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Doc Searls Weblog

Just trying to make stuff happen


  • December 28, 2014

    Raising a glass to @AtwatersBakery

    No sooner do I publish Let’s bring the cortado / piccolo to America than I discover it has already arrived at Atwater’s in Baltimore:

    atwaters-cortado

    And here’s how it’s featured on the coffee menu:

    atwaters-coffee-menu

    @AtwatersBakery at Belvedere Square Market was already our favorite place to grab a bite in Baltimore. (Here’s a menu.) Could be they already offered cortados and I didn’t know. Usually we go there for the bakery’s homey and original breads, soups and sandwiches. But either way, I hope their embrasure of the cortado is a harbinger of a larger trend.

    Anyway, if you’re in The Monumental City, check ’em out. They have six locations, so it shouldn’t be too hard.

    Business, Culture, Family, food, Geography, Places
    Baltimore, Maryland
  • December 26, 2014

    Let’s bring the cortado / piccolo to America

    There are ideal ratios of coffee and milk, if you don’t want the flavor of either to fully prevail. To me the closest to the ideal ratio is what in Spain and Peets they call a cortado, some elsewhere call a gibraltar, and Australians and Kiwis call a piccolo (short for piccolo latte). This is a photo of the latter:

    piccolo

    To be clear about scale, that’s a four-ounce glass. Or cup. What matters is the size.

    AustralianCoffeeLovers.com explains the piccolo here.

    To me this is roughly what a cappuccino in the US should look like in a clear glass. Alas, what we usually get in the U.S. (especially from Starbucks) is ten ounces of milk and one ounce of espresso in a twelve-ounce cup. Or maybe two ounces of espresso. Peet’s cappuccinos, when done right (which is in what they call “traditional”), get the ratio about the same (~1:1 coffee and steamed milk, and poured so the two mix into a creamy combination).

    Anyway, most coffee shops in the U.S. and the U.K., other than Peet’s, don’t know from a cortado or a piccolo. So I say let’s educate them. Here’s a goal: by the end of 2015, most coffee shops in the U.S. will know what you mean when you order either one. Possible?

    [Later, on Christmas Eve, 2020…] Well, two days from now it’ll be six years since I wrote the above, and saying “cortado” to the average barista at the average coffee shop (which continues to round to Starbucks) will still get you a blank response. But at least Peet’s has it on the cash register menu, though not the menu on the wall. In fact, Peet’s also took “traditional cappuccino” off the wall for reasons unknown, though it remains on the cash register menu. Here’s what the manager at the Peet’s on Lake and California (my fave) in Pasadena says is the best drink to order in the store: double breve cortado. That will get you two ounces of espresso and a slightly smaller amount of frothed half-and-half, poured in so the two mix well into a creamy blend.

    [Update on 17 December 2025…]  Well, we succeeded: Starbucks makes a cortado now. It’s on the menu, or at least that thing they use to key in the order. I need to try a few to see how close they come to getting it right, but it’s a big step. Hats are finally off.

    Here at home in Santa Barbara, where I have a machine like those used in good coffee shops (an ECM Giotto), my cortados are either a single 1 oz. shot of espresso and about the same amount of frothed half-and-half. Or, if I use the bottomless portafilter, 2 oz. of espresso. The frothing of the milk, however, increases the volume, so the whole thing takes up most of a 4 oz. cup. The glasses I use here are about 3.5 oz., so you can see that the whole thing is pretty small:

    But quite tasty.

    Culture, food, Geography, Personal, Photography, Travel, VRM
  • December 26, 2014

    After-Christmas Free Tab Sale

    I just ran across a pile of tabs from November. (Different browser, different pile, both thanks to OneTab.) Here they are:

     FlightAware MiseryMap
     AWC – ADDS Turbulence
     A Call to Israeli Engineers! Adtech Is Not For You. | Aleph
     Newsies, techies and that troublesome term "product." (with tweets) · jayrosen_nyu · Storify
     Cars – Products: Who Should Control Connected Car Data?
     DLD Pulse: Tweet by Andrian Kreye
     WTF is dark traffic? – Digiday
     This terrible CVS receipt shows why Apple Pay has little to fear from retailers – Quartz
     Getting started with Radio3
     One-in-five would pay more for house with fast internet – Telegraph
     Average Peak Broadband Speeds Rise in America | The Connectivist
     Hungary’s Internet tax arouses mass opposition – Boing Boing
     Own Choice — Medium
     Mozilla Launches Firefox Developer Edition | TechCrunch
     Signaling and saving Journalism
     Transcript of the Magliozzis’ commencement address | MIT News
     Modeling a Pandemic like Ebola with the Wolfram Language—Wolfram Blog
     Amanda Palmer: why fans choose to pay artists they love – Boing Boing
     Citizen Four | GreatHouse Stories
     DesigningCX | Human-Centered Design & Customer Experience Innovation Tools
     With bitcoin the internet is now a sovereign state : Bitcoin
     How the Market Ruined Twitter – Justin Fox – Harvard Business Review
     How to get into your Harvard | Educational Blog
     World’s Data Protection Leaders Highlight Internet of Things, Big Data Privacy R… | Bloomberg BNA
     Community Broadband Podcast
     Connected Things
     Why Twitter launched Fabric, in 5 devastating charts | VentureBeat | Marketing | by John Koetsier
     A big reset button on business | Decoding the new economy
     The Ad Contrarian: Finally, The True Value Of A Facebook Fan
     don marti brand advertising sides privacy – Google Search
     Surfacing, not hiding, the creepy?
     Italy Pioneers An Internet Bill of Rights | TechPresident
     Doc Searls Weblog · Table for two
     Jammed — Backchannel — Medium
     Waiting on the Riverbank: Intent Casting in Practice | DISRUPT.SYDNEY.14
     The diaspora* Project
     Peak Password
     Why Are New York City’s Subway Platforms So Hot? | Co.Design | business + design
     The Longest Now
     Copywrong
     Our Machine Masters – NYTimes.com
     When consumers become media for themselves | ProjectVRM
     Does the FCC really not get it about the Internet? – The Washington Post
     New Tech City: The Other Ed Snowdens: Inside the Mind of Two Privacy Whistleblowers – WNYC
     Tesco’s Downfall Is a Warning to Data-Driven Retailers
     My 15 Minutes of Fame as a B-List Gamergate Celebrity | Brian Keegan
     Doc Searls Weblog · Wallets should be wallets
     The Apple Pay Effect: Companies Get Behind Mobile Payment
     Notes from Cassandra Summit: The Rise of Top Line IT | Planet Cassandra
     Facebook has totally reinvented human identity: Why it’s even worse than you think – Salon.com
     The future is disappearing: How humanity is falling short of its grand technological promise – Salon.com
     The Writer Cartoon | Savage Chickens – Cartoons on Sticky Notes by Doug Savage
     Fed up, US cities take steps to build better broadband | Ars Technica
     Cisco: 13% of North American Cities Have Made Smart City Deployments – Telecompetitor
     Preparing for Climate Change through Energy Internet and eVehicles: High Level Architecture for Building Zero Carbon Internet Networks , ICT products and services
     Open Appointments for Massages, Haircuts, Dentists, Yoga and more – MyTime
     The Invisible Environment – The Future of an Erosion
     Report: Advertisers Threatening To Pull Money Now The Only Remaining Way To Effect Any Change | The Onion – America’s Finest News Source
     Find products on sale by Brand, Site or Product Category – TrackIf
     TrackIf
     College Football Fan Map – NYTimes.com
     “Oprah” for indie bands: Apple once loved unknown acts—what changed? | Ars Technica
     Why Haters Hate: Kierkegaard Explains the Psychology of Bullying and Online Trolling in 1847 | Brain Pickings
     Kittens & Kierkegaard
    Links
  • December 24, 2014

    Giant Christmas Eve Used Tab Closing Sale

    Here ya go, all free. (If I had time to turn the URLs into text, I would, but I don’t. Merry Christmas, ya’ll.)

