week of 01/21/2007

Japan's health minister: Women are "birth-giving machines"

Japan's 71-year-old health minister Hakuo Yanagisawa gave a speech in which he called Japanese women "birth-giving machines" and called on them to "do their best per head."
The number of women aged between 15 and 50 is fixed. Because the number of birth-giving machines and devices is fixed, all we can ask for is for them to do their best per head, although it may not be so appropriate to call them machines.
Link

TiVo's DRM breaks Slingbox - UPDATED


John sez, "I just spent a bunch of money on a new TV with an HDMI input and a Slingbox so I can enjoy my cable TV when I'm on the road. Check out the photos. Maybe I won't be able to after all. The title of the photo set is I Hate DRM. What a crock." Link (Thanks, John!)

Update: Larry sez, "The Slingbox Pro doesn't have an HDMI input; it has a connector that looks exactly like HDMI, even fits an HDMI cable, but it's not HDMI. It's a connector for Sling's optional HD dongle, which accepts only component video, not HDMI. Component video is DRM-proof, more or less, although some video source devices may limit the resolution on component output, or make it impossible to view output on both component (for the Slingbox) and HDMI (for the TV) simultaneously. The TiVo series 3 doesn't have this limitation... you can hook up the TV via HDMI, the Slingbox via Sling's component video dongle, and watch until your eyes fall out of your head."

Update 2: John responds, "Larry's comment doesn't really apply to my situation, but I should have been clearer. My original email didn't go into the details of my Slingbox set-up, but here it is if you'd like to add it.

"I've got the original Slingbox (now called Classic). I've got a Series 3 Tivo and a Samsung TV with an HDMI input. The Tivo connects to the TV with an HDMI cable. In addition, the Tivo also connects to the Slingbox via the S-Video cable. When the TV is on, the Slingbox will play all video. When the TV is off, the video on my Slingbox is disabled on most (but not every) channel. Sorry, the details are boring, but the situation is annoying none the less."

Google founder regrets censoring China

Google founder Sergey Brin told an interviewer that censoring China's search-results at the behest of the totalitarian government in Beijing was a "net negative" for Google. Before this, Google's position on China was the a kind of Orwellian doublespeak: "We have to censor China because they have lots of money and we can't have any without participating in censorship" and "If we censor China but tell Chinese people when they're being censored, they'll clamor for democracy." (Um... yeah... What about if you just send uncensored web-results to China about democracy? Wouldn't that aid the cause of democracy more?)
Since moving into China, Google has been compared to Microsoft because of its dominant position and power. "We are very sensitive to people talking about us in that way," said Mr Brin. Mr Page described the differences between the two technology companies by saying "we have very open partnerships, we are very clear about being fair with revenues."
Link (via Slashdot)

See also:
Exiled Tibetans in Dharamsala protest Google censorship in China
Google in China: The Big Disconnect
Censorship: Comparisons of Google China and Google
Hacktivists parody Google logo for protest, China human rights fundraiser
Report: China blocking Google.com; censored Google.cn to be only option?
Not just in China: Google localized, censored in Azerbaijan?
Update: reports China is blocking Google.com, censored Google.cn becoming only option
Record companies: Google should censor the US, same as China
Okay, *do* be evil: Google launches censored google.cn in China
Google.cn: Tibetans protest, misspellers evade, updates. Harsh words for US tech firms from House at China 'net hearings
Tech firms blasted over China policies on Capitol Hill
Proposed law targets tech-China cooperation
China 'net censorship: not one big brother, but many
Report: Online news of protest deaths blocked by China authorities
Google logo redesigned by Students for Free Tibet
Bloggers in China break silence on violent suppression of protest
China official: What 'net censorship? What jailed journalists
Tibetan poet's blogs shut down in China censorship wave
Net censorship: HOWTO bypass China's Great Firewall
China Communist party official: our net censorship modeled on West

