Why do the captains rely so much on log information when it can be unreliable?











up vote
11
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We know that the ship has and creates logs, even the captains and various crew members will write personal logs.



Why then, do they rely on logs when it can be manipulated? I'm sure a determined engineer can manipulate the logs to make an explosion look "unplanned".



The only I can see the logs being reliable is if there is some form of version control and backup. So you make a log and check it into the system, at which point, it creates a copy that no one, not even the captain can manipulate. If you want to make any changes, you are given a copy to do so, and when you check your changes in, it's also copied to a secure location.



Higher ranking members can access the logs and view all the changes that were made.










share|improve this question




















  • 1




    'I sure a determined engineer can manipulate the logs to make an explosion look "unplanned".' - Can you please provide a specific example of somebody doing that in one of the shows?
    – Kevin
    Dec 13 at 19:43










  • @Kevin - I don't think there was any specific incident, but they have said logs can be manipulated. Given the advancement of technology and the engineers, I don't believe it's impossible for them to do so.
    – user108190
    Dec 13 at 19:49










  • @Kevin - We also know certain machines on the ships also write logs, for example, who accessed them, last used, if you were really determined you could possibly change them.
    – user108190
    Dec 13 at 19:52






  • 11




    @Kevin Lieutenant Commander Benjamin Finney manipulated the computer logs of the original USS Enterprise in an attempt to frame Captain Kirk for his own murder in the episode Court Martial. His manipulations were sophisticated enough that they were only detected because Commander Spock noticed a discrepancy in a chess program in the ship's computers.
    – Kyle Doyle
    Dec 13 at 19:55






  • 2




    I mean, by the same token, why keep logs today when someone could alter or forge one? Because it can still be useful for context of situations and in case key navigational systems break down, you can always go back to charting by hand thanks to data you recorded in your log. If you are stranded, at sea or in space, and you fear someone is manipulating your log, you may have larger and more immediate problems.
    – Broklynite
    Dec 13 at 20:50















up vote
11
down vote

favorite












We know that the ship has and creates logs, even the captains and various crew members will write personal logs.



Why then, do they rely on logs when it can be manipulated? I'm sure a determined engineer can manipulate the logs to make an explosion look "unplanned".



The only I can see the logs being reliable is if there is some form of version control and backup. So you make a log and check it into the system, at which point, it creates a copy that no one, not even the captain can manipulate. If you want to make any changes, you are given a copy to do so, and when you check your changes in, it's also copied to a secure location.



Higher ranking members can access the logs and view all the changes that were made.










share|improve this question




















  • 1




    'I sure a determined engineer can manipulate the logs to make an explosion look "unplanned".' - Can you please provide a specific example of somebody doing that in one of the shows?
    – Kevin
    Dec 13 at 19:43










  • @Kevin - I don't think there was any specific incident, but they have said logs can be manipulated. Given the advancement of technology and the engineers, I don't believe it's impossible for them to do so.
    – user108190
    Dec 13 at 19:49










  • @Kevin - We also know certain machines on the ships also write logs, for example, who accessed them, last used, if you were really determined you could possibly change them.
    – user108190
    Dec 13 at 19:52






  • 11




    @Kevin Lieutenant Commander Benjamin Finney manipulated the computer logs of the original USS Enterprise in an attempt to frame Captain Kirk for his own murder in the episode Court Martial. His manipulations were sophisticated enough that they were only detected because Commander Spock noticed a discrepancy in a chess program in the ship's computers.
    – Kyle Doyle
    Dec 13 at 19:55






  • 2




    I mean, by the same token, why keep logs today when someone could alter or forge one? Because it can still be useful for context of situations and in case key navigational systems break down, you can always go back to charting by hand thanks to data you recorded in your log. If you are stranded, at sea or in space, and you fear someone is manipulating your log, you may have larger and more immediate problems.
    – Broklynite
    Dec 13 at 20:50













up vote
11
down vote

favorite









up vote
11
down vote

favorite











We know that the ship has and creates logs, even the captains and various crew members will write personal logs.



Why then, do they rely on logs when it can be manipulated? I'm sure a determined engineer can manipulate the logs to make an explosion look "unplanned".



The only I can see the logs being reliable is if there is some form of version control and backup. So you make a log and check it into the system, at which point, it creates a copy that no one, not even the captain can manipulate. If you want to make any changes, you are given a copy to do so, and when you check your changes in, it's also copied to a secure location.



Higher ranking members can access the logs and view all the changes that were made.










share|improve this question















We know that the ship has and creates logs, even the captains and various crew members will write personal logs.



Why then, do they rely on logs when it can be manipulated? I'm sure a determined engineer can manipulate the logs to make an explosion look "unplanned".



The only I can see the logs being reliable is if there is some form of version control and backup. So you make a log and check it into the system, at which point, it creates a copy that no one, not even the captain can manipulate. If you want to make any changes, you are given a copy to do so, and when you check your changes in, it's also copied to a secure location.



