Author Archives: Cory Doctorow

Most adulterous professions

A survey of the 1.9 million accounts on AshleyMadison.com, a dating site for people looking to cheat on their spouses, rounds up the most common occupations among the would-be infidelitous: For Women: 1. Teachers 2. Stay-at-home Moms 3. Nurses 4. Administrative Assistants 5. Real Estate Agents For Men: 1. Physicians 2. Police Officers 3. Lawyers 4. Real Estate Agents 5. Engineers Who Cheats? Docs and Stay at Home Moms! (via MeFi) (Image: The Seventh Commandment, a Creative Commons Attribution photo from pasukaru76's photostream) Previously:Woman stoned to death in Afghanistan for adultery Scan of Li'l Abner venereal disease comic strip Vintage sexist coffee TV commercial A year of following all the rules in the Bible Conservative California legislator gives pornographic account of ... Political sex scandals: the phenomenon of the "centipede" - Boing ......

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Christopher Barazak and Karen Joy Fowler readings in Seattle

Leslie Howle sez, "NW MediaArts is a non-profit organization inviting award-winning speculative fiction writers to Seattle to teach a one-day writers workshop, read at the University Book Store, and speak at schools and libraries. Workshops take place at Richard Hugo House. March 12 - Christopher Barazak, author of 'The Love We Share Without Knowing,' which was shortlisted for the Tiptree Award last year, reads at University Book Store on 3/12 and teaches a workshop on 3/14. Workshop space is still open if you register by 3/10/2010."...

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Looking back at the dotcom boom, ten years later

Wired claims that this is the tenth anniversary of the dotcom boom, and in honor of that auspicious overheated bubble, they've put together a long, Web 0.96b layout depicting the most hubristicly hubristic predictions and hype of that golden age. I moved to San Francisco in 1999, and remember the feverish absurdity of it all -- and how hard it was not to feel like all these people must know something if they were pouring all this money and energy into all the odd and improbable ideas (a recurring theme I remember was people explaining how they were going to build shopping malls for the web, which, I guess, is basically what Amazon's Z-shops are). 10 Years After: A Look Back at the Dotcom Boom and Bust Previously:Monkey Calls! Finally a dotcom FIXED Dotcom downturn be damned. Poignant story of a dotcom's First-person account of a dotcom How to avoid the dotcom shakeout: buy a better domain ... A quasi-defunct dotcom is doing...

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Cast-art depicting broken-bone X-rays

Casttoo makes decorative decals for your orthopedic casts -- including these ones, depicting the broken bones within. (via JWZ) Previously:Anatomical drawing on a cast Baby goose with homemade leg brace Cat burglar falls off three-storey building across from my bedroom ......

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Movie funded by asking for pocket change on Twitter: “At Home By Myself… With You”

Raj Panikkar sez, "We're screening a film called 'At Home By Myself... With You' (directed by Kris Booth, starring Kristin Booth - no relation) at The Royal in Toronto this week. The unique thing about the film is how we raised the financing to shoot. Quite literally, we campaigned for people to contribute their loose pocket change. The strategy took off, partly through an active Facebook and Twitter presence and also frequent video blogs detailing the contributions. By the time we shot the film, we had raised $42,000 (admittedly, one person's pocket change is occasionally another's small fortune - but it did really begin with 15 cents, 43 cents, a dollar 12, etc.) One might be led to assume that with a limited budget, there'd be a matching limitation on production quality. But the film looks gorgeous (Telefilm Canada came on board at the very end to help fund a pro finish), and reviews and comments have been great. We were reviewed by all the major papers in Toronto: The Sun, NOW, The Star, The Post, etc. The film plays at The Royal for the rest of the week, and then gets its TV debut right away on TMN and Movie Central, plus a DVD release on April 6th." Pocket Change Film (Thanks, Raj!) (Disclosure: Raj's mother, Bev, taught me to read) Previously:Get involved in production of community-made SF movie: Artemis ... Loony evangelical claims credit for Canadian film tax-credit ... Check out the sunglasses in this curious Danish sci-fi B-movie ......