BoingBoing week in review: Jan 20-27, 2007


  • ReasonableAgreement.org - the anti-EULA (Cory)
  • Autistic person translates from her language (Cory)
  • Ray Harryhausen tribute site with lots of good clips (Mark)
  • Faux cocaine seduces the ladies: creepy '80s TV (Xeni)
  • Terrorist sympathizer Andy Griffith rails against Patriot Act (Xeni)
  • Mongolian death worm documentary online (Mark)
  • HOWTO isolate stem cells from a placenta at home (Pesco)
  • HOWTO photograph smoke (Pesco)
  • Mike Love's Geneaology of Influence (Pesco)
  • Big factory pig farms are some of America's worst polluters (Xeni)
  • Sweden to be first country with official embassy in Second Life


    There are reports today that Sweden plans to open the first officially sanctioned embassy inside Second Life. Embassy officials won't be issuing visas or passports there, but they may just be wear rainbow codpieces when they offer you a Cyberian Angel Exotic Massage.

    Link to Notes from Sweden blog post, here's a news article: Link. (thanks, Gabriel)

    Web zen: goth zen


    destinations
    dolls
    dating
    portraits
    text files
    the anticraft

    Web Zen Home, Store (Thanks Frank!)

    Anti-cocaine TV ad from Colombian government


    Here's a gross but brilliant anti-coke PSA from the government of Colombia, which features one particularly desperate addict. Link (thanks, Nebe Barnett)

    Previously on BoingBoing:

  • Faux cocaine seduces the ladies: creepy '80s TV ad
  • Overdue unicorn chaser


    By popular demand (apparently the Mongolian death worm's eye sting is long-lasting): happy rainbow rooftop unicorn on an Indiana farm, spotted in google maps: Link. (thanks, Dave Shpritz)

    Haruhi Suzumiya Dance: like Numa Numa, en masse, in Japan


    BoingBoing reader ~~Pocky~~ points us to an anime fan tribute dance craze in Japan.

    "In America you have the Numa Numa Dance. In Japan, we have the Haruhi Suzumiya Dance. The dance is from a popular anime . But now everyone recreates their own version it." Link to a YouTube video montage of some examples. Here is the original dance: Link. Japan's TV star "Hard Gay" did a version too: Link. And here's a Gundam version: Link.
    WARNING: The Haruhi theme song will stick in your head and wriggle there like a Texas Brain Worm.

    Reader comment: Agent86 says,

    If you want to learn how to do the dance yourself, you can try the step-by-step instructions at the SOS-dan website: Link. But please note, "The dance uses quite a lot of muscles not normally used... aching might result." There is also a companion video, slowed down and mirrored horizontally for your learning pleasure at: AVI Link

    Whups: Nazi toy soldiers in Seoul Apple retailer's display


    Alec Porter says,

    I was stunned to see these handpainted Nazi toy soldiers on display in the Apple store in Korea's biggeset mall, in Seoul. It's not an official Apple Store, but it's certainly Apple's representative in Korea; everyone who shops for Apple considers that the place.

    Korea is not know for being sensitive about the Holocaust or Nazi Germany. Perhaps they'd say the same about the west and how we're not very sensitive about Japanese Imperialism, and the horrors it inflicted on Asia. Still, this is pretty shocking.

    Link.

    Reader comments: Michael Shaughnessy, who is a professor of German at Washington & Jefferson College, says:

    While tasteless, and Hitler in no way represents today's' Germany, Korea seems to have an obsession with all things German. You can see this in the use of German as a marketing language. Here are some interesting examples of German as an advertising language in Korea.You have to assume that most people don't know the significance of the language, but find it attractive nonetheless. Link. This mirrors the use of English is used in many European countries.My research deals with visualization of culture and students and I put together a collection of some examples during a research trip. Link.
    Joe says,
    A few years ago I was in Korea and travelling outside of Seoul. I noticed a big ad in a newspaper with a picture of Hitler and a pig. I asked my guide to translate and he said the ad encouraged pig farmers to use this company's nutritional supplements "to raise a master race."
    Jonathan says,
    The BoingBoing post about Nazi 'toys" at an Apple store in Korea could use a bit more context. First, there are no Nazi toys on display at the store. Clearly, the picture is of hand-painted models. These are not toys for children. Just like every other country in the world, there are people in Korea who study and enjoy history by painting models and trying to make historically-accurate miniture scenes. You can walk into any model shop in America and buy models of German tanks and Japanese planes from the Second World War. These stores are not being disrespectful of history. (It's likely that the customers know more about history than most people do.)