    • Above-and-Beyond Responses: Part 1 | Pew Research Center’s Internet & American Life Project (has some thoughts by yours truly)
    •  Above-and-Beyond Responses: Part 2 | Pew Research Center’s Internet & American Life Project (has more thoughts by yours truly)
    • Twitter and Facebook aren’t working (or do, as junk food)
      earth :: an animated map of global wind, weather, and ocean conditions
    • Wind Animation
    • Windyty, wind forecast
    • Maps Mania: The Animated Wind Forecast Map
    • Intellicast – Weather Active Map
    • http://www.jerrypournelle.com/chaosmanor/
    • Interface | Authorship for the App age
    • http://1uapps.com/about/
    • http://techcrunch.com/2014/12/20/the-internet-of-things-is-not-a-shiny-new-toy/
    • My experience at Improving Reality | Edgeryders
    • The Dark Truth: How AT&T and Big Telecom are working to destroy democracy in America | CREDO mobile
    • Knight Foundation: Net Neutrality Report
    • Big Data, Machine Learning, and the Social Sciences — Medium
    • Welcome to Fruugo!
    • Balkinization: Interview on the Black Box Society
    • The Internet is Temptation Island.
    • Video Of The Week: A History Lesson On Why We Need Neutral Networks – AVC
    • Why China’s Mobile Providers Are a Giant Problem for Its Music Industry | Billboard
    • I Started Serial, But It Didn’t End the Way I Had Hoped | TIME
    • The Information not-so-super Highway
    • Searchless RideShare in UK – DriverCollect.com
    • Hero Monkey Saves Friend’s Life – Digg
    • http://technologyofus.com/searls-free-the-people/
    • Public Perceptions of Privacy and Security in the Post-Snowden Era | Pew Research Center’s Internet & American Life Project
    • http://www.credomobile.com/lp/dec14/dark-truth/index.aspx?aid=2744081&pc=319497&utm_campaign=319497&utm_content=decoffer50&utm_medium=acq_email&utm_source=house_em#fact2
    • The 3 Big Myths that Are Holding Back America’s Internet — Backchannel — Medium
    • Ting, Consumer Cellular, & Republic Top Latest Consumer Reports Cell-Phone Service Ratings: Consumer Reports http://pressroom.consumerreports.org/pressroom/
    • Hey, remember that time you asked us to fix home Internet access too? – Ting.com
    • Ting Acquires Majority Stake In Blue Ridge InternetWorks, Expands From Mobile To Fixed Internet Access | Tucows Inc.
    • Homepage -Blue Ridge InternetWorks | Enterprise Web Hosting and Internet Services
    • BBC News – Net is ‘less free and more unequal’, says web founder
    • Cyber Sovereignty Must Rule Global Internet | Lu Wei
    • The 3 Big Myths that Are Holding Back America’s Internet — Backchannel — Medium
    • Sony leaks reveal Hollywood is trying to break DNS, the backbone of the internet | The Verge
    • Why Sony Pictures should release The Interview online | The Verge
    • Peak indifference-to-surveillance – Boing Boing
    • Love, Life and R: Personal Analytics Gets Real | WIRED
    • Michael Wolff on digital media in 2015: ‘A deluge of crap’
    • http://krebsonsecurity.com/2014/06/2014-the-year-extortion-went-mainstream/
    • Let’s Face It, We Don’t Really Care About Privacy | Digital Tonto
    • Data privacy by the numbers
    • Online advertising is the new digital cancer
    • Privacy is not dead: Microsoft lawyer prepares to take on US government | Technology | The Guardian
    • Digital Ad Spending to Pass TV by 2017, Magna Global Says | Agency News – Advertising Age
    • I’ve Been Mugged: Digital Advertising Firm Pays $750K To Settle Online Privacy Abuses
    • Verizon to FCC: You can’t stop Netflix-like interconnection payments | Ars Technica
    • From Mass Media to the Digital Revolution: An Interview with Fred (…) – Books & ideas
    • TV is over: Mobile has officially demoted TV to second-rung media status | VentureBeat | Business | by Jim Edwards, Business Insider
    • Irving Wladawsky-Berger: The Science of Innovation
    • Richard Feynman and The Connection Machine – The Long Now
    • This Rock in My Bra Told Me I Am Too Distracted | Re/code
    • Here’s the tiny human twig in the Tree of Life – ScienceAlert
    • How Instagram Alters Your Memory – CityLab
    • Study to Examine Effects of Artificial Intelligence – NYTimes.com
    • Joho the Blog » Jeff Jarvis on journalism as a service
    • The insight driven organisation | The insight driven organisation | London Business School BSR
    • The Future of HR – A Painless Renaissance – HCM Essentials
    • Public Perceptions of Privacy and Security in the Post-Snowden Era | Pew Research Center’s Internet & American Life Project
    • About me – Сайт tatianaindina!
    • Center for New Media and Society
    • Leadership for Disruption and Innovation | Haydn Shaughnessy | LinkedIn
    • A Room With A Pew – Blog
    • http://tdworld.com/grid-opt-smart-grid/global-smart-cities-market-reach-us156-trillion-2020
    • http://thenetmonitor.org/research/2014
    • Why China’s Mobile Providers Are a Giant Problem for Its Music Industry | Billboard
    • https://hbsdigitalinitiative.curated.co/
    • https://digital.hbs.org/
    • https://epicbrowser.com/thank_you.php
    • http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2014/dec/12/hong-kong-occupy-protests-far-from-over
    • Aaron Sorkin: The Press Shouldn’t Help the Sony Hackers – NYTimes.com
    • Disrupting Digital Business – The Book | A Software Insider’s Point of View
    • The Wellness Industry’s Terrible, Horrible No-Good Very Bad Week | The Health Care Blog
    • Six Colors: No, let’s not bring back the suits
    • The future of terrestrial radio in the age of podcasts.
    • Roads and Travel in New England 1790-1840 | Teach US History
    • A selection from a decade of visits to tower and studio sites in the Northeast and beyond
    • Evolution Going Great, Reports Trilobite | The Onion – America’s Finest News Source
    • Radio Ink Magazine
    • wjz bound brook – Bing Images
    • Radio Antenna Engineering – Stability of Directive Broadcast Arrays
    • Radio Antenna Engineering – Editorial
    • WABC (AM) – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
    • JIM HAWKINS’ WABC RADIO 77 Transmitter Page
    • Bound Brook, NJ – Google Maps
    • Welcome WiredTiger to MongoDB | MongoDB
    • MongoDB Acquires WiredTiger Inc. | MongoDB
    • Product Categories Collectibles – Fybush Media
    • About the program | Open Technology Fund
    • The Rise of AdBlock Reveals A Serious Problem in the Advertising Ecosystem | Monday Note
    • Adblock Plus – Features
    • adblock plus open source code – Google Search
    • How to Stop Comcast from Ruining The Internet — Backchannel — Medium
    • The Comcast-TWC merger threatens competition – Stop MegaComcast
    • Amazon.com : Canon EOS 5D Mark III 22.3 MP Full Frame CMOS with 1080p Full-HD Video Mode Digital SLR Camera (Body) : Camera & Photo
    • Exclusive: Tsu Launches as First Social & Payment Platform Where Users Own Their Content | Billboard
    • Shanley Kane of Model View Culture Challenges a “Corrupt” Silicon Valley | MIT Technology Review
    • How "dislike" might work
    • Planet Waves FM: Interview with Andrew McLuhan
    • http://www.howmuchdotheyknowabout.me/
    • http://fair.org/blog/2014/12/11/investigative-reporting-working-with-ad-partners-to-monetize-the-audience/
    • Google admits that advertisers wasted their money on more than half of internet ads – Quartz
    • http://zgp.org/targeted-advertising-considered-harmful/
    • http://www.privacybydesign.ca/index.php/paper/big-privacy/
    • http://radar.oreilly.com/2014/12/how-browsers-get-to-know-you-in-milliseconds.html
    • https://panopticlick.eff.org/
    • http://www.meltingasphalt.com/ads-dont-work-that-way/
    • https://medium.com/@direwolff/context-privacy-and-autonomy-908d91f2c4
    • Terrestrial & Satellite AIS Tracking Service in Realtime – vesseltracker.com
    • http://foreignpolicy.com/2014/12/08/the-problem-with-the-senate-torture-report-cia-enhanced-interrogation/
    • http://ww2.kqed.org/news/2014/12/11/photos-storm-scenes-from-around-the-bay-area
    • http://www.dtc.umn.edu/%7Eodlyzko/misc/gallamore-meyer.pdf
    • http://www.dtc.umn.edu/%7Eodlyzko/misc/harriman-hill.pdf
    • http://www.cnri.reston.va.us/series.html
    • http://www.keepeek.com/Digital-Asset-Management/oecd/science-and-technology/measuring-the-digital-economy/investing-in-smart-infrastructure_9789264221796-6-en#page1
    • http://avc.com/2014/12/veniam/
    • http://battellemedia.com/archives/2014/09/lessons-mobile-deep-dive-quickening-is-nigh.php
    • http://battellemedia.com/archives/2014/11/web-killing-apps.php
    • http://www.thetechnologyofus.com/
    • http://failedarchitecture.com/the-port-authority-bus-terminal-myth-mystery-mess/?utm_source=digg&utm_medium=email
    • https://gigaom.com/2011/12/11/why-spotify-can-never-be-profitable-the-secret-demands-of-record-labels/
    • https://www.google.com/search?q=rg–45&ie=utf-8&oe=utf-8&aq=t&rls=org.mozilla:en-US:official&client=firefox-a&channel=sb#newwindow=1&safe=off&rls=org.mozilla:en-US:official&channel=sb&q=IEEE-STO
    • http://www.ieee-isto.org/member-programs
    • http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/projectvrm/Main_Page#VRM_Goals
    • http://whatever.scalzi.com/2014/12/05/whatever-holiday-shopping-guide-2014-day-five-charities/
    • http://www.wired.com/2012/07/a-domain-of-ones-own/
    • https://gigaom.com/2014/12/04/its-showtime-in-fight-against-state-barriers-to-public-broadband/
    • http://mic.com/articles/105522/colorado-towns-stand-up-to-the-tyranny-of-cable-companies
    • http://flightaware.com/squawks/view/1/7_days/popular_new/45414/Qantas_to_suspend_744_flights_to_Antarctica_from_2015
    • https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/article/20141204174020-261404895-it-s-time-to-revolutionize-race-relations
    • http://www.nytimes.com/2014/12/04/opinion/why-are-some-cultures-more-individualistic-than-others.html?_r=1
    • https://ting.com/blog/organic-net-neutrality/
    • http://internetdistinction.com/wsisimpacts/statements/fcc-nn-info-soc-letter/
    • https://bitly.com/a/bitlinks
    • https://twitter.com/search?q=%22The%20New%20Republic%22&src=tren
    • http://www.brianrosenwald.com/blog/2014/12/5/a-few-quick-thoughts-on-the-new-republic
    • https://www.google.com/search?q=seth+johnson+on+twitter&ie=utf-8&oe=utf-8&aq=t&rls=org.mozilla:en-US:official&client=firefox-a&channel=fflb
    • http://www.flipsnack.com/peterw/rappahannock-magazine-december-2014.html
    • https://www.facebook.com/messages/?action=read&tid=mid.1405231590577%3A0ee057382b06171480
    • http://www.koda.dk/fileadmin/user_upload/docs/Analysis_Music-Streaming-In-Denmark_2014.pdf
    • http://www.spotifyartists.com/spotify-explained/#royalties-in-detail
    • http://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2014/12/att-still-throttles-unlimited-data-even-when-network-not-congested/
    • http://www.ericsson.com/res/docs/2014/ericsson-mobility-report-november-2014.pdf
    • http://www.c365.ro/video/carrot-clarinet-linsey-pollak-126.html
    • http://www.amazon.com/Who-Owns-Sky-Common-Capitalism/dp/1559638559
    • https://www.flickr.com/photos/docsearls/75974745/sizes/l
    • Merkel speaks out against net neutrality – The Local
    • http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/doc/2014/12/02/latest-linkpile/
    • https://www.dropbox.com/s/3uirxs71uzxzjmm/Glome%204%20Publishers%20%2B%20WF.pdf?dl=0
    • http://cashbackcatalog.com/profile/locking
    • https://devland.glome.me/#/wiki/Home.md
    • http://www.slush.org/
    • http://vimeo.com/91443707
    • http://glome.me/
    • https://crowdspending.com/preregister/
    • http://www.linuxjournal.com/content/linux-vs-bullshit
    • http://www.ccs.neu.edu/home/cbw/pdf/imc151-hannak.pdf
    • http://www.gwlr.org/2014/10/03/calo/
    • http://liorprosor.wordpress.com/2014/12/02/a-call-to-israeli-engineers-ad-tech-might-still-be-right-for-you/
    • http://ubos.net/blog/2014/11/24/ubos-beta1-available/
    • file:///Users/dsearls2/Documents/BACKUP/Business/Qredo/website/dsearls-site1/index.html
    • http://pctechmag.com/2014/11/google-unitel-to-build-submarine-fibre-network/
    • http://www.nifti.com/
    • 2014 UK Consumer Data Privacy Study: Consumer Privacy Edition from TRUSTe
    • Dear White People: Here Are 5 Reasons Why You Can’t Really Feel Black Pain | Alternet
    • Bitly. The power of the link.
    • The Technology of Us on Twitter: "A new era of “vendor relationship management,” where individuals dictate what, where and how they’ll buy – @dsearls http://t.co/4bvH9a36Zs"
    • Tears | Melting Asphalt
    • Gerald Robert Ahearn (Deceased), Bogota, NJ New Jersey
    • The Cicret Bracelet: It’s like a tablet…but on your skin! | Cicret
    • Information Fiduciary: Solution to Facebook digital gerrymandering | New Republic
    • Balkinization: Information Fiduciaries in the Digital Age
    • A Call to Israeli Engineers! Adtech Is Not For You. | Aleph
    • http://aleph.vc/a-call-to-israeli-engineers-adtech-is-not-for-you/
    • gartner-presentation-04-07-14.pdf
    • http://www.feelguide.com/2014/11/19/harvard-unveils-mri-study-proving-meditation-literally-rebuilds-the-brains-gray-matter-in-8-weeks/
    • http://zgp.org/~dmarti/business/unpacking-privacy/
    • http://www.cnri.reston.va.us/series.html
    • http://electrospaces.blogspot.ro/2014/11/incenser-or-how-nsa-and-gchq-are.html
    • http://digg.com/video/anglerfish-on-camera?utm_source=digg&utm_medium=email
    • http://www.meltingasphalt.com/ads-dont-work-that-way/
    • Who’s taking all the online ad money? (it’s not me)
    • http://streetfightmag.com/2013/03/08/limits-on-behavioral-ads-could-give-publishers-more-control/
    • https://medium.com/@chrismessina/thoughts-on-google-8883844a9ca4
    • http://www.theguardian.com/technology/2013/jul/26/porn-sites-internet-traffic-uk
    • https://medium.com/five-hundred-words/the-search-for-absurdity-55c6808f1a23
    • The Revolution In Tennis Stats That Didn’t Stick | FiveThirtyEight
    • Ranking Digital Rights | Ranking ICT sector companies on respect for free expression and privacy
    • Fiber fight: Broadening broadband Gig City touted as model in broadband debate | Times Free Press
    • AT&T’s good cop, bad cop routine with the FCC – The Washington Post
    • UPDATE: AT&T joins case; Chanute needs state nod to offer fiber broadband, says 1947 law | The Wichita Eagle
    • How A Feud Between Two Russian Companies Fueled A ‘Spam Nation’ : All Tech Considered : NPR
    • Public Books — Changing Climates of History
    • How to rebuild journalism
    • With Big Data Comes Big Responsibility
    • Understanding “New Power”
    • Spotify in 2013: revenues of €746.9m and a €93.1m operating loss
    • Paris Review – The Art of Fiction No. 64, Kurt Vonnegut
    • Logitech Ultrathin Keyboard Cover for iPad Air Review & Rating | PCMag.com
    • Radio World :: Blog – Looking at LPFM
    • The NUG: What is it & Why Join? | Nautel Broadcast
    • Radio World: Let’s Save a Vital National Media Resource: AM Radio
    • Silicon Valley’s Culture of Amorality – Water Will Find its Way | LinkedIn
    • How to Explain Net Neutrality to Your Relatives: A Thanksgiving Guide
    • Technology and the Moral Dimension | Om Malik
    • The Left-Right Political Spectrum Is Bogus – The Atlantic
    • Jaron Lanier Says Transparency Is the Path to a Sustainable Techonomy » Techonomy
    • RIAA 2014 Mid Year shipments memo and 2 yr table Final – 1806D32F-B3DD-19D3-70A4-4C31C0217836.pdf
    • Spotify: Friend or Foe?
    • The Tyranny of Free | East Bay Express
    • The Age of Context with Robert Scoble | Constellation Research Inc.
    • The Semantic Apocalypse | Speculative Heresy
    • Social Media Is Not Self-Expression – The New Inquiry
    • Tequila, U.S. surveillance and me | paulolivier.dehaye.org
    • ‘The Unwinding,’ by George Packer – NYTimes.com
    • Doc Searls Weblog · How Radio Can Defend the Dashboard
    • Doc Searls – Google Search
    • Conversation with @billjaneway, @pmarca and @danfrost (with tweets) · pkedrosky · Storify
    • Piece by Piece, The Blue Model Sickens and Dies – The American Interest
    • Facebook, You’ve Got a Friend: Matt Mullenweg Thinks You Own the Future of Advertising | PandoDaily
    • Your online journalism brand is doomed…unless you master these four basic tech tips (and break one well-known online rule)
    • Saturday Post: Silicon Valley’s Liquid Amorality – Water Will Find Its Way -SVW
    • Big, bad tech: how America’s digital capitalists are taking us all for a ride | John Naughton | Comment is free | The Guardian
    • Lucky Is Carving Out an E-Commerce Identity by Putting Readers, Not Products, First | Adweek
    • What Is In-Stream Advertising? | Chron.com
    • http://www.datasociety.net/initiatives/fellows-program/
    • http://edge.org/conversation/the-myth-of-ai
    • http://mashable.com/2014/09/16/artificial-intelligence-failure/
    • http://www.cpb.nl/en/publication/targeted-advertising-platform-competition-and-privacy
    • http://zgp.org/~dmarti/business/optimal-privacy-protection/
    • http://projects.aljazeera.com/2014/terms-of-service/#1
    • https://medium.com/@sharkyl/how-to-make-streaming-royalties-fair-er-8b38cd862f66
    • http://www.koda.dk/fileadmin/user_upload/docs/Analysis_Music-Streaming-In-Denmark_2014.pdf
    • http://daringfireball.net/linked/2014/11/18/uber-dirt
    • http://www.vox.com/2014/11/17/7082317/language-maps-charts
    • http://research.neustar.biz/2014/09/15/riding-with-the-stars-passenger-privacy-in-the-nyc-taxicab-dataset/
    • https://modelviewculture.com/pieces/the-fantasy-and-abuse-of-the-manipulable-user
    • http://zgp.org/targeted-advertising-considered-harmful/
    • http://crowdspending.com/
    • http://tomslee.net/2013/03/futureeverything-notes.html#comment-2715
    • http://zgp.org/~dmarti/business/monkey-badger/
    • http://ad.aloodo.com/
    • https://twitter.com/technologyofus/status/535190891955101696/photo/1
    • http://fly.historicwings.com/2012/12/volcano-bombing/
    • http://www.arturoerbsman.com/cumulus.html
    • https://ioptconsulting.com/blog/
    • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radio-frequency_identification
    • http://networkcultures.org/mycreativity/2014/10/16/never-mind-the-sharing-economy-heres-platform-capitalism/
    • https://ioptconsulting.com/busting-the-myth-that-people-dont-care-about-privacy/
    • http://demo.ottw.net/fall2014_keynote1?ch_id=298
    • http://www.wired.com/2014/11/indie-hosters/
    • http://www.theguardian.com/media-network-outbrain-partner-zone/native-advertising-quality-scalability
    • http://contently.com/strategist/2014/10/10/the-new-york-times-takes-native-advertising-to-the-next-level-with-cole-haan/
    • http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/doc/2014/11/22/on-native-advertising/
    • http://digiday.com/publishers/andrew-sullivan-native-ads/
    • https://www.google.com/search?q=wikimedia+commons&ie=utf-8&oe=utf-8&aq=t&rls=org.mozilla:en-US:official&client=firefox-a&channel=fflb
    • http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/the-intersect/wp/2014/11/19/everything-google-knows-about-you-and-how-it-knows-it/
    • http://www.scmp.com/article/1645231/one-country-two-internets-and-why-we-need-protect-it
    • https://medium.com/backchannel/the-definitive-story-of-information-wants-to-be-free-a8d95427641c
    • http://www.brennancenter.org/analysis/im-terrified-my-new-tv-why-im-scared-turn-thing
    • http://thehackernews.com/2014/10/verizon-wireless-injects-identifiers-to.html
    • http://interactive.guim.co.uk/embed/2014/apr/image-opacity-slider-master/index.html?ww2-dday
    • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fuWfEwlWFlw
    • Investigate Time Warner and Comcast’s "Social Contract" on America | Bruce Kushnick
    • http://www.wired.com/2014/10/verizons-perma-cookie/
    • https://ioptconsulting.com/escaping-advertisings-uncanny-valley/
    • http://kensegall.com/2014/07/the-relentless-and-annoying-pursuit-of-eyeballs/
    • http://uk.businessinsider.com/heres-another-sign-that-google-glass-is-doomed-2014-11?r=US
    • http://www.fastcompany.com/3038488/the-number-one-thing-consumers-want-from-brands-honesty
    • http://www.forbes.com/sites/andygreenberg/2013/12/16/an-nsa-coworker-remembers-the-real-edward-snowden-a-genius-among-geniuses/
    • http://www.theguardian.com/music/2014/nov/17/steve-albini-at-face-the-music-how-the-internet-solved-problem-with-music
    • http://www.theguardian.com/music/2014/nov/17/steve-albinis-keynote-address-at-face-the-music-in-full
    • http://www.completemusicupdate.com/digests/gh69m/cmudigest04_oct2014.pdf
    • http://www.nytimes.com/2014/11/17/opinion/paul-krugman-when-government-succeeds.html
    • http://www.dslreports.com/shownews/The-FCC-Calls-ATTs-Fiber-to-the-Press-Release-Bluff-131346
    • http://www.ted.com/talks/susan_etlinger_what_do_we_do_with_all_this_big_data
    • http://www.salon.com/2003/03/12/spectrum/
    • http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/vrm/2013/03/03/the-all-silo-mobile-marketplace/
    • http://broadbandbreakfast.com/2014/11/broadband-expert-andrew-odlyzko-warns-telecom-investors-that-industry-has-its-math-wrong-again/
    • http://www.buddeblog.com.au/frompaulsdesk/data-retention-policy-risks-gains/
    • http://muninetworks.org/content/republicans-and-democrats-alike-restore-local-authority-colorado
    • http://oecdinsights.org/2014/11/06/what-difference-does-a-mobile-operator-more-or-less-make-to-you/
    • http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/news/the-9-billion-witness-20141106
    • A Rare Peek Into The Massive Scale of AWS
    • https://blog.torproject.org/blog/partnering-mozilla
    • https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/about/manifesto/
    • http://blog.mozilla.org/privacy/2014/11/10/introducing-polaris-privacy-initiative-to-accelerate-user-focused-privacy-online/
    • http://adage.com/article/digital/online-ad-fraud/292285/
    • False rumors do not propagate like True ones | Twitter Trails
    Links
  • December 18, 2014

