Friday, December 28, 2007

Alfred Thompson the Cyberspace People Watcher: Company Cultures

Alfred Thompson the Cyberspace People Watcher: Company Cultures:

"People outside large companies think that the person at the top can change anything they want. They think that the CEO can wake up one morning, hear a great idea (like perhaps Hugh MacLeod writing about how Microsoft should be listening to their customers or Robert Scoble telling Google - and everyone else - how to run their public relations) and make it happen across the company. But it doesn't work that way. Change takes time. It takes time because a lot of times things require culture to change.

Inertia sets in. Passive aggression is a powerful force. People resist change. The only way a CEO could make instant change would be to directly manage everyone. And that is just not going to happen. Small or flat organizations have an edge here. But even in schools which are very flat organizations (almost everyone reports to the principal) and tend to be small are hard to change though. I've seen great principals fail to turn schools around even with the best of ideas. There are no quick fixes in any organization.

Individuals can and do make a difference though. Even in large companies one person changing they way they work and influencing the way other people work can over time make big changes. But 'over time' is key here. Few people want to wait for change to take place slowly and evolutionarily. We are a 'do"

view entire blog post

Saturday, December 22, 2007

vavoylanu

crooks & liars

Regis talks about meeting Amy Goodman on his show Live with Regis and Kelly (Dec. 19th). And that’s really all there is to this but it’s hilarious anyway.

Regis and Joy go to Phil Donahue & Marlo Thomas’ annual Christmas party and Regis finds himself seated next to Amy Goodman, one of the most respected journalists in America — who he’s never heard of. So when he asks what she does Amy explains she has a show on PBS where she covers global events. Regis immediately finds himself feeling a touch inadequate for the conversation. In the end though the most unlikely of plugs.

Sunday, December 09, 2007

Smart Mobs » Blog Archive » MIT Press places free chapter by Howard Rheingold online

Smart Mobs » Blog Archive » MIT Press places free chapter by Howard Rheingold online

The contents of the book Civic Life Online: Learning How Digital Media Can Engage Youth was posted online by MIT Press this week. It contains a chapter by Howard Rheingold titled “Using Participatory Media and Public Voice to Encourage Civic Engagement.” The book is part of a The John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation Series on Digital Media and Learning. The series “examines the effect of digital media tools on how people learn, network, communicate, and play, and how growing up with these tools may affect a person’s sense of self, how they express themselves, and their ability to learn, exercise judgment, and think systematically.

The following is the abstract of the chapter by Howard Rheingold, which appears on an MIT Press webpage from which the full chapter can be downloaded in PDF:

Teaching young people how to use digital media to convey their public voices could connect youthful interest in identity exploration and social interaction with direct experiences of civic engagement. Learning to use blogs (“web logs,” web pages that are regularly updated with links and opinion), wikis (web pages that non-programmers can edit easily), podcasts (digital radio productions distributed through the Internet), and digital video as media of self-expression, with an emphasis on “public voice,” should be considered a pillar—not just a component—of twenty-first-century civic curriculum. Participatory media that enable young people to create as well as consume media are popular among high school and college students. Introducing the use of these media in the context of the public sphere is an appropriate intervention for educators because the rhetoric of democratic participation is not necessarily learnable by self-guided point-and-click experimentation. The participatory characteristics of online digital media are described, examples briefly cited, the connection between individual expression and public opinion discussed, and specific exercises for developing a public voice through blogs, wikis, and podcasts are suggested. A companion wiki provides an open-ended collection of resources for educators.

The contents of the book Civic Life Online: Learning How Digital Media Can Engage Youth was posted online by MIT Press this week. It contains a chapter by Howard Rheingold titled “Using Participatory Media and Public Voice to Encourage Civic Engagement.” The book is part of a The John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation […]

Friday, November 16, 2007

John McKay: a soldier in the Army of Davids

Fired Attorneys Build Case Against Gonzales

By Jason Leopold
t r u t h o u t | Report

Friday 16 November 2007

John McKay, the former US attorney for the Western District of Washington, pieced together thousands of pages of internal Justice Department (DOJ) emails released earlier this year, reviewed public documents and pored through hundreds of pages of sworn testimony his former boss, Alberto Gonzales, gave to Congress about the firings of at least nine US attorneys last year.

McKay said evidence in the public record demonstrates the former attorney general and his underlings may well have obstructed justice.

McKay was one of the nine US attorneys fired in December 2006 for reasons that appear to be politically motivated. The DOJ's inspector general, Glenn Fine, is conducting an investigation to determine whether Gonzales perjured himself before Congress or sought to influence the testimony of Monica Goodling, the DOJ's former White House liaison who used a political litmus test to hire and fire attorneys, and resigned in disgrace earlier this year. McKay said that a special prosecutor should be appointed to further probe the circumstances behind the US attorney firings if the inspector general's report determines federal laws may have been broken.

In an upcoming issue of the Seattle University Law Review, Mckay said the firing of at least two US attorneys, David Iglesias of New Mexico, and Carol Lam of San Diego, appears to demonstrate Gonzales and top DOJ officials may have obstructed justice by interfering with public corruption cases and ongoing criminal investigations Iglesias and Lam had been involved in at the time of their dismissals.

McKay discussed elements of his Law Review article at a conference of former US attorneys in Miami earlier this month. Iglesias, as well as Bud Cummins, the former US attorney for the Eastern District of Arkansas, were also in attendance and participated in a panel discussion to talk to their colleagues about their firings and how it has impacted the integrity of the DOJ. About 100 former US attorneys from the Reagan, George W. Bush and Clinton administrations attended the conference, sponsored by the National Association of Former United States Attorneys.

At the conference, a resolution was passed that includes nine bullet points, one of which says "a United States attorney should never be asked to resign or be terminated because a Senator, Representative or other elected official has complained to the Department of Justice or White House regarding the US attorney's refusal to bring charges."

The resolution has been sent to newly appointed Attorney General Michael Mukasey. McKay's Law Review article calls for similar resolutions. He recommends Mukasey should "move immediately to ... take steps to prevent the abuses of his predecessor," including, "limiting the points of contact between the Justice Department and the White House; eliminating all but specially designated Congressional liaisons."

In an interview, Iglesias said the resolution adopted at the conference in Miami underscores that the legal community still views the firings as a serious matter. He added that the former US attorneys who attended the conference were outraged over the politicization of the DOJ and "they expressed how bad they felt about what happened to us."

Iglesias said former DOJ official Mike Battle, who played a role in the firings to the extent he personally contacted the US attorneys to fire them, attended the conference as well. Iglesias said Battle told him he had nothing to do with selecting the US attorneys for dismissal. He was simply the messenger.

"I believe he was being honest," Iglesias said.

