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04 Sep 08:32

K224: Flyktingkrisen

by rasmus

Senaste två veckorna har jag inte lyckats blogga. Visst hade jag dussintals tilltänkta bloggposter på lut till K-serien, om diverse små och stora kriser eller krisidéer. Jag roades så smått av tanken på att ignorera alla de finanskriser som skapade krisrubriker i nyhetspressen. Men sen överskuggades alltsammans av en kris vars verklighetsnivå är så olidligt mycket högre än alla andra kriser som berör Europa just nu: flyktingkrisen.

Alla är åtminstone överens om en sak: att det är fråga om en kris. Oavsett om krisens orsak förläggs inom eller utanför Europa, oavsett att vissa ser den akuta lösningen i öppnare eller slutnare gränser, oavsett om man alls förstår kriser i termer av en möjlig “lösning”, oavsett vilket intresse man har av att sätta flyktingkrisen i ett längre tidsperspektiv, bakåt eller framåt.

Att människor på flykt dör på Medelhavet är ju inget nytt. Jag minns demonstrationerna mot “Fort Europa” kring senaste sekelskiftet. Jag minns år 2003, när jag jobbade som journalist på Arbetaren och åkte till Marocko för att skriva en tidningsbilaga om migration. Sedan de åren har jag liksom tagit för givet att Medelhavet är en massgrav. Jag har semestrat på Kanarieöarna, tittat mot horisonten och inte kunnat ignorera tanken att tusentals människor riskerat livet just i detta hav, i ett desperat försök att komma till Europa. “Någon gång längsmed vägen hamnade jag i en uppgiven acceptans”, som Hanna Höie skriver.
Den lågintensiva katastrofen har varit så självklar att det tog ett tag innan det sjönk in i mig att 2015 års flyktingkris verkligen är en kris i ordets mer akuta mening. Om så bara för att det nu rör sig om större “volymer”. Dödsvolymer.

För att kunna tänka flyktingkrisen i Medelhavet som en världshistorisk händelse, måste vi datera den. Så när började den? Kanske kan vi peka på katastrofen utanför Lampedusa i oktober 2013. Kanske på de bägge skeppsbrotten vid Libyen och Malta i september 2014. Men troligare är kanske att vi pekar på mitten av april 2015 som start på den verkligt akuta flyktingkrisen. Där dog en bra bit över tusen båtflyktingar i två skeppsbrott, varpå listan bara fortsatte att fyllas på. En sådan historieskrivning har för tillfället kristalliserat sig på Wikipedia, där artikeln “European migrant crisis” skapades just den 15 april 2015.
Hur pågående kriser återspeglas på Wikipedia väcker ofta intressanta frågor om krisernas enhet och mångfald, om när en serie incidenter har eskalerat till en nivå där de börjar uppfattas som en pågående kris.

Under sensommaren förändrades bilden av flyktingkrisen, från att ha utspelat sig till havs, vid en yttre gräns, till Europas inre gränser. Framför allt har vi fått höra om ett tillspetsat läge vid den fransk-brittiska gränsen, samt den serbisk-ungerska.

Vi noterar startdatumen för Wikipediasidorna “Migrants around Calais” (4 juli) “Calais jungle” (11 juli) och “Calais migrant crisis” (21 augusti) – men kan också läsa där om hur flyktinglägren har vuxit i uppemot tjugo år, ända sedan kanaltunneln byggdes. Det som möjligen är nytt sedan hösten 2014 är att större grupper av desperata flyktingar har försökt sig på gemensamma stormningar av farkoster på väg mot Storbritannien.
Samma sommar inleddes bygget av en ungersk gränsbarriär mot Serbien. Liknande barriärer har byggts på andra håll i Balkan och Makedonien har utlyst undantagstillstånd. Sensommarens händelser visar väl snarare hur Europas gränser inte längre kan ritas som linjer, utan är närvarande överallt. På tågstationen i Budapest och på Österrikes motorvägar.

Just nu i Ungern: människor blir märkta med nummer på sina armar, spärras in i överfulla tågvagnar och körs till läger.

Den här bloggposten har absolut inget nytt att tillföra, ingenting viktigt att säga. Den är bara ett tafatt försök att logga vad som sker, medan det sker, i förhoppning att kanske hitta vissa samband inom ramen för en bloggserie. Att grunna på frågan om de olika sätten att förstå flyktingkrisens koppling till andra kriser. (Vilket f.ö. är raka motsatsen till vad den allmänt hyllade optimistgurun Hans Rosling sysslar med, men det ska jag tiga om nu.)
I det större perspektivet tänker jag fortfarande att vi måste förstå de växande flyktingströmmarna som uttryck för en världskris, alltså “det fortskridande sönderfallet av stater i det kapitalistiska världssystemets periferi och semiperiferi” (Tomasz Konicz). Vi bör försöka att hålla fast en tanke på kopplingen till klimatkrisen och dess verkningar t.ex. i Syrien och Rumänien. Men det är sannerligen inte lätt att konkretisera detta samband, som ofta fastnar på en väldigt övergripande nivå.

Att flyktingkrisen redan är oskiljbar från EU:s politiska kris är numera uppenbart. Men vilka möjligheter finns att tänka sambandet mellan finans- och flyktingkriserna?

Tidigare under året har vi sett en del motbjudande exempel på hur flyktingar spelats ut mot greker. Det har givetvis förekommit i tysk debatt. Ett svenskt exempel gavs i artikeln “Dags att slänga ut Grekland” (Dagens Industri, 2015-01-27). Tidningens s.k. analytiker Henrik Mitelman pläderade för att EU inte borde “skicka biståndspengar till Aten” när det “dör båtflyktingar varje dag i Medelhavet”. Jag är emellertid inte helt övertygad om att denna retorik har någonting att göra med solidaritet.
Vi kan kontrastera det med ett citat som cirkulerat senaste dagarna:

Kunde vi rädda bankerna så kan vi rädda flyktingarna.

Citatet tillskrivs nu Angela Merkel. Dagens Industri skrev t.ex. på torsdagen, i en intervju med Antonia Ax:son Johnson:

Det var Tysklands förbundskansler Angela Merkel som gjorde det redan berömda uttalandet: ”Kunde vi rädda bankerna så kan vi rädda flyktingarna.”
”Hon klev fram och tog ledarskapet och gjorde klart att det här är en situation som Europa kan hantera”, säger Antonia Ax:son Johnson.

Ja, på torsdagen uttalade rentav utrikesminister Margot Wallström:

– Jag kan ju bara hålla med Merkel när hon säger att kunde vi rädda bankerna då ska vi kunna rädda flyktingarna.

Ja, vem kan inte hålla med? Problemet är bara att Angela Merkel inte har sagt så. Källkritiken har kollapsat totalt i den svenska ekokammaren.

Vad som finns är en rubrik på Bloomberg: “If We Rescued the Banks We Can Save Refugees, Merkel Says. En rubrik, inte ett citat. En ganska vinklad rubrik. Själva citatet lyder som följer:

“German thoroughness is great, but right now we need German flexibility,” she said. “We have many examples where we showed we can respond. Remember the bank rescues. During the international financial crisis, the federal and state governments pushed through the necessary legislation in a matter of days.”

Tyvärr lyckas jag inte ens hitta detta citat i tysk originaltext i något av alla referaten från måndagens presskonferens. Uppenbarligen pratade hon mycket om flyktingkrisen, tog principiell ställning för asylrätten och mot främlingsfientlighet. Kanske drog hon även någon parallell till den politiska handlingskraft som visats under senaste finanskrisen. Hon verkar alltså mena att det nu krävs en motsvarande handlingskraft i Europa. Men påstod hon verkligen att det överordnade syftet skulle vara att “rädda flyktingar”? Jag vill se källa på det.

”Kunde vi rädda bankerna så kan vi rädda flyktingarna” är likväl en stark paroll. Den blir inte mindre stark av att Angela Markel inte har uttalat den.

31 Aug 11:58

The most loved and hated TV finales, charted

by Rob Beschizza

shows

A simple methdology: compare the IMDB rating of the final episode vs the show's average. Dragonball Z and Dexter share bottom spot, but who wins?

31 Aug 08:24

Före Rosa Parks

by Hexmaster
Här är fyra personer som man sällan hör talas om.

