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access to media, privacy, conspiracies, nerds fighting back, and information architecture
Posted By: Stearns
The
Government Information Awareness project is intended to bring transparency to politically and socially relevent information. A major idea is to allow users to post and contest unchecked information while retaining anonymity. It involves some really hard information architecture issues.
The inspiration came from a plot to collect and relate info on US citizens, by a man convicted of attempting to run a shadow government. That man is Admiral John Poindexter, and his Total Information Awareness plot has actually been implemented as the the more marketable Terrorism Information Awareness program.
I haven't heard about GIA since its launch. I'm not sure if this is an interesting experiment that didn't pan out, or if the idea could have legs.
Tales of the Sausage Factory: Tales From the Sausage Factory: Saddam and Howard Dean
Posted By: Harold
I seem to be the only one in America who fails to see the link between the capture of Saddam Hussein this week and the 2004 Democratic Presidential Primary. Or so says an
op ed in today's Washington Post. On the other hand, I do see this as a classic example of media group think.
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Moebius hydrocarbon finally synthesized.
Posted By: peg
Okay, this is just cool.
Synthesis of a Möbius aromatic hydrocarbon
For your viewing pleasure, I traced the structure and made a .jpg so you can see for yourself.
I posted this on K5 without any further comment, but I've since looked up the paper, and there are a couple of interesting things to note.
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Will the real Monty Meekman please stand up?
Posted By: John
I only heard about
this guy after my book was written, so he's really not the model for Monty Meekman, the mad-scientist cartoon-villain of Acts of the Apostles. However it is odd (creepy?) that
everything he does seems to have been done first by Monty.
And oddly enough I find a lot of what he has to say very compelling. Maybe I should check my brain frequencies. . . maybe I'm just one more happy Feynman Nine customer?
where does the Wetmachine crowd go for breaking news?
Posted By: Stearns
With Saddams capture last night, I'd like to know the implications for trial. If we turn him over to an international court for, say, gasing Kurdish forces, won't he want to tell the court where he got his intelligence reports? Could that lead to a subpoena of previous US administrations? What happens at trial and in world opinion if he's tried by us or by a US-controlled Iraqi “government”.
Where can one go to get the poop? Google isn't current enough.
CBS,
ABC, and
NBC (GE and Microsoft, my two least favorite corporations) are covering the story, but say nothing of relevence about trial.
NPR has an audio report that hasn't been transcribed yet, so I can't search for the word “trial”.
Slashdot and
kuro5hin aren't on to this yet. (I wonder if I should check
Urban Legends.)
My regional newspaper has some coverage (go print media!), but the
New York Times and the Washington Post want me to fill out forms before they tell me anything. (And besides, the stuff about trial at the NYT isn't transcribed from audio yet. Odd, for a newspaper.)
The day after the last election, and on the moring of 9/11, I was at work and had the resources of a hundred well-informed people. While getting paid a lot of money to come up with technology to change the world, we had each other and the best broadband money could buy to get info throughout the day. Now we're all isolated in our homes. Where do you go for the real deal?
the good guys are winning
Posted By: Stearns
Spam sucks, or at least, it used to. In less than two years, filters have been developed and made available for free that work as nice as you please. I may never now the whole story, but I find this little part of it to be a nice tale of good triumphing over evil on the Web.
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Overmind & the Mark of the Beast
Posted By: John
My friend Rick sends this
link to a site that deals with UFOs and biblical prophecy. The section on the Mark of the Beast reminded me of Acts of the Apostles (the one I wrote, that is, not the earlier version by Luke. . .). Some good, wacky, scary stuff.
Heinlein predicts again
Posted By: peg
Starship Troopers was Robert Heinlein's novel about future soldiers. One feature of the book, besides a very right-wing political stance, was the suits worn by the soldiers in battle. Just as inventors made real the remote controlled hands in Heinlein's novella
Waldo, the military is looking to nanotechnology and MIT to make battle suits.
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Tales of the Sausage Factory: Tales From the Sausage Factory: Telephone Competition in the U.S.
Posted By: Harold
I'm taking the opportunity to post a little essay I wrote when I moved last March. It illustrates the problems of implementing domestic phone competition in the U.S. I have no reason to believe that anyone in either company (
Verizon or
Cavalier Telephone) were trying to screw us or were playing fast and lose with the rules. Each one was genuinely trying to do its job, and all the people I talked with were uniformly polite, friendly, and well intentioned. I love well intentioned people, they provide me with such great paving stones that the handcart I'm in rides smooth to the end. . .
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For Copyright Buffs in Europe
Posted By: Harold
I got this notice from the
Consumer Project on Technology, which is a public advocacy organization I've worked with and respect. CPT has been very active on a variety of fronts seeking to limit abuses of intellectual property.
The Trans Atlantic Consumer Dialogue (http://www.cptech.org) is planning an event in Brussels on Feb 4 on digital copyright issues. If people are interested in this, the should contact Jamie Love (james.love@cptech.org) or Manon Ress (manon.ress@cptech.org) for more info....
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