In his Law Review article, and at the conference, McKay singled out Iglesias's firing saying it could result in "criminal charges" against Gonzales and other former senior DOJ officials "for impeding justice."

"The elements of a prima facie case of obstruction of justice are: (1) the existence of the judicial proceeding; (2) knowledge of or notice of the judicial proceeding; (3) acting 'corruptly' with intent to influence, obstruct or impede the proceeding in the due administration of justice; and (4) a nexus (although not necessarily one which is material) between the judicial proceeding sought to be corruptly influenced and the defendant's efforts," McKay writes in a 34-page article, which is still in draft form and expected to be published in January. "The [federal] omnibus clause is a 'catchall' provision, which is broadly construed to include a wide variety of corrupt methods."

In testimony before Congress earlier this year, Iglesias said that a few weeks before the 2006 midterm elections he received telephone calls from New Mexico's Republican Senator, Pete Domenici, and the state's Republican Congresswoman, Heather Wilson, inquiring about the timing of an indictment against a popular Democratic official in the state who was the target of a corruption investigation. Iglesias told Domenici and Wilson he could not discuss the issue of indictments with them. A couple of weeks later, Iglesias's name was added to a list of US attorneys selected for termination.

McKay writes that when Gonzales testified before Congress about the circumstances behind the firings Gonzales admitted "he took multiple phone calls from Domenici concerning [Iglesias], urging that he be replaced, and has admitted that [President Bush] spoke with him about the 'problems' with Iglesias."

"Gonzales has even admitted that one of the reasons that Iglesias was fired was because Senator Domenici had "lost confidence" in Iglesias," McKay writes. "While these allegations are troubling under any analysis, a thorough and independent investigation is necessary to determine whether criminal laws have been violated. Among the considerations facing the inspector general is whether the actions of former Attorney General Gonzales constituted obstruction of justice by removing Iglesias. That [Gonzales] had knowledge of the high profile public corruption case being investigated by Iglesias in New Mexico is virtually certain, given that [Gonzales] has admitted speaking to Domenici and would almost certainly be expected to have such knowledge as the leader of the Justice Department. Under the broad language of [the federal statute regarding obstruction of justice], it would be hard to imagine that 'corruptly influence' would not extend to firing of the United States attorney in the middle of a public corruption case because he 'lost confidence' of a senator who sought to manipulate the indictments for crass political advantage."

McKay said that the firing of Lam, the former US attorney for the Southern District of California, is just as troubling because it took place while Lam was "supervising the highest profile public corruption prosecution in America," Randy "Duke" Cunningham, the Republican congressman from San Diego.

Cunningham pleaded guilty in March 2006 to mail and wire fraud and conspiracy to commit bribery and is serving an eight-year federal prison term. At the time of Cunningham's sentencing, Lam said in a prepared statement the investigation would continue "with respect to other co-conspirators."

The co-conspirators Lam was referring to included Kyle "Dusty" Foggo, the former executive director of the CIA, who resigned from the agency in early May 2006, a few days before search warrants were executed on his residence. McKay believes Lam's dogged pursuit of Cunningham's co-conspirators in the spring of 2006, a year in which Republicans faced tough reelection campaigns, may have led directly to her firing.

"Lam alerted the Justice Department that FBI agents would, at her direction, search Foggo's home in connection with the Duke Cunningham case, and the following day [former Gonzales Chief of Staff] Kyle Sampson emailed the White House from the attorney general's office that 'we have a real problem with Carol Lam' and urged that she be dismissed at the conclusion of her term," McKay writes. "Given the wide publicity of the Cunningham political corruption case ... it is reasonable to conclude that Gonzales, [former Deputy Attorney General Paul] McNulty, Sampson and other senior Justice Department officials were aware of the underlying judicial proceeding being handled by Carol Lam, Gonzales, McNulty and Sampson, at minimum, will have to demonstrate that their complicity in the removal of Lam had nothing to do with her aggressive prosecution of power Republicans for public corruption. In addition to the Sampson email ... investigators will seek to establish whether other senior officials knowingly sought her removal in connection with the Cunningham investigation. If such evidence is found, removal of the United States attorney in where the US attorney was personally supervising the case would undoubtedly come within the omnibus provisions of the federal obstruction of justice statute."

McKay discusses the politics surrounding his own firing as well as that of Paul Charlton, the former US attorney for Arizona. Moreover, he uses the public record to demonstrate Gonzales and McNulty may have knowingly lied to Congress, a felony.

"McNulty also may have sought to conceal an important phone call from Senator Domenici regarding US attorney Iglesias, instructing Monica Goodling to delete reference to that call from his Senate testimony," McKay writes, drawing upon Goodling's prepared testimony before Congress earlier this year, to back up his argument. "Others who likely have serious concerns (and even more likely who have retained criminal defense lawyers) are Kyle Sampson and former McNulty staffers Will Moschella and Michael Elston Sampson appears to have knowingly concealed from Congressional investigators the forced resignation of Todd Graves from the Western District of Missouri, and the role of Karl Rove in securing the appointment of Timothy Griffin in Eastern District of Arkansas to replace the US attorney Bud Cummins."

McKay adds that Elston may have lied about the criteria the DOJ and/or the White House used in placing the nine US attorneys on a list. Moschella has maintained that the White House was not involved in the firings but evidence that has surfaced thus far has contradicted his assertions.

If the DOJ's inspector general investigation concludes further investigation into possible federal crimes is warranted and refers the case to the US attorney's office for the District of Columbia to probe the matter, McKay said a special prosecutor should be appointed instead because the US attorney in DC is Gonzales's former chief of staff.

"The Justice Department must seek a special prosecutor who will be seen as independent of the White House and of the Justice Department itself," McKay writes.

Thursday, November 08, 2007

Crooks and Liars » Giving Olbermann some company

Crooks and Liars » Giving Olbermann some company:

By: Steve Benen
November 6th, 2007 at 5:40 PM - PST


When MSNBC added Tucker Carlson to its prime-time lineup two years ago, the network appeared anxious to capitalize on Fox News’ success as a Republican network. If cable-news viewers were flocking to a conservative, partisan network, MSNBC seemed to believe, then the answer was to keep up by putting more conservatives on the air. The result Fox News-lite — featuring a lineup with conservative Carlson, conservative Joe Scarborough, and the politically baffling Chris Matthews.

Viewers didn’t exactly flock to this lineup. There’s already a Republican news network; no one needed a pale imitation. But with Keith Olbermann’s ratings continuing to blossom, MSNBC seems to have come to a realization: maybe there’s an audience for those who aren’t sympathetic to the Republican agenda.

