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"I don't think the report is true, but these crises work for those who want to make fights between people." Kulam Dastagir, 28, a bird seller in Afghanistan

Maryland Voters Test New Cryptographic Voting System | Threat Level | Wired.com
Topic: Miscellaneous 7:43 am EST, Nov  5, 2009

On Tuesday voters in Takoma Park, Maryland, got to try out a new, transparent voting system that lets voters go online to verify that their ballots got counted in the final tally. The system also lets anyone independently audit election results to verify the votes went to the correct candidates.

From 2003:

Why not publish all the votes on the Internet? When I vote, I get a random number. I can go on the website later and verify that my random number got tabulated correctly. I can count all the votes on the website using my own software and decide for myself who won the election.

(Not saying I had any influence on this, I didn't. Just saying, this has been a good idea long coming.)

Maryland Voters Test New Cryptographic Voting System | Threat Level | Wired.com


Hey, Texas Instruments -- Stop Digging Holes | Electronic Frontier Foundation
Topic: Miscellaneous 7:15 am EST, Nov  4, 2009

Texas Instruments (TI) ultimately failed to stand behind their misguided claim that calculator hobbyists violated copyright law by having public, online discussions about techniques to get more functionality from TI calculators. Yet the company continues to dig itself into new holes by issuing more improper take-down letters...

In fact, TI has sent an identical take-down demand to Mr. Smith's university complaining about the same OS keys having been posted on our client's student webpage, and demanding that the school take the materials down from that URL. Today, Mr. Smith filed a DMCA Section 512 counternotice to continue the fight.

Hey, Texas Instruments -- Stop Digging Holes | Electronic Frontier Foundation


NSFW: Halloween in San Francisco and the gathering clouds of a location-based privacy storm
Topic: Miscellaneous 12:47 pm EST, Nov  1, 2009

n the past month or so, I’ve had conversations with two friends who have organised private parties at their homes for small groups of friends. In both cases the hosts created online invitations but sensibly ensured that any date and location information was only visible to invited guests. Yet within minutes of the first guests arriving, they were alarmed to discover that all of their privacy efforts were for nought. Their guests – their friends – had used Foursquare to check in at the party, thus instantly adding their address to the service’s growing database of highly specific locations.

From that point on, a simple search on the Foursquare site for the hosts’ name provides their full home address, along with a handy map for anyone who feels like breaking in and murdering them in their sleep. To make matters even worse, as more partygoesrs checked in – all caught up in the game element of this thing, and hoping to become mayor of someone else’s living room – the information was repeatedly pushed out via Twitter. If Foursquare had a ‘Breathtakingly Irresponsible’ badge, there would have been a whole lot of recipients at those parties.

NSFW: Halloween in San Francisco and the gathering clouds of a location-based privacy storm


Zoompf: Or, Why Billy Hoffman Left Security To Work On Web Performance
Topic: Miscellaneous 6:26 pm EDT, Oct 30, 2009

Today I'm launching Zoompf, a new kind of web performance company. We don't deploy sensors, simulate user load, or monitor your application from data centers around the global. We don't try to answer the question "How fast are my web apps?" We answer the next logical and frankly more important question: "How do I make my web applications go faster?"

Zoompf's technology crawls and identifies over 150 specific problems with your web application that impacts web performance. You can learn more by downloading our Optimizing Web Performance presentation. Bu this post is not about what Zoompf does. It's about why I'm doing Zoompf.

Why on earth would I leave an amazing career in a successful industry and resign from an awesome job in a down economy? A lot of close friends have asked whether I'm crazy or not in the last month. But after I've explained the incredible opportunity behind what I'm doing their outlook completely changes and they become very supportive, offering time, funding, and recommendations.

The business case for performance is obvious. Faster apps increase revenue. Using resources more efficiently reduces operational costs. This is why the performance testing market is huge. But there is a gap in this market when it comes to performance testing of modern web applications. Talk to anyone about web performance and they start talking about the usual suspects:

-Refactoring, optimizing, JITing, caching application code and data
-Database tuning, queries, store procedures, indexes, denormalizing tables
-Reverse proxies, memcached, Varnish, load balancers, SSL accelerators, etc.

But recent research has found generating dynamic content accounts for typically less than 10% of page load times. The vast majority of page load time is spent downloading, parsing, and rendering all the components that make up a modern application. It is on the front end, and not on the back end, where optimizations can be made that drop seconds off load times. JavaScript code, CSS, the inner workings of browsers, HTTP voodoo. I am a thought leader in exactly this space.

The majority of widely known web performance optimization practices today focus on the application tier or the database tier. Traditional performance testings tools do no front end optimization testing. And yet the front end has the biggest impact on web application performance in modern applications. Do you see the disconnect yet?

This is an enormous opportunity.

This is why I created Zoompf.

Billy, we wish you the best of luck.

Zoompf: Or, Why Billy Hoffman Left Security To Work On Web Performance


Diabetik Leaving Candy Corn Traffic Cones on The Streets of Washington DC
Topic: Miscellaneous 5:17 pm EDT, Oct 28, 2009

Street artist diabetik has been installing “Candy Corn” traffic cones around the streets of Washington DC for Halloween.

Diabetik Leaving Candy Corn Traffic Cones on The Streets of Washington DC


Viking metal - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Topic: Miscellaneous 5:00 pm EDT, Oct 28, 2009

Viking metal is a subgenre of heavy metal music characterised by its galloping pace, keyboard-rich anthemic sound, bleakness and dramatic emphasis on Norse mythology, Norse paganism, and the Viking Age.