In 1942, he boarded a bus in Louisville, bound for Nashville, and sat in the second row. A number of drivers asked him to move to the back, but Rustin refused. The bus was stopped by police 13 miles north of Nashville and Rustin was arrested. He was beaten and taken to the police station, but was released uncharged.
- Wikipedia: Baryard Rustin

In 1944, the 27-year-old Irene Morgan was traveling to Baltimore, Maryland when she was arrested and jailed in Virginia for refusing to sit in a segregated section on an interstate Greyhound bus. Although interstate transportation was supposed to be desegregated, the state enforced segregated seating within its borders.
The bus driver stopped in Middlesex County, Virginia, and summoned the sheriff. When he tried to arrest Morgan, she tore up the arrest warrant, kicked the sheriff in the groin, and fought with the deputy who tried to pull her off the bus. She was convicted of violating state law for segregation on buses and other public transportation. Morgan pled guilty to the charge of resisting arrest and was fined $100. However, she refused the guilty plea for violating Virginia's segregation law.
- Wikipedia: Irene Morgan

When Sarah Keys departed her WAC post in Fort Dix, New Jersey on the evening of July 31, 1952 for her home in the town of Washington, North Carolina, she boarded an integrated bus and transferred without incident in Washington, D.C. to a Carolina Trailways vehicle, taking the fifth seat from the front in the white section. When the bus pulled into the town of Roanoke Rapids, North Carolina, however, a new driver took the wheel and demanded that she comply with the carrier's Jim Crow regulation by moving to the so-called "colored section" in the back of the bus so that a white Marine could occupy her seat. Keys refused to move, whereupon the driver emptied the bus, directed the other passengers to another vehicle, and barred Keys from boarding it. An altercation ensued and Keys was arrested, charged with disorderly conduct, jailed incommunicado overnight, then convicted of the disorderly conduct charge and fined $25.
- Wikipedia: Keys v. Carolina Coach Co

On March 2, 1955, she was the first person arrested for resisting bus segregation in Montgomery, Alabama, preceding the more publicized Rosa Parks incident by nine months.
- Wikipedia: Claudette Colvin

Även om alla händelserna är intressanta fastnade jag för Sarah Keys; här är en artikel om när hon, efter över tre år, hade vunnit sitt mål (klicka för större version).

The commission ruled in her case against the Carolina Coach Company of Raleigh, N. C. It ruled that separating the races in passenger conveyances operating in interstate commerce "subjects passengers to unjust discrimination, and undue and unreasonable prejudice and disadvantage" in violation of the Interstate Commerce Act.
[...]
The N. A. A. C. P., [National Association for the Advancement of Colored People] commenting on the ruling, said yesterday "we consider it a most significant step in our efforts to eradicate compulsory racial segregation from all phases of public life in America."
- Winner Acclaims Decision by I. C. C., New York Times, 27 november 1955

Fyra dagar senare tog Rosa Parks bussen i Montgomery, Alabama.

28 Aug 07:35

Almost None of the Women in the Ashley Madison Database Ever...







Almost None of the Women in the Ashley Madison Database Ever Used the Site - Gizmodo

What I discovered was that the world of Ashley Madison was a far more dystopian place than anyone had realized. This isn’t a debauched wonderland of men cheating on their wives. It isn’t even a sadscape of 31 million men competing to attract those 5.5 million women in the database. Instead, it’s like a science fictional future where every woman on Earth is dead, and some Dilbert-like engineer has replaced them with badly-designed robots.

28 Aug 07:12

"You are also going to die, Sir"

by Simon Winter

Jag har tidigare dokumenterat ett samtal från telefonspammarna som kallar sig "Window technical department". De har ringt mig många gånger, men idag var första gången på mitt nya nummer. Kanske köper de listor över folk som skaffar ny telefon. Det måste vara en mega-industri.

När de ringer brukar jag säga att jag har försökt nå dem länge, och skälla på dem för att de inte har rintgt tidigare, och fråga efter deras chef.

Sist slutade det med en svordom från uppringarens sida. Dagens uppringare var mer rutinerad, och försökte ganska snart börja på sitt manus: "Vi har fått signaler från din dator, du måste fixa den", typ.

Efter att jag hade avbrutit honom ett antal gånger sa han "Your computer is going to die, Sir". Jag invände och sa att min dator redan var död, och att den aldrig hade levat. Efter några repliker hörde jag hur han tvekade i andra änden, sa "You are also going to die, Sir" och la på.

Jag undrar hur jag hade reagerat om det hade varit någon i Sverige som ringde upp. Eller om de gjorde hembesök med samma koncept. Hade det gått att stoppa lättare om det var i Sverige, eller inom EU?

/Simon

28 Aug 06:49

Quebec Is Now the Only Place In Canada Where Streaming Music Doesn't Suck

by Matthew Braga

Easily the biggest barrier to streaming music on mobile phones is data—chiefly, a lack of data, thanks in no small part to Canada's extremely expensive cellphone plans.

It should come as a relief to music lovers, then, that Videotron, a telecom provider based in the province of Quebec, is no longer charging for data used by streaming services such as Rdio, Spotify and Google Music with select plans.

The service, called Unlimited Music, will be offered free of charge to Videotron customers who are subscribed to mobile plans with at least 2 GB of data, "or to an Internet + Mobile package with at least 1 GB of data," according to a statement released on Thursday.

Videotron's Unlimited Music service is similar to a service offered by T-Mobile in the United States, which, at present, exempts 33 distinct streaming services from counting towards subscribers' data plans. (T-Mobile even excludes services such as BandCamp and SoundCloud, which are favoured by independent artists.)

Notably, Apple Music was not mentioned in the Videotron release, although, the company stated that "In the coming weeks and months, other popular services will be added to the list."

The practice of exempting certain services from counting towards data caps hasn't come without controversy, however. Although zero rating traffic, as the practice is called, isn't new—telecom companies have delivered their IPTV services this way for years—some say the practice is ultimately "anti-competitive, patronizing, and counter-productive" and a violation of net neutrality rules.

But hey, at least I can listen to the new Destroyer album on repeat free of charge now, right?

28 Aug 06:46

Nextwave Is A Bloody Brilliant Comic Book That Everyone Should Read

by James Whitbrook

While researching my article on Monica Rambeau’s unfortunate history, I naturally re-read one of her standout series: Warren Ellis and Stuart Immonen’s Nextwave: Agents of HATE. It’s a comic I already held dear to my heart, but it re-affirmed what I previously thought: It’s the most joyful comic Marvel have ever released.http://io9.com/the-unfortunat...

Read more...










28 Aug 06:42

”Arbetsgivaren tog problemen på allvar”

by Jonas Söderström

Nu börjar det komma resultat av arbetet för en bättre digital arbetsmiljö. I Upplands Väsby har fackförbundet Vision och kommunen börjat komma till rätta med system som stressar medarbetarna.
– En seger under förra året var att jag hade fått signaler om att människor som jobbade med biståndshandläggning hade stora problem med ett visst IT-system som skapade stress, berättar Maria Lindeberg, som är huvudskyddsombud för Vision i Upplands Väsby, stolt om sina framgångar.
- Till slut så kände jag att ”det här går inte längre” och begärde en genomlysning av arbetsmiljön för de som arbetade i det systemet.
klipp från vision.se
– Arbetsgivaren tog det på allvar och gjorde en genomlysning som visade på flera brister i systemet. Vissa brister fick man lov att åtgärda direkt och man lovade ha en uppföljning nu i juni och det hade man. Den visade att man hade åtgärdat några problem men det finns hel del kvar att jobba med.
– Det är en seger för oss för vi tog till de möjligheter som vi har och eftersom arbetsgivaren lyssnade så att vi slapp att gå vidare till Arbetsmiljöverket.
– I min värld är detta segrar, säger Maria och skrattar.
Läs mer på Fina fackliga framgångar i Upplands Väsby (Vision.se, 18 aug 2015)

Vision är ett av de fackförbund som komit längst i att få igång arbetet med den digitala arbetsmiljön. Visions sajt innehåller en särskild sektion om digital arbetsmiljö, med bland annat instruktioner för hur man gör en IT-rond.

26 Aug 10:51

A 21st-Century Migrant’s Essentials: Food, Shelter, Smartphone...



A 21st-Century Migrant’s Essentials: Food, Shelter, Smartphone - The New York Times

BELGRADE, Serbia — The tens of thousands of migrants who have flooded into the Balkans in recent weeks need food, water and shelter, just like the millions displaced by war the world over. But there is also one other thing they swear they cannot live without: a smartphone charging station. 

 “Every time I go to a new country, I buy a SIM card and activate the Internet and download the map to locate myself,” Osama Aljasem, a 32-year-old music teacher from Deir al-Zour, Syria, explained as he sat on a broken park bench in Belgrade, staring at his smartphone and plotting his next move into northern Europe. 

“I would never have been able to arrive at my destination without my smartphone,” he added. “I get stressed out when the battery even starts to get low.”

25 Aug 13:07

Samsung fridges can leak your Gmail logins

by Cory Doctorow

Researchers at Pen Test Partners took up the challenge to hack a smart fridge at Defcon's IoT Village, and discovered that they could man-in-the-middle your Google login credentials from Samsung fridges.

The fridges use your Google login to display your calendar. They incorrectly implement SSL: when presented with an incorrect certificate, they fail to validate it. This lets someone on your network -- say, someone who's broken your wifi password -- to get your Google login. With more work, the researchers believe they could overwrite the fridge's firmware and the mobile app that lets you control it.

Whilst the fridge implements SSL, it FAILS to validate SSL certificates, thereby enabling man-in-the-middle attacks against most connections. This includes those made to Google's servers to download Gmail calendar information for the on-screen display.

So, MITM the victim’s fridge from next door, or on the road outside and you can potentially steal their Google credentials.

