Tag: Internet Privacy

Geek-Squared (July 29, 2012)

 

Highlights of the week include: hospitals treating victims from the Aurora massacre earn their ‘compassion’ badge, more ‘real geek girl’ controversy, 3D movie cures medical malady and Congressman seeks public help to build a better mouse-trap (err… SOPA style legislation).

All in all, it was kind of a weird week in the geek-o-verse.

 

Hospitals treating Aurora massacre victims show compassion

Of the five hospitals treating victims of the Aurora shooting massacre, three of them have announced that they will waive all fees and co-pays for the victims they are caring for. Many of the victims were young adults with minimal or no health insurance and hospital fees are already mounting for the victims and their families, so this move stands to significantly ease the stress for these victims who face a long road to recovery, both physically and psychologically.

According to a statement from Colorado Children’s Hospital, which treated six of the victims,

“We are committed to supporting these families as they heal…”

In addition to the move by hospitals to waive fees and co-pays, donations from Warner Brothers Studio and the public have reached nearly $2 million. The money is ear-marked for helping victims with their healthcare and rehabilitation.

 

“Real Geek Girl’ controversy flares once more

Honestly – can’t we get past this whole real/fake thing? Apparently not.

Stoking the fires this time was Joe Peacock a blogger for CNN’s Geek Out called out ’6 of 9′s’ — or semi-pretty girls (6′s) who can’t make it as models who head to various Cons, slap on costumes or a geeky t-shirt and immediately become ’9′s’.

“What I’m talking about is the girls who have no interest or history in gaming taking nearly naked photos of themselves with game controllers draped all over their body just to play at being a “model.”  I get sick of wannabes who couldn’t make it as car show eye candy slapping on a Batman shirt and strutting around comic book conventions instead.

I’m talking about an attention addict trying to satisfy her ego and feel pretty by infiltrating a community to seek the attention of guys she wouldn’t give the time of day on the street.” – Joe Peacock

While some of Peacock’s argument seems to support geek girls (he does defend Felicia Day as a bona-fide geek girl against the accusations of Ryan Perez) he spends much of his time deriding these ’6 of 9′s’ which only succeeded in getting people up in arms again.

From The Mary-Jane to celebrities on Twitter, the ‘real/fake’ geek girl controversy is still dividing the geekdom – but Joe Scalzi’s scathing retort to Peacock ‘wins the Internet’ for the week! In short:

These are your choices. Although actually there’s a third choice: Just let her be to do her thing. Because here’s a funny fact: Her geekdom is not about you. At all. It’s about her.

Well said Mr. Scalzi!

 

3D movies just might be good for you…

A 67 year-old man who has suffered from stereo-blindness, a lack of depth perception cues found his condition was cured – by watching the 3D version of Martin Scorsese’s film Hugo. And people said the movies are just entertainment! Hah! Unless of course the 3D movie itself was not the miracle and it was Scorsese’s film. Either way, more research is needed. I for one and waiting for a movie (or type of movie) that can cure other things – like ingrown toenails and kidney stones.

 

 

 


A Congressman finally ‘smartens up’ and seeks public help

Congressman Hank Johnson of Georgia is trying an unusual tactic to gain input for creating a better mouse-trap — um…. Internet Privacy Act. In an unusual move, he turned to social media community Reddit to announced his AppRights.us initiative on July 26.

“It’s an open, bottom-up approach to drafting legislation that will protect the privacy of mobile device users.”

The move is unprecedented, as Reddit has been one of the leaders in the anti-SOPA blackout that has seen SOPA and other similar legislation fail due to a grass-roots movement of angry Internet users. Rather than seeing Reddit users as the main reason SOPA and similar legislation keep failing, Johnson is turning to Reddit users and other Internet users to seek their input for what the legislation should contain.

However, unlike previous legislation attempts, it seems that Johnson’s primary concern is actually with protecting user privacy — rather than the interests of businesses. If this is true, then he may just get the information he wants.

 

 

 

Geek-Squared: Internet Privacy, Civ 5 for Free, Geek Day and Social Media Monitoring

It was a busy week in the geek-o-sphere, so choosing the top four items of geek-troversy and general geekery was difficult. (My apologies if one of your top items did not make this week’s list!)

1. Internet Privacy Makes the News – Again!

The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) and other organizations are currently battling against Congress’s continued attempts to erode individual privacy. At the moment the EFF and various civil liberties groups are continuing to fight the ‘cyber security’ legislation known as CISPA, legislation that is two-kicks off Internet-based, mass surveillance by the military. The bill, which is facing opposition from security experts, as well as the White House, was pushed through the House of Representatives in April and is moving to a Senate vote in EARLY JUNE.

So, if you haven’t paid attention before — NOW IS THE TIME TO ACT! You can email your Senators (click here) or even Tweet them (click here).

Write your senators and let them know that such measures are a gross mis-use of power and will NOT protect network security.

In the words of Benjamin Franklin…

“Those who desire to give up freedom in order to gain security will not have, nor do they deserve, either one.”

2. Free Civilization – Sounds Like an Oxymoron

While it sounds like an oxymoron given the #1 item of the week, free Civilization is in this case — true. Sid Meir’s Civilization 5 will be available for free play via Steam until 1 pm Sunday (PDT). It seems that many game companies are hoping on the ‘free play’ band-wagon, and I’m not talking about beta-testing either.

