Archive

Archive for March, 2006

Partial Success with City Council Minutes

March 27th, 2006 No comments

I’ve received a response from the Council to my enquiries about their broken minutes system. They assure me that nothing has changed with the system, which is not just puzzling, but also means that they have nothing that they can correct. So it appears I’m stuck with a very convoluted way of getting the minutes.

However, they also assured me that they aren’t happy with the current system and lodged a request with the supplier concerning accessibility and browser compatibility. But, as the supplier was unable to give them any firm indications as to when this might happen, the council has decided to investigate procuring a new system.

This will, no doubt, take a considerable period of time to actually happen, but at least there’s some hope for the future.

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The Shambles of the Magistrates Courts

March 27th, 2006 2 comments

The Diary of a Criminal Solicitor quotes a Sunday Mirror article on the blunders and delays that make up much of the business of the Magistrates Courts.

When I first had to sit through a day’s proceedings at the Belfast Magistrates Courts (to challenge a parking ticket), I was amazed at how shambolic the whole thing seemed to be. Although recently they seem to have imposed a little more order into the process, with solicitors and barristers now forming a queue for who gets to speak next, rather than the older process of whomever happened to speak loudest at just the right moment, the whole process still seems mostly out of control.

This morning I watched as what appeared to be somewhere between 25%-50% of the cases were put off for anywhere between 3 days and 4 weeks, occasionally because police, witnesses, solicitors, or defendants couldn’t be found, but mostly because the PPS didn’t have files, or wanted to re-charge the defendant.

Defendant after defendant sat waiting in court for up to two hours, only for it to be announced, often even before they made it as far as the dock, that their case was put off until several weeks later. The magistrate berated the PPS several times for not having material, but they in turn usually blamed the police, or the probation service, or someone else, and it doesn’t seem like anyone really expects anything to change. The magistrate occasionally looked like he expected defence counsel to make some sort of application — presumably to either proceed without the files or for the case to be dismissed — but everyone just seemed to play along with the delay. (Cynics might think that the defence team might be happier to get their fees for another day in court than in actually getting their clients’ cases dropped, but I’m sure that never actually happens…)

One case in particular even had numerous journalists sitting waiting in court for hours: that of Seamus O’Kane who had been convicted four weeks ago of common assault on Sammy Wilson, and was due for sentencing today. However, the pre-sentence reports hadn’t yet been received, so the sentencing was unable to go ahead. The magistrate demanded that someone from the probation board explain why his earlier order hadn’t been complied with, but they just stated they hadn’t gotten the request until two weeks ago and hadn’t had time to prepare the reports yet. They then asked for, and received, another four weeks to prepare them. At least this case came up at 12:30 and the journalists only wasted two hours waiting for it, rather than having to wait until the afternoon session. And Mr O’Kane gets to spend another month sweating about whether or not he’s going to have to serve time away from his young son.

I should probably write up some of my notes from the original trial too, as I found it to be rather amazing. Mr O’Kane strongly denied the charges against him, and his counsel even tried to make an application that there was no case to answer as the four witnesses against him all gave mutually exclusive evidence – particularly on key points such as whether or not Mr O’Kane had ever even made any physical contact with Sammy Wilson. (Sammy said that there was no contact other than him being pushed against a car, whereas his dining companion said that Mr O’Kane had kicked Sammy twice – once on the upper arm(!), and an eyewitness from a nearby restaurant had said that he had seen the defendant standing over Sammy Wilson whipping him with a chain whilst he lay on the ground!)

However the magistrate ruled against this application, and defence counsel struggled to put on any defence other than the complete confusion of the prosecution evidence, seemingly surprised that that wasn’t enough. Although he tried to push this point several other times, including during his summing up, the magistrate shot him down several times saying he’d already made himself clear on that point.

Sammy Wilson’s assertion that he doesn’t drink alcohol put paid to the only other real alternative theory put forward – that when he left the restaurant he had been drunk, or at least a little tipsy. This really shouldn’t have surprised the defence as much as it seemed to, as I would expect that most DUP MPs/councillors would also be teetotal. And then the defendant did himself no favours whatsoever by claiming that the policewoman who gave evidence had never actually spoken to him at his house, as she had claimed, and that the signature on his witness statement wasn’t his, even though the police stated that it had been signed in the presence of his solicitor, who in turn declined to give any evidence on the point. (Although this caused a little commotion as people tried to work out whether or not the solicitor could or should even give evidence on such a matter.)

