Report on the Privacy Policies and Practices of Health Web Sites from the Health Privacy Project at Georgetown University: “Although health Web sites now provide a wide range of clinical and diagnostic information; opportunities to purchase products and services; interactions among consumers, patients, and health care professionals; and the capability to build a personalized health record, they have not matured enough to guarantee the quality of the information, protect consumers from product fraud or inappropriate prescribing, or guarantee the privacy of individuals’ information. This last point is the subject of this report. Health care Web sites have access to an unprecedented amount of personal information about consumers. What are their policies about the privacy of that information? How easily can consumers find and understand them? Do they afford sufficient protection? And do the actual practices of the health sites reflect their stated policies?” [via Phil Agre]
Where’s George? Interesting idea, not sure if it will work, but I tried it. You go to this site, enter the serial number of one or more bills of any denomination in your pocket, and write the URL of the site on the bill. If anyone who subsequently receives the bill notices the URL, logs on and enters their location, you’re notified by email and can track the meanderings of the currency. They report that they’re tracking over $2,000,000 in currency entered by over 175,000 registrants.
Doubleclick’s retreat from plans to tie personal data to now-anonymous web cookies is A Turning Point for E-Privacy, says Wired.
Get rid of that babyfat by age two or else:
“Children as young as ages 2 to 5 can experience elevated blood
pressure due to obesity, study results suggest. The elevated pressure may be a harbinger of obesity-related
health problems later in life, such as heart disease…”
Adult victims of domestic violence may suffer from a version of “shaken baby syndrome”, according to the discussion in a case report from British emergency medicine physicians. Rapid recognition is key in this potentially deadly and recurrent manifestation of abuse.
Friends of the late blues singer Screamin’ Jay Hawkins are searching for the 57 children he’s pretty sure he fathered but couldn’t keep track of.
England ugly and grey, say tourist guides. I’m going, nontheless.
ebpd – The ebay password daemon by Richard Fromm: “This script sniffs traffic on the network watching for ebay userids and passwords. This is only possible because (as of this writing), ebay does not encrypt passwords — they are sent in the clear. It is hoped that the writing and dissemination of this program causes this situation to change. (Repeated attempts at resolution of the situation through other means, prior to the posting of this script, failed.). This isn’t rocket science. I don’t pretend to have discovered anything fundamental or new here. It’s a simple little script that countless
other people could have written. The pitfalls of sending passwords in the clear have been recognized for many years. The only surprising
thing is that too many people still don’t take security seriously and continue to repeat the same mistakes over and over again.”
[via Phil Agre]
Report on the Privacy Policies and Practices of Health Web Sites from the Health Privacy Project at Georgetown University: “Although health Web sites now provide a wide range of clinical and diagnostic information; opportunities to purchase products and services; interactions among consumers, patients, and health care professionals; and the capability to build a personalized health record, they have not matured enough to guarantee the quality of the information, protect consumers from product fraud or inappropriate prescribing, or guarantee the privacy of individuals’ information. This last point is the subject of this report. Health care Web sites have access to an unprecedented amount of personal information about consumers. What are their policies about the privacy of that information? How easily can consumers find and understand them? Do they afford sufficient protection? And do the actual practices of the health sites reflect their stated policies?” [via Phil Agre]
ZDNet: News: Intuit scrambles to plug Quicken leaks
“A design quirk in some e-commerce Web sites allows
sensitive information that consumers provide about their
personal habits, tastes or finances to be attached to Web
page location codes used by third parties such as
ad-placement companies. In the case of Intuit (Nasdaq:
INTU), both a mortgage calculator and a
credit-assessment feature on its Quicken site collect
information from customers regarding income, assets and
debt, and then send the data to DoubleClick Inc.
(Nasdaq: DCLK), a company that sells and places
advertising on Web sites. DoubleClick says it doesn’t
keep any of the data it receives.”

From BBC News: Satellite snaps a mighty sandstorm The satellite photo shows a giant sandstorm the size of Spain, off the west African coast. “Such storms, combined with rising warm air,
can lift dust 4,500 metres (15,000 feet) above
the desert and then out over the Atlantic. The
dust can reach right across the ocean to the
Caribbean where local weather forecasters
sometimes have to issue air pollution alerts.”
From Wired: A Ralph Nader Plan That ‘Sucks’
ZDNet: News: Intuit scrambles to plug Quicken leaks
“A design quirk in some e-commerce Web sites allows
sensitive information that consumers provide about their
personal habits, tastes or finances to be attached to Web
page location codes used by third parties such as
ad-placement companies. In the case of Intuit (Nasdaq:
INTU), both a mortgage calculator and a
credit-assessment feature on its Quicken site collect
information from customers regarding income, assets and
debt, and then send the data to DoubleClick Inc.
(Nasdaq: DCLK), a company that sells and places
advertising on Web sites. DoubleClick says it doesn’t
keep any of the data it receives.”

From BBC News: Satellite snaps a mighty sandstorm The satellite photo shows a giant sandstorm the size of Spain, off the west African coast. “Such storms, combined with rising warm air,
can lift dust 4,500 metres (15,000 feet) above
the desert and then out over the Atlantic. The
dust can reach right across the ocean to the
Caribbean where local weather forecasters
sometimes have to issue air pollution alerts.”
From Wired: A Ralph Nader Plan That ‘Sucks’
Join me here?

From CNN.com: A timeline of mass shootings in the U.S., prompted by the latest killing rampage by a Philadelphia man reportedly motivated by racial hatred.
From CNN.com: US – Death row inmate whose lawyer slept at trial to stay in jail. Calvin Burdine’s murder conviction had been thrown out because his lawyer had allegedly slept through long segments of his trial. The state of Texas missed a deadline to file an appeal and on Wednesday a federal judge ordered him released. The Texas AG called the missed deadline for a new trial a “regrettable mistake.” But he said the error does not justify “releasing a convicted murderer.” Two days later, an appeals court has agreed and is blocking his release. Texas Gov. George W. Bush says, “He’s a really violent person. I hope he gets retried soon.”