Riding a ratings wave from “Countdown With Keith Olbermann,” a program that takes strong issue with the Bush administration, MSNBC is increasingly seeking to showcase its nighttime lineup as a welcome haven for viewers of a similar mind. Lest there be any doubt that the cable channel believes there is ratings gold in shows that criticize the administration with the same vigor with which Fox News’s hosts often champion it, two NBC executives acknowledged yesterday that they were talking to Rosie O’Donnell about a prime-time show on MSNBC.

And what about self-described “right-winger” Tucker Carlson? An NBC executive told the NYT he’s “in real danger of being canceled.”

On a related note, there’s plenty of good discussion out there about whether O’Donnell is a good choice for the MSNBC prime-time lineup.

Monday, November 05, 2007

Thousands mistakenly allowed past U.S. border, report says - CNN.com

Thousands mistakenly allowed past U.S. border, report says - CNN.com

WASHINGTON (CNN) -- Government watchdogs have found that thousands of people who shouldn't have been admitted to the United States were mistakenly allowed in last year because of security lapses at legal border crossings.

art.checkpoint.gi.jpg

Customs and Border Patrol agents question a motorist at a checkpoint last month in Campo, California.

The number of inadmissible aliens who managed to enter through official ports of entry in 2006 was not disclosed in Monday's report from the Government Accountability Office.

However, a source who has seen a full version of the report, in which those statistics were included, put the total at 21,000.

The author of the GAO report, Richard Stana, said most of those who were wrongly allowed to enter were economic migrants who did not present a security risk.

"But as we saw in the recent past, it doesn't take too many people getting through the ports of entry to cause some real trouble," he said. "And not everyone who comes in and is a danger needs to be a terrorist. It could be someone connected with a criminal enterprise."

Understaffing and turnover at Customs and Border Protection, the agency that oversees the nation's 326 land, sea and air ports of entry, has contributed to the problem, according to the GAO report. However, investigators also cited weak management controls and complacency and inattentiveness by some officers.

GAO investigators arriving at one point of entry found no border agents in the inspection booth, while at other locations, agents didn't ask for travel documents, according to the report.

"Supervisors aren't demanding that the agents do their jobs and ask the right questions and look at the right documents," Stana said. "It's because they can't get people trained properly, and it's because staffing is short."

The Customs and Border Protection's stance is that at busy border crossings, it has to balance security with commerce.

As a result of its own earlier investigations, Customs and Border Protection issued new policies and procedures to tighten security at ports of entry, but, months later, GAO inspectors found that many of the same weaknesses persisted.

In July, Customs and Border Protection issued new procedures for conducting inspections at border crossings. However, GAO investigators concluded the agency has not put the management structure in place to make sure those procedures are consistently implemented at all of the crossings.

Monday's report "confirms that Customs and Border Protection must do a better job of recruiting new officers and retaining and training those already on the job," said Democratic Rep. Bennie Thompson of Mississippi, the chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee.

"Employee retention and recruitment problems at CBP may be indicative of larger morale and vacancy problems at the Department (of Homeland Security), but that's no excuse," he said in a statement. "While this administration pumps millions of dollars into hundreds of miles of real and virtual fences, it must not ignore critical vulnerabilities at our ports of entry."

The National Treasury Employees Union, which represents 17,600 Customs and Border Protection officers manning ports of entry, said the agency is understaffed and poorly managed and officers are overworked and not adequately trained.

About 400 million people enter the U.S. through legal checkpoints every year, according to The Associated Press.

"It is clear that CBP needs thousands more front-line employees, not just to do the job the nation has a right to expect but to provide enough manpower to staff ports of entry while critically necessary training is provided," said Colleen Kelley, the union's president, in a statement.

Tuesday, October 30, 2007

Google in talks with Verizon Wireless: sources | Reuters

Google in talks with Verizon Wireless: sources | Reuters:

"According to the Journal, the Google-powered phones are expected to meld several of its applications, including Google Maps, YouTube and Gmail.

The ground-breaking part of the plan, according to the newspaper, is Google's aim to make the phone's software 'open,' right down to the operating system which controls applications and interacts with hardware."

Sunday, October 28, 2007

Gosset's Figure in Zometool

Gosset's Figure in Zometool





















This is a Zome model of Gosset's figure in 8 dimensions. A first step to understanding this model is to study the geometry and Zome model of the 600-cell. As it turns out, this model of the Gosset figure is merely the union of two concentric models of the 600-cell. It is a remarkable fact that there are only two "natural" models of the 600-cell which can be built using standard Zome pieces, and that the union of these two objects turns out to represent the Gosset figure.

NeuroReport - Abstract: Volume 15(12) August 26, 2004 p 1917-1921 Enhancement of auditory cortical development by musical experience in children.

NeuroReport - Abstract: Volume 15(12) August 26, 2004 p 1917-1921 Enhancement of auditory cortical development by musical experience in children.:

"Abstract: Auditory evoked potentials (AEPs) express the development of mature synaptic connections in the upper neocortical laminae known to occur between 4 and 15 years of age. AEPs evoked by piano, violin, and pure tones were measured twice in a group of 4- to 5-year-old children enrolled in Suzuki music lessons and in non-musician controls. P1 was larger in the Suzuki pupils for all tones whereas P2 was enhanced specifically for the instrument of practice (piano or violin). AEPs observed for the instrument of practice were comparable to those of non-musician children about 3 years older in chronological age. The findings set into relief a general process by which the neocortical synaptic matrix is shaped by an accumulation of specific auditory experiences."

Slashdot | YouTube For High-School Jocks

Slashdot | YouTube For High-School Jocks

Saturday, October 27, 2007

He drew his lips over his teeth to imitate bare gums. He gabbled in pantomime, not a sound coming out. He let out his tongue like a dog panting. He squeezed his eyes so tight that you couldn't see anything except the millipede brows and lashes. He put his thumbs to the sides of his head and waggled his fingers. Then he slid himself out of the booth, took up the duffel, and started for the door.

Wednesday, October 24, 2007

tilting

Saturday, October 20, 2007

Slashdot | New GPS Navigator Relies On 'Wisdom of the Crowds'

Slashdot | New GPS Navigator Relies On 'Wisdom of the Crowds':

"'The New York Times is running an article on Dash Express, a new navigation system for automobiles that not only receives GPS location data, but broadcasts information about its travels. Information is passed back to Dash over a cellular data network, where it is shared with other users to let them know if there are slowdowns or traffic jams on the road ahead. The real benefit of the system isn't apparent until enough units are collecting data in a given area - so Dash distributed over 2,000 prototype units to test drivers in 25 large cities.'"

Friday, October 19, 2007

Think Progress » Rep. Lofgen: Bush Administration Carries Out Politically-Motivated Immigration Raid

Think Progress » Rep. Lofgen: Bush Administration Carries Out Politically-Motivated Immigration Raid

Twenty-four year old Tam Tran is the daughter of Vietnamese immigrants and has consistently spoken out on U.S. immigration reform. On May 17, she appeared before the House Immigration Subcommittee to speak in support of the DREAM Act, which would have granted legal status to children of immigrants who complete at least two years of college.

