Tuesday, December 30, 2003

This Car Can Talk. What It Says May Cause Concern - NYT (sub)
OnStar is one of a growing number of automated eyes and ears that enhance driving safety and convenience but that also increase the potential for surveillance.
Consolidating the Christian Blogosphere - IFC
If you like to keep up with what the Christian blogging community is saying, browsing the Christian blogosphere just got a bit easier: The Blogdom of God is a meta-blog that aggregates new posts and content from Christian blogs all over the Web.
The Twelve Voices of Chistmas
Back to the Bible (BTTB) invites you to hear Dr. Kroll's The Twelve Voices of Christmas on its Web site. "The Twelve Voices" is an audio reenactment of the stories of twelve people who were witnesses to the coming of the Messiah. Hear the powerful retelling of the impact that Christ's birth had on these well-known individuals and hear the voices of disclosure, disbelief, blessing, preparation and more. Enjoy this popular Christmas feature as you reflect on the real meaning of Christmas.

Friday, December 19, 2003

Tiny transmitters give retailers, privacy advocates goosebumps
USA Today reports, "Say hello to RFID: radio-frequency identification. If you don't know about it already, you're going to. Because, depending on who you ask, RFID technology is either a giant can of WD-40 on the wheels of commerce and inventory, or a spawn of the evil military-industrial complex that (still) plans to enslave us all."

Thursday, December 11, 2003

Send Free Bibles To Persecuted Christians
Right now, 200 million Christians are living under restriction and persecution for their faith in Jesus Christ. Most do not even have their own copy of the Bible. Now there is a unique new way that you can provide your suffering brothers and sisters with a portion of God's Word at no cost to you. By visiting The Bible Site on the Internet you can click a button that will send a scripture portion to a persecuted Christian, funded completely by sponsors of the site.

Saturday, December 06, 2003

Reading the Ancient Bible Online - IFC
Is it possible to read the Bible in its original languages online? What do you need to read the Bible in its original languages? Where online can the original texts be found? IFC has gathered links and resources to help you start exploring online Bible texts in Greek and Hebrew.

Thursday, November 20, 2003

125 Christian Meeting Halls in China Shut - AP
Authorities in an east China province have sealed off 125 Christian gathering places since July, cutting off 3,000 believers from their places of worship, a human rights organization said Thursday.

Tuesday, November 18, 2003

Ukraine moves to tighten control of Internet - AFP
The Ukrainian parliament passed the first reading of a bill banning publication -- including on the Internet -- of anything that promotes terrorism, the overthrow of the state or damages an individual's reputation.

Monday, November 17, 2003

Encryption revolution: the tantalizing promise of 'unbreakable' codes - AP
Code-makers could be on the verge of winning their ancient arms race with code-breakers. After 20 years of research, an encryption process is emerging that is considered unbreakable because it employs the mind-blowing laws of quantum physics. This month, a small startup called MagiQ Technologies Inc. began selling what appears to be the first commercially available system that uses individual photons to transfer the numeric keys that are widely used to encode and read secret documents. Photons, discrete particles of energy, are so sensitive that if anyone tries to spy on their travel from one point to another, their behavior will change, tipping off the sender and recipient and invalidating the stolen code.

Wednesday, November 12, 2003

Lifeway & 'Left Behind' boost evangelism with end-times aids - BP News
LifeWay Christian Resources is partnering with the creators of the popular "Left Behind" series to help individuals and churches use the apocalyptic thrillers as tools to share the Gospel. The evangelistic strategy, called "Share Eternity with Someone Today," is available to download for free at LifeWay.com.

Thursday, November 06, 2003

Religion Journal Focuses on International Missions
ReligionJournal, a Christian Internet news service, focuses on international missions news as it reports the latest in evangelism and world missions. Read the "Evangelism & Missions Report" about missionaries in Africa, anticipating a renewed Gospel interest following President Bush's visit there. Learn how evangelicals are "on the move" in Romania and about prayer-walking in Chicago. Enjoy a Christian Aid report from India, Bible League news around the world, news on the International Charismatic Catholic Renewal Services and a highlighted story on Top Chretien's major French Christian presence on the Internet. Subscribe to receive Religion Journal's weekly headlines news and keep updated on what God is doing in His world today!

