November 2001

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November 30, 2001

Weather fast-forwarded from mid-November to mid-February

Yesterday the weather here in Ottawa fast-forwarded from mid-November to mid-February. We have now had many hours of snow, freezing rain, slush, and then, this morning, a great melting, and more rain. I was prepared for this, equipment-wise, having a pair of insulated rubber knee-high boots, but have found them to be too large, a size 11 to my size 9 1/2. It's a good workout for my calves but very uncomfortable. When do I get to move to the south of France?

Erotic Computation Group at MIT

"From the simple beauty of the Ibrator to the delicate complexity of the Jackhammer Jesus, sexual appliances have a long history of sophisticated industrial design." Erotic Computation Group is a project of the MIT Media Lab.

Psywar Society

"Since its inception in 1958 the Psywar Society has published a quarterly magazine,The Falling Leaf. It is an invaluable source of news, articles, and information about aerial leaflet propaganda."

World Cup draw tomorrow

The World Cup draw tomorrow appears to be a frightening and complex thing. Why on earth is England ranked behind Germany?

Design Not Found

Design Not Found is 37signals' latest work. They highlight the very best and worst of online contingency design, the design of pages presented to users when things go wrong. It could become a useful resource for users to report examples and Web application designers to learn something.

Steven Johnson interviewed

"The Web, left to its own devices, would be the exact opposite of [clusters of useful categories ]: It's like a giant city with no neighborhoods; it needs these kind of meta-filters, these second-level kind of things, whether it is Yahoo or Google or Slashdot, to rein in that chaos and turn it to something more organized." Steven Johnson, author of Emergence: The Connected Lives of Ants, Brains, Cities, and Software, interviewed at Salon.com.

Deconstructing Deconstructionism

"So much of deconstructionism is just cultural Marxism..." Robert Locke of FrontPageMagazine.com tries to sum up the post-modern.

Chapters pulls Mein Kampf

The CEO of Mein Kampf from store shelves and the Chapters/Indigo online store, saying "We consider it hate literature... With freedom of expression, the line is drawn on hate literature." Will she get rid of other hateful and stupid books like The Anarchist's Cookbook, The Protocols of Zion, and Turner Diaries? I asked Metafilter what other books should be removed. Among the suggestions: Ayn Rand's Atlas Shrugged and The Fountainhead, Matt Kent's Gasstationthoughts, Fahrenheit 451, The Bible, and unspecified works by Hanna Quindlan and John Grisham.

Excite.com to disappear

Excite was my start page for a couple of years: not a great search engine, but an innovator in personalized content. That was several years ago, however, and My Yahoo! has been my start page for awhile. People who have stuck with Excite have told me that the service has been gradually shrinking over the past few months, and at the end of September At Home, Excite's parent company, filed for bankruptcy protection, and the @ Home broadband services were sold to AT&T. One has to expect that Excite will soon disappear, with Dogpile taking over the search function and iWon handling most of the portal components.

There are still many ways to get personalized news; My Yahoo! is quite good, as are NewsIsFree, moreover, and the new syndic8. There are also desktop apps such as AmphetaDesk and Headline Viewer.

Ginger to be revealed?

Diane Sawyer, host of ABC's Good Morning America, says that soon we will all know what Dean Kamen's Ginger is: "Well, are you ready? Because one week from today [Monday, Dec. 3] we're going to reveal right here what It is. And we don't know, either. We don't know if you eat it, or you ride it, or you co-anchor with it. We don't know. But we're going to find out a week from today."

YayDir

YayDir is the Yaysoft Weblog Directory. Like Weblogs.com in days past, YayDir facilitates the creation of a list of fave blogs, and tracks when they are updated.

White supremacists and Islamicists just plain agree on a lot of things...