Higher ranking members can access the logs and view all the changes that were made.







star-trek






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Dec 13 at 20:28

























asked Dec 13 at 19:39







user108190















  • 1




    'I sure a determined engineer can manipulate the logs to make an explosion look "unplanned".' - Can you please provide a specific example of somebody doing that in one of the shows?
    – Kevin
    Dec 13 at 19:43










  • @Kevin - I don't think there was any specific incident, but they have said logs can be manipulated. Given the advancement of technology and the engineers, I don't believe it's impossible for them to do so.
    – user108190
    Dec 13 at 19:49










  • @Kevin - We also know certain machines on the ships also write logs, for example, who accessed them, last used, if you were really determined you could possibly change them.
    – user108190
    Dec 13 at 19:52






  • 11




    @Kevin Lieutenant Commander Benjamin Finney manipulated the computer logs of the original USS Enterprise in an attempt to frame Captain Kirk for his own murder in the episode Court Martial. His manipulations were sophisticated enough that they were only detected because Commander Spock noticed a discrepancy in a chess program in the ship's computers.
    – Kyle Doyle
    Dec 13 at 19:55






  • 2




    I mean, by the same token, why keep logs today when someone could alter or forge one? Because it can still be useful for context of situations and in case key navigational systems break down, you can always go back to charting by hand thanks to data you recorded in your log. If you are stranded, at sea or in space, and you fear someone is manipulating your log, you may have larger and more immediate problems.
    – Broklynite
    Dec 13 at 20:50














  • 1




    'I sure a determined engineer can manipulate the logs to make an explosion look "unplanned".' - Can you please provide a specific example of somebody doing that in one of the shows?
    – Kevin
    Dec 13 at 19:43










  • @Kevin - I don't think there was any specific incident, but they have said logs can be manipulated. Given the advancement of technology and the engineers, I don't believe it's impossible for them to do so.
    – user108190
    Dec 13 at 19:49










  • @Kevin - We also know certain machines on the ships also write logs, for example, who accessed them, last used, if you were really determined you could possibly change them.
    – user108190
    Dec 13 at 19:52






  • 11




    @Kevin Lieutenant Commander Benjamin Finney manipulated the computer logs of the original USS Enterprise in an attempt to frame Captain Kirk for his own murder in the episode Court Martial. His manipulations were sophisticated enough that they were only detected because Commander Spock noticed a discrepancy in a chess program in the ship's computers.
    – Kyle Doyle
    Dec 13 at 19:55






  • 2




    I mean, by the same token, why keep logs today when someone could alter or forge one? Because it can still be useful for context of situations and in case key navigational systems break down, you can always go back to charting by hand thanks to data you recorded in your log. If you are stranded, at sea or in space, and you fear someone is manipulating your log, you may have larger and more immediate problems.
    – Broklynite
    Dec 13 at 20:50








1




1




'I sure a determined engineer can manipulate the logs to make an explosion look "unplanned".' - Can you please provide a specific example of somebody doing that in one of the shows?
– Kevin
Dec 13 at 19:43




'I sure a determined engineer can manipulate the logs to make an explosion look "unplanned".' - Can you please provide a specific example of somebody doing that in one of the shows?
– Kevin
Dec 13 at 19:43












@Kevin - I don't think there was any specific incident, but they have said logs can be manipulated. Given the advancement of technology and the engineers, I don't believe it's impossible for them to do so.
– user108190
Dec 13 at 19:49




@Kevin - I don't think there was any specific incident, but they have said logs can be manipulated. Given the advancement of technology and the engineers, I don't believe it's impossible for them to do so.
– user108190
Dec 13 at 19:49












@Kevin - We also know certain machines on the ships also write logs, for example, who accessed them, last used, if you were really determined you could possibly change them.
– user108190
Dec 13 at 19:52




@Kevin - We also know certain machines on the ships also write logs, for example, who accessed them, last used, if you were really determined you could possibly change them.
– user108190
Dec 13 at 19:52




11




11




@Kevin Lieutenant Commander Benjamin Finney manipulated the computer logs of the original USS Enterprise in an attempt to frame Captain Kirk for his own murder in the episode Court Martial. His manipulations were sophisticated enough that they were only detected because Commander Spock noticed a discrepancy in a chess program in the ship's computers.
– Kyle Doyle
Dec 13 at 19:55




@Kevin Lieutenant Commander Benjamin Finney manipulated the computer logs of the original USS Enterprise in an attempt to frame Captain Kirk for his own murder in the episode Court Martial. His manipulations were sophisticated enough that they were only detected because Commander Spock noticed a discrepancy in a chess program in the ship's computers.
– Kyle Doyle
Dec 13 at 19:55




2




2




I mean, by the same token, why keep logs today when someone could alter or forge one? Because it can still be useful for context of situations and in case key navigational systems break down, you can always go back to charting by hand thanks to data you recorded in your log. If you are stranded, at sea or in space, and you fear someone is manipulating your log, you may have larger and more immediate problems.
– Broklynite
Dec 13 at 20:50




I mean, by the same token, why keep logs today when someone could alter or forge one? Because it can still be useful for context of situations and in case key navigational systems break down, you can always go back to charting by hand thanks to data you recorded in your log. If you are stranded, at sea or in space, and you fear someone is manipulating your log, you may have larger and more immediate problems.
– Broklynite
Dec 13 at 20:50










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
17
down vote



accepted










Federation (and other) logs are, for the most part, susceptible to manipulation by computer experts. The principle is that if they're used as the basis for legal proceedings that they're treated as any other piece of evidence, normally highly reliable but potentially alterable.




GRAL: These accusations are absurd. We had nothing to do with this alleged attack.



ARCHER: The Andorian sensor logs. Look them over yourself.



GRAL: Logs can be fabricated.



ENT: Babel One




and




DAX: If you want, you can check our ship's logs and they'll prove it to you.



COLYUS: Logs can be tampered with. Well, you ought know that. After all, you claim to be a Security Officer.



