UK website details legislation

As of four days ago, UK com­pa­nies now have to include cer­tain manda­tory busi­ness infor­ma­tion on their web­sites & all emails.

The linked arti­cle explains really well what this change entails (short ver­sion: not much for many web­sites, as nearly every­one will prob­a­bly already have these kinds of details if not in their footer then almost cer­tainly on a con­tact or legal info page), but I’ve still got a few burn­ing ques­tions — mostly to do with fairly inane stuff that only web geeks would think of.

Viral mar­ket­ing, for exam­ple. It’s ille­gal if you don’t say who you are, so no more viral web mar­ket­ing in the UK (and EU gen­er­ally?). Crampin’ style since 2007.

This point from the arti­cle is inter­est­ing, too:

It is not suf­fi­cient to include a ‘con­tact us’ form with­out also pro­vid­ing an email address and geo­graphic address some­where eas­ily acces­si­ble on the site. A PO Box is unlikely to suf­fice as a geo­graphic address; but a reg­is­tered office address would. If the busi­ness is a com­pany, the reg­is­tered office address must be included.

Say hello, email scrap­ing har­vesters. I realise that with fil­ters improv­ing this is the­o­ret­i­cally becom­ing less of a prob­lem, but even so — very few fil­ter­ing providers are up to the stan­dard of Gmail (usu­ally the poster child for “Feel free to post your email address on the web” exper­i­ments), and are unlikely to become such in the near future.

If you’re a sole trader, I imag­ine you don’t have to list your home address, as you’re not con­sid­ered a com­pany. IANAL and IANAL who lives in the UK, but if the ter­mi­nol­ogy is the same as in .au (which, given our com­mon her­itage, I’d imag­ine it wouldn’t be far from), that seems to be the log­i­cal interpretation.

If the busi­ness is a mem­ber of a trade or pro­fes­sional asso­ci­a­tion, mem­ber­ship details, includ­ing any reg­is­tra­tion num­ber, should be provided.

That seems… very hazy. If it means enti­ties such as ICAA, that’s nearly fair enough, but for organ­i­sa­tions like that mem­ber­ship is indi­vid­ual, not cor­po­rate. Same goes for trade unions, etc. The only equiv­a­lent I can think of here might be some­thing like CRICOS provider num­bers for edu­ca­tional insti­tu­tions pro­vid­ing ser­vices to over­seas stu­dents — though there are prob­a­bly other exam­ples one could give.

Per­haps our gov­ern­ment has become more lib­eral than that of the UK, but, even so, it seems a rather odd stip­u­la­tion. For elec­tri­cians you might have green licenses and so forth — but, again, that is admin­is­tered at an indi­vid­ual level, so you’re only really effec­tively get­ting this infor­ma­tion out of sole traders: it seems unre­al­is­tic for larger organ­i­sa­tions to pub­lish this type of information.

Given the sur­prise it seems to have taken peo­ple by (the OUT-LAW pub­li­ca­tion is dated 20th Decem­ber 2006 at the time of access), it seems unlikely that it will ever be very strictly enforced, and appears to be EU-associated pol­i­tick­ing more than any inten­tioned pol­icy. Some of its stip­u­la­tions offer some­thing in the way of con­sumer pro­tec­tion, but, really, if con­sumers aren’t already on the look out for this sort of infor­ma­tion (or lack thereof) when par­tic­i­pat­ing in the web, then edu­ca­tion in this regard should be far higher on the agenda than leg­isla­tive mea­sures. But per­haps that’s just my inner lib­eral get­ting cranky.

Roman Catholic reform?

An illus­trated con­ver­sa­tion with Car­di­nal Cor­mac Murphy-O’Connor, the leader of the Roman Catholic Church in Eng­land and Wales, explor­ing his pen­e­trat­ing insights on the Church’s role in a post mod­ern, mul­ti­cul­tural and sec­u­lar Britain.

