Current TV

Current TV logo

There’s a new TV net­work out there that’s got a rad­i­cally dif­fer­ent pro­gram­ming model, and looks immensely inter­est­ing. They’re foward-thinking type peo­ple. This is Clue­train–model tele­vi­sion pro­gram­ming. And I wish they’d gone and launched a video stream as well, because nei­ther I (nor any­one else out­side the US) can see any of it live — only what’s been specif­i­cally selected and uploaded to their online Cur­rent Stu­dio sec­tion (not yet live).

(Oh, and if any US peo­ple are read­ing this — I’m look­ing at you, Matthom ;) — expect­ing a full report! :P)

I’d say some more nice things about them if their web­site were as foward think­ing as they clearly are: they could eas­ily have a val­i­dat­ing web­site if they cared (look ma, no tables… also no doc­type), and stream­ing is obvi­ously not beyond their reach if they already have the facil­i­ties to pro­vide some of their con­tent selectively.

Beyond reason

This is a post that I’ve been want­ing to make for a while now, but haven’t, because the facts still weren’t clear and there’s a part of me that aspires to jour­nal­ism beyond pure blogging.

July 23, 2005. “Bomb sus­pect shot dead on Tube”.

July 24, 2005. “Police gunned down inno­cent man”.

Notably, police did not gun down “Bomb sus­pect”. Shoot first, ask ques­tions later. Okay, what­ever. They screwed up, they’re only human. So why am I jump­ing up and down about it (value of human life aside — because we know thou­sands of peo­ple in non-Western coun­tries are being killed every­day and no-one blinks)?

If noth­ing else, their rea­son­ing. The appar­ent lack of recourse.

“For some­body to lose their life in such cir­cum­stances is a tragedy and one that the Met­ro­pol­i­tan Police Ser­vice regrets,” police said, acknowl­edg­ing they had shot the wrong man.

Photo of Jean Charles de Menezes

They are now try­ing to get the body of mur­dered Brazil­ian, Jean Charles de Menezes, back to his home land in accor­dance with the wishes of his family.

“The gov­ern­ment expects the British author­i­ties to explain the cir­cum­stances that led to this tragedy,” a For­eign Min­istry state­ment said.
The Brazil­ian was “appar­ently the vic­tim of a lam­en­ta­ble mis­take”, the state­ment said.

Brazil­ian For­eign Min­is­ter Celso Amorim issued a state­ment in which he states his expec­ta­tion the British author­ites explain the events that unfolded. This is impor­tant: there has been no men­tion from the British of any fur­ther inves­ti­ga­tion or inquest into the death of Jean Charles de Menezes.

The actual nature of the killing itself, how­ever, is also in need of expla­na­tion. Police, appar­ently, assessed the risk and deter­mined the actions that would result in the mur­der (I use that word unflinch­ingly, for that is what this is) of an inno­cent man. Let us pause to col­lect what we know of the sit­u­a­tion, from the state­ments of eyewitnesses.

The police were in plain clothes. Other pas­sen­gers on the train had absolutely no way of know­ing with any degree of cer­tainty that the men weild­ing guns were, in fact, mem­bers of the Lon­don Met­ro­pol­i­tan Police Ser­vice. With­out indulging in con­spir­acy the­ory, to this day the only way the pub­lic can “know” this is by the [later, rather delayed] state­ments of the police force itself: the actual killers could quite eas­ily have been a covert British force that unseen agree­ments nec­ces­si­tated the blame being placed upon the Met­ro­pol­i­tan Police.

The “Met­ro­pol­i­tan Police Ser­vice”, wear­ing plain clothes, weild­ing sev­eral “heavy”-looking hand­guns (accord­ing to eye­wit­ness Mark Whitby), start chas­ing after this man.

If we cut through the ide­o­log­i­cal obfus­ca­tion about how “ter­ror­ism has no effects on the pop­u­la­tion” what­so­ever and insert name of attacked city here will be strong!” rhetoric, just for a sec­ond, it’s pretty self-evident that ter­ror­ism does have very real effects, man­i­fest in (amongst other things) a pre­vail­ing sense of para­noia. Ter­ror, con­cep­tu­ally, is based upon the irra­tional. You are not sta­tis­ti­cally likely to be killed in a pub­lic place in Lon­don, but the fear is there. Sim­i­larly, a man wear­ing a New York tee-shirt and a coat that “looked out of place in the hot humid weather” (also Mark Whitby) would not, with­out the con­text of pre­vi­ous days, be con­sid­ered a sus­pect, chased into a train car­riage in a pub­lic place, and shot in the head at close range five times.

