Monday, December 30, 2013

#168: More Leftovers

#168: More Leftovers via



Another little exchange that never made it in, back when everybody was doing character introductions and set-dressing on Deep Space Nine during the first gaming session. Dressing this up as a full-on mini-strip like this is fun but also kind of an odd exercise when the line’s lived in my brain more as just a one-off thing that would have just eaten up a few spare panels as a b-joke in a full-sized strip otherwise about something else; if I was doing a three-panel gag-a-day strip, it could have just been something like: 1. Troi: “Blah blah Dabo girls.” 2. Riker: “Is it hot in here or is it just me?” 3. Data: “Blah blah Cardassian environmental controls.” In other news, I’d meant to mention this sooner but there’s a pretty fun little collection of strips about our favorite transporter chief drawn by Jon Adams at City Cyclops , called Chief O’Brien at Work . The first strip (of what looks like a pretty clearly open-and-shut ten total):

Friday, December 27, 2013

TED: Paul Piff: Does money make you mean? - Paul Piff (2013)

TED: Paul Piff: Does money make you mean? - Paul Piff (2013) via



It's amazing what a rigged game of Monopoly can reveal. In this entertaining but sobering talk, social psychologist Paul Piff shares his research into how people behave when they feel wealthy. (Hint: badly.) But while the problem of inequality is a complex and daunting challenge, there's good news too. (Filmed at TEDxMarin.)

Christmas Lights

Wednesday, December 25, 2013

Relatives Gather From Across The Country To Stare Into Screens Together

Relatives Gather From Across The Country To Stare Into Screens Together via



OAK CREEK, WI—Turning on the television while unpacking tablets, iPhones, and laptops from their suitcases, members of the McPherson family communed from across the nation this holiday season for several straight days of staring into electronic scre...