    We’re all going to need clothes

    door knocker, beacon hillIn the physical world we know what privacy is and how it works.

    We know because we have worked out privacy technologies and norms over thousands of years. Without them we wouldn’t have civilization.

    Doors and windows are privacy technologies. So are clothes. So are manners respecting the intentions behind our own and others’ use of those things. Those manners are personal, and social. They are how we clothe, shelter and conduct ourselves in the world, and how we expect others to do the same.

    The Internet is a new virtual world we also inhabit. It was born in 1995 with the first graphical browsers, ISPs, email and websites. It arrived in our midst as a paradise. But, as with Eden, we walked into it naked — and we still are, except for the homes and clothing we get from companies like Google, Amazon, Facebook and Apple. They clothe us in uniforms, one for every login/password combination. Who we are and what we can do is limited by what they alone provide us. Yes, it’s civilized: like the middle ages. We toil and prosper inside the walls of their castles, and on their company lands. In many ways the system isn’t bad. In many othr ways it’s good. But it isn’t ours.

    To have true privacy in the networked world, we need to be in charge of our own lives, our own identities, our own data, our own things, in our own ways.

    We should be able to control what we disclose, to whom, and on what terms.

    We should be able to keep personal data as secret and secure as we like.

    We should be able to share that data with others in faith that only those others can see and use it.

    Our digital identities should be sovereign — ours alone — and disclosed to others at our discretion.

    (True: administrative identifiers are requirements of civilization, but they are not who we are, and we all know that.

    Think of how identity works in the physical world. It’s not a problem that my family members call me Dave, the government calls me David, other people call me Doc — and the rest of the world calls me nothing, because they don’t know me at all.

    This is a Good Thing. It is enough to recognize each other as human beings, and to learn people’s names when they tell us. Up to that point we remain for each other literally anonymous: nameless. This is a civic and social grace we hardly cared about until it was stripped from us online.

    In the physical world, companies don’t plant tracking beacons on people, or follow them around to see who people are are, where they go and what they do — unless they’ve been led by the hideous manners of marketers who believe it’s good to do that.