Ter­ror­ism, clearly, does have effects. Ignore the pop­u­la­tion: it has effects upon ratio­nal gov­ern­ment. It makes our lead­ers pass inef­fec­tive laws that ham­per the pop­u­la­tion but do lit­tle to pre­vent ter­ror­ism. In Syd­ney, about a week ago, the media started issu­ing demands that “rad­i­cal” books in Islamic book­shops be — and I quote — “burnt”.

I’m sorry, did I miss some­thing? Why is an increas­ingly “lib­eral” West­ern pop­u­la­tion revert­ing to burn­ing books? Whilst we’re at it, can we burn all the works of Hitler, Mao, Stalin, Marx, a host of other com­mu­nist lead­ers, and, if we were to con­tinue, the works of var­i­ous French rev­o­lu­tion­ar­ies that would unequiv­o­ca­bly be con­sid­ered anti-establishment? Who cares what the estab­lish­ment is — polit­i­cal vio­lence is polit­i­cal vio­lence, is it not?

Oh, no, appar­ently not. But every­one avert their heads from Viet­nam and other instances of US-sanctioned polit­i­cal vio­lence, just in case. That wasn’t about democ­racy, it was about stop­ping com­mu­nism that had turned North Viet­nam into an indus­tri­alised state with the fastest-growing econ­omy in the region to which aid from Rus­sia and China decreased whilst sim­i­lar aid to South Viet­nam increased and they became pro­gres­sively more depen­dent upon the US.

But that was, of course, a huge digres­sion that just threw me into a big pit full of Left­ist writ­ers. Ah, quick, let me out.

So let’s ignore the pol­i­tics behind it for a sec­ond, and look at raw emo­tion. A man was shot in the head five times at close range on pub­lic trans­port. SOMEBODY, BLINK! I’m sure I’m miss­ing some­thing that makes all this per­fectly fine — and don’t say prior acts of ter­ror­ism, because that’s been proven to be uncon­nected, remem­ber? Ter­ror­ism has no effect on the pop­u­la­tion! Oh, what was that? I’m assum­ing imposed ide­olo­gies? Yeah, maybe.

Whilst I’m on this whole rant, I thought I’d men­tion tomor­row I’m going to blow up the Syd­ney Har­bour Bridge

…and the only rea­son I’m capa­ble of doing this, is that I don’t yet have a national iden­tity card to act as a restrain­ing force upon me. I’m imag­in­ing they’d come out now, and the force it would have on me as I walked towards the cen­ter of the bridge wear­ing a large back­pack… Oooh!!! It’s pulling me back!!! I can’t pos­si­bly det­o­nate this bomb, because that would mean I’d destroy this beau­ti­ful work of holo­graphic, bio­met­ric, foren­sic per­fec­tion! Oh, yeah, and they’d be able to iden­tify me as the per­son who did it if it sur­vived the blast. Because, see­ing as I’m a sui­cide bomber, I do actu­ally care a great deal about that.

To the Aus­tralian Gov­ern­ment: who­ever decides this is a good idea should be taken out on an excur­sion to Sydney’s pub­lic trans­port net­work. They should be pur­sued by peo­ple in plain clothes call­ing out to them to stop, weild­ing hand­guns. The pub­lic should oblig­ingly step out of the way and accept this as nor­mal. The mem­ber of the pub­lic ser­vice who is being pur­sued will trip, and fall to the floor in the door­way of a train car­riage. They will cower, whilst three armed men come to the door­way of the train, and raise their guns in the air, point­ing to the head of the per­son who is now pow­er­less beneath them.

One.

Two.

Three.

Four.

Five.

The floor of the car­riage is red. “Every­body, please leave the car­riage. This per­son was a suspect.”

Twenty other — now uni­formed — peo­ple come running.