The notable exception to the rule above is when the terminal connects to the update server - we were able to isolate the URL https://www.samsungotn.net which is the same used by TVs, etc. We generated a set of certificates with the exact same contents as those on the real website (fake server cert + fake CA signing cert) in the hope that the validation was weak but it failed.

The terminal must have a copy of the CA and is making sure that the server's cert is signed against that one. We can't hack this without access to the file system where we could replace the CA it is validating against. Long story short we couldn't intercept communications between the fridge terminal and the update server.

Hacking DefCon 23’s IoT Village Samsung fridge

(via Techdirt)

24 Aug 12:19

Millionaire fined after using children's gravestones to build a patio

by Andrea James
2B77BF9300000578-3202107-image-a-1_1439912176039

Today in 1% villainy: UK property developer Kim Davies broke a bunch of laws when he used children's gravestones from a derelict church he owned to build an illegal patio at a historic home.

From The Daily Mail:

Newport Crown Court heard how planners were horrified when they saw the 'decorative stone plaques' had been used as part of a gaudy £1m makeover to the Grade II-listed home, turning it into a 'palace for an Iron Curtain dictator'. One of the 150-year-old gravestones was even engraved with the names of three brothers and a sister who all died while under the age of four.

Not only was this in violation of planning laws for Llanwenarth House, a property where Cecil Frances Alexander once penned All Things Bright And Beautiful, it seems like the plot to every other horror film.

Millionaire property developer who used children's gravestones to build a patio at £2.2million mansion which inspired All Things Bright And Beautiful is ordered to pay £300,000

24 Aug 11:01

K222: Cancer som metafor för invandring

by rasmus

Tredje lördagen i augusti 2015. Uppsalas kommunalråd Stefan Hanna (C) sitter och sörplar kräftor, tar sig kanske en snaps eller två, njuter i fulla drag. När kräftskivan är slut sätter han sig för att blogga. Om sin kärlek till familjen, om hur gott det är med kräftor och så lite politik på det. Inlägget som postas klockan 02.34 får den lagom underfundiga rubriken “Kräfta i systemet“.

Kräfta är också ett ord som används för cancer. När en cancer tagit fäste i vår kropp tar den steg för steg över vår kropp om vi inte lyckas stoppa och neutralisera den. Vissa cancerförlopp går skrämmande fort och har mycket dåliga prognoser. Vissa sprider sig sakta men även de leder mot sönderfall och en tidigare död om den inte botas.

Sveriges misslyckade integrationspolitik och en extremt ansträngd migrationspolitik kan jämföras med en cancer. Sverige är sjukt, allvarligt sjukt, och problemen har tillåtits att sprida sig och påverkar allt fler delar av samhället på ett socialt och ekonomiskt ohållbart sätt. Om inte rikspolitikerna mycket snart lyckas ordinera reformer som kan stoppa det sönderfall som är en konsekvens av nuvarande misslyckade politik, vad tror du händer då? /…/
Den svenska patienten är allvarligt sjuk! Det är dags för ansvarstagande partier att bota patienten! Skrota DÖ! Sparka ut MP från regeringen! Forma nya allianser som kan genomföra nödvändiga reformer som ökar chansen att patienten inom 10 år kan vara i en god och demokratisk form igen. Det brådskar!

Sjukdom som metafor är namnet på en essä som Susan Sontag skrev år 1978, medan hon själv behandlades för bröstcancer. Hon kritiserar den utbredda synen på cancer “inte bara som en sjukdom utan också som en demonisk fiende”, vilket i förlängningen “gör cancer till en sjukdom som inte bara är dödlig utan också skamlig”.
Något av denna skam kan anas även i beskrivningen av Sverige som en cancerpatient. “Sverigevännerna” tröttnar aldrig på att beskriva Sverige som ett försvagat och därför föraktligt land, som rentav förtjänar att dö om det inte rycker sig i kragen och fördriver sin sjukdom. Och inte vilken sjukdom som helst, utan en sjukdom som präglas av närvaron av någonting främmande, en parasit som förefaller mer livskraftig än sitt värddjur. Här finns flera lager av skam.

Epidemiska sjukdomar har länge använts som en metafor för att beskriva samhälleligt sönderfall. Redan kring år 1500 finns dokumenterat hur adjektivet “förpestad” på engelska användes i betydelsen “skadlig för religionen, moralen eller den allmänna ordningen”. Under 1800-talet blev syfilis en allt mer populär metafor för att beskriva det urbana industrisamhället. Adolf Hitler var smått besatt av tanken på den “syfilisering av folkkroppen” som han menade att judarna på något vis låg bakom.

Susan Sontag skriver i sin essä att cancer och syfilis har likheter som metaforer, men att cancermetaforen låter sig utsträckas mycket längre. Karakteristiskt är hur cancern omges av en militär terminologi. Cancercellerna “invaderar” och “koloniserar”. Tumören som inte elimineras av kroppens eget “försvar” måste “bombarderas” med strålar och kemiska stridsmedel. Civila offer är ofrånkomliga.

Ett extremt exempel på hur cancermetaforen låter sig utsträckas ges just av Hitler i Min kamp, i en passage som skyller Tysklands krigsförlust på “bristande viljekraft” hos tyskarna. Felet var att tyskarna resonerade så här: “Jag handlar endast, när jag kan räkna med femtioen procents säkerhet för framgång.” I stället, menar Hitler, krävs inställningen hos “en kräftsjuk, som i annat fall går en säker död till mötes”. Cancerpatienten “behöver inte tänka på femtioen procent, innan han vågar underkasta sig en operation. Om denna så med endast en halv procents sannolikhet talar för tillfrisknande, skall en modig man ändå våga den”.

Tidigare i denna bloggserie har vi berört cancermetaforen i ett inlägg om den malthusianska traditionen, där teorier om överbefolkning stundtals har slagit över i tanken på mänskligheten som cancersvulst.

Vad utgör då Sveriges cancersvulst, enligt kommunalrådet Stefan Hanna? I sin nattliga bloggpost skrev hand aldrig rakt ut att “invandrarna” är en cancer som måste avlägsnas. Han skrev att Sveriges “migrationspolitik kan jämföras med en cancer”. Men det råder ändå inget tvivel om vad som insinueras när han, i en plädering för minskat flyktingmottagande, väljer just cancermetaforen, framför alla andra möjliga metaforer.

21 Aug 09:28

När Fi fick 18 procent

by Hexmaster
Under lördagen publicerade Aftonbladet en artikel om att Feministiskt initiativ fick 18 procent i en mätning av Yougov. Det var fel.
Undersökningsföretaget Yougov beklagar att man fullständigt blandat ihop siffrorna. Fi får 4 procent, inte 18 som man först gick ut med.
- Fel i artikeln om Fi:s opinionssiffror, Aftonbladet 17 maj 2014

Så fick, till slut, det av Metro flitigt anlitade YouGov äntligen den uppmärksamhet det länge gjort sig förtjänt av.

För det är ett opinionsinstitut som använder sig av en webbpanel som vem som helst kan komma med i. Där man får poäng för varje undersökning man är med i, poäng som kan användas som delbetalning för hörlurar, väskor och köksknivar i deras Poängshop. Som på sin Om Yougov-sida uteslutande riktar sig mot presumtiva panelmedlemmar ...
Som medlem i en panel svarar du på undersökningar som handlar om många olika ämnen. Du får undersökningarna via e-post, och det är alltid frivilligt att delta. Alla som är över 15 år får gå med i YouGov-panelen, som i dag består av ungefär 40 000 svenskar.
- Om YouGov

... Men inte skriver ett jota om hur man viktar om denna med all sannolikhet rejält obalanserade målgrupp till att utgöra en rättvisande representation av svenska folket.

Å andra sidan — det ska inte glömmas bort — var YouGov tillsammans med United Minds de opinionsundersökarna som inför valet 2014 bäst lyckades att förutsäga Sverigedemokraternas framgång i riksdagen.

Wikipedia: Opinionsmätningar inför riksdagsvalet i Sverige 2014

Återstår att se vilken grund den senast rapporterade framgången har i verkligheten. Oavsett lär Metro behålla dem:
Vi gör bedömningen att undersökningen har ett stort värde
- Metro: "Bra att det blir debatt", Dagens Media 20 augusti 2015

Den bedömningen torde vara korrekt, eftersom uppmärksamhet är värdefullt. Huruvida undersökningen är sann, falsk eller mittemellan är irrelevant.

18 Aug 07:25

How Buenos Aires Unclogged Its Most Iconic Street

Citisciope

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BUENOS AIRES, Argentina — The postcard image of this proud city is Avenida 9 de Julio, a triumphant boulevard that is by some accounts the widest street in the world. There’s two parts to the picture everyone knows. One is the towering Obelisk commemorating the founding of Buenos Aires. The other is the 20 lanes of traffic commemorating the city’s love of cars.

In the past year, half of that image has changed dramatically. City work crews ripped out four of those traffic lanes in the middle of the roadway. In just seven months, they gave the space entirely to buses and the people who ride them.