    Those manners won’t change as long as we don’t control means of disclosing our selves and our data. Until we have true privacy, all we’ll have are:

    • Crude prophylaxis, such as tracking and advertising blockers
    • Talk about which companies screw us the least
    • Talk about how governments screw us too
    • Calls for laws and regulations that protect yesterday from last Thursday

    We won’t get true privacy — the kind we’ve known and understood offline since forever — until we have the online equivalents of the clothing, doors and manners.

    All we’ll get from most big companies are nicer uniforms.

    I look forward to what we’ll get from the Barney Pressmans of the online world. Here’s a classic ad for Barney’s (his clothing store) that ran in the 1960s: http://youtu.be/KMIgu9-zd8M. (Just watch the first one, which ends :47 seconds in.) That’s where my headline came from.

     

    Business, Culture, Future, Life, Past, Personal, Personal clouds, problems, Technology, VRM
  • December 15, 2014

    Listening to Serial? Remember the West Memphis Three.

    On Saturday I invited Serial listeners to recall the Edgar Smith case. Smith got away, literally, with murder. He did it by convincing the media and the public (and to a lesser degree the courts) that he was innocent man, falsely convicted of brutally killing a teenage girl. After he was released he attempted another murder, confessed to the original one and went back to prison.

    Now I invite Serial listeners to recall a counter example: the West Memphis Three, who were convicted as teenagers in 1994 for the murders of three boys in West Memphis, Arkansas in 1993. One was sentenced to death and the other two were given life sentences. It was alleged, on debatable evidence gained by poor police work, that the victims were killed in a Satanic ritual.

    All three are now free, having given Alford pleas. These are “guilty” pleas in which innocence is still maintained. (It’s complicated. Look it up.) To make a long story too short, it is now clear that they got bum raps and that other persons are the more likely perps. The miscarriage of justice in the case is so extreme that the dad of one of the victims has taken up the Three’s cause.

    I met two of the Three, plus the dad, in 2012 after a screening of the documentary West of Memphis at the Santa Barbara Film Festival. I’m sure they are innocent.

    The Memphis Three’s case, like Edgar Smith’s, is irrelevant to Adnan Syed’s. (He’s serving time for murder in the case Serial explores). The jury is still in for that one, and Adnan is still officially guilty. But maybe keeping these other cases in mind will help us all keep our minds open.

    Meanwhile, HuffPo has a nice set of takes by prosecutors and defense attorneys.

    Broadcasting, Culture, Journalism, Law, Life
  • December 13, 2014

    Listening to Serial? Remember the Edgar Smith case.

    I’m now four episodes into Serial, the hugely popular reality podcast from WBEZ and This American Life. In it reporter Sarah Koenig episodically tugs together many loose ends around the murder of Hae Min Lee, a Baltimore teenager, in 1999. The perp, said the cops and the proscecutor at the time, was former boyfriend Adnan Syed, who was convicted by a jury of first degree murder. They deliberated about as long as it takes for an afternoon nap. He’s been in prison ever since.

    My provisional conclusion is that the court was right to find Adnan guilty. My case for that conviction (or vice versa) is an ad hominem one: the whole thing is eerily eminiscent (for me) of Edgar Smithedgar-smith, (that’s his mug photo on the right) who served a record length of time on death row before successfully arguing for a retrial, which resulted in a lesser conviction and his release — after which he kidnapped and tried to kill someone else, confessing as well to the original crime. He’s an old man now, serving time for the second crime.

    While still in jail for the first crime, Smith earned a high degree of media attention and celebrity with his book Brief Against Death, which was a bestseller at the time. I read it and believed him. So did William F. Buckley Jr., who befriended Smith, and was instrumental in getting Smith’s case reconsidered, by both the courts and the public. Buckley even wrote the introduction to Smith’s book.

    Think of the media-intensive Smith case as the Serial of its time.

    Back then a good friend of mine was studying at the John Jay College of Criminal Justice in New York, and interviewed Smith. “He’s guilty,” my friend said. “The guy is brilliant, but he’s also a liar.” Later Bill Buckley said the same thing.

    It haunts me that I was snookered by Smith, and comforts me none to know I wasn’t alone.

    This of course makes no case at all against Adnan Syed. He might be innocent as a lamb. And I’d like to say he’s innocent until proven guilty. But his guilt has already been decided by a court of law, so now it’s the other way around: he needs to prove his innocence. Or at least raise the shadow of doubt to a height under which he can be sprung.

    I worry about what will happen if all the current interest in this case results in Adnan’s release. What if he really did kill Hae — meaning he’s as remorseless and manipulative as Edgar Smith?

    With the case headed to an appeals court, this now appears possible.

    I’ll keep my mind open as I listen through the rest of Series. It’s outstanding radio. And I also invite the @Serial team to look at the Smith case as well — if they haven’t already.* It may not be relevant, but it is similar.

    Bonus case: Jack Henry Abbott.

    * (14 December) Have they? I’ve now listened through Episode 7 and so far they haven’t mentioned it.

    Broadcasting, Journalism, News, Past, Personal, Strange stuff
  • December 12, 2014

    Is perfectly personalized advertising perfectly creepy?

    The uncanny valley is where you find likenesses of live humans that are just real enough to be creepy. On a graph it looks like this:
    461px-Mori_Uncanny_Valley.svg

    So I was thinking about how this looks for advertising that wants to get perfectly personal. You know: advertising that comes from systems that know you better than you know yourself, so they can give you messages that are perfectly personalized, all the time. I think it might look like this:

    Screen Shot 2014-12-12 at 11.40.56 PM

    Traditional brand advertising — the kind we see in print, hear on radio and watch on TV — is fully familiar, but not at all human. It comes from companies, by way of media that also aren’t human. A little less familiar, but slightly more human, is old fashioned direct response advertising, such as junk mail. The messages might be addressed to us personally, and human in that respect, but still lacking in human likeness. Avertising that gets highly personal with us, because it’s based on surveillance-fed big data and super-smart algorithms, is  much less familiar than the first two types, yet much more human-like. Yet it’s not really human, and we know that. Mostly it’s just creepy, because it’s clearly based on knowing more about us than we feel comfortable having it know. And it’s only one kind of human: a salesperson who thinks we’re ready to buy something, all the time — or can at least be influenced in some way.

    I’m just thinking and drawing out loud here, and don’t offer this as a final analysis. Mostly I’m metabolizing what I’m learning from Don Marti‘s thinking out loud about these very different kinds of advertising, and how well they actually work, or don’t — for advertisers, for the media they support, and for the human targets themselves. (Like Don I also dig Bob Hoffman’s Ad Contrarian.)

    So there ya go. I welcome your thoughts.

    [Later…] I was just reminded of T.Rob‘s excellent Escaping Advertising’s Uncanny Valley and Sara Watson’s pieces cited below (she’s a Berkman Center colleague):

    • Colin Strong: Are brands entering an uncanny valley? and Is the marriage of big data and advertising headed for an ‘uncanny valley’?
    • Sara M. Watson: The Uncanny Valley of Targeted Marketing, The Uncanny Valley of Personalization and When big data falls into the uncanny valley
    • Alex Bramwell in Linkedin: The Uncanny Valley and why big data marketers are headed for it
    • @FelixSalmon in Wired: The Uncanny Valley of Advertising
    • Farhad Manjoo in Slate: The Uncanny Valley of Internet Advertising — Targeted Web ads are too dumb to be useful and just smart enough to make you queasy.
    • Mike Masnick in Innovation: Getting past the uncanny valley in targeted advertising
    • Helen Beckett in BVEX: Uncanny Valley: Deadly Destination of OTT Digital Marketer
    • Paul McEwan in TribalYell: The uncanny valley of interactive advertising

    What we see here is a groundswell of agreement about what’s going on. But do we see a reversal in the marketplace? Maybe we will if @rwang0 is right when he tweets “2015 is not the year of the crowd, it’s the year when the crowd realizes they are the product and they don’t like it.”

    Business, Ideas, problems
  • December 2, 2014

    Latest Linkpile

    I thought today I wouldn’t let the list of open tabs get too long, since I spent most of the time working on stuff that’s not especially webfull. But here we are.

    A Call to Israeli Engineers! Adtech Is Not For You. | Aleph While this resonates with me (as somebody who dislikes being on the receiving end of adtech), it doesn’t square with …
    gBig Data in Marketing: Where do we go from here?by @MartyKihn of Gartner. Compare and contrast.
    FeelGuide.com: Harvard unveils MRI study proving meditatoin literally rebuilds the brain’s gray matter in 8 weeks.
    Don Marti: Unpacking privacy
       http://electrospaces.blogspot.ro/2014/11/iIncenser: How the NSA and GHCQ are tapping Internet Cables
    @KevinSimler: Ads Don’t Work That Way.
    Don Marti: who’s taking all the online ad money? (it’s not me)
    Streetfightmag: Limits on behavioral ads could give publishers more control.
    Chris Messina in Medium: Thoughts on Google. It’s about identity. No big company, and no government, should be in charge of it. That includes Google.
    https://medium.com/five-hundred-words/the-search-for-absurdity-55c6808f1a23
    FiveThirtyEight: TheRevolution In Tennis Stats That Didn’t Stick
    Ranking Digital Rights | Ranking ICT sector companies on respect for free expression and privacy
    Fiber fight: Broadening broadband Gig City touted as model in broadband debate | Times Free Press
    AT&T’s good cop, bad cop routine with the FCC – The Washington Post
    UPDATE: AT&T joins case; Chanute needs state nod to offer fiber broadband, says 1947 law | The Wichita Eagle
    How A Feud Between Two Russian Companies Fueled A ‘Spam Nation’ : All Tech Considered : NPR
    Public Books — Changing Climates of History
    Links
  • December 2, 2014

    There goes the fire season

    Got big rain today in Santa Barbara, and across all of California, or so it appears:

    Rain in CaliforniaRainfall records were broken. As expected, there were mudslides. One friend going to Malibu was smart to avoid the Pacific Coast Highway.

    The drought persists, of course. We’ll need many more storms like this to make up for the water shortage.

    Two things the news won’t mention, though.

    One is the dropped wildfire danger. We care about those here. Two of the last four wildfires took out over 300 homes. One came within a dozen homes of where I’m sitting now.

    The other is the greening of the hills. When California gets a good winter soaking, it turns into Ireland — at least until the fire season starts again.

    Geography, Geology, history, infrastructure, Photography, problems, Santa Barbara, Science
    california, mudslides, News, rain, storm
  • November 29, 2014

    Huge Black Friday Tab Sale

    I’ll compress, copy edit and annotate after I drive to Los Angeles today. Meanwhile, dig.