Two days later, a state­ment is issued. But we already know the end­ing. It has been realised in the actions that recur­sively lead to the the death of this pulpy com­bi­na­tion of blood and flesh. A death of pub­lic free­doms has been realised, and the peo­ple have calmly left their car­riage of lib­er­ties with­out fur­ther ques­tion:– after­all, the guns are held by some­one else.

The ter­ror­ists have won.

If I were to write that in my HSC exam, as a short story or a work of fic­tion, chances are the paper would be con­sid­ered a non-serious attempt, as has hap­pened pre­vi­ously in at least one widely-publicised case with ‘exces­sive’ vio­lence (If mem­ory serves me cor­rectly, this instance detailed a school shoot­ing, I think). This vio­lence is not only on our streets, and in our tele­vi­sions: it is so per­va­sive in soci­ety that the insti­tu­tions once assigned the role of pre­vent­ing such now facil­i­tate it gra­tu­itously and with­out need for expla­na­tion. Remem­ber, in all this, that the British gov­ern­ment and bod­ies that con­sti­tute their pub­lic ser­vice (includ­ing the police force) have not iden­ti­fied the need for any fur­ther inves­ti­ga­tion into the pro­ce­dures that have allowed this bru­tal mur­der to take place, and nei­ther has any fur­ther inves­ti­ga­tion into why this man in par­tic­u­lar was shot. As of the time of writ­ing, the most recent press release avail­able on the Met­ro­pol­i­tan Police web­site is from the pre­vi­ous day:

“I can say as part of oper­a­tions linked to yesterday’s inci­dents, Met police offi­cers have shot a man inside Stock­well Under­ground Sta­tion at approx­i­mately 10am this morn­ing. Lon­don Ambu­lance Ser­vice and the air ambu­lance both attended and the man was pro­nounced dead at the scene. I under­stand Stock­well tube sta­tion remains closed.

The infor­ma­tion I have avail­able if [sic] that this shoot­ing is directly linked to the ongo­ing and expand­ing anti-terrorist oper­a­tion. [Empha­sis mine] Any death is deeply regret­table. I under­stand the man was chal­lenged and refused to obey. I can’t go any fur­ther than that at this stage…”

– Sir Ian Blair

This infor­ma­tion has since been proven incor­rect, yet there is a pre­vail­ing silence from the author­i­ties. Democ­racy requires a degree of open­ness that has not been allowed, here. Irre­spec­tive as to any “ongo­ing and expand­ing anti-terrorist oper­a­tion”, announc­ing that an inves­ti­ga­tion is pro­ceed­ing into this spe­cific event is not only of no detri­ment to “anti-terrorist” oper­a­tions, but a req­ui­site aspect of democracy.

BBC arti­cle
SMH arti­cle
Some­one who knew Jean

Domain registrar wastes money, pt 2

I received another 4 let­ters yes­ter­day from the same com­pany as was respon­si­ble for the orig­i­nal post­ing on this mat­ter. Of course, I’m trans­fer­ring none of the four domains to that reg­is­trar, and they sent it by reg­is­tered mail from the US.

A pile of letters from DROA

Sucks to be them.

Any­one else received any? Or am I some­how special?

Tan­gen­tial P.S.: Please please please read and com­ment on the post Recre­ant Strength. Please?

# by Josh on April 28th, 2005 Tags: , ,
| 4 Comments »

An essay on the digital divide

What is the dig­i­tal divide, and what impli­ca­tions for soci­ety and the indi­vid­ual are seen to arise from this?

A rather broad topic, per­haps, but use­ful, nonethe­less. Warn­ing — it’s fairly long.

Update: Now in pretty PDF form! Read the rest of this entry »

UK, Australia top TV piracy list

In this arti­cle in the Aus­tralian five days ago, Aus­tralia and the UK are iden­ti­fied as being the two largest pirates of TV con­tent, espe­cially mate­r­ial from the US. I found this arti­cle immensely amus­ing, espe­cially the fol­low­ing excerpt:

“Unless you’re a pretty big cybergeek, peo­ple are gen­er­ally happy to watch it on TV,” said an exec­u­tive at one UK broad­caster who asked to remain anonymous.