DS9: Shadowplay




Note that there are ways of cross-checking the logs with other logs to confirm their veracity




DATA: By comparing the Stargazer's main computer log with Captain Picard's personal log, I have found checksum discrepancies, sir.



RIKER: What does that mean?



DATA: All information is time-coded by entry, and the bits when totaled produce an aggregate amount which



TNG: The Battle




And later in DS9 we see that there are some kinds of logs (highly specialised, rarely used, extraordinarily expensive) that are basically unfakeable.




GARAK: When Senator Vreenak arrives, you will show him a holographic recording of a secret meeting held at the highest level of the Dominion in which the planned invasion of Romulus is being discussed. You will tell the Senator that this information was obtained through various covert means at great cost to the Federation. At least ten good men lost their lives bringing it across the line, that sort of thing. He will immediately suspect it's a forgery, but you will assure him that such a thing would be impossible. You see, Senator, this is an official Cardassian transcript. It was recorded on a one time optolythic data rod used for official record keeping. These rods are manufactured only as needed on Cardassia Prime. Information can only be transcribed on them once, and then cannot be altered.



SISKO: He'll want to examine it.



DS9: In the Pale Moonlight






Interestingly, the log in TOS: Court Martial is recognised as being susceptible to tampering but since the only ones who could tamper with it are Kirk (the accused), Spock (his loyal Number One and basically above suspicion) and the victim, the idea that it might be inaccurate was discounted out of hand until Spock noticed that the computer was acting funny.




COGLEY: Hypothetically, Mister Spock. Hypothetically, Miss Shaw. If what you suggest had been done, it would be beyond the capabilities
of most men. Is that true?



SPOCK: Affirmative.



COGLEY: What man aboard ship would it not be beyond?



SPOCK: The Captain, myself, and the records officer.



TOS: Court Martial







share|improve this answer























  • +1 Right, so why then do they continue to use them? For example, why design a machine or system that writes logs, I mean, you might be able to get some "truth" out of it, but still, you're dealing with mutable information.
    – user108190
    Dec 13 at 20:24






  • 15




    @BasementJoe The primary use of logs is not to serve as evidence in a court of law, they're to track information relevant to the ship. There are many examples of similar types of logs in the real world that can be changed, manipulated, or destroyed. That doesn't make them not useful.
    – Kyle Doyle
    Dec 13 at 20:34








  • 2




    @BasementJoe - the average person can't change them in a way that can't be easily detected. Even the most skilful programmer can't change them in a way that can't be uncovered with a high level scan or cross-check. Basically you need to be an uber-programmer capable of altering dozens of integrated logs from multiple systems
    – Valorum
    Dec 13 at 20:49








  • 1




    One thing nice about log files is if you can determine that they have been manipulated then you have learned something. In a way, like a honey trap.
    – Jim
    Dec 13 at 22:35






  • 1




    @BasementJoe History books are famously written by the winners; why bother to read history books then? Statistics can be manipulated and scientific studies falsified for personal gain; so why do we rely so heavily on science for advancements in the modern age? Because nothing is perfect. There's no such thing as a completely 100% reliable method of recording "the truth." Not IRL, and evidently not in Star Trek either. Heck, what we consider "the truth" itself can change over time. If we're going to get anything done, we have to draw a line between "perfect" and "good enough."
    – Steve-O
    Dec 14 at 14:50


















up vote
3
down vote













The chain of command can benefit from inaccurate logs.



According to Captain Janeway, Starfleet captains, in the best interest of carrying out their responsibilities, sometimes require greater freedom to act than Federation law and Starfleet regulations can officially sanction. Call this the idealistic explanation:




JANEWAY: It would seem that Captain Sulu decided not to enter that journey into his official log. The day's entry makes some cryptic remark about the ship being damaged in a gaseous anomaly and needing repairs, but nothing else.



KIM: You mean he falsified his logs?



JANEWAY: It was a very different time, Mister Kim. Captain Sulu, Captain Kirk, Dr. McCoy. They all belonged to a different breed of Starfleet officer. Imagine the era they lived in. The Alpha Quadrant still largely unexplored. Humanity on verge of war with Klingons. Romulans hiding behind every nebula. Even the technology we take for granted was still in its early stages. No plasma weapons, no multiphasic shields. Their ships were half as fast.



— "Flashback" (Voyager, 3x02)




There is also a self-serving interpretation. Captain Sulu's inaccurate log, in this instance, omitted the fact that his illegal order resulted in the death of at least one crew member under his command. It's unknown how Starfleet dealt with this breach of regulations and ethics, although Sulu's career and reputation does not seem to have suffered for it.



"Court Martial" (TOS, 1x14) established that ships' computers keep audio-video records of the bridge. In addition to putting a favourable spin on his own log, Captain Sulu would have needed to alter the bridge recording to keep the events out of Starfleet's official record.






share|improve this answer



















  • 2




    In this case the log wasn't falsified by changing the information already in it, it was altered by failing to log information about what was happening. It's possible that other logs on the ship (energy usage, stellar navigation, etc) would have shown their main log to be false if anyone had taken the time/energy/inclination to look
    – Valorum
    Dec 13 at 21:00












  • There's also all of the eyewitnesses on the Excelsior, so I imagine there was at least some sort of inquiry rather than a forced coverup.
    – Gaultheria
    Dec 13 at 23:44











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2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes








2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes








up vote
17
down vote



accepted










Federation (and other) logs are, for the most part, susceptible to manipulation by computer experts. The principle is that if they're used as the basis for legal proceedings that they're treated as any other piece of evidence, normally highly reliable but potentially alterable.