For broad­cast on Com­pass: Pil­grim Cor­mac. Sun­day 15 Octo­ber at 22:15 on ABC TV, Fri­days at 9.05am, 4.30pm, 7.30pm and 9.45pm on ABC2 (Dig­i­tal only, IIRC)

I heard a radio promo for this last night and it sounds really interesting/bizarre. One of the things Murphy-O’Connor is reput­edly argu­ing is that the “Parish” con­cept is too large/impersonal for the unchurched (they didn’t use that word, I wouldn’t nor­mally either, but I’ve been read­ing too many reformed mis­sional blogs/websites of late and it’s start­ing to become a part of my vocab­u­lary, for bet­ter or worse), postmodern-influenced, sec­u­larised British per­son. Accord­ingly, he is (appar­ently, again with­out hav­ing seen the pro­gramme) advo­cat­ing a new approach/structure of fel­low­ship cen­tred around meet­ing in people’s homes/more casu­ally. One (pre­sum­ably sig­nif­i­cant) part of this is for prayer and bible study.

Which is excit­ing, to say the least.

Appar­ently there are only 4 mil­lion peo­ple who call them­selves Roman Catholics that Cor­mac Murphy-O’Connor has the respon­si­bil­ity of serv­ing (this is in Eng­land and Wales: 50– and 3-million pop­u­la­tion respec­tively), which has prob­a­bly con­tributed some impe­tus to reform. This idea that smaller groups are bet­ter for fel­low­ship (jar­gon for meet­ing together and talk­ing) than larger bod­ies is in inter­est­ing con­trast with large (chiefly Pen­ta­costal) churches that don’t seem to have (pub­licly) popped up in the UK par­tic­u­larly lots. British cul­tural thing? Roman-Catholic church thing? It’s hard to tell.

Cer­tainly it would seem that there are senses in which belong­ing to a larger com­mu­nity can be of equal value to small groups… and in which small groups pre­vent the poten­tial detach­ment of larger ‘com­mu­nity’. But it’s espe­cially inter­est­ing that a church defined by its cen­tral­ity of lead­er­ship and centuries-old adher­ence to struc­ture defined by Tra­di­tion (cap­i­tal T as in defined by Roman church, not tra­di­tion as derived from the bible) over Scrip­ture is appar­ently mov­ing back to meet­ing pri­vately, pos­si­bly (prob­a­bly, given clergy short­ages and so forth) con­sist­ing wholly of lay peo­ple, read­ing God’s word and pray­ing together. One can only won­der what this means for tradition-bound non-Biblical prac­tices such as confession.

Maybe I’m just think­ing wish­fully. It’s been a week of Roman Catholic outreach-ish stuff at Uni and there are some really bizarre things that keep crop­ping up. The ‘prob­lem’ (it is a prob­lem, I’m just hes­i­tant to call it that because I know peo­ple are going to be offended… as though the rest of this post were com­pletely innocu­ous) of Roman Catholi­cism isn’t going away any more than lib­eral Chris­tian­ity and false teachers.

But false prophets also arose among the peo­ple, just as there will be false teach­ers among you, who will secretly bring in destruc­tive here­sies, even deny­ing the Mas­ter who bought them, bring­ing upon them­selves swift destruc­tion.
2 Peter 2:1

Keep pray­ing.

Van Helsing as object of comic derision

The notion itself seems laugh­able. The propo­si­tion of a pro­gres­sion from ‘nor­mal­ity’ to ‘com­edy’ to hor­ror as one trav­els east­wards (from Eng­land in Stoker’s Drac­ula) seems… well, itself very for­eign. Only not for­eign in any sub­stan­tiable kind of way, more in a “you lied about where you went when on hol­i­days, didn’t you” sce­nario. His lan­guage is reflec­tive firstly of his for­eign­ness, but this for­eign­ness is less mod­ern, and more attuned to the pow­ers of “old Europe” than Eng­land per­haps is. We see moder­nity through a dis­tinctly British lense, whereby com­pet­ing pow­ers are com­pletely mar­gin­alised and it is all reduced (seem­ingly) to a dichoto­mous strug­gle between her­itage and con­tem­po­rary being. It will be noted, also, that until the twelvth cen­tury or there­abouts (maybe later, even), England/Ireland/Scotland/Wales were con­sid­ered as bar­barous and unde­vel­oped as the (Far East) and Mus­lim pow­ers… moder­nity splits this, per­haps, into future poten­tial ver­sus present as-yet-undefeated cur­rency of being (I love that phrase, Com­mu­nist influ­ences or not) in a sense of antiquity.

