Recently, in the massively multiplayer online role-playing game A Tale in the Desert, an uproar erupted after an in-game trader declared that he would not sell to women and then inquired whether one female character was for sale...LinkOften though, such in-world tension is the result of member behavior many see as antisocial, and player communities frequently get into highly charged discussions -- both on official game forums and on unofficial blogs -- about what to do. In some cases, players threaten legal action against other players or even against the developers.
In-game free speech
Dueling e-voting press-conferences
1.) problems including "touchy" touch-screen machines -- e.g., machines that "light up" for the wrong candidate in the summary screen; machines failing and polling officials running out out paper ballots, as they did in New Orleans; and Sequoia machines showing a "default" choice that voters must correct;Link2.) which states appear to have had the most trouble and how to analyze the reports from the Election Incident Reporting System (EIRS);
3.) how to understand the elections data gathered on Election Day in the context of past elections; and
4.) why a paper audit trail may be the best solution for some of the problems that are coming up, especially as we head into vote tallying later this evening.
First-person voter accounts on Metroblogging
Overheard in line at my polling place this morning.... "I think all the ones with the white headphones are voting for Kerry."Link
DIY Election lawsuit HOWTO
Moment of LA election day phonecam zen
I voted in person today using ink and paper, inside this church. No eat-your-vote machines in sight -- though thousands of voters did use them in early voting procedures here in LA county. None of those had paper trails, but local election supervisors claim they were built with "systemic triple redundancy" to prevent errors (right).My short-term memory sucks, so I spent some time over the weekend reading up on obscure ballot measures and scribbling notes on a cheat sheet so I could just walk in, fill in the dots, then leave.
When I showed up at the voting site mid-day, there were no lines -- just bored volunteer pollsters gnawing on pizza crusts, and a few betruckerhatted hipsters brooding over ballots in booths. I filled mine out in a few minutes, then handed it in to an elderly black lady seated behind a card table covered with jolly ranchers and sweet tarts (either voting incentives or Halloween leftovers, or both).
"That was fast!" she said. I told her I'd spent time at home thinking about my choices, and already knew what I'd vote for when I arrived. "That's right, honey," she said. "If people don't know what they want by now, just when do they plan to know?" Link to full-size phonecam snapshot of my polling site in LA's Silverlake neighborhood.
Over on Dan Gillmor's blog, there are dispatches from a less tranquil precinct: Columbus, Ohio. Dan says, "Chris Kelly, a Bay Area lawyer, is one of the Democrats who's traveled to Ohio this week to keep an eye on the Republican ballot-challengers." Link. Dan also shares his first-person account of Bay Area e-voting misinfo and long lines here.
Chow magazine debuts
And now, here is CHOW. We consider it the tolling bell of a food revolution. You’ll see that our stories are more entertaining, our photos more realistic (and messier), our reporting deeper, our instructions clearer, and maybe most important, our subjects a lot more far-flung than what food magazine readers are used to seeing.
Link
RU Sirius interview about his new book, Counterculture Through the Ages: From Abraham to Acid House
Here's an interview with RU Sirius about his new book, Counterculture Through the Ages: From Abraham to Acid House
RU has a blog about the book, too.
Cool book. It offers a fresh historical perspective that covers a lot of ground, but at the same time it’s a pretty easy read.
RU: Yeah, I think it does the job of establishing that there is this stream; a spirit really, that runs through history. Several spirits perhaps. This non-authoritarian, non-conformist, antic, changeable character, or community of characters, keeps coming up throughout human history. Sometimes they show up as artists or anti-artists, sometimes as religions or spiritual path; sometimes as a political revolution or change, sometimes as a scientific movement, sometimes as nihilism. Some seem to contradict others; representing opposite political sides. Or they represent opposite attitudes towards civilization and technological development – that comes up quite a bit. And yet, I think the book shows various memetic lines of transmission that sometimes seem to run in parallel and sometimes seem to criss-cross.
I hope it’s an easy read. It’s my (you’ll pardon the word) most serious book, but I tried to have some fun with it. People are telling me they laughed quite a bit. History books aren’t usually funny, although Jacques Barzun has a pretty good sense of humor. Barzun hugely influenced me in the writing of this book. He’s kind of a conservative guy, a historian, who thinks we’ve gone to far in the pursuit of “emancipation.” But he’s pretty permissive with himself as a writer. He writes with a sort of puckish style that belies his conservatism. I took that as permission to do a bit of what comes natural to me anyway.