    Why are the models of Nazis at the store in Korea? Commonly, stores that sell models (tanks, trains, cars, soldiers and robots) lend some of the better work done by their customers to stores in the same mall. At Co-Ex, the mall in the post, you can see some really interesting models just outside the movie theater. The Apple store is not using Nazi toys to promote its wares. It is most likely taking part in a common form of cross-promotion.

    Continue reading Whups: Nazi toy soldiers in Seoul Apple retailer's display.

    Paintings inspired by Kaiju (scary Japanese monsters)


    BoingBoing reader munkao says,

    Hi Boing Boing. I love you. My name is munkao, and I am an artist from Malaysia. I recently did a series of Kaiju-inspired paintings for a two-man show at Giant Robot San Francisco: Link. Robert Bellm is the other artist and his fantastic art can be found on that website, too. Thanks Boing Boing! you have kept me company for many years!
    Link to photos of munkao's paintings at the Giant Robot show (nsfw: some contain nudity, sexual themes, Ultraman kissing Gojira, or underwear perverts in a state of arousal).

    Jewish porno can't use kosher symbol, says upset Rabbi

    "Assraelis" (nsfw) producer Oren Cohen shot his adult film in Hebrew with an all-Israeli cast. He stuck the the Hebrew letter kof, with a “k” tucked inside, on the cover. Then came the rabbinic nastygram:
    “As a leading company in the area of kosher food certification, companies are only contractually authorized to utilize the Kof-K trademark to promote and/or market their food products,” the letter said.

    The symbol is the trademarked property of the Kof-K company, which is based in Teaneck, N.J., and certifies food like bread, juice and cookies as abiding by kosher standards. Those who observe Jewish dietary laws consider any food lacking one of a handful of such symbols, known as hechsherim, as treif, or unkosher.

    Mr. Cohen, the son of a Moroccan Israeli and the third generation of his family involved in the pornography industry, was a bit perplexed. “I thought, what — they own a letter?” Mr. Cohen said in an interview.

    They do. And they have for more than 30 years, said Rabbi Yehuda Rosenbaum, the administrative director of the company.

    Link to New York Times article (1/27). Here's an earlier item at AVN (1/25), and another at TMZ (1/25). Here's the DVD: Link (nsfw) to "Assraelis: never good enough for his mother!" (Thanks, Jason Schultz)

    Reader comment: Anonymous says,

    I think there's an important point glossed over in your blog post... "Kof-K" isn't *the* kosher symbol, it's *one company's* kosher symbol. It's not "a letter", as the porn producer indicates; it's a great big Hebrew letter with a tiny little English letter inside it, something that doesn't appear anywhere in any language. Basically it's a trademark in the classic sense, used to indicate that a bunch of rabbis in New Jersey approve of a particular product. While the bounds if intellectual property laws have often been stretched to the breaking point, this one seems pretty cut-and-dry. It's their brand, and they don't approve of it's use. I'm sure Good Housekeeping would feel the same way if their symbol was used to promote Mop Porn.

    Star Wars drawing book

    Picture 6-9 For the last couple of months, I've been buying a lot of instructional drawing books. Most of them turn out to be pretty bad -- not because the art isn't good, but because the artist doesn't do a good job of explaining what to do.

    I was happily surprised by You Can Draw Star Wars, written by Bonnie Burton and illustrated by the supremely talented artists who work for Lucas. While the book focuses on the character, robots, and vehicle of Star Wars, the lessons in the book are valuable for drawing anything.