Buses used to be stuck in the mix of traffic on 9 de Julio, jostling with with cars, taxis and trucks. Now, buses have their own lanes for 3 km before peeling off into traffic to get to their destinations. More than 200,000 commuters, many of them traveling to or from the suburbs, enjoy a faster ride that also makes a subway transfer obsolete.

"It speaks a lot about a city, to be able to change the thing people are so proud of."

Marcelina Rodríguez is one of them. "This is really good," says Rodríguez, who lives in the suburb of Avellaneda, south of the city, and commutes daily to her work downtown. "It used to take me an hour to reach downtown. Now I can do it in 40 minutes."

Rodríguez says she also appreciates the amenities of the new system, called Metrobus. There are spacious, well-lighted shelters that have seats and a wi-fi connection. There’s also a platform raised to the same level as the bus floor for easy boarding and screens that provide real-time travel information.

Bus-rapid transit systems with features like this are nothing new in South America. In fact, compared with world-renowned systems in Curitiba, Brazil and Bogotá, Colombia, it’s safe to say that Buenos Aires is well behind its neighbors.

But what Buenos Aires did is about as bold as it gets when it comes to making can’t-be-missed statements about what urban mobility means today. The 9 de Julio Metrobus is a sort of transport surgery on the beating heart of the city — similar in ways to what New York City did a few years ago when it shut cars out of parts of Times Square.

"It speaks a lot about a city, to be able to change the thing people are so proud of," says Andrés Fingeret, director of the Argentina office of the Institute for Transportation & Development Policy. The international organization recently gave Buenos Aires its Sustainable Transport Award for 2014.

"Avenida 9 de Julio used to be a monument to cars," says Fingeret. "Now, it's reshaping the city as a monument to people."

'It Benefits Everyone'

The transformation was controversial. The loudest opposition came from groups of architects, city planners, and environmentalists who didn't want to see 1,500 trees and the small green spaces surrounding them removed. (Most of the trees were replanted elsewhere.) Some said the project should be built on the outer edges of the avenue, not in the middle of it.

A view of Avenida 9 de Julio before the bus lanes were put in. (Juanedc/ flickr/ CC)

Critics also argued that the intervention was costly and redundant, since a subway line running below 9 de Julio covers the same route. Some drivers complained that left turns from the roadway would become impossible. And inevitably, the project got swept up in national politics: Mauricio Macri, the mayor of Buenos Aires and the bus route’s champion, is a political opponent of the current president of Argentina.

Now that the bus system is operational, most of the opposition has gone away. That's because it's helped to unclog traffic and reduced travel times for just about everybody traveling through the area. According to Guillermo Dietrich, the city’s undersecretary for transport, travel time is down for buses by 50 percent, for minibuses (private buses that make fewer stops) by 45 percent, and for cars by 20 percent.

"It benefits everyone," says Dietrich, "even those traveling by car." He points out that cars still have ten central lanes to use, plus three exclusive side lanes and a parking bay — and the buses are no longer fighting with them in traffic.

The project cost 195 million Argentine pesos ($25 million U.S.) to build. That was 70 percent over-budget, but also a tiny fraction of what an above-ground or below-ground rail system would have cost. The government also estimates that the streamlining of traffic will reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 5,600 tons per year. That would be the equivalent of taking 4,300 cars off the road for 12 months. This has yet to be measured.

A Pedestrian-Scale Downtown

Just as interesting as what’s happening on 9 de Julio are the changes going on just a few steps away from it.

Buses were re-routed from side streets to the new bus lanes, allowing 100 blocks to become pedestrianized. (Fabrico Di Dio/ ITDP)

Buses used to run on the narrow and busy downtown streets nearby. Now, those buses have been diverted to the exclusive lanes on 9 de Julio. And the city has turned about 100 blocks of those once noisy and polluted roads into either fully pedestrianized streets or pedestrian-priority zones. The latter allow for vehicles but only at speeds of under 10 km/h and with special permits issued only to those who have parking spaces within the zone.

The busiest part of the city is thus becoming a pleasant place to go for a walk. Early in the morning, it’s possible to hear birds singing and the patter of footsteps on pavement.

To create this new pedestrian-friendly environment, the city raised streets up to sidewalk level to create a flat walking surface. Bollards were put up to keep out cars and trash containers were put underground to keep down the stench. To add to the ambiance at night, iconic buildings within the area were lit up with energy-saving LED lamps.

This is all part of an effort to get people to move downtown, close to their workplace. The idea is to add value to the area, create a more active nightlife and variety of tourist attractions. On the new pedestrianized streets, restaurants and bars have put up tables on the sidewalks and night-time activity has greatly increased.

"The downtown is now better from an aesthetic point of view, and it's more comfortable and quieter to walk around," says Darío López, a pedestrian who works in a nearby bank. "I guess this affects people who have cars, but it's good for us."

'More Democracy on the Road'

Dietrich says 90 percent of those who move around the city are pedestrians. But previously, 70 percent of the space downtown was used by cars and buses. Now that distribution has basically been flipped around in the pedestrian-priority zones. The city also has added 130 km of bike lanes.

Mayor Mauricio Macri has been a champion of the Metrobus improvements. (Mauricio Macri/ flickr/ cc)

There is still plenty of space to drive in Buenos Aires. But what’s happening here represents something of a rebalancing between cars and everything else. While car ownership remains an aspiration for many people, the reality is that 65 percent of homes in Buenos Aires and its surrounding areas do not have a car. Some 8 million people commute by bus daily.

"There is more democracy on the road," explains architect Emiliano Espasandin, from the University of Palermo. "The 20th century brought with it the highway boom. The street is now for everyone."

Buenos Aires already had a pretty comprehensive bus system, with good frequencies and 24-hour service. The first step toward improving it with bus rapid transit came three years ago when the first Metrobus line was installed on a corridor away from downtown. That allowed city officials to gain some experience in a less sensitive artery before tackling the bigger challenge that was 9 de Julio.

Since the 9 de Julio project was finished last July, a new bus rapid transit corridor has opened in the south part of the city. Recently the city announced it would extend the system to another four major roads. By 2015, it is expected that 1.2 million passengers will benefit from the Metrobus system.

Dietrich says the incremental approach has been a big lesson from Buenos Aires. It's important to choose the location of an experiment wisely, he says, and to know that each city and even neighborhoods within a city have their own specific characteristics. "This is not copying and pasting," he says. “You have to adapt the idea to each city."

This story originally appeared on Citiscope, an Atlantic partner site.

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18 Aug 07:20

Indiankartor

by Hexmaster
America before colonization... I've never seen this map in my entire 25 years of formal education. Not in one history book or one lesson. This is not a mistake... Representation matters!!! #NativeHistory #BeforeAmerica
- Facebook häromdagen

Vi var bra många som aldrig sett denna karta förut. Det är inte så konstigt eftersom den ritades häromveckan, och framför allt för att kartografen inte hade några anspråk på att vara historiskt korrekt. Tvärtom: Den gjordes som en hypotes, hur nordamerikas indianstammar hade kunnat dela upp kontinenten om den vite mannen aldrig kommit.

Douglas Alan Schepers med bloggen Reinventing Fire fann flera detaljer märkliga. Han gjorde en enkel sökning (läs hur du gör på bloggposten Att hitta bilder) och fann att bilden postats nyligen på supersajten Reddit. Rubriceringen var nog så talande:

"A map where Europe never discovered America"

Så var det med den saken.

Ja, och sedan fick någon syn på kartan, trodde att den var en faktisk beskrivning av läget ca 1500, lade ut den på fejan, varefter den fick hundratusentals delningar. Så som det går.

Även med ytliga kunskaper i ämnet går det att hitta märkligheter och anakronismer. Som att olmekerna är med; de försvann långt före Kristi födelse. Eller att stammar, där många (om än långtifrån alla) var nomader, skulle hålla sig med skarpa gränser. Eller begrepp som empire och federation. Och inte minst att man klumpat ihop de otaliga stammarna till ett fåtal "riktiga" nationer à la Europa.

En riktig indiankarta

Jämför med denna detalj från en riktig karta.

Aaron Carapella har lagt flera år på att göra så kompletta "indiankartor" som möjligt, med korrekta namn och sista placering i fritt skick. Det är inte alltid det lättaste; de har flyttat på sig mer än man kan tro, även före koloniseringen (denna förvisso viktiga process var sannerligen inte den enda som påverkade deras liv innan dess), och dokumentationen är inte alltid av det benhårda slaget. Han har fått med över 600 stammar.

Carapella describes himself as a former "radical youngster" who used to lead protests against Columbus Day observances and supported other Native American causes. He says he now sees his mapmaking as another way to change perceptions in the U.S.

"This isn't really a protest," he explains. "But it's a way to convey the truth in a different way."

- Hansi Lo Wang, The Map Of Native American Tribes You've Never Seen Before, NPR 24 juni 2014

18 Aug 06:57

Here's how Tokyo — the largest city in the world — brilliantly eliminated traffic deaths

tokyo streetShutterstock

When most people think about Tokyo, they probably imagine glitzy neon lights and zero personal space. What they shouldn't imagine, however, are traffic fatalities. Tokyo has practically none of them.

