SSL certainly *does* facilitate private browsing, at least from governments and service providers - you use SSL to tunnel your HTTP requests through another site (e.g. https://www.proxyssl.org/). You're still trusting the people hosting the proxy, of course, but that's a separate issue.
A more secure mechanism can be to run your *own* SSL proxy on a virtual private server. Regardless, once you have an encrypted connection to play with, you can use it for all sorts of things, regardless of the actual mechanism used (with IPSec and SSL being the two most common choices on the net).
The whole *point* of the encryption is that the ISP can't tell the difference between your connection to a bank and your connection to an SSL VPN (http://searchsecurity.techtarget.com/definition/SSL-VPN)
Sturgeon's Law (paraphrased): 90% of everything is crap
Survivorship bias (as applied to Sturgeon's Law): that which is recalled by later generations probably came from the 10%
I'd read that piece and have some fairly major objections to it. First and foremost is the lack of a *link* to the source paper, so we're only left with Jonah's interpretation of the experiment and can't readily go check the original paper to see what, if anything has been left out.
Most importantly though, they don't explain what they *mean* by 'hedonic rating'. I love stories with interesting twists where the author carefully orchestrates things such that there are (at least) two plausible interpretations of the facts, subtly nudges people towards one of them for most of the story, but then reveals at the end that they meant the second one. When they do this well, the moment of revelation is a great step in the story, since even if you didn't pick it, you get to go back and reinterpret events in light of the new data and see that it makes sense. (Heck, the whole process is a beautiful metaphor for the mechanisms of scientific discovery and reevaluation of a hypothesis in light of experimental data).
With such stories, I get to enjoy them in two different ways - the first time, attempting to guess what is going on, seeing how well I can divine the author's real intent, and the second and subsequent times, appreciating *how* the author sets out to mislead the reader, while at the same time remaining consistent with their *real* intent.
So, the article sounds suspect to me, since the very concept of distilling the process of enjoying a story down to a single 'hedonic rating' sounds like reductionist claptrap. The kind of story I want is going to depend on a whole host of other factors. Perhaps I want to be challenged in trying to guess where a story is going, perhaps I want to curl up with a familiar tale to pass some time without having to think too much.
Now, that said, I don't understand people that are *rabidly* anti-spoilers, either, especially when they're happy to reread books they like. You can't get a much bigger spoiler than having read, seen or heard the entire story before.
Did you read the same article I did? What did you think comments like "Anything politicians do to try to force it almost always does the opposite." were referring to if not "'jobs' projects"?
Focusing on building and upgrading expensive, naturally monopolistic networks (such as road systems, electricity grids, networking infrastructure, water distribution networks, sewage systems) is a good way to increase the chances of getting smart infrastructure spending from governments. But focusing on "job creation" as the primary motivator for government infrastructure spending is unlikely to be a good way to allocate resources.
Given the much vaunted touting of 'professional fact checking' by the various legacy news organisations and their regular failure to acknowledge mistakes and updates online, yes, it absolutely *is* worth mentioning.
It isn't a given that humanity will survive. We know from the example of Venus right next door that a runaway greenhouse effect is physically possible. We know from Earth's own history that climate change induced mass extinctions are also possible (as the less temperature change tolerant components of the foodchain die off, causing serious problems for critters higher in the foodchain that can themselves tolerate the changes in temperatures, but starve due to the depletion of their food sources).
Now, such dire outcomes may not be *likely*, but they're definitely possible. We can see the oncoming train - it makes sense to step off the tracks.
"If somebody is banging you repeatedly over the head with a hammer, you have the right to ask them to just stop, without having to simultaneously give them an alternative tool to hit you with."
Doesn't sound fixed to me - no mention of eliminating the ability for resharing to bypass the explicitly set photo album access controls (which *should* be completely independent of what you post to your stream, but currently are not).
Having been surprised by this myself, there is a *genuine* problem with the Google+ privacy model on this point: it gives you the *impression* of doing one thing, while actually do something else entirely.
First, let's go back to Facebook. When someone reshares a link on FB, it drops your description and any comments. Other kinds of post (photos, status updates, checkins) aren't easily reshared at all - you have to copy/paste them and the same goes for the descriptions you give posted links.
Now, move to G+ and by default resharing is enabled for everything you post. G+ still drops the comments, but keeps your description. This is generally a good thing, but there's a few aspects to it that annoy me:
1. The resharing status is hidden away in a submenu rather than being visible when making the post
2. Posts to limited groups still enable resharing by default (the default should be the other way around - easy resharing of public material ala Twitter retweeting, but require a bit more effort to reshare nominally private material - such as copying and pasting or posting a comment to say "Hey, could you enable resharing on this, please?")
