Phone Number Domain Names

ZDNet has a story about a company with a scheme to use phone numbers as web addresses rather than domain names.

Huh? I thought the point of domain names was to avoid using numbers. At this rate it won’t be long before a dot.com company comes along with a revolutionary idea — why not use IP addresses rather than domain names! Yeah, that’s the ticket.

PETA and Undercover Operative Sued by Veterinarian

The last year has seen a dramatic turnaround in the case of New Jersey veterinarian Howard Baker who was originally convicted of animal cruelty charges only to have his conviction vacated by an appeals court. Now, Baker is turning the tables on his accusers by suing People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals and one of its undercover investigators for defamation.

The imbroglio started when Michelle Rokke was hired by Baker to work at his veterinary clinic. Rokke is a career animal rights activist who has worked with PETA on a number of hidden camera exposes. Rokke was involved, for example, in a recent undercover investigation of Huntingdon Life Sciences.

In that case Huntingdon sued PETA and Rokke after Rokke, among other things, stole over 8,000 documents from HLS. Eventually the two parties settled that lawsuit out of court with PETA agreeing to stop claiming that Rokke turned up evidence of animal abuse at the laboratory.

Rokke claims she went to work at Baker’s office simply to learn how to care for animals, but it didn’t take her long to start smuggling a hidden camera in to work in a purse over a 10-month period looking to collect evidence of animal abuse. The videotapes she made while working for Baker eventually formed the core of a case of criminal animal abuse that resulted in Baker’s conviction.

That conviction was thrown out by a New Jersey appellate court, however, and Baker charged that not only did Rokke lie about what happened in his office, but that she and PETA selectively edited the videotapes to hide the context of his actions (whether or not this is true in Baker’s case, PETA has a long history of selectively editing such videotapes.)

Now Baker has filed a suit against Rokke and PETA saying that PETA defamed him. This isn’t the first time that PETA has faced such a lawsuit. Animal trainer Bobby Berosini won a judgment against PETA after it distributed videotapes of him disciplining orangutans that were part of a live Las Vegas act. That judgment, however, was later reversed by the Nevada Supreme Court.

Baker’s case is different in one important point from the Berosini case — the Nevada Supreme Court essentially held that Berosini was in a public place and had no expectation of privacy. Rokke, however, taped Baker inside a private office and New Jersey’s state constitution explicitly recognize a right to privacy.

Neville Johnson, an attorney who advised Food Lion in its landmark win against ABC’s “Prime Time Live” for using hidden camera investigators, told the Bergen Record that the cases are very similar. “. . . You cannot commit a crime to expose wrongdoing, because then you would have these people assuming police or quasi-police powers.” Johnson went on to add that the case could do a lot of damage to PETA. “This kind of stuff, done with the approval of PETA management, could bankrupt PETA. This could be the end of them.”

Especially since courts and juries are likely to be less sympathetic to a political activist group than they would be to a legitimate news agency such as ABC News. Not to mention being more grist for the mill for any potential Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organization suit against mainstream animal rights groups.

Source:

Secret agent for animals draws veterinarian’s suit. Mitchel Maddux, The Bergen Record, November 24, 2000.

Eric Harshbarger’s Princess Mononke Sculpture and Other Lego links

  • Eric Harshbarger has a nice looking 5-plus feet tall Lego sculpture of Princess Mononoke.
  • Another Lego fan has some good looking, large Gundam Wing mechs.
  • Finally, Daily Radar has a glowing review of the Mindstorms Darkside Developers Kit (the Mindstorms kit with the Lego AT-AT).

A Review of Mary Gentle’s Grunts

Grunts: A Fantasy With Attitude
By Mary Gentle

Imagine a world where JRR Tolkein wrote a fantasy novelization of Stanley Kubrick’s Full Metal Jacket. The result might read something like Mary Gentle’s phenomenal fantasy novel, Grunts. Gentle takes the fantasy standards of the constant struggle between good and evil, and turns it on its head by telling her story from the point of view of everyone’s favorite fantasy fodder, the lowly orc.

While on a mission to steal magical treasure from the local dragon on behalf of the Nameless Necromancer, a small group of orcs winds up with modern military weapons — and, thanks to a curse from the dragon, a U.S. Marine-style approach to war.

The first part of the book is a well-done straightforward parody of fantasy novels similar in some ways to Terry Pratchett’s Discworld novels. The orcs run around ordering their enemies to surrender “in the name of the Nameless,” while preparing for the latest installment in the Final Battle of the Army of Light Against the Horde of Darkness. The heroes on the good side are so smug in their goodness, the reader is rooting for the orcs to off them.

The last 2/3rds of the novel is more of a sendup of World War II action movies, and the inanities of modern politics. The Dark One decides he’s had enough with the endless battles between Light and Dark and announces that instead he wants to settle the whole matter once and all with an election (of course the evil lord promises free health care and high taxes), while the orcs busily construct their own military-industrial complex in the middle of the fantasy world.

Normally I’m not a big fan of fantasy novels — for example, I can’t stand reigning king of fantasy Robert Jordan’s books — but Grunts is one of the most hilarious and well-plotted novels I’ve read in a very long time. Although the book is slotted in the fantasy genre, it’s really just an all around excellent satire that works on many levels and just happens to occur in a Tolkein-esque setting.

There is only one caveat I have in recommending Grunts. If you’ve seen Full Metal Jacket you know the movie isn’t very appropriate for young people. Neither is Grunts. The violence is non-stop and described very graphically, along with quite a few sexually explicit scenes, including a few sadomasochistic scenes. They work within the novel, but this probably isn’t the book to give your 13 year old nephew.

Other than that, this is one of the best novels I’ve read in years.

Tajikistan on the Verge of Starvation

According to the World Food Program, the former-Soviet republic of Tajikistan is on the verge of massive starvation. Up to 1 million people are at risk of starvation following a severe draft that caused the nation’s grain harvest to fail so thoroughly that the country currently has only about 25 percent of the food it needs to avoid starvation.

Source:

New starvation warning in Tajikistan. The BBC, November 24, 2000.