Tuesday, November 04, 2003

International Day of Prayer for the Persecuted Church Day
There are many Christians being persecuted all over the world in places like Egypt, India, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Afghanistan, Latin America, Cuba and France. Join with millions of Christians all over the world on November 9th, 2003 in celebrating the International Day of Prayer for the Persecuted Church.
Startup Says Quantum Crypto Is Real - Light Reading
Light Reading yesterday announced it's shipping what appears to be the first security system based on quantum cryptography. Quantum cryptography goes a step further than electronic cryptography through its employment of a stream of photons, the quantum properties of which determine the key. The fun part is that if an intruder observes or intercepts the transmission, those properties get changed -- an unavoidable principle of quantum mechanics -- meaning the sender and receiver can tell if anyone is eavesdropping. Perhaps more important, the key can't be copied or faked.

Monday, November 03, 2003

American Tract Society - BOTCW
American Tract publishes attention arresting evangelistic literature and interactive Christian cd-roms, as well as growth, discipleship and witnessing resources for the local church.

Thursday, October 30, 2003

Priests to train on Temple Model - Isreal Today
For several months, Jewish experts have been working on a replica of the Third Temple in the blazing heat near the Dead Sea. The Jewish community of Mitzpe Yericho, between Jerusalem and Jericho, is home to the model, which is built on a 1:1 scale. Covering an area of 25,000 square meters (269,000 square feet), it will function as a training site to prepare priests (kohanim) for service in the Third Temple in Jerusalem.

Tuesday, October 28, 2003

Group lobbies for domain buyers' privacy - ZDNet
Individuals and small-business owners should be able to buy domain names without being required to divulge their mailing address, phone number and e-mail address, an international coalition plans to say in a letter Tuesday evening. Currently, the Internet Coalition for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) broadly requires that such details be made publicly available through the "Whois" directories. That policy enables spammers, direct marketers and identity thieves to loot the directory for personal information about domain name owners, the coalition's draft letter to ICANN charges.

Monday, October 27, 2003

Take A Whirlwind Tour of the Bible
Does the prospect of ever becoming familiar with the history and characters of the Bible seem daunting? Whirlwind Bible Tours(WBT) understands--and they've taken it upon themselves to give Internet visitors a fast-paced, humorous tour of the major people and events of the Bible. You will receive "a whimsically humorous and brief overview of the Bible" with these intriguing learning categories: "Earth: The Early Years"; "My World's Fallen and I Can't Get Up"; "Moses: the Great Escape"; "War and Peace (Repeat)"; "Decline and Fall of the Israeli Empire" and "Jesus People: The Early Years." If you're the sort of person who doesn't know his Jeremiah from his Jehoshaphat, WBT's light-hearted overview of Bible basics may be right up your alley! Parents will want to check out Discovering the Bible [Microsoft Word document], a coordinating Bible quiz developed for a 7th grade class by Geoff Roberts-Thomson of "Community and Religious Education" in Melbourne, Australia.

Sunday, October 26, 2003

Defeating Fascism, Again - National Review Online
"Fascism, the subject of my first 15 years' professional study, is used so often as a term of general opprobrium that it has been gutted of all serious content in popular usage. More's the pity, since fascism is back, big-time, and it would be worthwhile to try to understand it in order to drive it back under the slimy rocks where it was hidden for much of the last half-century."

Saturday, October 25, 2003

Audio Treasure - BOTCW
Free download site for the Bible narrated in mp3 audio format. World English Bible and King James Version.

Friday, October 24, 2003

The Needs of Europe - Gospelcom
'Modern' 'advanced' Europe is often overlooked as a mission field. Yet as a continent, it is largely secular, post-modern, post-Christian. At least 14 countries in Europe contain less than 1% evangelicals, with many under 0.5%. These are figures we normally associate with Islamic 10-40 countries.They are achingly bad. Numbers of Christian young people within these countries are even worse. Of course we are not suggesting that the Internet is an instant solution. But the high level of Internet usage and penetration, especially by the young, suggests that we should be specifically looking at ways to use the Internet in the languages of Europe for cutting edge evangelism, including specific outreach to young people.

Monday, October 20, 2003

China Christian Church Activist Detained
AP reports, "An activist for China's unofficial Christian church has been detained after investigating the destruction of churches by authorities in eastern China, human rights groups say."

Thursday, October 16, 2003

Search Engineering - Gospelcom
Although a search on Google for 'Jesus' will bring up mainly good material, it is sad to note that a search on 'Jesus resurrection' gives a number of skeptic pages in the top 10. Christians need to learn more about 'SEO' - Search Engine Optimization - and how to get pages into the vital top 10. A good page ranking is the result of lots of hard work. It does not just happen.

