« February 2006 | Main | April 2006 »

March 30, 2006

New Cold War - Dr.K's Personal Paranoia Meter

This "New Cold War" Paranoia-Meter will help you track just how I paranoid I am feeling about the New Cold War.

Lets Explain the system:




I am chilled out because there is little threat of a New Cold War.

I don't commit criminal acts, and could not possibly be considered a terrorist or subversive threat in our free society.

I feel safe because I know that my democratically elected government and their representatives only have my interests at heart.




I am edgy because the border between acts of terrorism and acts of legitimate protest is being eroded daily.

Dissent is suppressed and commonplace acts of technological exploration are being punished by prison sentences.

Meanwhile we are governed by PR spin merchants who ensure that free speech is a distant memory.

In the New Cold War - truth is the first victim




I am nervous because nobody knows who "the enemy" is anymore.

I am starting to wonder whether we aren't ALL the enemy now.

I am starting to wonder whether I might not be the enemy after all.




I am worried and have burned all my books and deleted all my files.

I no longer discuss anything in public with strangers and only speak to my friends in private.

I am thinking of informing on myself so I can testify as chief witness with immunity from prosecution and start a new life under the witness protection program



new-cold-war-05.jpg

I am paranoid because I am being shot by both sides - everybody wants to shoot the messenger.

If Homeland Security don't get me then the Religious Police will. Even if they fail there are Mormons, Jehovahs's Witnesses and Templars who are out to get me ....

It looks like there is no place for filthy hippy atheist anarchist dissenters in the New Cold War and I am making a will.



Tags:


March 29, 2006

Nailing the "Big Lie"

Anyone who reads this entry might be thinking I’m about to rant on about Big Brother propaganda and the USA.

You might even be expecting me to say something like the standard CND propaganda line presented at the last Anti-War rally in London.

The US is making charges about a covert nuclear weapons programme in Iran without presenting any credible evidence.

These charges are strikingly similar to the false accusations raised to justify the invasion of Iraq three years ago.

I agree – they are “strikingly similar” – but I don’t want to talk about that.

Today the “Big Lie” I want to nail is Iranian.

It’s not that I trust the US Government not to lie about WMD - Bush did it before and I’m sure he’d do it again – but I just can’t get a sensible answer to a sensible question out of the anti-war faction.

My question is very simple and goes like this:

Why would a country like Iran, which holds oil reserves of approx 132.5 billion barrels - roughly 14% of the world’s oil reserves, and which also holds 812 trillion cubic feet of gas reserves – 15.8% of the world’s gas reserves - choose to develop nuclear energy as an alternative power source - with the huge expense, environmental risk, and danger of political fallout?

In a country which enjoys an average of 8.5 hours of sunlight per day wouldn’t a solar solution be more ecologically and politically acceptable?

So far nobody has come up with a sensible answer that convinces me the Iranians are not developing nuclear weapons covertly under the cover of the “peaceful nuclear programme”.

But some of the anti-war faction are so blind they end up justifying the worst kind of appeasement - allowing Iranian access to nuclear weapons.

Every peace activist on the globe ought to be in the streets and elsewhere lobbying in support of something very simple: do not attack Iran, even if this means allowing Iran to develop its own nuclear weapons.

I don’t want a war either - but the idea of allowing the Iranian government to own nuclear weapons will not help me sleep securely in my bed at night.

It raises my level of paranoia and insecurity higher than they ever were in the “Old Cold War”.

Things are already bad enough with Israel, India and Pakistan developing nuclear weapons, the collapse of the Soviet Union allowing nuclear materials, expertise and possibly weapons to be sold to the highest bidders, and the threat of possible terrorist bio-chemical attacks.

Anyone who lived through the “Old Cold War” will be watching in dismay as we enter the “New Cold War”.

Now that we are in the New Cold War we can watch the propaganda and paranoia levels being raised – as the 21st century “USAxis” and “IslamAxis” go eyeball to eyeball before squaring up to each other in a war of words …

Ding! Ding! Seconds Out! Two Tribes …

Anyone else who is old enough to have lived through the pre-war years of the appeasement of Hitler when he was re-arming - despite the Treaty of Versailles - will be getting a profound and uneasy sense of deja-vu.

At that time the anti-war appeasement monkeys opined that:

(a) Hitler only wanted to protect himself from the Russians – so needed to re-arm

(b) The annexation of Austria, Sudetenland, and Czechoslovakia were just Hitler “re-adjusting his borders” within traditional and historic limits

(c) That nice Mr. Hitler was an honourable man who had been democratically elected and would never think about going to war with England.

Any old excuse really – but the excuses were all just a load of appeasement monkey doo-doo.

