Nixon politics

George | politics | Sunday, September 7th, 2008

Citizen Rat said:

Sup Nixon-Rove politics of resentment, how are you today? If/when Obama loses it’ll be because of this. People will resent the fact that he has succeeded and they have not. Voting for Palin, and they are voting for not McCain but for her, will be a way for them to stick it to those who have succeeded because she’s just as much of a white trash fuck up as they are.

This is important for any democrat to understand. The Republican party, after Nixon, learned that they could win by presenting themselves as joe-regular guy.

RIP Fannie Mae & Freddie Mac

George | business, politics | Saturday, September 6th, 2008

The two companies that own or guarantee half of the nations $12 TRILLION dollars worth of Mortgage debt are likely going to be effectively nationalized.

What does this mean? 1) Any shares or bonds with FNM or FRE are going to be next to worthless. 2) The American tax payer is going to eat this. 3) your money market funds are secure.

I don’t really know what should have been done. Americans are having a mega-exodus from credit mentality yet our entire economy relies on credit. Our economy relies on it’s growth, it borrows on our growth, yet the growth can’t happen without credit. If we completely get out of debt, we’re screwed. Yet we cannot contain our debt without inflation. In the long run, individuals get screwed.

Basic advice: Get out of debt and learn a trade skill.

Participation

George | politics | Monday, September 1st, 2008

There aren’t many things that get people riled up anymore. The only thing that seems to elicits super-human efforts is the abstract pursuit called our day jobs, second only to some lucky families. There’s a lot of other worthy places to put our toils. Like gardening or supporting Obama.

Change Congress

George | politics | Thursday, August 7th, 2008

Please watch this video of copyright lawyer Lawrence Lessig presenting his new project: Change Congress.

His premise is that until we remove the money from the job of Congress-person we’ll never be able to trust Congress to work for us. It’s worth a listen and it really resonates at a time like this, when only 9% of Americans believe that Congress is doing a satisfactory job.

Car Culture in Ohio

Andrea | politics | Wednesday, July 30th, 2008

A few weeks ago, I went to a Toyota dealership to look at their Priuses. Really, I’d rather not have to have a car at all, but I just moved to Ohio and cars are pretty much a necessity of life here. This is the land of multi-car families, where car-pooling is practically nonexistent, and most vehicles stuck in traffic during rush hour have one driver and no passengers. Hell, there was a time when my parents owned seven cars (one for each driver in the family and one extra, just for good measure).

Ohio loves its cars, and doesn’t seem to think too much about what those cars mean to the environment, the economy, and U.S. foreign policy. So, it wasn’t too surprising when the saleswoman at Toyota tried to sway me away from the Prius towards a Camry or Corolla. I tried to explain to her that I was only interested in the hybrid, when my dad interrupted in a “don’t mind her” fashion, to tell the woman I’d just moved from San Francisco. The saleswoman sighed, “Oh… you’re one of those ‘green’ people.”

From there, the conversation strayed away from interest rates and incentives. The saleswoman was astounded when it dawned on her that I didn’t have a car in San Francisco and that this would be the first car I’d ever owned. She wanted to know how I got around without a car, did I just take taxis everywhere? Imagine her surprise when I told her I walked as much as possible and took public transportation. She laughed and said, “Yeah, we sure are spoiled around here. I tell you, I just hate to walk. When I first started working here, you should have heard me when they showed me how far away the employee parking lot is from the office. I was like, ‘You expect me to walk all that way?!’” At that point, I realized she and I were never going to understand each other and she was not going to help me get a Prius. My dad, a man who sees cars as necessary tools and doesn’t see owning a car as a complex issue, was not at all pleased at my disinterest in any other car and grudgingly took me home. Thus ended my first and only car-shopping experience.

One thing I didn’t know before visiting the dealership was that every Prius in America is made in Japan. I’d never even thought about that, but it totally pissed me off. The best bet we have for an environmentally responsible car is shipped here from across the Pacific, loaded on trains or car-carriers at Los Angeles or Oakland, and then trucked all the way across the country? How is that possible? I’d be interested to see how close the emissions from the ship’s oil and the truck’s diesel come to negating the benefits of the bio-plastic and hybrid engine of the Prius.

