Anonymity for Thee…

This press release from Annoy.Com is bizarre. On the one hand, the government went after Annoy.Com because it enables people to communicate anonymously, but on the other hand the government put a gag order on the very existence of the case for a year. This is almost as absurd as the habit some appeals courts have of never publishing their decisions.

It is sites like Annoy.Com that are going to kill online privacy and create popular support for government intervention. A story about the indictment includes a link to the anonymous e-mail greeting card that got this whole case started, though be warned it is pornographic. Actively helping people send unsolicited threats (and Annoy.Com has to be joking if they do not think that is clearly meant to be construed as a threat when sent unsolicited) is just feeding into the censorship frenzy, and it is just plain bad manners besides.

Of Course College Courses Are Too Easy

    The student newspaper here carried a story on a national poll in which some liked 65 percent or so of college students said classes were too easy. When I was in college I thought my classes were almost absurdly easy — the scary thing was wondering how the kid behind me failed and hoping to God I never had to rely on him for something crucial.

    My epiphanies about the nature of classes and my fellow students came during the Fall semester of my sophomore year. I had a basic introduction to political science class taught by the chair of the department. About two weeks into the course somebody stole my book (along with a briefcase it was in), and I was too cheap to buy another one. I also had a habit of sleeping in instead of going to class. I was convinced I was going to fail the first test.

    So I go in to take the test and I couldn’t believe how easy and pointless it was. These, for example, were the first three questions on the “test” (which were all multiple choice or matching).

1. The President is which part of the government:

a. The Executive Branch
b. The Judicial Branch
c. The Legislative Branch

2. The Supreme Court is which part of the government:

a. The Executive Branch
b. The Judicial Branch
c. The Legislative Branch

3. The Congress is which part of the government:

a. The Executive Branch
b. The Judicial Branch
c. The Legislative Branch

    After that I never went to class again except on scheduled test days and got a BA. The bizarre thing is it turns out that class had one of the highest attrition rates — something like 40 percent of the morons I was in class with got a letter grade lower than a C.

    The only classes I really enjoyed in college were taught by 80 year old men who hadn’t quite got around to realizing they were supposed to cater to the whim of students rather than educate them. Typically they’d have you reading a 250 page book a week and expect you to write long essays in class for tests (the words “matching” and “multiple choice” never escaped their lips). I happened by accident to run into a man who had been a history professor who only gave me a B but who I certainly learned a lot more from than all of the A’s I got in brain dead classes and got the opportunity to thank him for taking his job seriously.

    My wife, Lisa, is sort of like that even though she’s not a man and not 80 years old. She’s been teaching a class the past couple years while working on her Master’s degree and is already annoyed at the students who don’t show up for class and then beg her for extra credit work.

    Some of the other graduate students who teach the same class have the same view. One circulated a hilarious paper the other day retelling some of the answers given to test questions, the most hilarious being a multiple choice question on a quiz in which a large minority of students checked the box indicating that the setting for Beowulf was the Bronx.

Dennis Miller and Monday Night Football

Allen Barra totally dogs Dennis Miller for his Monday Night Football performance. I’ve actually enjoyed Miller’s commentary. Sure he can be obscure at times, but I’m also tired of these sports media critics who apparently think all football fans are morons.

That said, I can’t imagine Miller lasting into next season. In fact I wouldn’t be surprised if ABC fired him before the end of the season if ratings drop too much.

On the other hand I have the perfect candidate to replace Miller. He’s not as funny as Miller but he knows the game a lot better and he is smart as a whip (he does sports commentary for NPR even): Tim Green. I know a lot of you are saying Tim who? That’s Tim Green, a first-round draft pick for the Atlanta Falcons who played defensive end and was one of the few bright spots on those horrible Falcon teams of the late 1980s to mid-1990s.

Green works for Fox now, but they usually give him the announcing jobs nobody else wants which is how I’ve become familiar with him because a lot of times he gets stuck announcing Detroit Lions games, and Fox insists on making me watch the Lions just because I happen to live a couple hours from Detroit.

Green would be excellent in the booth and would really complement Dan Fouts who, to me, is the really good news about the new Monday Night Football lineup. He’s not as good as Dan Dierdorf was but give Fouts enough time and he could be.

Plagiarism On the Net

    Evolt.Org has an interesting look at plagiarism on the Internet, and I’ve either done or had done to me pretty much everything mentioned there.

    Idiots who mirror a site and then put it on their own server without permission are, in my opinion, the lowest of the low. Had someone do this to my site and put part of it up on a pornographic site, largely because Hotbot was returning my site in the top 10 for people who would search on phrases like “rape pictures,” even though the actual page was a dry look at criminal statistics.

    On the other hand, I am a design swiper. If I see a color or a format I like I’ll hit “View Source” and see if there’s any way I can integrate something similar in my site. I don’t think it makes sense to just wholesale swipe someone else’s design and just change the text as I’ve seen some people do, but I don’t think copyrights on specific design elements as opposed to a design as a whole make a lot of sense.