How did you come up with the idea?
RU: It was a gift. Really, this came from my coauthor Dan Joy in concert with Timothy Leary. They provided the entire map, Dan particularly. I had to fill most of it in. This was a great process of discovery for me personally.
So it’s got kind of a Learyesque spin on the notion of counterculture. I actually tried to mitigate that somewhat, because I wanted to be sure that it was very inclusive. (It should include people who would never dream of freezing their heads!) But that basic dna – Think For Yourself and Question Åuthority (Leary’s slogan through the ‘80s and ‘90s) – is already pretty inclusive, so it wasn’t difficult.
I think constantly about how it could have been approached differently, and I can think of lots of approaches that would also be valid. I’m sure the most shit that Dan and I will take will be from counterculture types who feel we missed some major point, or didn’t include their pet epoch, or didn’t mention or say enough about this counter-subculture or that one. But I *want* that kind of shit, if it’s intelligent. I expect some passionate objections particularly to my coverage of the late 20th Century. I will be disappointed if there isn’t passionate objection. No authentic counterculture person should be completely satisfied with my take – no ditto-heads. But all ought to be flexible enough to find value in the book, I think, once they get over the fact that I didn’t mention the Radical Faeries or the Zippies or DJ Scrotum or whatever. There was just no way to do justice to every interesting mutant breed in that densely populated century. Maybe we’ll follow up with something more encycleopedic. I’m up for doing that at some point.
You’re pretty critical also of some countercultures. You don’t hold back.
RU: Well, I held back a little, but I didn’t want to just do a cheerleading book. That would have been boring for me. In turn, it would have been boring for the reader. So yeah, I was pretty rough on a few movements -- the ultraleft of the late 1960s for instance. I was part of it. You always hurt the ones you love. But I was honestly appalled when I went back and read the rhetoric of “The Revolution” circa ’69 or ’70. The problem wasn’t with their radicalness but their absurd level of self-importance. This sort-of “We came together as righteous dope-smoking motherfuckers stomping the plastic pig nation under the heels of our wild acid-drenched beatle boots ready to smash Amerikkka with our guns and bombs and rock and roll.” That sort of thing. Well, we were the boomers, you know. Self-impressed.
The book does strike a somewhat more conciliatory, careful, considered tone than most of your other work.
RU: Yeah. I suppose it’s true that some of my stuff doesn’t read too differently from the righteous acid-drenched beatle-booted fascist insect stompers. “Considered” is a good word for it. I was really aware that my assignment wasn’t to rant, but to see deeper into these things, and think a little bit harder about these things, and write a legitimate history… even if it does get whimsical in spots.
I think this is a really great book for straight people. (Not in the gay sense, but in the people who aren’t hip sense.) I want to emphasize this. I feel that I addressed this book to an educated, moderate, middle-class American; “Here’s something that’s worth thinking about Soccer mom”… at least the one’s that like to read and think a bit. At the risk of sounding like too much of a salesman, buy this book for your parents or kids who don’t get it. I just really happen to think that’s true. I can’t wait for my own relatives to insert it into their brains.
I’m frightened that it’s not going to ever reach that audience. I just hope it penetrates somehow.
Earlier you said that you think about different potential approaches. Like what?
RU: I could have harkened back to matrilineal societies much discussed by anthropologists and various feminists, neo-pagans, modern primitives, etcetera. These presumed pre-authoritarian origins as opposed to non-or-anti-authoritarianism within the context of what we call history. Our take is sort of Western, sort of post-enlightenment, although it also slices and dices and scrambles a lot of that basic software. Right now I’m reading a transgender history by Leslie Feinberg that casts back to matriarchy and shamanism and various other “primitive” cultures. I would call that a history of counterculture, of a particular sort. I admire it.
In defense of our approach, I would say only that ours can include the modern primitives, and also include Zen, Sufism, The Troubadours, western anarchism, cyberpunk, punk rock, cubism, Voltaire, ad infinitum. Whereas a modern primitive approach would be just that. And I think it’s been written in different ways by Terence McKenna, by Riane Eisler, and by Feinberg. It’s all good. Let a thousand histories of counterculture bloom!
