an ambush, but Iraq seems to have some semblance of a basically/occasionally working cell phone system.
WANTED: People who like Dollars more than sense (Score:3, Insightful)
Blue? Iraq? (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Go in peace, young businessman in armor. Run like hell, you fool.
Re: (Score:2)
Ryan Lackey also started Sealand (Score:5, Informative)
Not all that impressed (Score:4, Interesting)
In the end, I didn't live in a tent. I was in an actual buidling complete with amenities most would envy in Iraq. Between all of my contacts, I was rocking it with a TV, DVD Player, Sat Cable and Internet, Refrigerator/freezer, microwave, xbox and ps2 at the time, and above all else AC. The hardest part was getting the transformers but much like everyone else the engineers scratched my back as well for what services I rendered in off time.
Traveling between bases, I flew. Forget doing a convoy where it takes you 14 hours to drive 30 miles. Helo rides were what it was all about, and I spent many nights either sweating my @$$ off or freezing to death just waiting for them to touch down to grab me.
Again, like others had said it's sensational journalism. What he did isn't all that impressive and some of the security procedures handled by SSI are negligent at best. I also have a problem trumping up his bad@$$ card for being logistically irresponsible.
Exposing myself (Score:5, Informative)
Pictures:
http://www.tolaris.com/gallery/Iraq [tolaris.com]
The Mohammed story:
http://giantlaser.livejournal.com/56797.html [livejournal.com]
http://giantlaser.livejournal.com/56863.html [livejournal.com]
Re:Exposing myself MOD PARENT UP (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Had that kind of mentality set in at the start - encourage local businesses, keep peopl
No, he's not 26, he is 28 (Score:2)
What happened to HavenCo? (Score:2)
cypher, cipher, cyber ? (Score:2)
... and profitable (Score:2)
He died there in a car crash after 2.5 years.
Re:Running any infrastructural project... (Score:4, Funny)
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
Hey, then Iraq would finally have WMD's!
Re:Sensational (Score:4, Interesting)
To digress from my point (if I really had one) I thought this quote from the article was very interesting: "But the US solution was to give large US companies business here
This seems to be to be very insightful. Given the management structure of these large corporations - rapidly deploying anything as complex as telecommunications infrastructure doesn't seem to me to be something they can actually do. The reality in situations like Iraq is that if you want the citizens to be happy, you must give them the basic necessities: food, water, and shelter (and, since the late 19th century, electricity). Given the instability in Iraq, the way to provide these things is not through the massive beauracracy of American corporations, but rather with small, self-sufficient modules - mobile power stations, mobile communications stations. I kind of envision it as the guerilla warfare method of providing basic services. After all - it's been shown time and time again that the guerillas can give the massive beauracracies a run for their money *cough*vietnam*cough*iraq*cough*afghanistan*cough
Re:Sensational (Score:5, Informative)
At least some of the facts are wrong.
For instance, the claim of 75 net cafes nationwide prewar is bogus, there were more than that in Iraqi Kurdistan alone. They say the Erbil office failed because there's not enough business. Closer to the truth would be to say it failed because there was already an entrenched network of trusted local operators.
South of the Kurdish line, there were (and are) huge numbers of little ISPs. They arrange for satellite service from Jordan, then bring the dishes into Iraq. In the old days, when banking was still a total catastrophe, they paid their bills by sending people with cash strapped to their bodies overland into Jordan, where they'd wire the money to their upstream provider. These days it's a little easier.
Ultimately, I think this article - like so many others about Iraq - is written from the perspective of someone who is hiding in the green zone behind soldiers and armoured cars and doesn't have a great idea of what's really going on.
P.S. Just arrived in Dubai for a little R&R. It's 2:30am and they're blasting the call to prayer at my hotel balcony while I'm trying to sit out here peacefully and post to Slashdot. What the hell?
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Sensational (Score:4, Informative)
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
Duh, yep, it was screwed up. Flew through Egypt and changed my clock there. Spent the entire evening thinking it was 2 hours earlier than it was.
Re: (Score:2)
Yeah, yeah.
1. Who said I was American?
2. I've been living in Muslim countries for many years. Just never had the call to prayer at 2:30 before; the rhythm of the normal times is deeply ingrained by now so it seemed very weird to me. As someone else correctly deduced, I had messed up my clock and was totally off on the time.
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Enjoy Dubai; it's the Arab Disneyland. I'd like to work there.
Re:Sensational (Score:5, Interesting)
--
Just my 2 cents...which is probably worth more than your 2 cents...