Michelle Cottle in the New Republic: "Just when you thought things couldn't get any more unsettling, some of America's biggest bigots sound like they're bucking for a column in The Nation. It's not just that radical racists admire Al Qaeda's grit--though National Alliance official Billy Roper did recently lament, 'I wish our members had half as much testicular fortitude.' Nor is their praise merely a by-product of their overwhelming hatred of the Jews. White supremacists and Islamicists like Osama bin Laden just plain agree on a lot of things--in particular, that globalism and multiculturalism are the uber-enemies, and that separatism and cultural purity are the answer."

November 29, 2001

2600 Loses DeCSS Appeal

Hacker magazine 2600 has lost their appeal in the DeCSS case.

November 28, 2001

Buffy's will-to-power

Stephanie Zacharek on Buffy's will-to-power: "'Buffy the Vampire Slayer' has always been a show that takes chances, but it seems to be headed in a direction that's more daring than ever. In a culture where sex is supposedly all around us and yet true, intense sexuality is in desperately short supply, the show's openness -- its willingness to face up to the messiness and potential danger of sex -- is glorious and revelatory."

November 25, 2001

Goodbye to The WELL

You know I linger over old things that I should set aside. I have had my Whole Earth 'Lectronic Link account on and off for well over seven years, but for the past three it has not been my primary Internet presence. Lacking the clear self-promotional mission of some of my friends, I had been reluctant to consolidate under a single site, or even, for that matter, a single identity. Towards that end I had established my post-hacker "oppositional" Web site, Zone Libre, in my own old WELL Web space. More recently I had imagined instead leaving there some essential part of myself, though I couldn't determine what that was, and still can't.

What has prompted me to finally push the Web site and the email address over the cliff has been the volume of spam I have been receiving. I am quite fond of the address -- jhs at well.com -- as it is obviously short and sweet. But it is also all over the Web and all over the Google Usenet archives, as well as in a metatag on several thousand Web pages at IDRC.

In the Internet's medieval period, sharing your one true email address meant more contact with the nascent digerati; now it means endless offers for ejaculation pills and Florida timeshares. And by endless, I mean over 50 junk emails a day, double what I was receiving at the account last year, so that the ratio of obviously useless to even vaguely useful is roughly 100 to 1.

Of all the hosts I have dealt with in the past few years, The WELL, sadly, seems the least capable of stemming the flow of spam. So I have been paying for my own filtering at Spamcop.net, and at the current rate the that effort will cost me over $100 a year.

I suppose I should have listened to providence when I travelled to San Francisco at the end of 1999 and visited the old WELL HQ in Sausalito. All the crazed dot.coms that could have interviewed me then, and I ended up at Well Engaged.

So the account goes. Poof. Zone Libre can now be found at the 'Eye. I have left a little something behind, though I don't know if it will survive. We'll see.

November 22, 2001

American jurisdiction over Net?

An email sent between two cities in China probably would travel through the United States -- putting its contents under American jurisdiction. The recently approved anti-terrorism law is a "massive expansion of U.S. sovereignty" that could be used to prosecute foreign hackers. And once that precedent is established, much of global Internet communications could come under American authority.

Secret Santa

I like simple, elegant things that spread fun and build community. Secret Santa makes sure that everyone gets a present and everyone is happy.

November 21, 2001

Smokers Told to Fetter Their Fumes

Smokers Told to Fetter Their Fumes: "The Montgomery County [Virginia] Council yesterday approved one of the most restrictive anti-smoking measures in the nation... Under the county's new indoor air quality standards, tobacco smoke would be treated in the same manner as other potentially harmful pollutants... If the smoke wafts into a neighbor's home -- whether through a door, a vent or an open window -- that neighbor could complain to the county's Department of Environmental Protection... Smokers, and in some cases landlords or condominium associations that fail to properly ventilate buildings, would face fines of up to $750 per violation if they failed to take steps to mitigate the problem..."

November 20, 2001

Safeweb turned off

Safeweb has turned off their free privacy service. Company spokeswoman Sandra Song said "Consumer privacy is more of an idealistic vision..." Is anonymous use of the Internet dying?