    One unique feature of the book is the use of tracing paper overlays that have the rough pencil drawings on them. The pages below them contain the finished drawing. Special sections include inking and coloring, and creating a comic book. Link

    Magic or Madness kids' fantasy trilogy concludes with "Magic's Child"

    Justine Larbalestier has concluded her wonderful young adult fantasy trilogy, Magic or Madness. The third volume, Magic's Child, brings the series to a really satisfying, complex conclusion that's both brave and thought-provoking.

    In the Magic or Madness series, we are introduced to a magic system in which those born to magic die a little every time they use it -- but go insane if they refuse to use it (hence the title).

    Reason Cansino, the 15-year-old narrator, starts the series by being separated from her maddened mother, and being sent to live with her "evil" grandmother. There, she learns that magic-wielders can extend their lives by drinking the magic of others, draining them to live.

    By book three, the cast of characters includes nigh-omnipotent deceased relatives, evil, dysfunctional parents, and a trio of spunky young people whose hormones war with their senses.

    I won't spoil the conclusion for you, but there's something really disturbing and thought-provoking that happens by the end of the book, a direction I hadn't expected and that has me thinking about it still.

    This trilogy is ready-made for smart, curious kids who look to fantasy for more than escape -- who look to fantasy literature to stretch their understanding of the real world. Link

    See also: Kids' fantasy novel blends magic with modernity - Tolkien meets Coupland

    Autistic person translates from her language

    "In My Language" is a youtube video in which a non-verbal person with autism "speaks in her own language" -- a combination of sounds and visual cues and gestures -- and then explains what this all means by means of a text-to-speech program. It's a fascinating and compelling statement from someone who's given the problem of communication a lot of good thought.
    The first part is in my "native language The first part is in my "native language," and then the second part provides a translation, or at least an explanation. This is not a look-at-the-autie gawking freakshow as much as it is a statement about what gets considered thought, intelligence, personhood, language, and communication, and what does not.
    Link (via MeFi)

    Walking elephant car from 1947

    A rare, 1947 "walking elephant car" is up for auction:
    Powered by a four cylinder Chevy engine, all hydraulics, tucked neatly inside the body cavity. The elephant literally skates along at speeds of up to 20 mph.

    Stuart made three of the in 1947. One is permanently housed in a museum in Austria, one as well used for decades by the Hudson Department store in Detroit (it was later sold to a private museum in Chicago where it resides today) and one was kept by the inventor. It is the latter pictured here and it comes to us from his family who cared for it after his demise. In all likelihood, it will be the only one ever to come up for public auction.

    Link (Thanks, Stet!)

    HD-DVD/Blu-Ray cracker muslix64 interviewed

    Slyck has a fascinating interview with muslix64, the hacker who broke HD-DVD and Blu-Ray (he broke Blu-Ray without even owning a Blu-Ray player!). He says he didn't care about DRM until it stopped him from doing something legit, and then he broke it wide open in an act of "fair use enforcement":
    IMHO, AACS is totally busted. The only thing I can see for now to prevent the attack I have described is to put different keys on every disc! It will cost a fortune for the manufacturing, so I'm not sure they will go that way...

    People say I have not broken AACS, but players. But players are part of this system! And a system is only as strong as his weakest link. Even if players become more secure, key extraction will always be possible.

    I know many people of the industry try to cover up this breach, by saying I have only poked a tiny hole in AACS, but it is more serious than that. Only the future will tell.

    The AACS security layer is almost the same for both HD-DVD and Blu-ray, so they are both busted for good.

    The only extra security layer is for the Blu-ray format, and it's called BD+. BD+ is not there yet, and I don't know when it will be. May be my "exploits" will speed up the adoption of BD+, we will see...

    Link (Thanks, Ray!)

    See also Report: HD-DVD copy protection defeated

    Fox to Canada: control Montreallers or we attack

    Fox Studios says that half of the camcorder-recorded, pirated movies come from lax, bilingual cinemas in Montreal. They've demanded that Canada do something, or they will.
    "In Quebec, it is much more advantageous because you get both English and French. You cover a bigger part of the world," said Ellis Jacob, chief executive of the Cineplex Entertainment theatre chain. "They are using Canada because they can have the movie out on the street in the Philippines and China before it even releases there."

