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08 Feb 09:05

The Case for Using Drugs to Enhance Our Relationships (and Our Break-Ups)

by Ross Andersen

A philosopher argues that taking love-altering substances might not just be a good idea, but a moral obligation.

DECISIONS.jpg

Not actual love drugs (Alexis Madrigal)

George Bernard Shaw once satirized marriage as "two people under the influence of the most violent, most insane, most delusive, and most transient of passions, who are required to swear that they will remain in that excited, abnormal, and exhausting condition continuously until death do them part." 

Yikes. And yet, nearly all human cultures value some version of marriage, as a nurturing emotional foundation for children, but also because marriage can give life an extra dimension of meaning. But marriage is hard, for biochemical reasons that may be beyond our control.  What if we could take drugs to get better at love? 
Perhaps we could design "love drugs," pharmaceutical cocktails that could boost affection between partners, whisking them back to the exquisite set of pleasures that colored their first years together. The ability to do this kind of fine-tuned emotional engineering is beyond the power of current science, but there is a growing field of research devoted to it. Some have even suggested developing "anti-love drugs" that could dissolve abusive relationships, or reduce someone's attachment to a charismatic cult leader. Others just want a pill to ease the pain of a wrenching breakup. 
Evolutionary biologists tell us that we owe the singular bundle of feelings we call "love" to natural selection. As human brains grew larger and larger, the story goes, children needed more and more time to develop into adults that could fend for themselves. A child with two parents around was privy to extra resources and protection, and thus stood a better chance of reaching maturity. The longer parents' chemical reward systems kept them in love, the more children they could shepherd to reproductive age. That's why the neural structures that form love bonds between couples were so strongly selected for. It's also why our relationships seem to come equipped with a set of invisible biochemical handrails: they're meant to support us through the inevitable trials that attend the creation of viable offspring.  
"Our relationships come equipped with a set of invisible biochemical handrails"