November 17, 2001

G-20 in Ottawa

The Group of 20 meeting is taking place today and tomorrow here in Ottawa. Yesterday I watched from my office window at the corner of Bank and Albert Streets as a snake march made its way through the downtown of the city. This particular action was, I suppose, only mildly disruptive until they passed the wretched Bank Street McDonald's. As if on cue, a few of the marchers pulled bricks out of their backpacks and broke all the windows of the fast food restaurant. The targeting of Mickey D's was quite deliberate: the marchers passed many other stores and restaurants as they made there way through the downtown, yet even Starbucks two blocks south wasn't singled out.

The Ottawa Citizen, true to form, played up the vandalism with a sarcastic caption: "Breaking Windows for Democracy". The mainstream media's coverage of the anti-globalisation movement over the past three years has provided us with some of the best examples of media bias one will ever see. We can count on stories about supposed acts of vandalism along with editorials condemning the peaceful protestors, and then virtually no coverage of what is actually being objected to. Randall Denley's column in today's Citizen is a good case in point; he argues that finance ministers and bankers meeting behind closed doors is "democratic," but that peaceful protesters marching for fair wages and democracy somehow are not.

I have wondered for some time about the wisdom of hosting the G-20 in downtown Ottawa. Because of security concerns in the wake of September 11th, the conference was moved from Delhi to Ottawa. When I first heard that the meeting would be here, I thought it might end up at a nice golf resort in Gatineau, isolated but accessible. Instead, the Conference Centre downtown is the site. Anyone who knows Ottawa understands the problems this causes: the Centre sits beside the Rideau Canal, very close to the corner of two busy streets, Rideau and Sussex, across the street from the city's largest shopping mall, and within a block of the Byward Market. "Securing" the Centre has meant shutting two of the bridges and most of the entrances to the mall, and the mall is the hub for the Ottawa public transit system.

Why should thousands of Ottawa citizens be unconvinced by this meeting? How will we benefit? Can anyone tell me?

November 15, 2001

Were you ever a member of AVS?

Were you ever a member of AVS, the Adult Verification System? If so, the Feds have you on a list of potential pedophiles. I remember AVS from the mid-1990s; they were one of the easiest ways to generate revenue from an adult Web site, using the same business model as AdultCheck does today. A very few of the hundreds of sites AVS "fronted" for contained child porn, and the owners of the service are now in federal prison as a result. Even though they knew differently, federal authorities claimed that they had "dismantled the largest-known commercial child pornography enterprise ever uncovered," and for the past two years have been sending offers of child porn to some of 30,000 people on the AVS membership list, the vast majority of which have no interest in child porn.

Nasty surpirse?

Last evening I watched an MSNBC interview with Peter Bergen, author of Holy War, Inc.: Inside The Secret World of Osama Bin Laden. He thought that bin Laden may well intend to die in the current conflict and that he has a "nasty surprise" -- a weapon of mass distruction -- that will be used as a last resort. Hamid Mir, the editor of Pakistan's Ausaf newspaper who interviewed bin Laden last week, was of a similar opinion.

BBC has a transcript of an interview with Taleban leader Mullah Mohammad Omar in which he states "the current situation in Afghanistan is related to a bigger cause - that is the destruction of America... If God's help is with us, this will happen within a short period of time; keep in mind this prediction." Bin Laden claims he has nuclear weapons, and Western intelligence agencies say they have discovered evidence of transactions involving sophisticated laboratory equipment, along with a new bioterrorism manual distributed to cells of the al Qaeda terrorist network.

November 13, 2001

Nazi and East German Propaganda Archive

Nazi and East German Propaganda Archive at Calvin College: "Propaganda was central to Nazi Germany and the German Democratic Republic. The German Propaganda Archive includes both propaganda itself and material produced for the guidance of propagandists. The goal is to help people understand the two great totalitarian systems of the 20th Century by giving them access to the primary material."