Tuesday, December 24, 2013

Conic Sections: An Interview with Sol Yurick

Conic Sections: An Interview with Sol Yurick via



I interviewed novelist Sol Yurick back in March 2009. Rather than publish the interview on BLDGBLOG as I should have, however, I thought I'd try to find a place for it elsewhere, and began pitching it to a few design magazines. Yurick, after all, was the author of The Warriors —later turned into the cult classic film of the same name, in which New York City is transformed into a ruined staging ground for elaborately costumed gangs—and he was a familiar enough figure amidst a particular crowd of underground readers and independent press aficionados, those of us who might gravitate more toward Autonomedia pamphlets, for example, where you'd find Yurick's strange and prescient Metatron: The Recording Angel , than anything on the bestseller list. Looked at one way, The Warriors tells the story of a city gone out of control, become feral, taken over by criminal gangs and faceless police organizations, its infrastructure half-abandoned or, at the very least, fallen, limping into a state of quasi-Piranesian decay. The everyday lives of its residents whirl on, while these cartoon-like groups of armed militants spiral toward violence and disaster. Yurick was thus an urban author, I thought, suitable for urban publications, his insights on cities far more useful than your average TED Talk and about one ten-thousandth as exposed. In the interview, published for the first time, below, Yurick freely discussed the back-story for The Warriors , which was the question that had motivated me to contact him in the first place. But he also drifted into his interests in the global financial system, which, at that point in time, was melting down through a domino game of bad mortgages and Ponzi schemes, and he went on to offer an even more dizzying perspective on Dante's The Divine Comedy . Dante, in Yurick's unexpected retelling, had actually written a series of concentric financial allegories, tales of monetary wizardry starring lost, beautiful souls searching for one another amongst the impenetrable mathematics of paradise. Along the way, we touched on Mexican drug cartels, the Trojan War, the United Nations, and a handful of forthcoming books that Yurick was still, he claimed, energetically working on at the time. Image from Paper Tiger , via Sheepshead Bites Alas, I pitched the wrong magazines and, soon thereafter, hit the road for a long period of travel and work; the interview simply disappeared into my hard drive and years went by. Then, worst of all, Yurick passed away in January of this year . The New York Times described him as "a writer whose best-known work, the 1965 novel The Warriors , recast an ancient Greek battle as a tale of warring New York street gangs and earned a cult following in print, on film and eventually in a video game." Writing for The Nation , Samuel Fromartz specifically referred to several "out-of-the-blue interview requests" that had popped up in Yurick's latter years, asking him about, yes, The Warriors . As Fromartz writes, "despite the delight he got in its cult status, it did not mean a lot more to him" than his other books, The Warriors being simply one project among many. And so this interview sat, unpublished, till I came across it again in my files recently and I thought I'd give it a second life online. It's a fascinating discussion with an aging writer who unhesitatingly looked back at a long career of writing both fiction and political analysis, a life of deep reading and even a few eye-poppingly abstract interpretations of Dante. What follows is the final edit of our conversation. Yurick was an engaged and pointed conversationalist, and, while I was obviously just another out-of-the-blue interviewer curious about the broken city of The Warriors , I hope this text does justice to his creative and sharp vision of the world. So this is for Sol Yurick, 1925-2013. * * * BLDGBLOG : I’d love to start with the most basic question of all, which is to ask about the back-story behind The Warriors . What motivated you to write it when you did? Sol Yurick : Well, initially it started off when I was talking about some ideas with a friend in college. I’d just finished reading Xenophon and the concept popped into my head. This was the early 1940s. Then, later, maybe in the 1950s, I read Outlaws of the Marsh , and the combination of ritual and violence in Outlaws of the Marsh just took my breath away. Those things mixed—Xenophon, ritual violence, Outlaws of the Marsh —and, on top of all that, I had already been working on a novel of my own. I was trying to get it published and it kept getting rejected—maybe 37 times? BLDGBLOG : Wow. Yurick : To move on to the next step, I wrote The Warriors . I did it in about three weeks. By this time, a lot of these ideas had matured. I’d been thinking about the whole question of gangs. First of all, the youth gangs at that point in time, running into the 1950s and ’60s, had no economic basis whatsoever. They mostly came from poverty-stricken families. You remember the film Rebel Without a Cause , right? That kind of stuff. It was viewed as kind of a national problem. However, there were also gangs that came out of the suburbs—gangs nobody had ever heard about. No sociologist had wrote about this. In fact, I was big on sociology at the time, especially the works of Émile Durkheim and Max Weber, the founders of modern sociology. I wanted to write about stuff that approached reality—that was based in social reality—and that was not bound by a lot of the clichés or conventions of fiction as I knew it. I wanted to deal with a different stratum of society, something that wasn’t getting the attention it deserved in fiction at the time. By the time I was actually writing the book, though, the whole 1960s had already started, and I eventually had a different take on it. In the book, it’s really about making a revolution , not just a criminal gang taking over the city. After all, it takes place on July 4th! But, in the book, that holiday is like a slap in the face for my characters—at least that’s the vision of the gang leader, looking at all the things that keep these people down. It’s Independence Day—but independence for whom? Independence from what? Since that time, I’ve thought an awful lot about gangs and I began to see them in a very different way, as almost a biological formation. People make gangs—men and women, what have you. Cliques, clans, whatever you want to call it. There seems to be a big impulse there, something deeply social and political, but also maybe something biological. I’d been thinking and meditating on this whole thing—this whole problem of the gang and what makes it. The interesting thing about gangs, as I wrote about them at that point in time, and as I mentioned, is that they had no economic basis. That all began to change during the period of the late 1950s and early 1960s, especially in relation to Vietnam, when more and more heroin began to be imported into the United States—a chunk of that coming through the good offices of the CIA. So, especially looking at the drug cartels in Mexico today, but also looking at this phenomenon of organized crime all over the world, the more you see that gangs are essentially capitalists. Within that system, they organize themselves: they have hierarchical principles and their leadership gets the best of everything. The lower strata are just the soldiers who risk their lives and don’t make out too well. Look at the other gangs and mafia in 'Ndrangheta, Calabria, the Camorra, the Japanese gangs, the Chinese triads, the Bulgarian gangs, the Russian gangs, all of that. It’s a business. Essentially, there are connections between these phenomena and corporate capitalism and politics, one way or another. On some level, there are always connections to something else—some other group, level, or economic phenomenon. In fact, no phenomenon, whether we’re talking physics or chemistry or what have you is totally isolated. Total isolation, or the making of discrete sets, is really an intellectual concept. No social formation is isolated in and of itself. It just isn’t. What’s interesting is that, wherever you go, the gangs develop their own cultures. What makes them alike is generally their structures—their hierarchical structures—and the necessity for their leadership, whether it’s male or female, to exhibit charisma, machismo or machisma . And I don't care whether you see this in corporations, which are supposedly rational entities but that, really, are not—because, otherwise, why would people talk about the “culture” of a corporation as something that can drive it into bankruptcy or make it successful? And