3. And this is the kicker: resharing BREAKS the access controls you have configured on your photo albums
I have all my photos on Picasaweb as an offsite back-up. I shared a few of them with my Friends circle while playing around with G+. One of my friends reshared one of those posts and it meant all of *his* friends could now see the photos in that album.
Could my friend have made copies of my photos and redistributed them to other people against my wishes? Sure, but he wouldn't do that. What happened was that completely innocently and inadvertently, he bypassed the access controls I had chosen to place on my photo albums, because that's the way G+ is currently set up to work.
However, this is just a beta - this is almost certainly the kind of bad interaction between features Google will fix before Circles goes live.
It isn't ready for general use, since the privacy model doesn't quite work right as yet and it is really easy to accidentally spam your friends with email updates.
If they released it to the general public as it stands right now, they'd just have another Buzz fiasco on their hands.
Like many others, I've been playing with Google+ for a day or so now and think it has definite potential.
The reason Circles differs from FB friend Lists is that Google have made Circles central to the entire experience. Yes, FB has had Lists for a long time, but they've always been an optional extra that most people ignore. G+, by contrast, gives people 4 Circles by default (Friends, Family, Acquaintances, Following), makes it easy to create new ones, and provides a nice, oddly *fun* interface for managing them. The *only* way to connect with someone is to add them to at least one of your circles (like Lists, the details of the circles themselves are private, but you can choose to share the aggregate information as to who is in your circles).
They still have some kinks to work out in the way the privacy settings, sharing and circles interact, but what they have now is an *excellent* starting point in helping users to feel in control of who can see what they post (and doing so in a way that is more straightforward and integrated than the FB Lists experience).
They also make it easy to list your non-G+ using friends for your own benefit, so you can automatically connect with them if they join up, as well as easily passing information along to them directly via email when that is appropriate (although again, here, some of the defaults need tweaking to avoid inadvertent spamming by inexperienced users).
As to why they shut invites down, my assumption is that it is the feedback system that was dying rather than G+ itself. I never noticed any problems at all with the actual site, but the feedback tool was definitely struggling at times (and, of course, dealing with all that feedback is ultimately constrained by the number of *people* Google have available for the task rather than anything to do with how many servers they can through at the problem of allowing people to accept it).
The vendors that get cloud service right operate on a "wherever you go, there you are" type of mentality.
Sometimes that is achieved via "dumb terminal" status (i.e. web apps), other times it is achieved via automatic client synchronisation (e.g. Firefox Sync, Dropbox, over the air Google Calendar/Contact sync to a smartphone). Some services (such as Dropbox or the Calendar/Contact example) mix the two modes - you can use the web app *or* the smart client as you choose.
The principle missing component is direct service-to-service transfers for large files (as opposed to the dumb download+reupload approach typically needed now).
The place is apparently becoming a veritable model of plutocracy, so it's understandable that a lot of the folks that live there are getting rather annoyed about it.
There is one scarcity that at least some people will always be willing to pay money for: their own time.
Why do automated car washes make money? It is quicker and easier to pay up and drive through than it is to break out the bucket and hose and do it yourself.
Why do yard care services make money? It is quicker and easier to get someone else to do it for you than it is to obtain the necessary equipment and spend the time to do it yourself.
Why do cleaning services... etc, you get the idea.
What iTunes and Netflix offer is a system that is comparatively easy for a customer to use. You can subscribe to things and have them just turn up whenever they become available, and know that you'll be getting exactly what you asked for.
The free competition, on the other hand, requires remembering to search for things you want when new releases may be available, checking them to be sure they're what the claim to be, hoping that they're good quality (e.g. no video/audio sync issues).
However, the free version also comes with some big bonuses:
- available globally immediately on release
- absolutely no DRM of any kind
- no copyright warnings that talk down to paying customers like they're naughty puppies
You know the interesting thing about those major benefits of the free product? They're all related to removing things that the big content companies *chose to add* to their products. Windowing, DRM, copyright warnings - none of that is inherent in any of the content they're providing, it's just customer-hostility in a pre-packaged portable form.
Remove those annoyances from the paid versions and suddenly the free alternatives become significantly less compelling.
On the post: The Pavlovian Response To Seeing Birthday Announcements On Facebook
Relates to one of my favourite Facebook "infographics"
On the post: Pakistan Officially Bans All Encryption Online
Re: Misleading Title?
