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December 20, 2009

William Gibson finds this Zero History blog useful

Merry Christmas to WIlliam Gibson and his readers and fans.

I am honoured that William Gibson has found this http://ZeroHistory.net blog to be of some use to him, according to these tweets

Apologies for the html code mangling - it is not straighforward to copy tweets with a meaningful timestamp etc. from the GreatDismal Twitter web page:

Sun Dec 20 05:48:47 +0000 2009

Crikey, they're on to me spyblog.org.uk/ssl/zerohistory/" class="tweet-url web" rel="nofollow" target="_blank">https://p10.secure.hostingprod.com/@spyblog.org.uk/ssl/zerohistory/ Some helpful stuff here, actually! from web

from web

GreatDismal
William Gibson



The web page URL with the embedded "@" symbol seems to have confused Twitter somewhat !


Sun Dec 20 05:49:28 +0000 2009

Helpful to me, that is.

from web

GreatDismal
William Gibson

December 19, 2009

"Zero History" tweets - Wormwood Scrubs

Some more Tweets from William Gibson, ideas from which may,or may not be included in the published version of Zero History:

Fri Dec 11 18:01:41 +0000 2009

Query: Is there CCTV on the Scrubs, London? Not the prison; the wide open ground nearby. Wardens? Police presence at 2AM?

from Brizzly

GreatDismal
William Gibson

Fri Dec 11 18:04:38 +0000 2009

Would my brand of corporate spooks logical choose the late-night Scrubs for something private? It's an attractively atmospheric venue...

from Brizzly

GreatDismal
William Gibson

Fri Dec 11 18:36:31 +0000 2009

Thnx Scrubs advisors. I love it that it was the dueling ground. And such an anomaly in terms of undeveloped land.

from Brizzly

GreatDismal
William Gibson

Wikipedia entry for Wormwood Scrubs, which mentions its use as a duelling ground.

wikimapia_HMP_Wormwood_Scrubs_450.jpg

wikimapia_Wormwood_Scrubs_Park_450.jpg

The large site is surrounded on 3 sides by railway lines and depots, and, to the south by public buildings buildings i.e. Her Majesty's Prison Wormwood Scrubs, the Linford Christie sports stadium and Hammersmith Hospital part of Imperial College,University of London, and the Tube stations are likely to have security guards and CCTV camera systems, but none of these will be doing much, if any, surveillance of the the large open space /park.

The western side of the Wormwood Scrubs Park is effectively unfenced, but does have lots of residential houses on the opposite side of Braybrook Street and Old ok Common Lane, so there are plenty of potential observers, even at 2 am in the morning.

Unfenced_western_edge_Wormwood_Scrubs_Park_gsv_450.jpg

Dead Letter Drops and Geocaches

Depending on what sort of clandestine meeting or other activity in the middle of the night at 2am the "corporate spies" are up to, the Wormwood Scrubs site has pros and cons.

The access / exit routes by road are constrained by the railway lines and public buildings, making it easier to see if someone is following them to the location, but it might be a problem if a quick getaway is needed, as only a few watchers or roadblocks would be needed set up a surveillance or security cordon around the area.

A very good idea of how suitable the area is for classic dead letter drops as used by spies etc., can be gleaned from the number of local Geocaches there are in the area, as the location criteria for these are very similar i.e. easy to be found by those in the know, but not liable to accidental disturbance by wildlife or by human vandals or thieves, and not observed by CCTV etc.

Geocaches_around_Wormwood_Scrubs_450.jpg

Geocaches around Wormwood Scrubs Park W12 0DF

The half a dozen or so Geocaches in the Wormwood Scrubs Park area, imply that this is probably quite a good place for "dead letter drops" for "corporate spooks".

Mobile Phone Location Based Services / Communications Data tracking

Since the "corporate spooks" in William Gibson's novels are usually well aware of the local telecommunications infrastructure, the fact that this part of London has about 50 Cellular Mobile Phone Base Stations within 2 square kilometres, will give an idea of how accurately a Location Based Services position fix can done on any particular Mobile Phone Handset (or the various sorts of Moble Phone based electronic tags attached to people or tracking devices attached to vehicles etc.) in the area.

Sitefinder_Mobile_Phone_Base_Stations_around_Wormwood_Scrubs_450.jpg

Ofcom Sitefinder Mobile Phone Base Station Database for Post Code W12 0DF - Wormwood Scrubs (they make this database deliberately hard to link directly to, for various unconvincing reasons)

Even on a simple Cell ID basis, a Mobile Phone Handset within this Wormwood Scrubs area will be located, in real time during the Start or End of a Voice or SMS Text Message or Internet Data call, to within a couple of streets.

With triangulation between Base Stations, the accuracy of a Location Based Data fix will be a couple of metres, remembering , of course that there will also be poor reception "dead zones", where there is little or no signal.

In those marginal radio reception areas, the Mobile Phone Handset will automatically boost its transmission power (thereby shortening its battery charge) to try to re-establish an adequate signal.

It will do this every 5 or 10 minutes, not just with the actual Base Station it has a reserved Time Slot established with, but it also measures the signal strength to and from the half a dozen or so neighbouring candidate Base Stations, since one of them may have to take over the connection, if the handset is on the move.