The problem for us modern, long-lived humans is that natural selection is only interested in reproductive fitness. Once your kids can make their own kids, natural selection's work is finished. It doesn't care whether your marriage remains emotionally satisfying into your golden years. But if the magic of love resides in the brain, an organ whose mysterious workings we are slowly starting to unravel, there might be a workaround. 
At first blush, love may seem like a poor prospect for pharmacological intervention. The reflexive dualist in us wants to say that romantic relationships are matters of the soul, and that souls ought to be free of medical tinkering. Oxford ethicist Brian Earp argues that we should resist these intuitions, and be open to the upswing in human well-being that successful love drugs could bring about. Over a series of several papers, Earp and his colleagues, Anders Sandberg and Julian Savulescu, make a convincing case that couples should be free to use "love drugs," and that in some cases, they may be morally obligated to do so. I recently caught up with Earp and his colleagues by email to ask them about this fascinating ethical frontier. What follows is a condensed version of our exchange.
What is the current thinking among evolutionary biologists as to how love---or adult pair bonding---evolved?
From the perspective of evolutionary biology, love is a complex neurobiological phenomenon that has been wired into us by the forces of evolution. It makes heavy use of the brain's reward systems, and its ability to bring together (and keep together) human beings--from prehistoric times until the present day--has played a major role in the survival of our species.   In terms of natural selection, the working consensus among evolutionary biologists is that the human adult pair bond probably developed out of earlier structures involved in creating and sustaining feelings of attachment between mothers and their infants. Evolution likes to make use of existing systems for new purposes. In this case, the shift might have been driven by the heightened importance of paternal care for offspring with bigger and bigger brains over generations of human evolution. These burgeoning baby brains took longer to reach maturity than their more ancestral counterparts, leaving the infant vulnerable and underdeveloped for extended periods of time. The idea is that if parents fell in love and remained together during this fragile period for their offspring, their own genetic fitness would be enhanced. 
The anthropologist Helen Fisher has famously argued that "love" is not a single straightforward emotion, but an emergent suite of motivational states that stem from underlying systems for lust, attraction, and attachment. In her theory--one of a number of "biological" theories of love with quite a bit of overlap between them--the lust system promotes mating with a range of promising partners; the attraction system guides us to choose and prefer a particular partner; and the attachment system fosters long-term bonding, encouraging couples to cooperate and stay together until their parental duties have been discharged. These universal systems are then hypothesized to form a biological foundation on which the cultural and individual variants of sexual, romantic, and longer-term love are built.
What scientific evidence do we have that the difficulties people face in modern relationships can be successfully addressed with pharmaceuticals?
Modern relationships are challenging for a whole range of reasons, and these reasons might be very different from one couple to the next. Drug-based treatments aren't always going to be the best approach, and sometimes they should even be avoided. Putting a chemical band-aid on a violent or abusive relationship, for example, would be an extremely bad idea. But we do know that in at least some cases, states of the brain that are susceptible to being pharmacologically altered may have something to do with the interpersonal difficulties couples face. 
To give an obvious example, just think of a marriage in which one partner suffers from severe depression. As anyone who's been in that situation can tell you, chronic depression in one or both members of a committed partnership can drag the whole relationship down. Addressing the root of the problem, in this case through the use of anti-depressant pharmaceuticals if necessary, could make a big difference for some couples. 
For another example, consider the widespread use of Viagra to treat male impotence, a problem that prevents some couples, especially older couples, from having sex. Lack of sex reduces oxytocin levels, and reduced oxytocin levels can degrade a couple's romantic bond. If a drug-based treatment could help the couple restore a healthy sex life, this could improve their chances of sustaining a well-functioning relationship. 
Beate Ditzen and her colleagues at the University of Zurich have shown that oxytocin nasal spray can facilitate positive communication--and reduce stress levels--in romantic couples engaged in an argument. Oxytocin, sometimes called the "love hormone" for its role in sustaining mother-infant and romantic attachment bonds, increased the ratio of positive to negative communication behaviors and facilitated a drop in cortisol levels after the conflict. These factors have been shown to play a major role in predicting long-term relationship survival. While commentators like Ed Yong have recently emphasized that oxytocin can have a "dark side" as well--for example, by promoting in-group favoritism--the key is to figure out which people, which situations, and which ways of administering the hormone will maximize its effectiveness and minimize any troubling side-effects. We're working on some research right now to sort these conditions out. 
In earlier decades, MDMA (ecstasy) was sometimes used in couple's therapy to boost empathy and improve emotional communication skills. While this sort of use would be illegal today, there has been a recent resurgence of scientific interest in possible therapeutic uses of MDMA, for example to treat Post Traumatic Stress Disorder. More research is needed, of course, but there is no reason why it should not be carried out, carefully and ethically, with proper social, procedural, and legal safeguards in place. 
You argue that "love drugs" can help us address the tension between our moral values and our evolved psychobiological natures. Where does that tension manifest itself most obviously in relationships today? How have things changed since our basic sexual and relational drives evolved?
If you look at this in the context of evolutionary biology, you realize that in order to maximize the survival of their genes, parents need to have emotional systems that keep them together until their children are sufficiently grown--but, what happens after that is of no concern to natural selection. As Donald Symons has written, "in analyzing the psychological underpinnings of marriage [we should] keep in mind that Homo sapiens is the product of evolution ... we are designed to promote gene [survival], not individual survival, and reproductive [success], not marital success." Since we now outlive our ancestors by decades, the evolved pair-bonding instincts upon which modern relationships are built often break down or dissolve long before "death do us part."
"Since we now outlive our ancestors by decades, the evolved pair-bonding instincts upon which modern relationships are built often break down or dissolve long before 'death do us part.'"
We see this in the high divorce rates and long term relationship break up rates in countries where both partners enjoy freedom--especially economic freedom. We are simply not built to pull off decades-long relationships in the modern world. Nature designed us to be together for a while, but not forever--and once we push beyond the natural childrearing boundary, we are, in a sense, living on borrowed time. 
Another major tension comes from our non-monogamous impulses. Humans are rare among mammals in that we practice at least some form of social monogamy. But there is a mountain of evidence suggesting that sex outside of the primary parenting bond was common throughout our evolutionary history, and would have been to the reproductive advantage of both males and females of our species. Jealousy seems to have deep roots as well, so there is nothing particularly new about feelings of sexual possessiveness--but the conscious, socially enshrined value-expectation that both husbands and wives should remain 100% sexually exclusive to one another for decades in a row, and that failure to meet this goal should entail the end of the relationship, is certainly a more recent invention. Adultery is one of the leading causes of marriage failure.
You point out that married couples should have the freedom to use love-enhancing drugs if they so wish, but you also go a step further, arguing that there are circumstances where married couples ought to take them. What are the most compelling of those circumstances?
Imagine a couple that is thinking about breaking up or getting a divorce, but they have young children who would likely be harmed by their parents' separation. In this situation, there are vulnerable third parties involved, and we have argued that parents have a responsibility--all else being equal--to preserve and enhance their relationships for the sake of their children, at least until the children have matured and can take care of themselves. One way to do this, of course, would be to attend couple's therapy and see if the relationship problems could be meaningfully resolved through "traditional" methods. But what if this strategy isn't working? If love drugs ever become safely and cheaply available; if they could be shown to improve love, commitment, and marital well-being--and thereby lessen the chance (or the need) for divorce; if other interventions had been tried and failed; and if side-effects or other complications could be minimized, then we think that some couples might have an obligation to give them a try. Of course, we aren't suggesting that anyone should be forced to take love drugs--or any drugs--against their will. But we do think that when children are involved, the stakes become higher for finding a workable solution to relationship difficulties between the parents.
What if "love drugs" only serve to prop up fading cultural institutions? Some might argue that monogamy is outdated, or a bad fit with human nature, and that rather than pharmacologically altering ourselves to accommodate it, we should jettison the whole thing instead. What would you say to them?
Whenever individuals--or societies--experience a mismatch between their values and human nature, they face a choice. They can give up or amend their values, accept a contradiction between their values and their impulses or behaviors, or they can try to modify or manage human nature. 
This "management" can happen in different ways. It might involve shaping the physical, social, and legal environment to incentivize value-consistent behavior and disincentivize value-inconsistent behavior.  Or it might involve the use of biotechnology (such as love drugs in the case of monogamy) to modify the source of the behavior directly--or some combination of the above. Which course to take for any given mismatch depends upon a huge range of factors, and there are often good arguments for different approaches depending on the details of the given case. 
As a baseline, we have argued for something called the "principle of default natural ethics." This just means that, given the choice, we should try to adopt values that are as consistent as possible with human nature, so that we can avoid troubling side-effects that come from unnatural suppression and heavy-handed regulation of basic instincts: just think of the recent sex abuse scandal in the Catholic Church, and consider some obvious reasons why that tragedy might have come about. Sometimes, following the principle of default natural ethics means that we should jettison our social institutions--especially when they are so far out of synch with our human dispositions as to be totally unworkable, or when they end up creating bigger problems than they were designed to solve in the first place. This is probably part of the reason why we've moved past communism as a model for social and political organization: it seemed, at least to many people, to make a lot of sense on paper, but in the real world it ran up against too many deep facts about the way that people actually work. 
But communism was an experiment, both radical and recent. Monogamy, on the other hand, or at least some form of it, has been a part of human societies for a much longer time, so we have to be more careful about how we deal with its problematic features--most notably the gap it creates between the ideal of sexual exclusivity and the reality of human promiscuity. 
Some people think that we should give up on monogamy, and there are plausible arguments for this view. In fact, one possibility is that love drugs could be used to eliminate jealousy rather than the impulse to stray--and for individual couples, this might indeed be a worthwhile strategy. For couples who are committed to polyamory, for example, jealousy would seem to be the odd man out: it conflicts with the polyamorists' higher-order goals for sexual openness. 
We obviously cannot set the moral priorities for any given relationship. But in making a more general argument, we note that most couples as a matter of fact value sexual fidelity and make an explicit promise to hold to it.  And at least when children are involved, we think that this promise may be morally justified, since extramarital sex can lead to extramarital love that would divert time and energy directly away from existing offspring. On the other hand, when children are not an issue, when there are good arguments for non-monogamy for a particular couple, or when non-monogamous social institutions have a good chance of contributing to human welfare in a given culture or community, then we don't see any reason why people should go out of their way to "prop up" problematic social norms through the use of pharmacology. 
There are certain environmental features of modernity---like ease of travel and expanded social circles---that make monogamy more difficult. Why shouldn't we focus on limiting the effects of those factors instead of altering ourselves biochemically?
It's a question of trade-offs. Most people think that ease of travel and far-flung social connections are a good thing, and contribute positively to human flourishing in the modern era. On a practical level, too, these things aren't likely to go away. So when they do become a problem--by making it easier to commit adultery, for example--we have to be creative about how we respond. Certainly there are a range of non-biochemical strategies that couples can use to stay faithful to each other despite the pressures and temptations of modern life, and they should be free to pursue these strategies to the best of their abilities. We have simply argued that it may be time to consider a wider range of possibilities, as contemporary relationships need all the help they can get. At the end of the day, anyone who fully appreciates the post-Enlightenment ideals ensconced in present-day Western cultures would be loathe to restrict travel, freedom of socializing, freedom of divorce, or gender equality in the workplace, despite their potential to undermine full-fledged monogamy. The cure would be worse than the disease.  
You could see how these drugs could be used in the context of a parent-child relationship---perhaps to boost feelings of love in an otherwise apathetic mother. Are there any special ethical concerns there?
There may be some. But remember our analogy to treating depression in a romantic context, and then just extend this reasoning to a parent-child relationship. So long as it is the parent taking the drug, voluntarily and under conditions of informed consent, and so long as this drug-based treatment had a reasonable chance of improving her ability to care for her own offspring, there would seem to be little to worry about in terms of ethics. Some people might be concerned that this drug-induced "love" would be inauthentic in some way - but it depends on what you take as your baseline. Perhaps the authentic situation is the one in which feelings of love and contentment occur naturally between the parent and the child, and it is only a disordered biochemical state that brought about the apathy actually felt by the mother. Just as when a depressed person finds that a small dose of medication allows him to "be himself" again--finding joy in the old activities he used to love so much, for example--so might some mothers find that taking a love drug allows them to engage with their children in a way that feels more true to their own self-conception than they would feel without it.
It's often said that you don't have an obligation to love someone, usually based on the idea that it is impossible to voluntarily control our emotions. But if love drugs make such control more possible, then there might be some loves that should be felt. It's debatable whether this is true for spouses, but it seems very hard to argue against the idea that we should love our children. 
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This is an actual wedding ring. It smells like anise now. (Alexis Madrigal)

You've also written about "anti-love drugs," which could be used to dissolve love bonds in abusive relationships, or in cases where someone has fallen under the spell of a cult leader. Are there drugs like this that are currently under development?