Consider Mr. Death, a fascinating documentary by Errol Morris and its subject Fred Leuchter Jr. Leuchter, an engineer from Malden, Mass., was a self-taught expert on methods of execution and a consultant to a variety of states with the death penalty. In 1988, he was commissioned by Ernst Zündel, a neo-Nazi being prosecuted in a highly-publicized trial in Canada for publishing literature claiming that the Holocaust had never occurred, to conduct a forensic investigation into the Nazi use of poison gas in the WWII death camps. He claimed to have “proven” that the Holocaust had never happened by failing to find traces of poisonous substances in brick and mortar samples he had obtained illegally from the walls of the Auschwitz gas chambers. “The Leuchter Report is out there in dozens of languages, and I would dare say in millions of copies. We will not go down in history as being a nation of genocidal maniacs. We will not. We can, with historical truth, detoxify a poisoned planet,” said Zündel.
And while we’re on the subject of Holocaust deniers, Salon updates us on British author and Hitler apologist David Irving’s libel suit against Deborah Lipstadt, the Emory University professor of history who has called Irving “one of the most dangerous spokespersons for Holocaust denial.” Irving argues on his own behalf and the presiding judge has given him considerable leeway in presenting his case so as not to present the appearance of putting a person with no legal experience at a disadvantage. Irving thus gets massive exposure for his insidious arguments. To assist Lipstadt in her case, the Israeli government this week decided to release over 600 pages of Adolph Eichmann’s memoirs. Holocaust survivors attending the trial to bear witness are concerned about how much easier it will be for such Hitler apologists to plant seeds of doubt after the last survivors of the Final Solution are gone.
From Wired: “France Agog, Aghast Over Echelon”, the US- and UK-run surveillance network that can allegedly intercept email, faxes, and phone conversations. This article is full of links to extensive earlier coverage of the Echelon phenomenon, which is becoming a major acute irritant to chronically tense Anglo-French relations.
Kenyon College examines the rave scene: electronic dance music, its various sub-genres and styles. “As we dance into the next millennium, we must not forget our past. It is my hope that ravers, DJ’s, music critics, students, and anyone else interested in electronic dance music will be able to use this site to learn more about the sounds and subcultures that have provided the style and soundtrack to the end of the 20th century.”
Join me here?

From CNN.com: A timeline of mass shootings in the U.S., prompted by the latest killing rampage by a Philadelphia man reportedly motivated by racial hatred.
From CNN.com: US – Death row inmate whose lawyer slept at trial to stay in jail. Calvin Burdine’s murder conviction had been thrown out because his lawyer had allegedly slept through long segments of his trial. The state of Texas missed a deadline to file an appeal and on Wednesday a federal judge ordered him released. The Texas AG called the missed deadline for a new trial a “regrettable mistake.” But he said the error does not justify “releasing a convicted murderer.” Two days later, an appeals court has agreed and is blocking his release. Texas Gov. George W. Bush says, “He’s a really violent person. I hope he gets retried soon.”
Consider Mr. Death, a fascinating documentary by Errol Morris and its subject Fred Leuchter Jr. Leuchter, an engineer from Malden, Mass., was a self-taught expert on methods of execution and a consultant to a variety of states with the death penalty. In 1988, he was commissioned by Ernst Zündel, a neo-Nazi being prosecuted in a highly-publicized trial in Canada for publishing literature claiming that the Holocaust had never occurred, to conduct a forensic investigation into the Nazi use of poison gas in the WWII death camps. He claimed to have “proven” that the Holocaust had never happened by failing to find traces of poisonous substances in brick and mortar samples he had obtained illegally from the walls of the Auschwitz gas chambers. “The Leuchter Report is out there in dozens of languages, and I would dare say in millions of copies. We will not go down in history as being a nation of genocidal maniacs. We will not. We can, with historical truth, detoxify a poisoned planet,” said Zündel.
And while we’re on the subject of Holocaust deniers, Salon updates us on British author and Hitler apologist David Irving’s libel suit against Deborah Lipstadt, the Emory University professor of history who has called Irving “one of the most dangerous spokespersons for Holocaust denial.” Irving argues on his own behalf and the presiding judge has given him considerable leeway in presenting his case so as not to present the appearance of putting a person with no legal experience at a disadvantage. Irving thus gets massive exposure for his insidious arguments. To assist Lipstadt in her case, the Israeli government this week decided to release over 600 pages of Adolph Eichmann’s memoirs. Holocaust survivors attending the trial to bear witness are concerned about how much easier it will be for such Hitler apologists to plant seeds of doubt after the last survivors of the Final Solution are gone.
From Wired: “France Agog, Aghast Over Echelon”, the US- and UK-run surveillance network that can allegedly intercept email, faxes, and phone conversations. This article is full of links to extensive earlier coverage of the Echelon phenomenon, which is becoming a major acute irritant to chronically tense Anglo-French relations.
Kenyon College examines the rave scene: electronic dance music, its various sub-genres and styles. “As we dance into the next millennium, we must not forget our past. It is my hope that ravers, DJ’s, music critics, students, and anyone else interested in electronic dance music will be able to use this site to learn more about the sounds and subcultures that have provided the style and soundtrack to the end of the 20th century.”
The major question is whether this is merely a tactical move: Austria’s Haider Resigns; Opponents Skeptical
‘Asked if he still hoped to be chancellor one day, he replied: “I do not exclude it.”
In Austria, Die Presse newspaper said Haider’s decision was a shrewd move to distance himself from
unpopular government decisions such as planned tax increases and to position himself for the next election,
due within four years.