Wednesday, October 15, 2003

Growing Internet prayer site 'adopts' 140,000 U.S. troops
In response to the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, retired Baptist minister Cornell Haan and businessman Bill Hunter, founded the Presidential Prayer Team as an Internet venue to pray for the president, his Cabinet and the nation. Since then, it has broadened its focus to the military and their families as well as members of Congress and issues. They are among the 140,000 troops "adopted" for daily prayers by the Presidential Prayer Team. With a reported 1.6 million daily hits, the Web site is one of the biggest efforts merging technology with traditional prayer, religion experts say.

Friday, October 10, 2003

China Arrests Church Leader's Adviser
AP reports, "The legal adviser to an imprisoned leader of China's unofficial Christian church has been arrested along with a prominent church activist and his wife, international human rights groups reported Friday."

Monday, September 29, 2003

India Blocks Almost All Yahoo! Forums
AP reports, "A government ban on an Internet discussion group run by an obscure separatist movement has ended up blocking access to popular, unrelated Yahoo forums in nearly all of India...But for technical reasons, Indian Internet service providers were unable to block just the Kynhun site - and had to shut down every Yahoo discussion group...The Indian government occasionally blocks Web sites it finds objectionable, including one for a Pakistani newspaper during India-Pakistan fighting in 1999." :: It is worth noting how vulnerable to Internet is to national control. I wonder how realistic it was to imagine Buck's underground webzine or Zion's website would be immune to GC censorship when the web of today is so easily controlled by governmental authorities?

Sunday, September 07, 2003

Southern Baptists Applaud Mel Gibson "Passion"
The Jesus Journal reports, "Mel Gibson's representation of the sufferings of Jesus Christ in the upcoming movie "The Passion" surpasses all earlier efforts by cinematographers, according to Southern Baptists who were invited to view a rough cut of the film in Dallas."

Sunday, August 24, 2003

Passports and Visas to Add High-Tech Identity Features
The New York Times reports, "Technologies that scan faces and fingerprints will become a standard part of travel for foreign visitors next year, and for all travelers in the near future." :: Are we ready for the return of the infamous phrase "Your papers, please," at checkpoints? A day when people are not allowed to buy or sell without official identification seems not so remote when the day of not being able to travel without official identification is so close at hand.

Wednesday, August 20, 2003

Ham Radios Came to Rescue in Blackout
AP reports, "When technology failed on a massive scale last week, some old-fashioned broadcasting stepped into the breach as ham radio operators took to the airwaves to reach emergency workers.For millions of people in the Northeast and Midwest, the Aug. 14 outage took access to e-mail and the Internet with it. Landline and cellular telephones were jammed by a crush of calls. But the ham radio, which came into being in the World War I era, connected firefighters and police departments, Red Cross workers and other emergency personnel during the most extensive blackout in the Northeast since 1977." :: I wonder if Trib Force members should be trained in the use of ham radios?

Saturday, August 16, 2003

Training for Internet Evangelism
Until now, just about the only available training for Internet Evangelism has been informal self-study and learning-by-doing. Now, with the launch of a formal 12-week Distance Learning course in Web Evangelism, offered by the Asia Internet Bible Institute, you and your TF team can sign up for professional instruction on how to use the Internet to share the Good News.

Friday, August 08, 2003

Temple Mount Secured for Jewish Holiday
AP reports, "Police prevented dozens of ultranationalist Jews from entering a contested holy site Thursday...The hilltop, once home to two biblical Jewish Temples, is now the location of the Al Aqsa Mosque, Islam's third-holiest shrine. Thursday was the annual day of fasting and mourning for the destruction of the Temples by invading armies." :: This report is a bit late, but I did want to note it. Activity on and around the Temple Mount is always prophetically important.
Google News Alerts
This is just a quick aside, but those of you who follow the news (and you would not be here if you didn't) may be interested in this new service from the good folks at Google. All you have to do is give them a topic you want to follow, tell them how often you want to get an alert, and then give them your e-mail address, and they will then alert you everytime your keyword is mentioned in online news.