"Some Orthodox Jewish groups use off label anti-depressant medication to suppress libido, so that young yeshiva students can comply with strict religious norms concerning human love and sexuality."
With the exception of anti-androgen drugs sometimes used to treat paedophilia--and which work in a rather "low-level" way by targeting the bodily sex drive--very few chemical substances are currently available that have been explicitly designed with the goal of diminishing feelings of love or sexuality. But that doesn't mean that anti-love drugs don't exist in certain forms. Some Orthodox Jewish groups use "off label" anti-depressant medication to suppress libido, so that young yeshiva students can comply with strict religious norms concerning human love and sexuality. These selective serotonin re-uptake inhibitors (SSRIs) can also lead to "emotional blunting" of higher-order feelings involved in romantic attraction. Some people report finding it harder to cry, worry, get angry, or care about other people's feelings while taking anti-depressants. The overall lack of emotional stimulation produced by SSRIs has been described as producing a "blandness" that can overwhelm certain romantic relationships. As one author has put it: "aside from ruining your sex life, antidepressants could also be responsible for breaking your heart."
Other substances that can reduce libido--usually considered a "side effect"--include tobacco and alcohol, almost all blood pressure pills, certain pain relievers, statin cholesterol drugs, some acid blockers used to treat heartburn, the hair loss drug finasteride, and seizure medications including gabapentin and phenytoin.
There is some work showing that scientists can block a pair-bond from forming in certain vole species--those cute little rodents than are one of the few socially monogamous creatures on the planet--but this involves injecting dopamine- or oxytocin-blockers directly into the nucleus accumbens, and so similar experiments have not been carried out in humans.   In some cases---as with someone under the spell of a cult leader---the drugs would conceivably be administered against the wishes of the smitten person. How do we justify an invasion of autonomy that goes to something as personal as love?
This is a tricky situation. On the one hand, if love really can make a person "lose her mind" then at least in theory there could be an argument for saying that a person has been compromised mentally and thus some form of intervention could be justified. You would have to provide very strong evidence that the person was genuinely incompetent to make a decision on her own behalf, and you would have to be sure that she was at risk of suffering serious and unambiguous harm if left to her own devices. But the potential for paternalistic overreach here is huge, and we should be very cautious about assuming that we know better than someone else what is in her own best interests, all things considered. In general, individuals should be protected from any form of coercion by ensuring there are robust laws protecting independence of the mind. Interestingly, small children can be indoctrinated into fundamentalist religious cults without any restriction. That is a lot more worrying and occurs for thousands, or perhaps millions of children.
What's the threshold for the use of anti-love drugs? Should people use them in cases where they aren't in any particular danger, like in the case of a tough break-up? Some might argue that you can't learn from a break-up without experiencing it in full. Do you buy that?
In a forthcoming paper, we argue for four conditions for the use of anti-love biotechnology: (1) the love in question is clearly harmful and needs to dissolve one way or another; (2) the person would conceivably want to use the technology, so there would be no problematic violations of consent; (3) the technology would help the person follow her higher-order goals instead of her lower-order feelings; and (4) it might not be psychologically possible to overcome the relevant feelings without the help of anti-love biotechnology. But the question here seems to be, what if it were possible to overcome the attachment, only it would involve a lot of protracted pain and difficulty, and the person would rather just move on with the business of living?
Philosophers will disagree about what should be allowed in a case like this. So-called "bioconservatives" would probably remind us that even great and seemingly unbearable suffering can impart unforeseeably important lessons, and that people should be very careful about turning to drugs to solve their problems or dull their pains. They tend to say things like: "With suffering comes understanding" - and of course, there is a kernel of truth to that. Bioliberals, on the other hand, would be likelier to point out that "traditional" methods of getting over heartache aim at changing our brain chemistry just as much as drugs would, only indirectly and sometimes less effectively. "Sometimes suffering is just suffering," they would add, and then they might go on to suggest that such fruitless pain should be eliminated by whatever means the individual judges for himself are best. 
For our part, we certainly don't deny that there can be great value in experiencing the world "as it really is" - in its heartbreak and agony as much as in its joys. But we think that even if it could be shown that human beings had some sort of existential duty to experience pain along with happiness, this duty would not absolute: it could be trumped by the debilitating effects of certain traumas, and sometimes a broken heart might qualify in just this sense. 
What if these drugs enabled romantic sabotage? You could envision a scenario where someone uses a discreetly delivered anti-love drug to ruin someone else's relationship---in order to get rid of a romantic rival.
This would clearly be unethical, and would be analogous to (and perhaps no worse than) telling a scurrilous lie about the mutual object of affection in order to cause the rival-in-love to lose his interest. It also calls to mind the use of "date-rape" drugs to manipulate a person into having non-consensual sex. In general, if the love- or sex-related action would be considered morally impermissible if undertaken by "traditional" means, then it should be considered morally impermissible if undertaken by means of anti-love biotechnology. We need robust laws to prevent anyone's giving a drug or other intervention to another person that could alter their minds or change their behavior without their consent. This will be a big area in the future. Love drugs are just one part of it. 
One worry with "anti-love drugs," is that they could be used by fundamentalist groups to "cure" homosexuals, or by traditionalist groups in India that disapprove of "inter-caste love." Do these risks negate the potential social utility of anti-love drugs.
This is an important consideration. As is well known, the very disturbing practice of conversion therapy in the United States (designed to "cure" gay and lesbian individuals of their sexual and romantic feelings) carried on until at least the 1970s with the full-throated endorsement of the mainstream profession of mental health. And as late as 2012, a U.S. federal judge ruled that such therapy cannot be outlawed, even when conducted on minors, since it constitutes a protected form of religious "speech"-- indeed it is still being performed in a number of fundamentalist Christian communities to this day. 
While there is very little evidence that existing interventions actually work in the way intended--and quite a bit of evidence that they can cause trauma and other serious harms--future technologies might indeed be more effective. So if we were to grant that religious fundamentalists (for example) might try to use these future technologies in ways that progressive-minded people would object to, one tempting conclusion is that we should try to prevent their coming-into-being at whatever cost. 
But jumping to this conclusion would be premature. In the first place, we have to remember that any new technology poses risks - whether it is an anti-love pill, a powerful military weapon, or something more mundane. So the possibility that a new technology might be used for ill can never constitute, by itself, sufficient reason to reject it. Instead, the potential harms that might accrue from misuse of the technology have to be weighed against the potential benefits that might accrue from its responsible use. Second, even if it could be shown that the development of various anti-love interventions would be too risky to be worth pursuing, it still might not be possible to avoid having to deal with their eventual existence. This is because advances in other areas - i.e., in treatments for debilitating mental disorders such as autism - might leave us with the very same neuroscientific knowledge and technological capabilities that we would have ended up with had we sought them out for love-diminishing purposes directly. In such a scenario, we would still have to ask ourselves whether or when to use the powers we had (inadvertently) created.
What this question highlights, though, is that ethical dilemmas concerning emerging biotechnological innovations cannot be resolved in an "enlightened" academic vacuum. Instead, there is a much wider debate taking place in society over what sorts of values we should hold in the first place with respect to things like love, sex, and relationships (and nearly everything else as well). And plainly this broader conversation--between the insights of progressivism and the insights of conservatism, as well as between the forces of secularism and the forces of religion--will continue to shape the moral ends toward which human beings collectively and individually strive, regardless of what technology is actually in hand, and regardless of what pontificating bioethicists may argue in their papers. So we have argued that at most fundamental level, the relevant question--what we call the basic technology-value question--becomes:  
How can we use new technologies for good rather than for ill, while simultaneously trying to reach a functional consensus on what sorts of things should be considered good, and what sorts of things should not be considered ill?

'Progressive-minded people' clearly have their work cut out for them in terms of this longer-term project. 