how is that culture different from another corporation? So, in gangs and corporations both, we’re seeing a kind of driven necessity—maybe biological—to make and sustain a culture. But each culture is different. Structurally, things look the same, but, culturally, things look different. That fascinates me. Also, I grew up in a Communist household. Starting in the 1960s, I went back to reading Marx. In the back of my mind, though, there were aspects of Marx that seemed inadequate as a theory. It was very Western-centered; the number of classical and historical references in all of Marx’s work was just overwhelming to me. For all of his references, it felt limited. Then, as well, I began to think more in terms of neo-Darwinism. I don’t mean social Darwinism. Leftists and liberals deny the question of human nature, but what if it’s true? So that also became a consideration in my thinking—mixing the two: Marx and Darwin. All of that was part of the back-story for The Warriors . BLDGBLOG : Before we move on to other topics, I think it’s interesting how much the built landscape of New York has changed since you wrote The Warriors . I’m curious, if you were to update the story of Xenophon again and rewrite The Warriors today, if there is a different location you might choose, whether that's a different city or a different part of New York. Yurick : Well, I would make it global, for one thing. And I would try to bring into it questions of finance—things like that. I’m not sure, though; I haven’t thought of that. Yes, there was a political and economic connection to Xenophon, and to Xenophon’s story —essentially, these gang members were mercenaries, and they were also a surplus population pushed to the edge of society. They were, after all, kids. And they were revolutionaries, not just street criminals. But I don’t know exactly how I’d handle it today. Again, the whole question of making a revolution in the old way—it’s a tricky one. From my way of thinking, what happened in the Russian Revolution is: you had an uprising. People were discontented and what have you. Then a moment of opportunity came along, when it was a complete breakdown, and, at that point, Lenin stepped in. It was purely opportunistic. There was nothing decent in his move. There it was. It happened. Boom. He took advantage. BLDGBLOG : In your book-length essay Metatron: The Recording Angel , you combine so many of these interests—everything from finance to electronic writing, looking ahead to what we now call the internet, and so on. I’m curious if we could talk a little bit about how Metatron came about, what you were seeking to do with that book, and where you might take its research today? Yurick : When I wrote that, it was still early on. Computers were not universally around. I had a friend who was a computer expert—he had become an expert in the 1950s—so I was introduced to computers and the idea long before there were PCs or anything like that. I knew, when I saw stuff that would later become the internet—exchanges between scientists who had access to this kind of stuff—I knew I was looking at a different world. I began to see signs that this was going to become a big phenomenon, one of information and the effects of information. And again, this was before anybody had home computers. Then computers began to come in, bit by bit. We’re talking maybe 1979. What happened then was that I got tied up with an organization trying to promote the use of satellites for global education. By this time, though, having been through the 1960s and 70s, I was telling them that this was just not going to happen. You’re not going to get money for this kind of thing; they’re going to use satellites for any other purpose for the most part, maybe military purposes, maybe propagandistic purposes, certainly for telecommunications. But I went down to Washington with these people a couple of times, and we sat in on the committee hearings. Then I wrote a piece—an essay—to sort of introduce our organization. I forget when it was—maybe 1979 or 1978—but Jimmy Carter was coming to the UN and, because of the connections of several people in this organization, somebody got my essay to Jimmy Carter’s people. He almost incorporated a piece of it into his speech at the UN! That didn’t happen, of course, so I decided I would submit it to this little publishing house, and they asked me to expand on it. I did that, and that was Metatron . So my mind was ranging over all these things. I was trying to think of what the effect was going to be of computers and networks and satellites, trying to anticipate a lot of side effects. There was a lot I didn’t foresee, but there were some things I saw beginning to happen—that then, in fact, did happen maybe ten years later. Things like running factory farm machines by satellite and, now, running drones over Afghanistan from a place in Nevada. Things like that. Anyway, having been getting more and more involved in many areas, while at the same time trying to find a basis for writing my fiction from new perspectives, became very destabilizing. Because most writers—most people—just stop growing at a certain point. They stop taking in more stuff because it gets in the way of their writing. But the opposite was happening. For instance, with The Warriors , I was able to make an outline chart of how the themes would develop. I could coordinate everything: what happened to the clothing, what happened at a certain time of day, and so forth and so on. Interestingly, the form of the chart I borrowed from a business model called program evaluation . It was a review technique. So I could do this thing and it came easy. But when I tried to do it with The Bag , it didn’t work. I had such a hard time doing The Bag . The chart began to expand and expand till it was about ten feet long; I had different colors on it; it just didn’t work right. But I was learning so much. Anyway, at certain points you’ve got to say enough. I forget which writer said this: “You don't finish the work you abandon.” BLDGBLOG : The financial aspects of your work are very interesting here, as well. Yurick : Do you mean the economic ? BLDGBLOG : Well, I mean “financial” more specifically to refer to the system of writings, agreements, valuations, and so forth that constitute the world of international finance—which, if you take a very basic, material view of things, is just people writing. It’s numbers and spreadsheets, stock prices, contracts, and slips of paper, licenses and patents—its own sort of literature. You imply as much, in Metatron , with its titular reference to the archangel of writing. Yurick : OK, yes. You know, I’ve been saying for years to people that this is coming, this moment [the financial crisis of 2007-2009], and it’s happening now. I read the newspaper and I see it: these people manufacturing money out of their imaginations. Sooner or later the bubble has got to burst, and it’s bursting. In a certain sense, what’s taken place—what’s taking place now—is a series of mistakes. In other words, you don’t hire the people who caused the problem in the first place to try to rectify it, yet that’s what’s happening. It’s very interesting, I think, to look at this in terms of the criminal elements that we discussed—the gangs—and to see that what they do is done through extortion, prostitution, the selling of illegal things, illegal commodities, and what have you. They accumulate money and they launder it. But this also happens at the very top levels of finance: they imagine money and then they objectify it in terms of mansions and things like that. When you’re dealing with this kind of stuff, you’re dealing with fiction—and when you’re dealing with fiction, you’re in my realm. BLDGBLOG : The financial world that’s been created in the last decade or so often just seems like a dream world of overlapping fictions—of Ponzi schemes and collateralized agreements that no one can follow. It’s as is people are just telling each other stories, but the characters are mutual funds, and, rather than words, they’re written in numbers. To paraphrase Arthur C. Clarke, it’s as if sufficiently advanced financial transactions have become indistinguishable from magic. Yurick : A long time ago, I started to write a book in which I invented a planet, and the planet was ultimately nothing but finance. I called it Malaputa. Do you know Jonathan Swift’s work at all? One of the trips Gulliver takes is to an island called Laputa, which really means, in Latin, the whore or the hole . There he encounters nothing but intellectuals building the most astonishing mental structures and doing the stupidest things imaginable. Now, Malaputa would be the evil whore . So the planet I began to invent was a world that