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Current Topic: Society

Yahoo! News - Naked Kidnap Fantasy Has Police Scrambling
Topic: Society 2:18 pm EST, Feb 21, 2003

Those crazy Canadians.

Yahoo! News - Naked Kidnap Fantasy Has Police Scrambling


North Koreans Celebrate Birthday of 'Dear Leader'
Topic: Society 3:51 pm EST, Feb 17, 2003

Since foreign visitors were barred from entering local villages today, the government staged a peppy musical performance by the Pyongyang Youth Brass Band, an all-female group attired in outfits that looked like a style collision between Maoist Red Guards and the Dallas Cowboys' cheerleaders.

"We are living in affluence, so we don't expect anything special."

It's nice that the kids get the day off for President's Day.

North Koreans Celebrate Birthday of 'Dear Leader'


Possible King of Stonehenge Discovered
Topic: Society 3:26 pm EST, Feb 13, 2003

The Swiss excel at making clocks and also... henges?

A skeleton was found near Stonehenge hypothesized to be a regional bronze age king of Stonehenge who may have played an important role in the construction of Stonehenge and surprisingly, may be Swiss.

Possible King of Stonehenge Discovered


Criticism Won't Change the DMCA, but Breaking the Law Will
Topic: Society 3:43 pm EST, Nov  6, 2002

Here is the plan. Everyone who hates the DMCA has to illegally copy a movie or a song, and then tell both the Congress and the U.S. Copyright Office exactly what they did. We need 10 million or so confessed and unrepentant intellectual property pirates. That's too much illegal behavior to ignore (What could 10 million pirated copies of "Debbie Does Dallas" be worth?), but too many individual criminals to be prosecuted. Then, having pirated our movie or song, we also need to turn ourselves in to the authorities, clogging every hoosegow in America, facing our potential $10,000 fine, each of us demanding the jury trial we are guaranteed under the Constitution.

If we all do this, REALLY do it, the DMCA will be gone in a year. This follows the simple principal that if you or I drive 100 miles-per-hour on the highway, we get a ticket, but if EVERYONE drives 100 miles-per-hour, they change the speed limit. "They," whoever that is, can't afford to annoy so much of the population. We are, after all, the folks who elect all these officials who keep telling us what we can and can't do. But it isn't enough to just threaten to vote against your Congressman. To make the system really change we have to work it to death by all becoming criminals.

...

Most of Cringley's article this week ties back to last week's treatise on BayTSP, but this point is very intriguing. If something like this was coordinated properly, it probably would have an effect. Every system has its bounds, yes? Personally, I'm not willing to become a felon for something I don't believe in (leeching copyrighted material illegally) but if anyone is willing to wager their United States voting rights on something like what Cringely details, more power to you.

Here's an idea for a jamming mechanism for BayTSP's technology. Hit up some of the CDDB servers and grab all the titles, artists, song lengths, you name it. Encode complete garbage that sort of signatures like what it's supposed to be (spectrograms are your friend here...) and share it. Peer to peer this to death at every conceivable opportunity. Angelfire it. Geocity it. Just jam the fucking system, who needs it?

I could care less about downloading mass market consumer drivel copyrighted material, be it games, movies, music, goat porn, whatever. While BayTCP programmers and their ilk make robots to live out their fucking alpha male syndrome jack off fantasies, people in the know will quietly be building their own trusted networks well above the fray.

By the way, record companies that have been hit with the CLUE STICK (TM) such as warprecords.com are thriving. They give generous clips of all songs, they embrace new technology with a passion, and they are cool. That's what it takes to survive and keep your head above water these days if you want to play the game online. It's called "evolution."

Criticism Won't Change the DMCA, but Breaking the Law Will


Tolerance.org: Dig Deeper
Topic: Society 7:58 pm EDT, Oct  3, 2002

This is such an interesting study. I took one of the tests and it was fairly accurate and disturbing.

"Created by psychologists at Yale University and the University of Washington, this collection of Implicit Association Tests (IAT) measures unconscious bias. We invite you to test yourself and reveal what may be lingering in your psyche. Each test takes about five minutes, and your privacy is protected -- no identifying information is collected or distributed.
Your test results may disturb you -- more than one million tests have been taken and the majority reveal unconscious bias. Dig Deeper into the science behind the tests, into stereotypes and prejudice, and into the societal effects of bias. Read the IAT tutorial. "

Tolerance.org: Dig Deeper


Smart Mobs - The Next Social Revolution
Topic: Society 1:52 pm EDT, Sep 25, 2002

Howard Rheingold is now running a weblog about Smart Mobs. There are some quite interesting links here.

Smart Mobs - The Next Social Revolution


SF Guardian on current 'Reputation Systems' (SIC)
Topic: Society 9:04 pm EDT, Jul 23, 2002

"And yet I can't help thinking the reputation system is less about creating communities of friends than it is about building cults of personality around popular, "reputable" individuals...

What happens to ideas that are smart but unpopular? In a reputation system, it's too easy for them to be exiled, cast beyond the bounds of what the community deems expressible...

Sometimes we need to listen to people who have bad reputations. Often they are the critics, the people with a talent for seeing flaws and problems none of us want to face. Communities can't thrive if they never answer to the least reputable of their members. So, for now I'm waiting for a new community system, one whose wisdom will destroy reputations and replace them with something more meaningful. "

Annalee Newitz is waiting for MemeStreams.

SF Guardian on current 'Reputation Systems' (SIC)


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