07 Feb 13:57

"Gender Programming" - Sun, 20 Jan 2013

Gender Programming
07 Feb 11:09

Clever Porn-Title of the Year

by René

Aus den Adult Video News Awards in Las Vegas wurden am Wochenende nicht nur die besten Performances, Newcommer und Regisseur (haha) ausgezeichnet, sondern auch der cleverste Titel einer Porno-Produktion. Mein Favorit wäre ja mit einigem Abstand „Occupy My Ass“ gewesen, aber der Preis ging an „Does This Dick Make My Ass Look Big?“

Meine gute Freundin Kate hat da übrigens ‘nen Vortrag über ihre Porno-in-den-neuen-Medien-Studien gehalten und auf Facebook ein paar Bilder gepostet. Go, Kate! Jedenfalls, Clever Porntitle of the Year, Nominees:

Clever Title of the Year
Asphyxia Heels the World, BurningAngel/Vouyer
Brooklyn Egg Cream on the Roxxx, Seymore Butts/Pure Play
Chocolate Covered Crackers, Black Magic Pictures
Chocolate Yam Yams, Black Storm/Monarchy/Vantage
Does This Dick Make My Ass Look Big?, Vouyer Media
Look Mom, My First Black Penis, Mike Hunt/Juicy
My Wife Caught Me Assfucking Her Mother, Devil’s Film
Nice Shoes, Wanna Fuck?, Electric/Hustler
Occupy My Ass, Bobbi Starr/Evil Angel
She Plays a Mean Rusty Trombone!, Lethal Hardcore/Pulse
Show Me Your Shithole, B. Pumper/Freaky Empire
Somebody Shave Me, Zero Tolerance Entertainment
The Spit and the Speculum, Mike Adriano/Evil Angel
Subtle Fragrance of Her Private Parts, Swank/Pure Play
We Vow to Bang Black Beotches, Kelly Madison/Juicy

The Adult Video News Award Nominees for 2013’s Clever Title of the Year Are Really All Winners

07 Feb 10:40

Ben Frost paints on Packaging

by René

Ben Frost hatte ich vor drei Ewigkeiten hier ein paar mal verlinkt, mittlerweile hat er sich ‘nen Tumblr angeschafft, auf dem er aktuelle Arbeiten postet. Ich mag seine Popart auf Verpackungen ja sehr gerne.

house-of-1000-crackers-acrylic-on-ritz naturally-flavored-honey-nut-cheerios-acrylic-on Uxq804lMQ6 UxTHoylMc-
07 Feb 10:39

Actual Facebook Graph Searches

by René

Actual Facebook Graph Searches: „Compiled by @tomscott. Don’t worry, we’ll all be used to this in a few weeks’ time.“

07 Feb 10:38

Japanese Elderly should „hurry up and die“

by René

Ansage vom japanischen Finanzminister: Die Rentner sollen sich mit dem Sterben doch mal bitte ein bisschen beeilen. Ich wiederhole mich: Als Politiker braucht man echt ein besonderes Talent für Arschlochism.

Japan’s new government is barely a month old, and already one of its most senior members has insulted tens of millions of voters by suggesting that the elderly are an unnecessary drain on the country’s finances.

Taro Aso, the finance minister, said on Monday that the elderly should be allowed to “hurry up and die” to relieve pressure on the state to pay for their medical care.

Let elderly people ‘hurry up and die’, says Japanese minister

07 Feb 10:36

Deal with it

by René

07 Feb 10:24

Blowtooth: International Smuggling-Game for Android-Phones

by René

Ein Game für Android-Phones, in dem man an Checkpoints der Flughäfen virtuelle „Schmuggelware“ mit den Handys der anderen Mitreisenden durch die Security bringen muss. Ben Kirman schreibt mir: „Perhaps unwisely, I made a game for Android that can only be played in real airport security. During checkin, you drop illicit contraband on unknowing fellow passengers, then attempt to find it again after passing through security.“

Blowtooth is the game in which you smuggle illegal contraband through REAL airport security in REAL airports. Upon reaching an airport, you will hide your illicit goods on unsuspecting passers-by. After clearing security, you must find and reclaim those goods from your fellow travelers, who will more than likely have dispersed to various gates and shops throughout the airport. The game is designed to only work if you are inside a real airport.

Of course, no real drugs are necessarily involved. The game runs on Android mobile devices and polls a player’s vicinity for nearby devices that are advertising their presence using Bluetooth (such as phones, tablets, laptops and guns). There is no interaction with these devices, or their owners, and any reference data is anonymised.

Blowtooth is a playful critique of the simultaneously thrilling and banal experience of international air travel. The game plays on the absurd relationship between ordinary people and the oppressive security theatre in which they are forced to perform, and aims to provoke players to think more deeply about their experience of that environment.

Welcome to Blowtooth – The Game of International Smuggling! (Thanx Ben!)

07 Feb 10:23

Internet GIF’d

by René

07 Feb 10:20

Sewn Mouths: Los Anegados – The Unwanted

by René

Julie Turkewitz schreibt im Atlantic über Leo Ramirez‘ Fotoserie über Los Anegados, die sich mit Gang-Bossen in den überbelegten Gefängnissen von Venezuela angelegt haben und sich daraufhin die Münder zunähen.

At the lowest end of the prison power structure are los anegados — the unwanted ones — prisoners who have angered the pranes or allies of the pranes, on the inside or outside, and fear for their lives. And so, in an act of desperation, they stitch their mouths shut. Within the country’s prisons there is an unspoken, but religiously followed, agreement among inmates: When one sews his lips, no one can kill him.

Los anegados use what they can to bind their lips: thread, plastic, shoe strings. And the act speaks not only to the pranes, but also to the government, “They use the macabre, Dante-esque symbol of sewing their mouths to pressure the government to move them to a prison where their lives are not in danger,” said Ramírez. “I’m not sure any of them managed to get a transfer.”

Why Are Venezuelan Prisoners Sewing Their Mouths Shut? (via Criminal Wisdom)

05 Feb 09:57

Meet MeCam, The $50 Surveillance Drone That Will Watch You Wherever You Go Next Year

by Ian Chant

Have you always wanted a tiny robot that hovers behind you, documenting your every move, but don’t want to spend thousands of dollars on a lumbering UAV or a quadcopter so noisy it can’t join you inside fancy restaurants? Of course you have, because it’s pretty clearly the coolest part of living in a self-inflicted Orwellian police state. Well, your long wait is getting close to over with the announcement of MeCam, a tiny, digital camera-equipped quadcopter that will follow you around and upload pictures and videos of you to Facebook, YouTube, Twitter, and more in real time. Even better? The MeCam is small enough to fit in the palm of your hand, and should retail for just $50 when it comes to market early next year, meaning you’ll never again have to worry about living an unexamined life.

With a planned launch date of early 2014, the MeCam is one ambitious little piece of equipment from tech company Always Innovating, which plans to license the tech to other companies rather than produce the copters itself. Equipped with a small digital camera, the copter won’t need a remote control, but will instead respond to voice commands. It can also be set in a simple ‘follow mode,’ to keep pace with — and tabs on — its owner. Like a puppy, if puppies hovered over your shoulder making an eerie buzzing noise and recording everything you do.

It’s makers brag that the little copter carries 14 sensors to help keep it stable and maintain smooth shooting so your life doesn’t always look like a scene from some bad found footage horror movie, and boasts a sound filter that keeps audio clear as well. If all of that sounds like a lot to ask for an MSRP of $49… well, it is, but I guess we’ll all find out together if those promises are too good to be true.

Here’s the thing that worries us about MeCam — once this hits the market, we’re going to be about thirty seconds from someone hacking it to follow other people, or do surveillance of certain areas, or any number of things that are less wholesome than simply having a personal surveillance drone follow you around and upload your daily activities to the Internet for public consumption, which, let’s face it, isn’t all that wholesome to begin with.

