bcc: Everybody, & the WEF

James Grimmelmann posted an extremely lengthy but interesting piece on LawMeme about the Laurie Garrett e-mail brouhaha. It’s about a Pulitzer-winning science journalist who attended the WEF, and then sent some of her friends an e-mail describing it. She became outraged when one of those friends forwarded it, then their friends forwarded it, and so on, and so on, and it wound up all over the Net.

One line in the LawMeme article struck me: “Every email comes with an implicit ‘Bcc:everyone’ header set”. Essentially, if you write it, it might be forwarded to the rest of the world. It turns out that that isn’t what the article is really about, and he doesn’t get around to making his real point until the end, but that’s another story.

I ran across the subject of Laurie’s e-mail (and the LawMeme piece) again while I was looking for something completely unrelated. Coincidence? Perhaps. But it made me realize that I had never gotten around to reading her letter because the “cc: all” idea was more interesting to me. Whoops.

I was not really familiar with the World Economic Forum (and confused it with the WTO as being something that gets protested), but it is attended by heads of state and the economy from all over the world; among many other from the U.S., Bill Gates, Bill Clinton, Powell and Ashcroft were there. This is a major event, so reading about it in something that hasn’t been cleaned up or edited for PC-ness is really interesting.

Be afraid. Be very afraid.

Here are a couple of things that she noted at the convention:

The global economy is in very very very very bad shape. Last year when WEF met here in New York all I heard was, “Yeah, it’s bad, but recovery is right around the corner”. This year “recovery” was a word never uttered. Fear was palpable — fear of enormous fiscal hysteria. The watchwords were “deflation”, “long term stagnation” and “collapse of the dollar”. All of this is without war.

If the U.S. unilaterally goes to war, and it is anything short of a quick surgical strike (lasting less than 30 days), the economists were all predicting extreme economic gloom … Very few economists or ministers of finance predicted the world getting out of that economic funk for minimally five-10 years, once the downward spiral ensues.

For a minority of the participants there was another layer of AntiAmericanism that focused on moralisms and religion. I often heard delegates complain that the US “opposes the rights of children”, because we block all treaties and UN efforts that would support sex education and condom access for children and teens.

I attended a small lunch with Ashcroft, and observed Ralph Reed and other prominent Christian fundamentalists working the room and bowing their heads before eating. The rest of the world’s elite finds this American Christian behavior at least as uncomfortable as it does Moslem or Hindu fundamentalist behavior. They find it awkward every time a US representative refers to “faith-based” programs. It’s different from how it makes non-Christian Americans feel — these folks experience it as downright embarrassing.

It’s not my normal political focus, but it is good reading. And scary.

Dr. Seuss

UCSD has published an archive of fanciful advertising graphics created by Dr. Seuss — the copy is fantastic, full of Seuss humor, and the pictures are just perfect. Take a look.

Political Compass

Political Compass thinks that left vs. right doesn’t work: it needs to be broken into both economic and authoritarian components. For instance, Stalin was an authoritarian leftist (ie the state is more important than the individual) and Gandhi, believing in the supreme value of each individual, is a liberal leftist.

They have a quick, 5-minute quiz that determines your position on the map.

Services block each others’ emails as spam

Outrageous! MSN TV (formerly Web TV) is blocking Adelphia’s mail servers because of “spam complaints”. What if Adelphia blocked Hotmail, the cradle of spam, which is also run by Micro$oft? And Hotmail blocked Yahoo, and Yahoo blocked Earthlink…

We may as well shut down internet mail if the major services start blocking each other.

Most people never find out that they didn’t receive the intended mail unless the sender takes the trouble to send it from a different account, if they can find one that isn’t blocked.

Powers of Ten

View a photo exhibit about The Powers of Ten, which starts with the Milky Way at 10 million light years from the Earth. It moves through space towards the Earth in successive orders of magnitude until you reach an oak tree, then continue to move from a leaf into its the cell nucleus, and finally into the subatomic universe of electrons and protons. (Requires Java)

DSEA: Act 2 of the PATRIOT Act

The PATRIOT Act turned out just to be Act 1.  the Domestic Security Enhancement Act (DSEA), is Act 2.

 

Among many other things, it would create a new federal felony of willfully using encryption during the commission of a felony, punishable by “no more than five years” in prison plus a hefty fine.  As this article says, as encryption becomes more and more common in electronic transmissions, it’s like making it illegal to breath air during the commission of a felony.

Another fine feature of the act is that engaging in the lawful activities of a group designated as a “terrorist organization” by the Attorney General could be presumptive grounds for expatriation. And since it’s a national security issue, you’re no longer entitled to a trial.

John Perry Barlow interview

How convenient: MotherJones.com has an interview with John Perry Barlow which summarizes all the stuff I’ve been writing about. It’s not that long, really.

TIA: “And the important thing to think about there is that they’re no longer just looking for terrorist activity, they’re looking for any kind of criminality at all — which includes what I consider to be cultural crimes, like say marijuana smoking.”

Other freedoms lost: “This is an administration that has recently reserved to itself the right to kill American citizens anywhere on the planet for the mere suspicion of membership in Al Qaeda. That’s really quite and awe-inspiring breakthrough.”