Tiny Humans update #6 - religious implications
In theory, the existence of Mini-Man should destroy religion, but I can already hear the fanatics claiming that he has been put on earth by the Devil.Link (Thanks, Aggressively Shy Stick Insect Hunter!)
And Stefan Jones sez: "Bounced the news about the Wee Folk off of David Brin. Apparently, he'd already been discussing it with some fans, some of whom were creationists. His comment, which I quite like:"
"I find it truly stunning how many people can shrug off stuff like this, preferring instead a tiny, cramped cosmos just 6,000 years old, scheduled to end any-time-now in a scripted stage show. An ancient and immense and ongoing cosmos is so vastly more dramatic and worthy of a majestic Creator. Our brains, capable of exploring His universe, picking up His tools and doing His work, seem destined for much more than cowering in a corner, praying that some of our neighbors will go to hell..."
Bomb threats reported at AZ polling sites
It's on Phoenix, Arizona TV news right now... haven't found any links yet. They are moving polling stations around. School is being canceled (children in buses are being diverted) because the threats are directed at schools with voting. Police say the voices were of two adult males.Link
Update: Links to news stories: Tucson Citizen, and KOLD (Thanks, Mike Gillis)
In other news: It's a miracle! The first-ever immaculate election. CBN, a Christian TV network run by Satan the 700 Club just called it for Bush. Quoth Pat Robertson, on preliminary exit poll data: "Safe to say Bush is the winner." Those of us in the reality-based community will have to wait a while for results. (Thanks, Sean)
Low-tech voting snafu: whups, the Kerry lever broke
A low-tech election snafu in Pennsylvania, reported by my husband (currently in line waiting to use the backup voting machine): The Kerry lever broke off. I hope this bodes well. Unfortunately, the voter who experienced the problem pulled the lever to cast his vote before asking for assistance, and did not vote in any other races.Link
Heartwarning paper vote story
With all the bad stuff getting reported, I just wanted to let you all know about my good experience today voting in my second presidential election. I live in Astoria, New York, so I guess no one's trying to mess with the election here.Link (Thanks, Jeremy!)I work nights and get off around 3 AM. By the time I bike home, it's about 3:30 AM, so I figured I'd just stay up, get to my polling place early and vote when the polls opened. I left the house around 5:25 AM. I was pretty tired.
I got to the polling place and was disappointed to find about 10 people out front. I wanted to be first. So I waited about ten minutes until the school janitor came and opened the doors. We all walked into the gym and I watched as the voting machines were rolled into place and various set-up activities happened.
I stood with a group of people in the front of the gym, where a lady was checking some cards. They didn't look like my card and I was worried. I waited near the end of the line and the lady got to me. I realized that these were all poll workers and said I wasn't one. So I went and waited in the lobby.
Ten more minutes passed and at 6 AM the lady let those of us waiting (about 30 now) come in to vote. I walked up to my election district machine, showed my card, had some banter with the workers and a girl behind me, they filled out my card, put it in and I was the first person to vote.
I went in and, let me tell you, I don't know what kind of setup your state has, but New York doesn't have pansy-ass touch screens, punch cards or check boxes. We've got a Big Red Lever! You pull this monster to the right. Then you flip black switches next to your choice. Then, and this is fun because you get to touch the Big Red Lever again, you flip the Big Red Lever back to the left to finish voting.
That Big Red Lever made me feel secure. My vote was entered, I said thank you to the poll workers and headed back to my home at 6:15 AM with a spring in my step and a Big Red Lever in my heart. I'm pretty tired now, but I'm going to stay up tonight and watch the returns and dream tonight of a Big Red Lever.
HOWTO get music off your iPod
Vote Save Error #9 photo
Link to full-size snapshot of voting machine error message. Blogger and BB reader Megan Powell says, "Perhaps the most disturbing thing about this is the implication that there are (at least) eight other errors."Want to know what this image is? It's a picture I took with my cellphone-camera of an electronic voting machine screen. I took it today when I went down to vote for the next President of the Unites States in Santa Clara California. The screen says "Vote Save Error #9. Use the Backup Voting Procedure." A news crew was on hand to film Californians using the voting machines. I pointed to this particular screen and said "There's your story - right there. I just took a picture of the screen and plan to share it with 6.4 billion of my closest friends on the Internet tonight. I suggest you do the same." To my astonishment, the cameraman did shoot some footage of the screen, though I don't know what was shown later on television.