That said, the technology to do those things is already out there, and it’s not necessarily a bad thing — in fact, it’s already helping fathers keep track of their sons on the way to the bus stop, which worries us less than the pretty much inevitable tracking your ex-girlfriend work to which it will no doubt be put. While MeCam will make those sorts of shenanigans cheaper and easier to get up to, you can’t really fault it for that, as it is… kind of the whole point of technological progress. Don’t hate the game of cheap drones, in other words — be creeped out by the legions of skeeves who will no doubt be putting MeCams and homebrewed devices like it to use in unseemly fashion.

That said, if we could get one of these that also had access to the Internet and headlines from the future, maybe it wouldn’t be all bad? Oh, also, it should talk to us in the voice of Billy West.

(via IEEE Spectrum, image courtesy of MeCam)

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05 Feb 09:46

Sounds From Google Glass Will Vibrate Your Skull

by Glen Tickle

Listening to traditional headphones is so completely 2012. That’s why Google Glass wants to rattle your brain cage directly by sending vibrations straight through your skull instead of using normal speakers. The technology is called “bone conduction” and we saw a few examples of it at CES this year. It’s not exactly new, but it hasn’t caught on in the mainstream just yet. Looks like Google is going to cram as much technology people aren’t used to using into Glass as they can.

The first experimental version of Google Glass is expected later this year, and new documents filed with U.S. regulators show Google’s intention to take advantage of bone conduction. The biggest difference between bone conduction and traditional headphones is that by vibrating the skull directly, wearers don’t need to cram tiny speakers into their ear-holes, leaving them open to listen to the world around them.

Personally, I love that my earbuds block out the sound from the world around me. I hate the sounds of the world around me, but Google is probably focusing more of safety than they are in my ability to drown out the sounds of other people on the train. Leaving the user’s ears unobstructed means they’re more aware of their surroundings, and less likely to get hurt by something easily avoided if they heard it coming, like a train or a monster. That fits in with the overall concept of a device that integrates itself into the world surrounding the user, instead of distracting them from it the way most devices do.

Google Glass is already something some people are wary of. In the comment threads of other articles I’ve written on the project, a few people have written it off completely as a useless fad. Personally, I’m excited for it, and see great potential in it, but understand that some people are uncomfortable with something that is radically different than anything they’ve seen before.

Developers who have registered with Google and paid the hefty $1,500 fee will get their hands on Google Glass later this year, while the rest of us will have to wait until at least 2014 for a commercial version.

(via Business Insider, image via zuguldia)

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04 Feb 13:24

Brussel (Gedichtendag 2013)

by Els Keytsman

Voor deze 14de gedichtendag met als thema muziek, plaats ik graag dit gedicht van Alhadi Adam Agalbeldour. Hij is vluchteling en vrijwilliger bij het Info- en soeppunt van Vluchtelingenwerk Vlaanderen. Dit mooie gedicht, een lied voor Brussel als het ware, bracht hij een week geleden op het dankfeest in het Arabisch voor de vrijwilligers een week geleden. Zijn mooie stem, en het warme en zangerige declameren,  moet je er dus zelf bij denken.

شمعة فى قلب بروكسل
من وراء الشواطئ البعيدة
ومن أسداف المدن الرمادية
ومن أحشاء الجزر المرجانية الجميلة
ومن رائحة السافانا الآزلية
ومن زخات مطر خط الاستواء
ومن ألسنة رياح الصحراء  و الجبال الزرق
من همس الأمهات الحنونات
تدفقت الأحلام فى قلب كل أنسان
كشلالات المرمرالمسكونة بالمشاعر و القبلات العميقة
لتمتزج بزخات مطر بروكسل المعبقة بعطر القصائد الذهبية
المغسولة بضوء الشموع و الفرح الاسطورى
لتفوح رائحة قوس قزح بلطف
ملقحة  بدموع مليون فنان
آه…. ما أحلى الحياة عندما نكون عنوان للمطر و الأناشيد
وما أروع البكاء عندما نكتشف اننا مواطنون
نشكل هذا البحر بفخر كسلسلة لنجيمات فريدة
كل شيئ هنا رائع مدهش مغسول  بالاغنيات الجميلة
كل شيئ مرسوم  بالدفئ  و المواويل
وجميعا نحن هنا سمفونيات وفيثارة
نهطل سحابة للأنتماء الواحد
للحب و الأحلام .. و الشجون و التآملات .. للفرح و العناق
لضوء ارواحنا الشفافة
آه.. ما أروع أن يولد الجميع بلون الشمس
بنكهة الياسمين وخيال الأفق  الساحر
برائحة السهول الرخوة و الرحيق الخرافى
ومن وراء كلماتنا الخالدة نحن ترنيمة للفرح الأبدى
نحن كتاب من القلب للقلب
تفسرنا كل لغات العالم أنشودة  فى قلب بروكسل
23-06  2011
بروكسل متحف الفنون الجميلة
البوذار

Licht in het hart van Brussel, deze stad

Vanachter
de verte van wijdse kusten,
de donkerte van grijsgrauwe steden
de diepte van prachtige koraaleilanden
de verre eindeloze savanne en haar geuren
de stortregens van de evenaar
de tongen van de woestijnwinden
de blauwe bergen

Vanuit
het gefluister van liefdevolle moeders
storten dromen
zich in het hart van elke mens
als marmeren watervallen
gezwollen door oprechte gevoelens
en tere kussen

Ze vermengen zich
met de neerslag,
hier in deze stad
geurend naar gouden verdichtsels
gewassen in het licht van kaarsen
oplichtend door een fabelachtige blijdschap
een zachte regenbooggeur verspreidend
versmeltend met de tranen van zovele kunstenaars

Ah, hoe zoet is het leven
wanneer we één worden met die regens
en de hymnen van deze stad
hoe schitterend klinkt het geween
wanneer we ontdekken dat wij de stedelingen zijn, hier in deze stad

We vormen met trots een zee
van aaneengeregen oplichtende sterretjes
alles hier
is schitterend en wonderbaar
deinend in schone liederen
is getekend met warmte en liefde
is een symfonie van liefde en dromen
wij regenen neer
van het plafond
tot een unieke weergaloze trouwhartigheid
is een snarenspel
van heimwee en mijmeringen
van vreugde en omhelzingen
van transparante zielenlicht

Ah, hoe schitterend
dat iedereen wordt geboren
met de kleur van de zon
met de smaak van jasmijn
met de verbeelding van een betoverende horizon
met de geur van zachte vlakten
met de nectar van bijgeloof

En van achter onze tijdloze woorden
zijn wij
een lofzang van de eeuwige vreugde
één boek van hart tot hart
wij weerklinken alle talen
als een hooglied
in het hart van deze stad

(vertaling Stijn Van Asch / bewerking Ilse Wijnen)


18 Jan 16:18

Japan Plans To Replace Fukushima Reactor With World’s Largest Wind Farm

by Ian Chant

After the 2011 disaster that shut down it’s main reactor, Japan’s Fukushima nuclear plant simply isn’t going to make a comeback. Like several other reactors across the island nation, it’s been shuttered and will likely remain so, leaving authorities there with a problem — how do they continue to provide the energy that the plant once produced and that residents in the region depend on? This week, we got their answer: rather than reopening the nuclear plant, Japan is looking off their shores, announcing plans for a massive wind farm ten miles off the coast of the area affected by the Fukushima reactor meltdown.

The planned project would host 143 turbines, making it the largest wind farm in the world. Together, those turbines will generate an estimated 1 gigawatt of power, or almos twice the energy produced by today’s largest wind farm near Suffolk in the United Kingdom.

That’s a lot of energy, but well short of the 4.7 gigawatts of power formerly produced by the nuclear plant, which was one of the most powerful in the world. Just where Fukushima prefecture — which has announced that it intends to be completely energy self-sufficient by 2040 — thinks it can make up that energy shortfall remains to be seen.

