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Google CEO Eric Schmidt says privacy isn't important, and if you want to keep something private, "maybe you shouldn't be doing it in the first place" (in other words, "innocent people have nothing to hide.")

Bruce Schneier calls bullshit with eloquence: "For if we are observed in all matters, we are constantly under threat of correction, judgment, criticism, even plagiarism of our own uniqueness. We become children, fettered under watchful eyes, constantly fearful that -- either now or in the uncertain future -- patterns we leave behind will be brought back to implicate us, by whatever authority has now become focused upon our once-private and innocent acts. We lose our individuality, because everything we do is observable and recordable."

But JWZ has the kicker, when he reminds us that Eric Schmidt's Google blackballed CNet's reporters after CNet published personal information about Schmidt's private life: ""Google representatives have instituted a policy of not talking with CNET News reporters until July 2006 in response to privacy issues raised by a previous story..." "To underscore its point about how much personal information is available, the CNET report published some personal information about Google's CEO Eric Schmidt -- his salary; his neighborhood, some of his hobbies and political donations -- all obtained through Google searches...."

Hey, Eric: if you don't want us to know how much money you make, where you live, and what you do with your spare time, maybe you shouldn't have a house, earn a salary, or have any hobbies, right?

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Pirate Party MEP Christian Engström is drafting an Internet Bill of Rights for introduction into the European Parliament, and he's seeking your advice on the language:

I will give a first draft of an answer to the first question: What sections should be in the Internet Bill of Rights?

1. Fundamental rights. The European Convention on Human Rights should be respected on the net as well, including Article 8 (the right to privacy) and Article 10 (information freedom).

2. Net neutrality. Internet operators should provide neutral connections without any restrictions on content, sites, platforms, or the kinds of equipment that may be attached.

3. Mere conduit. I return for providing net neutrality, Internet operators and other suppliers of information infrastructure should not be held responsible for the information exchanged by their clients.

These are my first suggestions. Are there any other areas that ought to be covered by an Internet Bill of Rights? The floor is open, and all suggestions and comments are welcome.

Let's write an Internet Bill of Rights (via The Command Line)
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Spanish Civil Guardsmen were dispatched to the Sigüenza Jazz Festival to gather evidence as to whether the Larry Ochs Sax and Drumming Core band were actually performing jazz or "contemporary music." Their attendance followed a complaint from a festivalgoer whose doctor "had warned it was 'psychologically inadvisable' for him to listen to anything that could be mistaken for mere contemporary music."
His complaint against the organisers, who refused to return his money, was duly registered and will be passed on to a judge.

"The gentleman said this was not jazz and that he wanted his money back," said the festival director, Ricardo Checa.

"He didn't get his money. After all, he knew exactly what group he was going to see, as their names were on the festival programme.

He added: "The question of what constitutes jazz and what does not is obviously a subjective one, but not everything is New Orleans funeral music.

"Larry Ochs plays contemporary, creative jazz. He is a fine musician and very well-renowned."

Spanish fan calls police over saxophone band who were just not jazzy enough
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Best archaeological finds of 2009

National Geographic rounds up its favorite archaeological finds of 2009, from vampire corpses to pirate booty:
8. Blackbeard Pirate Relics, Gold Found
A sword guard, tiny gold pieces, and a coin are among newfound artifacts from a shipwreck off North Carolina--shown in exclusive pictures. The discoveries, announced in March, add to evidence that the ship belonged to the pirate Blackbeard.

7. World War II "Samurai Subs" Found--Carried Aircraft
Two advanced Japanese "samurai subs" were found off Pearl Harbor in February and announced in November--including a stealth aircraft-carrying submarine and a supersleek vessel engineered for utmost speed.

Top Ten Archaeology Finds: Most Viewed of 2009 (Thanks, Marilyn!)
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This gentleman couldn't figure out why food was going missing in his high-storey NYC apartment. His girlfriend denied taking it. So he set up a hidden camera to see what was happening, and shortly thereafter, he saw a strange woman creep out of a deep storage crawlspace over the kitchen, let herself down onto the kitchen table and help herself to his pantry. He phoned the police (he was in the apartment), and they told him after investigating that they believed the woman had been secretly living in his apartment for weeks.

Creepy Creeper!

