week of 09/09/2007
The Canadian Recording Industry Association (which represents multinational, US, and other non-Canadian record labels exclusively) has come out against the "private copying levy," a tax on blank media that it lobbied hard for over the past 15 years. The levy is charged against blank media, and the money raised is paid to copyright holders in exchange for the right to copy music and other works onto the media. CRIA apparently fears that the levy can be used to legalize P2P music-trading in Canada (an activity whose legality is in dispute right now), thereby breaking the P2P deadlock, decriminalizing millions of music fans, and paying millions of dollars to their members. The record industry giants would prefer to go on suing music fans and technology companies -- an activity that pays the record companies handsomely, while encouraging fans to defect from buying music in the future, and which does not pay one cent to any artist.
The Canadian Recording Industry Association this week quietly filed documents in the Federal Court of Appeal that will likely shock many in the industry. CRIA, which spent more than 15 years lobbying for the creation of the private copying levy, is now fighting to eliminate the application of the levy on the Apple iPod since it believes that the Copyright Board of Canada's recent decision to allow a proposed tariff on iPods to proceed "broadens the scope of the private copying exception to avoid making illegal file sharers liable for infringement."

Given that CRIA's members collect millions from the private copying levy, the decision to oppose its expansion may come as a surprise. Yet the move reflects a reality that CRIA has previously been loath to acknowledge - the Copyright Board has developed jurisprudence that provides a strong argument that downloading music on peer-to-peer networks is lawful in Canada. Indeed, CRIA President Graham Henderson provides a roadmap for the argument in his affidavit:

"First, the Board has stated, in obiter dicta, on several occasions that the Private Copying regime legalizes copying for the private use of the person making the copy, regardless of whether the source is non-infringing or not. Therefore, according to the Board, downloading an infringing track from the Internet is not infringing, as long as the downloaded copy is made onto an 'audio recording medium'...

Link
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Bob Dylan warns of Cylon invasion


Antonio sez, "There is a 'viral' Bob Dylan marketing project that allows people to remix the infamous Subterranean Homesick Blues film made by D. A. Pennebaker. I made this mash-up with my favorite series, Battlestar Galactica, titled, 'Subterranean Homesick Alien (a Radiohead homage).'" Link (Thanks, Antonio!)
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700 megabytes of internal email from MediaDefender, a group of entertainment industry enforcers, has leaked onto the net. The emails detail MediaGuardian's procedures, their internal response to being outed for posting a fake download site to entrap users, the plans to induce users to link to their entrapment site, and the way the company sought to insulate their clients in the motion picture industry from negative publicity arising from their entrapment efforts. There's plenty more there -- 700mb is a lot of mail -- and I'm sure we'll see all kinds of interesting things in the coming weeks.
Unfortunately for Media Defender - a company dedicated to mitigating the effects of internet leaks - they can do nothing about being the subject of the biggest BitTorrent leak of all time. Over 700mb of their own internal emails, dating back over 6 months have been leaked to the internet in what will be a devastating blow to the company. Many are very recent, having September 2007 dates and the majority involve the most senior people in the company. Apparently this is not the first time that a MediaDefender email leaked onto the Internet.

According to the .nfo file posted with the Mbox file the emails were obtained by a group called "MediaDefender-Defenders". It states: "By releasing these emails we hope to secure the privacy and personal integrity of all peer-to-peer users. The emails contains information about the various tactics and technical solutions for tracking p2p users, and disrupt p2p services," and "A special thanks to Jay Maris, for circumventing there entire email-security by forwarding all your emails to your gmail account"

Link (Thanks, Christian!)
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Wired NextFest takes place in Los Angeles this weekend, and is full of much to enjoy. I visited earlier this week and filed this report for NPR News with "Day to Day" host Madeleine Brand: Link to audio. Three things not to miss: Keepon (who looks like a "marshmallow scrotum" or "the yellow lovechild of Hello Kitty and a friendly snowman, depending on who you ask), the creepy Chinese doppelganger 'bot, and Brainball. Here are some great NextFest photos from Dave Bullock.
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A new, ultralight aircraft made from carbon fiber has beaten the standing world record for longest unmanned flight, according to its manufacturer. It has a 60-foot (18-meter) wingspan, weighs 66 pounds (30 kilograms) and is launched by hand. Snip from National Geographic report:
The Zephyr High Altitude Long Endurance Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (UAV) stayed aloft for 54 hours during a recent test flight at New Mexico's White Sands Missile Range, says London-based defense firm QinetiQ.

No observers from the Fédération Aéronautique Internationale (FAI) were on hand, so the flight may not officially break the previous record of 30 hours, 24 minutes, 1 second set by Northrop Grumman's RQ-4A "Global Hawk" on March 21, 2001.

But the FAI is currently reviewing a second test flight of the Zephyr that lasted 33 hours, 43 minutes.

Link. Image: National Geographic. (thanks, John Parres!)
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Ever-charming Manolo the Shoeblogger (who refers to himself in the third person because he's earned it, people!) tells Boing Boing,
Here is the story that has been hot among the purse blogger for the past several months but has just broken through to the general public, the story of the limited edition, patchword, $52,500 Louis Vuitton purse, constructed out of the chopped parts of 14 older Louis Vuitton purses.

It is ugly and ridiculous and grotesquely overpriced, and the Manolo has said so at his blog.

Here is the Washington Post story on the purse.

Only five are being sold in the US, one of which has already gone to Beyonce.