The opposition Social Democrats dismissed the resignation as a sham. “It is quite clear that Haider is only
giving up his office but will continue to set the tone,” said new Social Democratic leader Alfred
Gusenbauer.
“He sees that this government is unpopular so he seeks the first opportunity to ditch responsibility,
formally, to distance himself from this government. Everything that has been said indicates he will continue
to keep the party on a short leash.”‘
The major question is whether this is merely a tactical move: Austria’s Haider Resigns; Opponents Skeptical
‘Asked if he still hoped to be chancellor one day, he replied: “I do not exclude it.”
In Austria, Die Presse newspaper said Haider’s decision was a shrewd move to distance himself from
unpopular government decisions such as planned tax increases and to position himself for the next election,
due within four years.
The opposition Social Democrats dismissed the resignation as a sham. “It is quite clear that Haider is only
giving up his office but will continue to set the tone,” said new Social Democratic leader Alfred
Gusenbauer.
“He sees that this government is unpopular so he seeks the first opportunity to ditch responsibility,
formally, to distance himself from this government. Everything that has been said indicates he will continue
to keep the party on a short leash.”‘
UPDATE! Tentative publication date for the fourth Harry Potter book, Harry Potter and the Doomspell Tournament, is set. My son and I spent several months of bedtimes reading the first three aloud together. Haven’t you got someone with whom you might be doing that?
Newest issue of Phil Agre’s occasional notes and recommendations from the Red Rock Eater news service:
“In talking to all these people, I was endlessly struck by the chasm
between the telephone world and the computer world. Everyone in the
telephone world had superficial training and good manners; everyone
in the computer world had deep training and a bracing arrogance.
And with the sole exception of the one technical guy in the bowels
of Sprint, neither side exhibited the slightest comprehension of its
connection to the other. Hey, everyone: the telephone world and the
computer world are merging! This merger, it would seem, is not just
a technical matter.”
From Medley: “One of Queen Elizabeth’s cooks was fired for making remarks about poisoning
her and wondering where to buy cyanide.” And I read somewhere today that, when the police came to help the Queen remove her personal effects from the Palace during that fire several years ago, she found one of them standing before an open dresser drawer in her personal bedchamber about ready to knick some of her knickers until he was aware of her standing there watching him.
Boy Bands and Girl Vixens – All you need to know about the Backstreet Boys and Britney Spears. by David Plotz [Slate]
Random Access Memory: “an experiment in collective recollection.”
From Atlantic Unbound: Welcome to the Word Police Academy “The Word Police are looking for a few good people. As a
certified Word Police officer, you will be entitled to issue
Grammar Citations when you see or hear crimes against
the language. To be inducted into the force, you must
pass a Word Police Academy exam.
The Word Police Force has many divisions and squads.
The current entrance exam is for the Pronoun Patrol.
Coming soon: the entrance exam for Who Wants to
Marry a Word Police Officer? Just kidding!” [I passed the exam, despite any grammatical errors your finding in this blog…]
Eugenics Archive: “materials from the
Eugenics Record Office at Cold Spring Harbor, which was
the center of American eugenics research from 1910-1940.
In the Archive you will see numerous reports, articles,
charts, and pedigrees that were considered scientific
“facts” in their day. It is important to remind yourself that
the vast majority of eugenics work has been completely
discredited. In the final analysis, the eugenic description of
human life reflected political and social prejudices, rather
than scientific facts.”
UPDATE! Tentative publication date for the fourth Harry Potter book, Harry Potter and the Doomspell Tournament, is set. My son and I spent several months of bedtimes reading the first three aloud together. Haven’t you got someone with whom you might be doing that?
Newest issue of Phil Agre’s occasional notes and recommendations from the Red Rock Eater news service:
“In talking to all these people, I was endlessly struck by the chasm
between the telephone world and the computer world. Everyone in the
telephone world had superficial training and good manners; everyone
in the computer world had deep training and a bracing arrogance.
And with the sole exception of the one technical guy in the bowels
of Sprint, neither side exhibited the slightest comprehension of its
connection to the other. Hey, everyone: the telephone world and the
computer world are merging! This merger, it would seem, is not just
a technical matter.”
From Medley: “One of Queen Elizabeth’s cooks was fired for making remarks about poisoning
her and wondering where to buy cyanide.” And I read somewhere today that, when the police came to help the Queen remove her personal effects from the Palace during that fire several years ago, she found one of them standing before an open dresser drawer in her personal bedchamber about ready to knick some of her knickers until he was aware of her standing there watching him.
Boy Bands and Girl Vixens – All you need to know about the Backstreet Boys and Britney Spears. by David Plotz [Slate]
Random Access Memory: “an experiment in collective recollection.”
From Atlantic Unbound: Welcome to the Word Police Academy “The Word Police are looking for a few good people. As a
certified Word Police officer, you will be entitled to issue
Grammar Citations when you see or hear crimes against
the language. To be inducted into the force, you must
pass a Word Police Academy exam.
The Word Police Force has many divisions and squads.
The current entrance exam is for the Pronoun Patrol.
Coming soon: the entrance exam for Who Wants to
Marry a Word Police Officer? Just kidding!” [I passed the exam, despite any grammatical errors your finding in this blog…]
Eugenics Archive: “materials from the
Eugenics Record Office at Cold Spring Harbor, which was
the center of American eugenics research from 1910-1940.
In the Archive you will see numerous reports, articles,
charts, and pedigrees that were considered scientific
“facts” in their day. It is important to remind yourself that
the vast majority of eugenics work has been completely
discredited. In the final analysis, the eugenic description of
human life reflected political and social prejudices, rather
than scientific facts.”
