August 28, 2004
What does Toogle do?
I don’t want to give the surprise away, but you should go to Toogle and search for an image as if you were at Google’s image page… (Thanks to Vergil Iliescu for the link.)
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August 28, 2004 What does Toogle do?I don’t want to give the surprise away, but you should go to Toogle and search for an image as if you were at Google’s image page… (Thanks to Vergil Iliescu for the link.)
August 27, 2004 How W got out of the warVideo of the then Lt Gov of Texas saying that he pulled strings to get W into the National Guard… A little context here. I know y’all have probably seen this already, but I just got a link to this photo from the Yale yearbook showing W sucker-punching some unlucky rugby opponent, violating lots of rules, both official and of decency. [Thanks to Mark Dionne for the link.]
Man grows new jaw on his backA man who had his jaw removed because of mouth cancer has had a new jaw implanted. He grew it on his back by using stem cells, growth hormones and wire mesh. How long before we start getting spam offering this as a sure-fire way to please our lady, if you know what I mean?
Is this a trend?Two stories on page 3 of the NY Times today are headlined with a question: “Did Kissinger Tolerate Rights Abuses in Argentina?” and “Is North Korean Leader’s Mistress Dead?” Neither is marked as news analysis. Are questions the beginning of humility?
Sell-side advertisingJohn Battelle has an idea for “sell side advertising,” which is very interesting even though I never get “sell side” and “buy side” right. (Thanks to Ross Mayfield for the link.)
Four by SchneierBruce Schneier has had four security-related op-eds published. Yikes! Here they are:
Those pesky 527′sW is now denouncing 527 groups (some background here, here, here, and here) so that he’ll get headlines that sound as if he’s denounced the Swiftboat Veterans for Big Lies. And, of course, it’s working. But I find myself really confused about what to do about those 527s. On the one hand, they are the way big money is getting around campaign finance limitations. They give too much power to people and companies with money. On the other, how do you stop them from advertising (a proposal the Reform Party backs) without infringing on free speech? If I want to raise a million dollars to buy a SuperBowl ad denouncing poodle trimmers, I should be allowed to. Should there be a limit on how much anyone can contribute to a 527? Should there be a limit on how much you can contribute to a 527 for use in media campaigns? Should there be controls on the content of ads? The Federal Election Commission is going to decide – in effect after the election – whether 527s should be regulated the way the parties are, an idea that John McCain and Public Citizen like. I myself just don’t know. My liberal money-shouldn’t-buy-influence ideals conflict with my free speech ideals. Maybe there’s a simple and obvious right answer. I’m guessing some of you will tell me what it is. BTW, I can’t find any position on the topic at www.JohnKerry.com. But it’s pretty clear that Bush’s new position against soft-money 527s is a serious flip-flop by W who opposed soft-money limits on individuals (see here.)
Swiftboat Veterans for BlogSpamMeta-Roj got comment-spammed by the Swiftboat Veterans for Big Lies and is pissed. He retaliates by posting bunches of links, info about their domain, and a link to their Form 8872 finance report that lists the group’s email address as “no@email.” (Note: Meta-Roj lists my blog, Loose Democracy, as one that escaped the blog spam. No such luck. And, I could have done without M-R’s Vietnamese comments, apparently based on the fact that the IP address for the boasting is the Asia Pacific Network Information Centre .)
Tom on FEMATom‘s such a damn fine, and funny, writer. It’s enjoyable watching him ride his rant about FEMA like a buckin’ bronco, even while knowing how Charley has disrupted his life.
It all depends on which end of the hatchet you’re facingMediaPost‘s MediaDailyNews runs a story by Ross Fadner with this headline: eBay’s Craiglist Deal Classified As A Horror Story
This is based on an article in Classified Intellligence Report about eBay buying 25% of Craigslist:
The editor of the report, Peter Zollman, seems to me to get it right: “Craigslist is not the threat; it’s a symptom or a reaction to the threat.” The “disease” of which Craigslist is a symptom is the growth of the Internet and the decline in interest in print newspapers. “Newspapers have lost their role as the marketplace [for classifieds],” Zollman says in the MediaDailyNews article. “Craigslist is the new marketplace.” Without irony, the little ad to the right of the MediaDailyNews headline reads:
Fun facts from the article: CraigsList’s 45 regional sites get a billion page views monthly and 5 million unique visitors. Classifieds account for 40-45% of a newspaper’s advertising revenues, or $15.8 billion dollars per year in the US. Craigslist’s annual revenues are guessed to be $7-$12 million/year. Craigslist does not advertise, relying on word-of-mouth. And the article says the following about eBay’s plans:
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