[Ed. note: Me, I'd call her "*The* Beyonce," but who am I to judge.]
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Susannah Breslin has an essay up today about the online life of adult film performer Ashley Blue, whose very interesting blog seems to document a sort of transition from working in an extreme genre of hardcore porn to whatever lies beyond that. Snip:

Ashley Blue's blog is like no other. On it, Blue--whose real name is Oriana Small--reveals the real girl behind the porn star. Blue is--or at least was--a porn star like no other. She has starred in some of the most extreme porn movies ever made. According to IMDB, she has appeared in over 200 adult videos, among them: "Ashley Blue AKA Filthy Whore," "American Bukkake 26," and "Gag Factor 15." Take "American Bukkake 26," for example, in which Blue fed fried cum to a bukkake girl. ("It was amazing," she later noted.) Her performances have not gone unnoticed. Last year, "Gag Factor 15," in which Blue reenacts a scene out of Abu Ghraib, was listed in an 18-count federal obscenity indictment. Her blog, though, shows another side of the sex star. There, in a stream-of-consciousness assemblage of words and pictures that's part tumblelog, part haiku, and part Molly Bloom's monologue, Blue--that is, Small--exposes the woman behind the sex with unrivaled intensity. This is a blog that stars the usual suspects found on confessional blogs--the boyfriend (erotic photographer Dave Naz), the new puppy, the night out on the town. Blue takes blogging to a whole new level.
Link
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Clouds that look like UFOs

Ufoclouds

I snapped this photo of three flying saucerlike clouds hovering over the 101 in Tarzana about an hour ago. I believe they are lenticular clouds. Google images has lots of nice examples of lenticular clouds. Link

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Rule the Web 60-second podcast

200709141716 Over at my Rule the Web blog, my editor David Moldawer and I have been producing a daily 60-second podcast, each of which offers a tip on how to get things done online. Subscribe in iTunes
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To-The-Winds 480 Sympathy-For-Prey-2 480 You-Are-Not-Falling 480Jpg Prepared-For-Anything 480

(Click on thumbnails for enlargement)

NYC artist David Hochbaum’s solo show opens this Saturday at Corey Helford. It will include over 50 works including photo constructions, works on paper, and giant (20 x 24”) original Polaroids. Only four of these cameras exist in the world and kodak is discontinuing the film.

Link

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The Haunted Mansion ride at Walt Disney World has just undergone a major rehab that builds on the superb work done on Disneyland's Mansion last year. Inside the Magic's Ricky Brigante was there for opening day, and he recorded a high-resolution, night-scope-equipped binaural-sound video that starts at "rope-drop" at the entrance to Liberty Square and runs through the entire ride. The other riders are clearly Mansion-obsessed loonies (like myself) and their gasps of pleasure at the new grace-notes and improvements in the Mansion are a real treat. Link
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Douglas Rushkoff's online course

Author and cultural critic Douglas Rushkoff is teaching an online course called "Technologies of Persuasion." A few years ago he wrote an excellent book on the subject called Coercion: Why We Listen to What "They" Say.
200709141635 I'm teaching a course through a distanced learning site called Maybe Logic Academy - where Robert Anton Wilson used to teach everything from James Joyce to economics theory.

My course, Technologies of Persuasion, is beginning in just two weeks. I haven't promoted it anywhere - I just haven't had time or energy these days to do more than what's right on my plate - so this should be a small and intimate group. And it's a hell of a lot cheaper than paying for NYU.

Plus, we'll get to be a little crazier than people are generally allowed to get in a college seminar room, with some no-holds-barred discussions on how media and technology shape the way we think, and why we seem to remain so pitifully unaware of the biases of the media we use.

Link

Previously on Boing Boing:
Boing Boing interviews Doug Rushkoff about his Testament comic book
Rushkoff's new book Get Back In The Box
Douglas Rushkoff fiction in Nerve
Rushkoff on Guruphiliac
Interview with Douglas Rushkoff (MP3)
Rushkoff's Testament issue #1, now free
Barbara Rushkoff's new parenting blog
Rushkoff's Thought Virus #4
Douglas Rushkoff's Thought Virus #3
Rushkoff on the futility of artificial workplace fun
Doug Rushkoff's final Thought Virus from his new book
Rushkoff's Thought Virus #5: The Ben & Jerry's Syndrome

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200709141629

• Oldsters Help Propel Wii to Number 1 Link

• Apple iPhone Early Adopter Store Credit Live Link

• NEW4LR Robot: Teach a New Dog New Tricks Link

• Optimus Maximus Keyboard Teaser Shot Link

• Immobilizer Stun Gun in the Shape of a Phone Link

• A Peek Inside the Minds of Rock Band Link

• Halo "Museum" Commercial Send-Up from Consolevania Link

• Morning Tech Deals Highlights Link

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The science fiction blog Futurismic is now running a regular Friday feature devoted to rounding up the best free sf online this week. As more and more people have discovered it and sent them their picks, the list has grown, and this week, it seems to have achieved some kind of watershed moment, with a list of fiction so mind-croogglingly awesome that it makes me wish I could fork another instance devoted to nothing but reading. Here's just the first few, from manybooks.net: Link
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The latest iPods have a cryptographic "checksum" in their song databases that prevents third-party applications from synching with the portable music players. This means that iPods can no longer be used with operating systems where iTunes doesn't exist -- like Linux, where gtkpod and Amarok are common free tools used by iPod owners to load their players.

Notice that this has nothing to do with piracy -- this is about Apple limiting the choices available to people who buy their iPod hardware. I kept my iPod when I switched to Ubuntu Linux a year ago, and I've been using it happily with my machine ever since (though it took me a solid week to get all my DRMed Audible audiobooks out of iTunes -- I had to run two machines 24/7, playing hundreds of hours of audio through a program called AudioHijack, to remove the DRM from my collection, which had cost me thousands of dollars to build). I'd considered buying another iPod when this one started to show its age -- it's a perfectly nice player to use, provided you stay away from the DRM.