    Jacob said he was warned in a letter from Bruce Snyder, president of Fox's domestic distribution, that if Canada doesn't do something to curb its growing piracy problem, Hollywood will.

    "They are definitely thinking about delaying releases in Canada," said Jacob. "This is very, very bad for our Canadian consumer and it's bad for the industry as a whole."

    Link (Thanks, Andrew!)

    Problems with Jedi

    Tyler Cowen, a Star Wars fan, has blogged an elaborate theory about the Jedi -- "The public choice economics of Star Wars: A Straussian reading" -- essentially being a bunch of useless dicks:
    The core point is that the Jedi are not to be trusted:

    1. The Jedi and Jedi-in-training sell out like crazy. Even the evil Count Dooku was once a Jedi knight.

    2. What do the Jedi Council want anyway? The Anakin critique of the Jedi Council rings somewhat true (this is from the new movie, alas I cannot say more, but the argument could be strengthened by citing the relevant detail). Aren't they a kind of out-of-control Supreme Court, not even requiring Senate approval (with or without filibuster), and heavily armed at that? As I understand it, they vote each other into the office, have license to kill, and seek to control galactic affairs. Talk about unaccountable power used toward secret and mysterious ends.

    3. Obi-Wan told Luke scores of lies, including the big whopper that his dad was dead.

    4. The Jedi can't even keep us safe.

    5. The bad guys have sex and do all the procreating. The Jedi are not supposed to marry, or presumably have children. Not ESS, if you ask me. Anakin gets Natalie Portman; Luke spends two episodes with a perverse and distant crush on his sister Leia, leading only to one chaste kiss.

    Link (Thanks, Bonnie!)

    See also R2D2: Secret leader of the rebellion

    Grocery store-zilla


    Flickr user Lyzadanger uploaded this stupendous photo of a giant Fred Meyer grocery store in Oregon. Seen from this angle, it's like an entire industry laid bare. Link (via Megnut)

    Stick-figure web-toy


    Pictaps is a web-toy that invites you to draw a stick-figure and then creates a delightful, gigantic animation of your figure, multiplied into a cast of thousands, doing a joyful, Busby Berkeley show-number, with dancing and cavorting and so forth. Link (via Wonderland)

    Map of connections between characters in the New Testament


    When you feed the names and connections in the King James Version of the New Testament into the ManyEyes social visualization tool, you get this incredible hairball map of the social relationships between the characters in that novel. Link (via Waxy)

    SF podcast: "How Lonesome a Life Without Nerve Gas"

    The latest installment of the great sf story podcast Escape Pod is "How Lonesome a Life Without Nerve Gas" by James Trimarco. Escape Pod always publishes great science fiction audio, but "How Lonesome a Life..." is a standout, even so. It's the story of an artificially intelligent battle-helmet, testifying for its life, in front of a judge of the Earth Imperial court system. It unravells the story of how it started in the forces, as the headgear of a soldier sent to quell a Martian agrarian rebellion, and as the story unspools, Trimarco sketches out an often comic, always intriguing tale of AI in war. Frank Key, of the Hooting Yard podcast, gives it a dry, sardonic reading that fits perfectly.

    Link, Link to text of story, Link to subscribe to Escape Pod podcast feed, Link to Hooting Yard

    See also:
    Cory's Printcrime audio on Escape Pod
    Escape Pod -- great sf story podcast
    Paul Di Filippo's "Shadowboxer" - Twilight Zonesque story podcast
    Di Filippo's story "Little Worker" as a podcast
    Podcast of Cory's story, "Craphound"
    Science fiction podcast: a modern Paul Bunyan story (funny!)

    Giant magnet used to pull steel splinters from eye

     Blog Lrg Eye Magnet
    From a 1932 issue of Modern Mechanix -- a giant magnet used to "remove steel cinders from patients's eyes." I wonder if you could use a neodymium magnet to do the same thing? Link

    Previously on Boing Boing:
    Implanting a magnet in your fingertip adds a sixth sense
    Black, magnetic silly putty
    Dangerously strong magnets
    Anti magnetic ribbon site

    Halliwell's four-star movies

    Pancho says:
    Here's a link to an online list of all the top scoring films from the notoriously stringent Halliwell's film guide.