Nev­er­the­less, Hol­ly­wood is not stand­ing by idly. Fear­ful of a repeat of the ram­pant down­load­ing that crip­pled the music indus­try, the Motion Pic­ture Asso­ci­a­tion of Amer­ica (MPAA) has forced the clo­sure of sev­eral sites that pro­vide the links needed to down­load movies and tele­vi­sion shows.

In my pre­vi­ous post on piracy-related issues, I talked about the inad­e­quacy of stag­gered global release poli­cies in an envi­ron­ment in which con­sumer sov­er­eignty exists to the point where this stag­gered release sys­tem is com­pletely irrel­e­vant, and serves only to pro­mote and give addi­tional cause for piracy. We’re see­ing exactly the same issue with stag­gered tele­vi­sion episode release, too.

Suc­cinct ver­sion: The UK broad­caster exec­u­tive labelling the issue as being niche and only for “pretty big cybergeek[s]” is hor­ri­bly, hor­ri­bly naïve and gen­er­ally mis­guided, mak­ing him/her more than a lit­tle bit the fool.

Not-so-succinct ver­sion: They’re hor­ri­bly wrong, and I’ve got anec­do­tal and other evi­dence to con­clu­sively prove him so. Really. Admit­tedly, anec­do­tal evi­dence which is drawn from a smaller spec­trum of soci­ety, but it’s indica­tive of a greater prob­lem to come (teenage cul­ture rep­re­sent­ing an “early adopter” mar­ket within the field of con­sumer elec­tron­ics and tech­nol­ogy), which can­not be sim­ply ignored in the way that it appears broad­cast­ers have ignored this.

Today a group of peo­ple at school were talk­ing about the TV show “Des­per­ate House­wives”, and some­one said words to the effect of “I wish I knew what hap­pened next week, this is addic­tive TV!” (appar­ently most of Aus­tralia would agree with them, as evi­dent from the sta­tis­tics posted on Steve’s weblog). That’s far less inter­est­ing in and of itself than what came next – a com­ment along the lines of “Oh, in the US they’re up to [some other sea­son or some­thing], I’ve already seen them”, cou­pled with an offer to plot-spoil for other watch­ers of the series. Which isn’t exactly some­thing the net­works need to worry about – plot spoil­ers rarely would actu­ally deter some­one from spend­ing an hour (or 47 min­utes, given the 13 minute adver­tis­ing restric­tion in that times­lot in Aus­tralia, if I recall cor­rectly – some­one might care to clar­ify as a mat­ter of trivia?) watch­ing a pro­gramme they enjoy, even if it makes lit­tle to no dif­fer­ence to them in terms of plot revelation.

The more sig­nif­i­cant part of this com­ment is of course that this per­son had actu­ally seen these episodes, and con­text which direct quo­ta­tion can’t con­vey – this per­son is a TV addict, but they’re hardly a “geek extra­or­di­naire”, which is impor­tant in crit­i­cis­ing this executive’s state­ments. The per­son who’d seen the episode was hardly the only one, either, although the only instance that imme­di­ately springs to mind as being noteworthy.

A slightly more removed exam­ple from this is from a few months back, relat­ing to those piratical-problem-children, uni­ver­sity stu­dents from an insti­tu­tion that shall remain unnamed. Episodes from the entire first sea­son of The OC, long before we were too far into it here in Aus­tralia. On a lap­top, down­loaded from Peer-to-Peer, by an arts stu­dent with a mod­er­ate (and I mean very mod­er­ate!) IT bent… nobody ever try and say that using peer-to-peer is beyond the scope of any aver­age teenager or uni­ver­sity student!