GRAL: These accusations are absurd. We had nothing to do with this alleged attack.



ARCHER: The Andorian sensor logs. Look them over yourself.



GRAL: Logs can be fabricated.



ENT: Babel One




and




DAX: If you want, you can check our ship's logs and they'll prove it to you.



COLYUS: Logs can be tampered with. Well, you ought know that. After all, you claim to be a Security Officer.



DS9: Shadowplay




Note that there are ways of cross-checking the logs with other logs to confirm their veracity




DATA: By comparing the Stargazer's main computer log with Captain Picard's personal log, I have found checksum discrepancies, sir.



RIKER: What does that mean?



DATA: All information is time-coded by entry, and the bits when totaled produce an aggregate amount which



TNG: The Battle




And later in DS9 we see that there are some kinds of logs (highly specialised, rarely used, extraordinarily expensive) that are basically unfakeable.




GARAK: When Senator Vreenak arrives, you will show him a holographic recording of a secret meeting held at the highest level of the Dominion in which the planned invasion of Romulus is being discussed. You will tell the Senator that this information was obtained through various covert means at great cost to the Federation. At least ten good men lost their lives bringing it across the line, that sort of thing. He will immediately suspect it's a forgery, but you will assure him that such a thing would be impossible. You see, Senator, this is an official Cardassian transcript. It was recorded on a one time optolythic data rod used for official record keeping. These rods are manufactured only as needed on Cardassia Prime. Information can only be transcribed on them once, and then cannot be altered.



SISKO: He'll want to examine it.



DS9: In the Pale Moonlight






Interestingly, the log in TOS: Court Martial is recognised as being susceptible to tampering but since the only ones who could tamper with it are Kirk (the accused), Spock (his loyal Number One and basically above suspicion) and the victim, the idea that it might be inaccurate was discounted out of hand until Spock noticed that the computer was acting funny.




COGLEY: Hypothetically, Mister Spock. Hypothetically, Miss Shaw. If what you suggest had been done, it would be beyond the capabilities
of most men. Is that true?



SPOCK: Affirmative.



COGLEY: What man aboard ship would it not be beyond?



SPOCK: The Captain, myself, and the records officer.



TOS: Court Martial







share|improve this answer























  • +1 Right, so why then do they continue to use them? For example, why design a machine or system that writes logs, I mean, you might be able to get some "truth" out of it, but still, you're dealing with mutable information.
    – user108190
    Dec 13 at 20:24






  • 15




    @BasementJoe The primary use of logs is not to serve as evidence in a court of law, they're to track information relevant to the ship. There are many examples of similar types of logs in the real world that can be changed, manipulated, or destroyed. That doesn't make them not useful.
    – Kyle Doyle
    Dec 13 at 20:34








  • 2




    @BasementJoe - the average person can't change them in a way that can't be easily detected. Even the most skilful programmer can't change them in a way that can't be uncovered with a high level scan or cross-check. Basically you need to be an uber-programmer capable of altering dozens of integrated logs from multiple systems
    – Valorum
    Dec 13 at 20:49








  • 1




    One thing nice about log files is if you can determine that they have been manipulated then you have learned something. In a way, like a honey trap.
    – Jim
    Dec 13 at 22:35






  • 1




    @BasementJoe History books are famously written by the winners; why bother to read history books then? Statistics can be manipulated and scientific studies falsified for personal gain; so why do we rely so heavily on science for advancements in the modern age? Because nothing is perfect. There's no such thing as a completely 100% reliable method of recording "the truth." Not IRL, and evidently not in Star Trek either. Heck, what we consider "the truth" itself can change over time. If we're going to get anything done, we have to draw a line between "perfect" and "good enough."
    – Steve-O
    Dec 14 at 14:50















up vote
17
down vote



accepted










Federation (and other) logs are, for the most part, susceptible to manipulation by computer experts. The principle is that if they're used as the basis for legal proceedings that they're treated as any other piece of evidence, normally highly reliable but potentially alterable.




GRAL: These accusations are absurd. We had nothing to do with this alleged attack.



ARCHER: The Andorian sensor logs. Look them over yourself.



GRAL: Logs can be fabricated.



ENT: Babel One




and




DAX: If you want, you can check our ship's logs and they'll prove it to you.



COLYUS: Logs can be tampered with. Well, you ought know that. After all, you claim to be a Security Officer.



DS9: Shadowplay




Note that there are ways of cross-checking the logs with other logs to confirm their veracity




DATA: By comparing the Stargazer's main computer log with Captain Picard's personal log, I have found checksum discrepancies, sir.



RIKER: What does that mean?



DATA: All information is time-coded by entry, and the bits when totaled produce an aggregate amount which



TNG: The Battle




And later in DS9 we see that there are some kinds of logs (highly specialised, rarely used, extraordinarily expensive) that are basically unfakeable.




GARAK: When Senator Vreenak arrives, you will show him a holographic recording of a secret meeting held at the highest level of the Dominion in which the planned invasion of Romulus is being discussed. You will tell the Senator that this information was obtained through various covert means at great cost to the Federation. At least ten good men lost their lives bringing it across the line, that sort of thing. He will immediately suspect it's a forgery, but you will assure him that such a thing would be impossible. You see, Senator, this is an official Cardassian transcript. It was recorded on a one time optolythic data rod used for official record keeping. These rods are manufactured only as needed on Cardassia Prime. Information can only be transcribed on them once, and then cannot be altered.



SISKO: He'll want to examine it.



