Currently:
Author Archive
2002-06-30»
saturday night at the palladium»
Previous post notwithstanding, I’m disturbed to discover that I had literal nightmares about Palladium last night. And sensible ones too (in the sense that they didn’t consist of Steve Ballmer chasing me across a landscape made of giant naked librarians).
I’m still clarifying my thoughts on this, but Palladium appears to involve sacrificing liberty (the liberty to choose what runs on my computer) for some temporary security. And the more I think about it, the more I don’t like it. Ryan Lackey, in more forthright terms, agrees.
In his fascinating summary of what is to be done, Ryan discusses mass public rejection of Palladium, and I currently see this as the best solution. But I’m still trying to bring together my thoughts to convey why – and I worry that many geeks don’t instinctively understand the risks.
Before they were slapped into wakefulness by the wet trout of legislation, many knowledgeable people assured me that information could never be controlled, because the PC was, de facto, an open system.
Worse, there was a tacit assumption by a lot of (especially software) folk that over time, everything was an open system – that people wouldn’t stand for anything else, and that if nothing else the ingenuity of the black market would guarantee our freedoms. As someone who has watched Rupert Murdoch succesfully introduce a completely closed, cryptographically secure, digital content-provision system to 40% of UK households, I know that isn’t true. There’s a lot of (illicit) money to be made cracking the Sky Digital box, and it hasn’t been yet. Open systems are the exception, not the rule.
Palladium would install a closed environment on every usable desktop on the planet. Who entered and what exited that environment would not be controlled by the owner. Your programs would not run there, except at the behest of Microsoft. Software that did run there would be hidden from your sight by strong cryptography, so there would be no way of knowing what it was doing in the Palladium. And all the vital parts of your computer – the low-level hardware, a chunk of your RAM, a slice of your harddrive, even perhaps a sizeable amount of your networking capability – would only be accessible from within the Palladium. The Palladium is like Shakin’ Stevens “Green Door”. You don’t know what they’re doing, but they certainly are laughing a lot behind it.
Cory talks about the universal Turing machine as a unique object, that differs from the rest of our consumer electronics. Intel exec Leslie Vadasz warns of “neuter[ing] the personal computer to be nothing more than a videocassette recorder”. But the hardest part of this fight will be explaining to the media and the politicians (and maybe the public, although I think they have a better grasp than the rest) what the difference is. And why putting this tiny little poisoned and closed chalice into every PC destroys what has driven so much of the innovation of the last thirty years.
Comments Off on saturday night at the palladium
2002-06-29»
a sense of perspective on the rip act»
You know, when people say I’m paranoid about all this surveillance legislation, I like to point them to this analysis of the RIP legislation (bottom left, near back end of cat). Now, that’s paranoid. (Found on a flyer handed to Andrew Brown yonks ago).
Comments Off on a sense of perspective on the rip act
2002-06-27»
googlebot heard me!»
So Oblomovka finally appeared in the Google rankings – with the cached copy containing my recent whinging. Justice!
If you do the search yourself, watch out: it’s Google Dance time. That means Google will return different results depending on which set of servers you access. This happens once a month, as Google rejigs its page rankings. It’s a Saturnalia for searches.
Comments Off on googlebot heard me!
every ampmeter must go!»
I am so shooting myself in the foot publicising this: an auction this Sunday of tinkey-toy molecular models, demonstration-size slide rules, and “portable potentiometers” from the attic of Berkeley Physics Department.
Comments Off on every ampmeter must go!
cure for anorexia»
Typical Swedes: think everything can be solved with a nice sauna
A Swedish clinic says it has developed a highly effective treatment for anorexia and bulimia, eating disorders affecting many thousands of people, especially teenaged girls.
The treatment involves training patients in normal eating habits then making them sit down to rest in rooms with a temperature as high as 104 Fahrenheit.
Comments Off on cure for anorexia
2002-06-25»
Wed Jun 26 01:02:00 2002»
The desperate traffic in illicit goods across America’s borders continues. With Kinder Eggs.