Thursday, August 07, 2003

Believer Murdered, Pastor Clubbed in South India
Christian Aid Mission reports, "Hindu extremists clubbed a Christian believer to death in Karnataka state recently, beat another pastor till he was unconscious, and then hindered relatives from conducting Christian burials. Even though Karnataka itself does not yet have an anti-conversion law, the presence of an anti-conversion law adopted last fall in neighboring Tamil Nadu-and similar laws in four northern states of Madhya Pradesh, Orissa, Gujarat and Arunachal Pradesh-is thought to have lent a permissive atmosphere for such violence."

Wednesday, August 06, 2003

Stealing The Internet
The Tom Pain public interest journal reports, "The Internet as we know it is being hijacked, warn two leading digital democracy defenders. If telecom giants have their way, Americans will soon be paying for net use by volume, and every move will be part of a grand marketing scheme." The marketing bothers me, of course, I hate pop up ads as much as the next guy, but what really worries me is the monitoring that is required for advertisers to set rates and for businesses to assess the value of a web property. They have a monetary interest in knowing who is visiting a web site, and when, and from where. It will be increasingly difficult, if not impossible, to surf the Internet anonymously. The tools that corporations use to monitor the Internet can also be used by governments, both benign and totalitarian.
A New Era for PGP
ZD reports, "Speaking at the Black Hat security conference in Vegas, PGP pioneer Phil Zimmermann says the dark times are over for the encryption software." This may be merely an interesting tech article for those of us in the West, but for missionaries working in repressive countries like China, Saudi Arabia and the rest of the Arab and Islamic world, the privacy of e-mail communication may be a matter of life and death. If your church is sending missionaries to places where the enemy rules, make sure they are equipped with the latest in e-mail security software.

Monday, August 04, 2003

Keychain Drives Store Files Smartly
AP reports, "In our rich media world of digital music and photography, flash memory has replaced the floppy disk as king of portable storage. The market is now flush with a bazaar of key chain storage devices that use it." Portable memory for your Trib Force, and who knows, perhaps those Saudi customs officials won't know your keychain contains a Bible.

Friday, August 01, 2003

Secret Networks Protect Music Swappers
CNN reports, "They are the country clubs of the file-sharing world, exclusive Internet networks that require knowing the right people and having a wealth of content on your hard disk to get into the clique." I wonder if this strategy would help missionaries sharing the gospel in countries that repress Internet communication?

Saturday, July 26, 2003

Biblical Studies Foundation
Here is a great resource that came to me from the Christian Website e-mail list that I'm on. According to their recommendation, "The Biblical Studies Foundation is a non-profit organization founded for the purpose of distributing sound, evangelical Bible study materials in electronic format so those with small personal libraries or without access to a local Bible college or seminary library, etc., may have access to sound biblical studies from their home.

Thursday, July 24, 2003

New GPS handheld hunts for customers
ZD Tech News reports, "Garmin, a maker of global positioning system devices, has begun shipping its first PDA. It hopes to create a new niche for the slumping handheld industry." :: Every on-the-go TF team should probably get one of these. Or not. I know, I love tech toys, but sometimes a good map works just as well, right?

Saturday, July 19, 2003

Senate pulls plug on computer dragnets
According to this report from ZDNet Tech News: "The U.S. Senate votes to cut off funding for a computer-surveillance program that would comb credit-card bills and other private records to sniff out suspected terrorists." TIA RIP?
Video cameras will monitor plane passengers  
According to this report from WorldNetDaily: "Airline to keep customers under constant surveillance, record faces." Think about how much of the LB series has to do with flying, pilots and airports, all of that would have to be reconsidered in light of new surveillance technology.

Monday, July 14, 2003

Funding for TIA All But Dead
According to this Wired News report, "The Senate inserts a provision to a key bill that denies all funding to the Terrorist Information Awareness effort. It's a move that would make it much more difficult for the Pentagon to try to establish its massive data-mining spy network." Big Brother loses one, amazing.
Cell Phone Calls Flying High
According to this Wired News report, "A Colorado company is working on a device that would let airline passengers use their cell phones during flight. But, as on the ground, cell-phone calls in yet one more public place could ruffle feathers. By Elisa Batista." Buck would use this all the time I bet.

