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December 29, 2004

If This Is True - We Ought to be Ashamed

A CNN report from a US woman scuba diving in Thailand tells of the US Consulate demanding payment for passport pictures before they'd issue new documentation for victims to return to the United States. If they hadn't kept their ATM card on board the dive boat, I wonder what would have happened to them and to the others for whom they coughed up the money.

From CNN.com via
Peggy Bowen, Director
New Jersey Council of Diving Clubs
American diver underwater during catastrophe
Wednesday, December 29, 2004 Posted: 7:12 AM EST (1212 GMT)

(CNN) -- An American woman who was scuba diving with her husband in Thailand
as one of Sunday's tsunamis roared overhead said she was oblivious to the
disaster until after they surfaced, her mother told CNN on Tuesday.

Faye Wachs, 34, was diving with her husband, Eugene Kim, Sunday morning off
Ko Phi Phi Island in Thailand when they noticed the water visibility
worsened and felt as though they were being sucked downward, Helen Wachs
said.

Their dive master signaled to them to surface, "but we still didn't know
what happened," Faye wrote in an e-mail to her mother Tuesday.

The enormity of what was happening while they were scuba diving was not
immediately apparent after they surfaced, Helen Wachs said her daughter told
her. "She said she saw a lot of trash in the water. The dive master said it
was really rude for people to throw trash. Then they saw large bits of
debris and thought there might have been a boat crash," Helen Wachs said.

She said her daughter didn't know what had happened until the dive master
got a text message from his wife telling him about the catastrophe.

Soon they saw bodies floating past them, Wachs' mother said in an interview
from Oakland, California, where she lives.

Once they returned to shore, the couple did what they could to help, Helen
Wachs said. "I can't describe carrying a moaning person who just saw his
girlfriend killed down a hill in the middle of the night," the e-mail said.
"I saw more bodies than I care to report. The hotel where we were staying is
mostly gone. We lost everything, but our lives."

Faye Wachs said she was impressed by the efforts of the Thai government and
the International Committee for the Red Cross, but "she was appalled at the
treatment they got" from the U.S. government, her mother said. At the
airport in Bangkok, other governments had set up booths to greet nationals
who had been affected and to help repatriate them, she said.

That was not the case with the U.S. government, Wachs told her mother. It
took the couple three hours, she said, to find the officials from the
American consulate, who were in the VIP lounge.

Because they had lost all their possessions, including their documentation,
they had to have new passports issued. But the U.S. officials demanded
payment to take the passport pictures, Helen Wachs said.

The couple had managed to hold on to their ATM card, so they paid for the
photos and helped other Americans who did not have any money get their
pictures taken and buy food, Helen Wachs said. "She was really very
surprised" that the government did so little to ease their ordeal, she said.

Helen Wachs said her daughter told her they would need "some serious
counseling" upon their return to Los Angeles.

Once aboard the plane, Wachs told her mother, the biggest thing they noticed
was the absence of the stench of raw sewage that had permeated the air.
"She said the clean smell was amazing."

Wachs, who described herself as "shell-shocked but happy to be coming home,"
is scheduled to arrive Wednesday morning in Los Angeles, her mother said.
She returns acutely aware that many thousands of others don't have that
option. "The tourists are able to get out, but those there are left with
utter destruction," Helen Wachs said.

December 28, 2004

Psycho Sensei Quits Teaching Tae Kwon Do

I always knew there would come a time that it would be necessary to stop teaching TKD. Catching whooping cough from my lovely charges was just the last straw. I'd been getting sick at least once every month due to parents insisting on bringing their kids to TKD regardless of their physical condition or degree of contagiousness. Finally, after getting this nasty, long term disgusting whooping cough thing, husband put his foot down. Since this was the first time in our entire marriage that he's gotten pissed enough to put his foot down, and since he was right, I figured that marital bliss should win out, and out of TKD I now am.

May my health soon be regained

December 22, 2004

SCO reports deeper loss, shrinking revenue

And sometimes people don't tolerate companies that use screwed up lawsuits to attempt to stifle innovation. Hooray for them.

It's another quarter of financial bad news for the firm engaged in litigation over Unix and Linux. [CNET News.com]

EU upholds penalties against Microsoft

Uh oh.... time to increase the bribe budget

update Judge orders company to unbundle Windows Media Player and to share server technology. Appeals aren't over yet, though.
[CNET News.com]

Morons in the News: Social Security Administration Retaliates against Towns for Gay Marriages

Don't we just love the way that the administration finds ways of punishing people that dare attempt to assert their rights.

The Social Security Administration is rejecting the marriage
certificates of heterosexual couples who happened to live in the
same towns that issued some certificates to homosexual couples
earlier in the year...