It didn’t work then - it won’t work now.

We all know how that turned out – a bloody conflict that turned much of “Old Europe” into rubble - and caused an estimated 62 million deaths.

You see – I’d prefer “Jaw-Jaw rather than War-War” but sometimes we need to take action.

Now is about right - before the nuclear stakes become like poker chips on a gambling table - like the “Old Cold War”.

Anybody remember “Mutually Assured Destruction” (MAD)?

I remember MAD – and I don’t want to go there again.

The last thing our global culture needs is a new “missile gap”, a new “arms race” - or a "New Cold War".

So when peaceniks point out that WWII cost 62 million lives and argue “shouldn’t we try and stop WWIII now” – I have to agree with them.

We should try and stop war - but allowing Iran to develop nuclear weapons will do nothing to prevent the 620+ million deaths that WWIII would cost.

I have to look at the facts – and the facts worry me more than any appeasement monkey suggestions from people who would normally oppose nuclear power at the drop of a hat.

Perhaps nuclear power is OK for the Iranians - right? But I’m a cynical old git – and I have a long memory.

Maybe I’m forgetting something.

After all “Islam is a religion of peace” - maybe it’s nothing like National Socialism after all – perhaps I’ve been reading too much Islamaphobic material that just emphasises the threat.

After all - that nice Mr. Ahmadinejad is a responsible leader of a democratic country – so even if we allowed the Iranians to have nuclear weapons they would never want to attack us would they?

I wonder what the Iranians have to say on the subject.

"The United States has the power to cause harm and pain. But the United States is also susceptible to harm and pain.

So if that is the path that the U.S. wishes to choose, let the ball roll"

That sounds like a nicely chilled out attitude to foreign policy.

I wonder what they think of Israel.

Our enemies on the one hand oppose our nation’s acquisition of nuclear energy and on the other hand want to divert the attention of other nations from the key issue of Palestine to give an opportunity to the Zionist regime to prolong its existence

One of the main reasons why the big powers oppose Iran on the nuclear issue is for the sake of the Zionist regime, so as to let this regime live on.

But they are unaware that not only will the Iranian nation continue in the path of obtaining nuclear energy till the end, it will not even for one instant divert its attention from the issue of Palestine

OK – I can cope with a bit of anti-Zionist ranting – but this next bit promotes a picture of Iran as a nation of peaceful people who can be trusted to use their nuclear weapons responsibly when they get them.

Do the removal of Israel before it is too late and save yourself from the fury of regional nations," the ultra-conservative president said.

He once again called the Holocaust a "fairy tale" and said Europeans have become hostages of "Zionists" in Israel.

He also accused Europeans for not allowing "neutral scholars" to investigate in Europe and make a scientific report on "the truth about the fairy tale of Holocaust."

I could keep going - but you get the picture.

Ahmadinejad promotes beliefs such as “the fairy tale of the holocaust” that are not mainstream - to say the least – in most western democracies.

In fact you can be arrested and prosecuted for saying the same thing in many western European countries.

If there is one thing I do like about Ahmadinejad – he is such a reasonable man.

So we can rely on the Iranian leader to ensure that religious tolerance will be the norm in Iran.

I will stop Christianity in this country ...

If the Iranian leader is so tolerant – what about the role of women in Iran?

The gathering of hundreds of women in Tehran to mark the International Women's Day was brutally attacked by security forces on Wednesday, March 8.

A unique video clip from this barbaric act against a peaceful gathering has been provided to the Iranian Resistance.

The attached clip here shows clearly how women were attacked and beaten up by truncheons and forced to disperse.

I guess the rights of homosexuals in Iran are also guaranteed then?

The new wave of anti-gay repression in Iran came to world attention with the torture and hanging of two gay teenagers in the city of Mashad on July 19; they were each lashed 228 times before having the nooses placed around their necks.

No? Well surely the record of Iranian human rights must be better?

No one knows how many people are held in Iran’s prisons and secret detention centers for the peaceful expression of their views.

Over the past four years, as the window of free expression has closed in Iran, abuse and torture of dissidents have increased in Evin Prison’s solitary cells and secret detention centers.

Meanwhile, back in Tehran, enabling free speech is a priority for the government.

Hossein Derakhshan is on tour. In the past few years, he has become the public face of Iran's beleaguered bloggers, more than a dozen of whom have been arrested for their politics.

The crackdown has stifled Iran's exploding Web culture, and Derakhshan is making a swing along the Eastern Seaboard to drum up support for the bloggers back home.


So there we have it.

We can only conclude that Iran is a reasonable country that only wants to protect itself from its enemies, possibly re-adjust its borders a little, and would never go to war with us.