One thing seems certain, though — nuclear energy isn’t making its return to Japan anytime in the near future as the country continues to recover from the toll taken by the Fukushima meltdown and works to find its way forward to an energy future that doesn’t rely on either nuclear energy or expensive, environmentally damaging imported fossil fuels.

(via UPI, image via flickr)

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18 Jan 15:59

Back on the Radar of the Day

Back on the Radar of the Day

The 1990s rap duo Kris Kross announced that they are reuniting for concert next month in honor of the record label So So Def Recordings in Atlanta, GA.

Submitted by: Unknown (via Gawker)

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18 Jan 15:58

Why don’t people in power do the right thing – supply, demand or collective action problem? And what do we do about it?

by Duncan

My last few days have been dominated by conversations around ‘convening and brokering’, including an exchange between assorted ODI wonks and a meetings Africabunch of NGOs on the findings of the Africa Power and Politics Programme, and a ‘webinar’ (ugh), with our Latin American staff on the nature of ‘leverage’ (a closely associated development fuzzword). Yesterday I set out the best example of this approach that I’ve found to date, the Tajikistan water and sanitation network. Today it’s some overall conclusions from the various discussions.

David Booth from ODI described the question he is trying to answer as ‘why don’t people in power do the right thing?’ He thinks aid agencies (both official and NGOs) have moved from thinking that the answer is building capacity in government (supply side) to strengthening the voice of citizens to demand better services (demand side), but argues that both approaches are wrong.

The mistake, he argues is seeing power as a zero sum game, whereas often the barrier to progress is better seen as a collective action problem: ‘doing the right thing involves cooperating with others and people aren’t prepared to take risks and bear the costs of working with others, unless they believe that everyone else will do so too.’

That requires a different approach, getting everyone into a room to build trust and find joint solutions to a common problem.

ODI argues that on the ground, a lot of aid agencies realize this, and are doing it already. But the official line (often driven by donors’ funding decisions) is that they are exclusively building demand-side accountability, so their reports and narrative airbrush out all that ‘collaborationist’ activity with local government officials, politicians etc. That’s a problem because it inhibits their ability to share experiences and learn how to do things better.

As evidence, ODI cited an evaluation it did for Plan of a ‘Community Scorecards’ project in Malawi that was proving remarkably successful. The programme design was classic demand-side: entitlements, rights, holding duty bearers to account etc. But when ODI investigated, they found that reality involved brokering local-level reform processes and working with local officials to help them raise concerns with central government. Solutions included communities agreeing to help with school construction. In agriculture, problems included fertilizer subsidies being traded on secondary markets, sometimes for sex. The project brokered contacts with police and the courts to help sort it out. Little of this appeared in the official project narrative.

All well and good, but Oxfam’s Jo Rowlands argued that the NGOs’ approach is different to ODI’s in one important aspect. While ODI argues for ‘going with the grain’ of existing institutions and traditions, the NGOs are more normative – going with the grain but at the same time seeking to change it, through a kind of ‘affirmative action convening and brokering’ that ensures the voices of previously excluded groups are at the table. So for example, our work with protection committees in the DRC involves helping them build trust with local government and ‘armed actors’, but also ensuring the committees have an even gender balance, which has transformed the confidence and self-perception of many women participants.

  would they get more results from a meeting?

would they get more results from a meeting?

This kind of transformative approach usually involves something additional to just convening and brokering (Tajikistan is a bit of an exception). In livelihoods it involves investing in technical assistance and building organizational capacity so that smallholder assocations can benefit from value chains. In women’s rights it involves building ‘power within’ as well as brokering the kinds of discussions the protection committees have in the DRC. Elsewhere it may involve running pilot programmes to demonstrate new solutions around which the discussions can take place.

Which leads me to a key dividing line between two kinds of convening and brokering. The more innovative kind involves acknowledging that there is a problem, but admitting that we don’t have a solution, and want to get everyone in the room to try and find one. That’s the Tajikistan model, but is still something of a rarity (NGOs often think they know the answer, even when they don’t….). That is very different from merely trying to build an alliance around a predetermined policy demand (a much more common approach).

Which all left some important questions and dilemmas hanging in the air. They include:

  • Given that social change often takes place through a cycle of cooperation and conflict (see diag), when and where is the ‘problem-solving approach’conflict-cooperation-cycle the best answer? Just during the kiss and make up phase, or more generally?
  • Is this approach easier in some sectors (children, water) than others (taxation, livelihoods)? Or is it easier in service delivery work (more pragmatic) than influencing (more normative)?
  • ODI argues that the trick is to pick the moments when the stars are aligned for some kind of collective action breakthrough, but how do you recognize such moments, apart from in hindsight (not a lot of use for practitioners)?
  • What kinds of people are good at this, and do they work for aid agencies? In my experience, lovers of ambiguity, policy entrepreneurs willing to take risks, and networkers happy to talk to people they disagree with or even dislike are in pretty short supply in the aid world
  • David Booth argues that ‘meetings are of the essence’, but what distinguishes useful convening-type meetings from pointless NGO gabfests. (JAM – Just Another Meeting)?
  • Which brings us to the role of donors. To what extent can they cope with the uncertainty over attribution and the long timescales involved in this kind of work? How do we take them with us?

Finally, we agreed to ask for your help. David Booth reckons we need a good snappy name for this new approach – open-minded on solutions, trust-building, convening and brokering, problem-solving etc. Any ideas?

And since ODI is funky and digital these days, here’s my 3 minute download, which they filmed straight after the meeting

 

17 Jan 16:35

To Hell with Interactivity!

by René

Einer der besten Artikel über Webdesign und UX steht – auf The Onion.

Tired of being bombarded with constant requests to share content on social media, bestow ratings, leave comments, and generally “join in on the discussion,” the nation’s Internet users demanded substantially less interactivity this week. […] “All I want is to go to a website, enjoy it for the time I’ve decided to spend there, and then move on with my life,” he continued. “Is that so much to ask?”

As part of their demands, Internet users from around the country appealed for a drastic reduction in interactive lists, polls, and pop-up slideshows. Sources also called for an end to the badges that some websites award for “checking in” to physical locations, citing the fact that they ostensibly have no meaning, are dumb, and nobody cares about them.

Internet Users Demand Less Interactivity – ‘We Just Want To Visit Websites And Look At Them,’ Users Say

17 Jan 10:52

Google Maps Quashes Rumors That They’re a Bunch of Remorseless Donkey Killers

by Steven Romano

Google was in the news yet again this past Monday when the internet community bore witness to a disturbing picture of what appeared to be a donkey that was struck by a roving Google Maps Street View car in the Kweneng region of Botswana, Africa. News of the donkey-related vehicular homicide spread quickly and caused quite the uproar on various social media outlets — despite what others may say, the Internet truly does care for the welfare of pack animals — demanding that Google stop hiding behind its money piles and explain itself. Caving from the heat brought down on them, the company made a statement today to deny any and all allegations that they’re a bunch of monstrous donkey slayers.

Google Maps’ official blog was quick to post a series of photographic evidence this morning in the hope to discourage people from congregating outside their corporate offices clamoring for the rights and dignity of donkeys, which is also how the storming of the Bastille began — we think. In addition to these photos, the company provided a statement from Group Product Manager Kei Kawai:

Because of the way our 360-degree imagery is put together, it looked to some that our car had been involved in an unseemly hit and run, leaving the humble beast stranded in the road.

As our imagery below shows, the donkey was lying in the path – perhaps enjoying a dust bath – before moving safely aside as our car drove past. I’m pleased to confirm the donkey is alive and well.

They say a picture is worth a thousand words, but these four — if photographs had a functioning voice box capable of human speech — would say, “Nothing to worry about, folks, the donkey’s alive and well and apparently enjoys rolling around in road filth.”