Sunday, July 13, 2003

New Kind of Snooping Arrives at the Office
According to this New York Times report, "Employers have stepped up their surveillance of employees, often using stealth techniques to peer deep into their computer use. :: I looked into this some time ago and found that this is all perfectly legal, you should assume that you have no privacy at all in the workplace. Many people use their office computers for personal business because the connections are often faster than what you have at home. What you need to realize is that your company IT manager is probably keeping a log of all employee Internet activity. This includes e-mail as well as sites visited. So, you can see, that if companies can do this in the United States, how much more can governments hostile to the spread of the gospel (like China, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Nigeria, etc.) do to monitor the Internet activity of citizens. It is only a matter of having the righty spyware.

Thursday, July 10, 2003

Evangelistic tool gaining popularity
With its own Web site at www.evangecube.org, the Evangecube has become so popular that Sheets said it "will be the primary evangelistic tool used to share the gospel with people at next summer's Olympics in Athens, Greece. Sheets' goal is to go to 100 countries. In each country, he hopes to visit 1,000 churches and in each church train 100 Christians to share the gospel, thereby equipping 10 million Christians with the Evangecube, who will in turn give one billion people a chance to hear the story.

Monday, July 07, 2003

Start-up streamlines e-mail encryption
ZDNet Tech News offers this report on a service no Trib Force team should do without: "Voltage's method offers a slight twist on current practices: The public key derives from the sender's e-mail address, eliminating a step in a sometimes daunting process." This approach sounds like it may be easier to use than PGP. Of course, PGP is still free and this will be a fee based service, so perhaps only those more financially blessed TF's will use it.

Thursday, July 03, 2003

Another Tool for Big Brother?
Here is an interesting report from Wired News: "A surveillance camera that can track and analyze the movement of individual vehicles in a crowded city is being developed for the Pentagon. Despite assurances that the camera is meant only to protect troops in the field, civilian authorities will probably want to use it, too."

Wednesday, July 02, 2003

Disorganized Resistance?
"Organized resistance has many drawbacks. These drawbacks have seldom been
discussed by the opposition. We believe that the only effective resistance is a
completely disorganized, decentralized, and leaderless opposition." So, is this what Buck and the gang were up to? I think they were more organized, or at least they tried to be.

Tuesday, July 01, 2003

Urban Tracking
According to USA Today: "WASHINGTON ?The Pentagon is developing an urban surveillance system that would use computers and thousands of cameras to track, record and analyze the movement of every vehicle in a foreign city." Well, I guess Big Brother really is watching.
Iran Blocks Reform, Porn Web Sites
Here is another report on Iran's effort to control what their people see on the Web, this from CBS News: SciTech.
Iran blocking access to sex sites on Web
This CNN - World report provides yet another example of how a government can control the Internet. It makes me wonder if the GC could have blocked Tsion's web site.

Monday, June 30, 2003

Wireless Net may aid poor nations - CNN & Reuters
Wireless Internet technology may help poor nations leapfrog into the future if they can get assistance to harness the new technology, said U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan. Wireless Internet access has "a key role to play everywhere, but especially in developing countries and countries with economies in transition," Annan said on Thursday in a message to a U.N. conference on the rapidly growing phenomenon known as Wi-Fi. :: TF members operating in poor countries should be prepared to help local believers establish wireless networks and take full advantage of the new communication tools.

Saturday, June 28, 2003

Urgent Prayer for North Korea Requested in Wake of Nuclear Threat
A special day of prayer for North Korea is being organized by AsiaLink Ministries and a number of other ministries including Christian Solidarity Worldwide, Open Doors (UK), Jubilee Campaign, and Release International. "Our desire is to see thousands of churches and believers around the world impacting one of the world most closed and repressive regimes -- communist North Korea -- in a worldwide Day of Prayer on Sunday, June 29, 2003," said Rev. Dale Hiscock, executive director, AsiaLink Ministries. "The communist government has sought to decimate the church and repress Christianity with great ruthlessness. As a result of a lack of information, the situation of the church has remained a mystery and the church worldwide, outside Korea, has forgotten the need to pray for these most persecuted of our brothers and sisters.”

Thursday, June 26, 2003

HOW TO PRAY FOR IRAQI CHRISTIANS
Open Doors Ministry recently had opportunity to encourage Iraqi Christians and assure them of the prayers of millions of Western Christians in the war aftermath. A Chaldean Catholic nun, Sister Margaret, said, "Your prayers have made all the difference for us." This ASSIST News Service report also includes prayer needs from the Iraqi Christians. Pray for the swift stabilization of the country; for wise administration; for the safety of visiting Christians; for hope, revival and a new moral culture. Pray against a spirit of fear, Shiite extremism, identity wars, and other desperate needs. Open Doors, founded in 1955 by Brother Andrew, faithfully serves the Persecuted Church; visit its Web site to review the ministry now reaching out to approximately 200 million persecuted Christians worldwide.