    With Big Data Comes Big Responsibility
       Dave: How to rebuild journalism
    Understanding New Power
    Spotify in 2013: revenues of €746.9m and a €93.1m operating loss
       Paris Review – The Art of Fiction No. 64, Kurt Vonnegut
    Radio World :: Blog – Looking at LPFM
    The NUG: What is it & Why Join? | Nautel Broadcast
    Radio World: Let’s Save a Vital National Media Resource: AM Radio
    Silicon Valley’s Culture of Amorality – Water Will Find its Way | LinkedIn
    How to Explain Net Neutrality to Your Relatives: A Thanksgiving Guide
    Technology and the Moral Dimension | Om Malik
    The Left-Right Political Spectrum Is Bogus – The Atlantic
    Doc Searls Weblog · Snow on the Water
    Uber removed blog post from data science team that examined link between prostitution and rides | VentureBeat | Mobile | by Chris O’Brien
    Jaron Lanier Says Transparency Is the Path to a Sustainable Techonomy » Techonomy
    RIAA 2014 Mid Year shipments memo and 2 yr table
    Senator Al Franken Has Some Uncomfortable Questions For Uber – Business Insider
    Spotify: Friend or Foe?
    The Tyranny of Free | East Bay Express
    Health Data Consortium kick-starts lobbying efforts — MEDTECH bill circulates Hill — Beth Israel will pay $100K for stolen patient data
    T-Mobile Doubles The Number Of Music Streaming Services That Don’t Count Towards Data Caps | TechCrunch
    Social Protocols
    Thoughts on privacy
    The Age of Context with Robert Scoble | Constellation Research Inc.
    Ferguson « The Dish
    perma.cc
    The Semantic Apocalypse | Speculative Heresy
    Social Media Is Not Self-Expression – The New Inquiry
    Tequila, U.S. surveillance and me | paulolivier.dehaye.org
    ‘The Unwinding,’ by George Packer – NYTimes.com
    Doc Searls Weblog · How Radio Can Defend the Dashboard
    Doc Searls – Google Search
    Mark Cameron | Marketing magazine
    Uber Forever – The Awl
    Conversation with @billjaneway, @pmarca and @danfrost (with tweets) · pkedrosky · Storify
    Piece by Piece, The Blue Model Sickens and Dies – The American Interest
    Don Marti
    Facebook, You’ve Got a Friend: Matt Mullenweg Thinks You Own the Future of Advertising | PandoDaily
    Your online journalism brand is doomed…unless you master these four basic tech tips (and break one well-known online rule)
    Saturday Post: Silicon Valley’s Liquid Amorality – Water Will Find Its Way -SVW
    The Definitive List Of Uber Horror Stories – The Daily Beast
    Uber’s Rival Lyft Quietly Limits Employee Access to User Data – Digits – WSJ
    The guy who accused Sarah Lacy of “playing victim” over Uber forgot to disclose….| PandoDaily
    Uber’s Real Crime Is Giving In to Politics as Usual | TIME
    Big, bad tech: how America’s digital capitalists are taking us all for a ride | John Naughton | Comment is free | The Guardian
    The horrific trickle down of Asshole culture: Why I’ve just deleted Uber from my phone | PandoDaily
    Lucky Is Carving Out an E-Commerce Identity by Putting Readers, Not Products, First | Adweek
    What Is In-Stream Advertising? | Chron.com
    http://www.datasociety.net/initiatives/fellows-program/
    http://www.somersethouse.org.uk/venue-hire/venues/seamens-hall
    http://www.somersethouse.org.uk/venue-hire/filming-and-photography/locations/seamens-hall
    http://edge.org/conversation/the-myth-of-ai
    http://mashable.com/2014/09/16/artificial-intelligence-failure/
    http://www.ftc.gov/news-events/press-releases/2014/11/truste-settles-ftc-charges-it-deceived-consumers-through-its?utm_source=govdelivery
    http://www.cpb.nl/en/publication/targeted-advertising-platform-competition-and-privacy
    http://zgp.org/~dmarti/business/optimal-privacy-protection/
    http://projects.aljazeera.com/2014/terms-of-service/#1
    https://medium.com/@sharkyl/how-to-make-streaming-royalties-fair-er-8b38cd862f66
    http://www.koda.dk/fileadmin/user_upload/docs/Analysis_Music-Streaming-In-Denmark_2014.pdf
    https://meeco.me/
    http://daringfireball.net/linked/2014/11/18/uber-dirt
    http://www.vox.com/2014/11/17/7082317/language-maps-charts
    http://research.neustar.biz/2014/09/15/riding-with-the-stars-passenger-privacy-in-the-nyc-taxicab-dataset/
    https://modelviewculture.com/pieces/the-fantasy-and-abuse-of-the-manipulable-user
    Don Marti: Targeted advertising considered harmful
    Tom Slee: Future of everything (read the comments too)
    Don Marti: Monkey Badger
    http://ad.aloodo.com/
    Historic Wings: Volcano Bombing
    A personal cloud storage lamp
    Never mind the sharing economy. Here’s platform capitalism
    https://ioptconsulting.com/busting-the-myth-that-people-dont-care-about-privacy/
    http://pando.com/2014/11/17/the-moment-i-learned-just-how-far-uber-will-go-to-silence-journalists-and-attack-women/
    http://demo.ottw.net/fall2014_keynote1?ch_id=298
    http://www.theverge.com/2014/11/20/7254085/why-mozilla-is-scared-of-google?
    Wireless veteran pioneers a new product category aimed at women
    https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/article/ubers-privacy-scandal-failure-isabelle
       Video: 24 Hours of UK Air Traffic
    Google Contributor offers a way to make ads disappear
    https://www.aviationweather.gov/
       The Internet trumps bad marketing
    http://www.wired.com/2014/11/google-contributor/
    David Brooks: Interstellar love and gravity:
    http://www.theguardian.com/media-network-outbrain-partner-zone/native-advertising-quality-scalability
    http://contently.com/strategist/2014/10/10/the-new-york-times-takes-native-advertising-to-the-next-level-with-cole-haan/
       Digiday: Andrew Sullivan on Native Ads
       WaPo: Everything Google knows about you and how it knows it
    http://www.scmp.com/article/1645231/one-country-two-internets-and-why-we-need-protect-it
    https://medium.com/backchannel/the-definitive-story-of-information-wants-to-be-free-a8d95427641c
    http://www.brennancenter.org/analysis/im-terrified-my-new-tv-why-im-scared-turn-thing
    suitable position 6
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HNmKO7Gr4TE
    http://thehackernews.com/2014/10/verizon-wireless-injects-identifiers-to.html
       Some UK history
    Investigate Time Warner and Comcast’s "Social Contract" on America | Bruce Kushnick
    Verizon’s perma-cookie
    https://ioptconsulting.com/escaping-advertisings-uncanny-valley/
    http://kensegall.com/2014/07/the-relentless-and-annoying-pursuit-of-eyeballs/
    http://uk.businessinsider.com/heres-another-sign-that-google-glass-is-doomed-2014-11?r=US
    Fast Company: The one thing customers want from brands is honesty
    Forbes: An NSA coworker remembers the real Edward Snowden as a genius among geniuses
    The Baffler: The problem with music
    Guardian: Steve Albini’s keynote address on facing the music
    http://www.completemusicupdate.com/digests/gh69m/cmudigest04_oct2014.pdf
    The Web is dying and apps are killing it
    The-FCC-Calls-ATTs-Fiber-to-the-Press-Release-Bluff-131346
    Will the FCC ruin the Internet? (Opinion) – CNN.com
    TED: Susan Etlinger on what we do with all this big data
    David Weinberger in Salon: The Myth of Interference
    The all-silo mobile markewtplace
    http://broadbandbreakfast.com/2014/11/broadband-expert-andrew-odlyzko-warns-telecom-investors-that-industry-has-its-math-wrong-again/
    http://www.buddeblog.com.au/frompaulsdesk/data-retention-policy-risks-gains/
    http://muninetworks.org/content/republicans-and-democrats-alike-restore-local-authority-colorado
    http://oecdinsights.org/2014/11/06/what-difference-does-a-mobile-operator-more-or-less-make-to-you/
    http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/news/the-9-billion-witness-20141106
    Tor: Parterning Mozilla
    https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/about/manifesto/
    Mozilla: Introducing Polaris Privacy Initiative to Acccelerate User Focues Privacy Online
    Adage: online ad fraud
    Andreessen Horowitz’s Evans on Mobile Technology – Businessweek
    http://www.whitehouse.gov/net-neutrality
    Obama’s call for an open Internet puts him at odds with regulators – The Washington Post
    How Obama’s net neutrality comments undid weeks of FCC work – The Washington Post
    False rumors do not propagate like True ones | Twitter Trails
    () – smart.pricing.pdf
    The Empire Strikes Back: AT&T threatens to pull Paltry US Fibre Investment | Fiberevolution
    A Rare Peek Into The Massive Scale of AWS
     Cars – Products: Who Should Control Connected Car Data?
     DLD Pulse: Tweet by Andrian Kreye
     WTF is dark traffic? – Digiday
     This terrible CVS receipt shows why Apple Pay has little to fear from retailers – Quartz
     Getting started with Radio3
     One-in-five would pay more for house with fast internet – Telegraph
     Average Peak Broadband Speeds Rise in America | The Connectivist
     Hungary’s Internet tax arouses mass opposition – Boing Boing
     Own Choice — Medium
     Mozilla Launches Firefox Developer Edition | TechCrunch
     Signaling and saving Journalism
     Transcript of the Magliozzis’ commencement address | MIT News
     Modeling a Pandemic like Ebola with the Wolfram Language—Wolfram Blog
     Recent Elections Missed the Biggest Challenge of All – NYTimes.com
     andreas weigend school of information berkekely – Google Search
     Information Course Schedule: Fall 2014 | UC Berkeley School of Information
     Google Maps is getting a colorful redesign for iOS and Android | The Verge
     Firefox on Twitter: "In regards to the op-ed via @TheOpenStandard, @georgieonthego responds, "Yes, #GamerGate is Everyone’s Issue" http://t.co/mxspVPSIeu"
     Amanda Palmer: why fans choose to pay artists they love – Boing Boing
     Citizen Four | GreatHouse Stories
     The best smartwatch you can buy | The Verge
     DesigningCX | Human-Centered Design & Customer Experience Innovation Tools
     Conversational Bitcoin: The Ebook
     With bitcoin the internet is now a sovereign state : Bitcoin
     Will the FCC ruin the Internet? (Opinion) – CNN.com
     How the Market Ruined Twitter – Justin Fox – Harvard Business Review
     How to get into your Harvard | Educational Blog
     World’s Data Protection Leaders Highlight Internet of Things, Big Data Privacy R… | Bloomberg BNA
     Community Broadband Podcast
     Connected Things
     Why Twitter launched Fabric, in 5 devastating charts | VentureBeat | Marketing | by John Koetsier
     A big reset button on business | Decoding the new economy
     Terms of Service | Al Jazeera America
     The Ad Contrarian: Finally, The True Value Of A Facebook Fan
     don marti brand advertising sides privacy – Google Search
     Surfacing, not hiding, the creepy?
     Italy Pioneers An Internet Bill of Rights | TechPresident
     attention fat corporate bastards searls @man – Google Search
     Doc Searls Weblog · Table for two
     Forum 2014 Reading List
     Italy Pioneers An Internet Bill of Rights | TechPresident
     Jammed — Backchannel — Medium
     Waiting on the Riverbank: Intent Casting in Practice | DISRUPT.SYDNEY.14
     The diaspora* Project
     Peak Password
     Why Are New York City’s Subway Platforms So Hot? | Co.Design | business + design
     The Longest Now
     Copywrong
     Our Machine Masters – NYTimes.com
     When consumers become media for themselves | ProjectVRM
     Does the FCC really not get it about the Internet? – The Washington Post
     New Tech City: The Other Ed Snowdens: Inside the Mind of Two Privacy Whistleblowers – WNYC
     Tesco’s Downfall Is a Warning to Data-Driven Retailers
     My 15 Minutes of Fame as a B-List Gamergate Celebrity | Brian Keegan
     FCCInfo Results
     RADIO-TIMETRAVELLER: Field Strength Calculations: Calculating
     Doc Searls Weblog · Wallets should be wallets
     The Apple Pay Effect: Companies Get Behind Mobile Payment
     Notes from Cassandra Summit: The Rise of Top Line IT | Planet Cassandra
     Facebook has totally reinvented human identity: Why it’s even worse than you think – Salon.com
     Wanna see how Russia et al hope to shape the internet? ITU opens up (a little more) to public • The Register
     The future is disappearing: How humanity is falling short of its grand technological promise – Salon.com
     The Writer Cartoon | Savage Chickens – Cartoons on Sticky Notes by Doug Savage
     Fed up, US cities take steps to build better broadband | Ars Technica
     Cisco: 13% of North American Cities Have Made Smart City Deployments – Telecompetitor
     Preparing for Climate Change through Energy Internet and eVehicles: High Level Architecture for Building Zero Carbon Internet Networks , ICT products and services
     Open Appointments for Massages, Haircuts, Dentists, Yoga and more – MyTime
     The Invisible Environment – The Future of an Erosion
     Report: Advertisers Threatening To Pull Money Now The Only Remaining Way To Effect Any Change | The Onion – America’s Finest News Source
     Find products on sale by Brand, Site or Product Category – TrackIf
     TrackIf
     College Football Fan Map – NYTimes.com
     “Oprah” for indie bands: Apple once loved unknown acts—what changed? | Ars Technica
     Why Haters Hate: Kierkegaard Explains the Psychology of Bullying and Online Trolling in 1847 | Brain Pickings
     Kittens & Kierkegaard
    Links
  • November 23, 2014

    The Most Spectacular Place You’ll Never See

    Unless you look out the window.