This happens regardless of whether there is an incoming or outgoing voice or data call or not, provided that it is still switched on. This network handshake update frequency is set by the Mobile Phone Network. In theory, it could be made much more frequent e.g. every few seconds, if the system is being used by the Authorities to try to follow someone remotely, in near real time, who is carrying a mobile phone - like they falsely appear to do routinely in so much TV and Film fiction. Obviously this technique can also be of use when they are hunting for a Mobile Phone Activated Bomb etc.

The statistics on how many illegal Mobile Phones are found each year within HMP Wormwood Scrubs and other Prisons, are astonishing.

See the SpyBlog.org.uk Mobile Phones in Prisons blog category archive

Over half of all Emergency Services calls to the Police, Ambulance and Fire and Rescue services are made from Mobile Phones, so simply jamming such signals in Prisons, something which might be acceptable in the wide open spaces of the USA or Canada, would be a disaster for the local area around Wormwood Scrubs in densely populated London .

One of the popular methods of getting such illegal mobile phones and drugs into a Prison is to wrap them up in some bubblewrap etc., and simply throw them over the walls of the Prison.

Potentially, there could well be people lurking around HMP Wormwood Scrubs, intent on doing this, at 2am in the morning, which is something that William Gibson's "corporate spooks" should be aware of.

"Zero History" signals hiding in the Twitter noise - Bigendmobile

Since William Gibson abandoned his blog back in July 2009, in favour of his Great Dismal identity on Twitter, it is very easy to miss clues and hints about his work in progress novel Zero History.

The Signal to Noise ratio of Twitter, and the use of opaque, inhuman URL shortening services, is a real hinderence to communication.

None of the Twitter specific add ons or search engines are of any help, when we are on the look out for new stuff, which, by definition does not have a previous history of existing keywords or meta data e.g. a new term like "Bigendmobile":

Only a tiny minority of recent Tweets are probably relevant to the Zero History novel in progress, and the ideas they represent may, or may not actually end up in the finished novel:

Thu Dec 10 17:47:35 +0000 2009:

RT @bittersweetdb: The latest Bigendmobile is a Jankel-armored Toyota HiLux pickup, "cartel grade".

from Brizzly

GreatDismal
William Gibson

"Bigend" is a reference to the major character in the previous two novels Pattern recognition and Spook Country - Hubertus Bigend

Jankel are based at Hamm Court Farm, Weybridge, Surrey, just south west of London, UK, but they also manufacture armoured Toyota Landcruisers in Jordan.

There are some (stupidly file locked .PDF) brochures about the range of armoured Toyota Landcruisers from the Jankel website

There are some Jankel sales videos on YouTube e.g. Jankel Armoured Toyota 76 LandCruiser

Jankel_armoured_Toyota_Hilux_1.jpg

Jankel_armoured_Toyota_Hilux_2.jpg

Armour Installation

The vehicle is armoured using proven armour materials and installation methods to include substantial overlaps and splash returns on all door apertures to ensure the passenger compartment is ballistically sealed.

Jankel_ballistic_spall_and_splash_door_armour.jpg

The standard level of ballistic protection is NATO Level B6 (7.62 x 51 NATO Ball) with ugrades available for other selected rounds if required. The standard level of fragmentation protection is STANAG 2920 / 2 x DM51 hand-grenades with upgrades available for increased levels of protection.

They also claim to protect against bullet rounds such as:

• 7.62 x 39 mm, FJ/PB/SCP, AK 47 (Kalashnikov) , OBR-43 PS

• 5.45 x 39,5 mm AP, FJ/PB/SCP, AKS 74 (Kalashnikov), OBR- 7 4

• 5.56 x 45 mm, FJ/PB/SC, US rifle M16 A2, SS-109/M-855

• 7.62 x 51 mm, FJ/PB/SC, "FAL" NATO rifle

and against hand grenades but not against Rocket Propelled Grenade (RPG )type anti-tank weapons:

• STANAG 2920 V50, 1.1 gram FSP @ 500mps, this has equivalency to DM51 hand grenades.

An upgrade is available to provide 1.1gram FSP protection at 600mps.

Given that manual or electric windows add complexity and weakness to an armoured vehicle, one interesting optional feature offered is a:

Ballistically Sound Door Document Slot :

A slot in the drivers door to enable the safe passing of papers at checkpoints, used in conjunction with the intercom.

Surely this is not usable with urban multi-storey car park ticket machines, so either the door has to be opened, or a manual or electric window fitted ?

Jankel Armouring hide behind

PO Box 1,
Weybridge,
Surrey,
KT13 8XR, UK

but they can be tracked down via the web via the Companies House WebCheck and Local Council planning applications :

The Jankel Group of companies has its registered office at

Park House
25-27 Monument Hill
Weybridge
Surrey
KT13 8RT

but their Jankel Armouring factory / workshops in the UK seem to be at

a href="http://maps.google.co.uk/?ie=UTF8&ll=51.376602,-0.469172&spn=0.00434,0.017703&t=h&z=16&layer=c&cbll=51.37531,-0.468706&panoid=ecmFGxcoPtWfaTw1V9DvFA&cbp=11,340.04,,0,5" target="_gsv" title="Hamm Court Farm - Google Street View - new window">Hamm Court Farm
Hamm Court
Weybridge
Surrey
KT138XZ

Hamm_Court_Farm_gsv1_450.jpg

Note the sign which says:

Private House and Farm
Armed Gamekeeper
The Jankel Group
No Unathorised ???? (cars ?)

Hamm_Court_Farm_gsv2_450.jpg

Hamm_Court_Farm_gsv3_450.jpg

Hamm_Court_Farm_mbmbe1_450.jpg