The new hardware limits the number of potential customers for Apple's products, adding engineering cost to a device in order to reduce its functionality. It's hard to understand why Apple would do this, but the most likely explanations are that Apple wants to be sure that competitors can't build their own players to load up iPods -- now that half of the major labels have gone DRM free, it's conceivable that we'd get a Rhapsody or Amazon player that automatically loaded the non-DRM tracks they sold you on your iPod (again, note that this has nothing to do with preventing piracy -- this is about preventing competition with the iTunes Store).

It won't be the first time Apple has rejigged iTunes/iPod to lock out competitors: back when Real built a DRM player for its own music that would run on an iPod, Apple threatened to sue them and engineered a firmware update to break their code (again, nothing to do with fighting piracy). This is the soul of anti-competitiveness: Real made code that iPod owners could use to get more legal use out of their iPods, Apple threatened to sue them for endangering their monopoly over delivering iPod software.

This is all par for the course, of course. Businesses have taken countermeasures to prevent competitors from interoperating with their products for decades. Apple had to break Microsoft's file-formats to give Numbers, Pages and Keynote the ability to read Office files -- they're enthusiastic participants in "adversarial compatibility." Decades ago, IBM lost a high-profile lawsuit against competitors who'd been making compatible mainframe accessories and selling them for less than IBM, wrecking IBM's business-model of selling cheap mainframes and charging a fortune for accessories. The law of the land has generally been that compatibility is legal, even if it undermines your profitability -- making a product does not create a monopoly over everything that your customers might do with that product.

That was then. Now, Apple has the Digital Millennium Copyright Act on its side, which makes it illegal to "circumvent an effective means of access control" -- that is, to break DRM. I don't know if Apple will invoke the DMCA against people who break this latest measure (they threatened Real with the DMCA before) but I guarantee you that the attorneys and investors advising potential iTunes competitors are going to be very conservative about this. The upshot is that iPod owners and the public interest lose out, because competitive products that expand the utility of the iPod are less likely to come into existence, thanks to the DMCA and Apple's locking technology.

I guess my next player won't be an iPod after all.

With the release of the new range of iPods - the new Nano, the iPod Classic and the iPod Touch, we were expecting more of the same - a few tweaks here and there and everything would be fine. No so.

At the very start of the database, a couple of what appear to be SHA1 hashes have been inserted which appear to lock the iTunes database to one particular iPod and prevent any modification of the database file. If you try to do either of these, the hashes will not match and the iPod will report that it contains "0 songs" when the iTunesDB would otherwise be perfectly adequate.

Link
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Review of $35 Blackwing 602 pencil

The beloved Eberhard Faber Blackwing 602 pencil (Its slogan, "Half the Pressure, Twice the Speed," is stamped in gold foil on each pencil) went out of production in 1998. It sold for fifty cents. In 2002 you could get one on eBay for $10. They now fetch $30. How much with they cost five years from now?

I've written about the Blackwing on Boing Boing in 2002, 2005, and 2006. I guess it's about time for a new post about this incredible pencil.

Andy says: "As a pencil enthusiast, I recently bit the bullet and bought a Blackwing off eBay for thirty bucks. It was pretty awesome, but *perhaps* a bit over-hyped. I'm a product reviewer for pencilthings.com, too, so I posted a review over at the product blog. It's some advice for what a layman should to do if he or she is thinking about getting one."

200709141128 I am impressed with the performance of the Blackwing. I might pay $5, or even $10 per pencil, but $35-$40 per actual pencil? I think not. Recently, eBay had a lot of 144 Blackwings, and that sold for about $1400. I almost bid on it, thinking that I could then make a fortune by splitting up the lot and selling individual pencils. But I stopped myself -- I love pencils, don't get me wrong -- because I couldn't bring myself to make a major (for me) investment in this particular writing instrument.

One of my joys of pencils is the fact that they're cheap. Even top-quality products like California Republic's various pencils aren't any more than a couple bucks apiece -- and that's at the higher end. If I go out and splurge on a couple unique pencils for my collection, my wife isn't going to get mad. I'm not collecting antique fountain pens, after all.

If you are looking for a good low cost pencil, try the California Republic Palomino HB ($5.15 for 6) and 2B ($4.75 for 6), sold here. Link

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John K (creator of The Ren and Stimpy Show) says: "I just started a new series of blog posts on the Bakshi Mighty Mouse cartoons we did.

"Every week (Thusday nights) I'm putting up a freshly packaged episode of The Bakshi Mighty Mouse Show I directed.

"I'm including funny bumpers and commercials that didn't appear with the show but should have, a throwback to the old directly sponsored age of TV."

Picture 4-40 This was my favorite of all the Bakshi Mighty Mouse episodes. It came out the closest to what I envisioned. There are many episodes that make me cringe. BTW, I have restored some scenes in this cartoon that were cut out way back when. They aren't in this copy, but you can see the cartoon uncut wherever I do a retrospective.
Link

Previously on Boing Boing:
Interview with John Kricfalusi
bOING bOING interviews John K.
John Kricfalusi on the art of Milt Gross
Outline for John Kricfalusi's new cartoon
John K's animation for Weird Al's video
BB Digital Emporium: John K's "George Liquor Xmas" video
John K on the "Death of Form"
John K's drawing school
John K's storyboard for "Stimpy's Invention" episode
The $100000 animation drawing course (for only $8!)
Foolish Warner Bros. lawyers trying to clobber John K.
Jack Black Tenacious D video directed by John K
Ren & Stimpy: The Lost Episodes
John Kricfalusi has a blog

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NY Times on Capgras Syndrome

Caprgras Syndrome is a mental condition that causes those afflicted to think that they people they know have been replaced by imposters, a la Invasion of the Bodysnatchers.
My patient, a 37-year-old homemaker, gazed at the man in the red plaid shirt as he sat on the couch in her living room.

