Saturday, February 07, 2026

At 15, my world was upended. This was a lesson I’ll never forget

 

There is no greater agony than bearing an untold story inside you.
- Maya Angelou



At 15, my world was upended. This was a lesson I’ll never forget

An English teacher taught me three simple rules. In the age of fake news, they have served me well.

George Kemp

A high school is a bonkers thing. Teenagers (at my school, solely males) are learning privately about social order, sex and acne medication, while being publicly tested on Pi, Jane Austen and the seemingly ever-present question: igneous, sedimentary or metamorphic? Every day is a whirlwind during which one is rolled, awkwardly and roughly, in all the glittering elements of life, in the hope that something sticks.
I remember precisely the moment that the glitter stuck.
Sitting in English class among two dozen 15-year-old boys, flushed red from a beep test an hour earlier in PE, I learned how to read. And the whole world cracked open.
Of course, I already knew how to read. I was working my way through Harry Potter with the speed of a Seeker in a game of Quidditch. But in this moment, an enormous adult-sized door opened just a crack, and I walked through wide-eyed. There were two people holding that door open for me: the writer Graham Greene and my Year 10 English teacher.
He was teaching us The Quiet American, Greene’s 1955 exploration of foreign interference, democracy and war in Vietnam, told through the cynical and sardonic eyes of Fowler the journalist. That book still sits on my bookshelf more than 20 years later, full of fading highlighter and pencil markings. In studying that book with my teacher (who resplendently displayed the quality most anathema to the teenage boy – passion), I learned that fiction is akin to a sedimentary rock: it can inspire awe at a glance, like the ancient city of Petra, but is even more magnificent up close when its layers are studied in detail.
In that classroom, I learned three things about reading a novel: characters can say one thing and mean another; setting and context create meaning; and ambiguity is something to be treasured, not feared.
Looking at that list in 2026, and after recently re-reading Greene’s book, I can’t help but feel that those three things could be the most important lessons I learned in 13 years of schooling. The teacher offered a warning. He read, out loud, Fowler’s declaration: “I have never thought of myself as a correspondent, just a reporter. I offer no point of view, I take no action, I don’t get involved. I just report what I see.” We were cautioned, challenged, to keep an eye out for any moments when this statement might be untrue.
It meant that I read with a purpose, like a detective gathering clues – a thrill every time my highlighter found a new piece of evidence proving Fowler wrong. What a trick Greene was playing. Asking us to trust his narrator, while laying down banana skins all over Vietnam.
Without knowing it, I was critically thinking. If we can’t trust our protagonist, can we even trust its author? How can we trust anyone? In a world full of “fake news”, redactions, clickbait, podcasting prophets, AI slop and a handpicked White House press room, we are neck-deep in a murky media morass like never before. Thanks to that English class, I try to move through the world on guard for Fowler-esque hypocrisy, all thanks to that ardent and tartan-clad teacher imploring a bunch of teenage boys to think.
The novel follows two characters, representing two possible futures for a country – neither of them actually from the place – and both fighting for power over someone who actually is. Sound familiar? It should. As one of my fading 23-year-old highlighted passages states: “it’s not the most powerful rulers who have the happiest populations”.
As Greene writes in the book: “Suffering is not increased by numbers. One body can contain all the suffering the world can feel.” Over this past Christmas, and thanks to that English class, I have been thinking about this book in relation to the countless images beamed to us from Gaza, Sudan, even Bondi.

It requires work to remain sensitised to that barrage of images. I believe that the English teacher is primed to help young people train their minds for that work. The empathy coach. My life experiences couldn’t be further from the characters in Greene’s book. I don’t share a single given circumstance with any of them. But an English teacher gave me permission to think: what if I did?
And what of our dying friend, ambiguity? The idea that two things can be true at once seems to be gasping for air. It’s constantly bashed by the gotcha grotesqueness of the Twitter-verse, the insistence of the Murdoch media to pit two sides against each other, the hardened hypocrisy of the MAGA mindset, and god forbid a politician change their mind about something. But English teachers treasure ambiguity; all good literature is dependent on it: to be or not to be? Did Offred remember The Handmaid’s Tale wrong? Is Gatsby a dickhead? English teachers send young people out to the tuckshop line thinking in two parts while they wait for their toasties. Has that ever been more important in our lifetime?
While writing my debut novel, Soft Serve, I would regularly see the spine of Greene’s book staring back at me from my bookshelf – a spine that told me to straighten my posture when I was tired and lost. To keep writing in the hope that I might create a work that perhaps a reader, either pushing through their post-beep-test slump in a classroom, or looking back through their overstuffed life of creative memories, might think of something they were taught by an English teacher, one who made them see that, as Greene writes in The Quiet American, “human nature is not black and white, but black and grey”. That they might find the glitter in that grey.
Soft Serve is published by UQP on February 3.