    When I did that on 4 November 2007, halfway between London and Denver, I saw this:

    baffin Best I could tell at the time, this was Greenland. That’s how I labeled it in this album on Flickr. For years after that, I kept looking at Greenland maps, trying to find where, exactly, these glaciers and mountains…

    baffin1…were.

    While I’m sure there are good maps of Greenland somewhere (Nuuk? Denmark?), Google, Bing and the rest are no help. Nor are the fat world atlases. Here’s an island the size of a continent, with lots of Fjords and islands and glaciers and mountains and stuff, many of which were surely named by the natives or visitors, and there ain’t much.

    But:::: good news.

    There, out my dirty and frosty window over the trailing edge of the wing, was the same long deep valley I had seen seven years before. Only now I was equipped to learn what was what, and where. My GPS and the plane’s map — there on a screen mounted in the back of the seat in front of me — agreed: we flying over the Cumberland Peninsula of Baffin Island, an Arctic landform almost twice the size of New Zealand, in Nunavut, Canada’s newest, most arctic and least populated territory.

    The valley, I discovered on the ground, is called Akshayuk Pass. It connects the North and South Pangnirtung Fjords, bisecting the peninsula. Imagine a Yosemite Valley with a floor of glaciers draining into Arctic rivers, flanked for seventy miles by dozens of Half Domes and El Capitans — crossing the Arctic Circle, through an island where the last Ice Age still hasn’t ended.

    On the west side of the pass is the Penny Ice Cap, a mini-Greenland inside the forbidding and spectacular Auyuittuq National Park. Wikipedia explains, “In Inuktitut (the language of Nunavut‘s aboriginal people, the Inuit), Auyuittuq (current spelling: ᐊᐅᔪᐃᑦᑐᖅ aujuittuq) means ‘the land that never melts.’” Nobody lives there. Hiking across it ranges from difficult to impossible. The only way to fully take it in is from the sky above, like I found myself doing right then. It was thrilling.

    On the first flight over, I became fascinated by a mountain, just south of the Penny Ice Cap, that looked like an old tooth with fillings that had fallen out. It’s in the lower left side of this shot here from the 2007 trip:

    asgard So I recognized it instantly when I saw it again two days ago. Here’s how it looked this time:

    agard2 Now that I could research the scenery, I found it was Mt. Asgard, named after the realm of Norse gods. From below it looks the part. (That link is to amazing photos by Artur Stanisz, shot from Turner Glacier, which Asgard overlooks in the shot above. Fun fact: one of the great James Bond ski chase stunts was shot here. See this video explaining it. Start at about 1:33.)

    So now we have all these albums:

    • 2007_11_04 Blue light in Baffin Island (used to say Greenland)
    • 2014_11_21 Crossing Baffin Island’s Cumberland Peninsula (all from the latest trip)
    • 2014_11_23 Baffin Island’s Arctic Auyuittuq National Park (includes shots from both trips)

    Which join these others on Flickr:

    • Mt. Asgard
    • Akshayuk
    • Penny Ice Cap
    • Auyuittuq

    A digression on the subject of aviation…

    A bit before I started shooting these scenes, a flight attendant asked me to shade my window, so others on the plane could sleep or watch their movies. Note that this was in the middle of a daytime flight, not a red-eye. When I told her I booked a window seat to look and shoot out the window, she was surprised but supportive. “That is pretty out there,” she said.

    Later, when we were over Hudson Bay and the view was all clouds, I got up to visit the loo and count how many other windows had shades raised. There were very few: maybe eight, out of dozens of windows in the economy cabin of our Boeing 777. Everybody was watching a movie, eating, sleeping or otherwise paying no attention to the scenery outside.

    No wonder a cynical term used by airline people to label passengers is “walking freight.” The romance and thrill of flying has given way to rolling passengers on and off, and filling them with bad food and failed movies.

    Progress is how the miraculous becomes mundane. Many of our ancestors would have given limbs for the privilege of seeing what’s on the other side of our window shades in the sky. Glad all we need is to give up our cynicism about flying.

    Art, Aviation, Geography, Geology, Photography, Places, Travel, weather
  • November 22, 2014

    On “native” advertising

    In an email today I was asked by a PR person if I wanted to talk with somebody at a major newspaper about its foray into “native” advertising, a euphemism for ads made to look like editorial matter. Among other things they asked if native advertising would “signify the death of credible journalism.” Here was my response:

    I think tricking up advertising to look like journalism crosses a line I wish (name of paper) would keep up as a thick wall.

    In publishing, editorial is church and advertising is state. The difference should be clear, and the latter should not be confused with the former. For nearly all its history, this was the case with (name of paper), and all serious publications.

    While native ads don’t signify the death of credible journalism, they do signify a sell-out by publishers using them.

    If (person at the paper) wants to try convincing me otherwise, I’m game. But be warned that the likelihood that I’ll give native ads a positive spin — for any pub — is close to nil.

    “Native advertising” is just one poison arrow in the quiver of “content marketing“—a Borg that wants to assimilate all the media it pays to fill with itself. Both “native advertising” and “content marketing” began to trend in 2012.

    Bonus link — Andrew Sullivan on Native Ads: Journalism has surrendered. Great interview.

    adtech, advertising, Journalism
  • November 20, 2014

    Some thoughts on App Based Car Services (ABCS)

    I started using Uber in April. According to my Uber page on the Web, I’ve had fifteen rides so far. But, given all the bad news that’s going down, my patronage of the company is at least suspended. As an overdue hedge, I just signed up with Lyft. I’m also looking at BlaBlaCar here in the U.K. (where I am at the moment), plus other alternatives, including plain old taxis and car services again.

    But here are a few learnings I’ve gained in the meantime.*

    First Uber isn’t about “ride sharing.” That’s just marketing gloss at this point. Instead Uber is what’s coming to be called an “app-based car service.” Let’s call it ABCS. I mean hey, if that’s what the New York Attorney General calls it, that’s what it is. At least for now.

    ABCS is a new category, growing within and alongside two existing categories: taxis and livery. These are both old, established and highly regulated (in New York City for example, by the Taxi and Livery Commission).

    My first few Uber drivers were dudes picking up some extra bucks, or so it seemed. The rest, including all the recent ones, have been livery drivers taking advantage of one more way to get a fare. Some had as many as three dedicated cell phones on their front seat: one for Uber, one for Lyft, and one for whatever car (livery) service they otherwise work for. Here are their names, in reverse chronological order: Jeffrey (whose real name was Afghanistani), Heriberto, Malik, Abdisalam, Fernando, Jourabek, Maleche, Namgyal, Mohammad, Rafael, Maged, Shahin, Imtiaz, Shaafi and Conrad. That last one was my first, in Santa Barbara.

    Rather than being a new way to “share rides,” ABCS is a great hack on dispatch — a function of taxis and car services that has long been stuck in the walkie-talkie age — and payment ease.

    But ABCS also hacks the whole car category as well. Why spend $300/month on a lease, or $30k for a car, plus the cost of gas, tolls, insurance and upkeep, when you’ll spend less just calling up rides from an app — and when every ride is friction-free and fully accountable? (Even to the extent that every charge is easy to post in an expense account.)

    Cars are already becoming generic. (If you rent cars often, you know what I mean. A Toyota is a Nissan is a Chevy is a Hyundai.) And now we have a generation coming up that gives a much smaller damn about driving than did previous ones — at least in the U.S. All that aspirational stuff about independence and style doesn’t matter as much as it used to. How long before GM, Ford and Toyota start making special models just for Uber and Lyft drivers? (In a way Ford did that for livery with Lincoln Town Cars. Not coincidentally, several of my Uber drivers in New York and New Jersey have been in black Town Cars. Another fave: Toyota Avalons and Camrys.

    Anyway, I think we are in the midst of many disruptions that caused by app-based ways to shrink the distance between supply and demand, in many categories. Taxi/Livery is just one of them. Hospitality is another. So is retail. Changes within ABCS are happening rapidly and in real time. Example: SheRides. Here’s one story about it.

    Whatever else ABCS does, driving still won’t be a way for anybody to get rich, or even join the middle class. (At least not here in New York. YMMV.) At best driving will be a stepping stone to jobs that pay better and involve more marketable skills. So one question might be, What are the next stones? And, Does the emergence of ABCS give workers on the supply side — other than those running the companies — a lift?

    Bonus link: DriverCollect, a new project in the UK. Check it out.

    *[Later (12 April 2015)…] I went back to using Uber a few days after writing this, and I’ve taken another fifteen rides since then. I’ve given all the drivers 5-star ratings, meaning everything went fine. I’ve also taken one Lyft ride. When I’ve compared the two, Uber had the closer, faster ride, and won my business. I haven’t tried BlaBlaCar or any of the competitors. I’ve also taken car services when Uber hasn’t been available, such as when going to Heathrow from Richmond early on a Sunday morning. There tend not to be Uber cars available at that time in that town. Also, none of my drivers since I published this post have been native to the U.S. or the U.K. When I’ve asked them if they like driving for Uber, most have said it’s better than driving for a car service or Lyft, mostly because Uber gets them more fares, more easily. And scale matters. At that, Uber rules. The drivers’ only complaint is the slice Uber takes: 20%. Lyft takes the same, they say (and many drive for both). Finally, as with car service drivers, most don’t like taking route advice from passengers with Google Maps running on their phones (or at least not from me). But some do.

    Business, infrastructure, News, Personal, problems, Technology, Travel
  • November 14, 2014

    Summer vs. School

    This was me in the summer of ’53, between Kindergarten and 1st Grade, probably in July, the month I turned six years old:

    1953_07_paradiseI’m the one with the beer.

    And this was me in 1st Grade, Mrs. Heath’s class:

    Grade_1I’m in the last row by the aisle with my back against the wall, looking lost, which I was.