    Single-handedly authored by Leslie Halliwell (until his death in 1989) his yearly updated eponymous guide is considered to be one of the most authoritative, balanced and (crucially) comprehensive critical lists of the movie canon.

    It pioneered the four-star rating system whereby films only receive one (or more) stars if they are remarkable, interesting, challenging or brilliant. Most films in the guide receive no stars with only a handful (well, 251) receiving a four-star rating. this top grade has long been considered one of the highest accolades for the discerning film director. The Halliwell's Four Star list has been accused of favouring Black and White films from the '30s and '40s but, needless to say, that is some of its charm

    Link

    Reader comment:

    Dave says:

    While Halliwell's Film Guide may well be the most comprehensive in print, but "most authoritative [and] balanced" is far off the mark! Halliwell was an absolute master of waffle (meaningless remarks like "Some people have found pleasing things in it") and gross inconsistencies. He'll compliment a film and then give it no stars at all, and then he'll diss another film for being average and then give it two stars. Usually an entertaining read, but far from balanced.

    Ray Harryhausen tribute site with lots of good clips

    Picture 5-19 Ray Harryhausen is a stop-motion-animation wizard who is widely regarded as the master of old-school special effects. Harryhausen called his method of animating small models of monsters and superimposing them into live action scenes “Dynamation,” and it was used to great effect in such movies as The Seventh Voyage of Sinbad (1958) and Jason and the Argonauts (1963).

    I'll never forget the first time I saw the rousing and meticulously choreographed skeleton fight in Jason, in which a team of seven undead creatures spawned from a hydra’s teeth are acrobatically knocked, flipped, and stabbed out of commission by Jason and his cohorts, or the gray-skinned, 20-foot-tall Cyclops who gets seriously pissed off when Sinbad and his crew impale him with spears.

    This website has short clips of the monsters from most of Harryhausen's movies. Link (Thanks, Joe Alterio!)

    R. Crumb's Bigfoot covers for Fate

    200701261324Cryptomundo has some scans of the Fate covers illustrated by Robert Crumb. Link

    Previously on Boing Boing:
    Old copies of Fate magazine
    R. Crumb and Aline Crumb in the New York Times

    Woman saves husband from mountain lion attack

    65-year-old Nell Hamm and her 70-year-old husband Jim were hiking in Humboldt County CA when a mountain lion pounced on Jim and clamped its jaws on his head. Nell was able to fight of the mountain lion and take her husband to safety.
    Jim Hamm, who was trying to tear at the face of the cat, told his wife to grab a pen from his pocket and stab the cat in the eyes. She did, but the pen broke.

    "That lion never flinched," she said. "I just knew it was going to kill him."

    Nell Hamm picked up the branch again and this time slammed it butt-end into the cat's snout. The lion had ignored her until then. Finally, she had its attention. The cat stepped back, and glared at her with its ears pinned back.

    "I thought he was going to attack me," she said.

    Instead, the cat slipped into the ferns and disappeared.

    Link

    Previously on Boing Boing:
    Zoo lion kills man who thought God would protect him
    Mule vs mountain lion

    Earwax pick comes with LED

    Picture 2-30 Andrew says: "Have you guys seen these ear wax picks with LED lights? I just spotted one last night at a Korean grocery store and posted a photo on my site." Link

    Previously on Boing Boing:
    The joy of earwax picking in Japan
    Excellent video of earwax picking
    When will I stop writing about earwax cleaning?
    Asians carry gene for dry earwax
    The earwax cleaning madness must stop, says reader
    Still more on Japanese ear cleaning
    Ear coning is a scam
    How to clean your ear with a bobby pin
    Ear Cleaning Manga

    Explosion rocks Marriott hotel in Islamabad

    Link 1, Link 2 from Islamabad metblog, both posts are being updated with details as news is reported on blogs and in mainstream venues. (Thanks, Sean Bonner)

    Bush no longer "miserable failure": Google tackles googlebombs

    Search Engine Land's Danny Sullivan says,
    After just over two years, Google has finally defused the "Google Bomb" that has returned US President George W. Bush at the top of its results in a search on miserable failure. The move wasn't a post-State Of The Union Address gift for Bush. Instead, it's part of an overall algorithm change designed to stop such mass link pranks from working.
    Link, more here and here.