A more secure mechanism can be to run your *own* SSL proxy on a virtual private server. Regardless, once you have an encrypted connection to play with, you can use it for all sorts of things, regardless of the actual mechanism used (with IPSec and SSL being the two most common choices on the net).
The whole *point* of the encryption is that the ISP can't tell the difference between your connection to a bank and your connection to an SSL VPN (http://searchsecurity.techtarget.com/definition/SSL-VPN)
On the post: Changing How We Handle Advertising And Sponsorships
Re: For the Record
I don't mind too much if they animate for a few seconds after loading and then *stop*, though. It's the looping ones that are horrible.
On the post: Changing How We Handle Advertising And Sponsorships
Re: Re: Re:
On the post: Some Old Guy Can't Come Up With Any New Ideas; So He Says There Are No New Ideas & It's Twitter's Fault
Sturgeon's Law and Survivorship Bias
Survivorship bias (as applied to Sturgeon's Law): that which is recalled by later generations probably came from the 10%
On the post: Spoiler Alert: People Enjoy Books More When They Know The Spoilers
Missing data: 'Hedonic Rating'
Most importantly though, they don't explain what they *mean* by 'hedonic rating'. I love stories with interesting twists where the author carefully orchestrates things such that there are (at least) two plausible interpretations of the facts, subtly nudges people towards one of them for most of the story, but then reveals at the end that they meant the second one. When they do this well, the moment of revelation is a great step in the story, since even if you didn't pick it, you get to go back and reinterpret events in light of the new data and see that it makes sense. (Heck, the whole process is a beautiful metaphor for the mechanisms of scientific discovery and reevaluation of a hypothesis in light of experimental data).
With such stories, I get to enjoy them in two different ways - the first time, attempting to guess what is going on, seeing how well I can divine the author's real intent, and the second and subsequent times, appreciating *how* the author sets out to mislead the reader, while at the same time remaining consistent with their *real* intent.
So, the article sounds suspect to me, since the very concept of distilling the process of enjoying a story down to a single 'hedonic rating' sounds like reductionist claptrap. The kind of story I want is going to depend on a whole host of other factors. Perhaps I want to be challenged in trying to guess where a story is going, perhaps I want to curl up with a familiar tale to pass some time without having to think too much.
Now, that said, I don't understand people that are *rabidly* anti-spoilers, either, especially when they're happy to reread books they like. You can't get a much bigger spoiler than having read, seen or heard the entire story before.
On the post: Politicians, Innovation & The Paradox Of Job Creation
Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Infrastructure spending
Focusing on building and upgrading expensive, naturally monopolistic networks (such as road systems, electricity grids, networking infrastructure, water distribution networks, sewage systems) is a good way to increase the chances of getting smart infrastructure spending from governments. But focusing on "job creation" as the primary motivator for government infrastructure spending is unlikely to be a good way to allocate resources.
On the post: Associated Press Carelessness Reaches Boiling Point
Re: Re: Re: I think your overreaching here
On the post: Associated Press Carelessness Reaches Boiling Point
Re: Re: Re: Re: It's just a future headline
Now, such dire outcomes may not be *likely*, but they're definitely possible. We can see the oncoming train - it makes sense to step off the tracks.
On the post: Associated Press Carelessness Reaches Boiling Point
Re: Re: Let me bait a bit
Oh, wait...
(Took me a while to get it myself, since I skipped over the headline and intro and jumped straight to the numbers. Had to reread to pick up the error)
On the post: Debunking Some Big Myths About Patents
From the article
Gold :)
On the post: More Details On Spanish Music Collection Society Corruption: Accused Of Stealing $550 Million From Artists
Re:
On the post: Iran Declares Victory Over Internet-In-A-Suitcase
On the post: First Totally Bogus Privacy Issue Over Google+ Raised
Re:
On the post: First Totally Bogus Privacy Issue Over Google+ Raised
No, there's a genuine problem here
First, let's go back to Facebook. When someone reshares a link on FB, it drops your description and any comments. Other kinds of post (photos, status updates, checkins) aren't easily reshared at all - you have to copy/paste them and the same goes for the descriptions you give posted links.
Now, move to G+ and by default resharing is enabled for everything you post. G+ still drops the comments, but keeps your description. This is generally a good thing, but there's a few aspects to it that annoy me:
1. The resharing status is hidden away in a submenu rather than being visible when making the post
2. Posts to limited groups still enable resharing by default (the default should be the other way around - easy resharing of public material ala Twitter retweeting, but require a bit more effort to reshare nominally private material - such as copying and pasting or posting a comment to say "Hey, could you enable resharing on this, please?")