Most Americans don’t have much of a choice when it comes to modes of transportation. Sprawl has eliminated the option of walking to work, school, and shopping. Public transportation is spotty and unreliable in all but major cities. Moving to a metropolis is out of the equation for most people, and they are left no choice but to drive. So why aren’t there better choices for what we can drive? It’s sad that the best we can do are hybrid vehicles that still rely at least partially on fossil fuels. As a consumer, it’s extremely frustrating to be at the mercy of the auto manufacturers and feel forced to give up on values I feel very strongly about, just so I can get around.

But really, the auto industry isn’t solely to blame. The situation this country is in right now is a result of a corrupt political machine which values the interests of lobbyists over all other concerns, a national epidemic of abysmal city planning, and, most importantly, a populace disconnected from their community and the world at large. Incubated in a world of plastic and glass, Americans today live in literal and metaphorical bubbles, traveling between the manufactured realities of their cookie-cutter suburb to their cube-and-fluorescent-light cage to their local big box superstore where they can buy prepackaged meat and shrink-wrapped vegetables and anonymous clothing. We know more about the contestants on American Idol than we do our own Supreme Court. We breathe filtered air for the majority of our day and only see the real world through the glass of our windshields.

Remind me again why I was going to buy a car?

Virtually Homeless

george | humor, politics, video games | Wednesday, December 6th, 2006

Second Life Homeless KidThe Spain-based NGO Mensajeros de la Paz will be present in the virtual world of Second Life as a homeless teenager avatar named MensajerosDeLaPaz Jubilee. The avatar will have no belongings except for some paper, a cardboard box and and a sign that reads ‘Help a child have a second oportunity in his First Life.’

Maybe if we gave homeless children paypal accounts and blogs they could do some online begging.

Dear blog readers, please give me money. -George

TiVoToGo DRM Reportedly Cracked

george | hacking, politics, technology | Monday, December 4th, 2006

According to TivoLovers, a livejournal Tivo blog, the TiVoToGo DRM protection which halted users’ attempts to play their TiVo Recordings on multiple devices has been cracked. The SourceForge page for the crack has C source available for download. Running the command line program on a .tivo file will convert it into a DRM-stripped MPEG file. Additional documentation on the project, as well as information about the algorithm used are available on the project’s wiki.

This breakthrough comes on the heels of tensions between entertainment studios and TiVo with the release of TiVo’s TiVoToGo service. Despite networks concern over mobile viewing of their content, TiVo has been snuggling up to networks providing commercial ratings and forced commercial viewing despite TiVo’s previous blind-eye towards the modding and hacking community. I think we’ll see a lot more regarding this powder keg of content distribution in the future. Keep checking back to laternerdz for more coverage.

Update: according to the project page, “The conversion still requires the valid MAK of the TiVo which recorded the file, so it cannot be used to circumvent their protection, simply to provide the same level of access as is already available on Windows.”

Economist Predicts Taxation of Online Game Assets

george | politics, technology, video games | Monday, December 4th, 2006

“Given growth rates of 10 to 15 percent a month, the question is when, not if, Congress and IRS start paying attention to these issues,” said Dan Miller, a senior economist with the Congress’ Joint Economic Committee, who is also a fan of virtual worlds. “So it is incumbent on us to set the terms and the debate so we have a shaped tax policy toward virtual worlds and virtual economies in a favorable way.”

Anyone who has followed MMORPGs knows that the economy of these games have been blowing up since Everquest. Years ago the economy of everquest was rated higher than some real countries. Read this story with a grain of sensationalist salt, however, as it’s only one economist’s prediction. Expect more coverage of this topic here in the future.

Read more.

Pretexting, Social engineering ban stopped by MPAA

george | hacking, politics, technology | Friday, December 1st, 2006

A California bill outlawing the use of pretexting, or telling someone you’re someone else to obtain records and information about that person, has been stopped by lobbyists of the MPAA.

Written by state Sen. Debra Bowen, SB1666 would have prevented investigators or other enterprising persons from making “false, fictitious or fraudulent” statements in order to obtain otherwise private information about an individual. Under the bill, victims would have had the right to sue for damaged.
Goons from the MPAA, or the Motion Picture Association of America, stopped the bill after an initial vote of 30-0 in favor. After the MPAA intervened citing investigations into piracy that would be halted by such a bill, the vote changed to 33-27.

This vote occured 2 days before the HP board pretexting investigation.

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