Travel Applications

 The 10 key travel apps you need to have on your phone


Where would we be without our apps when we travel? Probably grappling with paper maps, thumbing through guidebooks, wearing a t-shirt instead of a rain jacket in a downpour and ordering weird beige food. Our travels would be slower, messier and probably more chaotic. Here are 10 apps for the savvy traveller, available for Apple iOS and Google Android platforms.

Basic to any trip are the apps for airlines you’ll be flying, for your bank and any credit or debit cards you’ll be using during your travels, apps for car-hire operators, Uber, Google Drive to store vital documents, apps for Booking.com or Expedia if you’ve booked using them, for your SIM or eSIM and Kindle if you’re using e-guidebooks. Unless otherwise noted, all the apps below are free to install.

what3words

This is a brilliant app for locking in a location, and for finding your way back to your parked vehicle in a strange city, a shop or restaurant you want to revisit, or even your hotel. Click on the arrow and the app gives you three English words that tag your location, precise to within three square metres anywhere on the globe. Save it, add a label and when you need to return, the app steers you back to this exact spot. Also handy for finding lost partners. See what3words.com

Currency XE


How much is that Moroccan carpet or the scrumptious almond pastry in Venice’s St Mark’s Square costing you in Australian currency? Simple and intuitive, Currency XE tells you in an instant. There are lots of currency conversion apps around. Some swear by Revolut, but Currency XE has been my go-to since forever and I’m sticking with what I know. See www.xe.com

Planets

When you’re in the desert or anywhere else with a clear, dark sky, the view overhead is one of the most amazing sights you’ll ever see, but is that Canis Minor or the rich galaxy cluster of Coma Berenices you’re looking at? With Planets installed, all you have to do is lift your phone and the stars, constellations and planets in that sector of the sky are identified and located. It also gives you the times when the planets will be visible at your location. Slightly nerdy, highly addictive. See qcontinuum.org/planets

Atlas Obscura

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If you want to add something strange and different to your travels, this is the app for you. Billing itself “The Definitive Guide To The World’s Hidden Wonders”, Atlas Obscura tells you where to find the weird, the offbeat and the downright unmissable, from the world’s largest ball of string in Darwin, Minnesota to a “sweating” pillar in a Roman church, said to predict the death of the pope. See app.atlasobscura.com


WhatsApp

The killer communication app. Provided you have a data feed, you can make calls and send messages for free. It’s a given that whoever you’re trying to reach needs to have WhatsApp installed, but it’s likely that your guide, your driver or whoever else relies on instant communication to run their business will. Also, it’s a fact that people respond to WhatsApp messages a whole lot quicker than they do to emails. No need to register, the app uses your standard phone number. See whatsapp.com

AwardWallet

Its primary focus is keeping track of all those stray reward points you might have earned and forgotten about. The free version gives you basic tracking, while the premium AwardWallet Plus at $US49.99 ($71) per year comes with bells and whistles, including notifications when your points are expiring, not just the three accounts available with the free version. AwardWallet also has another function, keeping track of flight bookings, car hires and hotel bookings. It sends push notifications and alerts when flights are delayed or cancelled or even when there’s a gate change. See awardwallet.com

The Photographer’s Ephemeris

Kinky name, but for landscape, wildlife and natural light photography, light is key, and sunlight, moonlight and the Milky Way are what the Photographers Ephemeris is all about. For any point on our planet, this app tells you where the sun and moon will rise and set and at what time, and that’s solid gold for photographers. Click on “3D” and the app flies you over any spot on earth, compressing time to show the changing effects of a moving sun or moon on the landscape below. If you want to know exactly where and when to stand to get a long lens shot of a blood moon rising over the Great Pyramid of Giza, this is the app for you. The app costs $14.99 per year, but the Android version lacks the full functionality of the iOS app. See photoephemeris.com

Waze

I love getting behind the wheel when it’s available and Waze is my go-to direction finding app. It’s got a bunch of funky voices – I’ve got Roger Federer as my direction dictating buddy right now – but the ’80s Aerobics Instructor is worth a go. Best of all, lest I stray from righteous paths, Waze warns me of road hazards, speed cameras and police radar traps. See waze.com

AccuWeather

From Wind Ridge, Pennsylvania, to Torrent, Spain, AccuWeather tells you whether it’s a sunblock or an umbrella day. Sourcing its data from a huge weather network, AccuWeather comes up trumps with an easy-to-read interface plus radar, long-range forecast, air quality and health outlook. See app.accuweather.com/app-download