You may recall that earlier in the year, a number of small towns
in New York state issued marriage licenses to same-sex couples.
Now that action has resulted in an unforseen consequence:
retaliation against everyone from them by the Social
Security... [Morons Dot Org]

December 21, 2004

Drug Safety and the Evil FDA

Ok folks...which do we want? An agency to play Big Brother and tell us what we may and may not put into our bodies while simultaneously allowing us to eat as much McDonalds crap as we want while skydiving and becoming alcoholics? I'm totally confused. A few years ago we had people screaming that the FDA wasn't approving new drugs fast enough. This week everyone is taking studies out of context and running around like Chicken Little scaring the bejeezus out of anyone who ever took a pain reliever in their lives.

Oh the bad naughty FDA who approved Vioxx. Uh, guys...pain and the stress on the body caused by pain ALSO increases your possibility of a heart attack or stroke. Everything we do is a trade off. NO drug is "safe." There are side effects to everything. Then comes Celebrex. The ONE study that concluded that continually taking very high doses of Celebrax can contribute to stroke and/or heart disease is not actually READ by the media before breathlessly announcing how dangerous it is. And the stock market plummets.

Today we get that Aleve is horribly dangerous. Did anyone read THAT study? All participants were over 70, and all were taking very high doses of Aleve every day for over 3 years. Label says "Adults over 65 years - do not take more than 1 caplet every 12 hours unless directed by a doctor." So, is the drug at fault? Should the FDA rush to our defense? Or should people READ THE INSTRUCTIONS on the bottle?

I resent having choices taken away from me because some people are too dumb to read and follow directions. Ephedra was taken off the market because some people abused it. It was an important herb in Chinese medicine, and very useful for many different disorders. Now we have to find an alternative because "Big Brother" must help the stupid. I don't like that. I want to make my own choices, and be responsible for my own mistakes. Oh wait, I forgot. We live in a world where someone else must be responsible. It can never be "my fault." *sigh*

December 17, 2004

Ok, So What's Next?

This story from Dan Gilmor's eJournal just brings to the forefront that some people have entirely too much time on their hands, in which they can fantasize about ways to impose their sick senses of morality on everyone else.

  • Hollywood Reporter: FCC Requests Tape of Olympics. The Federal Communications Commission has asked for a tape of NBC's broadcast of the opening ceremony of the Summer Olympics after it received at least one indecency complaint.
  • No, it's not April Fools Day yet. This is apparently real.

    Shudder for our nation, if this kind of idiocy preoccupies people who have serious duties to perform. [Dan Gillmor's eJournal]

    Gamer buys $26,500 virtual land

    Idiot of the Month?

    A gamer spends $26,500 on a virtual island that exists only in a PC role-playing game. [BBC News | TECHNOLOGY]

    December 13, 2004

    Dear Santa, This Christmas...

    This Christmas, give the gift of digital freedom by not buying an Ipod or any other DRM-encrusted device.


    This tired old catch phrase of "voting with your dollars" is still valid. Don't like DRM? Hate the idea of your lawfully-purchased music files lose all usefulness and value when you can't transfer them to another device? Hate being told by faceless corporations that you can't take precautions to back-up, protect, or even use your purchase without their permission?


    Then stop supporting their DRM-dependency by not feeding the beast. Don't enable those companies to invest in DRM development with your own money. Don't buy an Ipod because it's cute and everyone else has one. Buy a device that will play more than one format. Buy songs that can be played on more than one platform.

    Be a proactive consumer and BOYCOTT ITunes!


    Tell your friends. Tell your co-workers. Tell your family. And find power in your decisions and choices again.

    ‘Dear Santa, please give me my presents without DRM.’

    [DRM Blog]

    December 10, 2004

    Reflections on a Deer Fence

    Color me clueless, but why would a person purchase a home in the woods, and then become confused because deer are in their yard? We live in a suburb of DC that is known for its large wooded lots (perhaps not for much longer since they're allowing so many damn McMansions to be built 2 to an acre...), horse pastures, wildlife, and Great Falls National Park. It is nice here, where you can hear the birds chirping, see an occasional fox on the hunt, raccoons come to visit, some nice possums, and, of course, deer. Well duh! Deer live in... [Non Fluffy Wicca]

    Why Do We Give These People Positions of Power?

    From the Politech mailing list. How could someone who is supposed to be responsible for security of the US vis a vis those evil foreigners, possibly, with any type of clue whatsoever, even SUGGEST this type of garbage? Oh, I forgot. This IS the Bush Administration.

    Excerpt:
    Access to networks like the World Wide Web might need to be limited to those who can show they take security seriously, he said... The national press, including United Press International (UPI), were excluded from yesterday's event, at Mr. Tenet's request, organizers said.

