Lazy press watch: Just what are "global communications," anyway?

Orwell advises against using the vague language found in the Independent’s story about the dead MI6 guy, saying Gareth Williams worked for an MI6 division that “eavesdrops on global communications.”

Better to have said “international calls and email messages,” or “between the UK and other countries.” “Global,” though often used, is so vague as to be meaningless.

The Independent (link and excerpt, below) also seems in a hurry to shoot down, based on no evidence either way, any suggestion the agent’s murder might be work-related:

The reality, however, is likely to be more mundane. Sources within the murder inquiry led by the Metropolitan Police’s Homicide and Serious Crime Command insisted that “the suggestion there are terrorism or national security links to this case is pretty low down the list of probabilities”. They are believed to be concentrating on Mr Williams’ private life.

via Mystery of the MI6 man who was found dead in his bath – Crime, UK – The Independent.

Smart appliances will tell Google when you rise, and hit the shower

Now that we know Google — the search engine giant and revolving door operation for CIA analysts — has been spying on Wi-Fi laptop users, we can expect corporations and governments to next target so-called smart appliances: toasters, clock radios (such as this prototype, left) and dishwashers connected directly to the Internet.

Add these gadgets to the smart meters being promoted by the likes of the Boston-based “consumer group,” ConsumerUnited.com (actually, the organization lists utility companies as its “partners”), and you will find it impossible to flip a switch in your house without someone knowing about it.

Here’s a bit from my column this week, below the fold, about a Wi-Fi (and therefore, apparently, vulnerable) alarm clock that factors-in your commute time, and the time it takes you to shave and shower before work, to calculate when you wake up:

“The Dynamically Programmable Alarm Clock will not make getting out of bed easier. But it will do a better job than your current bedside gadget to make sure you’re on time for that meeting.

The DPAC (egaertner.com/dpac), as its developers at Northeastern University call it, connects to Google Calendar via Wi-Fi. It then grabs your first task of the day as a starting point for its calculations.”

Note: Special thanks to Alan Watt (and his Cutting Through the Matrix listeners) for sharing your thoughts about my research, here.

via Power up, with juice from the yard – The Boston Globe.

Dio spent a career warding off the evil eye

My wife, Lisa, an Italian, knew what the ubiquitous heavy metal hand signal meant.

Dio’s “devil horns” were meant to ward-off the malocchio:

“But Dio, says Young, explained that he was taught the so-called corna sign by his Italian grandmother, as a way to scare off the ‘evil eye’, a look which is said to cause bad luck. It’s like knocking on wood for superstitious purposes (more on this meaning at bottom of page).”

via BBC News – Dio’s two-finger gesture – what does it mean?.

Copycat killers use knives, where guns are scarce

Consumerism doesn't work for everyone. Photo: Ernie/Flickr CC

The latest attacks suggest that middle-aged men are struggling to cope in capitalist China. — MB

Loren Coleman suspects the wave of school killings by older males that horrified the Chinese in April, hasn’t ended:

“I have pointed out that in China and Japan, due to their strict firearms laws, such countries tend to manifest their ‘copycat school violence’ in terms of ‘stabbing’ series. Will this current stabbing spree spread to Japan or other Asian nations?”

The attacks, as Coleman suggests (noting what precipitated the attacks, and how they ended), probably reflect an increase suicidal behavior amongst Chinese men, many of whom are struggling to get ahead within their new, ruthless, economy.

Japan and South Korea already lead much of the world in suicides.

Alas, the most recent World Health Organization data for China is 11 years old.

In 1999, the suicide rate for men over 65 was four-to-five times higher than for their middle-aged cohorts. My bet is that the 40-something set has been closing that gap.

via Twilight Language: 3 Days, 3 Attacks.

Attention unimaginative bloggers: IBM app spits out topics to write about

Every writer could use a muse, sometimes. Photo: Ygor Oliveira/Flickr CC

You might think a roomful of monkeys could generate most of the blog posts you read.

But IBM Research has got it all down to a single program. Called Blog Muse, it generates topics for you to write about, based upon what audiences are asking for.

Blog muse isn’t an artificial brain. Rather than tapping that roomful of monkeys for raw material, however, it crowd-sources requests for stories from the naked apes in your community. (Read the paper about Blog Muse, which is being presented at computer conferences this winter and spring, below.)