As an added treat, if you haven’t played Civ5 and like it during the free play weekend, you can then purchase the game for $12.49 for the ‘Game of the Year Edition’. Considering that the standard price at launch was $49.99, this is significant savings.

All you need to take advantage of the free play weekend is a free Steam account.

But I’d clear your weekend plans first! Civ5 has a reputation of being HIGHLY addictive. Happy playing!

3. Geek for a Day

May 25th was Geek Pride Day. But seriously, why do we need a whole day devoted to showing off our geekery? ‘Real geeks’ (yes…I dropped the ‘real-bomb’…deal with it) celebrate their geekdom every day. Having a ‘Geek Pride Day’ just encourages people to be nice to geeks one day of the year, instead of every day. I want to see see ‘Geek Pride Year’! Now that is fake holiday I can get behind!

4. Talking about ‘Exercise’ on Social Media Could Be Dangerous to Your Freedom

Due to pressure from a variety of sources, the Federal Government (namely the Department of Homeland Security) has recently been forced to release their list of ‘trigger words’ (pun intended) that they monitory for on social media networks. Who knew that discussing the fact that ‘Exercise makes me sweaty’ could render you ‘of interest’ to the federal government for illicit activities?

Check out the full list here. The number of words on this list that I use on a daily basis for completely harmless reasons is shocking. I guess it is time for the geeks of the world to unite and start creating the ‘double-speak’ dictionary so we can evade the government’s cyber-sensors. (And if you don’t get the double-speak reference, go read 1984!)

 

Geek-Squared: Big Brother and Internet Privacy Meet the Daleks

Dalek at MITThe overall theme for the week seems to have been ‘Big Brother’ and the Internet, with flashes of stupidity relating to video games and murder (yup – someone is beating that ‘horse’ once again) and CalTech unleashing Daleks on an unsuspecting MIT population. Just another week of nerdery in the geek-o-verse!

1. Two Steps Forward, One Back — CISPA Passes the House

Okay gang, if you haven’t been paying attention, now is the time to put down the video game controllers and wake up!  The Cyber Intelligence Sharing and Protection Act (CISPA) passed the House of Representatives this week. This way-too-broad bill would give companies the ability to share our private and possibly sensitive information with the government, without the need for a warrant or oversight. Not only that, but companies could share information with the National Security Agency or any other Department of Defense groups — who could keep our information on file indefinitely.

In a statement that we issued just after the House vote, ACLU legislative counsel Michelle Richardson stated:

“CISPA goes too far for little reason. Cybersecurity does not have to mean abdication of Americans’ online privacy. As we’ve seen repeatedly, once the government gets expansive national security authorities, there’s no going back. We encourage the Senate to let this horrible bill fade into obscurity.”

Unless you particularly want to live in a dystopian society where Big Brother really does rule things with an iron fist and people are afraid to open their mouths for being accused of treasonous words (or thoughts), then you need to make your voice heard NOW! Click here to sign an online petition and monitor what is happening.

2. Steps Taken to Thwart Another Boneheaded ‘Big Brother’ Move

New legislation has been introduced in Congress that would forbid employers from demanding the social networking logins and passwords for potential employees, a practice that was outed this month amidst outrage from the public.

According to Rep. Eliot Engel, who acts as a co-sponsor on the draft legislation:

“No one would feel comfortable going to a public place and giving out their username and passwords to total strangers. They should not be required to do so at work, at school, or while trying to obtain work or an education. This is a matter of personal privacy and makes sense in our digital world.”

If the bill passes into law, the Social Networking ONline Protection Act would see violators fined $10,000 for every offense.

A similar bill is currently being passed for reading through the Senate.

Although the bills are new to Congress, some states have already made moves to put an end to such practices, with Maryland being the first to rule against such behavior in early April. Illinois, Michigan and California are currently debating such legislation as well.

Start communicating with your legislators now! With elections around the corner, at least half of the jokers in Congress are up for re-election, so NOW is the time to make your voice heard and make sure they protect YOUR interests!

3. Video Games Blamed for Contributing to Murder — Again

Yes, we are back on this old saw once more. Earlier this week, Joshua Davis, a 32 year-old, Winter Haven, Fla. man killed two of his gaming buddies and wounded a third, while his six-year-old daughter looked on. While news media and a ‘local psychiatrist’ (who I am sure sees MANY, MANY, THOUSANDS of video game related murders in his local Winter Haven practice) were quick to blame the deaths on the man’s many hours spent playing Battlefield 3, the ‘little’ fact they are quick to conveniently forget is that drugs were also involved.

According to Dr. Walter Afield, the local psychiatrist that apparently specializes in video game addition (at least that is the way local media are making it sound), playing video games is:

“…a way of not relating with people and making that your life. And, those people are a little crazy.”

It would be nice if the media would actually check that their so-called ‘experts’ actually know what they are talking about. To hear Afield tell it, anyone who plays video games is crazy. He is painting a lot of perfectly sane people with that broad brush of his. Anyone want to bet that his secret passion is playing Angry Birds?

4. And the Dalek Invasion is Starting – At MIT

Dalek positioning

It took serious determination to get the Dalek up all of those steps!

With graduation looming, the usual shenanigans are starting on university campuses around the nation. Not to be outdone, this year the enigmatic engineering students of Cal Tech built a large Dalek atop the Stata Center, MIT’s computer science building and a hotspot for inter-university pranks. Check out the location of the building — getting the Dalek up took some serious planning and determination. Way to go Cal Tech — you win this round!

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