Monday, June 23, 2003

Should Christians Convert Muslims?
This weeks edition of Time Magazine examines the question of evangelism efforts directed at Muslims, this is a must read for your TF: Not for a century has the idea of evangelizing Islam awakened such fervor in conservative Christians. Touched by Muslims' material and spiritual needs, convinced that they are one of the great "unreached megapeoples" who must hear the Gospel before Christ's eventual return, Evangelicals have been rushing to what has become the latest hot missions field. Figures from the Center for the Study of Global Christianity at Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary in South Hamilton, Massachusetts, suggest that the number of missionaries to Islamic countries nearly doubled between 1982 and 2001—from more than 15,000 to somewhere in excess of 27,000.

Friday, June 06, 2003

Palm Sunday?
Lend a hand and put the gospel in your palm, your Palm Pilot that is. Bible+ bible reading software for Palm OS PDAs, announces the immediate availability of The Message: The Bible in Contemporary Language for Bible+. "I'm honored to receive rights to distribute The Message," said Yih-Chun Hu. "Peterson's lucid translation is very readable, and makes you want to read on and on." This is exactly what Eugene Peterson was aiming for when he wrote this contemporary translation: "I hope that when readers find the poetry, the stories, the prayers, the songs in this Book in their language---the sort of language in which it was written---they will read it from cover to cover, nonstop," says Peterson. The Message for Bible+ is licensed through PalmGear for only $15, a $25 print value. You are encourged to try before you buy: the translation can be browsed on BibleGateway, and Bible+ is freely available on PalmGear.

Saturday, May 24, 2003

Students flock to cyber cafes
This Express India report is a reminder that even in countries with a small Christian population, the Internet can still be a powerful means of reaching and teaching.

Thursday, May 22, 2003

Software simplifies e-mail encryption — somewhat
So, let's say your trib force sends a lot of e-mail. How do you know that your communication is secure? Could hostile GC agents be intercepting your e-mail? This USA Today report suggests that one simple way to secure your e-mail is to use a program like PGP. If you are not doing this already, it's time to start.

Wednesday, May 21, 2003

Writing a PDA Friendly Web Site
This About.Com report suggests that with the Palm VII wireless Internet, cell phones that offer Web access, and other pocket sized computers, it is getting more and more important to think about how your Web site displays on the palm sized computers and internet devices.
Alarm at Pentagon's Email Snooping
This report from The Guardian suggests that the age if Big Brother is here and about to get a lot more intrusive. It makes me wonder how well a trib force could really evade GC forces in the modern world of 21st Century government surveillance?

Sunday, May 11, 2003

A Question for All Bloggers
Jim at Right Thoughts blog has an idea for protective web hosting. He explains it better than I can, but the idea is simple enough, if you are the type that might run afoul of the PC police and their lawyers, he promises not to cave. In his words, "My pledge will be simple: I will not shut you down on any threat of a lawsuit. I will not regulate your content. If the lawyers come a'knockin, I will "accidentally" lose all your personal information with one click of the delete key. In short, I will be a human digital shield, only I won't run away when they start shooting." He is looking for input from the blogosphere on this idea. Ever wonder who Tsion's ISP was? How come the GC couldn't just force the ISP to shut him down? Maybe he had protective web hosting.

Thursday, May 08, 2003

Can my PDA go on-line via a mobile phone?
The PC User Help Page answers this question. Can't you just see Buck using his PDA to access the net via his cell phone in a crisis? Cool tech toys for your Trib Force.
Christian Evangelist Stabbed to Death in Bangladesh by Muslim Extremists
Barnabas Fund and Religion Today report that a Christian evangelist became Bangladesh’s first martyr in modern times following attack by at least seven Muslim extremists armed with knives. Just after midnight, early in the morning of April 24, Hridoy Roy was returning home after showing a film version of Luke’s Gospel. As he approached his house seven or eight people attacked him, stabbing him seven times. He died instantly. Hridoy Roy was a Bangladeshi evangelist and regularly used to put on the film, known as the Jesus Film. He is believed to be the first martyr in Bangladesh in modern times, if not ever; local believers feel that he will not be the last. They are in a state of deep shock, mourning and great fear following this tragic attack. In Islamic law (Shari’ah) conversion from Islam to another faith (apostasy) is punishable by death. This is a deep-seated tradition among Muslims and those who do convert, if not killed, are often subject to beatings and having their possessions and family taken away from them. This is the fundamental reason for the antipathy that most Muslims hold towards those who try to proselytize in their communities. It goes a long way towards explaining why they are sometimes willing to take such draconian measures to make sure that none of their community will be corrupted.