Now that I've told you the story behind the picture, I need not mention the maelstrom of thoughts that go through my head whenever I look at it - the picture is testament enough. The next revolution will not be televised. The next revolution will be blogged.
Voting with paper in Santa Clara is hard and uncertain - UPDATED
If you intend to cast a paper ballot today, please be ready for an adventure. This morning in Santa Clara, Vickie and I signed in the way we always do and requested paper ballots. Hilarity ensued: attempting to vote on paper caused a flurry of activity: oh-no-you're-not, you-have-to-vote-with-the-machine, what's-your-major-malfunction-mister, and other clucking noises.Link (Thanks, Kent!)There was no "votamatic" machine for paper ballots any longer; we had to enter a plain brown cardboard voting station that looked exactly like a refrigerator carton and mark our ballots with a pen. (Pen not supplied; bring your own.) I was first in line; after marking my ballot I approached the desk and asked the Nice Lady on the end if I should put it into the box. She nodded and smiled at me, so in it went.
Then I turned to look at Vickie and the rest of the line and noticed they all had big pink envelopes to put their ballots into when they were done. A tiny peanut-sized bulb flickered to life inside my brain. I went to the stack and checked, and sure enough: the big pink envelope said PROVISIONAL BALLOT on it. It had several choices to check: you had no ID, you had moved after the registration deadline, or were Otherwise Unclean. The Other Nice Lady--the one who had her act together--was making everybody who voted on paper seal it inside the provisional ballot envelope, even though there was no "I HAVE BEEN REGISTERED VOTER IN THIS PRECINCT SINCE 1987 AND I AM CHOOSING TO VOTE ON PAPER DAMMIT" box to check.
Further hilarity ensued: Vickie is a lawyer with a long history of political activism, so there was much back-and-forth between her and the Other Nice Lady, who then got on the phone with Headquarters and came back with the following ruling: we were all to mark our paper ballots, seal them in pink envelopes, and don't worry about filling out our names and addresses on the envelopes. Somehow--the nebulous theory goes--the election workers will be able to magically detect the paper ballots filled out by properly identified voters and pull them out to be counted tonight.
We left the station feeling VERY unsure that our votes would be counted.
If I was a busy election worker tonight, I'd just grab all those pink envelopes and heave them into the Provisional stack. And if I was the guy at the Provisional Counting Station, I'd have to seriously consider trashing all those envelopes without names and addresses filled in on the form on the outside. That's the point of a provisional ballot envelope, after all: to make it possible for them to verify your right to vote.
Update: Wirehead sez, "I'm in Santa Clara for this election and I got up early to vote, by paper if possible. The EFF isn't blowing smoke -- They aren't asking you if you want paper ballots. There's a single, dunce-cap of a voting area for those who ask for paper and clearly not enough paper ballots. To top it off, there's two stickers -- one for if you voted using an eat-my-vote machine, the other for if you voted with paper."
Update #2: Ben Delong sez, "I'm assuming you're having people with voting issues either call 1-866-OUR-VOTE (Kent probably should have while at the precinct), or make an online report at http://voteproblem.org, Must spread the word!! ;)"
Lab Notes from UC Berkeley
Link* Animating slime, mud, and blood
* Nanopores detect disease
* Computationally comparing rats, flies, and people
Genetically-enhanced jocks
"Gene doping could someday provide extra copies of genes that offer a competitive advantage, such as those that increase muscle mass, blood production, or endurance. The products of gene doping would be proteins similar, if not identical, to the body's versions and would therefore be less detectable in an athlete than are performance-enhancing drugs such as steroids and insulin. Consequently, rules against gene doping might be difficult to enforce."Link
1,000,000 copies of Eminem's Mosh served by archive.org
Small World photo winner
MIT electrical engineering grad student Seth Coe-Sullivan won Nikon's 2005 Small World Photomicrography Competition with this shot. The image depicts quantum dot nanocrystals that Coe-Sullivan was studying for possible use in light bulbs and cell phone. Each "coffee bean" shape is approximately the diameter of a human hair. From MIT's press release:
"The natural world is what created the art, much more than I did. I was just there to observe it," said Coe-Sullivan.Link
Diebold voting machines hacked -- unplug the modems NOW
New information indicates that hackers may be targeting the central computers counting our votes tomorrow. All county elections officials who use modems to transfer votes from polling places to the central vote-counting server should disconnect the modems now.Link (Thanks, David!)There is no down side to removing the modems. Simply drive the vote cartridges from each polling place in to the central vote-counting location by car, instead of transmitting by modem. "Turning off" the modems may not be sufficient. Disconnect the central vote counting server from all modems, INCLUDING PHONE LINES, not just Internet.