November 11, 2001

Sciforums.com

Sciforums.com is an intelligent science discussion community. Forums include "Pseudoscience", "Free Thoughts ", "Intelligence & Machines" and "Nerd Culture".

Natalie Imbruglia's new album first major UK CD release to feature Cactus Data Shield

NTKnow, the "the weekly high-tech sarcastic update for the uk", reports "Natalie Imbruglia's 'White Lillies Island' album has beaten Michael Jackson to the public enemy number one spot by being the first major UK CD release to feature Cactus Data Shield, a copy protection system which ostensibly prevents MP3 swapping by corrupting the table of contents so it won't play on PCs... In a bizarre bid to pacify PC users, the disc also contains a Windows app which will play the entire album from a chunked 42meg MP3 file - at a scorching 128kbps, hi-fi fans... but NTK reader MIKE GRAY has already successfully burned the files and the player onto a CDR... So: a CD which won't play under Linux or MacOS, but which is actually easier to pirate under Windows?" A note to the music industry: I am never going to buy a copy protected CD.

November 10, 2001

Changes at Rogers@Home

I have made a point over the past two years to avoid complaining about my high speed Internet provider, Rogers@Home, a business of Canada's largest cable television company in partnership with Excite@Home. During the service interruptions, difficulties with tech support, and the disappearance of my Web site (twice), I wrote nothing about the problems. At one point, my primary login name, used to control my account and also my default email address, simply disappeared. This took a week and several calls and emails to the poor Rogers tech support folks to fix, and the fact that this could happen at all still boggles my mind. Rogers' service is so poor, people are suing them.

Today I received an email from Rogers telling me that the domain names for both my Rogers Web space and my email address would be changing on November 22nd. For me, this is actually little trouble: Rogers email has been so poor over the past three years that I have stopped using it for anything, including my eBay auctions. However, for others, specially the average home user, the shift is a major problem, especially for those who have used Rogers as the primary email. Many @Home users are not, I expect, all that enthusiastic about being identified with Rogers. Part-and-parcel with the change: Web sites will be erased when the domain is moved.

I now recommend that Rogers@Home users not rely on Rogers for either Web hosting or email services. If you are a current Rogers@Home user, I suggest you visit the Residential Broadband Users' Association for support in dealing with Rogers and some good technical and security tips. If you are considering becoming a Rogers@Home subscriber, you should know that there are most likely other high speed providers in your area including Bell Sympatico, ExpressVu/DirecPC, and, here in Ottawa, Magma Highspeed.

November 8, 2001

Rosenberger silenced for "national security reasons"

Rob Rosenberger, editor of Vmyths.com, writes that three uniformed federal police visited him in the middle of the night and asked that he not to publish an upcoming column that would embarrass anti-virus vendor for "national security reasons." From late-October, but intriguing.

November 7, 2001

This AutoZone.com link is illegal

If you want to link to auto parts Web site AutoZone.com, you have to download a four page legal agreement, fill it out, sign it, and fax it back to them. The link must be in the form of the official AutoZone.com logo, linking to any other page isn't allowed, and "may be used only on web [sic] pages that make accurate references to AutoZone.com..." Of course, none of this lawyer busy-work is legal.

Pacifica Radio settlement?

I have been following the problems at Pacifica Radio, America's only independent community radio network, for some time now, but I haven't commented on them because, frankly, the situation was just too unpleasant and reminded me of the idiocy that can be at the core of campus radio in Canada. Really, you don't want to get me started on this; instead, listen to these on- and off-air confrontations between some WBAI staff. Anyway, it appears that the whole mess might be over: plaintiffs in four lawsuits against Pacifica have reached an agreement with the foundation that will lead to "accountability and democratizing" of the network. More information can be found at savepacifica.