Google Translate

Whether it’s directions to a taxi driver in Kyoto or ordering the local specialty in Ulaanbaatar, a little of the local lingo smoothes your travels. Key in the word or phrase in English and back comes a written response in any one of over 100 languages. Record someone in another language, or snap a photo of a sign or a menu in Polish or Portuguese, and you’ll get an English language translation. If you want to try your hand at conversation, voice prompts will help you get your tongue around “Ben Turkce bilmiyoyum” (I can’t speak Turkish). See translate.google.com/about

The Long Now of the Web: Inside the Internet Archive’s Fight Against Forgetting

No tears in the writer, no tears in the reader. No surprise in the writer, no surprise in the reader.
- Robert Frost


The pods, small modular units costing from about $26,000, can be assembled in days.

At first glance, this looks like an affordable housing innovation. But the reality is more nuanced.

These pods are fundamentally temporary. Their size, layout and fit-out reflect short-term or secondary use rather than long-term residential living. 

Beside this, many pods avoid full planning or building approval in some locations, which is a strong signal they are being treated, legally, as ancillary structures.

They are most useful as offices, studios, guest rooms or extra space but unlikely to be suitable as permanent homes for families.

While the price is eye-catching, it does not include site preparation, ground works, connections for power and water, or any compliance costs, all of which can add substantially to the final price. 

Buyers would also need somewhere to put the pod – either owning land, or being able to use someone else’s.






How Do They…?

I was poking around on YouTube for “how to” videos (one of my favorite video genres) the other day when I hit a small jackpot: a bunch of How Do They…? videos from the National Film Board of Canada. A favorite shows how chain link fences are made:


You can view all the videos at the NFB site as well. NFB produced one of my favorite “how to” videos ever: how to build an igloo.


WELL, GOOD:  Shingles vaccination associated with delayed dementia onset in older adults.


The Long Now of the Web: Inside the Internet Archive’s Fight Against Forgetting

Hackernoon: “…The scale of the operation is staggering, but the engineering challenge is even deeper. 

How do you build a machine that can ingest the sprawling, dynamic, and ever-changing World Wide Web in real-time? How do you store that data for centuries when the average hard drive lasts only a few years? And perhaps most critically, how do you pay for the electricity, the bandwidth, and the legal defense funds required to keep the lights on in an era where copyright law and digital preservation are locked in a high-stakes collision? 

This report delves into the mechanics of the Internet Archive with the precision of a teardown. We will strip back the chassis to examine the custom-built PetaBox servers that heat the building without air conditioning. We will trace the evolution of the web crawlers—from the early tape-based dumps of Alexa Internet to the sophisticated browser-based bots of 2025. We will analyze the financial ledger of this non-profit giant, exploring how it survives on a budget that is a rounding error for its Silicon Valley neighbors. 

And finally, we will look to the future, where the “Decentralized Web” (DWeb) promises to fragment the Archive into a million pieces to ensure it can never be destroyed. To understand the Archive is to understand the physical reality of digital memory. It is a story of 20,000 hard drives, 45 miles of cabling, and a vision that began in 1996 with a simple, audacious goal: “Universal Access to All Knowledge”…”

Friday, February 06, 2026

Information stealing malware obtains 150 million passwords for gmail, Instagram, and Facebook posted online

“You can't undo the past, but you can certainly not repeat it” ~Bruce Willis


 The Pursuit of Mastery Big Think




Florida: Man from India who was in the US illegally gets 18 years prison for acting a money mule; went to victims’ homes to pick up gold and other money; nabbed when he went to collect; picked up $6.6 million



Article explains what fraud losses can be deducted from tax returns

Los Angeles: Chinese man gets 46 months prison for laundering money from US crypto victims from Cambodia-based romance frauds; handled $36.8 million; must repay $27 million; eight co-conspirators have also pleaded guilty
 
Monica Whitty on the psychology behind AI Deepfakes used in romance frauds (podcast :13m)
 

Fraud Studies: Here are links to the studies I’ve written for the Better Business Bureau: puppy fraudromance fraud; BEC fraudsweepstakes/lottery fraud,  tech support fraudromance fraud money mulescrooked movers, government impostersonline vehicle sale scamsrental fraud, gift cards,  free trial offer frauds,  job scams,  online shopping fraud,  fake check fraud and crypto scams
 
Fraud News Around the worldHumorFTC and CFPBArtificial Intelligence and deep fake fraudBenefit Theft Scam CompoundsRansomware and data breachesATM Skimming                                                       Romance Fraud and Sextortion 

Overshoot: The World Is Hitting Point of No Return on Climate

 A nation that is afraid to let its people judge the truth and falsehood in an open market is a nation that is afraid of its people.