I clearly watch too many bad legal dramas or something, but even where the defendant patently lies through the proceedings (as the magistrate declared had happened here), I don’t believe that that manages to overturn the reasonable doubt that clearly has to arise when none of the witnesses can agree on any significant point whatsoever. The magistrate went on to give a bald ‘guilty’ verdict with no explanation whatsoever as to what version of events he believed had actually happened, or which particular incident of the many set forward by each witness had been the occasion of common assault for which the defendant was being found guilty. One of the principles of our legal system is meant to be that it is not enough for justice to be done – it must also be seen be done. In this case I believe that principle was sorely absent.

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Belfast City Council Minutes update

March 21st, 2006 No comments

The nigov site has been rather lacking in updates to the Belfast City Council minutes section for a while now. Although partially this is down to laziness on my part, the main reason is that the Council seem to have changed their on-line minutes system slightly.

Not content with the plethora of problems previously discussed, the latest version of the software spectacularly fails to work with Firefox. You can still run a search (with all the normal problems that entails), but now, when the results are returned, you can no longer paginate through them, or even download the actual minutes.

None of the links on the page are actually true links – they’re all nasty JavaScript links (the next page is “javascript:lisObj._changePage(‘listObj$75′,2)”, for example). And, of course, the JavaScript doesn’t work in Firefox. I wasn’t sure at first whether this is because they’ve updated the software they use, or whether a Firefox update had changed something, but I investigated on a variety of machines with several different Mozilla-based browsers of various vintages, and it seems to be broken on all of them.

I actually forced myself to investigate using Internet Explorer to do this, but although the JavaScript does actually work there, IE’s “load a dummy page for download instructions” mechanism, coupled with the severely broken ‘back’ function of the Council minutes system (which seems to use frames for no apparent reason) means that I can only download one set of minutes at a time before having to return to the home page and re-run the search. Thus downloading a month’s worth of minutes would take an hour rather than 5 minutes.

I asked the Council about this three weeks ago (and whether they have considered the implications of such a broken system on disability access / screen-reading software etc.), but haven’t received any response yet.

Hopefully they fix this soon and I can bring everything up to date again.

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Be careful how you prove your identity

March 15th, 2006 No comments

I’ve been having some more difficulties with BT over the last few days (more details later, when I discover what has actually happened), and I found myself looking at their SMS webpages again.

As regular readers know, shortly after I complained to them about their previous system, whereby you could find out when anyone last paid their phone bill, just by knowing their phone number, the service was replaced by one that required you to also know their BT account number.

What I didn’t realise until today was that now, as long as you know their account number, you can find out not just when someone last paid their bill, but also how much they paid.

This is quite an astounding breach of basic privacy and Data Protection principles. BT bizarrely seem to think that your account number is a sensible security barrier, even though it’s casually printed on almost all correspondence from them.

Even aside from the normal misdirected/stolen mail, unshredded mail in bin, identity theft type scenarios, surely BT are well aware that a significant number of companies (banks, utilities etc) accept, or even ask for, a recent phone bill as proof of identity?

When I fought with BT on this issue last month I never got around to actually reporting the issue to the Information Commissioner, mostly due to BT’s friendly offer of £25 compensation (which I discovered yesterday they haven’t actually credited to my account yet, but more on that later). Now I may just be pushed far enough to make the complaint…

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Mediawiki spam

March 14th, 2006 7 comments

I run several sites off Mediawiki, and the spam problem has been getting progressively worse recently.

Making the wiki ‘registered users only can edit’ helps a bit, but most of the spambots can get around that now. In fact most seem to get around the ‘easy rollback’ of recently registered users changes by creating their spamming accounts quite some time before actually using them to spam.

Most of the spam I get is of a particularly useless kind. It’s wrapped in a div set with a style of “overflow:auto;height:1px;”, which makes it invisible on the page. However, as most recent releases of MediaWiki also default to adding a “nofollow” to external links, this means that the spam links get no googlejuice either.

Although useless to the spammer, it’s highly irritating to wiki admins. However, there is a particularly simple fix.

In your LocalSettings.php, just add one line:

$wgSpamRegex="/overflow\s*:\s*auto/i";

Now any attempt to include text that matches in an edit causes the edit to fail.

I’m sure this is documented somewhere, but I only came across it on one of the mailing lists. So I’m offering it out here in the hope that some other plagued mediawiki admin can cut back their admin burden too.

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Sharmanka Kinetic Art

March 14th, 2006 2 comments

Tower of BabelIf anyone is visiting Glasgow at any time soon, I would strongly recommend a visit to Sharmanka. Their website is very 1997, and doesn’t really do them justice, but this is a truly amazing collection of pieces created from old sewing machines, bicycles, and other scrap, with hundreds of little carved figures pulling and pushing and twisting and turning.

There are scheduled performances on Thursdays and Sundays, but apparently they’ll open it pretty much any time if you ring them.

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