    The question I have wondered about ever since I started getting paid for writing many years ago is the whole plagiarism issue. At the extremes, everybody can agree. If I download a text file of a Dostoevsky book, replace Dostevsky’s name with mine and then upload it to my site, that’s clearly plagiarism (actually today that might be called art, but we’ll leave that for another day). On the other hand if I sit alone in my room and write a sentence that nobody else ever has, that’s clearly not plagiarism.

    But what about Shakespeare as Evolt.Org puts it? The author, Erika, notes that her English teacher warned students not to plagiarize, but at the same time instructed her on Shakespeare.

Of course, the plots for many of Shakespeare’s plays were based on the plots of medieval French folk stories.

Did that make Shakespeare a plagiarist? Did he take credit for someone else’s ideas? Or are folk tales simply the clip-art of literature?

    There is an amusing science fiction version of this problem that centered around the television show “Battlestar Galactica.” When it was released, George Lucas actually sued those associated with the show arguing that “Battlestar Galactica” was a rip off of “Star Wars.” Among other things, Lucas claimed he had a copyright on scenes depicting space battles between small fighters and large capital ships. The lawsuit also claimed that Lucas had a copyright on the veteran serious warror/wisecracking young hotshot relationship a la Ben Kenobi/Luke Skywalker, so the Apollo/Starbuck characters in Battlestar Galactica were a copyright violation. This is especially ironic given the fact that as even Lucas acknowledged, “Star Wars” was just a clever rip off of several other films, and was heavily influenced by Akira Kurosawa’s excellent films (which themselves are often updated retellings of folk stories).

    There are all sort of grey areas with the sort of political commentaries that I write. If you open a newspaper and read any opinion column, for example, you will find many sentences that contain information that are clearly not the result of original research carried out by the writer but you’ll never find footnotes and oftentimes you won’t find any sort of attribution at all for facts and figures. Add to that the fact that there are only so many ways to say the same thing and on a strict definition, plagiarism is an epidemic in the nation’s newspapers.

    When I was in college, for example, there was briefly an enormous controversy over a historian whose name escapes me who had written a very well received biography of Abraham Lincoln. A few years later someone emerged to claim that large passages of the book had been plagiarized. The case against the author fell apart for this reason: the plagiarism charge was based on having a computer hunt for similarities between the new book and several older biographies of Lincoln. Sure enough there were quite a few similarities, but the problem ultimately is that there are only so many ways to describe, say, the childhood of young Lincoln and it was inevitable that if I or anyone else writes an essay on Lincoln’s early career as a lawyer, it’s going to have a lot of similarities to the probably thousands of books and popular and scholarly journal articles that have described Lincoln’s legal career.

    Part of the problem is deciding just when a fact should be cited. A person I knew was universally reviled by her college students because she regularly gave them F’s on their essays if they didn’t cite even the most banal of facts, which to me always seemed extraordinarily absurd given the amount of things we know only because we have read about it or heard it somewhere.

    As with many things in life, I think the answer is just to use common sense, but there are a lot of minefields out there where it’s hard to know when you’ve cross the line into plagiarism.

Harry Browne Interview In Wired

    Wired‘s Andy Patrizio has an interview with Libertarian Party candidate for president Harry Browne, Libertarian: Leave Tech Alone, which is pretty sympathetic to Browne (actually it reads like it was written by Browne’s campaign staff). Browne and Patrizio talk about a couple issues that are worth discussing further:

The Direction of the Libertarian Party. Browne notes that the Libertarian Party has doubled in size since 1996, and has a lot more money to spend thanks to that. A conservative Republican friend of mine was surprised to see a Harry Browne ad running on CNN. He found the message appealing, but realistically the Libertarian Party’s going to have to poll a lot more voters than the 500,000 Browne got in 1996 to convince free market types who usually vote Republican or Democrat to go with Browne.

    It’s a shame Patrizio didn’t ask or didn’t report on what role Browne thinks the Internet has played in the increasing size of the LP. In 1994 or 1995 it was relatively difficult to find libertarian-oriented information — today thanks to the Internet, as both critics and supporters have noted, it’s almost impossible not to find libertarian sentiments and information.

Does Libertarianism Pay? The Public Choice Problem. Browne makes an argument he made in 1996 and that I’ve heard other libertarians make, though I wonder how convincing it really is. Browne told Patrizio,

When it is presented in combination with the benefits, where we show people how much better off their lives would be without having to pay income tax or to be free from (the) Social Security system, they realize what it’s costing them for these alleged benefits from the government.

    This only works, of course, when you can convince people that the total net cost of government is greater than the total net benefit they are receiving. Of course one strain of libertarian-oriented economic theory is the public choice school which strongly implies, among other things, that it is extremely difficult to get rid of a government bureaucracy and program once it is in place precisely because the benefits it provides to a group of voters gives them a very high motivation to lobby for keeping that program, while the costs of the program are distributed so widely that it’s very difficult to get those who are paying for the program to get involved to get rid of it.

