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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

Why Tornadoes Take the Weekends Off in Summer
Topic: Miscellaneous 9:20 pm EST, Dec 30, 2011

They discovered that tornadoes and hailstorms occurred at a rate of about 20 percent above average during the middle of the week. In contrast, the phenomena occurred at a rate of roughly 20 percent below average on the weekend.

Why Tornadoes Take the Weekends Off in Summer


RE: The Heritage Foundation takes a principled stand against SOPA
Topic: Miscellaneous 12:42 pm EST, Dec 30, 2011

Thanks for the explanation...

Rattle wrote:
I do know that CAP took alot of heat over that Dodd event... In the absence of policy work, CAP sees events as exploratory. It's useful to have people come out and get them talking.

All things being equal, its great to have Dodd out and to have him articulate his organization's point of view - thats how we have a political dialog. His statements there got a lot of coverage and analysis. Its helpful to have a forum like that.

The problem is that its not clear that all things are actually equal. If the MPAA is the only organization that CAP is interested in hearing from on this issue, then we're not really having a dialog - we're having an event in which a particular POV is being promoted.

Prior to the Dodd event, Alyssa Rosenberg used the ThinkProgress blog to float the idea that what I'd refer to as copyright maximalism is a valid progressive goal, due to the number of middle class and union workers involved in the content industries. This position was directly reflected in Chairman Dodd's comments.

There are, of course, other valid progressive goals in play here, such as the vitality of the public domain as well as the right to tinker with and criticize commercial products.

Unfortunately, these are goals that aren't backed by multi-million dollar lobbying efforts.

RE: The Heritage Foundation takes a principled stand against SOPA


The sad state of Internet Civil Liberties in America
Topic: Miscellaneous 7:18 pm EST, Dec 29, 2011

This article does a good job of summarizing the way that most of our leadership is indifferent to reasonable civil liberties issues relating to the Internet, and also very eager to do the bidding of their paymasters.

The sad state of Internet Civil Liberties in America


Go Daddy loses over 37,000 domains due to SOPA stance | VentureBeat
Topic: Miscellaneous 10:39 pm EST, Dec 24, 2011

Hosting and domain registrar company Go Daddy has lost more than 37,000 domains in the past two days due to the company’s wishy-washy stance on the Stop Online Piracy Act.

GoDaddy has apparently dropped its support for SOPA, FWTW. Very little in my opinion. Reports are that they are calling customers who transfer to beg them to stay.

Its only been two days and its the holidays. Its going to take a while for this to fully work through. I certainly don't have time to switch right now and doing so is going to take several steps in order to ensure that nothing goes down.

Go Daddy loses over 37,000 domains due to SOPA stance | VentureBeat


National Counter Terrorism Center's 2012 Calendar
Topic: Miscellaneous 11:11 am EST, Dec 24, 2011

Keep things festive the whole year through with this free calendar that includes reminders of major events in terrorism history and potential dates for future attacks!

National Counter Terrorism Center's 2012 Calendar


Wikileaks is guilty
Topic: Miscellaneous 10:33 pm EST, Dec 23, 2011

EasyDNS wrote:
If this becomes law, it's a short stretch from SOPA to NODA (No Online Dissent Anywhere) and if you think I'm a nutcase for saying so, I'd like to remind everybody what happened just over a year ago, when US politicians were tripping over themselves to shut down wikileaks (a royal fiasco in which this company was embroiled) and to this day, they have not been charged with a crime anywhere.

I totally agree with this sentiment and I still think that the Wikileaks fiasco a year ago was both totally inappropriate and a sign of what is to come with SOPA, its worth pointing out that Wikileaks is actually guilty.

In another chat, dated March 8, 2010, Manning asked “Nathaniel Frank,” believed to be Assange, about help in cracking the main password on his classified SIPRnet computer so that he could log on to it anonymously. He asked “Frank” if he had experience cracking IM NT hashes (presumably it’s a mistype and he meant NTLM for the Microsoft NT LAN Manager). “Frank” replied yes, that they had “rainbow tables” for doing that. Manning then sent him what looked like a hash.

Cracking an NTLM hash for somebody who you know intends to gain unauthorized access to a computer system is not "journalism" - its a crime. Someone at Wikileaks, possibly Assange, offered to do this for Manning. Whatever happens in court, it seems clear that Wikileaks was not just a drop box for information.

Now, that doesn't mean its OK for the US Government to use all kinds of extralegal measures to go after them by hook or by crook, but there is no reason that anyone should withhold judgement about them anymore.

Wikileaks is guilty


GoDaddy Faces Boycott Over SOPA Support | Threat Level | Wired.com
Topic: Miscellaneous 10:30 pm EST, Dec 22, 2011

“Not only is there no First Amendment concern, but the notion that we should turn a blind eye to criminal conduct because other countries may take oppressive steps in response is an affront to the very fabric of this nation.”

