Author Archives: Michael Froomkin

Hosting Review Payola

This is funny. Dreamhost, the cheap but imperfect hosts of this blog, have a blog of their own. And in a recent entry, DreamHost Blog | Web Hosting’s Dirty Laundry, they describe their correspondence with a supposedly neutral and objective service that offers consumers reviews of hosting companies.

This is how hosting-reviews.com describes itself:

Hosting-Review is an independent provider of web hosting reviews. We base our reviews on knowledge, personal experience with webhosts and user feedback.

What emerges from their correspondence with Dreamhost, is a little different: if you want to be listed in their top 10, you pay them.

As an encore, Dreamhost offers a defense of their sales policies. It’s written with a certain panache, and convincing as far as bandwidth and disk space go. But I can testify that there’s nothing in the sales literature that I read which put me on notice as to their quite restrictive CPU throttling policies.

Basically, if this blog gets hit with a wave of spam, they threaten to pull the plug. And I’ve had to disable a number of PHP-intensive things to keep CPU usage down. DH’s business model is great for static pages. Lots of them.

But while it may be a great service for a porn server, it is only OK for serving stuff that gets built on the fly, or gets rebuilt often.

Why do I stick? It’s cheap, fairly reliable, friendly, cheap, and I can’t face the switching costs (especially the time & energy). Also, I have a separate managed dedicated server for work (not as cheap!) which performs very well, and I like having the same interface for everything I do.

Posted in Internet | 1 Comment

Our Enemies Strike Again

Further evidence of domestic subversion by our enemies: Moles in the White House killed a (probably) legal NSA data mining project with built-in privacy protections.

The National Security Agency developed a pilot program in the late 1990s that would have enabled it to gather and analyze massive amounts of communications data without running afoul of privacy laws. But after the Sept. 11 attacks, it shelved the project — not because it failed to work — but because of bureaucratic infighting and a sudden White House expansion of the agency’s surveillance powers, according to several intelligence officials.

The agency opted instead to adopt only one component of the program, which produced a far less capable and rigorous program. It remains the backbone of the NSA’s warrantless surveillance efforts, tracking domestic and overseas communications from a vast databank of information, and monitoring selected calls.

Posted in Politics: The Party of Sleaze | 2 Comments

Did Someone Say ‘Tulip Bulbs’?

Someone wrote to me once hinting he might offer the high four figures or even five if I would sell him discourse.net. I had no idea if it was real, or some sort of scam, or an attempt to entrap me into something that might be used against me in some weird UDRP proceeding. And since I had no real desire to sell, it seemed safer not to reply and too much trouble to write back with the sort of NDA you have to have in hand before entering into domain name related negotiations.

If you believe this wacky site spotted by Alex Halavais, then it was a waay lowball offer anyway,

discourse.net


   It has been determined based on search results that this name may be extensively valuable beyond the scope of the LeapFish.com domain analysis tool. It is recommended that you seek the services of a complete domain appraisal company rather than rely on this estimate.
Thank You.

I don’t myself have much faith in automated domain valuation, but if you do, and think something in the healthy six-figure range sounds reasonable, we should definitely talk.

Posted in Discourse.net | 3 Comments

Treason at Least Has Profit or Principle

It is a given that the inventiveness of our nation’s enemies surpasses human imagination. Even so, could anyone ever have imagined they’d come up with something as fiendish as this?

Posted in Politics: The Party of Sleaze | Comments Off on Treason at Least Has Profit or Principle

Miami: We’re #1

Miami is #1. No, not basketball. Miami Motorists Rated Rudest:

Stressed Miami drivers speed, tailgate and cut off other drivers so frequently that the city earned the title of worst road rage in a survey released Tuesday.

It’s true that Miami roads are populated by dangerous maniacs. But their behavior isn’t always simple rudeness because, as Dave Barry once explained, “Miami is a place where everyone drives according to the rules of his home country.”

That said, I will admit that it’s pretty surprising how many parents dropping off their kids at school in the morning can’t be bothered to pull over, but just stop their (large) SUVs in the middle of the small side street. Then have a little chat with someone. And how many Mercedes I’ve seen this week alone parked on the line to take two spaces in a crowded parking lot.

Posted in Miami | Comments Off on Miami: We’re #1

Serendipity, At a Price

Just yesterday, yes less than 24 hours ago, I was reading the news feed from a group blog and desperately wishing I had one of these so I could filter out the most obnoxious of the group.

And today, via Boing Boing, comes a link to FeedRinse, a service that “that filters the RSS feeds you subscribe to, hiding items that match keywords or authors you don’t want to see.” Yes!

Only trouble is, the free version is very limited; otherwise you have to pay.

But surely an open source version can’t be that far away? (Oh, please someone build this into FeedOnFeed Redux, please.)

Posted in Internet | Comments Off on Serendipity, At a Price