The Iranian nuclear program is entirely peaceful because they need to develop an alternative energy source and they don’t have any intention of developing nuclear weapons with any of the reprocessed material.

This is because they live in a very dark country – so they have no chance of developing alternative solar resources. (I have enquired about windmills but I haven’t had a reply yet).

Meanwhile democracy in Iran continues to flourish with freedom of speech, equal rights for all religions, and equal rights for women and homosexuals.

Tomorrow I was going to talk about the reality of Santa Claus – but in the “New Cold War” - there is no Sanity Clause.


Tags:


March 25, 2006

Operation Cleanfeed

While in Fuengirola the other day I bought a copy of the Daily Mail.

The advertisement article about BT Cleanfeed caught my eye for some reason.

The evil trade in child porn on the Internet is growing at a shocking rate.

Yet simple technology can block ALL these sites and put the pornographers out of business.

So why are some Internet companies refusing to use it?

I’ve registered my objections to blanket “blacklist” ISP censorship systems like BT Cleanfeed before – but this two-page PR puff article takes the biscuit – some of my objections are listed below.

My first objection is that the Daily Mail have actually made it *easier* for perverts to find illegal material – even though they have obscured the names of the guilty parties.

I’ll pick a quote at random.

… there is a the video ... of a ten year old girl “very cute sweety, in pain she’s even more beautiful” …

There are more quotes like this in the article – designed to overwhelm the reader with shock and horror so they buy into the major premise of the story – but each and every quote provides enough information for a Google user to locate the sites in question within minutes.

This is a big bonus for novice Internet perverts who haven’t managed to hook up with their more experienced brethren – but now the Daily Mail has managed to provide the information for anyone who can read.

I guess the author of the article did exactly what I did - looked at the links in Google - - an act which is not illegal – rather than viewing the websites – which is illegal.

There was a high degree of match between the quotes in the initial opening paragraphs of the article and the material I found on Google – too high a match in my opinion – haven’t the Daily Mail heard of synonyms, rewriting or selective editing?

I considered rewriting the quote above – but as (i) I am quoting the Daily Mail in this context I wanted to leave as much intact as possible, (ii) the illegal website in question has been removed from the (possibly) hacked site that was doing the hosting, and (iii) the damage has well and truly been done – how many people read the Daily Mail as opposed to my blog?

The Daily Mail provided enough information to any pervert with a knowledge of the Internet to find exactly the kind of goods that were being described in the article – you can’t buy advertising like that – especially with the circulation of the Daily Mail.

Shame on you Daily Mail! Next time you do an expose like that - rewrite the quotes so that they don’t lead perverts directly to illegal material – you changed the names – why not change the quotes as well?

Next on my list – the often cited figures about “100,000” attempted “accesses” to illegal material daily – figures that cannot be verified by any critical external observer because BT Cleanfeed is a closed system.

No-one can verify that the blocked URLs are illegal – that would be illegal – and BT Cleanfeed release few details about what sites are blocked as illegal because that would be like providing a directory of illegal sites.

In just two years the number of ... websites identified by British police has increased by an astonishing 78 percent to 6,128, virtually all of them abroad.

Every day in Britain alone, more than 100,000 attempts are made to access pornographic images of children- three times the number recorded in 2004.

Yet nobody can independently confirm these figures because:

The "BlackList" is secret - and any attempt to reverse engineer the contents of the BlackList might be illegal under the DMCA - and no checking can be made of the BlackListed sites anyhow.

If you really do stumble upon a dubious site - and confirm that the BlackList is working - then you are open to prosecution for viewing the wrong kind of site.

Otherwise we have no idea who is "BlackListed" - as I said the whole .ru domain seems suspect

The blunt instrument of blacklist usage - blocking servers, domains and subdomains because they are suspected of hosting illegal material - inflates the illegal “access” figures by including innocent Internet users along with the guilty – and also damages free speech.

If I access some domain in Russia that is blocked because certain hosts inside that domain are guilty of hosting illegal material – does my attempt to access that domain count as an attempt to “access” the wrong type of material?

If a domain, subdomain or even a single server were blacklisted - then BT Cleanfeed has no way of knowing whether I wanted to access legal or illegal material from that server, domain or subdomain.

The BT Cleanfeed system only knows that a site is blacklisted – and then counts any attempted access as an “attempt to access” illegal material – this must inflate the figures for “attempted illegal accesses”.

So we can’t take the claim that “100,000” attempts per day are made to “access” illegal material seriously until we know more about how BT Cleanfeed works - but we can’t find out how BT Cleanfeed works because it is secret – and if we try and figure out how it works we might be prosecuted anyway.