I guess thats the final nail in the coffin - I've got to switch registrars.

GoDaddy Faces Boycott Over SOPA Support | Threat Level | Wired.com


The Heritage Foundation takes a principled stand against SOPA
Topic: Miscellaneous 5:59 pm EST, Dec 21, 2011

Three cheers to the Heritage Foundation who join the Cato Institute in opposing SOPA.

The federal government needs to protect intellectual property rights. But it should do so in a way that does not disrupt the growth of technology, does not weaken Internet security, respects free speech rights, and solves the problem of rogue sites. Congress should carefully consider the consequences of and alternatives to the legislation before moving forward.

James L. Gattuso is Senior Research Fellow in Regulatory Policy in the Thomas A. Roe Institute for Economic Policy Studies at The Heritage Foundation.

The Center for American Progress doesn't appear to have taken a position, although they did provide the MPAA with a forum to promote the bill. Not the same thing as endorsing it, but...

At least their Campus Progress subdivision has spoken out against SOPA.

Lesson: Only trust Democrats under the age of 30?

The Heritage Foundation takes a principled stand against SOPA


A Libertarian’s Lament: Why Ron Paul Is An Embarrassment To The Creed | The New Republic
Topic: Miscellaneous 5:35 pm EST, Dec 21, 2011

Ron Paul's unexpected ascendency in the Republican Party is going to tip off this dialog in the popular press about "Libertarianism" that already has my eyes rolling.

I recommend this article not because I think it does a good job articulating the problem with Ron Paul, but because it gets off a couple of zingers that I do strongly empathize with, such as this:

It irks me that, as far as most Americans are concerned, Ron Paul is the alpha and omega of the libertarian creed. If you were an evil genius determined to promote the idea that libertarianism is a morally dubious ideology of privilege poorly disguised as a doctrine of liberation, you'd be hard pressed to improve on Ron Paul...

I am personally interested in individual liberty. That attracts me to the Libertarian party - who claim to be interested in the same thing and whose think tanks sometimes write good papers on the subject.

Unfortunately, its a bad relationship for me, because, after years of talking to libertarians, I don't think that most of them are really all that interested in individual liberty.

They're basically just interested in not being taxed.

Some think its immoral that they should be taxed because its just like theft. Others have read elaborate rationalizations that trying to build a healthy society is counterproductive and you should just stop worrying about other people and enjoy your money. Whatever the reason, all these people care about is low taxes.

Individual liberty is more complicated than having low taxes. Individual liberty has to do with things like having a right to freedom of speech and being secure against unreasonable searches and seizures and having the right to vote and a guarantee of equal protection under the law. Only a small minority of libertarians care about those things. Most are indifferent, some are actively hostile, and almost none understand the specific policy issues involved or take personal action in support of those issues.

Ergo, we have Ron Paul. Ron Paul is openly hostile to the 14th amendment's guarantee that state governments won't violate the individual rights of people. He is someone who applies the political philosophy of the oligarchy that controlled the 19th century South to modern political issues. He is a principled man, which is more than can be said for a lot of people in politics. Sometimes his principals even lead to desirable results. But ultimately, his principals come from the time before the internal combustion engine, and were discredited in that time, by people we should regard as comparably primitive.

If THEY could think around this but YOU can't - perhaps you're not thinking.

No reasonable understanding of "individual liberty" can be framed through the lens of the political rationalizations of the Slave Power. It was a caste system that had as its central features the violent oppression of people, a total lack of social mobility, and an absence of basic political freedoms and enfranchisement. It was an oligarchy of about 300,000 people who oppressed millions.

How could a movement associated with "individual liberty" become aligned with THAT?

The answer is because they don't actually care about "individual liberty." They just care about lower taxes.

Libertarians have done a terrible job countering the widespread suspicion that theirs is a uselessly abstract ideology of privilege for socially obtuse adolescent white guys.

Libertarians cannot simultaneously have "individual liberty" and Ron Paul. But they do have Ron Paul, and they are about to be associated with him in the national conciousness in a permanent way.

Therefore, it has come time to start pointing out that "libertarianism" has nothing to do with "individual liberty."

Individual liberty is more complicated than having low taxes.

A Libertarian’s Lament: Why Ron Paul Is An Embarrassment To The Creed | The New Republic


APOD: 2011 December 21 - A Horseshoe Einstein Ring from Hubble
Topic: Miscellaneous 11:05 am EST, Dec 21, 2011

What's large and blue and can wrap itself around an entire galaxy? A gravitational lens mirage.

APOD: 2011 December 21 - A Horseshoe Einstein Ring from Hubble


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