Behavioral Drug Use In Toddlers Up Sharply: This report confirms many people’s concerns. As a psychiatrist and the father of two young children, let me add my voice to theirs. I’m not as upset as many that the effect of the medications in subjects this young hasn’t been tested. What troubles me immensely is how in the world anyone could be so confident that a toddler’s overactivity, poor impulse control, or mood instability are pathological. And, if they are, isn’t that what parental nurturance and containment are for? And if the parental influence is lacking, how obscene is it to think that a medication can compensate? I have written and taught about “ADHD” since I was a medical student, and in my view the more popular it has become, the less and less meaning the diagnosis has come to have, and the more and more overused it is. To our children’s peril, and our society’s. Update: Dr. H Klasen writes in the current issue of the Harvard Review of Psychiatry on “The Medicalization of Hyperactivity.”
40-ton boulder smashes home; little to salvage after direct hit. “I’ve lived here for 12 years, and for 12 years I’ve been
wondering when this was going to happen. When, not if. Why
anybody would build a house beneath these boulders is beyond
me.”
Son ticketed rushing father to hospital with chest pains:“… it appears McClendon violated
department policy when he stopped the family
and kept them at the scene for, Lee said, about
14 minutes. The family said it was more like 30
minutes.”
Behavioral Drug Use In Toddlers Up Sharply: This report confirms many people’s concerns. As a psychiatrist and the father of two young children, let me add my voice to theirs. I’m not as upset as many that the effect of the medications in subjects this young hasn’t been tested. What troubles me immensely is how in the world anyone could be so confident that a toddler’s overactivity, poor impulse control, or mood instability are pathological. And, if they are, isn’t that what parental nurturance and containment are for? And if the parental influence is lacking, how obscene is it to think that a medication can compensate? I have written and taught about “ADHD” since I was a medical student, and in my view the more popular it has become, the less and less meaning the diagnosis has come to have, and the more and more overused it is. To our children’s peril, and our society’s. Update: Dr. H Klasen writes in the current issue of the Harvard Review of Psychiatry on “The Medicalization of Hyperactivity.”
40-ton boulder smashes home; little to salvage after direct hit. “I’ve lived here for 12 years, and for 12 years I’ve been
wondering when this was going to happen. When, not if. Why
anybody would build a house beneath these boulders is beyond
me.”
Son ticketed rushing father to hospital with chest pains:“… it appears McClendon violated
department policy when he stopped the family
and kept them at the scene for, Lee said, about
14 minutes. The family said it was more like 30
minutes.”
the body politic / Germ Warfare by RUSTY UNGER (02/28/00: a long article from New York about the vehement and bitter controversy dividing the medical community about Lyme disease. First noticed in 1975 as a novel type of arthritis in Lyme, CT and determined to be caused by a tick-borne bacterium called borrelia, some maverick physicians want to alert their colleagues to their contention that the disease goes on in some cases to a persistent systemic form despite treatment. Of particular interest to me, as a psychiatrist, are reports that it may be behind certain puzzling cases of neurobehavioral symptoms. Most MDs scoff at these claims and discount case reports of patients whose deterioration has been reversed by aggressive recurrent treatment for the infectious process. “In one corner is a group of those predominantly university-based physicians who
develop drugs, receive research grants from federal health agencies, and often
advise insurance companies. They contend that Lyme is usually simple to
diagnose and easily curable with two to four weeks of oral antibiotics. Chronic
Lyme, they say, is extremely rare, not a disease but merely a group of
symptoms remaining after the initial infection is treated that usually disperse.
In the other corner stands a group of primary-care
doctors, those on the front lines who see Lyme
patients every day, and a number of other
scientists — all of whom maintain that the illness
is far more complicated. Late-term or lingering
cases of Lyme disease, they say, may require six
months or more of oral antibiotic therapy and
intense intravenous therapy — which some like to administer in a hyperbaric
chamber. They believe that the increased oxygen of the chamber helps kill the
tenacious spirochetes — known as Borrelia burgdorferi — deposited by the
blood-sucking deer tick. Burrowing rapidly into the tissues, joints, and central
nervous system, borrelia slightly resembles the syphilis spirochete in the way it
feeds, sleeps, and reproduces.” Detractors have accused the more aggressive Lyme doctors of overdiagnosing and overtreating. But recently they’ve gone further. Several of the “Lyme literate” (as they are known by their supporters) are under investigation or have already lost their licenses. Bad medical practice or merely the unpopularity of their approach and beliefs? A case study in how illness definition has political as well as scientific influences…
Readme Quick: Do you read too slowly, as most people who value reading complain about themselves? How do you measure up? Can you improve? The Slate reading test.
the body politic / Germ Warfare by RUSTY UNGER (02/28/00: a long article from New York about the vehement and bitter controversy dividing the medical community about Lyme disease. First noticed in 1975 as a novel type of arthritis in Lyme, CT and determined to be caused by a tick-borne bacterium called borrelia, some maverick physicians want to alert their colleagues to their contention that the disease goes on in some cases to a persistent systemic form despite treatment. Of particular interest to me, as a psychiatrist, are reports that it may be behind certain puzzling cases of neurobehavioral symptoms. Most MDs scoff at these claims and discount case reports of patients whose deterioration has been reversed by aggressive recurrent treatment for the infectious process. “In one corner is a group of those predominantly university-based physicians who
develop drugs, receive research grants from federal health agencies, and often
advise insurance companies. They contend that Lyme is usually simple to
diagnose and easily curable with two to four weeks of oral antibiotics. Chronic
Lyme, they say, is extremely rare, not a disease but merely a group of
symptoms remaining after the initial infection is treated that usually disperse.
