Fixing the World (larger version here). Keep watching at least 'til you get to the "Halliburton Surviva-Ball." More info here.
October 7, 2009
The Yes Men's New Movie,
October 6, 2009
Monofonus Press's
American Trashcan field recordings is worth visiting even if just to see the header (you have to watch for a bit to get the full benefit).
The entries look cool, too.
FBI Investigates Coder for Downloading Public Records
Per Wired, 22-year-old programmer Aaron Swartz has been investigated by the FBI because the Government Printing Office experimented with offering free access to its database of public court records, and Swartz made the mistake of accepting their offer.
Swartz downloaded 19,856,160 pages, uploaded them to amazon.com's EC2 "cloud" service, and donated them to public.resource.org, "an open government initiative spearheaded by Carl Malamud as part of a broader project to make public as many government databases as Malamud can find. It was Malamud who previously shamed the SEC into putting all its EDGAR filings online in the ’90s, and he used $600,000 in donations to buy 50 years of documents from the nation’s appeals court, which he promptly put on the internet for anyone to download in bulk."
Prior to the GPO's experimental offer, the records had been available only for a fee of 8¢ per page, or more if purchased through a privately-owned, commercial intermediary. When the gummint figured out what was happening, they abruptly terminated the experiment and notified the FBI that the database was "compromised."
A partially-redacted FBI report shows they ran Swartz through a full range of gummint databases, among other things checking his work history, his Facebook data [see, e.g., here and here], whether his cell number had ever come up in a federal wiretap or pen register, and checking him against a private data broker’s database; they also obtained his driver's license photo and considered a stake-out of his home (which they concluded would be too conspicuous, since few cars parked on Swartz's dead-end, suburban street).
"The feds evidently identified Swartz in the first place by approaching Amazon, which provided his name, phone number and address. . . . Amazon’s user agreement for its cloud computing solutions gives it the right to turn over customer information to the government on request."
More at Wired. (And for more on Amazon's role, see Amazon EC2 and Amazon VPC.)
(Thanks, Ben!)
October 5, 2009
"Second Life Performance Night" at Eyebeam
(NY). "Alan Sondheim along with Foofwa d'Imobilite will present a performance using the aesthetics of the Second Life (or see Wikipedia) environment to create an experimental choreography; Lily & Honglei will present The Merry-Go-Around — a virtual installation addressing a series of environmental issues in today’s China; [and] Second Front has discovered a virtual crypt within Second Life and are inviting the public to witness its opening. Together, these three short performances (12-15 minutes each) will sample some of the contemporary trends in Second Life performance art.
"The performances will be followed by a brief panel discussion and a subsequent launch party of Avvie Road — the second DVD of Second Front’s performance works."
More at Eyebeam; wish I could be there.
Exhibition, "Performance/Art": Shonibare, Ahtila et Al. at the DMA
Opening on Oct. 8, and including
British-Nigerian artist Yinka Shonibare’s film Un ballo in Maschera (A Masked Ball), based on Giuseppe Verdi’s opera of the same name . . . ; Finnish artist Eija-Liisa Ahtila’s quietly intense and atmospheric evocation of an ill-at-ease mind, the three-screen film work Talo/The House; a new installation work by Dallas-based artists Frances Bagley and Tom Orr based on the spectacular sets and costumes they designed for a 2006 Dallas Opera production of Verdi’s Nabucco; . . . a selection of Argentine artist Guillermo Kuitca’s powerful paintings and drawings based on album covers and seating charts of major theaters and opera houses; and David Altmejd’s spectacular sculpture, The Eye, . . . created in conjunction with a recent Metropolitan Opera production of John Adams’ Doctor Atomic.Through Mar. 21, 2010. More at the DMA; or for more on Shonibare, see my previous post.
October 4, 2009
Grayson: Has the Fed Ever Tried to Manipulate the Stock or Gold Markets?
(For more, see Grayson make Bernanke squirm here.)