Chip Off the Ol' Block
[from Wired]
A 17-year-old kid arrested for hacking into ATMs on Long Island turns out to be the son of IBM's director of client security, reports the New York Post. Loren Anderson is the alleged brains behind an identity-theft operation that resulted in about $100,000 being stolen. Although Loren's father, Clain, declined comment, one computer-hacking expert said it was likely the boy had "top-of-the-line equipment to learn on" at home because of his father's position. The problem, said Dan Verton, is that kids are becoming computer experts without learning anything about the ethical issues attached to the technology.
00:00 /Humor | 0 comments | permanent link
This looks like an interesting new forum for discussion of copyright and patent issues.
00:00 /Copywrongs | 0 comments | permanent link
Good grief - a reasonably balanced report from the New York Times, despite the headline! They do raise (and answer) some serious concerns, but having served in a draftee army I'm still down hard on the side of the all volunteer force.
Military Mirrors Working-Class America. Those who are risking, and now giving, their lives in the fight against Iraq represent a slice of a broad swath of American society but by no means all of it. By David M. Halbfinger and Steven A. Holmes. [New York Times: NYT HomePage]
00:00 /Politics | 0 comments | permanent link
DMCA critics decry state-level proposals. Opponents of the federal Digital Millennium Copyright Act say they're disturbed by proposals for similar laws at the state level. But proponents say they're overreacting. [CNET News.com]
They're not overreacting! Ye gods - copyright is specifically reserved by the Constitution to the Federal Government! This is absurd, and a ploy of some desperation on the part of the entertainment industry to end run Congress. It needs to be stopped, now.
00:00 /Copywrongs | 0 comments | permanent link
Every once in a while, I run across something on the various Asatru lists to which I'm subbed that bears repeating. This in one such missive, posted here with the permission of my friend Böðvar, with a few links for background added. Read it well and throughly.
********************************
From: Böðvar Ásbjörnsson
Date: Sat Mar 29, 2003
Subject: A War On This Land
This war is beginning to get me down.
The guys and gals we've got over there doing their bit are right on
target, but the pundits, retired officers, talking heads, and agents
of doom are beginning to get on my tits!
I also visit (and occasionally clutter up) Dr. Dave Yeagley's web
page, Bad Eagle Forum. For those who don't remember Dr. Y, he's a
Comanche educator in Oklahoma whose writings on tribal, Indian and
political matters I admire, and have praised in many places I've
visited.
Today, he wrote a bit about Lori Piestewa, a PFC captured (we hope)
along with the others by the Iraqis a few days ago. She is a PFC
serving in the maintenance company ambushed after making a wrong turn
on the road to support the troops.
She's a daughter of the Hopi people.
I wrote the following in reply.
It cheered me up some.
-- B
*********
Let those reading this feel as they wish to feel about the current
war.
There are folks who honestly and sincerely would stand in front of
tanks, as that chap in Tienamen Square did, to avert a war...any
war. By the time we humans get to the point of war, we've screwed up
pretty badly, and war is never a pretty thing. War is only noble in
history books.
So, my hat's off to those folks. Maybe one day we'll evolve into the
sort of creatures who don't make those stupid mistakes, evolve
governments which don't go from mistake to mistake, and have
neighbors whose actions don't necessitate war.
There are folks who don't like THIS war, thinking it ill-advised and
rash. They cite alternatives and would've counselled caution. They
don't like this administration, or don't trust it, or just don't see
any sense in this. Folks here are allowed to disagree, and it is the
duty of an honest citizen to speak his mind, not just his or her
right.
But then there are folks out there who, honestly, want to see the US
fail. They don't like the government. They don't like their
neighbors. They have some social or ideological or racial or other
reason for disliking the US. They're not all grouped on one end of
the political spectrum, but are all over the place. They hunger to
see the US humbled.
For those people, who don't see how Saddam -- one of the most
malignant public figures since Stalin (hopefully) went to his reward
and Pol Pot checked out -- as a threat, don't see him as a sponsor of
terrorism, don't see any connection between the 9/11 attacks and him,
let me say this:
When the Islamists attacked on September 11th, they attacked holy
ground. There's a lot of talk about a "Holy Land". For me, it isn't
that place, 'way over there, with dusty churches above ground and oil
below, which is holy.
The ground which I walk on is holy.
The ground in which the generations of my family are buried is holy.
The ground which hosts and feeds and enchants my family and kinsmen
today is holy.
When they drove those planes into those buildings and murdered all
those people, they were assaulting holy ground.
Lori might understand that.
My family's only been here since 1635. We've just started our fifth
century this side of the Atlantic. That's only a lunchbreak in the
time Lori's people have been here. But, I bet she'd understand my
feelings about this land, newcomer that I am.
An assault was made on the land of my people, Vinland. It was first
the land of Lori's people. The land, as well as the government, the
people and all the rest, was not only assaulted, it was insulted. It
was the intention of the attackers and those who planned and aided
and cheered the attacks that the land would also be shamed.
It is the land over which the proud Comanche rode like lords.
It is the land over which the Lakota strode proudly and which, after
death, they pulled around themselves like a robe.
It is the land enriched by the bones of the mysterious people of
Hohokam and Clovis.
It is the land watered with the tears of the Cherokee, the frozen
blood of the Cheyenne at the Washita camp, and the sweat of the
Apache people leading a quarter of the US army around the desert.
This Saddam character stood in aid to those who would strike at this
land. His friends would strike at anyone from this land.
Here in Vinland, here in America, here in Turtle Island, here in the
land with your people's name upon it, we know how to deal with such
enemies. We send out our best to thwart their plans, and take their
lives if need be, to visit ruin upon them. We send our very best.
We send people like Lori.
They sent me to Kurdistan the last time this same miscreant acted up,
beating down a proud tribal people. They sent my wife to Bosnia when
Milosevic and his thugs acted up.
This time, though, it's gotten serious. They've sent Lori, and a lot
of other native sons and daughters, and some of my kinsmen, too.
They're the best we have.
I pray to my gods that they needn't cut any more of a swath through
Iraq than needs must, and that as many of them return home as is
divinely possible. But, we know that there will be losses. The
traditions of the many native nations, and of my people as well,
recognize this.
Today, coated in foreign dust, the sons and daughters of this land --
black and white, red and brown when they are at home -- are all the
same color. They are painted the red of fierce and final action.
There's a price to be paid for living on this land. Our best pay it.
--------------
-- Böðvar
00:00 /Asatru | 0 comments | permanent link
From over at The Daring Fireball comes this Interview with Brent Simmons, the developer of NetNewsWire, the popular OS X RSS news aggregator. RSS aggregation is what got me interested in blogging in the fisrt place, and this interview touchs on the vast potential of this technology.
00:00 /Technology | 0 comments | permanent link