More recently, a USA Today article on Oct. 8 featured Tran in an article on “children caught in the immigration crossfire”:

Without the DREAM Act, Tam Tran, 24, is a person without a country. The daughter of Vietnamese boat people, Tran was born in Germany, where her parents ended up after the German Navy plucked them out of the sea. The family moved to the USA when Tran was 6. … For now, Tran is permitted to stay — only because the United States has no repatriation treaty with Vietnam. Tran, who has never been to Vietnam, says that “I consider myself a Southern Californian.

Just three days after the article appeared, federal officers entered her home in the middle of the night and forcibly arrested her family. Tran’s family was detained on a “years-old deportation order,” even though they have been in regular communication with immigration officials for almost 20 years since arriving in the United States.

Thursday, October 18, 2007

Media Biz Turning off the TV set «

Media Biz Turning off the TV set «:

"According to the most recent figures, ABC has averaged 11.4 million prime-time viewers so far, down from 11.9 million a year ago. With 18-49 year-olds, ABC averaged an audience of about 5 million people, down from 5.5 million a year ago."

CBS has averaged 12.1 million overall viewers and 4.6 million 18-49 year-olds this season, down from 13.2 million total viewers and 5.3 million 18-49 year-olds a year ago. And NBC, despite moving up in the ranks, is also still losing audience.

The Peacock Network averaged 9.3 million viewers, off from 10.6 million a year ago. NBC averaged 4.7 million 18-49 year olds, down from 5.1 million a year ago.

Wednesday, October 17, 2007

Gonzales Investigated Subordinates Who Were Likely To Testify Against Him - Politics on The Huffington Post

Gonzales Investigated Subordinates Who Were Likely To Testify Against Him - Politics on The Huffington Post

Do witnesses against Gonzales feel intimidated in the way that law enforcement officials and ethics experts say might be the case?

Some former government officials who have been questioned as part of the leak probe, as well as attorneys representing officials questioned, said as much in interviews for this story. None wanted to speak for the record because they did not want to anger prosecutions investigating them or their clients.

But at least one former Justice Department official, who was questioned during the leak probe, has spoken out publicly: Jack Goldsmith, who, as head of the Justice Department's Office of Legal Counsel, questioned the legality of some aspects of the warrantless surveillance program, and directly clashed with Gonzales over the program when Gonzales was White House counsel.

Goldsmith declined to be interviewed for this story. But in his recently published memoir of his time serving in the Bush administration, "The Terror Presidency", Goldsmith disclosed that he been subpoenaed by FBI agents last April to testify under oath about the leak probe before a federal grand jury.

"What angered me most about the subpoena I received," Goldsmith wrote, was "the fact that it was Alberto Gonzales's Justice Department that had issued it... I had spent hundreds of very difficult hours at OLC, in he face of extraordinary White House resistance, trying to clean up the legal mess that then-White House counsel Gonzales, David Addington [Vice President Cheney's then-counsel], and others had created in designing the foundations of the Terrorist Surveillance Program.

"It seemed rich beyond my comprehension for a Gonzales-led Department of Justice to be pursuing me for possibly illegal actions in connection with the Terrorist Surveillance Program."

continued

Bush Quips He Might Stay in Power (Threat Level Plays Along) on Threat Level

Bush Quips He Might Stay in Power (Threat Level Plays Along) on Threat Level:

"Reporter: Mr. President, following up on Vladimir Putin for a moment, he said recently that next year, when he has to step down according to the constitution, as the president, he may become prime minister; in effect keeping power and dashing any hopes for a genuine democratic transition there ...

Bush: I've been planning that myself."

Wednesday, October 10, 2007

TPMmuckraker | Talking Points Memo | Alberto Lawyers Up

TPMmuckraker | Talking Points Memo | Alberto Lawyers Up

Fine is not only investigating whether Gonzales made false statements to Congress (see the top six here), but also whether Gonzales might have improperly coached his aide Monica Goodling on her recollection of the U.S. attorney firings. That's in addition, of course, to Fine's sprawling investigation of the politicization of the Department under Gonzales' leadership. But apparently Gonzales is most worried that his statements to Congress are the most likely to lead to a criminal investigation.

Monday, October 01, 2007

quoth gb

If I could arrange it so I didn't have to do ANYTHING, I think I could get a lot done.
GB

Wednesday, September 26, 2007

down with doofus boy

daily kos

A lot of Very Important People keep telling me that I have to continue being patient with the Iraq war. People like the President of the United States:

March: Bush Pleads for Patience in Iraq War

May: Bush Urges Patience on Iraq

June: Bush urges patience on Iraq

July: War In Year 5; Bush Requests Patience

August: Bush pleads for more patience for Iraq war efforts

September: Iraqi civilian deaths up, Bush urges patience

Contrary to what the frequently-wrong media pundits say, I (and, I'm willing to bet, you) do understand the gravity of the situation in Iraq. It's the mother of all messes. One of the worst blunders our country has ever made. It's just a big ball of bad and there's no way to get around it. If we stay it's bad and if we leave it's bad. The word of the day, the week, the month, the year and the decade is: "Bad."

And here we are, four and a half bad years after we strolled into Baghdad with our picnic baskets and Starbucks franchise leases, being asked to be patient just a little while longer because we're this close to going from "baddest" to "badder" on the scale of bad. Fine. I'm a reasonable man and perfectly capable of being patient. I've even heard it's a virtue.

But I want something in return. I want the nincompoops who orchestrated this farce in a massive rush of non-patience to excuse themselves from the public stage. That includes the president, the vice president and the secretary of state. They need to resign, find a nice rocking chair far away from D.C., and never be heard from again.

It includes the neocons and their think-tank buddies who continue to flap their gums about how awesome the Iraq war is going and wouldn’t it be swell to bring the same kind of awesomeness to Iran NOW NOW NOW!!!

It includes the journalists who helped beat the drums of war by "catapulting the propaganda" and advancing the official White House narrative. And it includes the members of the House and Senate who believe that buying "five rugs for five bucks" at an Iraqi marketplace surrounded by armed guards and attack helicopters is all the proof I should need that things are going swell, so sit down, shut up and be patient.

Friday, September 21, 2007

Slashdot | Do Not Call Listings to Expire in 2008

Slashdot | Do Not Call Listings to Expire in 2008:

"'Yahoo! News report that the cherished dinner hour void of telemarketers could vanish next year for millions of people when phone numbers begin dropping off the national/United States (U.S.)'s Do Not Call list. The Federal Trade Commission (FTC), which oversees the list, says there is a simple fix. But some lawmakers think it is a hassle to expect people to re-register their phone numbers every five years. Numbers placed on the registry, begun in June 2003, are valid for five years. For the millions of people who signed onto the list in its early days, their numbers will automatically drop off beginning next June if they do not enroll again.'"

