All those topics that i wish i had time to pursue more earnestly.
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Posts from — August 2003

paper idea: it’s not the power law: how statistical generalizations are confusing social modeling on the internet

In this paper, i will argue why what many people argue are power law models of social networks on the internet are usually not really that at all. By critiquing the assumptions built into the data gathering and measurement, combined with the theoretical modeled used, it is easy to see that through considering time in different ways and by fragmenting the data set, that there are much more complex and interesting phenomena involved in these power law situations that is being masked and hidden by the generalization. In the end, separating out the individual phenomena that seem to map to power law situations usually illustrate the the phenomena as a whole is not related to the power law, and that by using the power law to describe the phenomena, we end up losing much of the unique understandings that could make or break the application of technologies in this arena for a variety of purposes.

August 22, 2003   No Comments

Wed, 20 Aug 2003 13:30:11 GMT

The Day Email Died?. Between 10:45pm last night and 6am this morning, I received 1,470 pieces of spam (a run rate of nearly 5,000 per day). Most of them were from the SoBig worm, which seems to be the worst yet. And as far as I can tell, it's still getting worse.

I wonder if this is the last straw that will convince people to move in droves to challenge/response or whitelist mechanisms, as I argued last year. And I'd be surprised if these volumes don't overload mail servers at major ISPs. We're seeing the closest thing yet to the Morris worm that shut down the Net in 1988.

The good news is that my lovingly tuned filtering guantlet, including the rule-based SpamAssassin, the Bayesian POPfile, and a couple dozen hand-coded rules, has held up well. All 1,470 of the messages were auto-routed to the trash. The bad news is that, with this many spams, it's impractical to check manually for false positives (good email accidentally deleted as spam). My overall filter accuracy is well above 99%, but I'm still seeing occasional false positives (maybe two per week) when I search for them.

We have to confront the reality: either email is broken, Microsoft's email software is broken, or those two statements are the same. If it's the middle statement, Microsoft and other vendors can close holes and improve filtering in their products. Email itself isn't going to change. It's too widely deployed. I still think a combination of steps will tame the spam epidemic, but we're not there yet. [Werblog]

August 20, 2003   No Comments

Tue, 19 Aug 2003 20:50:22 GMT

College Degrees Lose Their Magic in China: Graduates Flood the Job Market. By Peter S. Goodman, Washington Post. [A blog doesn't need a clever name]

this sounds remarkably like a getting a ph.d. and that job market.

August 19, 2003   No Comments

Tue, 19 Aug 2003 20:48:26 GMT

Blogging and the Job Market…. I've been thinking about writing something on this for a while (I'm finding that I'm mentally writing blog posts to work out ideas, but once I write it in my head I don't bother to write it out when I'm… [Epistemographer]

as i understand it, with a surplus of qualified individuals, like in STS, committees look for reasons to not hire a person, blogging is a sufficient reason i would think. i can see it here 'look here, x said y' which could then be taken out of context to kill an application. the way you get a job is not to fire blindly apparently, but to network, when people know you, and know you are good, they hire you unless there is someone else they want to hire. network, network, network.

August 19, 2003   No Comments

situationists internationale is part of my job

dötournement. In a conversation today, i learned a new word/concept that intrigues me, but i still don't fully grasp…. dötournement. It… [zephoria]

August 18, 2003   No Comments

so you posted a word document and now i know more than you wanted

According to Simon Byers, computer researcher at AT&T's research laboratory, documents published online may unintentionally reveal sensitive information that could be used for corporate espionage or identity theft. Mr. Byers found that, using an ordinary search engine, the free software tools 'antiword' and 'catdoc', and a simple home-made script, he was able to collect 100,000 Word documents, many of which contained sensitive hidden or deleted information. Mr. Byers focused on Microsoft Word documents because of their ubiquity, but he believes other documents formats may be equally vulnerable. Microsoft is working to develop ways to ensure sensitive information isn't inadvertently left in files. The next edition of Office 2003 will include tools that will allow users to remove personal information from a document, according to Neil Laver, UK group marketing manager for Microsoft Office products.