“Who are you?” she asked.

There was something familiar about him. He wore her husband’s boots, but the shirt made him look like a truck driver.

“Yeah, and who are you?” the man replied with a laugh. “Come here and give me a kiss.”

She gave the man a peck on the cheek, but she felt guilty, fearing that her husband would arrive at any moment and admonish her. Not only did the man want a kiss — he also wanted sex!

Link
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Mid-day short links snackbar


  • BB reader Meredith says, "This guy (my roomate, in fact) has made these awesome PCB (printed circuit board) skull bracelets."

  • BB Gadgets: Apple's $100 store credit thing is now live.

  • Here's an article in Der Spiegel about German people who fetishize Native Americans.

  • Lacrosse, Kansas, is the barbed wire capital of the world, and home of the Kansas Barbed Wire Collectors Association. The Kansas Barbed Wire Museum is currently closed for the season but their competition, the "Devil's Rope Museum" in Texas, is not -- in case you get a hankerin' for such hard-to-find titles as "The Fencin' Tool Bible".

  • The Indian government has withdrawn a controversial report which questioned the existence of the Hindu god Ram. The report was filed to allow for the construction of a canal wich would destroy Lord Ram's bridge - a natural formation that some conservative Hindus believe was built by Ram and his army of monkeys.

  • "What 'The Sopranos' taught me about technology." (plus, a quiz)

  • Prince announces his intent to sue YouTube and other video and music websites for unauthorized use of his work, in an attempt to "reclaim his art on the Internet".

  • Flowchart: all the historic influences that led to creation of the Laugh Out Loud Cats.

  • Trent Reznor on his Australian label: "I've garnered a hardcore audience that you think it's OK to rip off? Fuck you!"

  • David Pogue's latest New York Times piece asks why customers purchasing some ringtones based on music tracks are being asked to pay three times as much for a 30-second, time-limited excerpt than they would for the entire work.

  • Check into Cash into Tequila. BB reader Rob Cockerham says, "After noticing the apparent proximity of liquor stores to check cashing places, I got out and measured twelve of them. The average distance was less than 200 steps."


    (Thanks, Patricio, Virtual Tours, Javier, Tian, Astrofiammante)

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    Why is Pluto chasing this kid around at breakneck speed on Main Street USA? And why does that woman grab Pluto and push him to the ground? I don't know, but it makes for a great vacation video moment for all the camcorder-wielding visitors to the Magic Kingdom. Link (Via Nothing to do with Arbroath)
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    Make a foxhole radio (video)

    In this episode of MAKE's Weekend Projects, Bre Pettis shows you how to to make a "foxhole radio" out of a paper tube, wire, paper clips, a razor blade, and a pencil.
    Picture 3-66 During World War II, GIs in the field built really amazing simple radios to listen too. These were made with materials that they could get their hands on and were small enough to carry around in a big pocket. You can modify this design if you want to set it up so that it's tuneable too!
    Link
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    Link to 8698 x 8735 pixel 7.32 MB jpeg of Black Rock City, as seen from space the sky, during Burning Man 2007. If this link dies, I'll host a copy somewhere. (thanks, Wayne Correia!)

    Update: BB reader Frogbeater points us to the source...

    Pict Earth has the Black Rock City image in place in the Black Rock Desert. I've never used them before and it's a little clunkier than Google Earth, but it has some more current images in some places than Google does. Doesn't seem to work with Safari though, Firefox works fine.
    BB reader William Harmon points us to an interesting similarity...
    The jpg of the burning man site reminded me of the early paleolithic site in Louisianna called Poverty Point. The site layout is stikingly similar. Most Americans are completley unaware of the massive earthen works associated with the archeology of the US.
    Wired Editor in Chief Chris Anderson says,
    Just a quick note about that Burning Man image. My understanding is that it's not from space, but rather a mosaic of shots taken from a Cessna. Pict'Earth is working with us on similar UAV imagery and we did the Wired Science UAV episode with them. Here's a shot from that session at the Alameda Naval Air Station (AKA the set of the Matrix 2): Link.
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    web zen: arrgh! 'tis pirate zen 2007

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    Snip from a blurb published today by the Project on Government Oversight, a group that has been tracking security breaches at America's "National Security Science" center, Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico:

    A computer which may have contained highly classified nuclear weapons information from the Los Alamos National Laboratory was traded in exchange for drugs, according to unconfirmed sources.

    The computer was owned by Jessica Quintana, the former contractor employee at the Lab who pled guilty in May to removing classified information after hundreds of pages of documents were discovered in a methamphetamine drug raid at her trailer.

    Among the list of items collected by the Los Alamos Police Department during the execution of the search of the trailer were three memory sticks containing classified LANL documents, as well as hard copies. No computer was listed. A senior POGO source claims that the LAPD did search the computer looking for drug information and found none. They did not search for classified LANL information. POGO has also been told that the FBI never obtained a search warrant to seize the computer for a review of evidence of classified information.

    Ms. Quintana allegedly broke down during an FBI polygraph session and indicated the computer she was using to work with the information on the memory sticks was now missing.

    PDF Link to docs related to the case, Link to Department of Justice press release, May 15, 2007 (whups, that link's 404 right now, I'll try to find an alternate source).
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    Magazine back issues on DVD

    200709140913 In 1997 National Geographic published an archive of all its back issues on CD-ROM. Some writers and photographers sued National Geographic, claiming the magazine didn't have the right to do that. This scared other magazine publishers from selling digital versions of their back issues.