Update May 2017: The original link is no longer valid, so use http://www.motherjones.com/politics/2003/02/cognitive-dissident

Wireless phones surpass “land-line”

In February, 1982, a small article appeared in the Living section of The Globe and Mail. “A wireless portable telephone may soon become the hottest business status symbol,” it began, explaining that “high-frequency cellular radio” would allow users to carry around full-fledged telephones that “weigh less than two pounds” and cost only $6,000.

This month is the thirtieth anniversary of the invention of mobile telephony and the twentieth anniversary of the first commercial cellphone. There are now more than 1.3 billion subscribers around the world, which means that the wireless phone has surpassed the old-fashioned “land-line” technology. Here is more on the birthday celebration.

Is it still slang?

I’ve been finding a fair number words that seem to be slang but are often tech/geek oriented. Sometimes I just have to wonder what they are because I don’t know of a way to look them up — web searches are very hit and miss for this sort of thing. For example, what is a Wiki? But if a book has already been written about the word, can it still be slang? Or it just another area of technology that I never happened to encounter?

Sony: right hand, meet left hand

I love it when I see concrete examples of industry fighing itself.

“As a member of the Consumer Electronics Association, Sony joined the chorus of support for Napster against the legal onslaught from Sony and the other music giants seeking to shut it down. As a member of the RIAA, Sony railed against companies like Sony that manufacture CD burners. And it isn’t just through trade associations that Sony is acting out its schizophrenia. Sony shipped a Celine Dion CD with a copy-protection mechanism that kept it from being played on Sony PCs. Sony even joined the music industry’s suit against Launch Media, an Internet radio service that was part-owned by — you guessed it — Sony. Two other labels have since resolved their differences with Launch, but Sony Music continues the fight, even though Sony Electronics has been one of Launch’s biggest advertisers and Launch is now part of Yahoo!, with which Sony has formed a major online partnership. It’s as if hardware and entertainment have lashed two legs together and set off on a three-legged race, stumbling headlong into the future.”

That was a small piece of Embrace File-Sharing, Or Die, where a record executive and his son make a formal case for freely downloading music. Their gist: 50 million Americans can’t be wrong. The writer, John Snyder, is president of Artist House Records, a board member of the National Association of Recording Arts and Sciences (NARAS), and a 32-time Grammy nominee.

TIA moratorium?

Some good news: The U.S. Senate voted unanimously to insert a moratorium on the Pentagon’s TIA, a controversial data-mining program that critics say would amount to a domestic spying apparatus. If fully implemented, TIA would link databases from sources such as credit card companies, medical insurers and motor vehicle agencies in hopes of snaring terrorists.

But it’s not over yet: Final passage of the moratorium is not certain. Because the House of Representatives’ version of the omnibus appropriations bill does not include any limits on TIA, a conference committee will have the final say.

link

I hate Quicken, 2003 version

I hate Quicken.

But I’ve used it for years because it was better than MS Money, which was the only other game in town. Quicken crashes frequently and causes more problems on my computer than any other program I use. Once it lost some data, but they Intuit Support insisted that it was some other program’s fault and so I had to pay for the tech support call. And they couldn’t get my data back, sorry about that.

It’s almost tax time, and the latest Turbo Tax has a new activation requirement so it can only be used on one computer and one tax form. It’s also causing a lot of problems: The current user reviews on C-Net are at 92% negative with 133 votes. Many can’t get it to install, others are crashing. So I considered switching to Tax Cut. (Side note: There’s one particular form I need this year and neither of their web sites will tell me if the form is included or which version of the program I might need but to get the right form.)

The pricing is all based on rebates. If you buy Turbo Tax then you get Quicken free. If you buy Tax Cut then you get MS Money free. So before getting Tax Cut I decided to download the 60-day trial version of Money and see if I could go to it. It easily imports Quicken data with just a few click. Yeah, sure. Easy for them to say. I’ll admit that my Quicken file is fairly complicated since some of the data had to be coerced into the program’s format in the early versions of the program, but only about 70% of the data went across correctly into Money. Going back and forth between the two programs allowed me to find some of the errors, but it would be a 80 hour process to fix all of it. Especially since one or the other of the programs keeps crashing; usually Quicken takes over all the memory and then Money starts having problems.

So I’m stuck with Quicken, which implies using Turbo Tax because of the rebate structure. It is definitely not worth paying for an upgrade to Quicken and it needs to be upgraded every year to use the online features such as getting stock quotes.

Now I hate Quicken, Turbo Tax and MS Money. I’ll probably never know on Tax Cut.

Has copy protection affected you?

The EFF is looking for stories from people that have encounter problems with copy protected CD, DVD limitations, etc., such as:

  • Ever bought a copy-protected “CD” and found that it doesn’t play in a device like your car stereo or computer?
  • Ever bought a foreign DVD only to discover it won’t play on your American DVD player? Did you have to buy a multi-region player to get around it?
  • Do you hate it when DVDs force you to watch ads every time you play them?

They will collect and forward the stories to the government during the comment period on the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA). I have only encountered unskipable commercials on DVDs (really annoying if you accidentally hit the stop button), but go through the extra step of checking every CD I buy on my computer to make sure it plays correctly.