Which is, of course, exactly what this exec­u­tive was sug­gest­ing – that down­load­ing con­tent that isn’t avail­able by other means is some­thing solely restricted to geeky peo­ple. It’s not. And until this fact is recog­nised by net­works, they can enjoy watch­ing their adver­tis­ing rev­enue fall as view­ers enjoy ad-free down­loaded cap­tures of pro­grammes not yet even released in this coun­try – all of which could be cir­cum­vented through stu­dios per­mit­ting and sup­port­ing simul­ta­ne­ous Inter­na­tional con­tent release, because real­is­ti­cally “global pre­miere rights” don’t offer any­thing aside from mar­ket­ing appeal, as the audi­ence can’t just hop con­ti­nents in order to view it on a com­pet­ing net­work (that’s an issue for another decade, when real-time video stream­ing becomes as pro­lific as audio streams are today… although com­pe­ti­tion with tra­di­tional radio net­works is only just begin­ning to become appar­ent in the US, with the advent of ded­i­cated wire­less stream­ing ser­vices), but they CAN wait 24 hours to view an ad-free cap­ture of the same pro­gramme via the Inter­net if they’re patient, or if the pro­gramme isn’t avail­able in their locale.

The exec­u­tive wasn’t com­pletely wrong. Peo­ple are happy to watch things on TV. The only issue with that is that TV must be show­ing the con­tent that peo­ple want to watch – that’s long been a recog­nised fact, but per­haps not so much in the tim­ing of this con­tent deliv­ery… now, it has to be on a sched­ule which leaves the audi­ence no alter­na­tive which is desir­able (because TV itself is eas­ier to use than peer-to-peer downloading).

Musical chairs

If some­thing starts going right, some­thing else has to break. At least, that’s how it seems at the minute — as soon as one PC starts behav­ing, another falls to a most mis­er­able state of exis­tence. It’s all about the dis­tri­b­u­tion of “lucky points”, a bril­liant friend remarked…

My SuSE desk­top isn’t boot­ing into X (or, is, but the pro­ceeds to become unus­able… go fig­ure — the num­lock key still works, and it’s fine in run­level 3, but as soon as X starts, out go the net­work inter­faces and display!) — which wouldn’t be a prob­lem on any nor­mal sys­tem, but I’m fairly sure I’ve whinged in the past about how stu­pidly stu­pid SuSE is when it comes to doing things in any stan­dard way… even binary stuff like NVidia’s Linux dri­vers it man­ages to man­gle, which is the prob­lem here — I can’t unin­stall them, and I can’t rein­stall them, because SuSE appar­ently requires spe­cial treat­ment. Sort of. The NVidia guide says you can man­u­ally install it but it won’t han­dle ker­nel upgrades on its own (e.g. you’ll have to rein­stall the dri­vers every time, like on all other distros!) — except, this prob­lem was caused by a ker­nel upgrade and SuSE’s fail­ure to deal with it on its own, and now I’m up the prover­bial creek because man­ual inter­ven­tion isn’t an option (or rather, it’d be faster just to rein­stall another oper­at­ing sys­tem, or something.)

There is good news, though (not that this has substantial/any impact on the rest of the world — it’s good for me, and this web­site is all about my sta­tus as a “cheap exhi­bi­tion­ist”! — plus the fact that you’re read­ing this implies that you’re either bored enough to be inter­ested, or objec­tively inter­ested… but I digress even more!).

I’ve thrown Fedora from the third floor of this house (I love being able to do that!!), and replaced it with FreeBSD (I could say it’s all Dale’s fault — yes, click the link, he’s run­ning his blog on a snazzy new domain!), but that’s hardly true… hav­ing said that, his good reports cer­tainly played a part in that deci­sion). It’s not going to han­dle rout­ing any­more, but will be prox­y­ing as soon as I get that ade­quately setup, if only for the pur­pose of ad block­ing (and pos­si­bly band­width — I’ve used a ridicu­lous amount thus far this month, to the point that I’ll actu­ally be going over the 10GB soft-limit if things con­tinue this way… meh! Shouldn’t be a big issue.). Its pri­mary func­tion is as a Samba server, func­tion­ing as a domain con­troller and file/print server. It’ll also be han­dling scan­ning, although that’s com­pletely sep­a­rate from Samba functionality.

The rout­ing aspect of things is now being han­dled by a D-Link DI-624 wire­less router, which does 802.11g, and has an inbuilt BPA client (which, inci­den­tally, sucks. Work­ing on that prob­lem, too — it seems as though dif­fer­ent firmware might make the world a bet­ter place, but exactly which firmware remains to be seen…) — it’s also got 4 wired ports, only two of which are in use — one uplinked to the main switch, the other directly into the server.

