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The Daily Mink - All the Mink, All The Time, via Syndication

☞ Community Matters

(From Sun Mink on Mon Feb 08 12:06:56 GMT 2010)

☞ Worrying Trend

(From Sun Mink on Sun Feb 07 12:07:01 GMT 2010)

☞ The Advance of Open

(From Sun Mink on Fri Feb 05 12:06:18 GMT 2010)

☞ More on H.264

(From Sun Mink on Thu Feb 04 12:06:06 GMT 2010)

☞ Why H.264 Must Be Avoided

(From Sun Mink on Sat Jan 30 12:07:43 GMT 2010)

☞ Endings

(From Sun Mink on Wed Jan 27 12:13:52 GMT 2010)

☞ Access To The Party

  • Excellent start to an explanation of Mozilla's position on H.264 and patent-encumbered CODECs. Still plenty of remaining questions, which will hopefully be addressed in part two of this explanation. Personally I think Mozilla is picking the right path and I hope we'll see Google (owner of YouTube) backing them in their promotion of technologies anyone in any country can use freely (rather than H.264 which is deviously chained to corporate profit).
  • Tim Bray joins the growing number of writers dangerously circling in politically-correct shark-infested waters looking for the core truth explaining the low numbers of women in the technology industry. Personally I think we make a mistake to look just at gender for an explanation. I think there are plenty of men put off the technology industry too, for the same reasons as many women.
  • Great feature on Neil Gaiman in the New Yorker.
  • Details (in Portuguese) of the event I'm attending in Brazil this week.

(From Sun Mink on Tue Jan 26 12:07:29 GMT 2010)

☞ Making A Stand

  • The issue at stake here is what some call "common-carrier status" for networks. Regardless of the excuse - be it China's hatred of protest, Italy's hatred of pædophiles or the USA's hatred of music lovers - governments should be protecting it. Once the principle has been breached, it is a slippery slope to a corporate-controlled society, whether the corporation is question is the state, the RIAA or, indeed, Google or Microsoft.
  • Tone-deaf editorial by the Chinese government coruscates Clinton & Google while actually casting light on the paranoia that makes China censor its citizens and force them to live by rumour.
  • If you were still in any doubt about it, this interview should prove that RMS does not live in your world. To go beyond the interview, a comment elsewhere points out he does not use web browsers; rather, he e-mails web URLs to a server that sends back the text for him to read in EMACS. Amazingly and inspiringly consistent philosophy and values over time, yes, but increasingly disjoint from the reality the rest of us have to navigate.

(From Sun Mink on Mon Jan 25 12:07:26 GMT 2010)

☞ Protecting Freedom

  • Schneier points out that the feature China hacked in GMail was only there because the US government demanded it "for security", and that building trapdoors for use by spooks is an invitation for bad guys to hack them. They are another example of why security through obscurity is an anti-pattern.

    Another question this raises is whether Google's position is truly defensible. They say they will only obey Chinese law if the Chinese government does too. Does the same apply to other governments? What about US government use of the same trapdoor?

    To criticise here is not to defend China's execrable record on human rights. Rather, it is to note that China defends itself internationally by saying it is just doing publicly what other governments do secretly (while overlooking the fact its own use is usually tyrannous). Once again that defense is theirs.
  • Excellent explanation of why Firefox has no H.264 support and why it won't be getting any. This is exactly the right position to be taking and I think it's a crying shame that major traffic drivers like YouTube aren't taking the same approach. [Is there also some rule that demands that the better the article, the more stupid the comments?]

(From Sun Mink on Sun Jan 24 12:04:46 GMT 2010)

RIP

The news is in that the EU has finally approved Oracle's purchase of Sun, and while there are some more hurdles to cross I think James' response is very fitting so I'll reproduce it here too.

I doubt there will be an official wake given what happened when James tried to arrange one before, so we'll need to have drinks ourselves.

