Daily Archives: May 5, 2009

Black Blizzard


Every Monday Should Start With A Comatose Computer


Every Monday Should Start With A Comatose Computer


Sometime between Sunday afternoon and Monday morning, my computer slipped from its normal “sleep mode” and into a deep coma. This became apparent after hitting the space bar and getting no reaction whatsoever, not counting a low-pitched whirring sound that

Gubernatorial Election 2010


Gubernatorial Election 2010


Will Gov. Rick Perry Have A Bad Reelection Hair Day In November 2010?


Will Perry Finally Take the Ferry From the Capitol?


Look, I know I have written a lot about the governor and how during the past seven years of his reign he mercilessly and maliciously has “flim-flammed” the good people of Texas.


“Mr. Good-Hair” has been a long-time topic of mine.


I know you folks out there must be saying, “Wow, this guy really has a vendetta against the governor.”


You know what? You

Where Did It All Go?


Where Did It All Go?


Yesterday was my son Pete

Venting About The Economy


Venting About The Economy


First of all, I want to thank you very much. I

Computers In Jeopardy?


Computers In Jeopardy?


I read the other day that IBM plans on having a computer compete against human contestants on the TV show, “Jeopardy!” The claim is that if the computer beats people, it will be a big leap forward in the field of artificial intelligence. It doesn

Dirty Words


WASHINGTON, D.C.

McCain Wusses Out On Torture Probe


WASHINGTON, D.C.

All The Words Of Tongue Or Pen On A Hot Night In Dallas


All The Words Of Tongue Or Pen On A Hot Night In Dallas


As Uncle Hugh used to say, “Most things never happen.”


I never got within 10 feet of her.


She was my Everett Sloan girl.


Sloan played Bernstein, Charles Foster Kane/Orson Welles

Madam Jane Predicts: Get Out Of Afghanistan & Get Out Now!


Madam Jane Predicts: Get Out Of Afghanistan & Get Out Now!


I seem to be feeling totally ambivolent and wishy-washy regarding the United States

Indigenous Peoples Denounce


ANCHORAGE, Alaska

Screw Spector! Remove The Filibuster!


Screw Spector! Remove The Filibuster!


So Sen. Arlen Spector of Pennsylvania is switching teams.


That

Sub Radiation Leaked Over Last Decade


LONDON, England

Cheney Called Out On


WASHINTON, D.C.

Air Force One Goes On Joyride


NEW YORK CITY, N.Y.

NYC-size Ice Collapses Off Antarctic


NEW YORK CITY, N.Y.

Obama Just Doesn’t Understand — Prez Still Mum On Copyright Treaty


Prez Still Mum On Copyright Treaty


DALLAS, Texas Sharing. It’s what our parents told us to do with our toys when the neighbor kids were visiting.


But to the European Union, Switzerland, Japan, Australia, the Republic of Korea, New Zealand, Mexico, Jordan, Morocco, Singapore, the United Arab Emirates, Canada, and the United States, forget about it.


They obviously had different parents.


Obviously, only because they haven’t told anybody about the super-secret Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement (ACTA) since first meeting to discuss it in 2006.


The ACTA would in effect criminalize peer-to-peer file sharing, even of intellectual property that has been purchased legally prior to said sharing over the Internet.


And all of this negotiating for it has been done behind closed doors with armed guards standing outside.


To the nerds that already knew about these secret meetings, however, President Barack Obama’s trade representative Ron Kirk in early April threw a bone that “reflects the Obama Administration’s commitment to transparency.”


Transparency under the Obama administration has been pretty much the same as transparency under the Bush administration since neither one has divulged the details of the ACTA; Bush just denied their release on “national security” grounds, though world officials have had access to private lobbyists who have drafted ACTA proposals.


Obama, carrying over Bush’s reasoning grounds, released his “detailed summary” only after Kirk’s appointment.


Knowledge Ecology International’s Freedom of Information Act request was denied in March after the intellectual-property research and advocacy group filed it in January thinking Obama’s presidency would be more transparent than Bush’s.


Still, as a frustrated Nate Anderson of ArsTechnica.com put it, the details in Kirk’s summary were “maddeningly few.”


“So what we get instead is a six-page outline of the issues that ACTA will cover, but stripped of any specific ideas that are being pushed in the negotiations,” he wrote. “While the list of issues is interesting to glance over, only ACTA’s approaches to those issues matter, and the document gives little hint about how things are shaping up.”


According to the Obama administration, the details were thin because the trade negotiations are in the early stages and to release any texts would jeopardize them and their good faith.


“A comprehensive set of proposals for the text of the agreement does not yet exist,” Kirk’s statement said.


Indeed, what the world knows of ACTA before leaked drafts of it were published by WikiLeaks.


The idea that governments will scan their borders for music downloaded illegally on citizens’ iPods has made the European Union categorically denounce this intention.


“EU customs, frequently confronted with traffics of drugs, weapons, or people, do neither have the time nor the legal basis to look for a couple of pirated songs on an i-Pod music player or laptop computer, and there is no intention to change this,” the EU said.


According to Kirk’s summary, the ACTA discussions revolve around information piracy that prioritizes comm

May 2009
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