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Oblomovka

Currently:

2002-06-24

here, google google bot!

There’s something a bit awry with Google’s indexing of my site. Which is to say – it ain’t doing it. Despite Googlebot sniffing around, it’s only indexed a few of the static pages.

Of course, some of that might be down to Oblomovka’s singular lack of Google Juice, but I’m thinking maybe it’s also my code. Each of the day entries also shows the subsequent seven days of entries, which a lot of the pages appear rather similar to each other. Could the bot hive mind think I’m trying to game the ranking? There’s not an easy hack to fix this – I’m going to wait a week and see if anything turns up.

more on virgin mobile usa

So it turns out that under Virgin Mobile USA, you still pay for incoming and outgoing calls – even though the FCC okayed “calling party pays” three years ago. Strike one. Next question: do prepaid minutes last forever, or do they expire after a couple of months, like every braindead US prepaid phone scheme until now?

who can get what from your isp

After all the confusion during the RIP Order debate, I’ve written a first approximation of who can get hold of your communications data (like Web logs, e-mail addresses, etc) from your ISP. It’s up on the STAND site now.

2002-06-23

virgin mobile hits usa

Oh, at last. Virgin Mobile‘s introducing a UK-style pay structure to the US mobile phone network. No contracts, 10 cents a minute after the first ten minutes. It’s a bit pricey, but it does mean that I no longer have to deal directly with US cellphone providers, their insane contracts, and the most fucked-up unuserfriendly corporate customer relations I’ve ever encountered. Our household has been trying to cancel a phone contract with Worldcom for eight months without success. Fuckers don’t even answer the phone.

I can’t tell whether Virgin US still has the US airtime system of charging, where you pay for incoming calls as well as outgoing. It’d be fantastic if they junked that too.

pleasedon’tscrewthisupvirginpleasedon’tscrewthisup

2002-06-22

the rational street performer protocol

The folk who brought you the The Circle (a P2P network with some intriguing properties) have just finished their first round of funding. To get the cash, they used one of their other innovations – a tweak of Bruce Schneier’s Street Performer Protocol that, they say, gives better incentives to freeloaders to become contributors. They call it The Rational Street Performer Protocol.

One useful aspect about the RSSP is that even if you understood none of the above, you can still use it. Basically, the RSSP says that if you are providing a regular service (like a Web comic, or software maintenance) you should get people to pledge you money in the form:

I will donate one dollar in every $____ raised over $____ up to a maximum contribution of $____

I still don’t quite understand the logic here (which never bodes too well for economic ideas that rely on “rational” consumption), but at least it’s easy implementable. Also, it somehow reminds me of sponsored swims at school.

2002-06-21

spamassassin for windows

I’m still pretty enthusiastic about SpamAssassin even though I spent last night fixing bugs in its 2.20 version, and unentangling one commonhouse user who was sick to death of it. Now there’s a version out that Outlook users can install onto Windows. I know that SA won’t be the final solution for spam, but I hope it might have the effect of making spam better written and less cliched.

2002-06-20

two extinctions for the price of one

Killer asteroids and killer flu viruses, all in one day. What did I do?

2002-06-19

explore these links for me

Argh. One of those days where I haven’t done a thing but answer mail, and it’s already 2:30pm. Not even any time to check out Paco Xander Nathan‘s postmodernist Google competition entry (via Missing Matter), nor the lab notebooks of Linus Pauling, now scanned and online (via Robot Wisdom).

2002-06-18

we slashdotted the government.

I’ve just sent a very STANDish mail out to the people who helped with the campaign against the RIP Standing Order that would give dozens of government departments access to traffic data without a warrant. It’s all very quiet-pat-on-the-back for everybody involved.

This, however, is my personal Web site, where I’m allowed to say:

Holy fucking batshit, we won!

The Home Secretary, David Blunkett (equivalent, I suppose, to John Ashcroft in the US) actually came out and said that the government had “blundered”, and was “wrong”. The BBC just ran a news story (needs Real player, and will go out of date at 1230BST on Wednesday 19th June – I’ll get hold of an MPG shortly) about how the majority of pressure came from e-mail and faxes from ordinary Net users.

After a hardcore Internet campaign, they withdrew the whole goddamn proposal, at a stage where it was only a week away from becoming law.

People keep on saying “unprecedented U-turn” and “unusual government honesty”. I’m trying to work out how we can turn this into everyday politics.

2002-06-17

woodie guthrie on copyright

From Peter Seeger, via Techdirt, via Bifurcated Rivets:

When Woody Guthrie was singing hillbilly songs on a little Los Angeles radio station in the late 1930s, he used to mail out a small mimeographed songbook to listeners who wanted the words to his songs, On the bottom of one page appeared the following: “This song is Copyrighted in U.S., under Seal of Copyright # 154085, for a period of 28 years, and anybody caught singin it without our permission, will be mighty good friends of ourn, cause we don’t give a dern. Publish it. Write it. Sing it. Swing to it. Yodel it. We wrote it, that’s all we wanted to do.” W.G.