Friday, 31 August 2012

Openness and self-censorship

"Instead of bringing us all together in an omnipresent, multi-faceted discussion, the internet instead has made sectarianism an almost default position. The nature of mass debate has become solely binary,"
says writer Patrick Ness in The Guardian. Funny enough he has a go at the comments in The Guardian's own website, but I really do think the comments apply elsewhere on the Internet. A culture of intolerance, fuelled by the (false) sense of anonymity that electronic communication provides, has a lot to do with it; astroturfing might well play a role, but I reckon any of us can be an idiot all by him or herself, regardless of someone artificially fanning the flames.
Not to self-censor is probably suicide these days. Intelligent people no longer need a censor's office to shut them up; that is the sorry state of public discourse these days. Sure, anyone is free to break ranks and speak his or her mind, but to do so all be him or herself may have even bigger costs. The age of transparency is fast becoming the age of the Panopticon.
How do we counter it?

Wednesday, 29 August 2012

Sorry, Ms. Jackson

 I have no idea why, but I like OutKast. Their stuff sits rather awkwardly alongside my usual diet of Dire Straits, Patti Smith and Credence Clearwater Revival.

Tuesday, 28 August 2012

Distraction

I have recently finished reading Bruce Sterling's 1998 cyberpunk novel, Distraction. There will soon be a review (busy days), and I am also creating a Wikipedia page for it - strangely, there isn't one already. That will hopefully soon be corrected.
Until then you might want to read Cory Doctorow's words of appraisal for the book, in Boing Boing. Or even better, just get the book and start reading.


Monday, 27 August 2012

Arctic sea ice coverage plunges to record low

Ars Technica has a good discussion article on the scary drop in Arctic sea ice cover. It is an interesting and thoughtful piece, and deserves reading; there are external factors at play here. However, this is the fact:
The obvious question on everyone's minds is where ice coverage will bottom out. The average from the first few decades of the satellite era is in the neighborhood of 7 million square kilometers, but this year is almost certain to see a bottom somewhere below 4 million. That's still a long way from an ice-free Arctic, but it's clear that we can't dismiss that scenario as being part of some distant, purely hypothetical future. A practically ice-free Arctic—one where shipping lanes consistently stay open for weeks—is likely to come even sooner.
Bets are off, and scenarios thought to be years away look around the corner. Time to pick up and re-read The World in 2050, and hope for the best

Sunday, 26 August 2012

Neil Armstrong

Late last night I heard the sad news that Neil Armstrong, first human ever to set foot on another planet, had passed away.
The media will be full of praise by now, so I'll refer you elsewhere if you're looking for an eulogy. Instead, here is a nice compilation of those amazing days in 1969.
We'll remember, Neil.

Friday, 24 August 2012

How The Dark Knight Rises should have ended

9gag, that evergreen source of giggles and puerile humour, has just linked to How It Should Have Ended's The Dark Knight Rise's finishes.
It is predictably brilliant, much better than The Guardian's whiny take on the same issue.

Wednesday, 22 August 2012

Selling faith

From September on, eBay will no longer allow users to buy or sell spells and tarot readings. Boo.

The BBC found someone who acquired a spell and was happy with the results, and someone from a Skeptics Society who proceeded to diss the concept on the basis of unproven efficacy of the services. This covered all their bases, but the real issue is why do people have these beliefs in the first place.
At first I was surprised these things could be acquired over the internet, but then it struck me: if you buy tangible things online, what's wrong it buying faith-based items over a broadband connection? It certainly makes more sense than buying a pair of jeans you never actually saw or tried on.

Of course it makes sense for eBay to stop carrying these services, just as it makes sense for Tesco's not to offer fortune telling to its customers: retailers cannot risk being seen as ready to make a fast buck out of baloney. That's bad for business, and is likely to land you in court, smeared with accusations of profiteering out of the ignorance and misplaced beliefs of some of the most fragile people in our society. But the fact that retailers will not carry spells and such things doesn't mean they are not for sale out there - these are probably the only kind of small retailer which does not fear the opening of a big box next door. Expect spell exchanges to crop up rather quickly, with a conveniently catchy URL.