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Privacy

Journal Journal: We need an opt-out resource! 1

What we need is some kind of clearing house of opt-out info, a la SpamCop, that would allow us to look up all the companies that we do business with and see what their real policies are. A nice feature would be the ability to generate legally binding letters of notification that we could send to those companies, preemptively opting out of all possible dissemination of our data.

Is this already available, or is someone working on it? If not, I'll get busy. Comments and suggestions welcome!
Science

Journal Journal: Geeks Welcome in Rocket City, Alabama

Thinking of moving south? CNN.com has a puff piece about Huntsville, Alabama, also known as "Rocket City," and how its high-tech economy has thrived through the recession. Interesting tidbits: One of every 13 people is an engineer, and 60% of the companies in town were started by former employees of NASA and the missile programs. The story gives Werner Von Braun the credit for bringing NASA and high-tech to this southern town, now a hotspot of aerospace, computer & telcom technology, as well as some cool websites and a huge rocketry club.
The Internet

Journal Journal: The Register Has Disappeared - On Christmas Eve, No Less!

This link at Nominet.uk gives the domain registration info of The Register, which appears to been detagged on Christmas Eve!

WHOIS query result:
________________________________________

Domain Name: THEREGISTER.CO.UK

Registered For: The Register

Domain Registered By: DETAGGED

Record last updated on 24-Dec-2001 by .

Domain servers listed in order:

WHOIS database last updated at 21:19:01 25-Dec-2001

The NIC.UK Registration Host contains ONLY information for domains
within co.uk, org.uk, net.uk, ltd.uk and plc.uk. Please use the whois
server at rs.internic.net for Internet Information or the whois server
at nic.ddn.mil for MILNET Information.

Is it only coincidence that this falls on the second anniversary of the Hotmail/Passport outage that gave Michael Chaney his fifteen minutes of Slashdot fame?

User Journal

Journal Journal: Moderator: A Song by Tsar

MODERATOR
(To the tune of "Operator" by Jim Croce)

Moderator, well, could you help mod up this post
See, the number of my karma is ten below now
I used to troll away
Now I'm bitch-slapped every day
I wish you guys would log off and just go home now

{Refrain}
But, isn't that the way Slashdot goes
But just forget my past
And mod this one comment if you can find it
So folks can read it and know that I'll climb to the cap
And overcome the slap
I've learned to read the polls
I only wish you guys couldn't see my trolls
'Til my thoughts have congealed
'Cause there's no court of appeals

Moderator, well, could you help mod up this post
Now it's scored so low that it's just infernal
There's something on my screen
You know I never think to clean
I might as well be posting this in my journal

{Refrain}
No, no, no, no, there's no court of appeals

Moderator, let's just forget about this post
There's no one out there who really wanted to read it
Crawl back in your pod
You guys should really just thank God
I can't meta-mod

{Refrain}
User Journal

Journal Journal: My Comment History

My First 67 Comments on Slashdot
Technology

Journal Journal: Pentagon Seeking Out New Tech, New Weapons

CBSNews.com has a story about the Pentagon's push for new advances in high-tech weaponry and battlefield technology for the War on Terror. Items on their shopping list include MAV's (micro aerial vehicles), retrofittable stealth nanotechnology in development at Clemson, Georgia Tech's "Bio-Gel" wound sealer, and smart clothing that can monitor your health and even change color to improve camouflage effects.
The Almighty Buck

Journal Journal: Toshiba Latest Casualty of DRAM Price Wars

ITWorld.com tells the story: Toshiba is getting out of the DRAM business. They had 6.2% of the world market last year, but soon their Manassas, VA facilities will belong to Micron, the Yokkaichi plant's DRAM production will be reduced to a trickle, and Toshiba will be out of the commodity memory market. Guess you can sell DRAM for a hundred bucks a gigabyte, but you can't make a living at it yet.
Slashdot.org

Journal Journal: A Modest Karma Proposal 5

A Parable of Karma

Joe Slashdotter signs in for an evening of /. reading, and catches a just-breaking story: the MicroWidget Corporation has just announced TeraWidget 1.0 (Open Source, of course, of course) and it's the greatest thing since punched cards. Joe happens to have some expertise in the HDW (High-Density Widget) field, so he posts a deeply insightful comment explaining his take on this development. He then settles in for a few hours of reading others' comments and responding thoughtfully and informatively to them. Everyone perceives Joe's insight, knowledge and incisive wit as a wonderful enhancement to the TeraWidget discussion, and continue to ply him for more. Before long, he's posted thirty comments, each with an initial score of 1, and an enthralled audience mods them up to an average of 4.5. His karma quickly caps at 50.

After the furor dies down, and folks begin to realize that TeraWidget 1.0 is really only GigaWidget 2.0 (or MegaWidget for Workgroups), later moderators won't perceive the same value in Joe's posts and mod them down as overrated. His thirty comments are reevaluated to an average of 2.5.

Now, look at what just happened. Joe has posted thirty comments today, which have now been modded up an average of 1.5 points each. His karma, though, now stands at -10, no matter what it was yesterday. His comments may now be initially scored -1, rendering him invisible to the vast majority of Slashdotters.

Is this scenario realistic? Perhaps not, but it happens all the time on a smaller scale, so it may happen periodically to this degree or something close to it. I just checked my stats: I've already made three comments today, and they were modded up to 3, 5 and 5 respectively. One of my comments was the site of a mod war which, after eight mods, brought it back down to 2. As a result, my karma now stands three points lower than it did this morning, even though my three comments for the day were modded up an average of 1 1/2 points.

Anybody else notice localized problems like this? I have a suggestion for a fix, though I'm sure there are better solutions:

Create a Glass Karma Cap. If a user is constantly pressed against it, with a large percentage of his comments being modded up, the pressure eventually causes the cap to yield. A secondary cap comes into play at 150, and the user can then post with a score of 1, 2 or 3 once he reaches 100 karma. If the user allows his karma to fall below 50, the cap reappears.

I'd love to hear anyone's thoughts on this idea, or why it won't work, or why another idea (or the current setup as it stands) is infinitely better.

Thanks,
Tsar
The Almighty Buck

Journal Journal: Senate Extends Internet Tax Ban Until November 2003

Reuters is reporting tonight that the Senate has passed an extension to the ban on Internet taxes which, as reported here, expired on October 31. The extension carries the ban forward until November 1, 2003. The House approved an identical bill last month, for which the President has already expressed his support, so now it goes straight to him for his signature.
The Almighty Buck

Journal Journal: Only 12% Willing To Pay For Once-Free Content

Reuters has this article about a report released on Wednesday by the Pew Internet & American Life Project, with some interesting numbers about the dot-com meltdown: 17% of Internet users have been asked to pay for previously free content, and 88% of them go elsewhere or offline for that service rather than pay for it. The full report (PDF format) has a lot more stats and some very good analysis—well worth a read.

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