“Mistakes should be examined, learned from, and discarded; not dwelled upon and stored.”
– Tim Fargo
“Don't let the cruel make you unkind. And don't let the unkind make you cruel.”
―
Tasmanian poppy farmers should not depend on 'death, addiction', say Greens
After Johnson & Johnson copped an $845 million fine, one lawyer said the US opioid crisis 'began in Tasmania' - the world's hub for legal opium poppies.
The most surveilled cities in the world (Atlanta making the top ten is the surprise). I was surprised to see facial surveillance on the Venetian Grand Canal and advertised as such.
Government MPs sound alarm over Chinese government influence at Australian universities
A "crisis of leadership" amid "deliberate efforts to influence": Four government politicians have warned the Chinese Communist Party has too much sway at Australian universities following an unprecedented week of rising tensions in Hong Kong.
14 Aug 2019
Irish author dives deep into the madness of Boris the 'clown' and Brexit
How does a privileged, modern, Western European country imagine itself to be intolerably oppressed, Fintan O'Toole asks in his latest book.
Peter J. Reilly (Forbes), Law Degree Held Against Defendant In Tax Scam:
Anthony
Charles Dwight Box was at what I consider the end of the line in tax
litigation — appealing his sentence from prison — when he heard from the Eleventh Circuit last month. It was not good news. The Circuit Court approved the 36 month sentence handed down by Judge Federico Moreno of the Southern District of Florida.
Judge Moreno had made an upward adjustment from the 24 to 30-month sentence
called for by the guidelines because Mr. Box's legal education should
have made him know better, a conviction in 1989 and failure to make any
restitution.
To Everything There Is a Season
What do you care about?
Somewhat as a continuation to the previous post on journalism, which included a call to “look at people and how they use the technology, not just the tech itself.” I’d like to draw your attention to this post by Doug Belshaw which can be summarized as saying that the solution to the problem we have with FOMO, notifications, and busyness might simply be to think of the human (you) first. To be purposeful in your choices, to determine what you need, to focus on how best to answer those choices and needs.
Know who you are, what you care about, and the difference you’re trying to make in the world.
You should read the whole thing, but I’m including it here in part for this great list Belshaw extracted from a Kathy Sierra post from bak in “2006, in the mists of internet time,” The myth of keeping up.
- Find the best aggregators
- Get summaries
- Cut the redundancy!
- Unsubscribe to as many things as possible
- Recognise that gossip and celebrity entertainment are black holes
- Pick the categories you want for a balanced perspective, and include some from OUTSIDE your main field of interest
- Be a LOT more realistic about what you’re likely to get to, and throw the rest out.
- In any thing you need to learn, find a person who can tell you what is:
- Need to know
- Should know
- Nice to know
- Edge case, only if it applies to you specifically
- Useless
Still reads as essential advice thirteen years later.
Ars technica – Parsing email headers needs care and knowledge—but it requires no special tools: “I pretty frequently get requests for help from someone who has been impersonated—or whose child has been impersonated—via email. Even when you know how to “view headers” or “view source” in your email client, the spew of diagnostic wharrgarbl can be pretty overwhelming if you don’t know what you’re looking at. Today, we’re going to step through a real-world set of (anonymized) email headers and describe the process of figuring out what’s what. Before we get started with the actual headers, though, we’re going to take a quick detour through an overview of what the overall path of an email message looks like in the first place. (More experienced sysadmin types who already know what stuff like “MTA” and “SPF” stand for can skip a bit ahead to the fun part!)…”
FOIA findings: Fox News + White House = ❤️
A headline about President Donald Trump is shown outside Fox News studios in 2018 in New York. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan)
Not that we needed any more proof, but a slew of emails this
week revealed more examples of the cozy relationship between Fox News and the
Trump White House.
Using the Freedom of Information Act, Democracy Forward obtained
270 pages of emails between the Trump administration, Fox News and the Fox
Business Network. It then turned those emails over exclusively
to The Hollywood Reporter.
One email from April of 2017 showed that Fox Business Network host David Asman gave advice to Treasury Department spokesman Tony Sayegh on how the administration should achieve a major tax cut. That’s just the most glaring example of the many times the Trump administration seemed to working alongside Fox News and Fox Business.
One email from April of 2017 showed that Fox Business Network host David Asman gave advice to Treasury Department spokesman Tony Sayegh on how the administration should achieve a major tax cut. That’s just the most glaring example of the many times the Trump administration seemed to working alongside Fox News and Fox Business.
This should not come as any great revelation. As Jane
Mayer deftly chronicled in a New Yorker piece in March, Fox News’ ties to
Trump run deep and wide, and it’s not unusual to see someone leave Fox News for
a White House position and vice versa. When Trump wants to reveal his thoughts
beyond Twitter, he often gives extended interviews on Fox News, where he is
rarely challenged.
Reading Thursday’s story in The Hollywood Reporter
proves the subhead of Mayer’s story is, once again, fair: “Fox News has
always been partisan. But has it become propaganda?”
Maybe Fox News, and its viewers, simply don’t care about the
optics of this. But when you have a news network and an administration trading
information and using each other to get the same message across ... isn’t
that what propaganda is?