There is something undeniably cool about the idea of metal about Viking mythology incorporating elements of traditional Scandinavian folk music. At least the abstract idea of it is cool - as an artform - the history of metal in Norway is way more messed up then I thought... some of these guys got into folk religion because Satanism isn't anti-Christian enough, and we're not just talking about philosophy here. There was a epidemic of church arsons associated with the scene in the early 1990's.

The first song is instrumental:


The second is Finnish:


There are some interesting threads that have fallen off from this, such as this Swiss "ambient metal" band whose music is supposed to characterize the emptiness of outer space:

Viking metal - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


Schwarzenegger Flips Off Lawmakers in Hidden Message | Threat Level | Wired.com
Topic: Miscellaneous 12:37 pm EDT, Oct 28, 2009

Buried in the text was a hidden message.

LOL!

Schwarzenegger Flips Off Lawmakers in Hidden Message | Threat Level | Wired.com


100 Year Dow Jones Industrials Chart | The Big Picture
Topic: Miscellaneous 12:24 pm EDT, Oct 28, 2009

People have been asking me when I think the economy is going to get better. The answer is 2020 on the outside, and 2015 if we're lucky. Please see the attached chart, from 2005.

Things are basically going to suck for a decade. A map of the future stock market is here. We're now entering the "trading range" section of that chart. Kind of a good time to make money in the market, actually, as you know its going to fluctuate. You will really be able to buy low and sell high and then buy low again and sell high again over the next ten years. Right now valuations are high. They'll be low again by March I think, but that is from the hip. These fluctuations are totally irrational so predicting the exact tops and bottoms will be really hard to do.

Most people will not be making money playing the market - they'll be struggling to make ends meet and adjust personal expectations in an environment where there just isn't enough money to go around.

We're about half way through a cyclical bear that would have been worse than the great depression if it wasn't for the housing bubble, which is why I think all the recent hand wringing about causes of the housing bubble is a bit strange.

It was obvious for years that there was a bubble, so articles wondering why economists didn't know or didn't do something, etc are silly. Economists did know. The bubble was created intentionally. If it wasn't for the bubble, it would have felt like a depression. Because it was a depression. It is a depression. And its going to be a depression for another decade.

In the past century, every Bull Market has been followed by a significant refractory period. From the looks of the time-lengths of red, it appears almost generational in nature. The damage is repaired when a new crop of investors — without crash scars – finally appears.

Maybe our soft landing will make us less cautious, which is probably a good thing for our prospects, but basically, get used to the current environment because by the time it gets better you won't care anymore.

100 Year Dow Jones Industrials Chart | The Big Picture


Ghost Story
Topic: Society 11:37 am EDT, Oct 28, 2009

Anne Frank:

Whenever you're feeling lonely or sad, try going to the loft on a beautiful day and looking outside. Not at the houses and the rooftops, but at the sky. As long as you can look fearlessly at the sky, you'll know that you're pure within and will find happiness once more.

Stefany Anne Golberg:

That's Anne Frank in a nutshell. A girl at a window, looking fearlessly at the sky.

Ghost Story


A very clear argument against staying in Afghanistan
Topic: Politics and Law 11:31 am EDT, Oct 28, 2009

Matthew Hoh, in September:

It is with great regret and disappointment I submit my resignation from my appointment as a Political Officer in the Foreign Service and my post as the Senior Civilian Representative for the US Government in Zabul Province.

Success and victory, whatever they may be, will not be realized in years, after billions more spent, but in decades and generations.

Karen DeYoung, yesterday:

While he did not share Hoh's view that the war "wasn't worth the fight," Holbrooke said, "I agreed with much of his analysis."

George Packer:

Richard Holbrooke must know that there will be no American victory in this war; he can only try to forestall potential disaster. But if he considers success unlikely, or even questions the premise of the war, he has kept it to himself.

DeYoung continues:

Late last year, a friend told Hoh that the State Department was offering year-long renewable hires for Foreign Service officers in Afghanistan. It was a chance, he thought, to use the development skills he had learned in Tikrit under a fresh administration that promised a new strategy.

The Economist on Obama, from last November:

He has to start deciding whom to disappoint.

Ahmed Rashid, last month:

For the first time, polling shows that a majority of Americans do not approve of Obama's handling of Afghanistan. Yet if it is to have any chance of success, the Obama plan for Afghanistan needs a serious long-term commitment -- at least for the next three years. Democratic politicians are demanding results before next year's congressional elections, which is neither realistic nor possible. Moreover, the Taliban are quite aware of the Democrats' timetable. With Obama's plan the US will be taking Afghanistan seriously for the first time since 2001; if it is to be successful it will need not only time but international and US support -- both open to question.

Lucian K. Truscott IV, in 2005:

The Army will need this lieutenant 20 years from now when he could be a colonel, or 30 years from now when he could have four stars on his collar. But I doubt he will be in uniform long enough to make captain.

If you keep faith with soldiers and tell them the truth even when it threatens their beliefs, you run the risk of losing them. But if you peddle cleverly manipulated talking points to people who trust you not to lie, you won't merely lose them, you'll break their hearts.

Andrew Lahde:

Today I write not to gloat. Instead, I am writing to say goodbye.

Frank Sandoval:

My heart swells in my chest and while I laugh,
I feel fear, smell a faint stench of insanity.

A very clear argument against staying in Afghanistan


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