3. And this is the kicker: resharing BREAKS the access controls you have configured on your photo albums
I have all my photos on Picasaweb as an offsite back-up. I shared a few of them with my Friends circle while playing around with G+. One of my friends reshared one of those posts and it meant all of *his* friends could now see the photos in that album.
Could my friend have made copies of my photos and redistributed them to other people against my wishes? Sure, but he wouldn't do that. What happened was that completely innocently and inadvertently, he bypassed the access controls I had chosen to place on my photo albums, because that's the way G+ is currently set up to work.
However, this is just a beta - this is almost certainly the kind of bad interaction between features Google will fix before Circles goes live.
On the post: Can Google+ Succeed Merely By Being Not Facebook?
Re:
If they released it to the general public as it stands right now, they'd just have another Buzz fiasco on their hands.
On the post: Can Google+ Succeed Merely By Being Not Facebook?
Thoughts on Google+
The reason Circles differs from FB friend Lists is that Google have made Circles central to the entire experience. Yes, FB has had Lists for a long time, but they've always been an optional extra that most people ignore. G+, by contrast, gives people 4 Circles by default (Friends, Family, Acquaintances, Following), makes it easy to create new ones, and provides a nice, oddly *fun* interface for managing them. The *only* way to connect with someone is to add them to at least one of your circles (like Lists, the details of the circles themselves are private, but you can choose to share the aggregate information as to who is in your circles).
They still have some kinks to work out in the way the privacy settings, sharing and circles interact, but what they have now is an *excellent* starting point in helping users to feel in control of who can see what they post (and doing so in a way that is more straightforward and integrated than the FB Lists experience).
They also make it easy to list your non-G+ using friends for your own benefit, so you can automatically connect with them if they join up, as well as easily passing information along to them directly via email when that is appropriate (although again, here, some of the defaults need tweaking to avoid inadvertent spamming by inexperienced users).
As to why they shut invites down, my assumption is that it is the feedback system that was dying rather than G+ itself. I never noticed any problems at all with the actual site, but the feedback tool was definitely struggling at times (and, of course, dealing with all that feedback is ultimately constrained by the number of *people* Google have available for the task rather than anything to do with how many servers they can through at the problem of allowing people to accept it).
On the post: We're Missing The Point Of The Cloud: It's Not Supposed To Be Locked To A Single Service
Re: Re:
Sometimes that is achieved via "dumb terminal" status (i.e. web apps), other times it is achieved via automatic client synchronisation (e.g. Firefox Sync, Dropbox, over the air Google Calendar/Contact sync to a smartphone). Some services (such as Dropbox or the Calendar/Contact example) mix the two modes - you can use the web app *or* the smart client as you choose.
The principle missing component is direct service-to-service transfers for large files (as opposed to the dumb download+reupload approach typically needed now).
On the post: Is It Bad When The Rich & Famous Use Things Like Kickstarter?
Re: hate the rich
The place is apparently becoming a veritable model of plutocracy, so it's understandable that a lot of the folks that live there are getting rather annoyed about it.
On the post: More People Realizing That Infringement Can't Be Stopped, So Learn To Embrace It
Some people will always pay for convenience
Why do automated car washes make money? It is quicker and easier to pay up and drive through than it is to break out the bucket and hose and do it yourself.
Why do yard care services make money? It is quicker and easier to get someone else to do it for you than it is to obtain the necessary equipment and spend the time to do it yourself.
Why do cleaning services... etc, you get the idea.
What iTunes and Netflix offer is a system that is comparatively easy for a customer to use. You can subscribe to things and have them just turn up whenever they become available, and know that you'll be getting exactly what you asked for.
The free competition, on the other hand, requires remembering to search for things you want when new releases may be available, checking them to be sure they're what the claim to be, hoping that they're good quality (e.g. no video/audio sync issues).
However, the free version also comes with some big bonuses:
- available globally immediately on release
- absolutely no DRM of any kind
- no copyright warnings that talk down to paying customers like they're naughty puppies
You know the interesting thing about those major benefits of the free product? They're all related to removing things that the big content companies *chose to add* to their products. Windowing, DRM, copyright warnings - none of that is inherent in any of the content they're providing, it's just customer-hostility in a pre-packaged portable form.
Remove those annoyances from the paid versions and suddenly the free alternatives become significantly less compelling.
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