~John F. Kenned


Overshoot: The World Is Hitting Point of No Return on Climate Yale Environment 360


How western wars turned liberal democracies into police states Middle East Eye


Silicon murder valley Events in Ukraine

 

Is it time to replace NATO with EATO? Ian Proud



‘Corruption on a Breathtaking Level’: Report Details Massive Foreign Investment in Trump Crypto Firm

“This was a bribe.”




Bitcoin Break Below $80,000 Signals New Crisis of Confidence Bloomberg

 

Emails Show Even Epstein Thought Crypto Pumps are Unethical Gizmodo



23 WAYS YOU’RE ALREADY LIVING IN THE CHINESE CENTURY Wired 


CK Hutchison faces limited legal options after Panama voids port rights: experts South China Morning Post


Epstein was probably a Russian spy, says Tusk - Poland

All Kremlin based Putin’s roads and rivers lead to Leipzig or Odessa


Kremlin needed tax havens and powerful politicians and oligarchs on the west side after the Iron Curtain was torn 


Epstein was probably a Russian spy, says Tusk

Poland to examine ‘increasingly likely possibility that paedophilia scandal was co-organised by intelligence services’ in Moscow


Jeffrey Epstein was likely to have been a Russian spy, the Polish prime minister has said.
In an unprecedented intervention after the Epstein document release, Poland is to examine the paedophile’s links with Russian intelligence services.
Donald Tusk said: “More and more leads, more and more ‍information, and more and more commentary in the global press all relate to the suspicion that this unprecedented paedophilia scandal was co-organised by Russian intelligence services.
“I ‌don’t need to ‍tell you how serious the increasingly likely possibility that Russian intelligence services co-organised this operation is for the security of the Polish state.
“‍This can only mean that they also possess compromising materials against many leaders still ⁠active today.”
The US justice department’s recent release of millions of documents related to Epstein underlined the extent of his ties to significant political figures, including the Russian president.
Among the millions of files that have been released, 1,056 mention Vladimir Putin and more than 9,000 refer to Moscow.
The files revealed that Epstein was granted audiences with the Russian president, including after the American financier was convicted in 2008 of procuring a minor for prostitution.
In 2010, Epstein sent an email to an associate offering to help them obtain a Russian visa, explaining: “I have a friend of Putin’s, should I ask him?”
Epstein
The consistent appearance of Russian women and politicians in the Epstein files has led some to question whether he may have been running a classic ‘kompromat’ operation
Emails featured in the latest release of files also reveal that Epstein and his associates would often recruit young Russian women into their network.
They showed that Epstein offered to introduce Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor to a “beautiful” 26-year-old Russian woman.
Epstein said he could arrange to introduce him to a woman named only as “Irina”, in an email sent in August 2010. Mr Mountbatten-Windsor denies wrongdoing and has not responded to the latest release.
The files include email requests to book flights for models and escorts between Moscow, Paris, and New York. In a 2010 email to a person whose name has been redacted, Epstein wrote: “Tomorrow I’m organising a dinner for some new Russian girls … see you at 10.”
The consistent appearance of Russian women and politicians in the files has led some to question whether Epstein may have been running a classic “kompromat” operation. This would involve luring influential businessmen, media moguls, and politicians into sexual encounters with women before using them as blackmail.
Tanya Kozyreva, a Kyiv-based reporter who focuses on high-level corruption worldwide, said the files showed signs of a “kompromat” operation.
She wrote: “Epstein reportedly had contact with Russian officials and Putin himself. Many of his girls were Russian. Powerful Western elites passed through his orbit. What are the odds this wasn’t a classic Russian ‘kompromat’ operation – and that DoJ is just ignoring the elephant in the room?”

‘Insight’ on Trump

It is understood that Epstein had several meetings with Putin. In September 2011, he received an email from an unidentified associate who mentioned “an appointment with Putin” during a trip to Russia.
The files released on Friday suggested Epstein had another meeting set up with the Russian leader in 2014, although it is not clear whether it went ahead.
In later emails, Epstein said he could offer “insight” on Donald Trump to Sergei Lavrov, the Russian foreign minister. “It is not complex. He [Trump] must be seen to get something. It’s that simple,” Epstein wrote.
Russia’s foreign ministry has not commented on Mr Tusk’s latest revelations. In December, Maria Zakharova, a Russian foreign ministry spokesman, said the Epstein files showed the hypocrisy of Western elites.
“Here, ⁠as I understood, were all the ‍Western ‘lecturers on life’ who looked down on Russia and who lectured us about ‘democracy and human rights’ in interesting poses with equally interesting leisure partners,” she said on Telegram.