FreeBSD is fun, but it took me a while to fig­ure out how to get root via remote access. There’s some­thing mildly depress­ing yet strangely funny about jump­ing up and down shout­ing “g0t r00t!!!” in ref­er­ence to a com­puter you have phys­i­cal access to, but I did, nonethe­less :-P Shrug, it wasn’t a prob­lem I’d had before… learn­ing experience? ;-)

I’m cur­rently hav­ing fun with ports, which is great, because I haven’t really got the fog­gi­est idea if I’m doing this right. I feel like I should have updated the ports index when I first installed, because I know for a fact some of the stuff listed here is old­ish… but whether that’s for secu­rity rea­sons or what­ever else I hon­estly couldn’t say. It mat­ters less now, because I’m not using this thing as a directly-Internet con­nected device, which is good. I con­tem­plated stick­ing one inter­face of it onto a DMZ, but fig­ured that prob­a­bly wasn’t be best of ideas, see­ing I’m the one respon­si­ble for patch­ing and oth­er­wise DoingStuff™ with the sys­tem… shrug!

Samba’s just been com­piled and installed, and I’m grab­bing vim before attempt­ing any­thing fur­ther, sim­ply because I find myself lost with­out being able to type “vim file­name” and hav­ing it DO some­thing, instead of just giv­ing me errors. I’m a long long way from being any kind of vim guru, and it’s overkill con­sid­er­ing how I use it (open file, press Insert to edit, press escape, :wq), but using “edit” just doesn’t feel right. As soon as that’s done com­pil­ing (it’s still down­load­ing patches painfully slowly from some US server — is there any way to change the source of down­load for ports??), I’ll start get­ting Samba up and run­ning, which involves installing OpenL­DAP, set­ting up users and stuff in there, then fig­ur­ing out how to make Samba a nice happy domain con­troller, point­ing Win­dows clients to it, set­ting up login scripts to make the clients mount dri­ves nicely, and then fix my other SuSE desk­top (haha, don’t think it’ll stay SuSE much longer… sug­ges­tions any­one? :)) with a view to get­ting it to authen­ti­cate users with the domain con­troller (pre­sum­ably using… some Linux thing… Ker­beros? Shrug. I’ve got no idea what I’m talk­ing about, as should be plainly clear to any­one who does by now!). Fol­low­ing that, I get to setup Squid, and then AMP which’ll be fun. And then an email server. I’ve dis­cov­ered I can send out­bound mes­sages on my own SMTP server with­out any prob­lems (cue applause), but I don’t know if Tel­stra is stu­pid by default with inbound MTA stuff… I’m sure if it doesn’t work you’ll read all about how ter­ri­ble they are here as I jump up and down and cry about it, before call­ing Tech­ni­cal Sup­port, lis­ten­ing to their groooovy hold music (seri­ously, it’s great — no crappy “Your call is impor­tant to us” rub­bish, just cool jazz… at least, it was last night. I nearly plugged my phone into the new amp to hear it bet­ter, coz the speak­er­phone wasn’t doing it jus­tice!), and then resolv­ing the whole thing with a few mouse clicks.

Oh, and I would take pho­tos, but there isn’t really any­thing that looks new and inter­est­ing that I haven’t posted already, so… I won’t yet :P That means don’t ask for less talk and more pic­tures, Steve :P

A whole new world of TLAs I don’t understand (Or, Josh wants to install VoIP/Asterisk)

Over the past week or two, I’ve heard about VoIP a bit more than usual, first with Adrian of Beat FM doing his thing over VoIP from Lis­more with FireFly/Freshtel, and then a lit­tle later, when Steve asked if I could join a convo with a guy called Dave to pro­vide some gen­eral Linux advice, as Dave had just installed the Aster­isk PBX soft­ware on a box (or, if you’re Steve, “com­puter”) and needed to SSH into it.

So, awareness/interest cat­a­lysts are there. I’d looked/heard about the Aster­isk soft­ware some time ago, but sort of wrote it off as not quite worth the effort. More recently, how­ever, we’ve been try­ing to get gen­eral ICT stuff sorted for the new place of res­i­dence, in a way that’ll let us cut costs a lit­tle. Read the rest of this entry »