    Some kids are good at school. I sucked at it until my junior year in college. That was when I finally grokked a rule: Find what the teachers want, and give them more than that. When I shared this insight with my wife, she said “I figured that out in the third grade.” She remembered sitting in class at her Catholic grade school, watching the nun go on about something, pointing her pencil at the nun and saying to her eight-year-old self, “I can work with this.” Which she did, earning top grades and blowing through UCLA in just three years before going on to a brilliant career in business.

    Don’t get me wrong. I learned a lot in school — probably just as much as the other kids, and maybe more than most because I read a lot and was curious about approximately everything (which is still the case). I also enjoyed hanging with friends and doing what kids did. But I hated the schooling itself: the seven lessons teachers were paid to deliver —

    1. Confusion
    2. Class position
    3. Indifference
    4. Emotional dependency
    5. Intellectual dependency
    6. Provisional self-esteem
    7. Submission to authority

    But Summer was paradise.

    One big credit for that goes to Grandma Searls, whose birthday is today. She’s top left in the first photo, which was shot at her house in the woods in what’s now Brick, New Jersey. (Back then it was still in the Pine Barrens — a more delightful region than the name suggests.) If Grandma was still around, she’d be 132 years old. (She died in 1990 at nearly 108.) She was our family matriarch, without the regalities, and one of the world’s most loving and welcoming people. Gatherings like the one above were constant and wonderful, all summer long.

    I also want to give a big hat tip to Nancy Gurney, one of the other faces in the back of the room in the second photo. Nancy has put together this Bogota High School site for our graduating class: 1965. I didn’t go to Bogota, but I did go to Maywood elementary and junior high schools, which fed into Bogota High back in those days. When I look back at the old photos on the site (of which the second above is one), only fun memories come back.

    Family, Friends, Fun, Personal, Places, School
  • November 13, 2014

    Winter arrives

    It’s already snowing across eastern Pennsylvania and much of New Jersey and upstate New York:

    first snowStill raining steadily here in New York, but hey: snow might come. Either way, Winter’s here.

    Life, weather
  • November 7, 2014

    A Reading List

    I thought I’d assemble a reading list of blog posts and other stuff I’ve written or said recently, for Andreas Weigend‘s Social Data Revolution class at the UC Berkeley School of Information, in which I participated a few days ago. So here goes. All this is stuff published roughly since The Intention Economy came out:

    From this blog —

    • Time for Digital Emancipation
    • It’s Indie Time
    • Escaping the Black Holes of Centralization
    • Automated Assumption Fail
    • Can we at least try not to kill 440,000 patients per year?

    From the ProjectVRM blog —

    • @Capgemini on #VRM: Well Done!
    • State of the VRooM, 2014
    • Apple Healthkit and VRM
    • VRM is as distributed as humanity
    • Market Intelligence that flows both ways
    • Why we need first person technologies on the Net
    • Personal = Sovereign
    • Big Data, meet Big Privacy
    • Why reduce yourself to a qualified lead?
    • Big Data will remain a Big Dud until individuals have their own
    • What do sites need from social login buttons?
    • For real customer engagement, “social’ is inadequate
    • Freedom vs. Tracking
    • VRM videos
    • Searls Glasses vs. Google Glass
    • Thinking outside the pipes

    From Linux Journal —

    • Linux vs. Bullshit
    • A Pain in the Person
    • Leaving the Land of the Giants
    • Can we stop playing card games with business?
    • Life on the forked road
    • The patient as a platform

    From HBR —

    • Products-as-Platforms Is Not a Marketing Gimmick
    • Free customers are more valuable than captive ones
    • Turning consumers into customers

    And from elsewhere —

    • Freeing the Customer with VRM: Q&A with Doc Searls. Part I & Part II
    • Personal Cloud by Doc Searls (State of the Net 2013)
    • Maintaining Independence and Privacy in a World of Security and Surveillance
    • Technology could empower people with tools that protect their privacy (Pew Research Center)

     

    Links, VRM
  • November 7, 2014

    Annotated Tab Pile

     Susan Etlinger: What do we do with all this big data? | Talk Video | TED.com. Good talk.
     What if Age Is Nothing but a Mind-Set? – NYTimes.com. At one level, yeah. But age also kills 100% of its victims. Believe me: I’ve been studying this for many decades.
     Why women leave tech: It’s the culture, not because ‘math is hard’ – Fortune. Of course. But women are still taking over. Trust me. We need it, too.
     Surveillance Self-Defense | Tips, Tools and How-tos for Safer Online Communications. Important stuff you’ll ignore. Trust me on that too.
     Wetmachine » Tales of the Sausage Factory » Intellectual Property, Jewish Ethics, and Aaron Swartz. New angles on several topics.
     Beyond Neutrality – Enabling a World of Connected Things. Start with stuff.
     Wearables and Quantified Self Demand Security-First Design | WIRED. Which we’ll need, lest we be hacked.
     Verizon Wireless injects identifiers that link its users to Web requests | Ars Technica. Secret slogan: “Okay, be evil. Whatever.”
     Don’t punch the monkey. Embrace the Badger. One of Don Marti’s good ones.
     Identity as a weapon. T.Rob thinking well and deeply.
     Promise Theory — What Is It? | Linux Journal. Never heard of it before, which is a good thing. Read on.
     N.C.A.A. Fan Map: How the Country Roots for College Football – NYTimes.com. Brilliant. Please dig.
     Webcasting Rate Proposals for 2016-2020 Now Public — What Will The Copyright Royalty Board Be Considering in Setting Royalty Rates for Internet Radio? | Broadcast Law Blog. This will affect your music streaming listening. For example…
     Taylor Swift and the Economics of Music as a Service. A harbinger of things to come. Here’s the thing: streaming is getting to be how most of us use music. It pays the artist shit, and it costs the streamers more dearly than ever. But there’s an answer:
     EmanciPay – Project VRM. I can think of no other way. Maybe the world will come around to seeing the wisdom of this approach.
     Airwave Auction Set For 2016: FCC – Business Insider. Auctioning spectrum is like auctioning colors or insisting the world is a cone. But normative, so there ya go.
     Akamai PLXsert’s Q3 2014 State of the Internet Report – The Akamai Blog. Always interesting.
     Why Podcasting Is Bigger Than You Think – Edison Research. Huge, in fact. Bigger than most radio stations.
     State of the Internet | Brought to you by Akamai Always interesting and useful.
     Passwords are Obsolete — Medium Always have been. Now we need to prove it with pudding.
     FBI — Going Dark: Are Technology, Privacy, and Public Safety on a Collision Course? Always were.
     How Google can unlock a trillion-dollar opportunity while improving search relevance —Tech News and Analysis Like they need the money.
     Samir Saran: The ITU and Unbundling Internet Governance – Council on Foreign Relations Context: the ITU is about telecom, not Internet. Just remember that.
     Never say never: why TV networks are suddenly ready to unbundle — Tech News and Analysis. Well, not really. Some of them, a little. But unbundling is inevitable. The questions are when and how.
     The latest malvertising incident and why you should care. Lots of ads online are personal now. And they’re not all about giving you a “better experience.”
     On monopolies: Thiel, Tirole and Tolstoy | Andrew McAfee. Always provocative, Andy is.
     32 Cities Back Municipal Broadband Initiative | Multichannel. With many more to come.
     Co-founder of Maine sanctuary for elephants, killed in pen, apparently fell and was stepped on – The Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram. He was an Awesome Foundation awardee, which is why I include it here. Sad story.
     The New York Times thinks only the rich should profit from crowdfunding | VentureBeat | Entrepreneur | by Sherwood Neiss, Crowdfund Capital Advisors. Interesting angle.
     Law is Code: A Software Engineering Approach to Analyzing the United States Code by William P. Li, Pablo Azar, David Larochelle, Phil Hill, Andrew W. Lo :: SSRN. David is a Berkman colleague. Good work there.
     SSRN-id2511947.pdf. The full text of the above.
     Help EFF Test Privacy Badger, Our New Tool to Stop Creepy Online Tracking | Electronic Frontier Foundation. Good hack, and open source. Give it a whirl.
     Eisenhower’s military-industrial warning rings truer than ever | Technology | The Observer. And it’s been ever for a long time already, which means things are now extra extra bad.
     Elon Pew Future of the Internet Survey Report: Killer Apps, Gigabit Net by 2025? I’m in there somewhere.
     National Overview – September 2014 | Average Temperature Anomalies | State of the Climate | National Climatic Data Center (NCDC). More for the deniers to deny.
     Barnes & Noble to Leave the Bronx After 15 Years – NYTimes.com. Our local B&N b gone.
     Dahr Jamail | As Casualties Mount, Scientists Say Global Warming Has Been “Hugely Underestimated”. More un-fun with stats.
     Men’s Basketball: Dwight Durante Was a 5-8 Sensation | Catawba College Athletics. I watched this guy destroy other teams, back in the decade. Amazing player. He was the best 3-point shooter in a time when all those shots were still worth only 2 points.
     The UNC fake class investigation and the “the myth of the student-athlete” – The Washington Post. Hard lessons for a good school.
     Goodbye, Organization Man – NYTimes.com. He’s actually been gone for a long time.
     As Online Viewing Soars, Internet TV Will Soon Be the Only TV | WIRED. Which I’ve been saying for years. But the inevitable seems to be approaching asymptotically.
     The north pole moved to the North Pole in a single human lifetime | Ars Technica. They do that. Bonus link.
    Links
  • October 22, 2014

    Tab Sale. Pay with attention. Save your cash.

    I was going to sort these into an outline; but I don’t have the time or the energy. I had some reason for keeping all of them open for awhile, though. So here ya go:::