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SF author Mary Robinette Kowal sez,

Once upon a time, someone starting a new publishing house would either have a personal fortune or would seek large private investors. Crowdsourced fundraising allows the masses to chip in for projects they believe in.

Tu Publishing is worth getting behind. It is a small, independent multicultural SFF press for children and YA and they are raising money for startup costs right now. I've had the opportunity to correspond with Stacy Whitman, the force behind it, in my role as SFWA secretary and she's sharp, knows the industry and is passionate about YA and SF.

The catch is that the fundraiser only has four more days to go and they only have 40% of their total.

"Fantasy and science fiction, mystery and historical fiction--these genres draw in readers like no other. Yet it is in these genres that readers of color might feel most like an outsider, given that such a large percentage features white characters (when they feature human characters). It is the goal of Tu Publishing to publish genre books for children and young adults that fill this gap in the market--and more importantly, this gap in serving our readers. By focusing on multicultural settings and characters in fantastic stories, we also open up worlds to all readers."

Tu Publishing: a small, independent multicultural SFF press for children and YA (Thanks, Mary!)
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Calf with a cross on its head

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Praise be, this holy calf was born a week ago on a Sterling, Connecticut farm owned by Brad Davis. From WFSB:
Davis said, "Well, I think it's maybe a message from up above. I'm not sure. We're still trying to figure that out."

Megan Johnson of Sterling said, "Well I wasn't surprised. I wasn't surprised at all because the dairy industry has needed a miracle for a long time and this is it. I think it's divine intervention, personally. I'm in the breeding business and I know about reproduction and genetics and I don't think this could happen again in a million cows."

"Cow Born With Divine Symbol" (via Fortean Times)

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Avant garde music mag The Wire posted a fascinating compilation of computer music pieces, each programed with a Tweet-length piece of code. The 22 artists from around the world wrote their pieces in SuperCollider, an open source programming language for audio synthesis that many laptop musicians use to compose live during performances. The compilation is titled "Supercollider 140" and is released under a Creative Commons license. From The Wire:
 Images  Content Wp-Content Uploads 2009 11 Twitter-Music-140-Characters It started as a curious project, when live coding enthusiast and Toplap member Dan Stowell started tweeting tiny snippets of musical code using SuperCollider. Pleasantly surprised by the reaction, and "not wanting this stuff to vanish into the ether" he has recently collated the best pieces into a special download for The Wire's online readership...

Many of these pieces are actually generative, so if you re-run the source code (the track titles) you get a new piece of music.

SuperCollider 140 (SourceForge, via @chris_carter_)

"Best of Twitter tunes album released" (New Scientist)

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"If you have something that you don't want anyone to know, maybe you shouldn't be doing it in the first place. If you really need that kind of privacy, the reality is that search engines — including Google — do retain this information for some time... we are all subject in the United States to the Patriot Act..." —Google CEO Eric Schmidt, in 2009. Here's Bruce Schneier's response, from 2006.

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This gorgeous wasp sculpture, c.1980s by artist S. Allen, is for sale at Seattle's Great Stuff shop. It's 24" (h) x 34" (d) x 38" (w). The price is $4,500. "Centered around an industrial light bulb and hundreds of typewriter and printer parts, car door handles, sprockets and springs all assembled with fine-gauge wire; wings made from reclaimed 1/8" acrylic sheeting." Wasp Sculpture (Thanks, Michael-Anne Rauback!)
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Robot dance competition


Here's a competitor in the 6th Robo-One Gate dance competition, held in Tokyo in November 2009. I wonder if the rules require the robots to look like scary cyborg schoolgirls?

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Porn mogul Larry Flynt took the stand Tuesday for the first day of his federal trademark infringement trial against nephews Jimmy Jr. and Dustin, who have launched their own "Flynt" adult film company. "Inferior products" and "knock-off goods" were among the phrases the elder Flynt used to describe their films. "Your clients are focusing on the boob element, so to speak," he said in court. "I just think that's sort of passé, and guys are moving past that. That's only my opinion."

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petridishcookies.jpg

I don't know about you, but I've got multiple cookie exchange parties lined up in the coming weeks. If you're on the same page and need a clever idea or two, the NotSoHumblePie cooking blog has several great science-themed cookies, sure to make geeks, dorks and nerds smile.