DS9: In the Pale Moonlight






Interestingly, the log in TOS: Court Martial is recognised as being susceptible to tampering but since the only ones who could tamper with it are Kirk (the accused), Spock (his loyal Number One and basically above suspicion) and the victim, the idea that it might be inaccurate was discounted out of hand until Spock noticed that the computer was acting funny.




COGLEY: Hypothetically, Mister Spock. Hypothetically, Miss Shaw. If what you suggest had been done, it would be beyond the capabilities
of most men. Is that true?



SPOCK: Affirmative.



COGLEY: What man aboard ship would it not be beyond?



SPOCK: The Captain, myself, and the records officer.



TOS: Court Martial







share|improve this answer























  • +1 Right, so why then do they continue to use them? For example, why design a machine or system that writes logs, I mean, you might be able to get some "truth" out of it, but still, you're dealing with mutable information.
    – user108190
    Dec 13 at 20:24






  • 15




    @BasementJoe The primary use of logs is not to serve as evidence in a court of law, they're to track information relevant to the ship. There are many examples of similar types of logs in the real world that can be changed, manipulated, or destroyed. That doesn't make them not useful.
    – Kyle Doyle
    Dec 13 at 20:34








  • 2




    @BasementJoe - the average person can't change them in a way that can't be easily detected. Even the most skilful programmer can't change them in a way that can't be uncovered with a high level scan or cross-check. Basically you need to be an uber-programmer capable of altering dozens of integrated logs from multiple systems
    – Valorum
    Dec 13 at 20:49








  • 1




    One thing nice about log files is if you can determine that they have been manipulated then you have learned something. In a way, like a honey trap.
    – Jim
    Dec 13 at 22:35






  • 1




    @BasementJoe History books are famously written by the winners; why bother to read history books then? Statistics can be manipulated and scientific studies falsified for personal gain; so why do we rely so heavily on science for advancements in the modern age? Because nothing is perfect. There's no such thing as a completely 100% reliable method of recording "the truth." Not IRL, and evidently not in Star Trek either. Heck, what we consider "the truth" itself can change over time. If we're going to get anything done, we have to draw a line between "perfect" and "good enough."
    – Steve-O
    Dec 14 at 14:50













up vote
17
down vote



accepted







up vote
17
down vote



accepted






Federation (and other) logs are, for the most part, susceptible to manipulation by computer experts. The principle is that if they're used as the basis for legal proceedings that they're treated as any other piece of evidence, normally highly reliable but potentially alterable.




GRAL: These accusations are absurd. We had nothing to do with this alleged attack.



ARCHER: The Andorian sensor logs. Look them over yourself.



GRAL: Logs can be fabricated.



ENT: Babel One




and




DAX: If you want, you can check our ship's logs and they'll prove it to you.



COLYUS: Logs can be tampered with. Well, you ought know that. After all, you claim to be a Security Officer.



DS9: Shadowplay




Note that there are ways of cross-checking the logs with other logs to confirm their veracity




DATA: By comparing the Stargazer's main computer log with Captain Picard's personal log, I have found checksum discrepancies, sir.



RIKER: What does that mean?



DATA: All information is time-coded by entry, and the bits when totaled produce an aggregate amount which



TNG: The Battle




And later in DS9 we see that there are some kinds of logs (highly specialised, rarely used, extraordinarily expensive) that are basically unfakeable.




GARAK: When Senator Vreenak arrives, you will show him a holographic recording of a secret meeting held at the highest level of the Dominion in which the planned invasion of Romulus is being discussed. You will tell the Senator that this information was obtained through various covert means at great cost to the Federation. At least ten good men lost their lives bringing it across the line, that sort of thing. He will immediately suspect it's a forgery, but you will assure him that such a thing would be impossible. You see, Senator, this is an official Cardassian transcript. It was recorded on a one time optolythic data rod used for official record keeping. These rods are manufactured only as needed on Cardassia Prime. Information can only be transcribed on them once, and then cannot be altered.



SISKO: He'll want to examine it.



DS9: In the Pale Moonlight






Interestingly, the log in TOS: Court Martial is recognised as being susceptible to tampering but since the only ones who could tamper with it are Kirk (the accused), Spock (his loyal Number One and basically above suspicion) and the victim, the idea that it might be inaccurate was discounted out of hand until Spock noticed that the computer was acting funny.




COGLEY: Hypothetically, Mister Spock. Hypothetically, Miss Shaw. If what you suggest had been done, it would be beyond the capabilities
of most men. Is that true?



SPOCK: Affirmative.



COGLEY: What man aboard ship would it not be beyond?



SPOCK: The Captain, myself, and the records officer.



TOS: Court Martial







share|improve this answer














Federation (and other) logs are, for the most part, susceptible to manipulation by computer experts. The principle is that if they're used as the basis for legal proceedings that they're treated as any other piece of evidence, normally highly reliable but potentially alterable.




GRAL: These accusations are absurd. We had nothing to do with this alleged attack.



ARCHER: The Andorian sensor logs. Look them over yourself.



GRAL: Logs can be fabricated.



ENT: Babel One




and




DAX: If you want, you can check our ship's logs and they'll prove it to you.



COLYUS: Logs can be tampered with. Well, you ought know that. After all, you claim to be a Security Officer.



DS9: Shadowplay




Note that there are ways of cross-checking the logs with other logs to confirm their veracity




DATA: By comparing the Stargazer's main computer log with Captain Picard's personal log, I have found checksum discrepancies, sir.



RIKER: What does that mean?