I work Communications. Satellite, phone, computer, solaris, microwave, voip, teleconferencing....everything he did. In the same place. Anaconda is ok...if you can ignore the irritating mortars that DO come in every single damn day(usually while you are sleeping or on the can it seemed). Unfortunately, I was military, and my pay was much less than his.
That 703 area code from viginia....yeah, try calling somebody else on base with that damn army phone. If you call from an army phone to an air force phone...it goes thru the satellite hop and fiber to get back to virginia, then runs around the world on the DNS phone network to the air force side. Calling from the army side to the air force side or vise-versa was significantly more laggy than calling back to the states.
Re: (Score:2)
tough going between them both all the time.
Re:Sensational (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Sensational (Score:5, Interesting)
I served in Iraq for a year. I just got back last November.
So the Stars and Stripes that we got there did tell us about explosions and deaths going on outside. We also got CNN at the chow hall and from that we heard about what's going on outside too.
But let me tell you what people back home never hear of.
The mobile hospitals that the military takes around Iraq, curing Iraqi children and adult Iraqis of diseases. The media probably never showed the stories of the mobile eye-hospital that went around Iraq curing children with eye-ailments that would have made them blind unless they got proper medical attention. I bet the media hasn't even told you guys about the schools, hospitals, and bridges that the military builds.
Nope. You will never hear about these, because "150 Iraqis die in a car-bomb blast" is more sensational than "15 Iraqi children have their sight restored due to help from US military doctors".
Re:Sensational (Score:4, Informative)
There are many good things that have happened downrange, but hardly anyone hears it because "Good News" doesn't sell unless you're some pop-idol that just got a face lift - or, you're Sanjay and just got voted off AI...
Now, AFN does show this type of stuff, but it's not picked up by the main media (I'm guessing it's shown to them..) The bad side of this is that AFN plays mainly OCONUS (overseas for those of you that haven't a clue) and only shows informational things to troops. So I see safety commercials 24/7 with Good and Bad news thrown in. The Good news is normally played over and over and over, to the point where we can mute the TV and say exactly what they are (That should be a Security question for all military personnel - "Who is Squeakers?"). The families overseas normally get excited when a normal commercial gets into the mix...
But, back on topic, good news doesn't sell. People only want to hear the bad things. Sadly, I know several people that refuse to watch the news (my wife, being one) specifically because it's only the bad stuff. The American public is so ignorant (in the true sense of the word) of whats going on down there. All they hear is X soldiers died...X Civilians died. They don't hear how many water plants are operational, they don't hear how we're attempting to fix the power but the locals keep cutting down towers so they sell the metal....
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
This is called propaganda and it's used to bolster the morale of troops who might otherwise find out from the "real news" (whatever that is, perhaps NPR?) what is really going on over there and how badly we are losing. You might ask yourself: Why are they repeating that one good story about the mobile hospital fixing vision problems for poor Iraqis over and over again? Is it because
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2, Interesting)
Nope. You will never hear about these, because "150 Iraqis die in a car-bomb blast" is more sensational than "15 Iraqi children have their sight restored due to help from US military doctors".
I'm not knocking you or anything, but how is a car bomb not very much more important? I mean, that sounds like having a story about firemen rescuing a cat from a tree in the middle of a war. I'm just saying that we could be saving children's eyesight without guns. All the nonsense about the media not reporting the "good news" is absolute horseshit. If anything they don't report enough about the real war taking place.
Signed, bitter Iraq combat veteran
Re: (Score:2, Troll)
You'd prefer it if the media dwelt on the n people saved from blindness, rather than the 10n people killed? Strange priorities you have there.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
But you have to put it in context.
The 150 Iraqis who died in the car bomb are in fact a bigger story. We had a huge story here in the US when 32 people were killed by a terrorist at VA Tech. When a hundred people are killed in Iraq, a country with less than 1/10 our population, it's like 1000 people being killed in the US.
In 2006, 24000 Iraqis civilians were killed as part of the civil war there. That roughly 461 per
Re: (Score:2)
HEIDI COLLINS, CNN ANCHOR: A lot of the news out of Iraq is not good. But it's not all bad, either. Every Saturday on Weekend Morning we try to take a look at some of the things that are going right in Iraq.
This morning, CNN's Jason Bellini takes us to the Iran-Iraq border.
Washington Post [washingtonpost.com]:
"Everyone here is excited. The mood and busyness are so much better than before when we just waited to see what would happen," said B.B. Abdul Qadir. [concerning elections]
New York Times [nytimes.com]
In the wave of lawlessness and frantic self-interest that has washed over this war-weary nation, small acts of pure altruism often go unnoticed.
