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THE VIEW FROM CHAOS MANOR

View 95 April 3 - 9, 2000

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This is a day book. It's not all that well edited. I try to keep this up daily, but sometimes I can't. I'll keep trying. See also the monthly COMPUTING AT CHAOS MANOR column, 4,000 - 7,000 words, depending.  (Older columns here.) For more on what this place is about, please go to the VIEW PAGE.

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This week:

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Monday  April 3, 2000

Well it happened as expected. Microsoft has learned the lesson: don't try to compete successfully, and if you do manage to win in competition, that does you no good: the place you must compete is in Washington. You must have a big presence in the Imperial City, and you must buy favor from the Great Ones in the Land.

If you do that you are safe; but if you merely work at your own trade, you will be lost.

Wendy Goldman Rohm's book on Microsoft made it clear: the government was out to get Microsoft, and if it took moving the case from Commerce or FTC to Justice, then so be it. Microsoft had not bought any immunity. They had no big presence in Washington. The Empire could effectively strike at them.

Gates lived in a fool's paradise: he thought that, being from a Democrat family -- his mother was appointed to the UW Board of Regents by Governor Rossolini -- he could ignore politics entirely. Now he knows better. You must donate a lot to Congress and the Major Parties; you must have "educational sessions" at which there is a lot of free liquor and good food for Congressional staff; and you must play the lobby game. Do that and you will be safe.

The US has taught tyrants that they must have nuclear weapons and get them by any means necessary: we may bomb you or occupy your country if you don't have nukes, but if you have them, you can send your armies in. India and Pakistan have learned that. China knows it. Milosovich didn't but he knows it now. Saddam Hussein knows it very well indeed. And we have taught entrepreneurs that to be really successful in the US you must have a strong Washington presence.

It was an expensive lesson to learn. Does anyone doubt that $500 million invested in the right places in Congressional races and in DC would have saved Microsoft the multi-billion dollar hit it took today? 

Not long ago Netscape was saying they would reduce Microsoft to a vendor of some buggy utilities. Others spoke of destroying the evil Microsoft. Gates was the devil incarnate. His mistake was in taking them seriously? No. It was in not buying a King's X from Washington. It is not a mistake he will make again.

I look for interesting times.

 

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Tuesday, April 4

Internet World shows tonight. Working on column.

 

 

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Wednesday, April 5, 2000

Internet World. Walked the halls. Warrantynow.com had a big party in Hillywood, and since my son Richard is VP we went. took some of his cousins also. Nice party. 

Renee Blodgett of Dragon Systems was there. Dragon was recently bought out by Lernout and Hauspie which probably makes sense and certainly makes L&;H the premier speech company in the world, with translation, text to speech, and the Dragon speech recognition engine.

Still working on column. Tiring day.

 

 

 

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Thursday, April 6, 2000

I'll put in one more day at Internet World, and then Showstoppers tonight. I find I can't get to all the parties and show events the way I used to. Yesterday's keynote by John Patrick of IBM was interesting. An IBM VP with a beard and no necktie giving a speech as an IBM official. That's changed. John Patrick always was an intelligent man, an exception to the IBM rule that to become an Executive you had to have your spine removed and get a lobotomy. Has that company really changed? Interesting; certainly Patrick understands the new world. Does IBM?

Saw the people at www.rebel.com at the show. My little Rebel Netwinder does so well for me I forget it's there. If you have any concerns about net security, sharing a DSL or T1 line among many computers (Apple, NT, Linux, Windows, Windows 2000) there are a number of ways to do it, but the simplest and most painless for me has been to install a Netwinder.

 

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Friday, April 7, 2000

Column and other deadlines. Stand by. Evolution debates in alt.mail. And Milton Pope says: 

I congratulate you and your correspondents on the current evolution debate.

It's the most civil and enlightening I've ever seen. Thanks to everyone.

--Milton--

Which indeed fits. At least there's some light in the smoke...

I am hard at work on the column. Stand by...

And this from A-Clue (To request your free copy, write us at Dana@a-clue.com ):

"It would be wrong to over-state the importance of Demon Internet's decision to cave in to a bad legal decision and pay Laurence Godfrey  for a news group "libel" it had no power to control. Godfrey is a worthless piece of pond scum, in my opinion, and that opinion remains protected under American law."

The case raises disturbing points.

Incidentally, I have no idea on whether Laurence Godfrey is worthless pond scum, worthy pond scum, or a much maligned good citizen; I never heard of him before this. But I do think it a pretty serious step to invoke the law against an ISP for hosting a discussion. I don't think ISP's should be immune in all cases, but I don't know the details of this case.

For example, if someone hosts a discussion group, and becomes aware that the participants are conspiring to criminal activity, what is the obligation of the host? Now suppose the discussion group is devoted to blackguarding some individual or organization: say the Pope and the Roman Catholic Church. There are many things one can say about such public figures and institutions that are both degrading and demonstrably false: is there a point at which they are so much so that, once the ISP's attention is called to the statements, there is an obligation to remove them? Suppose the discussion group acts as if The Protocols of the Learned Elders of Zion are in fact what they purport to be, and quotes liberally from them? Says that the United Methodists are all Communists? Says that the United Methodists ritually butcher Jewish children as part of their Easter festivities? At what point does leaving this up without comment constitute publication?

