. . . here.
November 14, 2007
November 8, 2007
AT&T Whistleblower: Telecoms Do Not Deserve Immunity
Former AT&T technician Mark Klein says that, at the U.S. government's request, AT&T has installed numerous, massive facilities that have been indiscriminately copying all internet traffic, even that of users who are not AT&T customers but whose communications were routed through AT&T's system. As he states in this video, “These installations only make sense if they’re doing a huge, massive domestic dragnet on all internet traffic in the United States.” He also says the telcos are intimately familiar with the constitutional issues from having dealt with warrants for wiretapping, etc., and knew full well that the government's program was in gross violation of the rights of millions of U.S. citizens. (My summary includes some details from an interview with Klein aired yesterday on NPR.)
Panning for Gold in Low Places
Reported on yahoo (with photo from Reuters):
"NEW YORK (Reuters) - . . . a local restaurateur unveiled a $25,000 chocolate sundae on Wednesday, setting a Guinness world record for the most expensive dessert.
[ * * * ]
"The dessert . . . is infused with 5 grams (0.2 ounces) of edible 23-karat gold and served in a goblet lined with edible gold. At the base of the goblet is an 18-karat gold bracelet with 1 carat of white diamonds.
"The sundae is topped with whipped cream covered with more gold and a side of La Madeline au Truffle from Knipschildt Chocolatier, which sells for $2,600 a pound." (More at the link above.)
Let the poor pan?
I'm going to have to add a new quote by Norman O. Brown to my "[t]houghts for the year or whatever" in the side bar at left.
Adam and the Ants
Thank goddess for friends like snarky (via Merlin Mann) who help give me a clue re- what I missed at the time.
November 2, 2007
Maira Kalman's Principles of Uncertainty
I had no idea so many of my favorite things -- the illustrated version of The Elements of Style, (un)FASHION, so many New Yorker covers -- all came from one person (here's her TED talk):
And check out her painted blog ("plog"?) on the New Yorker site.
October 17, 2007
3.37 Minutes of Bacon Jokes
As Bullwinkle said, "now for something really important":
October 16, 2007
Ongoing, Warrantless Telephone & Internet Surveillance of Us All
Even Starbucks is now required to help them spy on us.
Check out the summaries here and here. Note the post in the first thread indicating that telcos may now be routinely routing ALL communications through jurisdictions outside the U.S., so all can be captured.
All info is good info – until it's used against you for bad purposes. The gummint surveilled John Lennon (Wikipedia) and Martin Luther King (Wikipedia) in its efforts to end their activism, probably succeeding in the case of Lennon, who faced deportation for marijuana use.
A balance of power requires a balance of knowledge: we need to know at least as much about what our gummint is doing as it knows about us. We don't.
October 15, 2007
Pirates Take Over Anti-Piracy Website
"Software pirates have launched an astonishing smash 'n' grab raid on the music biz, stealing the domain name of one of its foremost anti-piracy bodies.
"The Pirate Bay has now taken up residence at IFPI.com, a domain once owned by the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry (IFPI). . . ."
* * *
"When asked to confirm how they got the domain name, Pirate Bay administrator Brokeup told TorrentFreak: 'It's not a hack. Someone just gave us the domain name. We have no idea how they got it, but it's ours and we're keeping it.'"
More at Tech.co.uk.