In the other corner stands a group of primary-care
doctors, those on the front lines who see Lyme
patients every day, and a number of other
scientists — all of whom maintain that the illness
is far more complicated. Late-term or lingering
cases of Lyme disease, they say, may require six
months or more of oral antibiotic therapy and
intense intravenous therapy — which some like to administer in a hyperbaric
chamber. They believe that the increased oxygen of the chamber helps kill the
tenacious spirochetes — known as Borrelia burgdorferi — deposited by the
blood-sucking deer tick. Burrowing rapidly into the tissues, joints, and central
nervous system, borrelia slightly resembles the syphilis spirochete in the way it
feeds, sleeps, and reproduces.” Detractors have accused the more aggressive Lyme doctors of overdiagnosing and overtreating. But recently they’ve gone further. Several of the “Lyme literate” (as they are known by their supporters) are under investigation or have already lost their licenses. Bad medical practice or merely the unpopularity of their approach and beliefs? A case study in how illness definition has political as well as scientific influences…
Readme Quick: Do you read too slowly, as most people who value reading complain about themselves? How do you measure up? Can you improve? The Slate reading test.
Infiltration: Transit Tunnels FAQ: a guide to the art of exploring abandoned subway tracks and stations beneath several of our cities. Includes a discussion of the possibilities of attack by “mole people” who, in unrban legend, live in these tunnels. The FAQ includes a list of recent films featuring people infiltrating transit tunnels onscreen; I can’t believe I’ve seen every film on the list. Infiltration is a ‘zine “about going places you’re not supposed to go” and a part of an urban exploration webring.
Wired notes the upsurge in weblogging:
“…For example, Memepool recently provided
links to sites for creating your own Old
Testament adventure, bubblewrap
lingerie, and entomophagy.
At the same time, Yahoo’s What’s New
linked to Philip Morris, Quaker Oatmeal,
and Clover Stornetta Farms.
Barger says in these days of
commerce-driven portals, weblogs are by
far the best way to explore the Net. So
efficient is the weblog circuit, Barger
estimates that anything new on the Web
will filter through the system within a
month.”
“You’re probably wondering why I allowed you to
bang on my car, why I didn’t simply drive
away and leave you sputtering in my rear-view. So let me tell you: I was
considering the possibility of opening my glove compartment, pulling out the
handgun I keep there, and sticking that gun into your mouth until you forked
over whatever money you keep in your expensive-looking riding suit. I battled
the temptation. You gambled on a stranger’s decency, and this time you won.” [via World New York]
Infiltration: Transit Tunnels FAQ: a guide to the art of exploring abandoned subway tracks and stations beneath several of our cities. Includes a discussion of the possibilities of attack by “mole people” who, in unrban legend, live in these tunnels. The FAQ includes a list of recent films featuring people infiltrating transit tunnels onscreen; I can’t believe I’ve seen every film on the list. Infiltration is a ‘zine “about going places you’re not supposed to go” and a part of an urban exploration webring.
Wired notes the upsurge in weblogging:
“…For example, Memepool recently provided
links to sites for creating your own Old
Testament adventure, bubblewrap
lingerie, and entomophagy.
At the same time, Yahoo’s What’s New
linked to Philip Morris, Quaker Oatmeal,
and Clover Stornetta Farms.
Barger says in these days of
commerce-driven portals, weblogs are by
far the best way to explore the Net. So
efficient is the weblog circuit, Barger
estimates that anything new on the Web
will filter through the system within a
month.”
“You’re probably wondering why I allowed you to
bang on my car, why I didn’t simply drive
away and leave you sputtering in my rear-view. So let me tell you: I was
considering the possibility of opening my glove compartment, pulling out the
handgun I keep there, and sticking that gun into your mouth until you forked
over whatever money you keep in your expensive-looking riding suit. I battled
the temptation. You gambled on a stranger’s decency, and this time you won.” [via World New York]
I’ve been pretty shaken since I learned last night about the death of a friend of mine, Phil Aranow. Phil was a beloved, deep, psychotherapist in Cambridge who wrote and taught about the integration of Buddhist theory into Western psychotherapy practice. I’d known Phil for almost thirty years since his younger brother and I became fast friends, and later roommates, the first day of college. His brother’s violent murder several years after college took me down for a closer look with Phil. Although we were in and out of each other’s lives, his marriage a decade later to one of my colleagues and friends at the hospital, and the birth of their first son around the same time my wife and I had our son, kept us pleasantly intertwined in spirit. I, who had found and lost my way with Buddhist teachings, was drawn to his even and mindful integration of Buddhist practice into this life. He was at the core of a group of psychotherapists, all practitioners of meditation, with whom my paths have crossed professionally in various ways in succeeding years. In recent times, as my work took me away from Cambridge and we were both busy with our families, we never got around to continuing to have lunch together as we had been doing. Phil and his family were driving to the airport last Friday night in Florida, returning from a working vacation and giving a workshop, when they were apparently hit head-on by a pickup truck. Thankfully, their two young boys are intact, but Phil succombed and his wife’s condition is uncertain after surgery today. I’ll be praying for her, for their children, and for the tragedy-stricken Aranow family. Phil, you’ll remain on my heart….