    ---

    http://www.washingtontimes.com/functions/print.php?StoryID=20041201-114750-6381r

    Tenet calls for Internet security
    By Shaun Waterman
    UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL
    Published December 2, 2004
    Former CIA Director George J. Tenet yesterday called for new security measures to guard against attacks on the United States that use the Internet, which he called "a potential Achilles' heel."
    "I know that these actions will be controversial in this age when we still think the Internet is a free and open society with no control or accountability," he told an information-technology security conference in Washington, "but ultimately the Wild West must give way to governance and control."
    The former CIA director said telecommunications -- and specifically the Internet -- are a back door through which terrorists and other enemies of the United States could attack the country, even though great strides have been made in securing the physical infrastructure.
    The Internet "represents a potential Achilles' heel for our financial stability and physical security if the networks we are creating are not protected," Mr. Tenet said.
    He said known adversaries, including "intelligence services, military organizations and non-state actors," are researching information attacks against the United States.
    Within the federal government, the Department of Homeland Security has the lead role in protecting the Internet from terrorism. But the department's head of cyber-security recently quit amid reports that he had clashed with his superiors.
    Mr. Tenet, who retired in July as director of the CIA after seven years, warned that al Qaeda remains a sophisticated group, even though its first-tier leadership largely has been destroyed.
    It is "undoubtedly mapping vulnerabilities and weaknesses in our telecommunications networks," he said.
    Mr. Tenet pointed out that the modernization of key industries in the United States is making them more vulnerable by connecting them with an Internet that is open to attack.
    The way the Internet was built might be part of the problem, he said. Its open architecture allows Web surfing, but that openness makes the system vulnerable, Mr. Tenet said.

    December 05, 2004

    Sony Bullies Blogger; We Must Fight Back

    Taking a look at Dan Gilmor's article below, I can't help but wonder why Sony went after a blogger, while the Washington Post published the same information and isn't facing down the barrel of a loaded lawyer. So you think that maybe, just perhaps, POSSIBLY it could be since the Washington Post has a much bigger war chest? No, never!

    I am now boycotting anything and everything from Sony Corp., given its heavy-handed treatment of Jason Kottke, whose offense was to post something -- something true and clearly news -- that Sony didn't want public.

    Jeff Jarvis suggests a blogger legal corps or something of that sort. It's an interesting idea.

    See also Britt Blaser's posting, the title of which I can't quote on a family-newspaper site even though I agree with it entirely (as applied to Sony).

    Jason Calacanis has appropriately scathing comments as well.

    Jason Kottke, you'll note, is not (yet) asking for contributions to a legal fund. The minute he does, I'll contribute.

    Sony's bullying deserves our contempt -- and our response. [Dan Gillmor's eJournal]

    December 01, 2004

    How to Get In the Game (Donna Wentworth)

    One way: give up today's (and/or tomorrow's) wildly over-priced Starbucks latte and make a donation to IPac.

    IPac

    Wired has a nice new piece explaining why this will make a difference for the copyfight in the US, including a few words from uber-copyfighter Rep. Rick Boucher (D-VA) -- one of the six pro-balance candidates IPac supported in this past election.

    Later: Chris Cohen:



    IP is an area of legislation where politicians can hand huge rewards to companies at the expense of the public without really getting any negative attention. People just don't know how important IP law is, don't realize they are actually the ones losing out, or don't care because IP doesn't make for a great above-the-fold story. As the copyright law has expanded so massively in the last decade, however, the public's interest in IP has really been piqued.

    ...

    It is only natural that eventually an IP PAC would pop up. It would obviously make a huge difference to the future direction of IP law if the public took such an interest in IP that politicians were forced to react, and particularly if donors other than the MPAA and the RIAA began to consider IP issues in who they supported financially. That will be a next step that may be a few years off but appears to be happening.

    [Copyfight]

    Stop the (IP Mini) Bus - Wendy Seltzer

    While much has been stripped out of the end-of-year copyright bill that passed the Senate over the weekend S. 3021 (pdf), much that's harmful remains. Particularly egregious is a provision that hasn't gotten much attention, the "Fraudulent Online Identity Sanctions Act." Ostensibly aimed at infringers who hide behind false domain name registrations, the provision seriously penalizes those who merely want to protect their privacy.

    Because there's no way to opt-out of publication of private address information in the WHOIS database when you register a domain name, your choices are to expose your address and phone number; use a possibly unreliable intermediary; or fake it. Unfortunately, if you choose the last option and FOISA passes, you'll now be presumed to be a willful infringer of copyright or trademark. A critic who makes liberal use of a company trademark, or a commentator who quotes a chunk from another's text, both now face a much steeper hurdle in their fair use defenses.

    Also in the bill are criminal penalties for making available a single "pre-release" work and for recording a movie while it's playing in a theater. I'm not arguing that this infringement is right, but it's not the kind of thing we should be sending kids to jail for, either.

    The bill adds an entirely new Title VII, "Professional Boxing Safety." Since the whole thing still has to pass the House, let's hope someone there finds this objectionable enough to KO the bill.

    [Wendy: The Blog]