    •  Irving Wladawsky-Berger: How Is Our Digital Revolution Doing? Deepthink from Irving. More here…
    •  Irving Wladawsky-Berger: The Evolution of the Internet of Very Smart Things
    •  The Black Box Society — Frank Pasquale | Harvard University Press
    •  The Invisible Environment – The Future of an Erosion
    •  Mystery startup Magic Leap raises $542 million from Google, others | Reuters
    •  The Dark Market for Personal Data – NYTimes.com
    •  Balkinization: Interview on the Black Box Society
    •  Women in Computer Science
    •  The NSA and GCHQ Campaign Against German Satellite Companies – The Intercept
    •  Treasure Map Presentation – The Intercept
    •  Andy Müller-Maguhn – The Intercept
    •  The Scent of a Woman | Jamie Lee Curtis
    •  The Future Of The Culture Wars Is Here, And It’s Gamergate
    •  Libertarianism After Fifty Years: What Have We Learned? (transcript)
    •  Amazon.com: What Money Can’t Buy: The Moral Limits of Markets (9780374203030): Michael J. Sandel: Books
    •  Why Some Things Should Not Be for Sale: The Moral Limits of Markets (Oxford Political Philosophy): Debra Satz: 9780195311594: Amazon.com: Books
    •  TuneCore Unveils ‘YouTube Money’ to Help Artists Monetize Tracks | Billboard
    •  One-third of Canadians don’t go a day without checking social media: survey – The Globe and Mail
    •  And Just Like That, Facebook Became the Most Important Entity in Web Journalism – The Atlantic
    •  The Year Facebook Blew Past Google | Re/code
    •  Endangered Tree Snails Keep Hawaii Public Radio Off the Air – The Atlantic
    •  How Birth Season Affects Personality – The Atlantic
    •  Copywrong
    •  Illegal Copying Has Always Created Jobs, Growth, And Prosperity | TorrentFreak
    •  Webcasting Rate Proposals for 2016-2020 Now Public – What Will The Copyright Royalty Board Be Considering in Setting Royalty Rates for Internet Radio? | Broadcast Law Blog
    •  Shazam’s endgame is important to all European startups
    •  Why "mobile" isn’t a channel | LinkedIn
    •  Identity Certainty | Payfone
    •  Marc Andreessen on Finance: ‘We Can Reinvent the Entire Thing’ – Bloomberg
    •  teamfinchconsultants.com/files/2014/09/Solnit-Silencing_Women.pdf
    •  Amazon’s Monopsony Is Not O.K. – NYTimes.com
    •  Workshop on Privacy and User Centric Controls – 20-21 November 2014 – Berlin
    •  Here’s Why Public Wifi is a Public Health Hazard: Medium
    •  Errata Security: Right-winger explains what’s wrong with ComputerCop
    •  Internet Talk Radio – w3w3® – Free Podcast, Blog, Business Interviews
    • Mediapost: Beacoming the retailer — Programmatic Ad Exchange
    •  EXTINCT.LY
    •  This Electronic Stonehenge Once Divined the Secrets of Soviet Radio
    •  Privacy Identity Innovation | pii 2014 Conference
    •  Why 20 Bitcoin Companies Are Backing a New Deal for Digital Identity
    •  Political Polarization & Media Habits | Pew Research Center’s Journalism Project
    •  At Ogilvy, New Unit Will Mine Data – NYTimes.com
    •  Why #Gamergaters Piss Me The F*** Off — The Cauldron — Medium
    •  If bubbles always burst what’s the alternative? – The COMRADITY Journal
    •  Your Data or Your Life by Lucy P. Marcus – Project Syndicate
    •  Office 365 Segway Commercial – YouTube (My nephew, Robert Bergin, is in it. He’s the third guy on the Segway.)
    •  Google tests waters for potential ultra-fast wireless service | Reuters
    •  Web Privacy and Transparency Conference » Center for Information Technology Policy at Princeton
    •  The Incumbent Challenge Another good one from Tristan Louis. “You can’t lead an insurgency from the top.”
    •  They Were Shooting A Beautiful Video From Space. Then They Sped It Up. Just WOW. Click-bait I bit.
    •  Oct. 23 | Emily & Tim launch THE INSPECTION HOUSE at 61 Local – Brooklyn, NY | Coach House Books
    •  I’m a developer for the Tor Hardware Router anonabox on Kickstarter now. AMA : TOR
    •  Anonabox – Tor router box is false representation, possibly even scam! : privacy
    •  Privacy Router Anonabox Gets $600K in Crowdfunding—And Huge Backlash | WIRED
    •  Andy Greenberg on Twitter: “Kickstarter just suspended Anonabox’s Tor-in-a-box fundraiser, story coming. Earlier story on the growing criticism:http://t.co/MBTgAXAEQB"
    •  What is madware? – Definition from WhatIs.com
    •  Gaga Daily meets Tony Bennett in concert at Granada Theater – News and Events – Gaga Daily I missed it, but enjoyed it vicariously.
    •  China Introduces New Consumer Protection Law – China Briefing News
    •  VRM+CRM at IIW | ProjectVRM
    •  Google Touts Its Progress In Piracy Battle, Announces New Ad Format & “Pirate” Algorithm Update
    •  Ello founder Paul Budnitz: America is a ‘car crash’ on privacy – Telegraph
    •  When Uber and Airbnb Meet the Real World – NYTimes.com
    •  Breaking up the pledge drive: Boston’s WBUR wants to build a new model for public media funding » Nieman Journalism Lab
    •  CBS Offers Web Service as TV Unbundles Itself – NYTimes.com
    •  WikiLeaks – Updated Secret Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement (TPP) – IP Chapter (second publication) – Press Release
    •  The Internet Of Someone Else’s Things | TechCrunch
    •  8tracks is an awesome (and profitable) music startup you’ve probably never heard of | VentureBeat | Media | by Tom Cheredar
    •  Ads Don’t Work That Way | Melting Asphalt
    •  The Perils of Highly Interconnected Systems | MIT Technology Review
    •  Inspired by Wikipedia, Social Scientists Create a Revolution in Online Surveys | MIT Technology Review
    •  Relaxing “Neutrality” Principles Could Unlock Online Innovation | MIT Technology Review
    •  The Reaction to Facebook’s “Emotion Contagion” Study Suggests Few People Realize How Common User Experimentation Is | MIT Technology Review
    •  The Move To Cross Screen IDs And Its Potential Fall Out | ExchangeWire.com
    •  Rhinobird.tv | Your Videos, Shared Live
    •  Anonymity, Privacy, and Security Online | Pew Research Center’s Internet & American Life Project
    •  Consumers value their personal data at €170 / £140, Orange study finds
    •  Model Contracts for the transfer of personal data to third countries – Justice
    •  Interoperability Case Study: Cloud Computing by Matthew B. Becker :: SSRN
    •  Killer Apps in the Gigabit Age | Pew Research Center’s Internet & American Life Project
    •  Death From Above An oldie but goodie. Required re-reading.
    •  Anonabox – Tor router box is false representation, possibly even scam! : privacy
    •  Dancing Poodles | Andy Ellis > Protecting a Better Internet
    •  One paper by Nobel Prize winner Jean Tirole that every internet user should know – Vox
    •  The age of loneliness is killing us | George Monbiot | Comment is free | The Guardian
    •  Why Inequality Matters | Bill Gates
    •  Optimal privacy protection?
    Links
  • October 22, 2014

    Every thing has a face, and vice versa

    That line came to me a few minutes ago, as I looked and read through the latest photographic blog posts by Stephen Lewis in his blog, Bubkes). This one…

    Stephen Lewis photo… titled Farmyard, Grandmother, Chicken, and Ovid in Exile, is accompanied by richly detailed text, including this:

    The courtyard in the photo no longer exists; it and and the vegetable garden were uprooted several years ago.  in their place: a summer-time restaurant surrounded by neatly planted flowerbeds and a tall antenna tower of a mobile telephony company resting on a broad concrete footing.  The grandmother still lives on the plot, however, and tends the little that remains of her garden.  She is in her late-eighties now and, at day’s end, often sits on the raised curb of the newly paved road next to her former farmyard in expectation of passersby…

    Nothing is permanent, but in this case the more durable feature is the grandmother and her friendly face — the face of the place, while she lasts.

    Also arresting is Corn Stalks, a Plateau, the Black Sea, and the Horizon:

    dscf0268

    It’s a place that calls to mind face in its verb form. A synonym might be to meet, or to confront. We face a challenge, an opportunity, a problem, success, failure, or the world. Things face us as well, but not always directly. Three of the four things in the photo are mostly hidden by the first, but far more vast and open. Also flat. Horizons may feature mountains, but they are horizontal: flat and wide.

    We are walking and running animals that work best in the horizontal. Our eyes shift more easily to left and right than to up and down. Our stereoscopic vision and hearing also locate best in the horizontal spread from one here to many theres.

    Our species dispersed from Africa toward gone horizons, mostly along coasts long since drowned by melting ice caps. The Black Sea has changed greatly in spread and shape throughout human history, and may have reached its present height in a deluge through the Dardanelles and Bosporus seaways.

    The view on the path in the photo is framed between the vertical blinders of dry corn stalks at the edges of fields of unseen vastness. (Corn fields have always been both beautiful and a tiny bit creepy to me, ever since I got a bit lost when wandering as a kid into a cornfield somewhere, with no clear direction out other than the sound of distant voices.)

    Between the last paragraph and this one, Stephen posted another photo, titled Shabla, Bulgaria: Seawards and Kitchenwards, taken on the shore of the Black Sea:

    shabla-bulgaria-seawards-and-kitchenwards

    The subject is mostly boats and ramps. In the foreground are stairs and wood railings, two of the many literal and figurative framings, none quite horizontal, in a vertical photo with dimensions we call “portrait.” On the face of this Bulgarian shore, one ear is the sea itself. All the ramps face land and sea. To them the camera is an unseen visitor from another dimension.

    While seeing and hearing are mostly horizontal (our ears as well as our eyes are aligned with the horizon), eating is vertical: food is something we “eat up” and “get down.” So is nutrition: we “raise” crops and cattle.”

    In Stephen’s photos, things have faces too. Some are literal, such as in Guns of August, Books of August: The Iconography of a Gravestone in Prague:

    ww-i-grave-prague-copy-2 The photo puts in contrast the irony of cemetery “monuments” (as gravestones are now called), commemorating stuff nobody alive remembers, for an audience a living performer might round to zero. Under the subhead The Emotions of the Living; the Passivity of the Dead, Stephen writes,

    The photo above, taken in the immense cemetery in the late-19th/early-20th century residential quarter of Vinohrady, portrays a gravestone tableau of life’s emotionized figures that reveals the ways that those in the comfort and safety of the home-front consciously or unconsciously sanitized, rationalized, and ennobled the senseless carnage of World War I.

    Last month I visited the graves of relatives three generations and more ahead of mine, at Woodlawn Cemetery in The Bronx, and reported on that visit in Lives of the Dead. While some graves at Woodlawn yearned toward the kind of extravagance Stephen found in Vinohrady, my late kinfolk leaned in the opposite direction, marking little or nothing of who they planted there. To my knowledge, I was the first to surface (at those last two links) twenty Englerts, Knoebels and others whose faces in death are carpets of mowed grass.

    And who knows how long anything will last on the Web? My old blog, on which I wrote from 1999-2007, survives by the grace of a friend, and its blogroll is a near-cemetery of rotting links.

    Every thing faces a future for as long as we grace it with expectation of use, appreciation or some other goodness. Why else save anything?

    So I’m glad Stephen keeps putting these photos up, and enlarging them so well with prose. Here’s a list of other photos in his series, posted since the last time I last blogged his series:

    • Stone Cliffs, Stone Beach, Stone Walls, Lord of Stone
    • Past Glory: Abandoned Mineral Bath Pavilion, Sofia, Bulgaria
    • Guns of August, Books of August: The Iconography of a Gravestone in Prague
    • Literary Interlude: Graffito, Sofia, Bulgaria
    • Monochrome Interlude: Night, Side Street, Şişhane Quarter, Istanbul
    • Reflective Interlude: A Saturday Afternoon, Beşiktaş, Istanbul
    • Colorful Interlude: Tarlebaşi Quarter, Istanbul
    • The Church of St. James the Martyr, Poduyane Quarter, Sofia, Bulgaria: A Careless Assumption, a Careless Bombardment, and the Benefits of a Once-Strong Back
    • Courtyard, Sofia, Bulgaria: Two Views, New Viewpoint
    • A Great Day in Meriçleri
    • A Musical Interlude: Two Musicians, Two Instruments, Two Moods
    • Istanbul, From Piyale Paşa to Bomonti and Back: A Half-Century of Urban Dynamics in Three Non-Stereotypic Views

    It’s a wonderful gallery. Enjoy.

    Awesome, Blogging, Blogroll, Friends, Geology, infrastructure, Internet, Life, Obituary, Photography, Places, Strange stuff
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