Calligraphy: Heaven and Earth by Daigu Ryokan (1757-1831)
Why I won’t be reading Dave Eggers: I caught Christopher Lydon on NPR’s The Connection talking today to this 24 year-old new literary darling and author of A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius (for those of you that are not yet aware of the buzz, yes, that’s the title, not my blurb). He also edits the literary quarterly, Timothy McSweeney’s Quarterly Concern and its net-spinoff, Timothy McSweeney’s Internet Tendencies. One caller to the radio talk show, fawning all over Eggers, made it sound as if his writing has single-handedly taken us past postmodernism and out the other side “to something clear and simple,” or something to that effect (it turns out the caller was part of Eggers’ little literary clique and a contributor to his magazine). To judge from his interview, simple at least is right! Lydon quickly realized that he wasn’t going to get any scintillating answers to his questions, beyond repetitious echolalia, so he began to lead Eggers around by the nose affirming points that Lydon wanted to make in the interview. Is this what they mean by the self-referentiality they apply to his work?? (I thought I liked self-referentiality ’til now…) It was uncomfortable to see Lydon squirm to maintain the obligatory stance that his current guest was the best thing since sliced bread, and to see Eggers eating it up, despite the fact that it was probably the least self-reflective interview I’ve heard in a long while. Not a literary movement I’ll be following, or a bestselling buzzbook I’ll be buying, I’m afraid. And if another nail was needed in the coffinlid, Eggers is equated as wunderkind with NPR’s This American Life host Ira Glass, to whose show he has apparently contributed. Glass is a smug self-satisfied commentator whose profundity I can’t see impressing anyone more than himself. Someone has described This American Life as driveway radio — you sit in your driveway when you arrive home, unable to bear shutting the car off ’til it’s over; but, even as an inveterate NPR listener, I scramble to turn the radio off when Ira Glass comes on. (And I’ve written to my local NPR station saying I won’t contribute to them anymore as long as they use Ira Glass’ demeaning and smarmy spots, based on gleefully shaming hapless non-contributing listeners, in their fund drives.) Maybe I’m just too old for these Gen-X’ers who think they’ve seen and realized it all. Listening to the interview with Eggers, it seemed he emoted mostly angst about having to live up to the adulation. It was hard to see what he’d ever have to offer in the way of a second book, unless it was something spun off of that angst…(And in case you were wondering, I don’t feel particularly ashamed in admitting that I don’t feel particularly awful about generating a diatribe like this without reading the book.)
Galileo swoops by volcanic Io
“Jupiter’s strange moon Io is
literally bursting with volcanoes. Dozens of active
vents pepper the landscape, which also includes
gigantic frosty plains, towering mountains and
volcanic rings the size of California. The volcanoes
themselves are the hottest spots in the solar system
(not counting the sun) with temperatures exceeding
1800 K. The plumes, which rise 300 km into space, are so large that the Hubble
Space Telescope can see them from its low Earth orbit.”
I’ve been pretty shaken since I learned last night about the death of a friend of mine, Phil Aranow. Phil was a beloved, deep, psychotherapist in Cambridge who wrote and taught about the integration of Buddhist theory into Western psychotherapy practice. I’d known Phil for almost thirty years since his younger brother and I became fast friends, and later roommates, the first day of college. His brother’s violent murder several years after college took me down for a closer look with Phil. Although we were in and out of each other’s lives, his marriage a decade later to one of my colleagues and friends at the hospital, and the birth of their first son around the same time my wife and I had our son, kept us pleasantly intertwined in spirit. I, who had found and lost my way with Buddhist teachings, was drawn to his even and mindful integration of Buddhist practice into this life. He was at the core of a group of psychotherapists, all practitioners of meditation, with whom my paths have crossed professionally in various ways in succeeding years. In recent times, as my work took me away from Cambridge and we were both busy with our families, we never got around to continuing to have lunch together as we had been doing. Phil and his family were driving to the airport last Friday night in Florida, returning from a working vacation and giving a workshop, when they were apparently hit head-on by a pickup truck. Thankfully, their two young boys are intact, but Phil succombed and his wife’s condition is uncertain after surgery today. I’ll be praying for her, for their children, and for the tragedy-stricken Aranow family. Phil, you’ll remain on my heart….

Calligraphy: Heaven and Earth by Daigu Ryokan (1757-1831)
Why I won’t be reading Dave Eggers: I caught Christopher Lydon on NPR’s The Connection talking today to this 24 year-old new literary darling and author of A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius (for those of you that are not yet aware of the buzz, yes, that’s the title, not my blurb). He also edits the literary quarterly, Timothy McSweeney’s Quarterly Concern and its net-spinoff, Timothy McSweeney’s Internet Tendencies. One caller to the radio talk show, fawning all over Eggers, made it sound as if his writing has single-handedly taken us past postmodernism and out the other side “to something clear and simple,” or something to that effect (it turns out the caller was part of Eggers’ little literary clique and a contributor to his magazine). To judge from his interview, simple at least is right! Lydon quickly realized that he wasn’t going to get any scintillating answers to his questions, beyond repetitious echolalia, so he began to lead Eggers around by the nose affirming points that Lydon wanted to make in the interview. Is this what they mean by the self-referentiality they apply to his work?? (I thought I liked self-referentiality ’til now…) It was uncomfortable to see Lydon squirm to maintain the obligatory stance that his current guest was the best thing since sliced bread, and to see Eggers eating it up, despite the fact that it was probably the least self-reflective interview I’ve heard in a long while. Not a literary movement I’ll be following, or a bestselling buzzbook I’ll be buying, I’m afraid. And if another nail was needed in the coffinlid, Eggers is equated as wunderkind with NPR’s This American Life host Ira Glass, to whose show he has apparently contributed. Glass is a smug self-satisfied commentator whose profundity I can’t see impressing anyone more than himself. Someone has described This American Life as driveway radio — you sit in your driveway when you arrive home, unable to bear shutting the car off ’til it’s over; but, even as an inveterate NPR listener, I scramble to turn the radio off when Ira Glass comes on. (And I’ve written to my local NPR station saying I won’t contribute to them anymore as long as they use Ira Glass’ demeaning and smarmy spots, based on gleefully shaming hapless non-contributing listeners, in their fund drives.) Maybe I’m just too old for these Gen-X’ers who think they’ve seen and realized it all. Listening to the interview with Eggers, it seemed he emoted mostly angst about having to live up to the adulation. It was hard to see what he’d ever have to offer in the way of a second book, unless it was something spun off of that angst…(And in case you were wondering, I don’t feel particularly ashamed in admitting that I don’t feel particularly awful about generating a diatribe like this without reading the book.)