interpenetrates ours and it works by the rules of our world, but it’s not visible. Ultimately, it resides in the financial system in which, as you get to the center of it, its mass and velocity keep on increasing potentially. It’s the movement, ultimately, of symbols. I realized, at a certain point, that what I was also talking about was, in a sense, The Divine Comedy . The descent into the Inferno, if you remember, is in the form of a cone—the inside of a cone. The ascent to the top of Mount Purgatory is also a cone, but you climb on the outside. Then, to move on to heaven, you have a series of concentric circles, at the center of which is the ultimate paradise, which is where God resides. The circles are spinning, but they’re spinning in an odd way. If you’re at the center of a spinning circle, you’re barely moving around. If you’re on the outside, you’re moving with great velocity. In this case, Dante tells us that the center of the circle spins with the greatest velocity, and the further out you get away from it, the slower it moves. What does finance have to do with this? The woman who Dante idolized—Beatrice—was a banker’s daughter. You could say his interest in her was partly financial, pursued through these circles and cones of symbols. Anyway, that’s the architecture of The Divine Comedy that I was getting at. From this point—as all of this was going into the stuff I’m writing now—I began to meditate on the question of surplus labor value. Which, as Marx said, is the unpaid part of what a worker doesn’t get, the part that the owner—the owner of the means of production—expropriates. BLDGBLOG : The Malaputa idea was for an entire standalone novel, or it’s something that you’re now including in your current work? Yurick : It was originally going to be its own book, but I’m going to change that. I’ll incorporate it; I’ll reinvent it. I wrote a piece a long time ago for—I forget the name of the magazine. It was on the question of the information revolution, the dimensions of which were not yet clear at that point. I think it was the mid-1980s. I was talking about, even at that point in time, the speed of the transactions, and the infinitesimally small space in which transactions occur—against the space that you have to traverse either by foot or other means, like to the market village or the shopping mall or the warehouse floor. In other words, I’m saying that finance has a space—it has an architecture. You might want to transfer billions of dollars from one country to another, but both are accounts in one computer space. What you’re doing might have enormous effects on the real world—the world of humans and geography—but what you’ve done is move it a fraction of an inch, at an enormous speed, with an enormous velocity and mass. And that has real effects thousands of miles away. BLDGBLOG : I’m curious if you see other future developments of these works, or if there’s something new you’re working on at the moment. Yurick : Yes—I’m working on two things that may intersect. One is a kind of biography that I call Revenge . What I realized, in a certain way—partly because I grew up in the Depression under bad circumstances, and now I see those same circumstances coming back again—I realized at a certain point that my novels Fertig and The Bag were revenge novels. That was a theme that was not clearly in my mind at the time, but that came into my consciousness relatively recently. Revenge begins with trying to pick a starting point—to impose a starting point—because wherever you begin, there is no ultimate beginning. Someone did something to someone else, in reaction to something that came before that, and so on and so forth. You start in the middle of things, and choose a starting point. It’s like a lot of the things we say about The Iliad , for instance, or Medea’s race. They start in the middle of things. There was an essay I wrote for The Nation on Truman Capote’s In Cold Blood , in which I panned the novel. But what I realized, even at the time I was writing it, was that, in a certain way, the story in that book—the true story it was based on—wasn’t just a random killing. It was a revenge killing. It was about two people who are, in a sense, dispossessed. But the person who got killed—not the family so much, but the farmer himself, Clutter—was no ordinary guy. He was no ordinary farmer, but a well-to-do guy with 3,000 acres and some cattle and maybe an oil-pumping system. He was important. He’d worked in government and he’d worked as a county agent. I won’t go into the history of the county agents and their ultimate role in making agribusiness as we know it today. But he was important enough in 1954 to have been interviewed about a kind of global crisis in agriculture in the magazine section of the New York Times . This wasn’t the story Truman Capote told. Capote was given an assignment by the New Yorker and he went and he did it. He didn’t know or understand any of this background. He didn’t talk about the role of this guy. Not that this guy was the ultimate villain—this Clutter person—but, the fact is, he had a very key role. If he was important enough to be interviewed in a section on changes in agricultural policy in the New York Times Magazine , that means he’s not just nobody. The fact that he conjoined the outlaws, the killers—the fact that they conjoin, in a sense, with the Clutters—I think is a piece of, you can almost say, Dickensian chance. It’s like how some novelists will start out with two or three random incidents that are not connected at all and then mold them together. I don’t know if you’ve read The Bridge of San Luis Rey ? It’s about six or seven people who are on a bridge that collapses; it falls and they’re killed. What it is is an exercise in what brought these people together: what did they have, or not have, in common? Why this moment and not another moment? That’s what I wanted to develop with this, to go a little into the background of how I came to this line of thinking. Now, one of the killers: his mother was an Indian [sic] and his father was a cowboy. The other one’s parents were poor farmers. So, here, we have three social groups expressed in these people. In the long struggle between corporate agriculture and the individual farmer, this is what develops: they get pushed off the land, these social groups. In fact, this also connects back to the old story of Joseph, in Egypt. With Joseph in Egypt, yes, he predicts the coming famine—the good times and the coming famine. But, when the famine does come, first he takes the farmer’s money, then he takes their land, and he moves them all into the cities. What you’ve got there is kind of an algorithm for the way agriculture develops: we’re talking Russia, the Soviet Union, China. We're talking the United States. It looks different in different places, but the structure remains the same. You urbanize the people and you consolidate the land. Then, of course, with the book I go into my own reactions to all kinds of literature, and I stop to try to rewrite that literature. For instance, suppose we think of The Iliad as one big trade war. Troy, as you know, sat on the route into the Black Sea, which means it commanded the whole hinterland where people like the Greeks and the Trojans did trading. The Trojan War was a trade war. BLDGBLOG : The mergers and acquisitions of the ancient world. Yurick : So that's the kind of stuff I’m working on. In the end, of course, the smaller farmer fought agribusiness tooth and nail, and they lost. We see what agribusiness has done to food itself, creating all kinds of mutational changes in seeds and so forth. Again, I think of the collectivization period in the Soviet Union in which, in order to win, you had to starve the peasants. That’s what the intellectuals of the time wanted, without understanding the practicality of life on the ground, so to speak. It was a catastrophe. On the other hand, one of the images I had when I was a kid, during the Depression, was: you’d go see a newsreel and you’d see farmers spilling milk and grain on the ground because they couldn’t get their price. People didn’t have enough food, but they were just dumping their milk in the mud. These were smaller farmers—agribusiness hadn’t happened yet. So you’ve got two greed systems going on here. Anyway, I use all that as the novel’s jumping-off point. In a sense, I’m saying Clutter had it coming to him—or his class had it coming to him. But I’m in the very early stages. It becomes like a little race between living and doing it, and ultimately dying. I’m not rushing myself, but I’m having fun. * * * This interview was recorded in March 2009. Thank you to Sol Yurick for the conversation. You can also read this interview over on Gizmodo .