Kinder (pronounced as in kindergarten and meaning “children” in German) can’t be sold legally here because the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission says the toy is a choking hazard. The Food and Drug Administration also objects, deeming the thumb-sized plastic capsule that contains the little toy an illegal, “embedded” nonfood item.
For years, Americans who returned from Kinder lands supported a small market here in the illegal eggs, and the feds were prompted to make periodic crackdowns against importers, often ethnic food shops. But in the past year or so, scofflaws have risen to a new level of Internet-fueled defiance, touching off a lucrative Kinder boom. Web sellers buy the candies — which are the size of a hen’s egg, with milk chocolate on the outside, white chocolate on the inside — and charge from 80 cents to $2 or more per egg.
via Cardhouse
Comments Off on Wed Jun 26 01:02:00 2002
there goes another one.»
Owen Thomas’ Ditherati.com just got domain-jacked. And there continues to be a pattern. I’m not sure, but I’m betting that the new whois owner:
Administrator:
Huang ming drc@vip.163.com 13018501730
Huang ming
gd
Guangzhou,gd,CN 510000
is another fake, but convincing-sounding, international address. Just like hoopla.com and smug.com. I feel like I’m in some clumsily-updated Agatha Christie novel, where a mysterious stranger is knocking off all my favourite Websites, one by one. Except the real criminal here is no stranger at all. Is there a security hole in Network Solution’s system, being exploited by one group of domain thieves? Or even an exploit script doing the rounds? Hard to tell – but I wouldn’t be surprised. Those incompetent, money-grubbing, secretive little fatcats at NetSol have sat in luxury so long they couldn’t even secure their own disgusting little monopoly.
Update: it expired. Reminder got lost in the post. Netsol let off hook. Daaamn them!
VerisignOff – it’s the only solution.
And do you know what really pisses me off? The one thing that ICANN could have done, should have done, within a week of its existence, was shut down Network Solution’s (now Verisign) .com monopoly. The rest of that quango’s job is, as so many people say, merely what Jon Postel did alone at his workstation for decades. But when ICANNwere first given power, for a brief moment they had the political mandate to cut NetSol down to size, and spread the registry out. And no matter what they claim, they fumbled that chance. And within a year or so, they were the absolute creature of Verisign.
Comments Off on there goes another one.
virgin mobile usa, strike two»
There’s a expiry time for top-up credits. And, it appears, an expiry time for the phones themselves. Nick found the the FAQ:
Q. Is there a minimum amount I need to Top-up?
A. The minimum amount you can Top-Up at a time is $20. As long as you add at least $20 every 90 days your account will stay “Current.”
Every time you Top-Up your 90 days starts over. If you forget to Top-Up at all in 90 days, your account becomes “Past Current” and you won’t be able to make or receive calls.
60 days after your account becomes “Past Current” your account will expire. But you don’t want that to happen because expired accounts lose their phone numbers.
Ah well. This isn’t that bad, but it’s still nothing like the straightforward nature of Virgin’s deal in Britain. One more catch and they’re out, I suppose. I did worry that they’d get screwed over by the American telcos.
The customer support voicemail is Very Virgin as well: 1-888-322-1122, if you’re in the US. This is not necessarily a good thing.
Comments Off on virgin mobile usa, strike two
2002-06-24»
biella has a blog»
Biella, who runs the best reading group in the universe, and is the Bay Area’s free software community’s very own anthropologist, now has a blog. This is good news for me, because it means I can secretly discover what The Ruckus Society is without having to ask.
Comments Off on biella has a blog
the deal: the music died»
Evil twists that killed Internet radio. Mark Cuban, the man who cut the Yahoo!/RIAA deal that the US Library of Congress ruling was based upon, admits that it was designed to destroy competition in the Internet radio market.
The Yahoo! deal I worked on, if it resembles the deal the CARP ruling was built on, was designed so that there would be less competition, and so that small webcasters who needed to live off of a “percentage-of-revenue” to survive, couldn’t.
Comments Off on the deal: the music died