Also, one mustn’t make the mis­take of con­fus­ing antiq­uity as lin­eage. MH’s first lec­ture drew atten­tion to ‘the whirlpool of Euro­pean races’ in Dracula’s third chap­ter (though I wasn’t at the lec­ture, it’s online in Pow­er­point for­mat) which, notably, refers only to con­ti­nen­tal Euro­pean influ­ences. There is pre­served an irrev­o­ca­ble dis­tinc­tion between ‘Europe’ (which, it seems, is an old power with­out the same sense of embrac­ing moder­nity — notably Ger­many and Rus­sia are gen­er­ally ignored in this text) and ‘Eng­land’ (even includ­ing Amer­ica, by a char­ac­ter link).

Hels­ing is still ‘other’. His oth­er­ness is not that of cheap laughs, but of blended encoun­ters with sav­age forces lurk­ing fur­ther to the East. (IMO, of course :))

Speech: Shakespeare’s Cymbeline

No pretty PDFs of this one. I wrote it in a nor­mal word-processor (because jaggy, unjus­ti­fied lines are eas­ier to read) so there were no LaTeX sources to make doc­u­ments from. OpenOf­fice does PDF export but there’s not much point. Shrug. Speech fol­lows, ~5mins (prob­a­bly over, closer to 6). ~950 words.

Scene 4 in Act 2 of Shakespeare’s Cym­be­line affords us a great deal that is of inter­est when exam­in­ing the devel­op­ment of romance nar­ra­tive through­out time.

This por­tion of the play is a scene — just in case, you know, every­one doesn’t, ah, remem­ber what the read­ing was — a scene in which Posthu­mus is in the house of Phi­lario, dis­cussing the present polit­i­cal sit­u­a­tion that exists between Rome and Eng­land. As Penny Gay men­tioned in her sec­ond lec­ture on Cym­be­line, there’s a cer­tain depar­ture from his­tory at this point. We are made aware that there is trou­ble brew­ing over the ces­sa­tion of the pay­ment of trib­utes to Rome, and, in Posthu­mus’ words, “this will prove a war”.

It’s unabashed nation­al­ism, com­pletely shame­less, and writ­ten in such a way that a con­tem­po­rary audi­ence would thor­oughly approve: “You shall hear/ The legions now in Gal­lia sooner landed/In our not-fearing Britain than have tidings/Of any penny trib­ute paid.” O’Neill would, how­ever, have us call this some­thing other than the re-writing of History.

It is the con­struc­tion of a fic­tional world — a fic­tional world that, it should be said, bears some mark of real­ity… but a fic­tional one nonethe­less. In fic­tion, as O’Neill explains, every­thing is con­tin­gent upon noth­ing aside from the whim of the author; that term, of course, extend­ing to include “play­wright”, “poet”, and all other man­ner of narrative-creator.

So in this fic­tional world, against this back­drop of polit­i­cal tur­moil, Iachimo enters. He enters amidst Posthu­mus’ nation­al­is­tic out­bursts, and it almost appears as though Posthu­mus doesn’t realise the issue at hand has altered, so unfal­ter­ing is his courage in his spouse, as with his nation.