This is called “Catch-22” – and I still fail to see how it helps to protect children from abuse.

While we have no way of knowing the true validity of the statistics claimed for the BT Cleanfeed system – we do know that people in Russia, China and many other countries rely on the web and P2P file sharing to promote freedom of speech and free communication of ideas away from the hand of repressive government restrictions.

If whole networks are blacklisted how will they get their information?

Any server could be blacklisted for a number of reasons – including being compromised by criminal hackers seeking to set up illegal sites - but should that server be blocked because criminal elements have used it?

How long should the block last?

How would you even know that you had been blocked – after all the contents of the BT Cleanfeed blacklist are a secret – when all that appears on the screen is an error message?

In my mind there is no room in any democracy for any “secret blacklists” – they must be open to inspection – not only to ensure that data integrity, data security and data access are not compromised in any way – but also to ensure that the commercial claims based on any statistics are grounded in some kind of reality.

That is especially true when the system is from a UK company, the product costs 2K and which is being heavily promoted by the UK government who are looking for “100% takeup”.

Right now the BT Cleanfeed system provides none of the transparency and openness that we have come to expect from the current government – who claim to be in favour of “open government” – but that comes as no surprise.

I guess the correct democratic solution is to form a panel of IT experts, academics, hackers, media people, and law-enforcement types - with a sprinkling of the great and good and a couple of Tony’s cronies - to monitor the performance of the near-monopoly that BT Cleanfeed will enjoy.

At least it would help to ensure that BT Cleanfeed (i) works as specified, (ii) that any available public data was consistent and complete, (iii) that standard concerns about data integrity, security and access were addressed and (iv) that the BT Cleanfeed system cannot be reverse-engineered or hacked in order to provide a “directory of illegal sites”.

Next up – the canard about blacklists fixing the problem of child abuse on the net.

Campaigners against child abuse quite reasonably argue that if people cannot reach the websites, the criminals cannot profit from their crimes.

Whereas campaigners against secret and undemocratic blacklists reasonably argue that blacklists do not prevent children being abused, and also that black lists do not prevent perverts accessing illegal material.

Paul Goggins - the government Home Office Minister in charge of illegal websites – wants 100% of UK ISPs to take up the scheme – costing 2K plus implementation costs and is “determined that we will hit 100%”

That 100% figure looks good on paper – but it sweeps the problem of child abuse websites under the carpet where NuLabour can claim that they have tackled yet another problem successfully.

The bonus “spin-factor” of keeping abusive material “out of sight and out of mind” is good – but better still - NuLabour have made money for “Cool Britannia Plc” in the process – which should guarantee at least some of them nice directorships when they retire from politics.

The government should concentrate on action against the criminals who abuse children for profit in marginal and 3rd world countries, rather than applying media-friendly quick-fix band-aid solutions. The use of secret blacklists does not stop children being abused, nor does it stop perverts viewing illegal material – but it does make for positive spin – no surprise that NuLabour has chosen it then.

Finally, it would seem that the Daily Mail has a very shaky grasp of the “common carrier” principle.

Worryingly the ISPA is insisting its members are “mere conduits” for these depraved images, pleading that ISPs are “carriers’ of information like the postal service.

Except, or course, the postal service delivers to a specific person and the content of the postbag is not open to anyone.

I hate to mention this to the Daily Mail – but the contents of TCP/IP traffic are delivered to a specific person – the one operating the computer.

In addition to that – anything delivered via an SSL connection is also “not open to anyone” – although unencrypted traffic can still be sniffed of course.

My preferred analogy would be if the criminals who ran these operations sent out their “brochures” via snail-mail, the perverts then sent back payment via snail-mail using postal orders, and then the illegal material was sent back via snail-mail to the perverts.

Would the Daily Mail then advocate that because the Post Office is carrying illegal material they should be prosecuted?

No they would not – because the Post Office – like ISPs - are common carriers.

ISPs are not responsible for the material they transact across their networks anymore than the Post Office is responsible for illegal material delivered by post, or Fedex is responsible when criminals use their system to distribute illegal drugs.

… the ISPA asserts that it must rely on the general public and official agencies to police the net. It cannot do it, it says, because it is not “possible or practical” to monitor content.

Even if it was “possible or practical” to monitor content - would the Daily Mail advocate the opening of every parcel, letter or package in the country if it was conclusively proved that criminals were using postal and parcel delivery services to make an illegal profit?

Once again they would not – and if they did then the Post Office would point out that they were not responsible for the mail they handled – and invoke the “common carrier” principle.

So why does the Daily Mail apply one rule to the ISPs and another to more traditional forms of communication?

