Monthly Archives: June 2005

Is it Time to Kill Trackbacks?

The amount of comment spam that gets past my blocks and filters is much less today than it was six months ago. But the trackback spam is fully making up for it. In the last week I have deleted hundreds of spam trackbacks — and received only a handful of real ones. (Do trackbacks TO me that I record here really give other sites any meaningful Google points? They shouldn't.)

It's very interesting to see who links to this stuff and what they make of it. But the trackback ecosystem must surely be on the brink of collapse.

If only technorati were a little better…

Posted in Discourse.net | 8 Comments

Only the Coolest Companies Do Stuff Like This

I think it's a pretty cool company that publicizes their plans to make transitioning away from their services seamless. But that is what Feedburner is doing, with details at Ciao, FeedBurner.

Compare that to companies that try to capture and smother you with technologies that make it from hard to impossible to leave their embrace. Very nice!

Posted in Internet | Comments Off on Only the Coolest Companies Do Stuff Like This

iPods as a “Cocoon of Solipsism”

The wonderful Ian Kerr, a man who organizes one heck of conference and generally fizzes with ideas, notes that a principal in a private school in Australia has banned pupils from using iPods because he believes that “iPod-toting children were isolating themselves into a cocoon of solipsism.”

Ian comments that,

one common conception of “privacy” is as a kind of “space” that enables intellectual consumption/exploration/achievement by allowing people to be “more or less inaccessible to others, either on the spatial, psychological or informational plane.”

And, on that view, iPods generate privacy, which we should see as a good. On the other hand, Ian (who has transcended the shift-key) continues,

ever since nicholas negroponte coined the concept of the “daily me” (referring to people's growing desire for only that information & news that pertained to them individually), much attention has been paid to network technologies and their ability to isolate rather than connect people.

after years of thinking about this, i still have no firm point of view on this subject — it is interesting to note that the article on the iPod referred also to the Blog as a technology used by “ego-centric 'social minimizers'” — but i do think it is worth raising the question whether these technologies are tools of that sort, or whether their use is better understood as a symptom of deeper social ills.

As Ian suggests, the iPod can be seen as a tune-out, turn-off technology, but it can also be described “as the last resort means of achieving intellectual solitude” in “the booming, buzzing confusion of technosociety”.

Personally, having children who seem quite capable of tuning me out without any technological help whatsoever, I have some trouble getting worked up about this. And being relatively libertarian on most social issues, I think whether people choose to be communitarian or solipsistic at various times of the day is their business. What's more, just because someone chooses to tune out for even a few hours per day does not mean that this activity defines them; people are complicated and can move between moods and roles during a day, and during a life.

Posted in Law: Privacy | Comments Off on iPods as a “Cocoon of Solipsism”

Padilla Latest

Padilla latest from Scotusblog :

The Supreme Court may act as early as next Monday on his attempt to get the Justices to review his challenge to his status and his indefinite detention, before the Fourth Circuit can rule.

The petition in 04-1342 seeks direct review of a ruling in February by U.S. District Judge Henry F. Floyd of Spartanburg, S.C., concluding that the President has no authority to designate and detain as an “enemy combatant” a U.S. citizen captured on U.S. soil.

The litigation is also moving along on an expedited schedule in the Fourth Circuit (docket 05-6396), on a regular appeal path by the Justice Department after its loss in Judge Floyd's ruling. The latest development there was the filing on Monday of Padilla's brief.

Posted in 9/11 & Aftermath, Civil Liberties | 2 Comments

Reputation Hacking

Clay Shirky discovers reputation hacking: Many-to-Many: Wikipedia, Authority, and Astroturf. In this case someone may have createed a wikipedia entry to make their project sound authoritative, then they or a friend pointed to it in a Slashdot post. But in fact the project is fairly obscure.

Yes, reputation hacking (false PR) is a real problem. No, it's not new. Shirky cites astroturfing as one antecedent; another he might have mentioned is “reputation farming” — a term surprisingly under represented in Google.

Reputation farming is the practice of creating identities (nyms) in a virtual community such as eBay, and then using the identities in a way that creates a positive reputation for them. In eBay, for example, that might consist of engaging in many small transactions, either real ones or sham ones among the nyms being farmed, in order to build up a good reputation.

One the nym has a high reputation score, it can be sold or used directly to perpetrate a fraud against third parties lulled by the high reputation score.

Posted in Internet | Comments Off on Reputation Hacking

Three Iraq-Related Posts From ‘First Draft’

First Draft is an excellent blog. Here are snippets of three posts in a row that are well worth reading.

U.S. Forces In Iraq Violate Geneva Convention (Reuters)

Thousands of people are detained in Iraq without due process in apparent violation of international law, the United Nations said on Wednesday, adding that 6,000 of the country's 10,000 prisoners were in the hands of the U.S. military.

In Iraq, “one of the major human rights challenges remains the detention of thousands of persons without due process,” Secretary-General Kofi Annan said in a report to the 15-nation U.N. Security Council.

Brits Cut and Run? (Glasgow Herald)

BRITISH forces may begin a withdrawal from Iraq “in three or four months”, a senior UK commander claimed yesterday.

Lieutenant-Colonel Andrew Williams leads a 1000-man battle-group based near the flashpoint town of al Amarah, about 100 miles north of Basra.

However, the Ministry of Defence played down the suggestion of any timetable for the removal of the 8500 UK troops in Iraq, saying that any cut in force levels was “contingent on the security situation and the availability of Iraqi forces to shoulder responsibility”.

Losing Control of the Mercenaries (The Guardian)

A group of American security guards in Iraq have alleged they were beaten, stripped and threatened with a snarling dog by US marines when they were detained after an alleged shooting incident outside Falluja last month.

“I never in my career have treated anybody so inhumane,” one of the contractors, Rick Blanchard, a former Florida state trooper, wrote in an email quoted in the Los Angeles Times. “They treated us like insurgents, roughed us up, took photos, hazed [bullied] us, called us names.”

According to Peter Singer, a Brookings Institute scholar and author of the book Corporate Warriors, private military contractors in Iraq are operating in a black hole as they do not fall within the military chain of command. “What appears to have happened here is tension between forces bubbling to the surface,” he told the Guardian.

But he said the incident also raised the question of what happens to contractors if they are caught doing something wrong, such as firing on civilians, as their legal status is not defined. “If the marines think [the contractors] did do something illegal there is no process they can go through. Who are they going to hand them over to?” Mr Singer said. “There have been more than 20,000 [contractors] on the ground in Iraq for more than two years and not one has been prosecuted for anything.”

Posted in Politics: International | Comments Off on Three Iraq-Related Posts From ‘First Draft’