People viewing Google Maps had erroneously assumed that the Street View car was driving away from the alleged side-swiped beast when, according to Google, closer inspection shows that the vehicle is approaching the donkey wallowing in dust.

Seeing as how its little moment of ‘me time’ was obstructing traffic, the donkey — we assume reluctantly — cut its dust bath short and allowed the passing Street View car to drive onward unhindered.

So it appears that the only heinous crime Google Maps is really guilty of is ruining this donkey’s day, which is probably a venial sin at worst.

(Google Maps via The Next Web, image via bagsgroove)

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16 Jan 13:21

Research Shows Pruney Fingers Are an Evolutionary Advantage, Still Gross to Look At

by Steven Romano

Among other things our pedantic mothers warned us about when playing around in a swimming pool, getting pruney fingers from staying in the water too long was one of them, as though having one’s fingertips resemble tiny geriatric faces was a terminal disease. It’s a common experience nearly every human being on the planet has shared and yet science has never quite determined the purpose of this wrinkly phenomenon — until now. Once thought to have been the swelling of the outer layers of skin caused from extended submersion, a research team from the Institute of Neuroscience at Newcastle University has discovered that pruney digits are an evolutionary response of the nervous system which allows us to get a grip on wet surfaces.

The research team had arrived at this conclusion by studying a group of volunteers willing to get their fingertips all pruney and gross for the sake of scientific discovery. After a select few of the subjects had their hands immersed in warm water for 30 minutes, they were asked to pick up wet marbles and lead fishing weights with their wrinkly fingers. Unlike the control group who didn’t take the plunge, those that had their fingers soaked were noted as being quicker and experienced less difficulty transferring the drenched objects into containers.

Tom Smulders, the research team leader, concluded that pruney fingers do in fact give one traction in wet conditions, comparing this to the function treads serve car tires. Nowadays, there really isn’t a need for wrinkled fingers — thanks to modern convenience — but in our evolutionary history, it was instrumental when gathering food from bodies of water or wet environments. Smulders said:

This would explain why it happens to both hands and feet, and might have been an adaptation in some primate ancestor well before humans evolved, who might have walked on all fours.

Going by this information, it’s funny to think that we now get pruney fingertips because of a bunch of prehistoric apes with a hankering for some fresh seafood. That’s what we get for having such discerning taste.

(via Phys.org, image via savanna-smiles)

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16 Jan 09:20

eBay Auction of the Day

eBay Auction of the Day

An eBay auction for a yellow skater dress has gone viral after the unnamed seller from Oxfordshire, UK accidentally uploaded a nude photo of herself to the auction site, leading to bids as high as £150,000 (the asking price was £15.99) and the Twitter hashtag #ebayyellowskaterdress trending in the UK region.

Submitted by: Unknown (via Gawker)

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16 Jan 09:18

OkCupid Introduces New Crazy Blind Date App, Declares Love is Blind Day

by Glen Tickle

Online dating has really taken off over the last few years, and more and more people are meeting each other through the Internet. What if you want the convenience of online dating without any of the hassle of looking at profiles, or learning anything about people before you meet them? Maybe you could try OkCupid’s new Crazy Blind Date app. It pairs single people up automatically without giving you any information about the other person besides a scrambled photo. To celebrate the launch, they’ve even removed all the photos of users on their website, calling today Love is Blind Day.

If you want to try the app, it’s available now for iOS and Android. Users create a basic profile that includes just their name, age, sexual orientation, what nights they’re free, and specific places they might like to go on dates. The profiles also include a photograph, but it gets scrambled like one of those children’s sliding tile puzzles before it gets sent to the person you’re meeting. It’s meant to keep things from getting too superficial, but anyone with basic photo editing skills can pretty easily see what you look like.

This really takes all the effort out of online dating and puts a person’s trust completely in the algorithm behind OkCupid. That’s exactly what OkCupid co-founder and CEO Sam Yagan says people want. He said, “If you ask women what they dislike most about online dating, it’s that it’s too much work. People want instant gratification. It’s the trajectory of the industry.”

This isn’t the first time Yagan has tried launching a service like this. In 2007 there was a Web and text-based version of Crazy Blind Date, but it didn’t really take off. Whether the service itself will work is yet to be seen, but having it available as a free smartphone app instead of the Web and text-based model should certainly make it easier to use.

Yagan also pointed out that the average OkCupid user will look at 20 profiles each session, and calls the profiles viewed that don’t lead to dates as “lost possibilities.” Crazy Blind Date cuts the back-and-forth that a lot of users go through to set up dates, but to see if this is something OkCupid users are interested in, I asked a few of them.

OkCupid user and comedian Liz Russo told me, “Yeah, I would not do that. You might as well just say hi to someone in public and ask them out for coffee or sex in the bathroom. You need an app for that?” She also said that most of the matches OkCupid makes for her aren’t with anyone she would pick for herself, so she’s not ready to give her faith over completely to the OkCupid computers.

Another friend and user who wished to remain anonymous said he wasn’t sure if he would be giving Crazy Blind Date a try or not. He admitted to having a sliver of shallowness, and would like to know what he’s getting into before going on a blind date with someone.

Crazy Blind Date does seem much more convenient than winnowing down a list of profiles, but there’s a trade-off, because it may be easier to get a date, but that date could very well be with someone whose profile you would have ignored. It depends on how much faith you’re willing to put in OkCupid.

(via The New York Times, image via quickmeme)

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16 Jan 09:17

Facebook's Graph Could Be OkCupid, Yelp, and LinkedIn, All in One

by Rebecca J. Rosen

Facebook unveils a powerful new search tool that will put the wisdom of your friends at your fingertips.

Screenshot-PeopleWhoLikeThingsILike copy.jpg

Facebook

Perhaps you've posted on Facebook something like this: "Anyone have any good book recommendations?" Or maybe you've said, "Hey, I'm looking for a good primary care physician, anyone know of one?" Or, "I'm going to London!!! Hit me up with your recommendations."

I've seen hundreds of these posts, and the reason is that, even with all the power of Google, there are just some things that your friends know better. They know your tastes, your budget, and they might have experiences that are similar to your own. And, if they use Facebook a lot, they might have at some point "liked" a book they read, recommended a doctor, or checked in at a pub in London. That data is there, but without a search tool, it was hard to access. That's why people posted these queries, hoping people would see them and respond.

Today, Facebook unveiled a new search tool they are calling Graph, and with Graph, they are hoping they can make much better use of all that data people have been leaving on Facebook for years. At a demonstration at Facebook's headquarters, Facebookers showed off just what this new tool can do, answering queries ranging from the simple to the complex, all falling under the four categories of "people, photos, places, and interests." (These are culled from the tweets and liveblogs of people at the event, with particular debt to The Verge).

  • Movies my friends like -- which pulls up, as you would expect, movies your friends have liked, but gives it some nice contextual information showing additionally other similar movies
  • Photos of my friends in 2009
  • Friends who live in Palo Alto who like Game of Thrones
  • "People named Chris who are friends of Lars and went to Stanford." (Perfect for finding someone you recently met through another friend)
  • Friends of friends who are single men in San Francisco
  • NASA Ames employees who are friends of Facebook employees (Powerful for corporate recruiters)
  • Photos of my friends taken in national parks
  • Photos of my friends before 1990
  • TV shows liked by doctors, engineers, etc.
  • Music liked by people who like Mitt Romney (for the curious: Johnny Cash, The Beatles, Nickelback, and Pink Floyd, whereas music liked by people who like Obama gets you Alicia Keys, Rihanna, Michael Jackson, Will Smith, Adele, and Madonna)
  • Languages my friends speak. Similarly: Friends who speak Arabic -- useful if you need a quick translation of something.
  • Alicia Keys, Rihanna, Michael Jackson, Will Smith, Adele, Madonna
  • Dentists liked by my friends
  • Restaurants liked by my Indian friends
  • Restaurants in San Francisco liked by Culinary Institute of America graduates
  • Bars in Dublin liked by people who live in Dublin
  • Countries my friends have visited
  • Photos of Berlin, Germany, in 1989.