Wednesday, May 07, 2003

Globalreach, New Site for Evangelism Debuts
Global University's Center for Evangelism and Discipleship presents Globalreach, a new Web site to provide free evangelism and discipleship materials worldwide. Globalreach will initially provide materials in English, Mandarin (simplified), French and Spanish, with Mandarin (traditional), Arabic and Bengali to be added shortly. These courses are currently being used in 178 countries, and have been translated into nearly 150 languages. A user may "Discover God," "Discover Christian Life" and "Discover Christian Service." Many courses are in audio, video or online interactive format; print courses are available in PDF format. Ministries and individuals may use the courses for any language group; all users are asked to provide feedback and let Globalreach know how the materials will be used. To link to a specific language page on the site, please contact the webmaster.

Monday, May 05, 2003

Zantaz Introduces E-Mail, Instant Message Monitoring Service
This TechWeb article on the latest in technology for monitoring employee communications, including e-mail, instant messages, and file attachments is a timely reminder that in today's world, big brother, or big boss, may be watching. So fire up your PGP and hit those keyboards.
Wireless Wares Take Center Stage At N+I
Interesting article here from TechWeb on new wireless products. Don't let your Trib Force team leave the safe house without the latest gadgets. Just be sure to check those security features, you never know who may be listening.

Friday, January 17, 2003

Blogging Phenom Goes Cellular
NewBay Software, a Dublin, Ireland-based startup, is offering FoneBlog, a software system for carriers that extends the practice of Weblogging, or "blogging," to cell phone users. With the software, consumers can create and maintain personal Web sites from any messaging-enabled phone. :: This News Factor report demonstrates that you will soon be able to update a web page from anywhere. Human rights workers witnessing state brutality can now report live from the field, missionaries can file real time reports of persecution, and civil libertarians can stay one step ahead of big brother, for a while at least.
China Blocks Internet 'Blog' Site
China has blocked an Internet site used by more than one million people worldwide to post on-line diaries, known as blogs, users and its developer said on Wednesday. :: This CNN report reminds us that even the freewheeling Internet can be tamed by a government bent on oppressing the people.

Thursday, January 16, 2003

Secret Document Outlines Anti-Church Campaign in China
A confidential document entitled “Work Plan of the Baoding Municipal Public Security Bureau to Prohibit Christian Illegal Activities” calls for specific action against unregistered house church Christians in Hebei province in the months leading up to the Communist Party Congress in November last year. The document states the aim of the repressive campaign, “to protect legal [religious activities] and to prohibit illegal ones; to resist infiltration and to strike down criminal acts … and to ruthlessly strike down all cult activities masquerading under the banner of Christianity.”

Wednesday, January 15, 2003

Even 'Erased' Hard Drives Hold Info
So, you think you cleaned all your personal files from that old computer you got rid of? Two MIT graduate students suggest you think again. Over two years, Simson Garfinkel and Abhi Shelat bought 158 used hard drives at secondhand computer stores and on eBay. Of the 129 drives that functioned, 69 still had recoverable files on them and 49 contained "significant personal information" — medical correspondence, love letters, pornography and 5,000 credit card numbers. :: This AP report certainly gives missionaries operating in closed societies more reason than ever to take care in how they use computers.
Chinese Internet Dissident Put on Trial
Human Rights in China reported Wednesday that police in Shanghai have sentenced the leader of an underground Christian church to 18 months in a labor camp.

Monday, January 13, 2003

Christians Begin to Fight Terrorism on Knees
Prayer movements across the country are rallying support for a major prayer effort intended to keep the United States safe from terrorist attack. The Homeland Security Prayer Initiative urges Christians to unite in 91 days of concerted prayer, through April 1.

Sunday, January 05, 2003

Defense Tech
I'd like to call your attention to a web page I recently discovered. It is a web log, or blog as they are called, that deals with the future of the military, law enforcement, and national security.