Tag Archives: Glimpse

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Amazon leaks first 8-inch full Windows 8 tablet, priced at $379

Amazon has all but confirmed rumors about an incoming breed of smaller Windows tablets by accidentally listing an 8.1-inch Acer Iconia over the weekend, running the full version of Microsoft’s latest operating system. The listing has since been removed, but not before several sites caught a glimpse at some specs… Read More

Swedish Beliebers swamp Justin’s hotel

Two Swedish girls had to get medical attention after hundreds of euphoric Justin Bieber fans besieged the Grand Hotel in Stockholm to catch a glimpse of their idol on the Swedish stop of his Europe tour. Read More

‘My name is Mark’: Facebook head’s teenage website resurfaces

A website thought to be the handiwork of Mark Zuckerberg at the age of 15 resurfaced on the Internet on Thursday, providing a glimpse into the early days of the famed Facebook co-founder. “Hi, my name is Slim Shady,” the creator of the website said in a message on an “about…

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Scientists reveal first results in hotly anticipated dark matter experiment

A massive science instrument that is spinning the globe aboard the International Space Station has provided its first glimpse of what may be mysterious dark matter in the universe, experts said Wednesday. The first results from the Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer, the most sensitive particle physics…

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Like 500 years ago, geeks are becoming the last line of defense for free speech

In the past week, the spam protection service Spamhaus was subjected to a relentless attack that gives a glimpse of things to come. The attack initially rendered the service inoperable, effectively killing many crucial spam filters around the world for the duration of the attack.However, geeks rose to the occasion, mounted countermeasures, and dissipated the attack, restoring the functionality of the world’s spam filters in a matter of hours.There is an escalating war on free speech happening right now. What Spamhaus does is easy to describe: it maintains a list of electronic junkmailers to the best of its ability, giving any and all e-mail services in the world the ability to sort out e-mail from known junkmailers. Publishing the list is obviously part of exercising free speech.However, this free speech interfered with business interests of the junkmailers, who are making tons of money filling up your inbox with advertisements for Viagra (regardless of your gender or age – they don’t know and they don’t care). In an attempt to force people to listen to their advertising, they killed most mail systems’ ability to sort out their junk mail in an outright attack. (Some people would claim that such unwanted advertising is a form of free speech in defending the businesses. That’s confusing the right to speak freely with a perceived right to an audience. The former exists, the latter does not.)While the attack was eventually repelled, it gave a glimpse into the resources and foul play businesses are prepared to use to quell free speech that goes against their interests. One number says that 75 gigabits of internet capacity was used in the attack against Spamhaus.This is an immense volume: a typical small firm has about one-thousandth of that at its disposal. Just like regular armies are a numbers game, so are net attacks; if the defender has one-thousandth of the attacker’s numbers, they lose, simple as that. (A key difference would be that the defender doesn’t die, though, but comes back online when the attack stops.)Normally, defending free speech would be the job of politicians and courts. Unfortunately, they have long had their own agenda, as their power is threatened by the net; where we used to see warrantless wiretapping and wanton censorship of the net (and cry foul over it), we are now seeing mass surveillance of everybody, all the time, with no better justification than “because it can be done”. Anybody who challenges their power – such as the late Aaron Swartz – will find themselves in the crosshairs of a might-makes-right ideology.In this, we are seeing an almost verbatim repeat of how the union of the Church and Crown reacted to the threat of the printing press in the 1500s. In those times, freedom of speech was also defended by the many small people against the few powerful institutions – and yet, it led to 200 years of war across Europe, over the mere power of freedom of speech.This time around, the conflicts are still escalating. Anywhere the corporations can use the power of the courts to kill an activist protest or a bad consumer review, corporations are trying to do so. Anywhere law enforcement can use the data of corporations to get the upper hand over activists that insist on exercising their rights, law enforcement will do so.Thus, we have arrived at the weird situation where the geeks of the world are defending free speech rights for everybody against the desire and hard push of business interests, politicians, and governments. Politicians have abdicated from one of the most important parts of their job – safeguarding civil liberties – and are instead trying to dismantle them.In the coming years, the battle will keep escalating. The Spamhaus attack, even though it was one of the largest attacks documented to date, was just a skirmish. Looking at the blueprint from when this happened with the printing press 500 years ago, free speech and activists will eventually win. Let’s hope it doesn’t take 200 years of war this time around. Read More

The Era of Deep Archiving Begins

Soon everyone may be digitially archiving their lives. The architect William McDonough offers a glimpse of where we’re going. Read More

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Fox making a documentary about Rihanna’s disastrous 777 tour

Fox will be making a documentary about Rihanna’s now-infamous 777 tour, which made headlines last year when 256 fans and journalists were more or less held captive on a 777 jet with Rihanna as she spent a week performing around the world.The documentary is meant to give a behind-the-scenes look at the entire promotional event for her 7th album, “Unapologetic,” which debuted at No.1 on the Billboard 200. The publicity, though unflattering, paid off: Her single, “Diamonds” topped Billboard Hot 100 the day after the tour ended.A Gawker post, written anonymously by one of the journalists on board, offers a glimpse into what the documentary might cover (or not cover):Continue Reading… Read More