Sunday, December 22, 2013

No company is going to stand up to a mob

Impossible scenario: The Twitter mob chooses someone to make an example of. They go after that person's job. The company says "We're standing behind our employee." It'll never happen. Companies have to make the right business decision. And that means firing the radioactive person and replacing them with someone who is not radioactive. Standing behind the employee would just fuel the rage, and cause the company itself to become radioactive, probably even more than the employee. The management would be fired, and replaced by people who will do the right thing for the business. Which is why no company will stand up to the mob. A few weeks ago one of the maintainers of node.js was fired because he didn't accept a check-in that would have made language in the code be gender neutral (at least that was my read of it as an outside observer). There was some question whether he understood what was being asked of him because English wasn't his native language. What an ugly scene, for so little, from someone who was so generous! I have been surrounded like this myself, many times, over the years. Believe me, the mob has tried to get me fired. If I had had a real job I'm sure they would have. When I was the CEO of a company, the mob went after our families. These are not principled acts. Don't kid yourself. If they think they can get you fired for having the wrong political opinion, they will. I've been told that "Free speech has consequences." Everything has consequences, like hounding people for practicing free speech. The consequence is that people won't speak. Great. What a cruel joke if the greatest communication medium ever invented was used to stifle communication.



via No company is going to stand up to a mob

Wednesday, December 18, 2013

The Pandrogyne

Genesis is the founding fa/mo/ther of Industrial music, a performance artist, a musician, and a very, very devoted husband.



via The Pandrogyne

The Rise of Web Bots and Fall in Human Traffic

A couple of years ago I reported that 51% of all website traffic was non-human . The study, undertaken by Incapsula , has been updated. We have become the minority: bot traffic has reached 61.5%. I say “we”; there’s only a 38.5% chance you’re human. The report data was gathered from 20,000 customers who use Incapsula’s security services. These are companies who are especially security-conscious or have been on the receiving end of nasty cyber attacks. They’re unlikely to represent the average website but the relative growth in bot traffic should be applicable. The distribution indicates: 38.5% is biological entities. Mostly humans, a few cats and assorted unclassified creatures. 31.0% is search engine and other indexing bots (a rise of 55%). 5.0% is content scrapers (no change). If you’re reading this anywhere other than SitePoint.com , you’re viewing a lazy copy of the original page. It won’t be as lovely an experience! 4.5% is hacking tools (down 10%). Typically, this is malware, website attacks, etc. 0.5% is spammer traffic (down 75%). That’s bots which post phishing or irritating content to blogs. Any negative comments below will certainly be from non-humans. 20.5% is other impersonators (up 8%). These are denial of service attacks and marketing intelligence gathering. The overall conclusion: bot traffic has increased by 21% in 18 months. However, the majority of this growth has come from cuddly good bots who have our best interests at heart (or should that be processor?) Security Scares A degree of cynicism is healthy. Incapsula is a security company; a rise in scare mongering has a direct correlation with their bottom line. That said, many companies are particularly lax about security until it’s too late. No system is ever 100% secure but the majority are caught by basic SQL injections or social engineering. Never underestimate the ingenuity of crackers … or the naivety of your boss . Why Your Website Visitors are Falling The rise of indexing bots is more interesting. We’re approaching a tipping point where the information you want won’t necessarily be obtained from the website where it originated. It’s already happening… If you need company contact details, you enter the name in a search engine and it appears along with a map and directions. If you want product information, you enter its name and can instantly view the specifications, prices and reviews. You want to find the closest Indian restaurant; it magically appears on a map on your smartphone. At no point did you visit the official company website. The data is scraped and repackaged for easier consumption on an alternative device such as a smart phone, watch or Google glasses. This type of activity has been occurring for many years but it’s fairly simplistic and you can search for one or two inter-related factors. The real challenge will be non-explicit joined-up data queries, e.g. “find a heating-specialist who has worked for my neighbors” or “find all web design agencies in New York with a red logo” . The search engine or app could refine data to a handful of relevant results rather than thousands of website links. The rise in web bot indexing activity will inevitably intensify. Of course, a business website will remain essential — but having one which can feed the bots is increasingly important. Direct human traffic to your website may even fall but bot-based sales leads will rise. If you’re not doing so already, it’s time to invest in machine-readable data exposure, e.g. structured data formats from Schema.org item-specific data feeds such as products and services discoverable, URL-based REST APIs RSS and sitemap feeds. The bots may be working for us, but they’re rapidly becoming our masters. The post The Rise of Web Bots and Fall in Human Traffic appeared first on SitePoint .



via The Rise of Web Bots and Fall in Human Traffic

Friday, December 13, 2013

Requires conditioning.

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via Requires conditioning.

Wednesday, December 11, 2013

Monday, December 09, 2013

habeas corpus

Keeping Secrets: Pierre Omidyar, Glenn Greenwald and the privatization of Snowden’s leaks

