Weblog on the Internet and public policy, journalism, virtual community, and more from David Brake, a Canadian academic, consultant and journalist

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3 April 2002
Filed under:Uncategorized at6:17 pm

That is what a computerised train safety system would cost and the number of lives it is expected to save, on average, in the UK. Yet a new report by Rail Safety still recommends that it be installed. £3bn spent on (say) heart defibrillators would save many more lives in this country and if spent on carefully targeted overseas aid could save hundreds of thousands of lives. It seems to me insane to even consider spending it on improving rail safety when rail is already one of the safest forms of transport…porn sex amateuradult porno clip s100 sex best sitesgay free porn allpictures pornstar tyler aliciachat sex aaa freeporn absolutely free ebonyclips 100 porn free Map

2 April 2002
Filed under:Uncategorized at11:01 am

An interesting news item about relationships that start online suggesting they might be better than ones that start more conventionally. Unfortunately, I couldn’t find the detail of the study referred to in the news report.

I would say that it can work both ways – it can allow people to be more emotionally open but it also encourages (even more than usual) projection of positive characteristics onto the person you are corresponding with that may not actually be real, and because text can’t transmit tone of voice or body language it is dangerously prone to misunderstanding. So proceed… but with caution would be my advice.

Filed under:Uncategorized at8:25 am

Perhaps because of the difficulty in opposing software and intellectual piracy privacy without looking impossibly self-righteous or in the pay of big corporations, Garry Trudeau rather fudges the message this time around (in this and the 5 following strips). This is a pity, since the message “go ahead, take anything you like” promulgated across much of the Internet is one that needs some criticism by voices outside the industry.

1 April 2002
Filed under:Uncategorized at10:29 pm

Pigeons

Filed under:Uncategorized at11:33 am

The Economist praises (registration required) the remarkable success of a UNICEF booklet, Facts for Life, that provides basic health information targetted at some of the world’s poorest. It’s a simple step but a vital one. As the Economist points out:

Each year nearly 11m children die from easily preventable causes before reaching their fifth birthdays. Ignorance is often the cause. Many parents, for example, do not know that breast milk is the only nourishment an infant needs in the first six months. Some 1.5m children might be saved each year if they were not also given polluted water. Many people believe that drinking liquids makes diarrhoea worse, when someone suffering from it should actually drink as much liquid as possible. It is safe to immunise a child who has a minor illness or disability, or who is malnourished. Many parents, and even health workers, do not know this. The symptoms of pneumonia are often overlooked, with fatal results. Staunching a cut with mud, a traditional remedy, often causes infections. Two-thirds of students in their last year of primary school in Botswana, according to one survey, thought they could tell if someone was infected with HIV simply by looking at her.

30 March 2002
Filed under:Uncategorized at10:24 am

One of my favourite directors died on Wednesday. Films of his I have loved include Double Indemnity and Sunset Boulevard.

29 March 2002
Filed under:Uncategorized at1:35 pm

The Economist (subscription required to read link) hits the nail on the head when it savages the government for using public private partnerships to conceal taxation.

“PFI deals are supposed to transfer risk from the public to the private sector. But with so much at stake politically, the government cannot afford to let them fail. One way or another, the railways have to work and the underground has to run. This makes it impossible genuinely to transfer risk from the public to the private sector, which undermines the purpose of PFI.

“If risk cannot genuinely be transferred, then the Treasury should own up to the actual cost of the borrowing that the private sector is undertaking on its behalf… Keeping risky investments off the books is the sort of thing that Enron did to its shareholders. It is not the sort of thing that governments should do to taxpayers. ”

The government should simply own up to the amount of money that fixing transport and health will require and raise taxes in order to pay for it.

27 March 2002
Filed under:Uncategorized at3:02 pm

As this piece in Salon makes clear, even if you accept that widespread encryption would be a good idea on the Internet (I have my doubts) it won’t emerge very quickly because 1) most people don’t recognise the need and 2) the software needed to encrypt and decrypt is still too hard to use. The latter is a particular problem because at the moment the commercial company that owns the original PGP email encryption software, Network Associates, is not continuing development.

Open source developers have stepped in, but there we run into the problem with open source – most open source programmers just don’t ‘get’ useability. They write for each other, not for a wider public, so you end up with products like GNUPG that require you to type in cryptic commands to use it.

26 March 2002
Filed under:Uncategorized at11:15 pm

The European union has given the go-ahead for a Europe-run clone of the GPS system. As I said earlier I don’t think this is a good use of tax-payer’s money.

Filed under:Uncategorized at5:45 pm

You may remember back in December three special forces soldiers were killed and 20 injured by friendly fire – now we know why. The guided bomb was called in by an air force controller who used a lightweight battery powered GPS unit. The battery died on his GPS and when he replaced it, the unit reset and defaulted to its own coordinates, which the controller duly sent to the bomb!

For more about the risks to the public in computers, check out the Risks Digest.all transsexual thingsmodel teen ameliaamature call back sexblogs video amatuer sexteen remember info porn amateuradult zoo sexameatur pornfashion 2007 teenage Map

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