IBMers Werner Geyer and Casey Dugan created Blog Muse.

Dugan studied at MIT, under the computer science giant, and Creative Commons founding director, Hal Abelson. She is working IBM’s Beehive Project, which aims to influence social networking behavior.

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Interested in tech from the Hub? Check out this week’s User Friendly

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Comic teaches you an esoteric thing, or two

Find your way to the whole comic, by Andy Carolan, at Binnall of America. (Click on the image to get to the BoA site. You will find a link to the column at the lower right-hand side of the page.)

The latest installment of Andy Carolan’s web comic, Disclosure,  is dedicated to Hub esotericist and podcasting sensation, Tim Binnall.

It tells the story of the discovery of an anomalous, narrow-beam radio signal detected by Earth-based observers in the early 1970s.

via binnallofamerica.com.

Latin America to UN drug warriors: Put this in your pipe, and smoke it

Photo: Esparta Palma/Flickr CC

Mexico, Argentina and Brazil are winding-down their roles in the no-win-scenario, war on drugs being waged (purportedly on Latin America’s behalf) by the United States.

And the UN is frustrated:

“The Vienna-based International Narcotics Control Board (INCB), in its annual report released today, stated its concern over Latin America’s “growing movement to decriminalize the possession of controlled drugs, in particular cannabis.”

via UN: Latin America undermining drug war by decriminalizing drugs / The Christian Science Monitor – CSMonitor.com.

Privacy alert: Will dummies buy the fed's "smart meter" line?

Gotcha! Through smart metering, utilities and the feds will widen their nets. (Photo: McKay Savage/Flickr CC)

The word “privacy” appears not once, in a 1,500-word request for public comment on the smart grid, released by the White House this week.

That’s because your individual privacy is the obstacle that the government, aided by the utility companies, hopes to overcome with so-called smart meters — devices that will reveal precisely how you are using the electricity you paid for.

Research into the smart grid, which includes the use of smart meters, has been paid for by hundreds of millions of your tax dollars.

So far, the only discernible benefits of the smart meters will go to the utility companies and government investigators. (No potential savings for consumers have been demonstrated.)

One question from the Office of Science and Technology does glance on the privacy issue:

“Who owns the home energy usage data? Should individual consumers and their authorized third-party service providers have the right to access energy usage data directly from the meter?”

Obviously, individual consumers own the juice they pay for, not the utilities. Therefore, they should own the data on where it goes on their property, be it to their electric heaters or marijuana grow bulbs.

But if the government was truly concerned about individual privacy, the same question would read:

“Should individual consumers *OR* their authorized third-party service providers have the right to access energy usage data directly from the meter?”

I believe the question is not written that way because the utility companies — just like the phone companies and ISPs — are not on the consumer’s side. Rather, they have a track record of collaborating with the authorities in their investigations of “suspicious behavior,” which typically means using a lot of electricity.

via Consumer Interface With the Smart Grid (at Cryptome)

Second Life: It's not just for sex, anymore

Nothing to see, here. Photo: Akasuki Redstar/Flickr CC

At least that’s the Linden Lab line.

Linden CEO, Mark Kingdon, says you shouldn”t trust your lying eyes, when it appears that the highest number of users are hanging around the naughtiest places

He blames the grid’s layout:

When asked to explain why the adult areas appeared to be much busier than the rest of the map, Kingdon said it was down to the unusual geography of the Second Life map. “Second Life is a fascinating construct. There are mainland areas like [the adult continent] Zindra, where there’s large contiguous land masses and that isn’t actually the majority of land in Second Life.

via PC Pro

Location awareness: From your desktop, find friends on the square

Hooked on Foursquare, the locative, social networking tool for mobile devices? Now, you can now track your friends from the relative comfort of your Mac desktop or laptop.

Folks use Foursquare (http://foursquare.com) to arrange lunch dates at their favorite joints. They can also unlock points and freebies, such as free cups of coffee, at some of these places.

The new application for Macs, FoursquareX (http://codebutler.github.com/foursquarex) uses the Snow Leopard operating system’s Core Location feature, to quickly notify you when your friends have “checked-in” at one of your favorite venues.

Core Location is based on the Wi-Fi locative software from Boston-based Skyhook Wireless Inc. (http://skyhookwireless.com)