“I hope the brief­ness of your answer made/The speed­i­ness of your return.” — he could well be speak­ing of an emissary’s rebut­tal at the hands of a for­eign power demand­ing trib­ute. There is some­thing diaphanous about the edges of these themes, as though Shake­speare has feath­ered them together inten­tion­ally. Our con­cep­tion of “state” is quite dif­fer­ent from that of mar­riage, but per­haps there is some­thing to be made of the way in which they are together, here. I think it pos­si­ble that we are being invited to exam­ine Posthu­mus against expec­ta­tions of what befits a “good” hus­band, specif­i­cally with regards to his lead­er­ship qual­i­ties. As a poten­tial states­man, Posthu­mus has not yet been thor­oughly dis­qual­i­fied. That comes in the scene fol­low­ing this, wherein he throws a hys­ter­i­cal, misog­y­nis­tic, tempter tantrum.

I con­sider this jux­ta­po­si­tion of polit­i­cal and rela­tional dis­cus­sion some­thing that is meant to con­nect the two in our minds: Posthu­mus is, after­all, being eval­u­ated not only as the con­demn­ing hus­band of Imo­gen, but also as a poten­tial ruler of the state. His apti­tude for both roles is seri­ously brought into ques­tion through­out this play: and often through the same events.

In an envi­ron­ment of ironic cru­dity, the sup­posed elite of Renais­sance Europe gather in Philario’s house, jest­ing about the con­stancy of, in par­tic­u­lar, Posthu­mus’ wife Imo­gen. Posthu­mus is agree­ably con­fi­dent in his wife’s fidelity, but, some­what less agree­ably, will­ing to sub­ject her to the approaches of one Iachimo. In con­clud­ing their wager, Posthu­mus declares:

Only, thus far you shall answer: if you make your voy­age upon her, and give me directly to under­stand you have prevail’d, I am no fur­ther your enemy; she is not worth our debate : if she remain unseduc’d, you not mak­ing it appear oth­er­wise, for your ill opin­ion, and the assault you have made to her chastity, you shall answer me with your sword.

This doesn’t take too much unpack­ing. In the case that Iachimo suc­ceeds, Posthu­mus explic­itly says “I am no fur­ther your enemy”. Back in Act II Scene IV, Iachimo is speak­ing of the par­tic­u­lars of Imogen’s cham­ber, and says he must speak in greater detail to jus­tify his knowl­edge. Posthu­mus agrees, stat­ing: “So they must,/Or do your hon­our injury”. There is a con­cern here for Iachimo’s hon­our even amidst his defama­tion of Posthu­mus’ wife. Again, on line 124, Posthu­mus responds to Philario’s ratio­nal sug­ges­tion that a cor­rupt ser­vant may have taken a token on Iachimo’s behalf, say­ing “I am sure/ She would not lose it : her atten­dants are/ All sworn and honourable”.

Sworn and hon­ourable, in fact, beyond the hon­our of his wife? Appar­ently, in Posthu­mus’ mind, this is true.

All this has a fan­tas­tic irony about it, as it serves both to cri­tique Posthu­mus as leader, and as hus­band. The two are insep­a­ra­ble; Posthu­mus has failed in ways a Renais­sance man is not per­mit­ted to fail, demon­strat­ing his cru­dity, his lack of faith, his inabil­ity to lead respon­si­bly even his wife — in the eyes of the audi­ence, he has failed.

This is realised through a nar­ra­tive that is cal­cu­lat­ing in its grad­ual rev­e­la­tion and con­struc­tion of the char­ac­ter Posthu­mus: we see this in the estab­lish­ment of the wager, Act 1 Scene 4; its con­tin­u­a­tion as Iachimo slowly unveils his deceit in Act 2 Scene 4, and Posthu­mus’ propen­sity to doubt his wife jeal­ously; his tantrum in Act 2 Scene 5; and, later, his order­ing her mur­der; and, later still, his grov­el­ing repen­tance rather unlike Iachimo’s stoic admis­sion of guilt. Iachimo is, in some respects, an anti-Posthumus. He is cal­cu­lat­ing, not impul­sive; cun­ning, not deceived; and orches­tra­tor of much action with regards to Posthu­mus’ rela­tion­ship with Imo­gen: he leads their rela­tion­ship, whilst Posthu­mus is (falsely) led.