    But in June, two US Appeals Courts ruled that National Geographic did have the right to sell back issues on CD-ROM. The said digital archives were like library microfiches, which freelancers never got paid for either. (More about this here.)

    I'm not going to argue for or against the courts' decision. I'm just glad that I'll be able to start buying complete back runs of famous magazines. I already have the complete run of Mad, and am looking forward to getting the the complete run of National Lampoon (all 246 original magazines from 1970 through 1998), and the complete runs of Silver Age Marvel comic books.

    In a couple of days, Bondi Digital Publishing (which published the complete run of The New Yorker as a DVD set and as portable hard drive) will release a DVD of all the 1950s issues of Playboy and all 40 years of The Rolling Stone.

    Other magazine and comic back issues I'm hoping will soon be offered on DVD: Scientific American, Popular Science, Harvey Kurtzan's Trump/Help/Humbug, Carl Barks' Donald Duck and Uncle Scrooge.

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    World's Worst Polluted Places 2007

    Environmental health organization Blacksmith has announced its 2007 top ten list of the "World's Worst Polluted Places." Topping the list is Sumgayit, Azerbaijan, followed by Linfen, China; Tianying, China; Sukinda, India; Vapi, India; La Oroya, Peru; Dzerzhinsk, Russia; Norilsk, Russia; Chernobyl, Ukraine; Kabwe, Zambia. From the description of Sumgayit's situation:
     Wwpp2007 Site10A1T SUMGAYIT, AZERBAIJAN

    Potentially Affected People: 275,000

    Type of Pollutants: Organic chemicals, oil, heavy metals including mercury.

    Source of Pollution: Petrochemical and Industrial Complexes

    The Problem:
    Sumgayit was a major Soviet industrial center housing more than 40 factories manufacturing industrial and agricultural chemicals. These included synthetic rubber, chlorine, aluminium, detergents, and pesticides. While the factories remained fully operational, 70-120,000 tons of harmful emissions were released into the air annually. With the emphasis placed on maximum, low-cost production at the expense of environmental and occupational health and safety, industry has left the city heavily contaminated. Factory workers and residents of the city have been exposed to a combination of high-level occupational and environmental pollution problems for several decades.

    Untreated sewage and mercury-contaminated sludge (from chlor-alkali industries) continue to be dumped haphazardly. A continuing lack of pollution controls, dated technologies and the improper disposal and treatment of accumulated industrial waste are just some of the issues that plague the city.

    Health Impacts:
    Sumgayit had one of the highest morbidity rates during the Soviet Era and the legacy of illness and death persist. A study jointly conducted by the UNDP, WHO, Azerbaijan Republic Ministry of Health and the University of Alberta demonstrated that residents of Sumgayit experience intensely high levels of both cancer morbidity and mortality. Cancer rates in Sumgayit are 22-51% higher than average incidence rates in the rest of Azerbaijan. Mortality rates from cancer are 8% higher. Evidence suggests that lower reported cancer rates are flawed as a result of underreporting.

    A high percentage of babies are born premature, stillborn, and with genetic defects like Mongolism, anencephaly, spina bifida, hydrocephalus, bone disease, and mutations such as club feet, cleft palate, and four or six fingers or toes.
    Link
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    Cutlery with built-in stands

    Cuttleryskibsted
    My friend Jens-Martin Skibsted, the Danish industrial designer behind Puma's Urban Mobility bicycle and Biomega, created this ingenious set of cutlery. Each utensil has an integrated little "stand" to keep the business end from touching the table when you set it down. Keeps food off the table and germs off your cutlery. Jens-Martin designed the product, called "Side-On Cutlery," for Mater, a Copenhagen-based brand all about "ethical business strategies" and "working methods that support people, local craft traditions and the environment." Jens-Martin told me that he was blown away by how rigorously Mater scrutinizes the business and environmental practices of their suppliers before contracting with a particular factory for production. From the Side-On Cutlery description:
    A polished, stainless steel cutlery collection consisting of fork, knife, spoon and tablespoon, inspired by Japanese oki table setting. the side-on standing cutlery range offers an attentive (sic, "alternative"?) to the traditional table setting. Produced in a family-owned factory located in the guangdong province of southern china.
    Link to Mater's Side-On Cutlery, Link to Skibsted Ideation

    Previously on BB:
    • Biomega's new Puma bike Link
    • Biomega/Puma sneaker for biking Link
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    Video from my Beijing Bookworm talk


    I gave a talk in Beijing this week at the Beijing Bookworm, an excellent bookstore/cafe. Filmmaker Victor Muh recorded the whole thing and put it up on YouTube! Link (Thanks, Jeremy!)
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    sez, "MC frontalot has an awesome new video for his song 'It Is Pitch Dark,' which is all about, you guessed it, being eaten by a Grue. As he says on his website: 'We welcome the general public to begin its viewing of the It Is Pitch Dark music video. This is directed by Jason Scott as an HD extra for his documentary on text adventures, Get Lamp. If you do not care for the wee QuickTime or DivX files at frontalot.com, you can help yourself to the gigantor 1280x720 HiDef QT, a mere 474 megs, available via torrent, or! you can go in the other direction and check out the shittiest available res over on YouTube. Blind fans will probably enjoy the mp3 instead.'"

    This is hands-down my favorite track on the new Frontalot album, and the video is great. MOV Link (Thanks, xzackly!)