According to a new report on city safety from the global research organization World Resources Institute, traffic fatalities are near rock-bottom for Tokyoites. They occur at a rate of only 1.3 per 100,000 people.

That's incredibly for a city that, by metropolitan area, is the most populated in the world at 36.9 million people.

Fortaleza, Brazil, meanwhile, has 27.2 fatalities per 100,000 people. 

So what's Tokyo's secret?

In conducting its research, WRI found that the safest cities all have several things in common. Generally speaking, traffic fatalities occur least often in compact cities — as opposed to sprawling ones — and they make plenty of accommodations for public transportation, biking and walking lanes, and clearly separate the spaces designed for cars and pedestrians. 

In Tokyo's case, the city has managed to draw many of its citizens near public transportation, such as Shibuya Station. On a given workday, roughly 2.4 million people pass through the station, which is one of the nation's largest. By comparison, Grand Central Terminal in NYC sees an average of 500,000 people daily.

The largest station in Japan, Shinjuku Station, sees some 3.5 million per day. To accommodate the sheer volume of bodies, Tokyo relies on a mind-bogglingly complex railway system. The fact that individual rail lines look like a plate of spaghetti says more about the city's use of organization to serve its inhabitants than its lack there of.

Noise issues aside, centralizing life around public transportation brings immediate benefits. For starters, it removes the need for cars in getting to work — a feat also accomplished by Tokyo's many snaking bike lanes. But it also insulates the city's culture, as much of its nightlife and shopping also happen near these stations.

city sprawlWRI

All this success in infrastructure is made even more impressive considering Japan's motorists are only getting older. 

Japan is known for its longevity. But as Tech Insider recently reported, the country is sitting on a "demographic time bomb." People aren't having kids, which is leading to an aging cohort of drivers who presumably have poorer vision and slower reaction times. 

According to the latest figures, some 40% of the 172 traffic deaths in Tokyo in 2014 were among drivers 65 years and older, but the overall figure continues to decline.

This is due in part to tightening safety restrictions on cars and the gradual improvement in urban planning — not to mention that for each person that takes the train, that marks one fewer person posing a threat on the roadways.

Read the original article on Tech Insider. Follow Tech Insider on Facebook and Twitter. Copyright 2015.

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17 Aug 11:43

K213: Nostalgidebatten

by rasmus

Upptäckte i efterhand att en av sommarens kulturbatter handlat om nostalgins roll i politiken. Vilket betyder kristeori, vilket betyder historiefilosofi. Hur ska vi jämföra Sverige kring år 1980 jämfört med Sverige av i dag?

America Vera-Zavala inledde med en välskriven svanesång över den tid då hennes familj kom till Sverige och folkhemmets jämlikhetssträvanden nådde sin kulmen. “Det var som en saga”, skriver hon. En saga som började falla samman “någonstans runt åren då Palme mördades”, för snart 30 år sedan. “Och jag skulle gärna, tillsammans med andra, gråta en skvätt över det nedlagda folkhemmet och över oss – de identitetslösa svenskarna.”

Hon pläderade inte för att använda nostalgin för politisk mobilisering. Där fanns ingen förhoppning, som det fanns hos Tony Judt, om att socialdemokratin ska vinna stöd av nya generationer genom att våga vara nostalgisk över forna framsteg. America Vera-Zavala verkade snarare tala om behovet av en sorgeprocess för att kunna gå vidare.
Ytterst syftar analysen till att förklara radikalhögerns hastiga framryckningar i Sverige (och dess inflytande över regeringsmakten i våra nordiska grannländer). Här tror jag hon träffar rätt i sin analys:

mitt fosterland är det magiska Sverige som vi kom till. Men om det landet inte längre finns, vem är jag då?
Kanske känner många ursvenskar likadant och kanske är det därför /…/ rut-avdraget, tiggarna och det fria skolvalet kan dominera samhällsdebatten år efter år på ett så oproportionerligt sätt. De skär rakt in i frågan om vilka vi är. Det handlar om vår identitet, den svenska självbilden.

Med andra ord handlar det om att bearbeta känslan av en kris. Om denna kris inte får bearbetas kollektivt, kommer den att projiceras på yttre hotbilder. Ungefär så tolkar jag America Vera-Zavala.

Detta provocerade den partitrogna sossen Katrine Marçal som på Aftonbladets ledarsida förkastade “vänsterns nostalgi”. Nostalgin är enligt hennes mening förkastlig eftersom den längtar tillbaka till en förflutenhet som aldrig har existerat på riktigt, utan är en bild som vi har skapat i efterhand.

“Nostalgi som politisk livskraft är livsfarlig”, fastslog ett liberalt ledarcirkulär. Enligt slutklämmen bör politiker inte bara ignorera nostalgin, utan bör aktivt bekämpa nostalgiska känslor där de kommer till ytan. Politiken “måste hantera dagsaktuella utmaningar för att kunna minimera nostalgin.”

Katrine Marçal utgick alltså, i likhet med många liberaler, från att nostalgin riktar sig mot ett förflutet tillstånd, det man brukar kalla för en drömd guldålder. Men måste det vara så? Nej. Politisk nostalgi kan också bestå i en “längtan till en svunnen framtidstro” – vilket snart påpekades av Ingvar Persson på samma ledarsida:

Det växte. Utvecklingen gick framåt, och den skulle fortsätta att gå framåt. Nostalgi, inte till en svunnen tid men till en svunnen framtidstro. Inte till något statiskt, utan tvärtom till en tro på utvecklingen, politiken och jämlikheten.

På liknande vis pekade historikern Kjell Östberg på hur det långa 1970-talets Sverige är värt respekt, inte för att det var någon idyll, men som ett årtionde av stora, snabba och djärva framsteg.
Historiska faktauppgifter får olika betydelse i olika berättelser. Å ena sidan Marçal som skriver på 1970-talets minuskonto att homosexualitet klassades som en sjukdom, å andra sidan Östberg som påpekar att det var på 1970-talet som sjukdomsklassningen började ifrågasättas.

* * *

Ett axplock beskrivningar – positiva och negativa – av Sverige kring 1980:

America Vera-Zavala, i den inledande artikeln på DN:s kultursida:

I konungariket Sverige rådde fred och frihet, i över hundra år hade befolkningen varit besparade kollektiva minnen av våld och övergrepp. Alla medborgare hade ett arbete, lagstadgad semester och tillhörde ett fackförbund. Kroppen och tänderna kontrollerades och en sjukdom kunde inte leda till ekonomisk tragedi. Barnen gick i skolan – alla barn – oavsett om föräldrarna var rika eller fattiga.

DN:s ledarsida svarade med framstegssiffror:

Sverige 2015 är så mycket bättre än 1979.
Enligt snart sagt varje sätt att mäta är nu en bättre tid att leva i än då. Vår BNP per capita, den vanligaste indikatorn för välstånd, är mer än dubbelt så hög 2015 än vad den var 1979. Medellivslängden, då under 75 för män och en bit över för kvinnor, är nu mer än 80

Även de liberala landsortstidningarna tog samtiden i försvar mot nostalgikernas angrepp:

Att leva i Sverige på 2010-talet är att skörda frukterna av generationers slit och hårda arbete. Medelklassen är friare och friskare än någonsin. Bilarna är säkrare, kosten sundare, informationsflödet snabbare.

Katrine Marçal skrev i sitt fördömande av “vänsterns nostalgi”:

I verkligheten var 1970-talets svenska sagoland förstås en tid då post till kvinnor adresserades till deras män, homosexualitet klassades som en mentalsjukdom och både näringsliv och rike styrdes av en ännu mindre elit än i dag. /…/ Televerket förbjöd rosa telefoner och många hushåll hade varken varmvatten eller badrum. DDR-Sverige som komikerduon Filip och Fredrik kärleksfullt har benämnt sitt uppväxtland har hade onekligen sina sidor.

Rosa telefoner! Ärligt talat? Här kunde Göran Greider svara med en fullträff:

När någon råkar säga att det var bättre förr vaknar den liberala framstegstankens alla profeter till liv och börjar räkna upp samtliga fasor som existerade för trettio år sedan, som exempelvis att Televerket förbjöd rosa telefoner. (De tycker att det är intressantare än att ett bolagiserat Telia på en avreglerad marknad numera kan muta sig fram med miljarder bland Kaukasiens diktaturer.)

Greiders lista över saker som blivit sämre i Sverige är också intressant:

För i vissa avseenden var Sverige definitivt ett bättre land för trettio år sedan. Idag har ett extremhögerparti snart tjugo procent av väljarna – på sjuttiotalet fanns det knappt någon organiserad rasism alls. Idag orsakar Sverige ett större ekologiskt fotavtryck i världen än för en generation sedan – trots allt miljöprat är den svenska ekonomin en värre miljöbov i våra dagar än på sjuttiotalet. Idag ligger arbetslösheten stadigt på runt åtta procent – det vill säga två eller tre gånger så högt som under efterkrigstiden. Idag är Sverige ett av de länder där ojämlikheten ökar snabbast – fram till början av åttiotalet minskade den år för år. Idag är den svenska a-kassan en av de sämsta i Europa – för en generation sedan kunde en löntagare känna sig betydligt tryggare om arbetslöshet hotade.