Galileo swoops by volcanic Io
“Jupiter’s strange moon Io is
literally bursting with volcanoes. Dozens of active
vents pepper the landscape, which also includes
gigantic frosty plains, towering mountains and
volcanic rings the size of California. The volcanoes
themselves are the hottest spots in the solar system
(not counting the sun) with temperatures exceeding
1800 K. The plumes, which rise 300 km into space, are so large that the Hubble
Space Telescope can see them from its low Earth orbit.”
I’m on an arts rip today, it seems. As the Grammies approach, recording companies are raking in the cash.
But record executives say they can’t recall a bleaker time in pop music creativity. “They don’t like the
music, they don’t get it, and they’re horrified that people like
Britney Spears and Christina Aguilera are becoming stars,” said
Jeff Pollack, a programming consultant for more than 100 U.S.
radio stations. Are they elitists out of touch with mainstream taste? Or is mainstream taste no longer anything but what market forces make it?
Ain’t No Problem: A West Virginia linguistics professor says that heavily dialectical speech is no sign of lack of intelligence. And his detractors want his resignation.
N.Y. arts group refuses regulations ‘The New York Foundation for the Arts has pulled out of administrating a major city-sponsored art project this summer to paint and display 1,000 fiberglass cows. The city had sought to have the foundation impose a rule on artists stating: “Designs that are religious, political or sexual in nature will not be accepted.”‘ [Arts Journal] First of all, after the wonderfully creative, zany and at times magical Chicago cows (which I was pleased to get to see), how derivative is this? I mean, why not thousands of fiberglass cats, or rats, or something? And hasn’t Rudy Giuliani learned anything from the city’s embarrassment in the Brooklyn Museum controversy? Update: Hew Orleans is doing fish.
Portal of entry to the latest upgrade of the Jargon File, the canonical dictionary — and more — of computer/techie related terms. It also includes essays on such topics as “Jargon
Construction”, “Hacker Writing Style”, “Lamer-speak”, and appendices that include hacker
folklore, an extensive bibliography, and a portrait of “J. Random Hacker”. Netmeg.net offers one of the
better Jargon File search interfaces.
I’m on an arts rip today, it seems. As the Grammies approach, recording companies are raking in the cash.
But record executives say they can’t recall a bleaker time in pop music creativity. “They don’t like the
music, they don’t get it, and they’re horrified that people like
Britney Spears and Christina Aguilera are becoming stars,” said
Jeff Pollack, a programming consultant for more than 100 U.S.
radio stations. Are they elitists out of touch with mainstream taste? Or is mainstream taste no longer anything but what market forces make it?
Ain’t No Problem: A West Virginia linguistics professor says that heavily dialectical speech is no sign of lack of intelligence. And his detractors want his resignation.
N.Y. arts group refuses regulations ‘The New York Foundation for the Arts has pulled out of administrating a major city-sponsored art project this summer to paint and display 1,000 fiberglass cows. The city had sought to have the foundation impose a rule on artists stating: “Designs that are religious, political or sexual in nature will not be accepted.”‘ [Arts Journal] First of all, after the wonderfully creative, zany and at times magical Chicago cows (which I was pleased to get to see), how derivative is this? I mean, why not thousands of fiberglass cats, or rats, or something? And hasn’t Rudy Giuliani learned anything from the city’s embarrassment in the Brooklyn Museum controversy? Update: Hew Orleans is doing fish.
Portal of entry to the latest upgrade of the Jargon File, the canonical dictionary — and more — of computer/techie related terms. It also includes essays on such topics as “Jargon
Construction”, “Hacker Writing Style”, “Lamer-speak”, and appendices that include hacker
folklore, an extensive bibliography, and a portrait of “J. Random Hacker”. Netmeg.net offers one of the
better Jargon File search interfaces.
Critics Slam Judge’s No-Pregnancy Sentence: putting a womb in state custody.
Critics Slam Judge’s No-Pregnancy Sentence: putting a womb in state custody.
‘And here’s today’s space weather forecast…’ “Space weather has joined earthquakes, hurricanes and gales in having official scales of severity. The worst events on the scale are accompanied by some severe impacts on human activities.”
‘And here’s today’s space weather forecast…’ “Space weather has joined earthquakes, hurricanes and gales in having official scales of severity. The worst events on the scale are accompanied by some severe impacts on human activities.”
Evidence of Mystery Particles Stirring Excitement and Doubt: Researchers at the University of Rome have stirred both doubt and excitement by reporting evidence of a heavy particle predicted by supersymmetry theory. Proof of the existence of this particle could account for the long-sought “dark matter” that may make up at least 70% of the mass of the universe. It would be exciting evidence of the validity of the supersymmetry hypothesis, a possible first step toward the holy grail of a “grand unifying theory”.
What I Saw at the Revolution by Donald Trump:
“I leave the Reform Party to
David Duke, Pat Buchanan and Lenora Fulani. That is not
company I wish to keep.”
Evidence of Mystery Particles Stirring Excitement and Doubt: Researchers at the University of Rome have stirred both doubt and excitement by reporting evidence of a heavy particle predicted by supersymmetry theory. Proof of the existence of this particle could account for the long-sought “dark matter” that may make up at least 70% of the mass of the universe. It would be exciting evidence of the validity of the supersymmetry hypothesis, a possible first step toward the holy grail of a “grand unifying theory”.
What I Saw at the Revolution by Donald Trump:
“I leave the Reform Party to
David Duke, Pat Buchanan and Lenora Fulani. That is not
company I wish to keep.”
“Fight the Real Enemy”: “Now, if I were to go out and take down some Internet sites, I wouldn’t waste my time with Yahoo! That’s for kids … which is what you are, cyberstupids. It’s pointless. There are sites out there that are begging for a large, steaming serving of whupass. If you had any guts, cyberwussies, you would make a new list. And the ten sites below are where I would start.”