Friday, September 07, 2007

NPR : Former Baseball Player Says He is Not Dead

NPR : Former Baseball Player Says He is Not Dead:

"Last week, an obituary of Bill Henry, the former major league relief pitcher, was picked up by news wires, only it turned out to be the obituary of a Florida man with the same name who had been impersonating the baseball player for nearly two decades."

METRONOME ONLINE - free!

METRONOME ONLINE - free!

Facebook eases freshmen fears, fosters friendship.

Facebook eases freshmen fears, fosters friendship - CNN.com:

"Wellesley, Massachusetts (CNN) -- Sang-Hee Min and her college roommate met each other this July and began planning for their year together. During the summer, they chatted about shared interests, discussed ground rules for living together, and agreed on what to pack."

Thursday, August 30, 2007

Wonkosphere

Wonkosphere

Welcome to Wonkosphere, the best place to keep a finger on the pulse of the 2008 Presidential election. We use patented technology to scour the blogosphere and analyze what is being said, who is saying it, and whether they're ranting or raving. Updated every 4 hours.

Monday, August 06, 2007

TPM interviews Jay Carney

Jay Carney is Time's Washington Bureau Chief, the one who tipped his hat to TPM re the US Attorney scandal a few months back.




Update 8.8.2007:
Carney responds to criticism of his remarks on the YKos panel and in his interview (above) with TPM:
What I meant about having a responsibility not to be labeled left or right is that our responsibility is to the truth -- that we should write what we see, not what we want to see or wish to be true, and that, if we do so, attempts to label us as partisan will fail. The purpose of labeling in most of these cases, after all, is to diminish and belittle the work we do. This is part of the motivation behind the multi-decade attack by the right on the MSM -- i.e., conservatives have long argued that the MSM is biased and the news stories in the NYT and WP and Time and Newsweek, as well as on CNN and the broadcast networks, should be discounted and ignored (if, of course, they reflect badly on the GOP or conservative policies) because the reporters who produce them are disproportionately liberal and, therefore, biased accordingly. But quality rises. The label doesn't stick if the work is grounded in truths that withstand the accusation of bias.
more ...

Wednesday, July 25, 2007

Monday, July 23, 2007

Friday, July 06, 2007

Domenici quote

GOP Defections on Iraq: Who's Next? - The Huffington Post

"'I have carefully studied the Iraq situation [translation: I know I should have been following this thing more closely all along, but I finally got around to taking a serious look] and believe we cannot continue asking our troops to sacrifice indefinitely while the Iraqi government is not making measurable progress to move its country forward [translation: it's not our fault that the Iraqi government isn't getting its act together. Our strategy was fine, it is that Iraqi government that isn't coming through on its end of the bargain],' Domenici told reporters from New Mexico this week."

[translation: my term expires next year]

Thursday, July 05, 2007

white house spokespersons

White House: "Equal Justice?"

Sometimes it's just too easy. From this afternoon's White House press briefing:

Q Scott, is Scooter Libby getting more than equal justice under the law? Is he getting special treatment?

MR. STANZEL: Well, I guess I don't know what you mean by "equal justice under the law." But this is a unique case, there's no doubt about that. And we have said that there are a lot of people on all sides of this issue who've made good points. The President took a very measured approach to it. He believed that the jury verdict should be respected and -- but he did feel that the sentence was excessive, in terms of jail time. But this is a unique case, and there's no doubt about that.

More below....

From the briefing:

Q Scott, why, if the President thought the sentence was excessive, why didn't he simply reduce it? Why do away with the entire sentence?

MR. STANZEL: Well, I think the President thought that the penalty -- the fine, the probation, the felony charge -- were all very significant penalties. And so that's why -- I'm not going to get into a gaming out of whether zero to 30 and somewhere in there was -- is the right place, but the President thought that the fine was excessive -- or the jail time was excessive, and that's why he commuted the sentence.

Q Even one day would have been considered excessive?

MR. STANZEL: The President commuted the entire sentence.

Q So a single day in jail for lying and obstructing justice, in a federal case, is excessive?

MR. STANZEL: The President believed that 30 months, the sentence that was given -- one day wasn't given, 30 months was.

Q Right, but it's not the 30 months that he thought was excessive, it was the entire sentence.

MR. STANZEL: It was the --

Q -- any time in jail.

MR. STANZEL: He commuted the 30-month sentence. So what the President believed was 30 months was excessive, and he respected the jury verdict, and the jury verdict also put in place -- found Mr. Libby guilty of perjury and obstruction of justice, which are serious charges, and those are addressed by the $250,000 fine and the probation and the felony charge.

Q Can you tell us if reducing the sentence was even considered?

MR. STANZEL: I'm not going to even speculate about internal deliberations. So the President made very clear his views in the two-page statement and in his comments the next day.

Saturday, June 30, 2007

Wired 15.04: Mixed Feelings






Wired 15.04: Mixed Feelings:

"Deep into the experiment, Wächter says, 'I suddenly realized that my perception had shifted. I had some kind of internal map of the city in my head. I could always find my way home. Eventually, I felt I couldn't get lost, even in a completely new place.'"

Friday, June 29, 2007

Bloggingheads.tv

Bloggingheads.tv

The ding-a-link is for the first 1:40.

Thursday, June 28, 2007

Tuesday, June 26, 2007

Congress's API

david alpert

HuffPo

The field of computer science, at base, is about efficiency. Algorithms are evaluated based on the time they take to run -- "big O notation", using formulas like O(n2) or O(n log n) telling how much time it takes to accomplish a task based on the size of the input. Programmers love to optimize systems, to make them run faster and better and more reliably. And one of the great joys of computer engineering, unlike, say, architecture or bridge building, is that if something doesn't work optimally, it's often not that expensive to simply rewrite it.

It's easy to think government ought to work the same way. After all, government is simply a social construct, governed by a set of rules (laws) just as a computer program governs a machine's behavior. (Larry Lessig famously wrote how "code is law.") If some aspect of government isn't working, why can't we just reprogram it?

Unfortunately, government is not just a socially programmed system executing a set of legal instructions, but it's a complex one with lots of dependencies. In software, you might choose to simply rewrite your code, but you may be running it on an operating system you didn't write, with an application server you didn't write, accessing a database you didn't write. (If they're open source, you can try to submit patches, but they won't always be accepted). Or maybe your client needs you to integrate your code with some legacy system written decades ago on an IBM mainframe in FORTRAN.