Petri dish cookies are pictured above, but there's also:

Heavens, they're tasty! And educational!

(Aha! Pharyngula is apparently the reason half my friend list was emailing me about these today.)

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Disney English

Guestblogger Paul Spinrad is a freelance writer/editor, and is Projects Editor for MAKE magazine. He is the author of The VJ Book and The Re/Search Guide to Bodily Fluids, and was an early contributor to bOING bOING when it was an online zine. He lives in San Francisco. 

Last year, cultural empire Disney launched its first "Disney English" school for kids in Shanghai, China. It would be a big win for Disney if they could own English language learning in the non-English speaking world. Any Disney English schools in areas where their presence might be controversial could be constructed like castles, with real moats! Chinese TV news clip here and Disney English website here.

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This may be the best/most cynical Tiger Woods scandal t-shirt spotted so far (via Sean Bonner)

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bacontreecard.png These cute Christmas postcards featuring a tree made out of raw bacon are for sale on Etsy. The creator, Mike Geno, specializes in drawing meat — it makes me kind of sad that this is just a drawing. Can you imagine frying this tree and eating it for breakfast? Yum/barf.

[Etsy via Eat Me Daily]

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qahtani.jpg

063.jpgdetainee063.com: "This is the interrogation log of Mohammed al-Qahtani. It is being published in real time: each entry will appear exactly seven years after it was first recorded. The interrogation took place at Guantanamo Bay."

That is him in the photo above. He is still imprisoned in Guantanamo. The serialized logs are not for the faint of heart. By way of background, al-Qahtani was the first "war on terror detainee" the United States admitted to having tortured. Snip:

Over the course of the fifty days, Al-Qahtani, Detainee 063, is questioned by teams of interrogators working in shifts, typically for twenty hours a day. While individual entries of the log are sometimes brutal and unpleasant to read, what is particularly disturbing about the treatment Al-Qahtani receives is its relentlessness. By publishing the log in real time, this site is intended as a kind of re-enactment - to show how mistreatment which might not appear immediately as terrible as, for example, waterboarding, can nonetheless come to amount to nothing short of torture, how by being prolonged and unceasing it can become unbearable.

More about the project here. Apart from the brutality, it just gets really weird. Some of the entries go, "Played Christina Aguilera music," or,

Control began "birthday party" and placed party hat on detainee. Detainee offered birthday cake - refused. Interrogators and guards sing "God bless America". Detainee became very angry.

The entries are also available through an RSS feed and a Twitter account. To those of you in the US, remember that your tax dollars paid for every word of it. (thanks, Susannah Breslin)

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Ancient art for Eros from Rome and Greece now on display in Athens

"There's even a life-sized replica of a prostitute's kiosk!" exclaims the narrator in this Reuters video about a new exhibition of sexually explicit art from ancient Rome and Greece: Sex and the Citizens. (thanks, Cyrus)... more

Woman spray-paints own house with Hitler graffiti

Frustrated by recent run-ins with her homeowners association over her inability to pay dues, 45-year old Sheila Jones of Indian Harbour Beach, Florida spray-painted this message on the side of her house: "Hitler would be a welcome neighbor here. Stop the harassment to my family."... more

Swell Season's Low Rising

Swatch "Low Rising" is the lovely new single from The Swell Season, aka Glen Hansard and Markéta Irglová from the film Once. The song comes from their latest album, Strict Joy. Interestingly, the video was directed by Sam Beam, who is better known for his musical recordings under the name Iron & Wine. I... more

How the Afghanistan Air War Got Stuck in the Sky

In Wired Magazine, Noah Shachtman explores the air war in Afghanistan. "It starts with a squad of marines in Helmand province, locked in a 36-hour siege and waiting for 500 pounds of high-explosive relief to fall from the sky," Noah says. "Over the next week or so, I'll dive into details of the U.S.... more

Ad campaign for pro-assisted suicide group

Swatch An ad campaign for pro-assisted suicide group DignityInDeath.com features a series of park bench plaques telling stories of now-deceased people whose lives, it suggests, may not have been worth prolonging. One plaque is dedicated "to the glory of Kathleen (Kay) Mandell, who at age 32 was stricken ... more

Ray Bradbury's ode to the library that raised him, which just closed

"Libraries raised me. I don't believe in colleges and universities. I believe in libraries, because most students don't have any money. When I graduated from high school, it was during the Depression and we had no money. I couldn't go to college, so I went to the library three days a week for 10 ye... more

Uganda's proposed anti-gay death squads: could Rick Warren stop them?