    See also: New MC Frontalot nerdcore album

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    Toaster-shaped teapot

    The Teapottery sells this teapot in the shape of a streamlined vintage toaster -- alas, it does not appear to actually make toast, which would make it deliciously dangerous (as Gizmodo notes). Link (via Gizmodo)
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    • They've Got the Touch – The first official review of the iPod Touch is glowing. Link

    • Join Us – "What it's Like to Switch to Ubuntu" Link

    • S.H.E.E.P. – "Hype Sheet: HP Hollas Back, Girl" Link

    • Come On, ePaper – One man's travails with a wi-fi picture frame. Link

    • Sportsmobile Ultimate Adventure Vehicle: In a Van, Down In the River Link

    • Time Box Calendar Spool from Biaugust Link

    • Edible Nokia Handset Mooncakes Link

    • Electro-Anachronistic, Neo-Victorian, Gaslightesque, Post-Dickensian, Vernesian, Clockwork, Grunge-a Din, Steampunk Metal Sculpture Link

    • Husqvarna Auto Mower: Another Lawn Care Robot Link

    • Smart New Speedometer Concept from Johnson Controls Link

    • Winamp Lives! Link

    • Griffin Technology iPhone Headphone Adapter Link

    • Virgin America announces in-flight, air-to-ground broadband Link

    • "Life Saver" Water Filtration Bottle Link

    • Video: Microsoft MS-DOS 5 Promotional Rap Video. Yes, Rap Link

    • Women's Spatial Acuity Improved By Videogame Link

    • Hennessy Hammocks Link

    • Not Everyone Loving the New iPod Interface Link

    • Morning Tech Deals Highlights Link

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    Miro needs your donations -- the project is trying to raise $50,000 to pay programmers and designers to make its player even better.

    Miro (formerly known as Democracy Player) is the best and most promising video player I've ever used. It's free and open -- licensed under the GPL -- and it incorporates three different technologies that make watching videos easier and better than any of the proprietary players like Windows Media Player or iTunes. These technologies are VLC, a free and open video playback engine that plays all video formats, no matter where they come from; RSS, so that you can subscribe to "feeds" of your favorite videos (including subscribing to feeds of YouTube videos matching your keywords); and BitTorrent, so that you can download files without costing the people who host them -- so the more popular a file is, the cheaper it is to host.

    Miro is a bet on a future for "Internet TV" that is as open as the Web, controlled by no one. Otherwise, the way things are headed, we could end up with one or two giant companies owning the future of video. No one -- not community activists, not video startups, no one -- benefits when just a few companies control the platform.

    The Miro fundraiser will raise money to pay the talented hackers who have been producing regular updates to the Miro platform, ensuring that there's always an up-to-date version for the Mac, Windows and Linux. I believe in Miro enough to have volunteered for their Board of Directors since they started -- I hope you'll help us keep on producing the future of Internet video. Link

    (Disclosure: I am a board member for the Participatory Culture Foundation, the 501(c)3 charitable nonprofit that oversees production of Miro)

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    A Welsh priest/Dr Who fan is planning Who-themed services to attract the young 'uns:
    St Paul's Church, in Grangetown, Cardiff, was used as a location for an episode of the first series of Doctor Who starring the ninth Doctor played by Christopher Eccleston.

    And parish priest, Father Ben Andrews, 32, says he loves the cult TV show so much he thought a themed evening would go down well with the youngsters.

    He said: "I love the series and it has such a great following that we couldn't resist doing something for young people on a Dr Who theme.

    "We will be looking at the idea of Jesus as a Lord of time and showing who Jesus was and the different images of him throughout time.

    "We will try and get some Dr Who props in to try and make it as lively as possible."

    Link (Thanks, Jennifer!)
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    A Polish paper has reported that a googlebomber ("23 years old Marek W. from Cieszyn") has been arrested for creating a googlebomb that turned President Lech Kaczyński's homepage into the top search result for Google searches on the word "kutas" ("penis"). Marek W faces up to three years in prison.
    The man used the official website of Polish president Lech Kaczyński for testing the software. When internet users typed "kutas" ["penis"] they got the official president's site. Furthermore - it was the first result. They played with this for couple of months - right up to March this year. That's when the 23 years old was traced by investigator from the Katowice police office.

    Finding him wasn't difficult - the man used his home computer, which police easily traced by its IP address. The computer amateur confirmed that he wrote the program. "I just wanted to verify my skills and check if the software works" was his his explanation during the hearings.

    Link (via Ars Technica)
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    Over on Boing Boing Gadgets, Joel has spotted this sweet (and I do mean sweet) collection of edible, Nokia-handset-shaped mooncakes for Chinese mid-autumn festival. A couple nights back, I mentioned mooncakes at a dinner in Beijing and the table erupted in hilarity and derision -- my hosts advised me that mooncakes are the Chinese equivalent of Christmas cakes -- no one likes them, everyone gives them (I like Christmas cake!). They are haloed with weird possible urban legends, like the scandal of a mooncake manufacturer that was recycling last year's filling because no one can taste the difference between year-old and fresh mooncake stuffin'. The consensus was that the best mooncakes come from western chains, like Starbucks (the Starbucks in China and Singapore carry green tea and coffee flavored mooncakes in plastic wrappers with little silica packets to keep them "fresh") (they also don't charge extra for soy-milk, a smart move in the land of widespread lactose intolerance). Starbucks's cakes are apparently less incredibly sweet than the real deal. Practically every food shop, restaurant, duty-free and department store I've visited here has had some kind of mooncake boxed assortment on offer, in elaborate packaging. At the Carrefour grocery superstore in Beijing, they had a double aisle running the whole length of the store devoted to 'em. Link, Discuss this on Boing Boing Gadgets
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    A man built his own guillotine and used it to kill himself.
    Groundskeeper from the Fairlane Green shopping center at Outer and Fairlane drive discovered the body shortly before 11 a.m. Monday.