When dealing with a system we can't fix, we try sending it data and seeing what it will do. If I call this function, this happens. If I put that data there, that happens. Software engineers start acting like biochemists -- if the cell's concentration of ions is such-and-such, then the cell will exhibit so-and-so behavior. You can complain about the cell or curse the people who wrote the FORTRAN code, but you can't reason with these systems and explain to them why they're wrong.

To get results, we must treat government similarly. Think of Congress as a black box that reacts to various stimuli. Send them ten thousand letters from citizens in their districts about an issue, and they'll pay attention. Get a lot of people to give money to their challenger, and they'll think long and hard before voting against your point of view. Make it clear that voters care about an issue, and they'll care, too.

People on Capitol Hill like to think they're impartial stewards of the country, thinking dispassionately about the Right Thing to Do. But usually there's no consensus on what that right thing is. And when people in Congress do the wrong thing, it's easy to get frustrated about their backward thinking. Ed Felten, a terrific advocate for engineers, wrote a clever post rightly excoriating Rep. Howard Berman for saying he'd consulted "all the interested parties" on patent reform legislation when in truth he'd only consulted all of the Beltway lobbying groups, not citizens. Many commenters chimed in that politicians only listen to the groups that give them money and "know which master they are serving."

Back when Berman was appointed chair of the House IP Subcommittee, Larry Lessig wrote a scathing critique of the Democrats, newly in the majority. "'Radical' changes in Washington always have this Charlie Brown/Lucy-like character (remember Lucy holding the football?): it doesn't take long before you realize how little really ever changes in DC. Message to the Net from the newly Democratic House? Go to hell." Lessig saw Berman's appointment as a rejection of the blogs and activist groups on the Net that regained them the majority.

Felten is right that Berman wasn't considering the public interest. Lessig was right that the leadership wasn't considering Net activists' concerns when appointing him in the first place. But simply saying that on a blog is like saying that a cancerous cell shouldn't be dividing so darn much. True, but we don't just talk about it, we develop chemotherapy and radiation and drugs to stop it. Instead of just blogging or whining on comments, we need to be developing antibodies to the special interest groups. The ordinary citizens, who Congress isn't listening to, need to make themselves heard, by writing letters, making phone calls, signing petitions, giving money, and voting.

We know it works. Just look at Net Neutrality, an issue that most people still don't understand. But a coalition of groups from Free Press to MoveOn to the Christian Coalition worked together and didn't just talk, they bombarded Congress with advocacy. And it got results. Several major presidential candidates and the congressional leadership came out in support of Net Neutrality. The stimulus was strong enough, and the response meaningful. That fight is far from over, but it shows what citizens can do when they take action.

Next time you read about the latest assault on Internet freedom, don't just blog about it. To Lessig, Felten, Cory Doctorow, and all the other great bloggers, don't just write about how much it sucks, direct people to get involved to fix it. Encourage them to join or give to groups like Save the Internet, Free Press, Public Knowledge, EFF, or the political action commitee I founded, IPac, as well as many more.

For a long time everyone complained bitterly about Microsoft's monopolistic behavior and its operating system dominance. Then some hackers got together, enlisted more hackers, and created an alternative so good that most Web sites don't run on Microsoft software and (coupled with several more innovations) some people say "Microsoft is dead." We can make the IP extremists' and the information gatekeepers' positions dead in Washington, too.

Monday, June 25, 2007

incompo-fascism

TPM

'the connected and mutually-reinforcing bonds of authoritarianism and incompetence'

There's been a lot of discussion of late about Vice President Cheney's unwillingness to abide by the rules followed by the rest of the executive branch when it comes to safeguarding and handling classified material -- particularly his claim that his office is, all appearances to the contrary, not part of the executive branch. And many have noted that the Libby case shows that the VP's office has some serious deficiencies when it comes to handling classified data.

But this isn't the only case.

It seems now largely to have been forgotten. But let's not forget the case of Leandro Aragoncillo, the naturalized US citizen of filipino descent who engaged in espionage on behalf of opposition leaders in his native country while worked as a Marine security official in Vice President Cheney's office. To the best of my knowledge this is the only known case of espionage taking place within the White House. And it happened in Cheney's operation.

Perhaps even more revealing, Aragoncillo was originally tasked to the Veep's office in 1999 when Vice President Gore was still in office. But he apparently only began snatching classified documents after Cheney showed up.


In any case, two observations. The first is that this isn't a on-off affair. The Cheney OVP seems to have a serious issue safeguarding classified material -- one so serious it has led to two felony convictions. So Bill Kristol may think it's annoying to have government 'bureaucrats' checking on how classified material is being safeguarded. But the Cheney crew could really use the help.

Second, I think we see here a hint of a too-little noted pattern -- the connected and mutually-reinforcing bonds of authoritarianism and incompetence. The Libby case (and the Plame case generally) is somewhat separate in that it was the intentional breaching of national security secrets. But is it a coincidence that the most paranoically secrecy obsessed office in the executive branch is the one that actually managed to have a spy working in its midst?


-- Josh Marshall

Sunday, June 17, 2007

Ranking Conservatives

A Proposed Pecking Order for Honest Conservatives

Brad DeLong
via C&L

Who should we ... respect--and give a boost to, in terms of reading them, arguing with them rather than mocking them, debating them, and suggesting that others read them?
As far as honest conservatives are concerned, it's a difficult question. Those I usually suggest--economists like Bruce Bartlett and Andrew Samwick and Bill Niskanen, strategists like Richard Clarke and Tom Barnett and Brent Scowcroft, social policy types like Rod Dreher and John DiIulio, unclassifiables like Andrew Sullivan and Ross Douthat--I find dismissed as "not typical conservatives. We want a representative of the conservative point of view. Someone like Larry Kudlow or Ramesh Ponnuru."
It strikes me that those who reject my advice are (as is almost always true) making a mistake. They are going about it the wrong way. We want an "honest conservative"--a conservative intellectual adversary we can respect, who is also intelligent. But their first move is to define a "conservative" as a public supporter of the Bush regime and its deeds. That means, I think, that they are searching the empty set.
Slavoj Zizek applied this to the puppet regimes of Eastern Europe under the iron curtain:
The Trilemma: Of the three features—-personal honesty, sincere support of the regime, and intelligence—-it was possible to combine only two, never all three. If one was honest and supportive, one was not very bright; if one was bright and supportive, one was not honest; if one was honest and bright, one was not supportive...
But it applies just as well to the Bush regime. Sincere conservative supporters are not bright. Bright conservative supporters are not honest. Bright and honest conservatives are not supporters--and so are ruled out, and we are left with Larry Kudlow and Ramesh Ponnuru.
I think we should recognize that the intelligent, honest conservatives out there are not Bush supporters, and turn that to our advantage in selecting honorable intellectual adversaries.
What I would like is a list of "honest conservatives" who fit into the following categories--and let me try to give an example of a person whose existence is recognized by the mainstream media for each class:
  • Class of 2000: People who in 2000 said, "George W. Bush is not qualified to be president, and we should be really worried about this."
  • Class of 2001: People who in 2001 said, "I supported Bush in 2000, but George W. Bush is not listening to his honest conservative policy advisers, and we should be really worried about this." John DiIulio
  • Class of 2002: People who in 2002 said, "I supported Bush in 2000 and 2001, but 911 has unhinged the administration; it's detention and other policies are counterproductive; it needs to be opposed." Richard Clarke
  • Class of 2003: People who in 2003 said, "I supported Bush over 2000-2002, but enough is enough. That's it. I supported the invasion of Iraq because I was certain there was evidence of an advanced nuclear weapons program--otherwise invading Iraq was just stupid. Well, there was no advanced nuclear weapons program. Invading Iraq was just stupid. Plus there's the Medicare drug benefit. These people need to be evicted from power." Tim Barnett, Bill Niskanen [Daniel Drezner]
  • Class of 2004: People who in 2004 said, "I've been a Bush supporter. I'm a Republican and a conservative, but I've had enough: I'm voting for Kerry." Andrew Sullivan, Bruce Bartlett, Brent Scowcroft, Dan Drezner
  • Class of 2005: People who in 2005 said, "I voted for Bush in 2004. But I made a mistake. A big mistake." [Lawrence Wilkerson].
  • Class of 2006: People who in 2006 said, "I know I supported Bush up to last year, but that shows I'm not the brightest light on the clued-in tree." Rod Dreher, Andrew Samwick