The appalling fact is that the government and big media are using the illegal content stick to force UK ISPs into using monopolistic CensorWare which restricts access to certain websites – the details of which are held on a secret blacklist which has no integrity checks and no accountability – and which can never work anyway.

What price free speech?

Are we to allow blacklist censorship via the back door in the name of protecting children – even though blacklist censorship does not protect children – or are we going to try and find ways of protecting free speech while still tackling the problem of child abuse?

Right now the choices are open.

We can accept passive CensorWare that glosses over the problem and waves a media friendly magic wand to convince the public that the government is doing something, or we can find a more proactive solution to child abuse – one that doesn’t involve secret blacklists and covert censorship.

The government could start by looking at the international links between the criminal gangs that are involved in human trafficking for sexual activity, child pornography, and pornography spam, rather than promoting this flawed approach

Until the government tackles the problem properly a secret blacklist will be determining everything you see or hear on the web, children will still be abused and perverts will still find illegal material on the web.

Is that the solution we want?

Can't we do more for these children?

This is not a solution – this is a problem that is not going to go away unless tackled properly – and blacklist censorship is not tackling the problem properly.

Its time to change the system – tackle the causes and not the symptoms - but NuLabour were always about shallow quick fixes backed up with propaganda - so I won’t hold my breath.


Tags:


DRM: Now EMI want to play too

You'd think after the SONY DRM debacle that big media companies would have wised up.

But no - from this report in Boing Boing it now appears that EMI are playing the DRM game now.

There are two buttons below the agreement. The first reads "Accept the Agreement" the second reads "Reject it". After reading all the above, I decided to reject it, and pressed the "reject" button. Immediately a screen with the word "Initializing" appeared, the proprietary software was installed, and the music started to play in my computer using the proprietary EMI player, as if I had "accepted" the whole thing.

So the softare is installed without explict consent, and EMI haven't provided an un-installer - that sounds like malware to me.

I'll be interested to hear what the Freedom to Tinker team have to say about the mechanisms used - asuming they woun't get prosecuted under the DMCA for investigating - and whether the EMI DRM uses rootkit style "cloaking technology" to interefere with the proper running of the operating system while possibly introducing system security vulnerabilities.

You would think that EMI - having seen the web campaign against SONY, read about the SONY DRM debacle in the trade papers, and noted the successful EFF suit against SONY - would have decided that DRM was a big mistake

1. DRM hurts paying customers
2. DRM destroys Fair Use rights
3. DRM renders customers' investments worthless
4. DRM can be defeated
5. DRM encourages platform lockdown and discourages innovation
6. DRM encourages "content lockin" or "corporate authorship"

There are many reasons not to use DRM - but big media seem helll bent on enforcing it anyway - even against the customers will.

Time to start boycotting all DRM encoded music - there are enough smalll labels out there making great music who won't implement DRM because it is not economically feasible for them - so the alternatives are there - for now.


Tags:


March 24, 2006

Da Vinci Trial - the "smoking gun" - almost

I've spoken before about the "Da Vinci Trial" and commented then that the ideas were not original - and that for Baigent & to Leigh to claim them was laughable.

This is from "The Secret of the 59th Chapter" by Adel Abbas & Anne Fretwell (Toth Publications, 2000), page 483.

However we came to know from several ancient documents that Mary Magdalene, according to the Cathars, was married to Jesus (Dondane 1959).

Strangely enough - in all this footnoted and heavily referenced book - there is no bibliographic reference for Dondane 1959 - no title nor publisher nor any other information except for the quote above.

So even though there is a clear reference to a work that preceded Baigent & Leigh - it is impossible to track it down - because there aren't enough details.

If anyone knows of a book about the Cathars, Mary Magdalene and Jesus published by Dondane in 1959 - then I'd like to know more about it.

I've emailed the publisher - maybe the authors can clear this one up - but until they reply I'm convinced its all a conspiracy and that the Templars must be involved somewhere ...

Have I mentioned the Templars yet?


Tags:


Googles Italian Clothing

I had a day off on Monday and went to the Costa del Sol for a daytrip - to Fuengirola to be precise - to see some friends who live there.

It was OK for a day trip but I wouldn't want a week there.

I found it disconcerting every time a shop assistant told me the price of what I was buying in English after we had spoken only Spanish up until then.

Where I live hardly anybody speaks English - but being in Fuengirola was a little like being in London if I shut my eyes for a moment - so I was glad to get home from my day trip to the seaside.

Anyway - while I was in Fuengirola I was browsing the market and found clothing for sale under the "Googles" logo - see the scan below.

googles.jpg

Does this mean that Google are going to use some of their cash pile to branch out into fashion?

I think it's more likely that some chancer is (ab)using their name and logo to make a quick buck - and the clothing was worse quality and 50% more expensive than where I live.