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Best jobs in America infographic

Paul sez, "We have been putting this together for a week or so and thought you might like it. Looks like I am going back to school to be a systems engineer, haha." I like that they've color-coded for "low-stress," "benefit to society" and "satisfaction." However, on these three counts, I'm unsurprised to see that "science fiction writer" didn't make the cut. When I was 17, the school guidance counsellor got in some software that would help you figure out what career to set your sights on. I completed its questionnaire and hit return, and an instant later was advised to become a "geriatric nutritionist" (that is, someone who prepares meals in an old folks' home). Even today, I sometimes feel like I missed my calling. ("Science fiction writer" wasn't on that list either). Best Jobs in America (Thanks, Paul!) Previously:Hotmail users deemed too dumb for employment at firm California Supreme Court: Non-compete clauses are not enforceable ... Federal temporary jobs in disaster recovery, a HOWTO Restaurant lays off waitress who shaved head for cancer charity ... Cal State U forced to re-hire Quaker math teacher who inserted ... City in Montana requires job applicants to hand over all social ... Lose your job, lose your life: trauma of being laid off can ... Best Job in the World Scary-ass job-loss chart comparing previous and current recession ... Grateful Dead Archivist wanted at UC Santa Cruz Prison guard: better job than journalist, according to "worst US ......

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Turn a quarter of Detroit into “semi-rural” farms?

The city of Detroit is proposing to give over a quarter of its land to be turned into "semi-rural" fields and farms, with the surviving neighborhoods standing in "pockets in expanses of green." The proposal is politically charged (serving a death-sentence on a whole neighborhood is bound to be controversial) but the idea of "downsizing" Detroit seems to have wide acceptance. And yes, this entire thing was predicted by David Byrne in 1988 in the song "(Nothing But) Flowers" on the final Talking Heads album Naked. Operating on a scale never before attempted in this country, the city would demolish houses in some of the most desolate sections of Detroit and move residents into stronger neighborhoods. Roughly a quarter of the 139-square-mile city could go from urban to semi-rural. Near downtown, fruit trees and vegetable farms would replace neighborhoods that are an eerie landscape of empty buildings and vacant lots. Suburban commuters heading into the city center might pass through what looks like the countryside to get there. Surviving neighborhoods in the birthplace of the auto industry would become pockets in expanses of green. Detroit looks at downsizing to save city (Thanks, Rigel!) (Image: Garden grows, a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike image from Payton Chung's photostream) Previously:Prelinger's Lost Landscapes of Detroit now available for download ... Lost Landscapes of Detroit from the Prelinger Archives Buy an inch of land in Detroit Stop robot poverty: i3 Detroit hackerspace fundraiser Pictory's Neighborhood Treasures: Detroit Smile Artists buying cheap houses in Detroit Haunting photo-essay on rotting buildings in Detroit Rotting textbook warehouse in Detroit...

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Knife-brandishing yob in a hoodie openly menaces public just steps from Parliament



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Laptop bag made from cement bag

Etsy seller TheWren sells messenger bags made out of South African cement sacks (which, I imagine, are durable by definition). Very nice, old school art. I had to give up messenger bags to spare my back (the lopsided burden was killing me), but I still have a soft spot for them, and live vicariously through others on this score. PPC Cement Laptop Bag - OPC (via Wired) Previously:Leather laptop bag folds 8 ways Working Class Heroes "Unfold" Laptop Bag Gadgets Cool laptop bags for chicks Noon Logan Solar laptop bag Gadgets Laptop sleeve disguised as a newspaper Review: Six months with the Tom Bihn "Western Flyer" travel bag ... O Beautiful For Spacious Bag, For Amber Waves of Beer Show-and-tell laptop bag hacks the TSA? [always read the fine ......

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Stop robot poverty: i3 Detroit hackerspace fundraiser

Nick from i3 Detroit hackerspace sez, "We all know that robot poverty is a major problem but no one is taking any steps to help combat it...until now. Help i3 Detroit, Detroit's Hackerspace, move to our bigger 8,000 sq/ft location and fight the causes of Robot Poverty. Most robots don't have the basic alcohol they need to survive or the tanks of pneumatic fluid to pressurize appendages. It's everyone's problem and you can help. Watch our informative video and support us via our Kickstarter program." i3 Detroit v2.0 (Thanks, Nick!) Previously:Hackerspaces around the world Mitch Altman completes his worldwide tour of hackerspaces (Welcome ... Historic RESISTORS radical hackerspace burns down "Fight Club for nerds" Gadgets...