* * *

Johan Norberg väljer att tala om vädret, i syfte att psykologisera den politiska nostalgin. Vårt eget minne priviligerar de soligaste sommardagarna och de vitaste julaftnarna, så till den grad att vi förvånas över de väderförhållanden som är statistiskt normala. Han kopplar detta till en tendens att idealisera 1950-talet som finns, menar Johan Norberg, både hos högern och vänstern. Eller åtminstone hos den generation som växte upp på 1950-talet. Och det kan nog stämma, men finns det inte en skillnad mellan nostalgin över ett “statiskt” 1950-tal och över ett “dynamiskt” 1970-tal?

Det går inte så lätt att vifta bort Göran Greiders vassa karakteristik av “den liberala framstegstankens alla profeter”; dessa är “vår tids små hegelianer”, fast i en dogm om nutidens överlägsenhet, att i princip allt var sämre förr.

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17 Aug 06:42

Billiga priser

by Hexmaster
Kan man säga billiga priser? Svaret är ja, men det kan råda delade meningar om varför. Uttrycker är ju onekligen en kontamination av låga priser och billiga varor (e.d.) om man tänker sig ordet billig i sin vanliga betydelse "lågprissatt". Men användningen brukar försvaras med att ordet också har en äldre betydelse "skälig, rimlig".
- Gösta Åberg, Handbok i svenska (W&W 2007)
...Uttrycket billiga priser, som många uppfattar som felaktigt. Även detta uttryck är emellertid, som Molde visar, fullt logiskt om man förutsätter att billig här har den sällsynta, på gränsen till obsoleta, betydelsen 'rimlig'. Men, frågar man sig, hur många språkhistoriskt oskyldiga svenskar uppfattar uttrycket billiga priser på samma sätt som Molde? Alltså, om 99% av de relativt medvetna språkbrukare som över huvud taget reflekterar över uttrycket billiga priser analyserar det som 'lågpris-priser' och inte som 'skäliga priser' och därför känner lätt irritation, så kan man kanske tycka att detta väger lika tungt som det språkhistoriska argumentet? Å andra sidan ska det inte förnekas att det är djupt tillfredsställande när principen om störningsfri kommunikation får stöd av språkhistoriska argument — och så sker nog i det stora flertalet fall.
- Sven-Göran Malmgren, "Mera svenska i dag", recension av Bertil Molde (postumt), Språkvård 3-1998

Med tanke på hur länge och hur mycket begreppet billiga priser användes i svenskan, så är det märkligt att kåren av frivilliga språkpoliser, som ju alltid (säger oavbrutet) framhäver äldre tiders språkbruk som överlägset det moderna på samtliga punkter, fått för sig att det skulle vara något fel på det. Exemplen i collaget ovan sammanställdes snabbt efter några trålningar på de vanliga ställena; någon brist på belägg fanns det inte.

Mer om "en av favoriterna för oss som gillar att besserwissra mot inte helt pålästa språkpoliser":
I sin ursprungliga betydelse är ordet [billig] belagt i svenskan redan på 1500-talet. Betydelsen "lågt pris" fick det enligt SAOB:s och Hellquists samstämmiga mening först på 1800-talet i skriftspråket fast adverbet "billigt" förekommer på 1700-talet säger SAOB. Också i tyskan har ordet "billig" undergått den här betydelseutvecklingen — och när man säger "Er hat den Preis gebilligt" betyder det inte att han har sänkt priset utan att han har godkänt det.
- Östen Dahl, Ganska billigt i DN, Lingvistbloggen den 29 januari 2012

SAOB: BILLIG
11 Aug 07:32

How Vancouver Became One of North America's Most Family-Friendly Cities

If you're a city resident of a certain age—basically, that part of the generational Venn diagram where X and Y overlap—you probably know someone who recently left to start a family. The reasons vary, but in predictable fashion. Not enough room in the apartment. Not enough park space nearby. No dependable public school and no affordable private one. No way to navigate a stroller on the subway that doesn't result in occasional tears of rage.

But are cities fundamentally unsuited to family life, or have they been in such a rush to feed the needs of young singles that they've unwittingly overlooked the procreating part of the population? The Sightline Institute's blog has been running a fantastic series, written by Jennifer Langston, tackling these very questions. All the posts are worth a read, but what caught my eye was one on a North American city that seems to be doing an especially great job luring families: Vancouver.

Downtown Vancouver, in particular, has made a concerted effort to improve living conditions for families, starting back in the early 1990s. Evidently, the policies have paid off. In 2011, downtown Vancouver was home to 5,100 kids under 15—five times more than downtown Seattle, which itself is doing better in this regard than most American cities. This part of Vancouver is also outpacing the city at large, as well as outlying parts of the metro area.

(Sightline Institute)

Let's take a closer look at the policies responsible for this change (most of them described in a set of guidelines for "high-density housing for families with children" adopted by the city in 1992).

Units: For starters, Vancouver required developers to set aside of share of high-density housing units for families—typically 25 percent, according to Langston. That means at least two bedrooms, one of which should have play space for toddlers designed into it. (Oh, and thick, thick walls.) Since families might not want to live on the 16th floor, the city suggested grouping family units closer to street level, often in multilevel townhouse-type structures that form the base of more traditional residential towers. This ground-level clustering makes coming and going easier and gives children peers in neighboring units. 


CityFixer

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Solutions for an Urbanizing World


Buildings: Family-friendly buildings need a few architectural quirks that towers for singles might not: bulk storage space for things like strollers or toys, better nighttime lighting in common areas, corridors that can fit a tricycle. They also need secure, safe play spaces—ideally ones that can be seen from inside the units or from a designated supervision area. The spaces should maximize sunlight and be made to withstand "the rough and tumble of children's play," according to Vancouver's guidelines. You have to love a government document with lines like this: "Opportunities for water and sand play are especially important."

Surrounding areas: Vancouver also realized that not all parts of the city were as family-friendly as others. It instructed developers to choose sites within half a mile of elementary schools, daycare centers, and grocery stores, and within a quarter mile of transit stops. Safe walking routes—ideally separated from high-traffic arterials—were also important. Langston writes that the city went a step further and actually required some developers to build or fund community facilities (such as daycare centers or parks) if none already existed, and even to designate sites for schools.

One former Vancouver planner told Langston that developers might initially balk at such requirements, but that they'd eventually recognize the potential to reach a new market. Indeed, a follow-up study on housing satisfaction among families in the city's False Creek North area found that 96 percent would recommend living there. The conditions aren't family-perfect—the city still has a shortage of schools, space for teenagers has been tougher to create, and questions of affordability linger—but they're definitely family-friendly.

American cities, meanwhile, have some catching up to do. Many have outdated parking, zoning, or land-use policies—as A-P Hurd pointed out here yesterday—that discourage the sort of development found in Vancouver. Writing at his Urbanophile blog earlier this year, Aaron Renn pointed out that the 10 U.S. cities with the lowest share of children under 18 is also a who's who of places otherwise fulfilling progressive urban development programs: San Francisco, D.C., Portland, and Boston, among them.

Using Census data, we reexamined this list by change in population of kids under 15 (not 18) between 2000 and 2012:

(CityLab)

What does this show us? First and foremost, that many major U.S. cities have their work cut out for them if they want to be home to more families. Those that do can't start implementing such policies soon enough. But it's interesting to note that the two cities on this list actually growing their youth population, Seattle and Portland, are also the ones closest to Vancouver. Coincidence? Perhaps. A good place to set the family-friendly compass? Sure seems like it.

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11 Aug 07:31

Chinese mega-manufacturers set up factories in India

by Cory Doctorow


Foxconn is opening a $5B facility in Maharashtra; Huawei just got a green-light for a networking gear factory; Xiaomi already runs a phone assembly plant in Andhra Pradesh that will announcing new products today.

There are enormous economic, political and military resentments between China and India -- the world's two most populous nations. India accuses China of secretly financing the Naxol "Maoist" guerrillas and the two countries have long-simmering border-disputes.

More interesting is what this says about relative wages, labor availability and demographics in China and India. China's manufacturing center have thrived on a seemingly bottomless pool of cheap workers, mostly women from the provinces, who travelled to the Pearl River Delta to work in the factories that supply the world with its manufactured goods.

However, China has a looming demographic crisis, thanks to the "one child" policy that has now run for more than two generations. This, combined with increased longevity, means that the ratio of young, working-aged people to pensioners keeps tilting greywards, meaning that each productive worker is supporting more and more retired, long-living parents, grandparents and even great-grandparents.

Chinese wages have been creeping up for a decade, as the demand for workers increased and the supply stayed static. India's population, on the other hand, has a median age of 27 (to China's 36.7), and a huge supply of desperate workers, including members of "scheduled castes" who face systematic discrimination that keeps their wages low.