Tags:


MPAA vs Deep Throat

I've been meaning to point out for a while that although the MPAA is all against movie "piracy" - i.e. copyright violation theft - it doesn't seem to be concerned that Deep Throat starring Linda Lovelace is widely available on all sorts of P2P sharing networks.

Today this report entitled Intellectual Property Runs Amok provides the interesting fact that I have been looking for.

42% OF ALL VIDEO files shared online are pornographic. No porn-sharing cases have yet been tried in the U.S.

Why am I not surprised at this?

Do porn film makers become members of the MPAA? or do they have to be "invited in" like members of some secret society?

Where do the MPAA get their porn films from anyhow?

Maybe they get DRM locked versions for review from the underground porn producers - just like everyone else.

They wouldn't dare to rent them from a local store - except under a false name.

They wouldn't dare pay for them via credit card from an online supplier.

They would have to go in person to their non-local porn shop and buy them in cash.

If I was cynical I could suggest that the best chance of saving them the embarrasment of the neighbours finding out that "Shemales On Top" was their favourite rented video - would be to download it from a P2P site like everyone else.

But that would be illegal wouldn't it?

So why aren't the MPAA going after the porn film file sharers if they make up 42% of the films online?

Enquiring minds want to know

Tags:


March 16, 2006

The "Da Vinci" Trial

Perhaps the funniest thing in this report today from The Herald Tribune is the following.

Baigent and Leigh are suing "Da Vinci Code" publisher Random House for copyright infringement, claiming Brown "appropriated the architecture" of their 1982 nonfiction book "The Holy Blood and the Holy Grail."

Excuse me - "non-fiction" - yeah right.

Actually it should have been filed under "Fortean" and "Forget" because it was only interesting for its 15 minutes of fame back in 1982.

If it hadn't been for the "Da Vinci Code" everyone would have forgotten the Baigent and Leigh book by now.

Except the Christians - they are a little fed up with the suggestion that Jesus married, had a child and lived happily ever after.

It seems to annoy them for some reason - something to do with the resurrection and 2,000 years of faith I guess.

But as they don't seem to be taking to the streets and demonstrating against it no-one seems to care about their feelings.

It's all about copyright - not about faith - so the "Auto da Fe" with Baigent, Leigh and Brown will have to wait for another year.

If I wasn't so new-age and fluffy I'd cynically suggest that certain authors are suffering from sour grapes and want a slice of the very large pie that Dan Brown has baked out of left over ingredients.

I suppose I should mention the Templars round about now ...


Tags:


March 15, 2006

Papal visit to UK

The recent report that the Pope might visit the UK reminded me of the joke about the graffiti on the wall during his last visit.

"No Pope Here" - it announced in huge letters across the wall.

Underneath which a very wise person had added - "Lucky Pope"


Tags:


The End of "The Blogosphere"

After the discussion on the End of CyberSpace - in which I opined that CyberSpace was the easiest and best word to use - I began to think about how much I hate the phrase "Blogosphere"

I mean - I really hate it - it doesn't sum up the strange interconnected weirdness that makes up "BlogSpace" at all.

The concept of a "sphere" limits things - a sphere has a centre and a boundary- but the centre of "BlogSpace" is a continually moving object and the boundaries of BlogSpace are always expanding.

I don't think BlogSpace is a sphere at all. Just another unique Internet space that we can enjoy - while it lasts.

I've spent a lot of time in other virtual spaces - GopherSpace, MUDSpace, USENETSpace, WAISSpace, IRCSpace and FTPSpace.

A lot of these are obsolete - but some remain - others have changed.

Once they were new and now they are superseded by something else.

I now spend a lot of time in WikiSpace, ForumSpace, IMSpace, GoogleSpace, TorrentSpace, BlogSpace and also RSS Space - which I have now come to call "SyndicSpace".

They are all regions of that thing called "CyberSpace".

For this reason I would argue that - just as the "Cyber" prefix helps to denote that the non-physical-space is "CyberSpace" and not "MeatSpace" ("Reality"), then I also argue that the "Space" suffix is enough to denote the region of "CyberSpace".

So when talking about "CyberSpace" lets talk of CyberSpace and all the different "Spaces" within in it - otherwise we might be using words that place imaginary bounded spatial metaphors on a potentially infinite space.

I look forward to "The End of the Blogosphere".

The "Blogosphere" is dead - long live BlogSpace



Tags:



March 9, 2006

Pay for Placement vs Sponsorship

This article from FreshBlog made me think about blog monetisation vs what would work better for me ..

I haven't monetised this blog - you'll find adverts on the project spaces I run - but my personal blog is free of that kind of thing.

