Monthly Archives: August 2007

7 Million Years and We’re Toast

So the sun has an orbit, or an oscillation, relative to the galactic plane, and when it gets to one of the extremes, we get fried with muons. Could this explain why every 62 million years, there's a huge die-off of species, about ten percent, in our biosphere?

Of Cosmic Rays and Dangerous Days: Now, researchers from the University of Kansas in Lawrence think they have found a possible answer. Physicist and co-author Adrian Melott says that he began suspecting a galactic cause after noticing a 2005 paper that calculated that the drop in species diversity occurs regularly on a time scale of tens of millions of years, which—for a cyclical event—is too long for something happening within the solar system. So he and Kansas colleague Mikhail Medvedev began examining the possibilities. At about the same time as the drops in biodiversity, the researchers determined, the sun reaches the highest point in its orbit relative to the galactic plane, where most Milky Way stars reside. At that point, the scientists report in the 1 August Astrophysical Journal, the solar system is closest to an incoming source of potentially lethal cosmic rays created by interactions between the Milky Way's magnetic field and radiation generated by a cluster of nearby galaxies.

These galaxies are located in the direction of the constellation Virgo, and the radiation consists of particles called muons, which are so powerful they can penetrate about 2.5 kilometers of sea water or 900 meters of rock—enough to reach just about every living thing on Earth and damage its DNA. Because the zenith of the Sun's oscillations match almost exactly with the times of the dips in the fossil record, the researchers found, “we've noticed an incredible coincidence,” Melott says.

Be sure to mark your calendar to give you plenty of warning, as the next one is due in just seven million years.

Posted in Science/Medicine | 4 Comments

For the Annals of Market Failure

You can't (or can no longer) get Amora Dijon Mustard in the United States.

Posted in Shopping | 5 Comments

If I Were Still Teaching Trademark

If I were still teaching Trademark, I could make something of JewTube. It's not quite an exam question, but it's at least a good class discussion. Is it a trademark violation? The chance of confusion is low. YouTube has considerable fame, however, so actual likelihood of confusion may not be required. There's clearly some overlap in what the sites do: serve up little movies. And the parody defense may be inapplicable, because JewTube does not appear to be a parody — it seems to be serious, for all that there's not much content there, and what there is won't detain you long…

But maybe it's not commercial, so the site survives, so long as it never runs a banner ad.

Anyway, I don't teach Trademark any more, so I don't have to worry about any of it, except why the site is so lame.

Posted in Law: Trademark Law | Comments Off on If I Were Still Teaching Trademark

Grim Outlook for Internet Radio Equality Act

Wired.com reports SoundExchange Entrenches Position as IREA Faces Music:

A federal bill that would reset music royalties at a more affordable rate for thousands of internet radio stations is losing steam in the House of Representatives, raising new fears for the future of webcasting.

Looks bad for Pandora…

Posted in Law: Copyright and DMCA | Comments Off on Grim Outlook for Internet Radio Equality Act

Funny. But.

This is very funny. And it isn't.

The Laboratorium: Today's Telemarketing Fun

Can I speak to Mr. and Mrs. Grimmelmann?

Speaking …

I'm calling from the [name omitted] Sweepstakes, and you've been entered in a drawing to win $25,000 or a trip to Hawaii. The sweepstakes is also available to cardholders with a Visa, Mastercard, or American Express. Do you have one of those?

Yes. When did you say the trip to Hawaii is?

The winners will be announced August 31.

Oh, I'm sorry. August 31 isn't good for us. Is there another time we could take the trip?

No, you'll find out on August 31 whether you've won.

Okay, then. We'll take the money instead. Now, you'll put that directly on the credit card, right?

I tell you what. We'll get in touch with you if you win, okay?

James ends by commenting, “I’m getting better at this.”.

Now I certainly emitted a number of evil chuckles at this one. And a chunk of me wishes I had the reflexes to do something like this in real time.

But the problem is, that horrible person on the other end of the phone is a wage slave. They are only a tiny bit responsible for the call; the whole thing is orchestrated by someone better paid. Maybe they could find something else to do, but maybe they can't.And I remember the time that phone sales was the only summer job I could find with my newly minted high school diploma. That would be shortly before I discovered people would pay you money to do programming even if you had no formal training. I found something else to do. I am lucky.

So I laughed. Then I felt guilty.

Posted in Econ & Money | 3 Comments

Torture

Upsetting — extremely well done — article by Jane Mayer for the New Yorker, on the CIA's 'Black Sites'.

Short version, and some reactions, in Report: Harsh Methods Used On 9/11 Suspect from the Washington Post. (Note the Officially Approved Euphemism here: “harsh methods” indeed.)

War crimes, I tell you.

Posted in Torture | Comments Off on Torture