The government recently gave security approval to Huawei Technologies’ plans to set up a manufacturing facility for network equipment in the country, though the facility still needs final approval from the ministry of commerce as it is a Chinese company, according to sources close to the matter. India and China have a border dispute.

Foxconn and the government of Maharashtra have entered into a memorandum of understanding to build a large electronics factory in the state with an investment of $5 billion, which would create employment for at least 50,000 people, state chief minister Devendra Fadnavis said after the signing of the agreement at which Foxconn CEO Terry Gou was present.

For the contract maker, India could present an opportunity to build products like smartphones both for the booming local market and for global customers, if it is able to iron out the country’s significant infrastructure bottlenecks.

Foxconn to invest $5B to set up first of up to 12 factories in India [John Ribeiro and Michael Kan/IDG]

(via /.)

11 Aug 06:29

Is This Alphabet Thing All About Google's Tesla Envy?

by Annalee Newitz

Is This Alphabet Thing All About Google's Tesla Envy?

As Silicon Valley struggles to understand the news about Google’s new parent company Alphabet, one thing has become clear. Alphabet is all about highlighting Google’s futuristic and downright nutbar projects. It’s as if Larry Page and Sergey Brin wish they were running Tesla.

After all, Elon Musk’s company gets to do all the cool things like reinvent energy with the Powerwall and electric cars. Plus, its sister company SpaceX is going to freakin’ space. Musk is putting all his cash into futuristic projects, and it’s actually paying off — partly in money, but perhaps more importantly in cultural capital. Everybody thinks Tesla and SpaceX are the future. Google is the present which is already sliding into the past.

But now, Alphabet aims to change all that by focusing on projects with just as much Utopian sizzle as those coming out of the Gigafactory. Life Sciences will create biotechnologies like smart contact lenses to test glucose levels in your tears. Calico will help you live forever. Fiber will transform the nation’s internet infrastructure. Nest will turn your home into the movie Minority Report. Plus, there will be investment groups to pour more money into robot armies and bionic organs and floating cities that broadcast health data. My point is, Alphabet is basically turning Google inside-out, putting all its weird X labs stuff on the outside and all its solid, money-making services and products on the inside.

Advertisement

Is This Alphabet Thing All About Google's Tesla Envy?

In an SEC Filing today, you can see the news about Alphabet becoming a parent to Google, which is now just another Alphabet company alongside outfits like Google X, which will let a robot car drive your 300-year-old body around. The New York Times helpfully breaks down the difference between the old Google and its new parent company:

Is This Alphabet Thing All About Google's Tesla Envy?

All the things you use are there on the right. All the weirdass stuff that you can’t even see, let alone use, is over there on the left. Only Nest even has a product you can buy. And those things on the left are now the meat of this company. Over at Re/code, Kara Swisher nails it:

Thus, the boring and mature stuff that pays for everything else will be watched over by the very stalwart [Sundar] Pichai, while the others get to play more with the business of the future that is much pricier.

This is about shuffling the money around, but it’s also about trying to lay claim to the future. It’s about Google trying to keep up with companies that are going into outer space and redesigning the physical contours of our lives with devices that change infrastructure instead of information. Will Alphabet be cool now that it’s all about living forever instead of search and YouTube?

I guess we’ll find out in the future — at least, the part of it that Alphabet hasn’t already bought.


Contact the author at annalee@gizmodo.com.
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05 Aug 12:32

Drinking Soylent With The Last Of The California War Boys

by Warren Ellis

There are doubtless a ton of hot takes about Soylent founder Rob Rhinehart’s recent detailed statement about his current lifestyle and philosophy.  Everyone’s done jokes about Soylent, including me, so we’ll leave that to the side.  One summation of his new statement would be that he’s living the classic 80s cyberpunk lifestyle – living off a single solar panel and a butane burner, wearing clothes made by subsistence-wage workers in China that he throws away when they get dirty, and writing long, confused philosophical screeds that probably largely make sense only in his head.  It would be both pointless and cruel to go after every single example of choplogic and error.  All that should be taken from his statement is that he treats humanity in much the same way he treats food — as something “rotting.”  The guy’s going to be found living in an old bath in Oakland in five years, and we should only feel pity and concern for his well-being.

Seasteading’s been and gone for the second (third?) time, the secession and Six-State-California guys have been and gone.  It is that time in the cycle where the Libertarian App Future Brothers start living off the grid, buying guns and getting good and weird out there alone in the dark.  I wonder how we’ll look back at this whole period of the last five or ten years.  At how the digital gold rush and the strange pressures of a new, yet accelerated, period of cultural invention cooked a whole new set of mental wounds out of the people swept up in it.  Yes, sure, it gave us sociopaths who prefer humans to be drones and believe that everything is rotting.  But I think, reviewing the era, that we will be sad.  I think we may look back and consider that, one more time, we saw the best minds of our generation destroyed by madness, starving hysterical naked, dragging themselves after an Uber that isn’t actually there because Uber fake most of those little cars you see on the Uber app map.

 

READING: UNDERSTANDING ME, Marshall McLuhan  (UK) (US)

 

05 Aug 08:56

The Instant Urban Legend of the #Karmadillo

by Hexmaster
Heard of the armadillo that "fired back" at it's would-be assassin? Of course you have.

... If it's true? Well, read on.

Here's the earliest description of the episode I've found:
CASS COUNTY, TX (KLTV) —  Cass County Sheriff's officials are investigating an early morning shooting in the Marietta area.
According to officials with the sheriff's department, they are investigating a possible accidental shooting that happened just before 3 a.m., Thursday in the 27,000 block of Highway 77. The man involved told deputies he was shooting at an armadillo and the bullet ricocheted and hit him in the head.
It was reported by local ABC station KLTV on July 30. As it stands, it is obviously a piece of purely local news. Few in Cass County would be interested, and nobody outside.

That is, had not someone interpreted the episode like this: That the bullet had ricocheted off the armadillo. That's the headline the story got when published on kltv.com.

Man injured after bullet ricochets off armadillo

This made all the difference. The episode instantly turned into a top story. It made headlines, was shared and retweeted all over the world, a world that had poor Cecil in fresh memory and fell in love with the idea of an animal that hit back at the hunter. The #Karmadillo was born.

Note that the claim that the bullet bounced off the animal is not in the text but in the headline. Those are usually written by other people than the ones writing the copy.

That the idea resonated with us is more important than exactly how it came to be in the first place. Maybe someone thought about an earlier story, Man Shoots at Armadillo But Accidentally Hits his Mother-in-Law (Time April 14 2015)? Where the bullet, according to the story as found, hit and killed the armadillo, bounced off, hit a fence, bounced again, went through a door and grazed the woman.

Picture unrelated

Fact: Armadillos have excellent protection ... Against predators. A bullet that hits it's tough plates at an angle can bounce, as it did in Georgia, where it also bounced at a second target. Bullets can be deflected by most any material, and bounce around in wild patterns.

But a bullet that hits the target straight on, and is not only stopped but ricochets straight back at the shooter with force? Is there any armour on any animal that could perform that feat?

Certainly not armadillos. Bulletproof they are not.

So what happened in Cass County? I've found a single source that asked the question to the right people:
The bullet did not ricochet off the armadillo, as some outlets [an understatement] have reported. [Chief Deputy Roy] Barker said the man told police the bullet from his .38 caliber pistol ricocheted off a rock and struck him in the jaw, grazing him.
- Texas Man Injured By Ricocheting Bullet While Shooting At Armadillo, Huffington Post, July 31 2015

Maybe the bullet hit the armadillo before bouncing off to hit the rock. But that's not the version that got wildly popular, where the animal reflects the bullet à la Superman.

Note that the Huffpost correction came the day after the first reports. It didn't, of course, have a chance against the funny clickable shareable erroneous version.

You could also put it like this: The true version had about as much chance against the funny satisfying myth as an armadillo has against a .38 bullet.

05 Aug 08:53

En studie i shared space

I början på sommaren bodde jag med familjen ett par nätter på Via dei Cappellari mitt i Roms äldsta delar. Gatan löper ut i Campo Fiori – detta härligt ostädade torg där det på förmiddagar är torghandel och på eftermiddagar och kvällar fullt av uteserveringar.



Det finns mer än tillräckligt att göra i Rom, men ibland fastnade jag bara i fönstret, fascinerad tittande ned på gatan - och undrande vad det är som gör en italiensk gata som denna så självklart urban och mänsklig. Varför trivs vi så bra just här?

Via dei Cappellari är ganska typisk för centrala Rom. En lugn, smal gata som slingrar sig genom den täta staden. Man ser inte långt ned för gatan varför en promenad ger ständigt nya intryck. Husen innehåller bostäder, kontor, butiker och enstaka verkstäder och restauranger.