BUT - if someone asked about a space (e.g. top left 180x100 pixels), then maybe I would hire it out .. I have bills to pay after all .. but only if I thought it was appropriate for the blog.

A lot of people don't think like that - there is money to be made - beware the "Pay for Placement" Blog

Let's say you write an average of three posts per day. If you took one paid posting per day at $20 per post and did that five days per week, that's $400 per month of income for your blog.

Where do you draw the line, though? Do you keep the advertising (and that's what it is) on topic for your blog? Do you disclose which posts are paid advertising? If you don't disclose, what's the risk of being outed?

I would draw the line when I get PAID to promote products I don't like

However .. if anyone wants something reviewed - book, film, tech-device or whatever - send it to me.

I guarantee that I will mention it here - I can't guarantee you'll like what I say though.

Any publicity is good publicity after all - especially in the Age of the Web - when SEO robots get to determine how popular you are.

Send me your books, magazines, cds, records, expensive gadgets and very fast sports cars - I guarantee to review each and every one of them ... just don't ask for them back.

If you have a product to promote - send it to me - look at it as a kind of "sponsorship" rather than "pay for placement" - and if you get a negative review just count the links - don't worry about the content.

Tags:


Data Mining Won't Stop Terror

An article today in Wired entitled Why Data Mining Won't Stop Terror goes into more detail about the problems I discussed yesterday with automated security systems that ensure We are All the Enemy Now

Data mining works best when you're searching for a well-defined profile, a reasonable number of attacks per year and a low cost of false alarms. Credit-card fraud is one of data mining's success stories: all credit-card companies mine their transaction databases for data for spending patterns that indicate a stolen card.

Many credit-card thieves share a pattern -- purchase expensive luxury goods, purchase things that can be easily fenced, etc. -- and data mining systems can minimize the losses in many cases by shutting down the card. In addition, the cost of false alarms is only a phone call to the cardholder asking him to verify a couple of purchases. The cardholders don't even resent these phone calls -- as long as they're infrequent -- so the cost is just a few minutes of operator time.

Terrorist plots are different. There is no well-defined profile and attacks are very rare. Taken together, these facts mean that data-mining systems won't uncover any terrorist plots until they are very accurate, and that even very accurate systems will be so flooded with false alarms that they will be useless.

The problem with "false positives" is compounded by the problem of "false negatives"

Let's look at some numbers. We'll be optimistic -- we'll assume the system has a one in 100 false-positive rate (99 percent accurate), and a one in 1,000 false-negative rate (99.9 percent accurate). Assume 1 trillion possible indicators to sift through: that's about 10 events -- e-mails, phone calls, purchases, web destinations, whatever -- per person in the United States per day. Also assume that 10 of them are actually terrorists plotting.

This unrealistically accurate system will generate 1 billion false alarms for every real terrorist plot it uncovers. Every day of every year, the police will have to investigate 27 million potential plots in order to find the one real terrorist plot per month. Raise that false-positive accuracy to an absurd 99.9999 percent and you're still chasing 2,750 false alarms per day -- but that will inevitably raise your false negatives, and you're going to miss some of those 10 real plots.

So, to put it mildy, vast automated systems that analyse data for security purposes not only places law-abiding citizens at risk of arrest, funds-seizure or worse - but for every 2,750 law abiding citizens that are persecuted there are 10 terrorist plots going on.

So are these systems making us safer? No they are not - and they threatean to alienate law abiding citizens who are innocent.

Will these systems stop terrorist plots? No they will not - the very lack of patterns in the methods that terrorists use means that finding them is not a job best done by computers.

No that you know these figures - ask yourself this:

Do you feel safer now that you are being watched all the time?

When everyone is perpetually watched to see if they are a potential security threat then everyone is a potential security threat - I can only conlude that we are all "The Enemy" now.

Are we in the "New Cold War" yet?


Tags:


March 8, 2006

We are all "The Enemy" now

As the USAxis finally imports the techniques and methods they have perfected to develop the permanent counter insurgency state in third world countries such as El Salvador, Vietnam and Chile - to the USA and "First World" countries - we all have reason to be worried.

When it comes to the point that when if you pay off your credit card early you are automatically suspected in illegal and/or terrorist acts by US "Homeland Security" - then it appears that anyone, anywhere can be a suspect - just because some automated computerised security system says you are.

How accurate are these systems?

Well, if you are very lucky, a system without bugs will attain 99.98% efficiency - so out of every 10,000 cases only TWO will be wrong - the real problem happens because these systems monitor millions of transactions - which means that dozens of "false positives" will occur regularly.