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Time-lapse of book-cover design

Lauren from Orbit books sez, "I thought you guys might like my latest behind the scenes design project, while designing the latest cover in a Victorian/Steampunk book series, I left the video screen-capture on...for like 6 hours (never knew how much I checked email until I had to edit them out of there) - we condensed the rest down to just under 2 minutes, and voila." I love watching people who are good at their jobs do their thing, such a treat to watch over Lauren's shoulder. Also, what a smart little promo for the book! design editor's inspiration (Thanks, Lauren!) Previously:Best book covers of 2007 Bad judgment in choice of kids' book cover Best book covers of 2008 Race and book covers: why is there a white girl on the cover of ... Pelican book cover design True nature of science fiction and fantasy books revealed through ... Jacket design for Mark's new book!...

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Ask your MEPs to support anti-ACTA motion

Jeremie writes, The written declaration 12/2010 regarding the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement (ACTA) is now open for signatures. It has to be signed within three months by more than half of the Members of the European Parliament (MEPs). It is a great opportunity for the European Parliament to prove its commitment to protecting fundamental rights and freedoms. Every EU citizen concerned about ACTA and the preservation of an open Internet can participateA dedicated campaign page is available here: http://www.laquadrature.net/wiki/Help_sign_the_Written_Declaration_12/2010_against_ACTA by getting in touch with MEPs and urging them to sign the written declaration. A dedicated campaign page has been set up to allow EU citizens to participate in collecting the signatures of the majority of the Members of the European Parliament. From Monday, March 8th to Thursday, March 11th, MEPs will meet in Strasbourg for a plenary session. From now on and until mid-June, plenary sessions will be the best periods to collect signatures on the written declaration. "Signing the written declaration 12/2010 would show MEPs' commitment to protecting citizens' rights. The adoption of the written declaration will send a strong message to the Commission and Member States that the European Parliament will not let EU citizens' freedoms be undermined by opaque diplomatic negotiations. Every citizen and NGO concerned about ACTA can participate by calling MEPs and urging them to sign the declaration.", concludes Jérémie Zimmermann, spokesperson of La Quadrature du Net. Start collecting signatures on ACTA declaration! | La Quadrature du Net (Thanks, Jeremie!) Previously:ACTA "internet enforcement" chapter leaks New ACTA copyright treaty dodges the UN, poor countries and ... ACTA leak shows US Trade Rep lied about "3-strikes" Secret copyright treaty leaks. It's bad. Very bad. EU Data Protection czar comes out against ACTA; EU analysis of ... Biggest-ever ACTA leak: secret copyright treaty dirty laundry ... UK petition for ACTA transparency...

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iPhone developer EULA turns programmers into serfs

The Electronic Frontier Foundation has published the Apple iPhone Developer Program License Agreement, a secretive document that requires its signatories to agree to a gag order on the terms of the deal. EFF got the agreement by submitting a Freedom of Information Act request to NASA, who had signed onto it in order to release its app. EFF Senior IP Attorney Fred von Lohmann has some pithy analysis of just how awful this agreement is for the programmers who gets sucked into it: Overall, the Agreement is a very one-sided contract, favoring Apple at every turn. That's not unusual where end-user license agreements are concerned (and not all the terms may ultimately be enforceable), but it's a bit of a surprise as applied to the more than 100,000 developers for the iPhone, including many large public companies. How can Apple get away with it? Because it is the sole gateway to the more than 40 million iPhones that have been sold. In other words, it's only because Apple still "owns" the customer, long after each iPhone (and soon, iPad) is sold, that it is able to push these contractual terms on the entire universe of software developers for the platform. In short, no competition among app stores means no competition for the license terms that apply to iPhone developers. If Apple's mobile devices are the future of computing, you can expect that future to be one with more limits on innovation and competition (or "generativity," in the words of Prof. Jonathan Zittrain) than the PC era that came before. It's frustrating to see Apple, the original pioneer in generative computing, putting shackles on the market it (for now) leads. If Apple wants to be a real leader, it should be fostering innovation and competition, rather than acting as a jealous and arbitrary feudal lord. Developers should demand better terms and customers who love their iPhones should back them. It's amazing all the ways that the iPhone manages to screw the people that love it: saddling iPhone owners with crappy contracts with abusive mobile companies, limiting their access to programs and forcing them into one-sided EULAs, then screwing the developers with equally abusive agreements. I guess that's one way to think different. All Your Apps Are Belong to Apple: The iPhone Developer Program License Agreement Previously:Pinch Media: Statistics your iPhone apps may be sending back home ... Thomas Edison's crappy, price-fixing EULA Apparatus for allowing your cat to agree to EULAs...

