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Archive for October, 2006

My last post talked about the US ban on Vegemite which seemed odd enough, but apparently there’s another new piece of news recently making headlines. Now, not only can you expect your local US Customs Agent to ask if you have any Vegemite, they may now be asking for your laptop as well.

In a recent NY Times article, laptops may now be seized and analyzed without any reason given and without any requirement to return the laptop to you in a reasonable time.

“One member who responded to our survey said she has been waiting for a year to get her laptop and its contents back,” said Susan Gurley, the group’s executive director. “She said it was randomly seized. And since she hasn’t been arrested, I assume she was just a regular business traveler, not a criminal.”

Now I can only assume that waiting a year is the exception rather than the norm but the article does raise some interesting points such as there’s no probably cause necessary for inspecting or seizing a laptop. Also there’s no requirement to notify the owner of the laptop as to why the seizure is taking place. These are the pieces that seem unfair. I’m not against empowering security officials to do their jobs but there needs to be checks and balances to protect the other side as well.

More and more personal information is being stored on computers. I probably have more financial records and photos on my laptop computer than in my own home. Law enforcement officials can’t enter my home without a warrant or probably cause. Why should they be able to browse through my bank statements or pictures of my family on my laptop without the same judiciary approval or supervision?

Link to Article

Do you come from the land down under?

Posted by Pete on October 23rd, 2006
Vegemite

Apparently the US has banned Vegemite from entering the country for containing folate.

Folate is a B vitamin that occurs naturally in foods like bananas, leafy green vegetables, and is also fortified in breakfast cereals in the form of folic acid.

That seems a bit odd to me. I’m no nutritionist but I’m not sure how removing items that contain folate from being available is going to help with meeting the FDA’s folate intake targets which we are currently well below.

I actually brought some Vegemite back from my trip to Australia a couple of years ago and invited some friends to try it with me. I guess it’s an acquired taste or something you have to grow up on, because I thought it was horrible. Most of my friends agreed also. Let’s just say I don’t think banning it from the US is going to hurt world-wide sales much.

Line Rider on Crack

Posted by Pete on October 16th, 2006
Ok, on the lighter side of things, I came across this Line Rider application the other day which allows you to draw your own ski slope and then watch someone try to sled down it. I thought I had created some pretty cool slopes….I was wrong.

Check this one out:

How well does Google know you?

Posted by Pete on October 13th, 2006
Here’s a billiant idea from fredshouse.net but doubtful to ever be realized. I think it goes against Google’s revenue plan. How can they continue to make money charging for personalized search ads if people strip out off of their personalization data?

I think I need a new Google product to drop into beta. That would be, let’s see, Google Data Privacy. GDP would allow me to review all of the information that Google retains on me across all services, from all devices, and from all sources. GDP would allow me to determine the maximum data retention period for each of my services. GDP would allow me to selectively opt out of cross-service data mining & correlation, even if it reduced the quality of the services I receive. GDP would allow me to correct any inaccurate data in my profile. And GDP would log and alert me when my data was queried by other services.

Link to the site

Confused on the point? Every time you perform a search with a search engine you’re trusting a couple of companies with your data. First, the Search Engine, since they know what keyword you searched on, and what links you clicked on in the results. Your ISP also knows what pages you’ve visited. These are things that most people probably never concern themselves with because they assume that even though these things may be tracked, no one is concerned with tying these back to an individual person. Sure a Search Engine many be concerned with information in aggregate to help sell adds and present relevant data to advertisers but they aren’t concerned with doing this at an individual basis. Most search engines won’t even store a name with the searches, they use random numbers instead to keep people’s information private.

Think for a second about the AOL data scare that occurred a little while back. Basically a bunch of aggregated data was released accidentally into public access. Even though no names were tied to the searches that were perfomred, it was possible for people to look at the keywords used for searches and figure out who some people were, where they lived, and even contact them.

Search Engine’s go through a lot of effort to keep your data secure and private but as you can see that’s not a guarantee that you’re 100% safe. Mistakes can be made and the propsed idea above is giving control of your data back to you. If you want to “clear your data” from a search engine, GDP might let you.

So why won’t it happen? Because even though Search Engine’s aren’t necessarily interested in your data individually, it is valuable to them in aggregate. That’s how they make money and measure results. Its how’s they can determine what pages are most relevant to a search term. Its also how they can communicate to advertisers on where trends are. Removing that, hurts their business. And I’m sure an agument could be made that it hurts you as well. If I can’t track your searches, I can’t estimate what results are going to be most relevant to you (see Google’s Personalized Search Feature).

Still, it does raise some interesting questions though. Who should ultimately “own” your data? And how comfortable are you with someone else managing it?

Moblog Page Added

Posted by Pete on October 4th, 2006
What’s a moblogging? Its basically a way for me to post pictures on my website from my cell phone (mobile+blogging=moblogging…get it?). So if I’m out anywhere and I take a photo, I can send it to my site and have it automatically post to my new moblog page without doing anything more than sending a text message (MMS). Pretty easy to do.

Cell Phone Celebration

Posted by Pete on October 4th, 2006
Finally picked up the Sony Ericsson w810i last night from Cingular. After waiting for my upgrade discount to be offered I finally got rid of my old crappy phone and was able to be back in the 21st century again. This one is sporting:

    -2.0 megapixel camera
    -video recorder
    -mp3 player
    -bluetooth
    -fm radio
    -calendar and contact synchronization with Outlook

and I think it may make phone calls too but I haven’t gotten that far yet.

sony ericsson w810i

Weblications

Posted by Pete on October 2nd, 2006
Web 2.0” is a buzz word that can’t last. It’s a version number, just like Windows 95, which was cutting edge when it first came out but now is pretty ancient. So I’m calling a new section on my site “weblications” for online applications over the web. In the future I’ll be posting some finds online regarding web 2.0 applications.

As a start, take a look at Gliffy which is an application very similar to Visio. It allows for:


Diagramming in your web browser without downloading additional software
Desktop application feel in a web-based diagramming solution
Add collaborators to your work and watch it grow
Link to published Gliffy drawings from your blog or wiki

Create many types of diagrams:
Flowcharts
UI wireframes
Floor plans
Network diagrams
UML diagrams
Any simple drawing or diagram

gliffy_ss_large.jpg