DATA: All information is time-coded by entry, and the bits when totaled produce an aggregate amount which



TNG: The Battle




And later in DS9 we see that there are some kinds of logs (highly specialised, rarely used, extraordinarily expensive) that are basically unfakeable.




GARAK: When Senator Vreenak arrives, you will show him a holographic recording of a secret meeting held at the highest level of the Dominion in which the planned invasion of Romulus is being discussed. You will tell the Senator that this information was obtained through various covert means at great cost to the Federation. At least ten good men lost their lives bringing it across the line, that sort of thing. He will immediately suspect it's a forgery, but you will assure him that such a thing would be impossible. You see, Senator, this is an official Cardassian transcript. It was recorded on a one time optolythic data rod used for official record keeping. These rods are manufactured only as needed on Cardassia Prime. Information can only be transcribed on them once, and then cannot be altered.



SISKO: He'll want to examine it.



DS9: In the Pale Moonlight






Interestingly, the log in TOS: Court Martial is recognised as being susceptible to tampering but since the only ones who could tamper with it are Kirk (the accused), Spock (his loyal Number One and basically above suspicion) and the victim, the idea that it might be inaccurate was discounted out of hand until Spock noticed that the computer was acting funny.




COGLEY: Hypothetically, Mister Spock. Hypothetically, Miss Shaw. If what you suggest had been done, it would be beyond the capabilities
of most men. Is that true?



SPOCK: Affirmative.



COGLEY: What man aboard ship would it not be beyond?



SPOCK: The Captain, myself, and the records officer.



TOS: Court Martial








share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Dec 13 at 20:20

























answered Dec 13 at 20:14









Valorum

393k10228513086




393k10228513086












  • +1 Right, so why then do they continue to use them? For example, why design a machine or system that writes logs, I mean, you might be able to get some "truth" out of it, but still, you're dealing with mutable information.
    – user108190
    Dec 13 at 20:24






  • 15




    @BasementJoe The primary use of logs is not to serve as evidence in a court of law, they're to track information relevant to the ship. There are many examples of similar types of logs in the real world that can be changed, manipulated, or destroyed. That doesn't make them not useful.
    – Kyle Doyle
    Dec 13 at 20:34








  • 2




    @BasementJoe - the average person can't change them in a way that can't be easily detected. Even the most skilful programmer can't change them in a way that can't be uncovered with a high level scan or cross-check. Basically you need to be an uber-programmer capable of altering dozens of integrated logs from multiple systems
    – Valorum
    Dec 13 at 20:49








  • 1




    One thing nice about log files is if you can determine that they have been manipulated then you have learned something. In a way, like a honey trap.
    – Jim
    Dec 13 at 22:35






  • 1




    @BasementJoe History books are famously written by the winners; why bother to read history books then? Statistics can be manipulated and scientific studies falsified for personal gain; so why do we rely so heavily on science for advancements in the modern age? Because nothing is perfect. There's no such thing as a completely 100% reliable method of recording "the truth." Not IRL, and evidently not in Star Trek either. Heck, what we consider "the truth" itself can change over time. If we're going to get anything done, we have to draw a line between "perfect" and "good enough."
    – Steve-O
    Dec 14 at 14:50


















  • +1 Right, so why then do they continue to use them? For example, why design a machine or system that writes logs, I mean, you might be able to get some "truth" out of it, but still, you're dealing with mutable information.
    – user108190
    Dec 13 at 20:24






  • 15




    @BasementJoe The primary use of logs is not to serve as evidence in a court of law, they're to track information relevant to the ship. There are many examples of similar types of logs in the real world that can be changed, manipulated, or destroyed. That doesn't make them not useful.
    – Kyle Doyle
    Dec 13 at 20:34








  • 2




    @BasementJoe - the average person can't change them in a way that can't be easily detected. Even the most skilful programmer can't change them in a way that can't be uncovered with a high level scan or cross-check. Basically you need to be an uber-programmer capable of altering dozens of integrated logs from multiple systems
    – Valorum
    Dec 13 at 20:49








  • 1




    One thing nice about log files is if you can determine that they have been manipulated then you have learned something. In a way, like a honey trap.
    – Jim
    Dec 13 at 22:35






  • 1




    @BasementJoe History books are famously written by the winners; why bother to read history books then? Statistics can be manipulated and scientific studies falsified for personal gain; so why do we rely so heavily on science for advancements in the modern age? Because nothing is perfect. There's no such thing as a completely 100% reliable method of recording "the truth." Not IRL, and evidently not in Star Trek either. Heck, what we consider "the truth" itself can change over time. If we're going to get anything done, we have to draw a line between "perfect" and "good enough."
    – Steve-O
    Dec 14 at 14:50
















+1 Right, so why then do they continue to use them? For example, why design a machine or system that writes logs, I mean, you might be able to get some "truth" out of it, but still, you're dealing with mutable information.
– user108190
Dec 13 at 20:24




+1 Right, so why then do they continue to use them? For example, why design a machine or system that writes logs, I mean, you might be able to get some "truth" out of it, but still, you're dealing with mutable information.
– user108190
Dec 13 at 20:24




15




15




@BasementJoe The primary use of logs is not to serve as evidence in a court of law, they're to track information relevant to the ship. There are many examples of similar types of logs in the real world that can be changed, manipulated, or destroyed. That doesn't make them not useful.
– Kyle Doyle
Dec 13 at 20:34






@BasementJoe The primary use of logs is not to serve as evidence in a court of law, they're to track information relevant to the ship. There are many examples of similar types of logs in the real world that can be changed, manipulated, or destroyed. That doesn't make them not useful.
– Kyle Doyle
Dec 13 at 20:34