Who “owns” the NSA secrets leaked by Edward Snowden to reporters Glenn Greenwald and Laura Poitras? Given that eBay founder Pierre Omidyar just invested a quarter of a billion dollars to personally hire Greenwald and Poitras for his new for-profit media venture, it’s a question worth asking. It’s especially worth asking since it became clear that Greenwald and Poitras are now the only two people with full access to the complete cache of NSA files, which are said to number anywhere from 50,000 to as many as 200,000 files. That’s right: Snowden doesn’t have the files any more, the Guardian doesn’t have them, the Washington Post doesn’t have them… just Glenn and Laura at the for-profit journalism company created by the founder of eBay. Edward Snowden has popularly been compared to major whistleblowers such as Daniel Ellsberg , Chelsea Manning and Jeffrey Wigand . However, there is an important difference in the Snowden files that has so far gone largely unnoticed. Whistleblowing has traditionally served the public interest. In this case, it is about to serve the interests of a billionaire starting a for-profit media business venture. This is truly unprecedented. Never before has such a vast trove of public secrets been sold wholesale to a single billionaire as the foundation of a for-profit company. Think about other famous leakers: Daniel Ellsberg neither monetized nor monopolized the Pentagon Papers. Instead, he leaked them to well over a dozen different newspapers and media outlets such as the New York Times and Washington Post, and to a handful of sitting senators—one of whom, Mike Gravel, read over 4,000 of the 7,000 pages into the Congressional record before collapsing from exhaustion. The Papers were published in book form by a small nonprofit run by the Unitarian Church, Beacon House Press. Chelsea Manning, responsible for the largest mass leaks of government secrets ever, leaked everything to WikiLeaks, a nonprofit venture that has largely struggled to make ends meet in its seven years of existence. Julian Assange, for all of his flaws, cannot be accused of crudely enriching himself from his privileged access to Manning’s leaks; instead, he shared his entire trove with a number of established media outlets including the Guardian, New York Times, Le Monde and El Pais. Today, Chelsea Manning is serving a 35-year sentence in a military prison, while the Private Manning Support Network constantly struggles to raise funds from donations; Assange has spent the last year and a half inside Ecuador’s embassy in London, also struggling to raise funds to run the WikiLeaks operation. A similar story emerges in the biggest private sector analogy—the tobacco industry leaks by whistleblowers Merrell Williams and Jeffrey Wigand. After suffering lawsuits, harassment and attempts to destroy their livelihoods, both eventually won awards as part of the massive multibillion dollar settlements—but the millions of confidential tobacco documents now belong to the public, maintained by a nonprofit, the American Legacy Project, whose purpose is to help scholars and reporters and scientists fight tobacco propaganda and power. Every year, over 400,000 Americans die from tobacco-related illnesses. The point is this: In the most successful whistleblower cases, the public has sided with the selfless whistleblower against the power- or profit-driven entity whose secrets were leaked. The Snowden case represents a new twist to the heroic-whistleblower story arc: After successfully convincing a large part of the public and the American Establishment that Snowden’s leaks serve a higher public interest, Greenwald promptly sold those secrets to a billionaire. He justified this purely on grounds of self-interest, calling Omidyar’s offer “a once-in-a-career dream journalistic opportunity.” Speaking to the Washington Post, Greenwald used crude careerist terminology to justify his decision to privatize the Snowden secrets: “It would be impossible for any journalist, let alone me, to decline this opportunity.” Let alone me. News about Greenwald-Poitras’ decision to privatize the NSA cache came just days after the New York Times reported on Greenwald’s negotiations with major movie studios to sell a Snowden film. This past summer, Greenwald sold a book to Metropolitan Books for a reportedly hefty sum—promising that some of the most sensational revelations from Snowden’s leaks would be saved for the book. Indeed what makes the NSA secrets so valuable to Greenwald and Poitras is that the two of them have exclusive access to the entire cache. Essentially they have a monopoly over secrets that belong to the public. For a time, it was assumed that Snowden had kept copies of the leaked documents, possibly on a number of laptops he was carting around the world. Greenwald and Poitras were simply conduits between Snowden’s cache and the public. In late August, Greenwald disclosed for the first time in a statement to BuzzFeed: “Only Laura and I have access to the full set of documents which Snowden provided to journalists.” Later, from his hideout in Russia, Snowden released a statement claiming he had left all the NSA files behind in Hong Kong for Greenwald and Poitras to take. A third Guardian journalist in Hong Kong at the time, Ewen MacAskill, confirmed to me on Twitter that only Greenwald and Poitras took with them the full cache. Even the Guardian was not allowed access to the motherlode. Clearly, in a story as sensational and global and alluring as Snowden’s Secrets™, exclusive access equals value. And for the first time in whistleblower history, that value has been extracted in full through privatization. It is one thing for Greenwald to maintain that exclusivity—or monopoly—while working with the Guardian, a nonprofit with institutional experience in investigative journalism. It is quite another for him to sell them to a guy with a history of putting profits before public interest. As Yasha Levine and I wrote at NSFWCORP , Omidyar invested in a third-world micro-loans company whose savage bullying of debtors resulted in mass suicides. Rather than acknowledge this tragedy, Omidyar Network simply deleted reference to the company from his website