This should not be taken to mean that Iachimo is a paragon of great lead­er­ship — this is, after­all, a com­edy in a world sus­pended between his­tor­i­cal fact and Renais­sance dis­course. There is scope for some degree of reflex­iv­ity within this play, as Shake­speare pokes fun at his own char­ac­ters, using oth­ers to delin­eate their foibles and pro­pel the nar­ra­tive towards its inevitable, genre-defined, close: poetic justice.

cat-scan 1.0 and other things

This is from last week. It’s been out a while, but I’ve been insa­tiably lazy when it comes to post­ing. So, at 22:20 on a Sun­day night, I finally make time for it. Ah well.

cat-scan 1.0 is out. Which is great news. Won’t post too much about it here, but def­i­nitely worth a look if pre­vi­ous ver­sions have seemed like too much has­sle to setup or whatever.

What’s not quite such great news is that Ben’s gone to the UK for a year. Well, great news if you’re in the UK, I guess :P Either way, he’s got a shiny new blog up and run­ning to tell us all about it. Or some­thing. I’m meant to do him a non-default-WP tem­plate for it some­time, but… well, going on my cur­rent rate-of-achievement, that’ll be some­time before he gets back ;-) Nope, not going to be any more spe­cific :P

If any­one else was won­der­ing what the image for the 1.0 launch announce­ment post was, yes, we do have shirts. Or rather, Ben does, and it’s a bit small, and it was my going away pressie for him :P So now cat-scan is tak­ing over the world in a more lit­eral fash­ion (hah, fash­ion). Well… it mightn’t, because Bonds don’t make Medium the same size as every­one else… and it’s prob­a­bly a lit­tle small. What­ever, sorry Ben! Enjoy the singlet!

In other news… I think Katy left to Hon­duras for 3 weeks on a short-term mis­sion some­time today, which is pretty excit­ing. Hope­fully will hear all about it from her when she gets back and stuff.

I’m sure I missed a load of var­i­ous things, but I need to go sleep so that’ll have to do for the time being.

# by Josh on January 8th, 2006 Tags: ,
| 1 Comment »

GPS Running and a trip to New Zealand

I haven’t been run­ning much lately, because… I’m lazy. And there are exams on. And I’d much rather pro­cras­ti­nate pas­sively. Or some­thing. I don’t know, I don’t really have any good excuses.

There is, how­ever, some­thing that would prob­a­bly make me want to run more. This ridicu­lously cool GPS train­ing device! It’s like… hey… you’re a geek. And you want to run. With gim­micks that are arguably use­ful. Buy me, buy me!

Some­how, though, at $US330ish plus ship­ping, I don’t think it’s going to hap­pen. The solu­tion? Start jog­ging with a back­pack and take a car GPS unit (already have one)!

Yeah, not ter­ri­bly likely, either. Ah well. Hope­fully The Trip to New Zealand com­ing up (have I men­tioned that online yet? Geez… maybe not… how bad) will serve to kinda rem­edy the whole lack-of-exercise sit­u­a­tion and cre­ate a habit for when I get back. If I haven’t men­tioned that on this site before (I don’t remem­ber doing that, I don’t think I have), then… con­sider this notice. I’m going to NZ from Sat­ur­day the 12th of Novem­ber until Mon­day the 5th of Decem­ber. Tori leaves to go to Eng­land on Novem­ber 10, so that’ll be dis­trac­tion enough after fin­ish­ing the exams and just before pack­ing… and hope­fully NZ will be enough of a dis­trac­tion for me to not realise she’s on the other side of the planet for a while (and vice versa, I imagine…)

I’m plan­ning on tak­ing lots of pho­tos, but haven’t decided which cam­era to take yet. Or, more accu­rately, how many I will take. I’m def­i­nitely plan­ning on tak­ing my Pen­tax SP500 w/ 28-70mm lens, but don’t know whether my lit­tle Pen­tax qual­i­fies. I can see it either get­ting bro­ken or full very quickly. Con­tem­plat­ing get­ting a harddrive-based reader thingo (some­thing like this HD-DM40 from Any­ware, about $215 from a retailer), but quite uncer­tain. It’s just more stuff to carry in a back­pack that’s already going to be sub­stan­tially full.