2




2




@BasementJoe - the average person can't change them in a way that can't be easily detected. Even the most skilful programmer can't change them in a way that can't be uncovered with a high level scan or cross-check. Basically you need to be an uber-programmer capable of altering dozens of integrated logs from multiple systems
– Valorum
Dec 13 at 20:49






@BasementJoe - the average person can't change them in a way that can't be easily detected. Even the most skilful programmer can't change them in a way that can't be uncovered with a high level scan or cross-check. Basically you need to be an uber-programmer capable of altering dozens of integrated logs from multiple systems
– Valorum
Dec 13 at 20:49






1




1




One thing nice about log files is if you can determine that they have been manipulated then you have learned something. In a way, like a honey trap.
– Jim
Dec 13 at 22:35




One thing nice about log files is if you can determine that they have been manipulated then you have learned something. In a way, like a honey trap.
– Jim
Dec 13 at 22:35




1




1




@BasementJoe History books are famously written by the winners; why bother to read history books then? Statistics can be manipulated and scientific studies falsified for personal gain; so why do we rely so heavily on science for advancements in the modern age? Because nothing is perfect. There's no such thing as a completely 100% reliable method of recording "the truth." Not IRL, and evidently not in Star Trek either. Heck, what we consider "the truth" itself can change over time. If we're going to get anything done, we have to draw a line between "perfect" and "good enough."
– Steve-O
Dec 14 at 14:50




@BasementJoe History books are famously written by the winners; why bother to read history books then? Statistics can be manipulated and scientific studies falsified for personal gain; so why do we rely so heavily on science for advancements in the modern age? Because nothing is perfect. There's no such thing as a completely 100% reliable method of recording "the truth." Not IRL, and evidently not in Star Trek either. Heck, what we consider "the truth" itself can change over time. If we're going to get anything done, we have to draw a line between "perfect" and "good enough."
– Steve-O
Dec 14 at 14:50












up vote
3
down vote













The chain of command can benefit from inaccurate logs.



According to Captain Janeway, Starfleet captains, in the best interest of carrying out their responsibilities, sometimes require greater freedom to act than Federation law and Starfleet regulations can officially sanction. Call this the idealistic explanation:




JANEWAY: It would seem that Captain Sulu decided not to enter that journey into his official log. The day's entry makes some cryptic remark about the ship being damaged in a gaseous anomaly and needing repairs, but nothing else.



KIM: You mean he falsified his logs?



JANEWAY: It was a very different time, Mister Kim. Captain Sulu, Captain Kirk, Dr. McCoy. They all belonged to a different breed of Starfleet officer. Imagine the era they lived in. The Alpha Quadrant still largely unexplored. Humanity on verge of war with Klingons. Romulans hiding behind every nebula. Even the technology we take for granted was still in its early stages. No plasma weapons, no multiphasic shields. Their ships were half as fast.



— "Flashback" (Voyager, 3x02)




There is also a self-serving interpretation. Captain Sulu's inaccurate log, in this instance, omitted the fact that his illegal order resulted in the death of at least one crew member under his command. It's unknown how Starfleet dealt with this breach of regulations and ethics, although Sulu's career and reputation does not seem to have suffered for it.



"Court Martial" (TOS, 1x14) established that ships' computers keep audio-video records of the bridge. In addition to putting a favourable spin on his own log, Captain Sulu would have needed to alter the bridge recording to keep the events out of Starfleet's official record.






share|improve this answer



















  • 2




    In this case the log wasn't falsified by changing the information already in it, it was altered by failing to log information about what was happening. It's possible that other logs on the ship (energy usage, stellar navigation, etc) would have shown their main log to be false if anyone had taken the time/energy/inclination to look
    – Valorum
    Dec 13 at 21:00












  • There's also all of the eyewitnesses on the Excelsior, so I imagine there was at least some sort of inquiry rather than a forced coverup.
    – Gaultheria
    Dec 13 at 23:44















up vote
3
down vote













The chain of command can benefit from inaccurate logs.



According to Captain Janeway, Starfleet captains, in the best interest of carrying out their responsibilities, sometimes require greater freedom to act than Federation law and Starfleet regulations can officially sanction. Call this the idealistic explanation:




JANEWAY: It would seem that Captain Sulu decided not to enter that journey into his official log. The day's entry makes some cryptic remark about the ship being damaged in a gaseous anomaly and needing repairs, but nothing else.



KIM: You mean he falsified his logs?



JANEWAY: It was a very different time, Mister Kim. Captain Sulu, Captain Kirk, Dr. McCoy. They all belonged to a different breed of Starfleet officer. Imagine the era they lived in. The Alpha Quadrant still largely unexplored. Humanity on verge of war with Klingons. Romulans hiding behind every nebula. Even the technology we take for granted was still in its early stages. No plasma weapons, no multiphasic shields. Their ships were half as fast.



— "Flashback" (Voyager, 3x02)




There is also a self-serving interpretation. Captain Sulu's inaccurate log, in this instance, omitted the fact that his illegal order resulted in the death of at least one crew member under his command. It's unknown how Starfleet dealt with this breach of regulations and ethics, although Sulu's career and reputation does not seem to have suffered for it.