Like the tiny track suits and dresses that Najat al-Saiedi takes to children of displaced families in the dusty, desperate Shiite slum of Shoala. Or the shelter that Suad al-Khafaji gives to, among others, the five children she found living in a garage in northern Baghdad last year.
But the Iraqi government has been taking note of such good works, and now, more than three years after the American invasion, the outlines of a nascent civil society are taking shape.
If there's not a lot of good news coming out of Iraq, maybe that's because there aren't a lot of good things happening in Iraq? (I find it telling that the Good News in Iraq blog [www.kmax.ws] has been updated twice in the last year.) Rather than floating the tired old liberal media conspiracy canard, maybe it's just a sense of proportionality that keeps the bad news on the front page? Viz: for every one of those 15 Iraqi children who had their sight restored,
Re: (Score:2)
And how much crap did the people who did the torturing get into?
That said, if anyone invades my country and tortures people I'll be reall annoyed, so I'm thinking I may be a teensy bit hypocritical here.
Mod me flamebait or insightful as yo
Re: (Score:2)
This is really the reason torture and the death penalty and other things are cruel and unusual punishment -- there is virtually no way to get it 100% right. If you imprison someone for 20 years in humane conditions, at least if it was wrong, you can take them out and apologize. Not if you've destroyed them physically or psychologically, however.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Don't know if you do, but I live in America, and I've yet to get that impression from our media. It's a whole lot of "Oh dear lord, we're stuck in a quagmire" - and I don't think that comes from an anti-war slant so much as a consistent barrage of bad news there's no way to spin in a positive way. The closest to "everything is fine" that we get is Fox telling us things are bad, but not nearly so bad as everyone else says.
Internet in Iraq (Score:5, Informative)
We used to get our internet access from an internet trailer that we had. We also had a (barely usable) wireless network set-up from our internet tent. As far as I know, a lot of the internet providers we used were satellite providers. In fact, we got so sick of the really crappy internet, that we shelled out money to buy a satellite dish, a satellite modem, and internet access. Split between the members of one platoon, it was about $60 a month. Our contact was an Iraqi who ran his business from off-base. He had a contact on-base that would help us out if we had any issues. It worked fine most of the time (unless we had severe dust-storms). The contact that the internet guy had on-base was actually an Iraqi electrical engineer. From what I heard, most businesses (and most people on the base) got their internet from satellite internet providers. It was pretty pricey and the only way you could manage it is if you got a huge bunch of people to sign up. In fact, that's what they used at the Internet tent. It was called FUBI Internet (For Us/US By Iraqis Internet).
This is the first time I'm hearing about this guy, or the company. I was stationed on Camp Liberty, which is a huge base in its own right. We were some hours away from Anaconda (I think 12? I don't remember rightly anymore). All the stuff we used there (that I know of, and my scope is just our internet trailer, internet tent, and platoon internet; the division MWR used internet but it was some connection from USAREUR (US Army Europe)) was from gulf (or greek or italian) satellite providers.
Re: (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Internet in Iraq (Score:4, Informative)
Greetings. I am at Camp Victory (Liberty/Victory/Slayer/Stryker/etc are all part of the BIAP complex). Anaconda/Balad is only 15 minutes away by plane and maybe 30/45 minutes by helo. I am not sure how far it is on the roads but 12 hours is probably excessive unless you are doing IED sweeping.
strike
Re:Internet in Iraq (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Internet in Iraq (Score:4, Interesting)
To be very honest I haven't been keeping up with what's been going on in Iraq that much. Mostly because I really wanted to get away from it for a while. I wish I could tell you what I really think of his handling, but I don't think I am in any position to say. The situation has been getting steadily worse since February of last year. That was about 3 months after we got there, and that was also when the Shia mosque was bombed. That was also when the "sectarian violence" or "civil war" (depending on whom you ask) started. As a Soldier, all I can say really is that we do the best we can, with what we have. As soon as we got there, all we tried to do was our job. Everything else was irrelevant. So I can tell you that Gen. Petraeus is probably trying to do the best he can. Sometimes it's easy for people to criticize (and I don't mean you personally, I just mean the "experts" on TV) from a distance without any idea of what's going on there.
What's happening now is a direct consequence of certain decisions made by Rumsfeld. Gen. Eric Shinseki requested at least 350,000 troops. Rumsfeld said he would provide only 150,000.
Thank you for your support. It means a lot to us.
Re: (Score:2)
26 and going on 46 [venona.com]. (more images) [google.com]
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
The article is primarily about two Americans. One of them trained, worked with, socialised with and employed a team of Iraqis.
How exactly is he shamelessly profiteering?
Hard to sell 'net access when the power is out. (Score:2)