    Allen Park Deputy Police Chief Dale Covert said the roughly six-foot tall guillotine was bolted to a tree and included a swing arm. Covert said police also found several store receipts detailing the materials used to assemble the device.

    "I can't even tell you how long it must have taken him to construct," he said. "This man obviously was very determined to end his life."

    According to investigators, the man had to make several trips to carry the wooden and metal parts to the area in the woods.

    Link
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    Hidden bear in Toblerone logo

    Fosta says:
    200709131555 I was tucking into a toblerone today, and decided to have a look into the history of this unusual chocolate bar. Aside from a rather interesting history, (maybe Einstein handled the patent) I found that there is a secret bear hiding in the matterhorn logo. I've shown everyone in the office, and no-one has noticed it before. I love things like that!
    It reminds me a little of the Land O Lakes trick. Link
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    Toronto's Seneca College is throwing its sixth annual Free Software/Open Source convention -- admission is as cheap at $20, and this year's speaker lineup includes Bob Young, Co-founder, RedHat and CEO and Founder, Lulu.com; Ross Turk, Community Manager, Sourceforge.net; Chris Blizzard, One Laptop Per Child Project; and Marc Kwiatkowski, Senior Software Engineer, Facebook.

    Welcome to Seneca's 6th Annual
    Free Software and Open Source Symposium
    October 25-26th, 2007 - 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
    Seneca@York Campus, Toronto

    The Symposium is a two-day event aimed at bringing together educators, developers and other interested parties to discuss common free software and open source issues, learn new technologies and to promote the use of free and open source software. At Seneca College, we think free and open source software are real alternatives.

    Want to present? The deadline for presentation proposals for this year's symposium is September 1.

    Link
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    Chris says: "Mike McConnell, Director of National Intelligence in the US, recently claimed that a temporary electronic-surveilliance law that gives 'the U.S. intelligence community broad new powers to eavesdrop on telephone and e-mail communications overseas without seeking warrants from the surveillance court' helped to stop a terror plot in Germany. Au contraire, the plot was actually discovered months before the law was even created, and it was done so by US military guards; no wiretapping involved."
    200709131553 McConnell's testimony that the new law helped in the German case was especially striking—since it seemed to contradict public statements by American and German officials about how the plot was exposed. About 10 months ago—long before the new law was put into effect—guards at a U.S. military base near Frankfurt noted a suspicious individual conducting surveillance outside the facility. U.S. military officials tipped off German authorities, who quickly identified the individual and several accomplices as militants affiliated with the Islamic Jihad Union, a violent Al Qaeda-linked group. The Germans kept the group under surveillance for months and discovered evidence that the militants—some of whom had been to an Islamic Jihad Union training camp in Pakistan—were assembling chemicals for bombing attacks on American military installations in Germany. (The U.S. Embassy in Berlin issued a public warning last April that it had received intelligence reporting about threats against U.S. personnel in that country.) One U.S. intelligence official described the law-enforcement operation as a case of "good old-fashioned police work."
    Link
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    Extermiknit: knit your own Dalek

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    Fake "tolerance" signs in Mexico

    Picture 4-39

    A reader says:

    Fake street signs declaring the Mexico City neighborhood of Itzacalco a "Tolerance Zone" for prostitution and murder. Nice use of graphic design. It's not know who put these up, or whether they're intended to encourage or protest such activty.
    Link
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    The US Army's MQ-5B/C Hunter unmanned aerial vehicle made its first kill in Iraq this month, reports Defense Tech. (The CIA and Air Force's drones have been killing for years, but this is a first for the army.)
    200709131542 A Hunter unmanned aerial vehicle engaged and killed two suspected improvised explosive device emplacers overwatching a major thoroughfare for Coalition Forces during a historic flight near Qayyarah, Iraq, in Nineveh province Sept. 1.

    A scout weapons team from 2nd Battalion, 25th Aviation Regiment, 25th Combat Aviation Brigade, observed the two unknown enemy fighters in a tactical overwatch near the roadside. The SWT requested support from the Hunter UAV.

    The pilots guided the Hunter operator to the scene where it set up for a strike mission and dropped its precision munition, killing both unknown enemies and marking a first in Army Aviation history.

    "It’s very humbling to know that we have set an Army historical mark in having the first successful launch in combat from an Army weaponized UAV," said Capt. Raymond Fields, commander, Unmanned Aerial Surveillance Company. "This would not be possible without my soldiers and civilians working hard day in and day out in Iraq to accomplish this feat."

    Link
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    Welcome to Moon 2.0. Snip from announcement coverage at Wired News:

    Google will award $30 million to the first private team to put a robot on the moon, the company and the X Prize Foundation announced at Wired NextFest in Los Angeles Thursday. Members of the public will also get the chance to send digital mementos to the moon. In this advance from the October issue of Wired magazine, contributing editor Spencer Reiss explains what's behind the Google Lunar X Prize, and what it will take to win it.
    Link, here's more about today's announcement.
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    Two young US soldiers who contributed to a collaborative New York Times op-ed about the war were killed in Iraq this week. Link to story in UK Guardian, Link to report in NYT, via themorningnews. Read their op-ed: The War as We See It, Link. (Thanks, Susannah)
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    Deceptive flower sign

    Picture 3-65
    A sneaky flower dealer near Sunset and Vermont in Los Angeles has a sign on the sidewalk that tricks drivers into thinking it sells roses for $4 a dozen.

    But if you get down on your hands and knees and use a magnifying glass, you can see a tiny "1/2" in front of the large "DOZ,"and an equally miniature "99" above the dot after the "$4."