Winning entries from the Adbusters Creative Resistance Contest:
“…we challenged people to
create social marketing concepts that best represented their
concerns about the world we live in. Here are some of the
best. The contest generated submissions from over 300 people
around the world: activists, students, graphic designers,
illustrators, photographers, painters, filmmakers, digital
artists, writers and poets. Their entries ranged from spoofs
to caustic commentary and included everything from school
projects to guerrilla protests. All of the submissions were
designs to change the way people think and act.”
Archbishop Desmond Tutu: ‘Our country did not go the way of Nuremberg, to bring the perpetrators
of such crimes to trial…Our country rejected the other extreme of a blanket amnesty, as
happened in General Augusto Pinochet’s Chile….
Our country chose a middle way of individual amnesty for truth. Some
would say, what about justice? And we say retributive justice is not the
only kind of justice. There is also restorative justice, because we believe
in Ubuntu — the essence of being human, that idea that we are all
caught up in a delicate network of interdependence. We say, “A person
is a person through other persons.” I need you in order to be me and
you need me in order to be you.’ [via iBoy]
Honoring a Heretic Whom Vatican ‘Regrets’ Burning. Freethinkers and atheists gathered to honor Giordano Bruno in observance of the four hundredth anniversary of his burning at the stake. Bruno, a Dominican priest whose scientific investigations led him to believe that the universe was infinite and the teachings of the Church irrational, refused to recant to save his life. ‘The pope has marked this Holy Year as a time for the church to
apologize for past errors and excesses, from the Inquisition to the
persecution of Jews. Today, Cardinal Angelo Sodano, the Vatican
secretary of state, said the church “regretted” that it had resorted to
violence in Bruno’s case, but pointed out that Bruno’s writing was
“incompatible” with Christian thinking, and that he therefore remains a
heretic.’
A coronal mass ejection is headed for Earth:
“Yesterday, a medium-sized solar flare erupted from a sunspot group near the
middle of the solar disk. It was accompanied by a
coronal mass ejection (CME) that appears to be
headed directly for our planet.
>
There’s no cause for
alarm — CMEs aren’t dangerous to people — but this
one could trigger beautiful aurorae and other
geomagnetic activity when it passes by our planet
around February 20.” [via Abby, thanks]
“Fight the Real Enemy”: “Now, if I were to go out and take down some Internet sites, I wouldn’t waste my time with Yahoo! That’s for kids … which is what you are, cyberstupids. It’s pointless. There are sites out there that are begging for a large, steaming serving of whupass. If you had any guts, cyberwussies, you would make a new list. And the ten sites below are where I would start.”
Winning entries from the Adbusters Creative Resistance Contest:
“…we challenged people to
create social marketing concepts that best represented their
concerns about the world we live in. Here are some of the
best. The contest generated submissions from over 300 people
around the world: activists, students, graphic designers,
illustrators, photographers, painters, filmmakers, digital
artists, writers and poets. Their entries ranged from spoofs
to caustic commentary and included everything from school
projects to guerrilla protests. All of the submissions were
designs to change the way people think and act.”
Archbishop Desmond Tutu: ‘Our country did not go the way of Nuremberg, to bring the perpetrators
of such crimes to trial…Our country rejected the other extreme of a blanket amnesty, as
happened in General Augusto Pinochet’s Chile….
Our country chose a middle way of individual amnesty for truth. Some
would say, what about justice? And we say retributive justice is not the
only kind of justice. There is also restorative justice, because we believe
in Ubuntu — the essence of being human, that idea that we are all
caught up in a delicate network of interdependence. We say, “A person
is a person through other persons.” I need you in order to be me and
you need me in order to be you.’ [via iBoy]
Honoring a Heretic Whom Vatican ‘Regrets’ Burning. Freethinkers and atheists gathered to honor Giordano Bruno in observance of the four hundredth anniversary of his burning at the stake. Bruno, a Dominican priest whose scientific investigations led him to believe that the universe was infinite and the teachings of the Church irrational, refused to recant to save his life. ‘The pope has marked this Holy Year as a time for the church to
apologize for past errors and excesses, from the Inquisition to the
persecution of Jews. Today, Cardinal Angelo Sodano, the Vatican
secretary of state, said the church “regretted” that it had resorted to
violence in Bruno’s case, but pointed out that Bruno’s writing was
“incompatible” with Christian thinking, and that he therefore remains a
heretic.’
A coronal mass ejection is headed for Earth:
“Yesterday, a medium-sized solar flare erupted from a sunspot group near the
middle of the solar disk. It was accompanied by a
coronal mass ejection (CME) that appears to be
headed directly for our planet.
>
There’s no cause for
alarm — CMEs aren’t dangerous to people — but this
one could trigger beautiful aurorae and other
geomagnetic activity when it passes by our planet
around February 20.” [via Abby, thanks]
Life is hard for TWA Flight 800 skeptics.
Reality Ain’t What it Used to Be: Robert Anton Wilson ponders thirty-five years’ legacy of Bell’s Theorem.
A World Community of Old Trees: an eco-art project in progress by June Julian.
R.U.Sirius interviews Stephen Gaskin on Al Gore, cannabis, and hypocrisy. I’ve followed Gaskin’s pilgrim’s progress since the ’60’s as one of the enduring honest presences in the counterculture whose actions are on the scale of his words.
Biar Witch Project sequel lost in the woods seeking product promotions.
According to a promotional packet entitled “The
Blair Witch Franchise,” kids will soon be able to play
four different “Blair Witch” PC and PlayStation
games, read “Blair Witch” comic books, collect
“Blair Witch” trading cards, and play with “Blair
Witch” action figures designed by “Spawn” creator
Todd MacFarlane.
The packet also promises “Dozens of New Licensed
Products — Computer Accessories, Jewelry, Apparel,
Leather Goods, Stationery … and many more.”