    Having been involved in libertarian student groups, for example, if you talk to college students about doing away with Social Security or legalizing marijuana a lot of them are very anti-government, but the second you talk about getting rid of federally funded financial aid most of them suddenly find something good to say about the state. Not that you can’t sell them on the evils of federally funded student assistance, but it ain’t easy.

The Firestone Tire Issue. Browne uses the Firestone tire recall to push the fact that government regulators don’t really keep us safe, and calls for private safety agencies a la Consumer Reports. Browne could have buttressed his case by pointing out that it was private insurance companies, not the government or Firestone or Ford for that matter, who first found a statistical anomaly that indicated the problem.

    On the other hand, I’m kind of flabbergasted at the attention the Firestone, and consumer product safety issues in general, receive from the media. I wish ongoing government actions that end up costing far more lives than the 80 to 90 people who have died due in Firestone-related coverage received the sort of night-after-night drumbeat of exposure that this story has received from the media.

Immigration and H1B Visas. Here Browne and other libertarians sorely misunderstand the issue. Browne thinks it’s all about the welfare state — people don’t want immigrants coming to the United States and then living off the dole. That might be a small part of the issue, but I think the bigger issue is a basic communitarian principle that if a job opens up, someone from the immediate community should be hired for that job.

    This is really apparent in a lot of the wrangling over H1B visas for high tech jobs. High tech companies say there aren’t enough computers programmers, engineers, etc. to fill the jobs they have and so they want the number of visas greatly enlarged so they can bring in foreigners to do these jobs. Groups representing computer programmers, engineers, etc., claim this is a lie — there are plenty of people with the degrees who are eager to work. NBC actually ran a story a few weeks ago featuring a computer programmer who was homeless and claimed the only reason his life had taken a downturn was because he was downsized from a previous position and then no one would hire him at other companies because of his age. The appeal is clear — how can you say you need foreigners when you have all these out of work Americans with high tech degrees.

    The thing nobody wants to say, of course, is that what companies want to do is hire extremely talented foreigners rather than merely competent Americans. Most of the anti-H1B rhetoric assumes that an engineer is an engineer is an engineer or that anyone with a degree in computer science who can program is just as good as any other person with those qualifications. That’s ridiculous of course — there’s a reason Transmeta brought in Linus Torvalds on a visa rather than hire some random American with similar educational background.

    That is the real driver, in my opinion, behind anti-immigration sentiments. If I am in the middle of my field as far as competency goes and the government say doubles the size of the labor pool by allowing easy immigration of foreign tech workers, the number of people who are more qualified than me for a given position just increased substantially. Simple short term self-interest is what underlies anti-immigration efforts.

The Fascist Green Party. One thing I really did like was Browne mincing no words about the Green Party,

The Green Party platform is pure fascism and socialism. It’s either government regulation to the nth degree, or government taking over to the nth degree.

    In fact, it’s been fascinating to watch Ralph Nader climb on board with the Republicans and Democrats in blasting the media for “targeting” children with sex and violence, especially since the Green Party platform essentially gives voters the right to outlaw entire industries they don’t like such as entertainment companies (and don’t think you wouldn’t see people trying to outlaw, say, Harry Potter books for “targeting” occult works at children).

    All in all, Browne did an excellent job of presenting himself and the Libertarian Party, but I still have strong doubts if it is really possible to create a mass movement out of an ideology that is so individualistic. It’s hard to get people involved in a political movement whose main message is “leave us alone.”

Conference Considers Problem of AIDS Orphans

    As has been widely reported, AIDS is in the process of decimating the population of some African nations. One of the byproducts of the large number of AIDS deaths is a large number of orphans. Current estimates are that there are 16 million children who have lost at least one parent to AIDS and by 2010 that number could rise to as high as 30 million. Many of those children will be orphans who have lost both parents, and many will have lost their parents at a very young age. How to handle the large influx of orphans is an enormous social problem.

    At a three-hour session organized by the Global Health Council, Albina du Boisrouvray of Francois-Xavier Bagnoud Foundation likened the large number of orphans to “a time bomb” because the children “will be unprepared to become productive citizens.”

    Various participants in the seminar had different approaches and suggestions, but the bottom line appears to be that developing nations are so busy using their meager resources to trying to prevent an AIDS disaster that dealing with orphans isn’t a high priority. Peter Piot of the United Nations AIDS program summed up the current state of affairs,

AIDS orphans have not been on the agenda really. It all sounds so very obvious and yet it’s not. When you look at resources there are very few — and the organizations dealing with this have not really talked to each other before.

Source:

Advocates say orphans are time bomb in AIDS pandemic. The Associated Press, September 12, 2000.