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Beyond breaking firewalls: how to fight net-censorship

Ethan Zuckerman's new piece on Worldchanging, "Internet Freedom: Beyond Circumvention," looks at the technical and social limitations of circumvention of censoring firewalls that we love so much as a tool for helping people in repressive regimes liberate themselves. It's an excellent and thought-provoking piece that raises more questions than it answers, but it points to some very meaty research problems that people who care about technology and freedom need to attend to. - We need to shift our thinking from helping users in closed societies access blocked content to helping publishers reach all audiences. In doing so, we may gain those publishers as a valuable new set of allies as well as opening a new class of technical solutions. - If our goal is to allow people in closed societies to access an online public sphere, or to use online tools to organize protests, we need to bring the administrators of these tools into the dialog. Secretary Clinton suggests that we make free speech part of the American brand identity - let's find ways to challenge companies to build blocking resistance into their platforms and to consider internet freedom to be a central part of their business mission. We need to address the fact that making their platforms unblockable has a cost for content hosts and that their business models currently don't reward them for providing service to these users. - The US government should treat internet filtering - and more aggressive hacking and DDoS attacks - as a barrier to trade. The US should strongly pressure governments in open societies like Australia and France to resist the temptation to restrict internet access, as their behavior helps China and Iran make the case that their censorship is in line with international norms. And we need to fix US treasury regulations make it difficult and legally ambiguous for companies like Microsoft and projects like SourceForge to operate in closed societies. If we believe in Internet Freedom, a first step needs to be rethinking these policies so they don't hurt ordinary internet users. Internet Freedom: Beyond Circumvention (Image: Great Firewall of China, a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike image from chidorian's photostream) Previously:Firewall workaround: use Google as a proxy and access forbidden ... Britain's "Great Firewall" set to restrict access to Wikipedia ... Net censorship: HOWTO bypass China's Great Firewall Great Firewall of Australia will nationally block sites appearing ... Wikileaks reveals secret blacklist behind proposed Great Firewall ... Google and China's "Great Firewall": Fun with the Billboard ... Great Firewall of Australia to block video games unsuitable for ......

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Smart auto-sorting bolt/screw/nut box

Wulf from Craftster built this uber-clever workshop-bits sorting box after getting sick of manually sorting out the buckets of loose bits of metal that built up around his shop: "At the shop where I work we just toss loose screws, bolts, nails and other bits and pieces of hardware from the workbenches and the floor into a bucket and, every couple of years when the bucket gets too full, somebody has to dump the whole mess out and sort everything back to where it belongs. When that job fell to me this Spring, I decided there had to be a better solution. So I designed a bin that would help to at least divide things by type to make the final sorting easier. Though built for an industrial situation, it would work equally well in the home craft room for jewellery findings, sewing notions, etc." Self-sorting (sorta) bin (via Dinosaurs and Robots) Previously:Hand-cranked penny-dispenser allows anyone to work for minimum ... Industrial robotic pancake production video...

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Clock made from a whirling, strobing hard-drive

This Strobeshnik clock is made from an old hard drive: "The digits are etched in the original platter and they're strobed from behind with leds. The HDD motor is driven by a custom circuit without feedback, hence poor startup performance and awful noise. Rotational feedback is provided by an IR LED/phototransistor pair near the place where the head arm formerly was." The result is a whirling, grinding, eye-catching, unreadable kinetic sculpture. Now that's a timepiece! Strobeshnik (final) (via JWZ!) Previously:Clock for geeks Warren Ellis alarm clock Make your own Pong-clock: MONOCHRON Clock sculpture with more than 150 analog hands spells out the ... Clock on a bicycle chain Roger Wood's latest clock sculpture Energy Clock New Chronulator clock kit spawns cigar-box clock...