November 6, 2001

Montreal is going to lose the Expos

Major League Baseball owners have voted to eliminate two teams, a process that is being called "contraction." For more that 100 years, baseball did nothing but expand; as recently as 1997, the Tampa Bay Devil Rays and Arizona Diamondbacks entered the majors. (In fact, the last time the National league shrunk was in 1899, from 12 teams to eight teams.) There is much speculation about which teams might go -- the Minnesota Twins, Florida Marlins, and Tampa Bay Devil Rays have all been mentioned -- but one thing seems certain: Montreal is going to lose the Expos.

As a child, I remember the Expos as Canada's team. They were a very good team in the late-1970s and early-1980s, with catcher Gary Carter and pitcher Steve Rogers. I wasn't much of a baseball fan then, but I remember coming home from school on October 19th 1981 -- "Blue Monday" -- to watch Dodgers' outfielder Rick Monday hit a ninth-inning home run off Steve Rogers in the deciding game of the National League Championship Series at Olympic Stadium. And in 1994, the 'Spos seemed destined for the World Series, but the players' strike intervened, and there was no World Series that year.

Nothing was quite the same for the Expos, or for me as a baseball fan, after the 1994 strike. I don't think the strike was the cause of baseball's current problems, but rather its worst symptom. Right now all major league sports are in a significant decline, as is wrestling, by the way. I think the only numbers that are solid at the moment are football, and I wouldn't count on that lasting.

November 4, 2001

An "open mind" about torture

The Ottawa Citizen this morning ran a front page story by Leonard Stern suggesting that Canadians keep an "open mind" about torture. The story was a companion to his piece about how Israel deals with terrorism. Stern's "torture" story continued from the front to A6, a page crowned by a highly speculative article from the London Sunday Times about the possibility of an attack "bigger than September 11."

The juxtaposition was unnerving, and I have to think this is a case of editorial manipulation, not coincidence. Whatever its strengths, the Citizen has a stiflingly right wing editorial policy. An editorial last week opposed internment camps for Arab-Canadians and immigrants but suggested they were "inevitable." The torture story today seems more of the same: floating out a repugnent, reactionary idea without endorsing it. It is a sickening trend.

September 11th has brought out the best and worst in many, not the least of which is the press. Our government is about to change the Criminal Code to make it possible to arrest and detain people without charge and force them to testify before a judge, even when no charges are pending. Add to that the ability of the police to use "reasonable force" to make people talk, and you might as well forget about pretending that we're in a free society.

The Internet FAQ Archives has lost its funding

The Internet FAQ Archives has lost its funding and may close. Prior to the advent of the World Wide Web and Usenet archiving the Frequently Asked Question (FAQ) document was the heart of the knowledge retained on the Internet. Typically posted to a Usenet group on a regular basis, FAQs grew over time, answering common questions before they were posted and explaining discussion etiquette to the uninitiated. The FAQ became the template for Internet writing, and helped to create a culture of utility around first Gopherspace, then the Web.

Writes Kent Landfield at faqs.org: "If something is not done VERY, VERY shortly, FAQS.org will have to be shutdown. FAQS.org has lost its funding and I cannot personally pay for the bandwidth needed to keep it operational... Please, if you have benefited from faqs.org in any way, take the time now to send a contribution to faqs.org. It doesn't matter how large, every little bit will help."

Faqs.org is accepting donations using the Amazon Honor system and PayPal.

November 3, 2001

The last time I saw Gillian

After I found out that Robert Merritt had died, I wrote Gillian a letter to let her know. She had been in one of Robert's classes with me.

The last time I saw Gillian was 1991, in New York City, New Music Seminar. I connected with her my second night there. She was still down in the Greenwich Village, but in a loft apartment in a stylish high-rise instead of in the place with the grand piano in the living room. "I live in New York," she told me. "I'm never going back" to Canada. She said seeing both her father and Margo Timmins (of the Cowboy Junkies) in an article in Maclean's called "Ten Canadians That Matter" drove her out for good. A situation like that was hard for me to understand.