The class of 2007--people who are now opposed to Bush only because they think Bush will drag the Republicans down in 2008 -- doesn't count. Dead-enders who are still claiming that Bush is Teddy Roosevelt don't count. They aren't honest conservatives. They are only worth scorn, and fit objects for nothing but mockery. One just doesn't joust with them in honorable intellectual combat. It's not done.
I say divide "honest conservatives" into the classes of 2000 to 2006, rank them by seniority according to the date of their public honesty, and use that as a ranking for who to read, who to respect, and who to promote as worthy intellectual adversaries. Refer to them using this citation form:
Brent Scowcroft, Honest Conservative Class of 2004...
Who else falls where in this classification?


****
C&L:
Brad DeLong has a new ranking system for ... honest conservatives … And then this very insightful entry
Now comes Rick Perlstein:
He explains how “honest conservatives of the class of 2007″ - the ones who only thought to turn away from Bush when it became obvious both was destroying the Republicans and the conservative project and empowering the Democrats and the liberal project - will use the public’s memory of Bush’s disasters to, well, destroy the Democrats and the liberal project. And, most importantly, points out that the media will let them get away with it
and then Digby steps up to the plate:
You can see the contours already as you observe the unbelievable sight of the House Republicans taking to the floor to assail the Dems for earmarks. Really. They are. They have no shame and no conscience and they can switch gears and turn on the phony sanctimony without even a sheepish grin to show they know they are full of shit. For them this is combat by any means necessary and they simply don’t care if someone says they are hypocrites…read on


. . .. ... ..... ........ oOo ........ ..... ... .. . .

Class of 2008

¡Scott McClellan! 5.27.2008

. . .. ... ..... ........ oOo ........ ..... ... .. . .


2009

. . .. ... ..... ........ oOo ........ ..... ... .. . .


2010.02.21 Smerconish Party's Over

.... Collegiality is nonexistent today, and any outreach across an aisle is castigated as weakness by the talking heads who constantly stir a pot of discontent. ... All of which leaves homeless those of us with views that don't stack up neatly in any ideological box the way we're told they should.

....
I think President Obama is earnest, smart, and much more centrist than his tea party caricature suggests. He has never been given a fair chance to succeed by those who openly crow about their desire to see him fail (while somehow congratulating one another on their relative patriotism). ... I'm not folding the tent on him. Not now. Not with the nation fighting two wars while its economy still teeters on the brink of collapse.


All of which leaves me in a partisan no-man's-land, albeit surrounded by many others, especially my neighbors. By quitting the GOP, I have actually joined the largest group of American voters.


. . .. oOo .. . .


March 2010 David Frum



  • The Daily Dish, Frum's Departure From AEI Reax March 26, 2010
    • But here's where David and I agree: we both grew up when conservatism was intellectually sharp and interesting. Its current brutal anti-intellectualism, its open hostility to moderation in any form; its substitution of purer and purer ideology for actual, pragmatic ideas: these are trends that have left a lot of us on the center right marooned. I think David may well be glad he is now formally ostracized. It will liberate him and his formidable mind. Serious thinking conservatives know that these are times for real re-thinking, not more positioning. Julian Sanchez:
      One of the more striking features of the contemporary conservative movement is the extent to which it has been moving toward epistemic closure. Reality is defined by a multimedia array of interconnected and cross promoting conservative blogs, radio programs, magazines, and of course, Fox News. Whatever conflicts with that reality can be dismissed out of hand because it comes from the liberal media, and is therefore ipso facto not to be trusted. (How do you know they’re liberal? Well, they disagree with the conservative media!) This epistemic closure can be a source of solidarity and energy, but it also renders the conservative media ecosystem fragile.
[x-ref the question: to what extent Frum's apostasy & excommunication fit the 'class of 2010' criteria (e.g., Yglesias, Varadarajan, Coates) -ed.]


. . .. oOo .. . .


January 2011 honorable mentschen ;) for Joe Scarborough


August 2016 TPM Guide to GOPers Hopping off the Trump Train

Friday, June 15, 2007

Crooks and Liars » The Daily Show catches Tony Snow Lying

Crooks and Liars » The Daily Show catches Tony Snow Lying: "The Daily Show catches Tony Snow Lying
By: John Amato on Friday, June 15th, 2007 at 12:45 PM - PDT

C-Span gets email on Michael Savage (from Think Progress)

Wednesday, June 06, 2007

Think Progress » Was the Federalist Society in on attorney firings?

Think Progress » Was the Federalist Society in on attorney firings?:

"Was the Federalist Society in on attorney firings?

“A leader of an influential conservative legal group recommended a replacement candidate for the U.S. attorney in San Diego just days after the sitting prosecutor’s name was secretly placed on a Justice Department firing list, according to a document released Wednesday.”

The recommendation by the executive vice president of the Federalist Society, Leonard Leo, came before anyone outside of a tight group in the White House and Justice Department knew about a nascent strategy that ultimately led to the firings of nine U.S. attorneys.

It could not be determined whether a short e-mail, sent on March 7, 2005, making the recommendation meant that Leo knew of the plan to fire Carol Lam or whether his message was unsolicited and coincidental.