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Stomach-churning details of CIA waterboarding crimes

Salon's Mark Benjamin went spelunking in the recently released CIA torture memos and comes back with a stomach-churning account of the waterboarding practiced at Gitmo. This fine-tuned torture process repeatedly took its victims to the brink of death (one victim was waterboarded 180+ times) until many of them simply gave up on breathing and tried to allow themselves to drown, only to be revived by unethical medical personnel who collaborated with the war criminals conducting the torture. The documents also lay out, in chilling detail, exactly what should occur in each two-hour waterboarding "session." Interrogators were instructed to start pouring water right after a detainee exhaled, to ensure he inhaled water, not air, in his next breath. They could use their hands to "dam the runoff" and prevent water from spilling out of a detainee's mouth. They were allowed six separate 40-second "applications" of liquid in each two-hour session - and could dump water over a detainee's nose and mouth for a total of 12 minutes a day. Finally, to keep detainees alive even if they inhaled their own vomit during a session - a not-uncommon side effect of waterboarding - the prisoners were kept on a liquid diet. The agency recommended Ensure Plus. "This is revolting and it is deeply disturbing," said Dr. Scott Allen, co-director of the Center for Prisoner Health and Human Rights at Brown University who has reviewed all of the documents for Physicians for Human Rights. "The so-called science here is a total departure from any ethics or any legitimate purpose. They are saying, 'This is how risky and harmful the procedure is, but we are still going to do it.' It just sounds like lunacy," he said. "This fine-tuning of torture is unethical, incompetent and a disgrace to medicine." Waterboarding for dummies...

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Fafblog on the Iraq elections

Fafblog, one of my favorite satirical sites, has a scorching and unfortunately accurate take on the Iraq election: VICTOREEEEEEEEE! After nineteen years of bombs and wars and torture and bombs and torture and ethnic cleansing and torture, America's mission in Iraq has finally been re-reaccomplished through the miracle of symbolic purple-fingered brown people! Oh sure, all the cynics and the critics and the nattering nabobs of payingattentionism will say "Oh but Giblets haven't we had five or six of these already, what makes these purple fingers different from previous purple fingers" and the answer to that is shut up. These purple fingers are the most purplest-fingeriest purple fingers to ever have been symbolically purpled! They stand as unique and compelling evidence of our nation's sincere generational commitment to transform a brutal impoverished dictatorship into a brutal, more impoverished dictatorship by freeing Iraq from the deadly menace of Iraqis. Freedom On The Lurch Previously:Fafblog on gay marriage Fafblog brings us the real Obama facts Fafblog's Medium Lobster becomes a political columnist for the ... Forward-looking defense policy from Fafblog Lampooning the American dismissal of Gitmo suicides...

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Rhizome’s 7 on 7: 7 geeks, 7 artists co-create in NYC

Fred sez, If you're in NYC on April 17th, definitely consider attending Rhizome.org's new conference, Seven on Seven. The idea behind Seven on Seven is to pair seven leading artists with seven technologists to see what they can produce. There's already a lot of buzz about the event, and for good reason, our lineup is stellar: Artists: Cao Fei, Evan Roth, Aaron Koblin, Monica Narula, Ryan Trecartin, Tauba Auerbach, and Marc Andre Robinson Technologists: Jeff Hammerbacher, Joshua Schachter, Matt Mullenweg, Andrew Kortina, Hilary Mason, Ayah Bdeir, and David Karp Check the link for full details, artist and technologist pairings, and ticket prices. Seven on Seven - Rhizome (Thanks, Fred!)...

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HUMONGOUS Soviet ground-effect tank-plane

I know nothing about this titanic Lun Soviet ground-effect war-tank-plane-thing. The description (in Russian) contains a large number of specialized ground-effect tank-plane enthusiast vocabulary words that stymie Google Translate. It appears that it could traverse broken apocalyptic roads, frozen tundra, and water with equal ease, skimming below radar, too. But I can't say anything else for sure. So I will say this: if you fed a hyperactive 12 year old lad a diet of old Astounding Stories covers and put him in the most boring math class of all time for 28 straight hours with a collection of fine pens and a binder full of doodling paper, he just might produce one of these. Экраноплан "Лунь" проект 903 (Thanks, Elapsv!) Previously:Soviet war painting gallery Iraqi army reuses old Cold-War-era Soviet armored vehicles - Boing ... Products from the former Soviet Union Have Atoms, Will Travel: Mobile Soviet nuclear power plants ... Gallery: The Gear of War Soviet watches...

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