(From Sun Mink on Thu Jan 21 15:52:29 GMT 2010)

☞ Clear Thinking

  • Google doubtless understands that the Chinese government don't respond well to public statements like this. I expect them to get far less diplomatic, directly-rude responses in fact. But after attempting to do things China's way, it's hard to see what response they could take to the betrayal of the trust they had placed in the Chinese government by toeing their line for three years. Google's business will increasingly depend on being globally trusted and this sort of political behaviour is a business necessity for them. It also challenges their competitors to make a stand that looks equally principled. Sadly, I expect most of them to be in Chinese government offices right now offering to fill the gap Google will leave. To understand why, Google "webmink reptiles".
  • More intensely sensible comment from Schneier. We need to refuse to be terrorised, which means refusing to tolerate security theatre that responds to it by propogating it. To the readers who only read my comments and not the articles; go on, read this one before you accuse me of stuff for a change!
  • Sensible comment on travel security from The Independent's travel guy: "We need a "Groucho" approach to airline security. To paraphrase Groucho Marx's attitude to clubs, I'd prefer not to join a flight that unquestioningly accepts dodgy characters like me on board."

(From Sun Mink on Wed Jan 13 12:11:58 GMT 2010)

New Year, New Music

Happy New Year! Here's a round-up of the music I've been recommending this week on Twitter.

For Everyone

  • Tycho: Coastal Break - Fine 3Hive recommendation led me to this trancey-dancey electronic track, which is very good.

  • Brooke Fraser: Albertine - One of my favourite artists has made one of the best tracks on her excellent second album available. It has rhythm, passion, melody, intelligently personal and challenging lyrics as well as beauty and is an essential download.

For UK Readers

For US Readers

    Amazon US downloads are restricted to verified US account-holders

  • Lou Rhodes: There For The Taking - Beautiful new track from Lou Rhodes, who you'll recognise as the voice of Lamb but whose new solo direction is a foundation for 21st century folk.

  • The Middle East: Blood - Despite the unpromising names, this is a charming and strong track that's worth the download.

[Note that these links and offers are highly likely to corrode over time]

(From Personal Mink on Tue Jan 12 23:51:00 GMT 2010)

☞ Attention-Grabbing

(From Sun Mink on Mon Jan 11 12:07:49 GMT 2010)

☞ Dealing With The Real Issue

  • Show this to every politician: "What we need is security that's effective even if we can't guess the next plot: intelligence, investigation and emergency response. ... The real security failure on Christmas Day was in our reaction. We're reacting out of fear, wasting money on the story rather than securing ourselves against the threat. Abdulmutallab succeeded in causing terror even though his attack failed. If we refuse to be terrorized, if we refuse to implement security theater and remember that we can never completely eliminate the risk of terrorism, then the terrorists fail even if their attacks succeed."
  • While it's great to see Microsoft finally joining the SVG WG after all these years, let's not forget (as this article does) that they were involved at the beginning and it was their unforgivable NIH attitude in rejecting the decision of the WG not to use Microsoft's contribution that has kept vector graphics from being a web technology for a decade. Imagine what could have evolved by now had they not listened to their greed and control-lust and instead worked with everyone to perfect web vector graphics. Even still I can't help myself wondering if they have joined the WG to snuff it out by over-activity.
  • Given the news that Google is avoiding paying almost all the taxes it should on UK advertising revenue through an offshoring loophole, a specific tax on portals-that-advertise may well be the only way to get the tax that's due in today's global economy.
  • It may be satirical humour but it makes a crucially important point. The reason so many of us stopped trusting Microsoft back in the 90s was we knew that partnering with them only had two exit points: acquisition or the "theft" of our ideas and customers (for me it was the latter). FSJ points out it's deja vue all over again.

(From Sun Mink on Fri Jan 08 12:10:29 GMT 2010)

Snow On Gorse

webmink posted a photo:

Snow On Gorse

(From Photo Mink on Thu Jan 07 16:59:15 GMT 2010)

Path Less Travelled

webmink posted a photo:

Path Less Travelled

(From Photo Mink on Thu Jan 07 16:57:49 GMT 2010)

Sledging on The Common

webmink posted a photo:

Sledging on The Common

(From Photo Mink on Thu Jan 07 16:55:42 GMT 2010)

The Snowman

webmink posted a photo:

The Snowman

(From Photo Mink on Thu Jan 07 16:48:39 GMT 2010)

☞ Deep Links

  • This is a useful part of the discussion, apart from the title. Since it describes a situation which has existed for many years, it doesn't justify intervention anywhere, but as a community of communities we neet to take its lessons on board and steer away from the problem over the coming years. Can I say "scorecard" again?
  • "The point is that that kind of thing simply cannot be built if you start with large formal specifications and fixed-price contracts and change-control procedures and so on. So if your enterprise wants the sort of outcomes we’re seeing on the Web (and a lot more should), you’re going to have to adopt some of the cultures and technologies that got them built." -- I completely agree with Tim here. If you've heard my Adoption-Led keynote you've heard me say this, and Tim's more general point is spot on. Now expect whines from those who gave us WS-* instead of true "small pieces loosely joined"...