Plus, as I’ve told some peo­ple before, I like film grain. It looks nice. Far nicer than dig­i­tal com­pres­sion arti­facts or the sen­sor crap­ping out in low light con­di­tions. One of Hayley’s pho­tos on year12.joahua.com demon­strates this nicely, because it’s not a good photo, but it’s very nice and char­ac­ter­ful… mostly, I think, because it was shot on film not digital.

So, I can live with my own inabil­ity to use a cam­era per­fectly mean­ing I get a hand­ful of blurry shots, and it cost­ing a lit­tle more to get pho­tos developed/make mis­takes. The ques­tion is, should I have a sec­ondary cam­era for quick pho­tos that I can check the qual­ity of imme­di­ately, just in case? I could prob­a­bly drop my SP500 in water and it’d sur­vive after a [prob­a­bly quite expen­sive] ser­vice… I can’t say the same thing for the dig­i­tal. Fun­nily enough, the tiny dig­i­tal would ulti­mately take up nearly as much space as the chunky SLR, because it would mean I’d be car­ry­ing a charger for its bat­ter­ies, a hard drive, and a charger for the hard drive, as well as the cam­era itself. I could just not use the hard drive and try to find a net cafe, but that’s some­thing I’d rather not rely on. I could also buy another SD card or two before we leave… which is a dis­tinct pos­si­bil­ity, given how cheap those things are get­ting (I saw a 256MB card for under $30 yes­ter­day, and wasn’t even look­ing. 512MB cards can be had for under $50). Prob­lem­at­i­cally, they’re absolutely tiny and I can just see myself los­ing one.

Sug­ges­tions, anyone?

# by Josh on October 26th, 2005 Tags: , , ,
| 4 Comments »

Beyonce, Becks and me me me

Bey­once, Becks and me me me — smh.com.au

Just a quick link. I’d love it if the news­pa­per actu­ally pro­vided links to the var­i­ous papers men­tioned. I’m no huge fan of the “celebrity as an object of study” thing, but snip­pets of this arti­cle stir [my] interest.

The only parts of any value to me in this arti­cle are in rela­tion to the con­nec­tion between media focus and our soci­ety — sur­mised in two short quo­ta­tions from the piece:

Explain­ing how Beckham’s career has been lit­tered with Chris­t­ian sym­bol­ism, Brick said redemp­tion, res­ur­rec­tion, and sal­va­tion “are the nar­ra­tives that tell his story”. The footballer’s per­cep­tion of him­self seems to con­cur: he has appeared in mag­a­zines adopt­ing a Christ-like pose, has a cru­ci­fix tat­too and named one of his sons Cruz, Span­ish for cross.

But Brick’s paper said read­ing Beck­ham as post­mod­ern reli­gious icon, a new god of the global con­sumer cul­ture, was insuf­fi­cient. “Rather, Beckham’s celebrity speaks to the para­dox­i­cal desire to attribute mean­ing in a cul­ture which is increas­ingly defined as meaningless…”

Paul McDon­ald, from Roe­hamp­ton Uni­ver­sity in Eng­land, pointed out that at the start of last cen­tury, press pro­files con­cen­trated on polit­i­cal, busi­ness and reli­gious lead­ers, “yet by the 1920s, the focus of that atten­tion had shifted toward cov­er­age of fig­ures in enter­tain­ment or sports”. The media’s atten­tion had moved from the idols of pro­duc­tion towards idols of consumption.

Still, it’s worth read­ing the whole arti­cle to con­tex­tu­alise those snippets.