Could Rick Warren stop Uganda's anti-gay legislation? Ethan Zuckerman thinks so.... more

DVD: 10 Rules for Dealing with the Police

Flex Your Rights is taking orders for its DVD, 10 Rules for Dealing with the Police. Price is $15. Here's the trailer. Through extensive collaboration with victims of police abuse, legal experts and law enforcement professionals, we’ve developed a powerful multi-language (English, Spanish & Arabi... more

Chano Domínguez at the Jazz Standard in New York (photo-essay)

(Boing Boing guestblogger Ned Sublette is an author, historian, photographer, and singer-songwriter who lives in New York City. His most recent book is "The Year Before The Flood." Photo above: Chano Domínguez, Dec. 3, Jazz Standard. Photos in this post: (c) 2009, Ned Sublette] In presenting hi... more

iPhone dummies for $19.95

iphonedummy.net sells just one thing: iPhone dummies for $19.95 (free shipping). Here's a video of some guys who superglued an iPhone dummy to the sidewalk in front of the new Wired retail store in NYC. iPhone dummies for sale... more

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Comments
  • "IIRC, total chaos is as boring as total order. What we have here is a special ratio of one to the other, I believe... Seems to me that this guy has created a perpetual motion machine. (for the most part)I can hear it, which suggests it could be even more 'high performance'. A far more solid stand, vacuum enclosure and magnetic bearings FTW...."
  • "This is so obviously fake. Forget all the people talking about her moving about in the video, in the "preamble" he clearly says "catch HER". HOW would he know it was a woman? ..."
  • "* Article the first All individuals should have equal rights to access to the internet for reading and writing data for their own use. [ I am not sure whether we should make exceptions even for people who may have been found guilty of doing damage by exercising these rights. Such people can probably cultivate an alias. The right to ban people from internet access will be hard to police and will probably give more injustice than it cures. Their 'own use' is intended to keep these rights from spamming organ..."
  • "Hi Cory, I wrote an open letter to Eric Schmidt about that interview. Privacy isn't necessarily about hiding things. It's about freedom, choice, about the user being able to draw a line somewhere. It is a human need and right. Google provides us with valuable services, but implicitly we pay by giving up (some) or our privacy. That exchange should never be implicit. It creates a fertile environment to 'Do evil'. http://vanelsas.wordpress.com/2009/12/09/an-open-letter-to-eric-schmidt/..."
  • "#5- Everyone with an opinion can be a founding father these days Although it's a lofty goal, there's very little evidence that some sort of democratic planetary consensus will grind out a universal, forward-thinking set of absolute rules and guidelines to which every country, Man and Woman will gladly adhere. The early days of the web, where amoral geeks ruled supreme our long gone. Internet commerce and advertising need to be monitored big time and regulated in a more serious way Vague ideas like "net n..."
  • "Of course people got the "right" answer. It's a 50/50 chance of guessing correctly.Given that only around 10% of people are homosexual, doesn't that complicate the odds somewhat? And given that I studied stats only a couple of years ago, I'm disappointed I can't remember how to get my head around such a basic problem : (..."
  • "Private Individuals Remonstrating Against Telecom Edicts?..."
  • ""Creepier still is that if she had cohabitated with him long enough, they'd be in a common-law marriage. Awkward." Useless fact: there is no common-law marriage in NY...."
  • "There have been complete Disney learner sets available in Japan (at a rather steep price, IIRC) since at least VCR days. My son is 17 now and I remember seeing these when he was in preschool. For that matter, my wife and I bought loads of Disney videos (regular movies, not education-oriented as such) during a trip to the US so that our son would have additional exposure to English. The point is that these were not the only exposure he had (his father's native tongue being English, for example). They could ..."
  • "@mdh - :) Preternaturally-Innovative Raconteurs Against Totalitarian Enforcement? Internet Speech is Free Speech Access for Life -- Access for All..."

 

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