Fortunately the more outrageous the statement the less harm it will do because the less likely it is that anyone will believe it.  But are there limits? In Los Angeles we have a lawyer named Steve Yagman who delights in outrageous lawsuits. Recently he brought a lawsuit on behalf of one of the chaps arrested in the Oscar theft, and called a press conference at which he was, he said, going to produce one of the three missing Oscars. Instead he brought a borrowed Oscar that has never been missing "so the reporters would know what one looked like" as if there were any Hollywood reporter on Earth who didn't: clearly a publicity stunt. One can now say a great many things about Mr. Yagman, not all of them complimentary, that are true: but suppose one begins making up things about him? How far can we go with that, and what liability extends to the publisher? To the ISP that hosts the discussion?

Etc.  The more I think on this one, the less I am certain I know all the answers.

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Saturday, April 8, 2000

I suppose to had to happen. Small computers are wired up to a frustration meter. This morning I get a particularly annoying spam. I want to report it. And of course I cannot reach spamcop. Are they down? Server overloaded? Gone fishing? Who knows. Cannot reach...  And the annoyance index climbs. I should know better. The Internet is no longer a vast experiment to determine how many grown people can be got to watch a screen on which nothing interesting is happening, but it still has some of those characteristics.

Well, at least Spamcop is back. I am still not sure that reporting spam doesn't get me more spam.

There have been several more exchanges of letters in the evolution debates, and I have added a few paragraphs. Absent something new on the subject, I think this one is ended. I do believe there has been a good exchange of views.

There is a good summary of the godfrey/demon case in mail.

And I am pleased to announce that SF author and long time friend and space scientist Yoji Kondo has a new home in the sky:

A New Asteroid Name

 

An asteroid has been named for Yoji Kondo in recognition of his

contributions to astronomy and the space program. The asteroid

is:

 

Asteroid 8072 = Yojikondo (1981 G01)

 

Its visual magnitude on a perihelic opposition would be 16.6

magnitude and on aphelic opposition 18. 4. Assuming that the

value of its albedo is about average, its size is estimated from

its brightness to be about 4 km across. The sidereal period of

its orbit is 3.68 years, and its orbital semi-major axis is

2.3854696 Astronomical Units with an eccentricity of 0.1459289.

[It is not an Earth-crossing object.]

 

The report was published in the MPC (Minor Planet Circular) dated

2000 March 20.

 

Orbital Elements of Asteroid 8072 (= Yojikondo) are:

 

Epoch 2000 February 26.0 TT = JDT 2451600.5

orbital semi-major axis = 2.3854696 Astronomical Units

orbital eccentricity = 0.1459289

orbital period = 3.68 sidereal years

orbital inclination = 2.57094 degrees

mean anomaly in degrees from perihelion = 50.6813 degrees

mean angular motion = 0.26751198 degrees per day

omega (angle from the node to the perihelion) = 163.28752 degrees

node (angle from vernal equinox to the ascending node) = 12.24599

degrees


Dana Blankenhorn says, concerning the Godfrey/Demon ISP case:

But the technical point, as you know, goes deeper than that. You can't just "take something down" from Usenet. Once it gets there, it's mirrored in many, many different places. You erase it, it comes back the next time you load to Usenet. So you erase it again? And again? And are you liable each time someone sees it before erasure?

Placing any restrictions, based on any law, on the exchange of ideas within Usenet presents a daunting technical challenge I don't think Usenet as presently constituted can possibly meet. But you probably know more about the technical ins-and-outs of that than I do...

Actually, I don't; I'm not all that familiar with USENET,, so I don't know how easy or difficult it would be to chop out, say, The Protocols of the Learned Elders of Zion, or a tract on ritual murder of Jews by United Methodists, if someone put that material up; I certainly would not want to be one of the owners of an ISP that published this stuff as factual. I do know that Scientology seems to have been able to suppress some materials about their system, with far less justification, but I confess I haven't been following how they do it.

Freedom of the Press means freedom from prior restraint; it is not absolution in advance for libel, and in a libel the author and the publisher are both tort-feasors, or so I understand; libel law isn't a subject I have more than a jack-leg knowledge of. I do have some claim to understanding the Constitution both as intended by the Signers, and as interpreted by the courts. Whether an ISP having been made aware of a libel is now a publisher within the reach of the libel law I don't know. I do know there is a principle that there should be no wrong without some remedy, and surely if I publish that someone ritually murders children and eats them, the person so named ought to have some remedy?


 

Assuming you haven't seen it already, you might get a chuckle out of the cartoon, available at http://www.non-sequitur.net/  (if you don't get to it today, Saturday April 8, find the one dated March 25, 2000). Have a laugh -- I sure did.

--

Walter Giesbrecht walterg@yorku.ca  Data Librarian  "Librarians are the secret masters of the world. They control information. Don't ever piss one off." -- Spider Robinson

 

 

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Sunday, April 9, 2000

It took all night, but the column is on the wire, and we're off to see the grandchild. 

http://www.newsmax.com/showinsidecover.shtml?a=2000/4/7/85827 has a very peculiar story. I would like any comments on it...

 

 

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