Kevin Sites Iraq photoblog: Things They Carry
Blogger and NBC combat correspondent Kevin Sites is in Iraq, traveling with the 214 Marines Reserves, from Dallas Texas, currently based at Camp Abu Graib near Falluja. He asks the soldiers, "What do you carry for comfort or luck in the war zone?," and photoblogs each reply. Link
Police punches, harasses photographer documenting FL elections
A widely published investigative journalist was tackled, punched and arrested Sunday afternoon by a Palm Beach County sheriff's deputy who tried to confiscate his camera outside the elections supervisor's headquarters. About 600 people were standing in line waiting to vote early when James S. Henry was charged with disorderly conduct for taking photos of waiting voters about 3:30 p.m. outside the main elections office on Military Trail near West Palm Beach.Link (via politech)
Seven years in the making: why Brit tax year stars April 5
The archives show that Aubrey Meadcroft's simple query to the Inland Revenue's librarian sparked years of research, including a close study of the personal files of William Pitt the younger, the late 18th and early 19th century prime minister who introduced income tax...Link (via Fark)It was long and complicated and dated back to the first division of the fiscal year in medieval times, which meant sheriffs who collected the king's income carried less money at one time, making their journeys safer.
The year was later split into quarters, with the end of one accounting period fixed as the Christian feast day of Annunciation, March 25.
When the calendar was reformed to take out mistakes inherent in the previous Roman system, 11 days were "wiped", putting Annunciation on April 5.
Around 80 years later, in 1832, this was named as the end of the entire tax year as it was the closest quarterly date to the Government's Budget, its annual statement of income and spending.
Gmail security flaw, and fix info
There's a Gmail exploit that allows an attacker to steal your Gmail cookie, which thereafter identifies them as you to the system, even if you change your password. This seems like a huge problem for Google, above and beyond the actual security breach. Remember that Gmail uses the same unlimited lifetime Google cookie. The data in that cookie is, presumably, extremely valuable for their tracking efforts, and I'd guess that this will be difficult for them to fix in a way that maintains that.Link (via politech)
Luminifer writes:
The site's been updated with links to info about the exploit already being fixed - and also, the fact that the gmail cookie and the google cookie are two different cookies (doesn't the gmail cookie expire after 2 weeks, and then only if you check the 2 week box? I may be wrong on this one.).link to the fix info
Daily Show from yesterday -- six more clips
Jon Stewart Telling Us To Get out there and VOTE!LinkA two part interview with Fox News' Chris Wallace
(where he explains that Fox has a four person panel now that has to decide unanimously before a winner can be declared.)Kerry and Bush respond to Bin Laden's new tape
Cheney, Chelsea, Bruce and Arnold On The Campaign Trail
A voting report from Ed Helms and Stephen Colbert

These water-proof floating battery-powered lamps are fantastic -- makes me wish I had a pool!
And now, here is CHOW. We consider it the tolling bell of a food revolution. You’ll see that our stories are more entertaining, our photos more realistic (and messier), our reporting deeper, our instructions clearer, and maybe most important, our subjects a lot more far-flung than what food magazine readers are used to seeing.
Want to know what this image is? It's a picture I took with my cellphone-camera of an electronic voting machine screen. I took it today when I went down to vote for the next President of the Unites States in Santa Clara California. The screen says "Vote Save Error #9. Use the Backup Voting Procedure." A news crew was on hand to film Californians using the voting machines. I pointed to this particular screen and said "There's your story - right there. I just took a picture of the screen and plan to share it with 6.4 billion of my closest friends on the Internet tonight. I suggest you do the same." To my astonishment, the cameraman did shoot some footage of the screen, though I don't know what was shown later on television.
* Animating slime, mud, and blood
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