when the shit hit the fan. This — this? — is the guy we’re supposed to trust with the as-yet unpublished NSA files? He’s the one we’re relying on to reveal any dark secrets about the tech industry’s collusion with the NSA? Let’s hope there’s nothing in there about eBay. Whoops! Deleted! Since we first raised our concerns, Yasha and I have been swamped with responses from Greenwald’s followers. The weird thing is, not all of those responses have been negative: even Wikileaks — Wikileaks! — responded that, “We have not [fallen out with Greenwald] but @Pierre is seriously compromised by Paypal’s attacks on our organisation and supporters.” Greenwald’s leftist and anarchist fans have always had an almost cult-like faith in his judgment, seeing him as little less than a digital-age Noam Chomsky. But now they’re reeling from cognitive dissonance, trying to understand why their hero would privatize the most important secrets of our generation to a billionaire free-marketeer like Omidyar, whose millions have, in some cases, brought market-based misery into some of the poorest and most desperate corners of the planet. A Greenwald-Omidyar partnership is as hard to swallow as if Chomsky proudly announced a new major venture with Sheldon Adelson, on grounds that it’s a “once-in-a-career dream academic opportunity.” WikiLeaks’ concern about Omidyar can be traced back to PayPal’s decision in December 2010 to blockade users from sending money to WikiLeaks. PayPal (founded by Pando investor, Peter Thiel — more on that below) is owned by eBay, where Omidyar has served as the chairman of the board since 2002. Before the blockade, PayPal was the principal medium for WikiLeaks donations, according to the Washington Post. As the single investor, founder and CEO of “NewCo”, Omidyar’s self-professed helplessness at eBay doesn’t extend to his new journalistic venture. More troubling for fans is that Greenwald has repeatedly provided cover for Omidyar, claiming that he “had nothing to do with [the blockade]” despite his board status. Whether or not eBay’s chairman really was ignorant of his company’s most controversial decision in years, there’s no denying that Omidyar is also eBay’s largest shareholder. At nearly 10%, his stake is worth billions and is more than twice as large as that of the next largest shareholder. By Greenwald’s reasoning, even though Omidyar is the founder, largest shareholder, and chairman of the body responsible for eBay/PayPal management oversight, he had “nothing to do with” its policy towards Wikileaks. Zero. None. He was as helpless as you, me, Batkid, or Grumpy Cat. Fortunately, as the single investor, founder and CEO of “NewCo”, Omidyar’s self-professed helplessness at eBay doesn’t extend to his new journalistic venture. With that level of autonomy, no one — not even Glenn Greenwald, who has admitted that Omidyar’s money is irresistibly persuasive — can tell him which secrets to publish on his new site, and which should remain hidden forever. We can all rest easy in our beds, then, knowing that Omidyar is in charge of our secrets. Information of national importance, such as which major tech companies colluded with the US government to spy on private citizens, will be published at the discretion of the founder and largest shareholder of one of those companies. Robbing Peter to Pay Paul (and Mark). An important footnote about Peter Thiel and Pando, by Paul Carr When NSFWCORP’s acquisition by Pando was announced, Greenwald raced to Twitter to accuse us of hypocrisy because Peter Thiel (another billionaire whose previous business dealings could fill a book, and who sold PayPal to eBay in the first place) once invested $200,000 in PandoDaily, through his Founders Fund. That’s absolutely true. Founders Fund’s investment is disclosed here on Pando’s main about page, along with the names of the other investors who collectively invested the remaining $2.8m raised by Pando. The difference between us selling our company to a media outlet that once received a minority investment from Founders Fund and Greenwald being personally hired by Omidyar should be obvious to anyone with a brain. But at the risk that category excludes Glenn’s most ardent supporters, we’re happy to spell out the difference (apart from the monetary difference of $249,800,000 between Thiel’s $200k and Omidyar’s $250 million, of course): Peter Thiel has no involvement with the running of Pando. Zero. He doesn’t make hiring or firing or any other kind of decisions (nor do any other investors), Founders Fund isn’t Pando’s only (or even closest largest) investor and no one from Founders Fund has a board seat, voting rights or any other input in business or editorial policy. In other words, Thiel has less ability to dictate editorial policy here, in fact, than the guy who cleans the coffee cups (at least that guy has a key to the office). Pierre Omidyar is personally hiring the journalists for his new project, starting with Greenwald himself. He is the venture’s sole backer. But, you know what? All of that would still be OK if Greenwald would make a simple, unequivocal, public pledge: to cover any bad behavior by Pierre Omidyar in the same way that he would cover someone who wasn’t backing him with millions of dollars. Should be a simple thing to promise, right? Here’s our absolute, unequivocal pledge: we will cover Peter Thiel and Pando’s other investors just as fiercely as we cover Pierre Omidyar or anyone else. In fact, it’s likely due to proximity that we will cover Pando’s investors even more fiercely. That’s how we always worked at NSFWCORP — and it’s how we’ll work here. Our past coverage of Thiel can be found all over the web, including here , here and even right here on Pando. Or see how we’ve covered NSFWCORP/Pando investors CrunchFund and Vegas Tech Fund . When we asked Glenn to make that same pledge about his single investor, in light of our coverage of Omidyar, he responded simply: “I can’t speak for Omidyar Network,” adding he had “no idea” about Omidyar’s involvement in micro loans. We contacted Omidyar Network for comment on this story but neither had responded at press time. We’ll update here if they do. Illustration by Brad Jonas.



