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From User: possibly noteworthy |
"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
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Do Social Networks Bring the End of Privacy? |
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Topic: Society |
2:48 pm EDT, Aug 27, 2008 |
There are certainly some thought provoking issues here. Do you have a right to prevent websites (particularly blogs, wikipedia, etc) from hosting embarrassing information about you? Slanderous accusations that are completely false? Video taken of you without your permission? True facts that you simply would prefer remained private? Can these things impact your ability to obtain a job (yes)? How would you balance rules about this against people's right to freedom of speech? I think this is a very difficult matter that will take a long time to figure out. Daniel Solove, in Scientific American: Young people share the most intimate details of personal life on social-networking Web sites, such as MySpace and Facebook, portending a realignment of the public and the private
From the archive: If you work in privacy or data protection either from a technology or policy perspective, you need to read this book and understand Solove's approach.
Praise for The Future of Reputation: "No one has thought more about the effects of the information age on privacy than Daniel Solove." —Bruce Schneier
More recently: Noooooo problem ... don't worry about privacy ... privacy is dead ... there's no privacy ... just more databases ... that's what you want ... that's what you NEED ... Buy my shit! Buy it -- give me money! Don't worry about the consequences ... there's no consequences. If you give me money, everything's going to be cool, okay? It's gonna be cool. Give me money. No consequences, no whammies, money. Money for me ... Money for me, databases for you.
Do Social Networks Bring the End of Privacy? |
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South Ossetia, The War of My Dreams |
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Topic: Society |
9:24 am EDT, Aug 13, 2008 |
War Nerd: There are three basic facts to keep in mind about the smokin’ little war in Ossetia: 1. The Georgians started it. 2. They lost. 3. What a beautiful little war! For me, the most important is #3, the sheer beauty of the video clips that have already come out of this war. I’m in heaven right now.
South Ossetia, The War of My Dreams |
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CBP Releases Intellectual Property Rights Seizure Statistics for Mid-FY2008 |
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Topic: Intellectual Property |
9:08 am EDT, Jul 22, 2008 |
U.S. Customs and Border Protection’s Office of International Trade announced today that the domestic value of counterfeit and pirated products seized by CBP and U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement increased by 2.7 percent in mid-fiscal year 2008 to $113.2 million compared to $110.1 million in mid-FY 2007. The number of large-scale seizures also increased: rising from 296 IPR seizures with a domestic value equal to or greater than $100,000 in 2008 compared to 266 such seizures in mid-FY 2007. The first half of the fiscal year extends from Oct. 1 to March 28.
If you are looking for the general financial motivation for our customs search policies... CBP Releases Intellectual Property Rights Seizure Statistics for Mid-FY2008 |
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The South Shall Snack Again |
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Topic: Health and Wellness |
7:21 am EDT, Jul 9, 2008 |
There is a causal relationship between Barbeque, Sweet Tea, and Death. The South Shall Snack Again |
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Topic: Business |
11:06 pm EDT, Jun 24, 2008 |
This is a data-heavy presentation from two economists at CIBC World Markets. You'll have to make your own soundtrack. See how China dominates the growth in demand for natural resources. See how much is accomplished by Americans' purchase of hybrid vehicles, in the face of massive market growth in Russia and China. Watch how gasoline hits US$7/gallon by 2012. Watch ethanol peter out and energy capacity fall short. Watch the Case/Shiller HPI continue to plummet as delinquencies soar. And so much more! The Age of Scarcity |
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Topic: Arts |
11:02 pm EDT, Jun 23, 2008 |
Like a Morricone-style dirge recorded by The Mamas and The Papas, Violent Femmes’ cover of Gnarls Barkley’s infamous “Crazy” is like nothing you’ve heard from the legendary alt-rock trio before. Their oft-imitated folk-punk sound is flavored with surf-rock guitar and Theremin, creating a tranquility that is somber and otherworldly.
Violent and Crazy |
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Topic: Society |
9:08 am EDT, Jun 16, 2008 |
In America we are currently living in a Kindergarchy, under rule by children. People who are raising, or have recently raised, or have even been around children a fair amount in recent years will, I think, immediately sense what I have in mind. Children have gone from background to foreground figures in domestic life, with more and more attention centered on them, their upbringing, their small accomplishments, their right relationship with parents and grandparents. For the past 30 years at least, we have been lavishing vast expense and anxiety on our children in ways that are unprecedented in American and in perhaps any other national life. Such has been the weight of all this concern about children that it has exercised a subtle but pervasive tyranny of its own. This is what I call Kindergarchy: dreary, boring, sadly misguided Kindergarchy.
This is an interesting, if long, perspective. It seems fogeyish sort of. We seem to be near the opposite end of the spectrum from 1970, when latch key kids were mostly left to their own devices. Both extremes produce bad results. The Kindergarchy |
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The Great Seduction by Debt |
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Topic: Society |
2:47 pm EDT, Jun 11, 2008 |
David Brooks: The United States has been an affluent nation since its founding. But the country was, by and large, not corrupted by wealth. For centuries, it remained industrious, ambitious and frugal. Over the past 30 years, much of that has been shredded.
I don't agree with all of this but the main thrust of the argument is sound. The Great Seduction by Debt |
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At home on Pablo Escobar's ranch |
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Topic: Home and Garden |
12:25 pm EDT, Jun 2, 2008 |
"This place is really nice and tranquil."
What a good message for the children... At home on Pablo Escobar's ranch |
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David Byrne’s New Band, With Architectural Solos |
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Topic: Arts |
10:48 am EDT, Jun 2, 2008 |
The symphony of Manhattan Island, composed and performed fortissimo daily by garbage trucks, car speakers, I-beam bolters, bus brakes, warped manhole covers, knocking radiators, people yelling from high windows and the blaring television that now greets you in the back of a taxi, is the kind of music people would pay good money to be able to silence, if only there were a switch. The other day, in a paint-peeling hangar of a room at the foot of the island, David Byrne, the artist and musician, placed his finger on a switch that did exactly the opposite: it made such music on purpose.
I know what I want to see during hope... David Byrne’s New Band, With Architectural Solos |
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