——

I've only done this to a few very close friends that have asked me to or i wanted them to stop sending word documents. I very easily go inside word documents and tell people the information that i now have and they never suspected that i did. Word documents are dangerous people, well if you work on anything that you want to keep private. a person who posts word documents is basically sharing far too much information, post things as html or ascii text only, you don't want some of this information shared, believe me.

August 18, 2003   No Comments

booker longlist

Monica Ali for Brick Lane
Martin Amis for Yellow Dog
Margaret Atwood for Oryx and Crake

Carol Birch for Turn Again Home

Melvyn Bragg for Crossing the Lines

JM Coetzee for Elizabeth Costello

Julia Darling for The Taxi Driver's Daughter
Gerard Donovan for Schopenhauer's Telescope

Damon Galgut for The Good Doctor

Barbara Gowdy for The Romantic

Mark Haddon for The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time

Zo‘ Heller for Notes on a Scandal

Francis King for The Nick of Time

Shena Mackay for Heligoland

Clare Morrall for Astonishing Splashes Of Colour

John Murray for Jazz etc

Julie Myerson for Something Might Happen

Tim Parks for Judge Savage

Caryl Phillips for A Distant Shore

DCB Pierre for Vernon God Little

Jonathan Raban for Waxwings

Graham Swift for The Light of Day

Barbara Trapido for Frankie & Stankie
——-

well no one else posted this yet, and I've only listened to Oryx and Crake from Audible, and i think it would be better in text. it was good in audible, but audio is so much more passing to my mind than text, so i don't track audio as well over that many hours.

August 18, 2003   No Comments

rdf this!

there is a new updated version of RAP – RDF API for PHP. The new version
includes:
1. relational database backend
2. RDQL query engine
3. N3 parser and serializer
–+–

ok, so its nearly magic, well not really, but this is a nice implementation, i might use it on one of my ultra secret probably never to be finished unless i finish other things first projects.

August 18, 2003   No Comments

semantic web, i never thought i knew ya, but now someone can

DIGITAL ENTERPRISE RESEARCH INSTITUTE (DERI)
NATIONAL UNIVERSITY OF IRELAND, GALWAY
GALWAY
IRELAND

PH. D., POST-DOC, RESEARCHER and RESEACH FELLOW POSITIONS

The Digital Enterprise Research Institute (DERI) (www.deri.ie), located at the National University of Ireland, Galway, Ireland, received significant funding from the Science Foundation Ireland. Accordingly, DERI has positions available on all levels, including Ph.D., Post-Doc, Researcher and Research Fellow positions in two major exciting research areas:

- Semantic Web Technology
- Semantic Web Service Technology

DERI has has been successfully acquiring large European research projects in these areas such as SWWS (Semantic Web-Enabled Web Services), DIP (Data, Integration and Processes) and KnowledgeWeb. In addition, DERI has established a significant cooperation link with the Next Web Generation Group (www.nextwebgeneration.org) in Innsbruck, Austria.

The institute is headed by Prof. Dieter Fensel and Prof. Christoph Bussler. The main focus of DERI is to address the existing and future challenges in Semantic Web Technology and Semantic Web Service Technology. DERI emphasizes research and applied science equally on a national as well as international level. In addition to executing research projects, DERI co-operates significantly with large, medium-sized and small industrial partners on a European as well as world-wide scope.

We seek highly qualified and exceptional applicants. According to experience and interest, a research team member is expected to participate in research activities, research and industrial project work, teaching and standardization efforts. Exceptional experienced senior applicants might be able to apply for professor status. In case you are interested in this challenging opportunity, please send your complete and detailed resumee to:

Chris.Bussler@DERI.ie

Galway is one of the most beautiful Irish cities shaped by artistic communities, active student life, innovative industry and leading edge research. Galway is located at the beautiful west coast of Ireland within the Galway Bay. Galway is located 'between' Europe and the U.S., making it an ideal hub for national, European and international research.

August 18, 2003   No Comments

the horror, the horror

submit your horror stories of the 'i own your ideas' privateers, if you've been wronged by the current system of intellectual property rights or if retaining your ip rights has been made 'not worth the cost' for whatever reason. If in anyway you were forced to choose, you should share. kindly do not resort to fiction, reality is horrific enough.

August 18, 2003   No Comments