If you are very,very lucky - then you will never get flagged by one of these systems as a false postive - you will never have to worry - but if you do - then the consequences for your life might be a little difficult.

But with systems such as these watching every electronic transaction, every email and tracking our surfing habits - the amount of data collected will increase rapidly - increasing the chances of a mistake being made.

When everyone is perpetually watched to see if they are a potential security threat then everyone is a potential security threat.

We are all 'the enemy" now.

Welcome to "1984" and the "Big Brother state" where even for law abiding people the slightest of reasons - a computer miskey, a confusion over names, a normal financial transaction - can flag action by the agencies that monitor the counter-insurgency state we live in.

Are we in the "New Cold War" yet?


Tags:


March 4, 2006

Jason Salavon - Digital Artist

Jason Salavon is an artist using digital techniques to make some unique art.

Not strictly cyberart - his objects have a printed presence in the real world as well - but well versed in digital techniques and with a playful hackish quality that I find interesting.

By using a large number of images Salavon integrates and re-arranges pictures into something unique - where the sum of all the parts creates a new whole, a summation, which can illuminate and re-create the originals.

Every Playboy Centerfold: The Decades mean averages every Playboy centrefold from 1960 to 1999.

The four pictures generated like this hover like palimpests over blurred backgrounds, details hinting at hair, breasts, legs, but never forming into a whole - everything is left to the imagination.

When Salavon integrates all the Playboy centrefolds from 1988-1997 a more ghostly image is the result - the "Shroud of Playboy" - a ghostly presence that reminds the viewer of the Shroud of Turin - but with less detail.

Salavon also chops up film and video into frames and then re-cycles and mashes-up the results into new artworks - The Titanic for example - as well as recycling familair household objects into Modern Lifestyle Mandalas of extraordinary beauty.

I wish that some of the pictures on this site were a little larger though - just enough to make nice wallpaper without scaling up and pixellating


Tags: |

March 3, 2006

Can you explain your rights?

This was interesting today.

Half of 1,000 Americans randomly surveyed by the McCormick Tribune Freedom Museum could name at least two of the five members of Fox Television's Simpson family, the stars of the network's long-running show.

But just 28 percent of respondents could name more than one of the five freedoms listed in the U.S. Constitution's First Amendment -- about the same proportion that could name all five Simpson family members or could recall the three judges on Fox TV's top-rated "American Idol."

Just 8 percent could recall three First Amendment freedoms.

Two-thirds of respondents did remember freedom of speech as one of five rights in the First Amendment, but just one person accurately named all five.


If only two-thirds of the population understand that they have rights to "free speech" - then how many are going to understand the complexities of the arguments against DRM? the postive side of P2P filesharing? why open-source software might be useful? why the DMCA is bad? ... and any number of other issues that are either badly presented or dumbed down in media sources - if they get mentioned at all.

It's an uphill struggle - lets keep plodding on - the top of the mountain can't be far away.


Tags:


The Big DRM mistake

Scott Granneman has an article The Big DRM Mistake which discusses DRM in a non-technical and illuminating way.

The artcicle sums up the problems with DRM succinctly.

1. DRM hurts paying customers
2. DRM destroys Fair Use rights
3. DRM renders customers' investments worthless
4. DRM can be defeated

Each of the examples explains in plain language why DRM is bad.

I shall recommend this to non-technical friends who can't figure out why I am anti-DRM.

They often can't see the point of obscure arguments about "fair use" and copyright, but pointing out that the downloaded tracks on their iPod are only there on a whim and could become worthless is an argument that most people can grasp.



Tags:





March 1, 2006

Brand Sony

I found this in an old issue of Wired and wondered how much this situation had changed after the Sony DRM debacle.

In one recent survey by Landor Associates, 99.5 percent of people said they'd be willing to pay more for a Sony. But the size of that premium is smaller than ever. Five years ago, Sony charged 44 percent more for its DVD players than the average manufacturer. Today, Sony DVD players cost just 16 percent more than the average. And yet, even though the price of Sony's most expensive DVD player fell 60 percent between 1999 and 2003, CyberHome, maker of absurdly cheap DVD players, has knocked off Sony to become the biggest DVD-machine seller in America.

I wonder how much of the SONY story has filtered down to the consumers via the media, and whether they understand enough of the DRM issues to affect their purchasing decisions. If 99.5% of all consumers would pay a Sony premium and only 10% of those understand the issues surrounding DRM enough to boycott Sony - is it enough to hurt Sony and discourage future attempts at DRM?

We could do with some figures on this one. Has the Sony DRM debacle dented consumer confidence in Sony enough to erode their brand - or is "Brand Sony" now so big that this is nothing more than a very bad PR year for them?



Tags: