The Independent: Greatest Threat to Journalism Since Polio

The Independent has a profile of Eminem’s publicity for his upcoming new album which include this claim,

As his fame grew, Eminem became a magnet for controversy. He was accused of glorifying misogyny, homophobia, bad language and violence. He was arrested on gun charges. On one occasion, George Bush, upset by his lack of respect for the forces of conservatism, labelled him: “The greatest threat to America’s children since polio.”

How stupid is the reporter who wrote that? That has urban legend written all over it. And, per Snopes,

Given that:

  • None of these articles [from 2001 when the quote first appears] contains any details about when (or where, or under what circumstances) President Bush allegedly described Eminem as “the most dangerous threat to American children since polio.”
  • All of the articles containing this putative quote come from newspapers published in the UK.
  • We haven’t yet turned up even a single article from a U.S. newspaper which includes this quote (other than brief references to its having been mentioned in British newspapers), even though President Bush and Eminem are both Americans and major media figures.

We’re guessing that this was a spurious “quote” fabricated by someone for publicity purposes (nothing piques curiosity about a person more than the President’s declaring him to be a dangerous enemy), or to poke fun at President Bush. Since no one else has been able to verify the authenticity of this quote, we’re assigning it a “False” rating.

Many of us who live in the United States can remember the withering criticism directed at George H. Bush for his moronic statements about The Simpsons. If George W. Bush had really said something as stupid as that, it would have been major news in the United States.

Akismet Blog on Stupid CAPTCHA Systems

The official Akismet blog has a post pointing out the numerous problems wtih relying on CAPTCHA  systems as a means of preventing, or at least discouraging, spam. CAPTCHA systems show the user almost unreadable text in graphic format — often twisted and deformed beyond recognition — and then ask the user to type in the word or letter/number combination in a text box.

My experience with these systems mirrors a lot of the comments to the Aksimet piece. A lot of the times, I simply cannot read what the word is. Facebook is horrible with this — it is constantly throwing up random CAPTCHAs and asking me to type in two words, but 90% of the time I cannot make out what the words are and have to sit there and reload new graphics until I find one that I can make out enough of the word to make an educated guess.

At other sites, I can very clearly make out what the word I’m supposed to type in, but most of the time the site will reject my entry. One thing that really pisses me off about CAPTCHA systems is they rarely include any indication as to whether the entry needs to be case sensitive. Some are case sensitive, but it’s even harder for me to tell if that’s a capital J or a lower case j by the time the letter is distorted and twisted.

Oddly enough, though, CAPTCHA is a bit like DRM — the casual user may have problems getting around it to actually enter a comment, but the spammers have little problem circumventing them,

Companies still believe in the power of the CAPTCHA and they are now very wrong to do so. Where there is a demand  by those wanting to spam there is supply – and it’s less than a cent to spam your blog. At ZDNet’s Security blog they report on an industry which can solve a quarter of a million CAPTCHA’s a day.

On the other hand, as useful as Akismet is, based on the success rate of spammers at this site I imagine spammers still have people who run high volume sites pulling their hair out trying to stomp out the spam.