    That said, the sign's design and colors are quite attractive. Link (Via Museum of Hoaxes)

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    MC Hammer school of English (video)


    Daryl Caesar, an ESL EFL teacher in Kaohsiung, Taiwan, shot this adorable video of children learning to speak and spell in English using the time-honored "Hammer Time" method. Video Link to their on-stage performance, and here's another clip of the kids practicing in the clasroom: Video Link. (via Souris' tweetstream)

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    Museum of Hoaxes has a run-down of 20 cruel and/or unusual experiments performed on both man and beast. They're from a new book, Elephants on Acid and Other Bizarre Experiments, by Alex Boese.
    #18: “Would You Go To Bed With Me Tonight?”

    If you were a man walking across the campus of Florida State University in 1978, an attractive young woman might have approached you and said these exact words: "I have been noticing you around campus. I find you to be attractive. Would you go to bed with me tonight?"

    If you were that man, you probably would have thought that you had just gotten incredibly lucky. But not really. You were actually an unwitting subject in an experiment designed by the psychologist Russell Clark.

    Clark had persuaded the students of his social psychology class to help him find out which gender, in a real-life situation, would be more receptive to a sexual offer from a stranger. The only way to find out, he figured, was to actually get out there and see what would happen. So young men and women from his class fanned out across campus and began propositioning strangers.

    The results weren't very surprising. Seventy-five percent of guys were happy to oblige an attractive female stranger (and those who said no typically offered an excuse such as, "I'm married"). But not a single woman accepted the identical offer of an attractive male. In fact, most of them demanded the guy leave her alone.

    At first the psychological community dismissed Clark's experiment as a trivial stunt, but gradually his experiment gained first acceptance, and then praise for how dramatically it revealed the differing sexual attitudes of men and women. Today it's considered a classic. But why men and women display such different attitudes remains as hotly debated as ever.

    Link (Via TDG)
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    MRI machines going berserk (video)

    Picture 1-103 This safety video offers scary scenes of MRI magnets sucking metal objects into the bed. A deadly serious Rod Serling-type (same pose, no cigarette) narrates.

    It's both educational and a source of cheap thrills, at least for the first few minutes. (For a quick thrill, watch this YouTube video of an oxygen tank shooting through an MRI tube.) Link (Via TDG and Mind Hacks)

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    Beehive in a glass jar

    200709130935 At first, I thought this was a photo of a glass eye with a snakeskin design. Actually, it's a bell jar that was placed over an opening in a beehive.

    Here's a slideshow of the bees building the honeycomb inside the bell jar. Link (Via That's How it Happened)

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    Virgin inaugural flight

    [ Boing Boing Gadgets ]: Virgin America shared more details today on its partnership with in-flight wireless broadband provider AirCell -- air-to-ground wireless internet will be available on all VA flights "sometime in 2008," and will be offered two ways: BYOD (bring your own device, laptops or pdas or whatever), and also through VA's inflight entertainment system called Red.

    AirCell also has a deal in the works with American Airlines for air-to-ground wireless, but from what I can suss out in the press release, two things make the VA deal different...

    Link to details and full post at Boing Boing Gadgets. Discuss.

    Previously on Boing Boing:

  • Getting high with Richard Branson: Virgin America's virgin flight
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    week of 09/09/2007

    Features Reviews Videos

    Comments
    • "The moment I saw this little girl I fell in love. I can understand how tough some of the things in her life can be. When I was 8 I was diegnosed with a brian tumor in the corpes colosome. As much as I am an inspiration for some, she is an insperation to me. God Bless her...."
    • "I think cats could do just as good a job of modeling atomic nuclei...well, hydrogen anyway. ..."
    • "It's funny that so many of the comments so far are questioning the reliability of the sources in the post, since Hugo's quotes in the article read as though he himself is questioning the truthfulness of what has been said about Amin and others. Not that I'd go to bat for any of those guys--I certainly don't know enough about anyone mentioned in the article to defend them, but I'd be much more open to believing the worst about them if the facts in this post were delivered by honest, thorough reporting inste..."
    • ""Without the other media, like BB here, acting as echo chambers, this man would be of no consequence whatsoever." I really appreciate BB. It allows me to express my opinions to other people who can type and like to. But I'm not sure BB's obsession with right-wing follies helps to prop up right-wing spokespeople. Fox News consistently outpulls, by a wide margin, the other cable channels nightly - not because it's better, it isn't, but because it's unabashedly conservative among news outlets that aren't. It ..."
    • "You know, just because someone calls himself a socialist, doesn't make it true. ..."
    • "When does this bill go up for vote, anyone know?..."
    • "However, he also seems to be trying to create a socialist Venezuela that works for all its people and not its historical elite. With the sky rocketing crime rate and long lines for food and essential sundries, he's not doing a very good job of it. Then again, the latter most often is a feature of socialism. ..."
    • "The "three strikes" law to disconnect suspected file sharers is wrong because • It applies punishment after accusation not after a fair hearing, discarding the principle of "innocent until proven guilty" • It applies collective punishment to all users of the particular broadband connection, i.e. the whole household. • As has been observed by others, an internet connection is "a pipe that delivers freedom of the press, freedom of assembly and freedom of speech" as well as entertainment. Disconnecting this en..."
    • "As a filmmaker, I can say it's highly unlikely any actual books were harmed for the making of this movie. The paper appears to have been laser cut. I suspect a number of prop books were created, at various sizes, in order to pull off the amazing animation of this thing. ..."
    • "Seriously, how repressive can the UK government get before the angry villagers start to revolt? If this type of crap was even on the horizon in the US, there would likely be some serious violence directed toward the people behind it - and deservedly so...."

     

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