via Keeping Secrets: Pierre Omidyar, Glenn Greenwald and the privatization of Snowden’s leaks

Thursday, December 05, 2013

Made in New York City | A Left to Right DIY

To celebrate design, craft, style and the entrepreneurial spirit, Timberland in partnership with ACL set out to highlight the guys that take matters into their own hands, to not only make great things, but to inspire and teach others the skills to do it yourself. The first time I met Stephen Muscarella from Left to Right Furniture was on a Sunday morning in his Gowanus, Brooklyn workshop. Stephen is one of the resident carpenters in a really interesting communal studio called Makeville . When we met to talk about this project the studio was calm and the stillness allowed an opportunity to speak about Stephen’s approach and how he got started working with his hands. His formal education is in economics and while he was pursuing an advanced degree he was repeatedly drawn to do something more tactical, he wanted to work with his hands. So when the opportunity arose to work under an experienced carpenter he jumped at it. Most of what Left to Right does is custom, which provides the opportunity to solve problems and at the same time to let the creative process run its course. Stephen told me that luckily his first pieces were commissioned by his brother, so even though he was working his way through the learning curve it was alright. One of the things that Stephen has focused on since the beginning has been to take reclaimed and discarded materials and incorporate them into his furniture. This philosophy is right in line with Timberland and its commitment to incorporating sustainability, style and craftsmanship into its products and retail stores. The subject of our particular DIY project (which we have documented below) focuses on one of Stephen’s signature designs: the Sailboat bench. This is a project that incorporates reclaimed wood scraps and arranges them in a beautiful and eye-catching style which centers around a sailboat pattern. As an avid sailor, Stephen combines two of his biggest interests; and like most of the pieces which carry the Left to Right name, this Sailboat bench is one of a kind. More on how Stephen got started as a carpenter and some details on his approach: My early days as a woodworker were much more akin to that of a DIYer than a craftsman. In my mind, I still haven’t earned the craftsman badge. And I may never earn it at it is more of a mindset than a skillset. I strive for self-reliance and manual competence first and foremost. I prefer well-made, approachable looking furniture – furniture I would not be afraid to fix, modify, or beat up. The DIY ethic embodies that spirit since it is easy to feel connected to and comfortable around things you’ve made yourself. My first professional design and build was the sailboat bench. Inspired by Ariele Alasko’s work and philosophy, I found a bunch of old floorboards in a dumpster and threw them in my car thinking I’d use her technique — attaching reclaimed wood strips to plywood and then bordering the edges. At the time I didn’t really know much about wood movement, so I thought this was a pretty nifty idea. Armed with a pile of scraps, an old piece of plywood, a nail gun, a chop saw, a janky table saw, and various measuring instruments I went to town. Geometrical patterns didn’t speak to me and I didn’t want to do anything boring. So I felt pretty pleased with myself when I discovered that I could make a sailboat out of the scraps. If you are interested in making your own sailboat bench, here’s how you would go about it. Stephen wears the Timberland Abington Quarryville Boot . Materials: - Scraps or wood you find interesting in fairly uniform thickness – Nice, flat, straight wood for making a border. Or an easier option is to just iron on some edge banding. – Sheet of 3/4″ plywood a little larger than the final dimensions you want – Bradley nails of proper length for your scraps + ply thickness – Glue – if water is likely to get on the surface, use Titebond III or similar Tools: - Nail gun – Air compressor – Chop saw – Table Saw – Square – Planer if you want to get fancy – Wet towel Steps: 1. Cut all scraps and bordering material to 3/8” on table saw. 7/16” if you have a planer that you can mill the wood to 3/8” with. Don’t go under 1/4” in thickness as the nails need some material to grab onto. It’s okay to keep it thicker, too. 2. Cut plywood to proper dimensions + 1/2” or more on all sides. You will be making final cuts to size at the end when all the pieces are glued and nailed on. 3. Choose one long side of the plywood. You will make sure no scraps overhang from the plywood on this side. It will be your straight edge for final cuts on the table saw. See step 10. 4. Select the wood you want to make into your sailboat. 5. Arrange the wood on the plywood until you like the ratios of your hull, mast, boom, jib, and main sail. The only real restraint here is that you want to angle your hull somewhere between perpendicular and 45 degrees to the plywood. 6. Be brave and stop fussing about screwing up. 7. Glue and nail the hull to your decided location. Now you’re committed. Any problems that arise you will solve. Because you’re a bad ass. 8. A few notes on nailing and gluing: a. First is that you don’t want to nail too close to the edges where a table saw will eventually pass through on the final cuts. Nails + table saw = no bueno. So inset those bad boys. If you still mess this up, it’s ok. A bradley nail presents a pretty minor obstacle to a table saw blade. But the sparks will wake you right up. b. Nailing pattern. Random nailing will save time and make it easy. But if you want to up the ante, mark out a nailing pattern with pencil before gluing and nailing. c. Glue dries quickly. Before you spread glue on your wood, make sure you are on the ball and ready to nail it in. Be liberal with the glue. I could go into more detail, but the spirit of DIY is also learning some of the intricacies for yourself. 9. Once the hull, mast, and boom are attached, you just have to fill in the rest. For angle cuts such as those below the hull, take a wide scrap piece and approximate the angle. Test the fit and fine tune the angle of the chop saw until it’s correct. Then either note that angle or make sure no one else uses the saw until you’re done with that section. 10. When the piece is completely covered, you’ll have scraps overhanging 3 sides. Cut off any pieces with more than 6” overhang with a handsaw. Then bring to table saw. Using the good edge, make your long cut. I cut the excess off with one cut and then make another cut for final dimensions – keeping the nail holes about 1” from the edge if I can for aesthetic purposes. Trim the good edge so that the scraps are now flush with the plywood. For the width-wise cuts, set up table saw appropriately for a cross cut. Trim off excess. Then cut to final width. Remember the border will add length and width. 11. Nail and glue border. There are a few tricks, but you can probably figure this part out ok. One technique I use is to clamp a piece of wood under the plywood that extends beyond the edge. This provides a little shelf to rest the border strips on while you nail and glue. 12. I like to fill the nail holes on the border with Plastic Wood. Any egregious cracks can also be filled with this product. 13. Sanding is up to you. 220 grit final smoothness is nice. 14. The finish is up to you. a. Danish oil for no gloss and to make wood grain detail more noticeable. Not highly protective but who wants that anyway? Worn in is good. Apply with rag. While surface is wet with oil rub with 320 grit wet/dry sandpaper to create a nice, smooth surface. Wipe dry with clean cloth. Two coats is my usual for this particular project. b. If you want more protection and easier cleaning, I’d go with water-based polyurethane. Raise the grain with a damp cloth, lightly knock off the fuzz with 320. Repeat until cloth no longer creates the fuzz. Let dry and then follow directions on poly bottle. 15. Legs – true DIY style is to get some black pipe and thread it all together. Best bet for a DIYer is to go to Home Depot with a measuring tape and assemble on premises to make sure you get the right dimensions. Hairpinlegs.com is another option. Voila. The finished Sailboat bench looking good at ACL HQ.



via Made in New York City | A Left to Right DIY

Wednesday, December 04, 2013

Welcome To Real-Life Mordor, Where Volcanoes Shoot Lava Half A Mile Into The Sky (PHOTO)

Someone give Peter Jackson a call. This very real, Mordor-esque volcano lies in the Kamchatka Peninsula in far-eastern Russia, more than 5,000 miles from Moscow. The region's known as the "Land of Volcanoes" and is home to 29 active craters. The bolt of red, captured by photographer Marc Szeglat , is actually a jet of lava that shot nearly a half a mile into the sky during an eruption. Thankfully, the One Ring has been destroyed.



via Welcome To Real-Life Mordor, Where Volcanoes Shoot Lava Half A Mile Into The Sky (PHOTO)