"Court Martial" (TOS, 1x14) established that ships' computers keep audio-video records of the bridge. In addition to putting a favourable spin on his own log, Captain Sulu would have needed to alter the bridge recording to keep the events out of Starfleet's official record.






share|improve this answer



















  • 2




    In this case the log wasn't falsified by changing the information already in it, it was altered by failing to log information about what was happening. It's possible that other logs on the ship (energy usage, stellar navigation, etc) would have shown their main log to be false if anyone had taken the time/energy/inclination to look
    – Valorum
    Dec 13 at 21:00












  • There's also all of the eyewitnesses on the Excelsior, so I imagine there was at least some sort of inquiry rather than a forced coverup.
    – Gaultheria
    Dec 13 at 23:44













up vote
3
down vote










up vote
3
down vote









The chain of command can benefit from inaccurate logs.



According to Captain Janeway, Starfleet captains, in the best interest of carrying out their responsibilities, sometimes require greater freedom to act than Federation law and Starfleet regulations can officially sanction. Call this the idealistic explanation:




JANEWAY: It would seem that Captain Sulu decided not to enter that journey into his official log. The day's entry makes some cryptic remark about the ship being damaged in a gaseous anomaly and needing repairs, but nothing else.



KIM: You mean he falsified his logs?



JANEWAY: It was a very different time, Mister Kim. Captain Sulu, Captain Kirk, Dr. McCoy. They all belonged to a different breed of Starfleet officer. Imagine the era they lived in. The Alpha Quadrant still largely unexplored. Humanity on verge of war with Klingons. Romulans hiding behind every nebula. Even the technology we take for granted was still in its early stages. No plasma weapons, no multiphasic shields. Their ships were half as fast.



— "Flashback" (Voyager, 3x02)




There is also a self-serving interpretation. Captain Sulu's inaccurate log, in this instance, omitted the fact that his illegal order resulted in the death of at least one crew member under his command. It's unknown how Starfleet dealt with this breach of regulations and ethics, although Sulu's career and reputation does not seem to have suffered for it.



"Court Martial" (TOS, 1x14) established that ships' computers keep audio-video records of the bridge. In addition to putting a favourable spin on his own log, Captain Sulu would have needed to alter the bridge recording to keep the events out of Starfleet's official record.






share|improve this answer














The chain of command can benefit from inaccurate logs.



According to Captain Janeway, Starfleet captains, in the best interest of carrying out their responsibilities, sometimes require greater freedom to act than Federation law and Starfleet regulations can officially sanction. Call this the idealistic explanation:




JANEWAY: It would seem that Captain Sulu decided not to enter that journey into his official log. The day's entry makes some cryptic remark about the ship being damaged in a gaseous anomaly and needing repairs, but nothing else.



KIM: You mean he falsified his logs?



JANEWAY: It was a very different time, Mister Kim. Captain Sulu, Captain Kirk, Dr. McCoy. They all belonged to a different breed of Starfleet officer. Imagine the era they lived in. The Alpha Quadrant still largely unexplored. Humanity on verge of war with Klingons. Romulans hiding behind every nebula. Even the technology we take for granted was still in its early stages. No plasma weapons, no multiphasic shields. Their ships were half as fast.



— "Flashback" (Voyager, 3x02)




There is also a self-serving interpretation. Captain Sulu's inaccurate log, in this instance, omitted the fact that his illegal order resulted in the death of at least one crew member under his command. It's unknown how Starfleet dealt with this breach of regulations and ethics, although Sulu's career and reputation does not seem to have suffered for it.



"Court Martial" (TOS, 1x14) established that ships' computers keep audio-video records of the bridge. In addition to putting a favourable spin on his own log, Captain Sulu would have needed to alter the bridge recording to keep the events out of Starfleet's official record.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Dec 13 at 21:16

























answered Dec 13 at 20:57









Gaultheria

9,65812755




9,65812755








  • 2




    In this case the log wasn't falsified by changing the information already in it, it was altered by failing to log information about what was happening. It's possible that other logs on the ship (energy usage, stellar navigation, etc) would have shown their main log to be false if anyone had taken the time/energy/inclination to look
    – Valorum
    Dec 13 at 21:00












  • There's also all of the eyewitnesses on the Excelsior, so I imagine there was at least some sort of inquiry rather than a forced coverup.
    – Gaultheria
    Dec 13 at 23:44














  • 2




    In this case the log wasn't falsified by changing the information already in it, it was altered by failing to log information about what was happening. It's possible that other logs on the ship (energy usage, stellar navigation, etc) would have shown their main log to be false if anyone had taken the time/energy/inclination to look
    – Valorum
    Dec 13 at 21:00












  • There's also all of the eyewitnesses on the Excelsior, so I imagine there was at least some sort of inquiry rather than a forced coverup.
    – Gaultheria
    Dec 13 at 23:44








2




2




In this case the log wasn't falsified by changing the information already in it, it was altered by failing to log information about what was happening. It's possible that other logs on the ship (energy usage, stellar navigation, etc) would have shown their main log to be false if anyone had taken the time/energy/inclination to look
– Valorum
Dec 13 at 21:00






In this case the log wasn't falsified by changing the information already in it, it was altered by failing to log information about what was happening. It's possible that other logs on the ship (energy usage, stellar navigation, etc) would have shown their main log to be false if anyone had taken the time/energy/inclination to look
– Valorum
Dec 13 at 21:00














There's also all of the eyewitnesses on the Excelsior, so I imagine there was at least some sort of inquiry rather than a forced coverup.
– Gaultheria
Dec 13 at 23:44




There's also all of the eyewitnesses on the Excelsior, so I imagine there was at least some sort of inquiry rather than a forced coverup.
– Gaultheria
Dec 13 at 23:44


















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