She took me out to a Mexican restaurant that night, and between us we drank forty American dollars worth of marguerites. I think it was something like five pitchers of the stuff. Suitably sloshed, she told me that my trip to New York was about to be capped by a visit to Club Babydoll.

I began to sober up almost as soon as I got inside. Gyrating, naked women will do that. I started drinking again, only three beers this time, but it was enough to fight off creeping morality. Gillian said she appreciated the pathos of the dancers, or something to that effect.

Back in Gillian's bed, mostly naked, I don't know if it was high morals, the threat of guilt, common sense, or just the alcohol that kept me immobilized. It's nice to imagine that it was my complete dedication to Monique, as this makes the subsequent unraveling of our relationship even more ironic.

During my first year of university I used to wander around Halifax a lot

During my first year of university I used to wander around Halifax a lot, by myself. Once I was walking down Spring Garden Road, back to King's after a writing class, so it was nine at night or so. Not a bad class. Just past the Lord Nelson Hotel and the Public Gardens I crossed the street and saw three kids, maybe thirteen or fourteen years old, walking toward me. One of the kids had a pretty big stick, and he was yelling and waving it around. I didn't try to avoid them, but I could feel the tension, because there were three of them and they weren't moving out of my way and I'm not moving out their way, mostly because I didn't know what to do.

Then, I was face to face with one of them. Well, face to chest. He told me to move and the other two laughed like it's a crazy thing. Did I say something? I didn't go anywhere, he pushed by me, and that's it, I lost my temper and asked him if he thinks he's big shit because he pushed me. This was a problem and though I backed away they came on and waved the stick around some more. They came up and I grabbed the stick and threw it over the fence into the Gardens.

This was a real piss-off. I started walking away, my back to them now. This was stupid, always stupid. The kid said, "I'm gonna teach you a lesson" and they started throwing frozen, crusty ice at my head. This isn't snow but the last of the winter freeze, solid stuff. "Hit his head with ice!"

The first piece missed me, but right near my ear. Stay cool or run, but I stayed cool. More ice, maybe I did walk a little faster. I didn't want to kick the hell out of a bunch of kids, but they thought I was scared. They were crappy shots with the ice, thank god, and it stoped.

I was walking and glanced back, just a glance. Now the kids had a big tree branch, because we were beside the Gardens. This did scare me, because it was all quite fast and I had my back to them. The branch was a couple of feet long and pretty big around. I remember hearing a cracking sound, they were breaking it or something but stupidly I tried to stay cool.

Next thing I'm on the pavement, on my knees. They had launched it from maybe fifteen feet away, and this time their aim had been pretty good. It hit me on the lower back, and was painful enough to knock me down. I got up and took off after them, but they were gone, split up and god knows where.

I kept that fucking branch in my dorm room for the rest of the year.

Failed and vanished dot.coms

Look at this list of failed and vanished dot.coms, and tell me if you really miss any of them. Well, do you? Okay, yes, a few: eyada.com (because of Dave Meltzer's great show), WrestleCrap, Wine.com, Total New York, The Spot, Suck.com, sixdegrees.com, Pseudo.com, hotoffice.com, feedmag.com. FOr the most part a lot of interesting ideas that didn't work, or got too big.

November 2, 2001

John Dvorak asks Microsoft to fix its software

John Dvorak asks Microsoft to fix its software: "Microsoft is always asked about this security flaw or that security flaw. The questioners usually end with 'Why do you even have such a feature?' Microsoft spokespeople invariably answer, 'It's what our customers have asked for.' You see this comment in a lot of the news coverage of Microsoft security failings. But which customers is the company referring to?"

November 1, 2001

Victory for DVD Code Cracking

Victory for DVD Code Cracking: "A California State Appeals Court ruled on Thursday that computer code used to 'descramble' DVDs is 'pure speech,' and citing the First Amendment, the court reversed a trial court's order to block the code from appearing on the Web."