    Photo: cartwheels in a swimsuit at the South Pole

    Sandwichgirl is stationed at McMurdo, in Antarctica. She took a trip from there to the South Pole, and in this photo she is doing cartwheels in a bathing suit at that site: - 25.5° F, -44.7° F windchill, 9.4 knots. This chick's got some major cojones. Link. (thanks, T. bias!)

    Faux cocaine seduces the ladies: creepy '80s TV ad

    Link to skeevy ad for "synthcoke," once sold "at adult bookstores throughout Manhattan." Beats Clorox!

    UPDATE: Turns out this ad came from a long-running adult cable access show produced by none other than SCREW Magazine's Al Goldstein.

    You can buy a DVD of archived editions of the show, including weird ads they ran like this one for SynthCoke: Link.

    From 1975 to 2002, MIDNIGHT BLUE was late-night cable's most depraved cavalcade of politics, pornography and perversion... meet the real legends behind DEEP THROAT... Carol Connors: Uninhibited bisexual co-star, extreme animal lover, and mother of award-winning actress Thora Birch. Harry Reems: The prolific porn stud whose criminal indictment on obscenity charges galvanized Hollywood. Gerard Damiano: Hairdresser turned visionary porn director... Chuck Traynor: Linda Lovelace's bluntly outspoken husband, manager and alleged abuser... And much more, including the show's original commercials for swinger clubs, adult toys and escort services that dropped jaws and pants all over New York City and lit the fuse on the battles against the FCC that still rage today.

    Record label crackdown on 30+ yr old vinyl bootlegs on eBay?

    Jacob Blickenstaff says,
    Warner Music Group and Universal Music Group (and probably others) have been cracking down on the sale of 30-year old + vinyl bootlegs. Most of these recordings are of concerts, sometimes unreleased demos, etc and were manufactured decades ago. Many titles are collectable and have sold sometimes for hundreds and even thousands of dollars, their value being more of an artifact than contraband. Recordings of Brian Wilson, Led Zeppelin and Neil Young, for example, have been removed from my listings by eBay under a program caled VeRO. Link.

    Someone is out there searching for certain titles and artists and requesting their removal from ebay. I can't tell whether the system is powered by computer searches or the eyeballs of bottom-of-the-totem-pole record company interns. It just seems a little up-tight. Record companies aren't making a cent off of ANY used LP auctioned on eBay so why the big fuss over these obscure collector-fetish objects?

    Here is a list of who participates: Link.

    (Thanks, Consumerist!)

    South Korea: hostage to Microsoft

    Baron sez, "This is a fascinating read on how S. Korea with all the fancy 3G phones, best broadband coverage, and electronics is shackled to Windows because of a government proprietary encryption format based on Active X. It prevents people from using Linux, Firefox, and is even holding back Vista because all secure transactions require it!"
    Remember how Active X controls were and continue to be a significant vector of viruses and malware because Microsoft originally architected Active X to run by default instead of with a user action? Maliciously programmed websites would be able to automatically install software on users' computers just by visiting a web page in IE 6. In IE 7 and in Vista, Microsoft has re-architected Active X controls in such a way to make them "more safe" by requiring a user action for the control to run. This is obviously impacting every web site and company that uses active X controls on their websites, which include just about every website in Korea that handles any kind of secure transaction. Every online bank, every governmental agency, every ecommerce site. Without enough time to re-architect Korean websites, 3 S. Korean governmental ministries, the Ministry of Information and Communication, the Ministry of Government Administration and Home Affairs, and the Financial Supervisory Service, warned S. Korean users that upgrading to Vista would disable the user from making any secure transaction online. Can you ima