(From Sun Mink on Thu Jan 07 12:10:23 GMT 2010)

☞ Working With Communities

(From Sun Mink on Tue Jan 05 12:10:28 GMT 2010)

The Pounce

webmink posted a photo:

The Pounce

On a rock in the driveway, a story plays out in the footprints...

(From Photo Mink on Mon Jan 04 15:25:16 GMT 2010)

☞ The Other Sun

(From Sun Mink on Mon Jan 04 12:07:13 GMT 2010)

Sitting In Front Of The Fire

webmink posted a photo:

Sitting In Front Of The Fire

(From Photo Mink on Sun Jan 03 00:11:04 GMT 2010)

☞ Unpopular Lessons

(From Sun Mink on Sat Jan 02 12:07:56 GMT 2010)

☞ Policy As Promised?

(From Sun Mink on Thu Dec 31 12:06:36 GMT 2009)

☞ Threats

(From Sun Mink on Wed Dec 30 12:04:48 GMT 2009)

For your safety and comfort...

There is only one way to make air travel secure, and that is to take security seriously and prioritise it above all other factors. We should learn from the most secure flights to date - operated by the US military for select trips to the Caribbean - and upgrade measures so that the antics of the Underpants Bomber can't be repeated.

In future, all passengers aboard planes must:

  • Wear secured headphones for safety education and approved entertainment throughout flights, so that passengers cannot communicate with each other for co-ordinated attacks. It's possible Apple or Sony might sponsor these, reducing costs. This measure will also reduce incidents of unlicensed use of music, especially as people cross market boundaries, so maybe the RIAA will support this.
  • Travel blindfolded. This prevents any awareness of location or time and ensures no targetted use of devices. This additionally defeats attempts to benefit from unlicensed movies, so MPAA sponsorship for the blindfolds is possible.
  • Travel naked. This reduces opportunities for concealment of devices, although security staff will still need to use powerful scanners pre-boarding.
  • Undergo sensory disorientation pre-travel, so that passengers do not know where they are seated or what the time is. This could be combined with the blindfolds and headsets.
  • Travel in limb restraints fastened to the seat. In addition to protecting against unexpected turbulence, this will prevent any attempt to operate devices. Airlines could consider tube-feeding so they don't lose revenue from in-flight paid catering.
  • Require a pre-flight "hotel night" where they spend 12 hours before boarding naked in solitary confinement under observation. This will eliminate the possibility of devices being ingested. Boarding will only be permitted with evidence of defecation.
There are huge cost-savings achievable for the airlines here, as well as potential new revenue opportunities and sponsorships such as those indicated. The pre-flight "hotel night" will naturally be charged extra, the need for in-flight entertainment systems is eliminated since no-one can see, hear or operate them, on-board toilets and galleys can be removed and replaced with extra seating and on top of all this far fewer staff are needed and training can be reduced. Ryan Air has already field-tested some of these, I gather.

In addition:
  • Flights must operate to unpublished departure and arrival schedules using undocumented routes. This has the added benefit that flights can no longer be late.
  • Business class passengers benefit from loin-cloths during boarding and in-flight sedation so they are less impacted by security measures. They can also purchase use of video goggles instead of blindfolds.
  • First class passengers benefit from anaesthesia and are boarded on stretchers. Choice of approved drugs available pre-boarding.
All for your safety, comfort and convenience, of course. Relax, sit back and enjoy the flight!


If Naomi Klein is right, capitalists have been waiting for the Underpants Bomber. Let me know when you spot them. The hour is at hand for the Underpants Gnomes.

(From Personal Mink on Sun Dec 27 18:51:00 GMT 2009)

☞ A Selection of Ideas

(From Sun Mink on Thu Dec 24 12:06:53 GMT 2009)

☞ Dealing With Corporate Thinking

(From Sun Mink on Wed Dec 23 12:06:22 GMT 2009)

☞ Public Information

(From Sun Mink on Mon Dec 21 12:36:29 GMT 2009)

[Daily Mink last updated Mon, 8 Feb 2010 01:21:18 GMT by Planet Roller]

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