Pretty freaking useful, no? And, lest you ever search for anything not supplied in the annals of Facebook, Facebook will provide Bing's search results. As Farhad Manjoo tweeted, "Oh man. This is huge for Bing. And bad for Google."

The privacy concerns for a tool like this are huge, and Facebook knows that. Graph will not ever show someone information that was not already available to them, through the sharing of a friend or because someone else had shared it publicly. So in that regard, Graph respects the privacy intentions of its users. But many people rely (foolishly, as Graph shows) on their Facebook past languishing in the depths of their timelines with no way to see it besides endless scrolling. Graph ends that luxury, and some people may respond by tightening up their privacy settings, though Facebook has recently upgraded its privacy controls to make doing so much easier.

During the presentation, Zuckerberg repeatedly emphasized that Graph is a beta roll-out for now, and it will become available to users bit by bit over the next few weeks and months. At the moment the product is not monetized -- no ads -- but the draw for advertisers is obvious and monetization cannot be too far off.

The queries people post to Facebook searching for book, pub, and doctor recommendations are evidence that the demand is there for a service like this. But whether Graph succeeds or stumbles, as Google's attempt to answer that demand did, lies in the execution. For Google+ the problem was getting the data. Facebook has the data, it just hasn't had a way for its users to access it. If Graph is easy to use and finds the information you want, Facebook will have just provided a powerful matchmaking, recruiting, and restaurant-recommending tool all in one -- exactly what Google tried to do with plus, this time with the actual warm human bodies to supply the answers it demands.



16 Jan 09:15

for discarding unwanted items in good condition, in the hope...

by simoniddol


for discarding unwanted items in good condition, in the hope that they’ll be picked up by a new owner instead of ending up at a landfill site

15 Jan 16:22

The Reviews Are In!

by admin

Zero Dark Thirty doesn’t judge the actions of the CIA and the Navy Seals. Instead, it lets the audience decide for itself. Many have decided that they hate Muslims and are happy to watch them die. Here are just a few responses I found on Twitter.

Hatred



Fear

Pride

Justified


 

Women’s Empowerment


15 Jan 16:12

Anonymous Hacks MIT Site in Wake of Aaron Swartz’s Suicide [UPDATED]

by Glen Tickle

The hacker group Anonymous defaced pages of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) site just hours after the school announced it would launch a full investigation into their role in Aaron Swartz’s death. Swartz committed suicide on Friday while facing millions of dollars in fines and up to 50 years in prison for stealing documents from MIT and academic database JSTOR. In response, Anonymous has publicly called for the reform of computer crime laws and prosecution, and they’ve been busy the last few days petitioning the White House to classify DDoS attacks as a form of protest while also engaging in this hack of MIT.

Swartz publicly admitted to a history of depression, but it is heavily speculated that the aggressive prosecution against him played a role in his suicide. Anonymous made that accusation clear, citing MIT’s implicit support of the Justice Department’s case against as a factor in Swartz’s suicide in a message posted to the school’s hacked site:

Whether or not the government contributed to his suicide, the government’s prosecution of Swartz was a grotesque miscarriage of justice, a distorted and perverse shadow of the justice that Aaron died fighting for — freeing the publicly-funded scientific literature from a publishing system that makes it inaccessible to most of those who paid for it — enabling the collective betterment of the world through the facilitation of sharing — an ideal that we should all support.

In other sections of the pages they hacked, Anonymous also called for reform of computer crime laws, copyright, and intellectual property laws. They say they want to return these laws to a principle of “common good to the many, rather than private gain to the few.”

The group also wants to see more commitment to a free and uncensored Internet, and more recognition of “the oppression and injustices heaped daily by certain persons and institutions of authority upon anyone who dares to stand up and be counted for their beliefs.” Which unfortunately reads like them asking the government to stop being mean to them, but also isn’t unreasonable by any means.

UPDATE: To Department of Justice has filed today to officially drop the charges against Aaron Swartz. This is standard practice when someone they’re prosecuting dies. (via All Things D)

(via CNET, image via Wikipedia)

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14 Jan 10:05

Forgotten Songs part of Angel Place and Ash Street Sydney...

by simoniddol






Forgotten Songs part of Angel Place and Ash Street Sydney Laneway Upgrades

Sydney, Australia

Landscape ArchitectsASPECT Studios

Photographer: Simon Wood

“The City of Sydney is undergoing a transformation which, through good design, is about uplifting the everyday experience of people. These new laneway projects provide a high quality public domain, and integrated, site specific public art which brings joy and a unique reading of history to these new city spaces…” 

14 Jan 10:03

vegetarian animals

by simoniddol


vegetarian animals

11 Dec 18:01

As Promised, 4chan Pranksters Spell Out "KJU Gas Chamber" on TIME's Person of the Year Online Poll

As Promised, 4chan Pranksters Spell Out "KJU Gas Chamber" on TIME's Person of the Year Online Poll

A group of pranksters affiliated with 4chan have successfully managed to pull off their polling scheme to fix the North Korean leader Kim Jong Un as the TIME Magazine's Person of the Year, according to the Daily Dot.

Submitted by: Unknown (via The Daily Dot)

Tagged: poll , kim jong-un , time , 4chan , prank Share on Facebook
10 Dec 17:05

Time to Pay Up: Google Apps No Longer a Free Service for New Businesses

by Steven Romano

With such a miniscule job market in these harsh economic times, many people are combating their unemployment rut by founding their own businesses and becoming their own boss. As such, these bold entrepreneurs rely heavily on the small business services offered by companies such as Google. For years, businesses have taken advantage of the basic service packages over premium versions as a cost-cutting measure, but due to the expansive growth of these small businesses and their needs, Google is eliminating their Google Apps basic package entirely, with the premium becoming the standard — annual payments and all. This is one detrimental move sure to leave prospective customers searching for more cost-effective solutions.

The only good news to this otherwise shattering development is that small businesses currently using the basic version of Google Apps will be exempt from this change in service options, although new businesses will be forced to sign up for the premium option and the accompanying $50 charge per user, per year. To defend what can easily be taken as an unpopular decision, the official Google Enterprise Blog posted an explanation:

When we launched the premium business version we kept our free, basic version as well. Both businesses and individuals signed up for this version, but time has shown that in practice, the experience isn’t quite right for either group. Businesses quickly outgrow the basic version and want things like 24/7 customer support and larger inboxes. Similarly, consumers often have to wait to get new features while we make them business-ready.

This announcement of a mandatory premium package comes after Google’s constant changing of the number of users that could use the previously free service, with the recent cap having been shaved down to 10. All of this may have an impact on customer relations, especially when it means the competition can sweep in and offer service packages at more reasonable prices. Competitors such as Microsoft’s Office 365 Small Business service and the free Windows Live Domains — sans the bells and whistles of the former — are just two of the services that could get the edge over Google when it comes to penny-pinching small businesses.

Google Apps will remain a free service for individual, non-business users, as well as universities and schools, but that still doesn’t do anything to remedy the dissatisfaction over sweeping changes made in small business management.

(Google Enterprise Blog via The Verge, image via methodshop.com)

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10 Dec 16:59

Street Art of the Day

Street Art of the Day

"Sum Times" by Aakash Nihalani

Submitted by: Unknown (via Eye Scream Sunday)

Tagged: Street Art , tape art , graffiti Share on Facebook