Yesterday marked the beginning to an end of “compassionate conservatism”, “trickle-down economy” and all the other bullshit that’s been screwing up this country for the past 8 years.
It was fun watching the wake on Fox News with Karl Rove.
-TPP
Random noise, incoherent thoughts, whatever.
Threat Level, a blog concentrating on online privacy, security, politics and crime issues, has posted an excellent article about what would it be like if the handbag industry adopted the same business model music and movie industries have.
Yes, it’s absurd.
-TPP
A little bird told me that to gain support for his plan to extend New York City Mayoral term limits to three terms Mayor Bloomberg is sending requests for public support of his plan to organizations that deal with the Mayor’s office and/or the New York City Council.
This is, of course, putting those organizations in a very tough situation. By not responding favorably to his request, they are risking getting themselves on the Mayor’s black list. The organizations would suddenly find dealing with the Mayor’s office very, very difficult. Appointments would be hard to arrange, the organization wouldn’t be invited to hearings, meetings or networking events, budgets could mysteriously get slashed.
Don’t for a moment think it wouldn’t happen. It happens every day already.
Shrewd move, Mr. Mayor. Almost Dr Evil-like, if you ask me.
-TPP
Finnish ex-president Martti Ahtisaari wins the 2008 Nobel Peace Prize for his decades long work in conflict resolution around the world.
He’s most known for brokering the independence of Namibia, and his involvement with the peace process in Kosovo and Aceh.
-TPP
ArsTechnica has done an excellent job in debunking the two most often used figures to justify the war on piracy.
The content producers and the US Government often quote two numbers: $250B in economic losses and 750,000 jobs lost due to IP theft in the United States. ArsTechnica tried to find the source for both of the numbers and found out that there really isn’t any realiable source.
It seems as if the job loss number came from a piece of IP legislation during the Reagan years. The authors of the bill were quoted of saying that between 130,000 and 750,000 jobs are lost due to counterfeiting US products. The bill itself didn’t include any information about those numbers, nor did the authors ever produce any source for them, other than the unsubstantiated claims they made themselves. The authors also never mentioned whether the job losses were annually or for some other duration. Subsequently people have just started quoting the upper limit of the range mentioned in the 80s. Between 130,000 and 750,000 first become “upto 750,000” and most recently just “750,000”.
ArsTechnica had even harder time finding out any justification for the annual economic loss of $250B due to piracy. They couldn’t find a single source for that figure other than a self-referential tangle of quotes from various content producer lobbying groups and the US Government. ArsTechnica did find some slightly more “scientific” sources, but the dollar amounts didn’t come anywhere close to $250B. Instead the only actual source they found from 20 years ago quoted $60B, and when they dug a little deeper they found that even that number was misrepresented. The actual study the number came from had a dollar amount of $23.8B and the study mentioned that even that number “could admittedly be biased and self-serving”.
So there you have it. The two numbers ($250B and 750,000) used to justify draconian IP legislation are at best guestimates and at worst pulled out of some entertainment industry bigwig’s ass and completely overblown.
ArsTechnica concludes its article:
Still, anything is possible: The figures could happen to be more or less accurate. But given the shady provenance of the data, the one thing we know for certain is that we don’t know for certain. And we’re making policy on the basis of our ignorance.
The US legislators should be ashamed, but then we all know they don’t make policy out of ignorance, but out of campaign donations by the entertainment industry. There is no ignorance here, rather willful negligence.
-TPP
If anyone knows where to buy a Wireless Pixxa 8″ wifi digiframe either on the Internets or in New York metro area, please drop me a note. I’ve been trying to hunt one of these bad boys down for months.
See more at http://www.wirelesspixxa.com/
-TPP
The inquest into the killing of Jean Charles de Menezes in London underground in 2005 is currently under way in UK.
The police killed Mr. de Menezes suspecting him to be a terrorist about to blow up the London underground during the hysteria surrounding the terrorist attacks in the London underground. Mr. de Menezes was mistakenly identified as a terrorist suspect when in fact he was just an ordinary person traveling in the underground. He was shot in the head at close range and killed by the police.
Deputy Assistant Commissioner Cressida Dick had some interesting comments at the inquest:
But if you are asking me did we do anything wrong or unreasonable, then I don’t think we did.
The police shoot and kill an innocent man, and they have the audacity to say that? Incredible.
-TPP