The subject line of Leo’s e-mail to Mary Beth Buchanan, then-director of the Executive Office for U.S. Attorneys, says, “USA San Diego,” indicating the top prosecutor job for the Southern District of California. Lam was on the job at the time and had no plans to step down.

The text of the note reads, “You guys need a good candidate?” Leo goes on to say he would “strongly recommend�"

Sunday, June 03, 2007

Rolling Stone : Giuliani: Worse Than Bush

Rolling Stone : Giuliani: Worse Than Bush

In the media age, we can't have a hero humble enough to
actually be one; what is needed is a tireless scoundrel, a cad
willing to pose all day long for photos, who'll accept $100,000 to
talk about heroism for an hour, who has the balls to take a $2.7
million advance to write a book about himself called
Leadership. That's Rudy Giuliani. Our hero. And a perfect
choice to uphold the legacy of George W. Bush.

Saturday, June 02, 2007

PoliticsTV.com » Blog Archive » Letterman: Iraq Update from George Bush

PoliticsTV.com » Blog Archive » Letterman: Iraq Update from George Bush

like time travelling (sort of)

Democracy stuns Polish coma man - CNN.com:

"WARSAW, Poland (Reuters) -- A 65-year-old railwayman who fell into a coma following an accident in communist Poland regained consciousness 19 years later to find democracy and a market economy, Polish media reported on Saturday.

Wheelchair-bound Jan Grzebski, whom doctors had given only two or three years to live following his 1988 accident, credited his caring wife Gertruda with his revival.

'It was Gertruda that saved me, and I'll never forget it,' Grzebski told news channel TVN24.

'For 19 years Mrs. Grzebska did the job of an experienced intensive care team, changing her comatose husband's position every hour to prevent bed-sore infections,' Super Express reported Dr. Boguslaw Poniatowski as saying.

'When I went into a coma there was only tea and vinegar in the shops, meat was rationed and huge petrol lines were everywhere,' Grzebski told TVN24, describing his recollections of the communist system's economic collapse.

'Now I see people on the streets with cell phones and there are so many goods in the shops it makes my head spin.'

Grzebski awoke to find his four children had all married and produced 11 grandchildren during his years in hospital.

He said he vaguely recalled the family gatherings he was taken to while in a coma and his wife and children trying to"

Friday, May 25, 2007

Thursday, May 24, 2007

Even Paul can make a Youtube video

YouTube - Paul McCartney - Dance Tonight with Mandolin Performance



he also debuted his new video on Youtube:

Spinticipation

bloggingHeads.tv
Wright & Fukuyama
May 22, 2007


Fukuyama on self-fulfilling prophecies & history's actors.




China discussion:

Frank anticipates Doofus-Boy:

Fukuyama: as [China] gets economically, politically, and militarily more powerful, increasingly the way that we deal with global problems will be shaped by Chinese preferences. ... Over time, it seems to me that it's almost inevitable that [Chinese economic power stemming from their ownership of >$1T in US debt] is going to translate into political power; and we're simply not going to be able to run the world in the way that we've been used to doing.

Wright: Right, but it seems to me if we accommodate ourselves to that reality, if we accept that reality, we should be able to play it in a way that's not especially inimical to our interests.

Fukuyama: Yeah, well, we should. Yeah, in theory we should be able to do this. But this is the United States, and I think we just [laughs]; we've got a mixed track record in dealing with these countries that are neither friend nor foe. ...

We the Media

TPM

Last Friday was
the fourth annual Personal Democracy Forum at Pace University in New York City. On Tuesday we brought you Part 1 of our visit to the conference. We bring you Part 2 in today's episode of TPMtv ... [which includes Josh Marshall interviewing open-source journalism maven Jay Rosen, and Yale Prof. Yochai Benkler].

Slashdot | Why Are CC Numbers Still So Easy To Find?

Slashdot | Why Are CC Numbers Still So Easy To Find?:

"Frequent Slashdot contributor Bennett Haselton gives the full-disclosure treatment to the widely known and surprisingly simple technique for finding treasure-troves of credit card numbers online. He points out how the credit-card companies could plug this hole at trivial expense, saving themselves untold millions in losses from bogus transactions, and saving their customers some serious hassles. Read on for Bennet's article."

Wednesday, May 23, 2007

Poking Disney in the Eye

h/t The Eye

Information-age battle rages:

Friday, May 18, 2007

The White House just saying it like it is

TPMmuckraker May 18, 2007 01:49 PM:

"Q Is it not important for the Attorney General to have the confidence of Congress?

[Deputy Press Secretary Tony] FRATTO: It's important for any public official to have as much confidence as he can garner. And that's going to ebb and flow, but it will not ebb and flow with this President and this Attorney General."

Thursday, May 17, 2007

Smart Mobs: Disappearing networks

Smart Mobs: Disappearing networks:

"Using an electron microscope, they discovered that the developing worm’s neural network, which had not previously been mapped, was completely different from that of the mature animal. “A large number of embryonic neurons are heavily interconnected by gap junctions,” says Bargmann, who is also a Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator. “They all grow to the midline, communicate with each other and create a conduit of information that links together these two different sides of the brain.” Then, after the gap junctions do their job, they disappear. “This network is transient; we only know about it because we were able to look at this early period.”"

Colbert Debates Himself on the Future of Iraq

Crooks & Liars

TPMmuckraker May 17, 2007 10:50 AM

TPMmuckraker May 17, 2007 10:50 AM:

"PS: There’s hope we’ll find out what was really going on. I’d highlight this portion of Specter’s remarks from the hearing: “Mr. Comey, it's my hope that we will have a closed session with you to pursue the substance of this matter further. Because your standing up to them is very important, but it's also very important what you found on the legal issue on this unnamed subject, which I infer was the terrorist surveillance program. And you're not going to comment about it. I think you could. I think you could even tell us what the legalisms were. Doesn't involve a matter of your advice or what the president told you, et cetera. But I'm going to discuss it with Senator Leahy later and see about pursuing that question to try to find out about it.”

And then Leahy, in response: “We will have a closed-door hearing on this. Senator Specter and I are about to have a briefing on aspects of this.”"

Wednesday, May 16, 2007

Congress demands e-mails, Justice says ask Rove camp - CNN.com

Congress demands e-mails, Justice says ask Rove camp - CNN.com:

"In the subpoena, Leahy had demanded all documents in the possession of U.S. Attorney Patrick Fitzgerald, who investigated Rove in connection with the disclosure of the identity of CIA operative Valerie Plame.

But Assistant Attorney General Richard Hertling, Gonzales' top link to Congress, told Leahy a search was conducted and turned up nothing.

'None of those records are responsive to the committee's subpoena. The electronic media was returned to Mr. Rove's counsel, Mr. Robert Luskin, in a sealed condition,' Hertling said."