Gaturummets väggar består av en tät sluten rad av varierade husfasader, alla med ingångar som vänder sig direkt ut på gatan. Ofta finns det bakom en dörr en lång tunnelliknande gång som leder längre in i huskroppen – i det sammanväxta gyttret av hus kan man således sluta vid en trappa upp i ett helt annat hus; varför det ibland kan vara svårt att lokalisera sig i en lägenhet där fönstret bara leder ut mot en djup ljusbrunn.

Men när man skall ta sig ut ur bostaden finns det ingen alternativ väg till en bakdörr eller en nedgång till en parkeringskällare. Här är man så illa tvungen att bidra till gatans liv med sin fysiska närvaro, träffa grannar och förbipasserande – och måste därför vara någotsånär presentabel i varje situation - även om det bara är att släppa ut katten.

Andra öppningar i husen täcks på natten av en jalusi, som när den öppnas på morgonen kan dölja både ett garage och en butiksentré – här finns inte alltid skyltar och när jalusin är stängd ser man inte alltid vad som finns bakom. Man skyltar sin restaurang eller butik genom att möblera gatan med växter eller varor. Det räcker.

Gatan är väldigt smal, kanske 5-6 meter, och hela gatans yta är belagd med de typiska romerska gatstenarna sampietrini av svart, slät basalt. Här finns ingen markerad trottoar, ingen körbana – bara en stor subtilt varierad yta av shared space. Jag kan inte låta bli att jämföra med Kungsgatan i Göteborgs nya exklusiva, men åh så tråkigt släta granityta. Hur får man detta fina liv i en yta utan att offra tillgängligheten? (För samprietrini ligger ibland ojämnt och blir tyvärr hopplöst hala vid regn).

 

Har man ingen trädgård till sin bostad får man erövra några decimeter gata och ställa ut ett par krukor eller gräva ned ett rör och plantera ett par klängväxter. Det räcker gott. Istället för uteplats kan man flytta ut ett par plaststolar och ta en paus med en kopp kaffe. När det kommer en bil få man ju flytta på sig – no big deal....

För här är gångtrafik standard, men bilar är också välkomna. En bil, en Vespa, en minibil, men även en lastbil ibland, i lagom storlek. Förmodligen skall man ha någon form för tillstånd för att köra här, men jag ser inga skyltar om det. Det känns bara självklart – här kör man försiktigt och långsamt. Och detta i en tydlig kontrast till hastigheten (och ljudnivån) på de större romerska gatorna, där man som främling undrar hur många olyckor det är som man inte ser.

Det finns faktiskt även några få parkerade bilar och vespor här och var på Via dei Cappellari. Jag skulle gärna vilja veta om de får ha sin omarkerade p-plats av ren hävd eller om de faktiskt betalar för den?

Är det nu bara det italienska klimatet som gör det? Använder man gatan som ett gemensamt uppehållsrum av den simpla orsaken att det är skönt att vara ute? Nej, man ser inte alls samma gatuliv i en modern, gles italiensk stad. Där korsar man gärna den tomma trottoaren för att ta bilen direkt till närmaste inköpscentrum.

I denna täta stad finns bara två vägar till och från ditt hus – upp eller ned för gatan. Det går inte att smita.

YIMBY Stockholm om: stadsliv, stadsrum, shared space, rom

Bloggar om: stadsliv, stadsrum, shared space, rom

02 Aug 09:51

How 7 news organizations are using Slack to work better and differently

by Laura Hazard Owen

Slack is a strange beast. Simultaneously a virtual meeting room and water cooler, it somehow encourages members of a distributed work force to socialize and get to know each other while also getting work done. It’s almost like a private social media network that also takes the place of email and instant messaging — what Facebook might have hoped its Messenger would do, Slack has accomplished, at least for a certain set of workers.

And while development/product and editorial teams have traditionally been siloed, Slack is finally breaking down the boundaries between people who need to be working together closely but, in formal meetings, might feel as if they speak different languages.

new-slack-logo
“It ends up becoming the fount of office culture,” Alexis Madrigal, the editor-in-chief of Fusion, told me. “It is to the enterprise what Vine is to youth culture more broadly. In most media companies, the tech people are very separate from the editorial people. The nature of the work is different, the pacing is different. So it’s nice to have a selected digital gathering spot for everyone, that’s not just about work. Slack is never all just about work — all Slack places that I’ve ever seen or heard of are filled with jokes and culture beyond the work, and I think that’s the genius of the platform. Product people love Beyoncé too!”

It’s unusual for people to be this passionate about an enterprise communication app. Maybe that’s why Slack, despite being just two years old, has raked in $340 million in capital and is now valued at $2.8 billion. It has 750,000 active daily users (up from 65,000 when we wrote about the app just a year ago), about 200,000 of whom use the paid version.

Slack is so open-ended that newsrooms that used to communicate via more traditional channels may not know where to begin as they transfer their workflow over to it. We asked several news organizations — Quartz, Vox Media, Slate, Fusion, The Times of London, Thought Catalog, and the Associated Press — to explain how they approach Slack, offer tips on how others can use it better, and share the features they wish it would add (hello, out-of-office notifications).

Quartz

Zach Seward, vice president of product and executive editor (and former Nieman Lab staffer):

We started using Slack in February 2014. We’d always used chat systems, but I’m glad we [switched to Slack then] because changing a big system like that is difficult the larger the organization is, and we’ve grown a lot since then. I can’t imagine what it would be like to on-board everybody today.
quartz-offices-credit
On the editorial side, we use a few channels to organize the typical workflow of the newsroom, from assignments to edits to publication notifications. Most of the channels are for actual chat, but a few have more regimented systems: You go into the assignments channel and say, ‘here’s what I’m working on, how many words, when it’s likely to come in,’ so it’s visible to the rest of the newsroom that someone’s on the story.

We have a production channel that we use for editing, so when a story is ready for edit it’s placed in that channel, and an editor takes it.

When news stories are published, they automatically post into the production channel. We note there if the story’s been placed in our top queue of stories on the site, and if it’s been tweeted or sent out elsewhere, to keep everything organized.

In the last week, we’ve started doing some of those things using emoji reactions. [The ability to “fave” or “like” a message was a long-requested feature; Slack added a way to do this earlier this month, using emojis.] In order to keep things less messy, when editors claim a story, they use a specific emoji reaction — the fist, to show that they’re “grabbing” the edit. We use emojis to show that something’s been published and that we’ve dealt with its distribution.

It quickly became clear that this was really useful. The obvious downside to doing a lot of workflow things in a chat context is that it can get messy fast. Emoji reactions have helped add some structure to the workflow.

All the deployments of code to the site are made using Slack, by using what we call Qzbot within Slack, instead of doing it on GitHub.

We have lots of channels on the editorial side, including more specific ones like #edit-Africa, #edit-Tech, and #edit-Video. Over time we groom channels, because everybody who uses Slack a lot ends up with channel sprawl, and we want to make sure it doesn’t get too overwhelming that people miss important stuff.

But the messiness is mostly an advantage. It helps people figure out, over time, the way in which they want to organize themselves. In the last six months, I’ve had success running some projects using Slack. It compresses a lot of the stuff you might otherwise do in meetings into a Slack channel, so that information is visible to everyone it should be visible to, and it saves people time: They don’t necessarily have to meet but can stay updated on a project’s status.

Vox Media

Lauren Rabaino, Vox Media product director, editorial:

Slack is one of the threads that holds our internationally distributed teams together. We use it to be incredibly productive and transparent, but also to foster team-building and camaraderie with remote colleagues. Some of our teams work on daily news deadlines, some on two-week product sprints, some through regular sales cycles, and some on a combination of those work styles. We use a mix of custom-built integrations, native Slack integrations and third-party services like Ifttt and Zapier to make the most of it.

On the editorial side, our Chorus Bot tells us when a new story has been published to a site, and who published it.

vox slack 1

On the product side, we have a bot to tell us when code is being deployed to a relevant repository, and who deployed it.

vox slack 2

Similarly, we have a bot that tells everyone when a new deploy to our publishing platform, Chorus, has been scheduled.

vox slack 3

For a team like Editorial Products, which is very deadline-driven and heavily integrated with our newsrooms, Slack is an integral part of our process, with the help of Zapier. Every request for a new project gets submitted through a Google Form. That form makes a new Trello card in our incoming queue, which pings our Slack room. We also ping our Slack room when new comments, members, or attachments are added to Trello, or when a deadline gets updated.

vox slack 4

Many teams integrate GitHub or FogBugz, so that conversation around specific bugs/features can happen in a structured way associated with a particular issue, but still be visible to everyone.

vox slack 5

We store a lot of essential docs using our bot named “cfbot” (migrated over from our days on Campfire), so everyone can easily access things they need easily.

vox slack 6

Across all of Vox Media, we also use cfbot for fun and useful non-work things. We can use it to replace faces in a photo with faces of people on our product team, or to grab funny GIFs, or to get poems we’ve stored, or congratulate new team members on joining our company, or to check the Metro status or the weather, among many other actions.

Don't use Slack to make decisions. Don't have multiple Slack rooms where decisions are being made – @laurenrabaino #bcni15

— Andrew Losowsky (@losowsky) May 2, 2015

Fusion

Alexis Madrigal, editor-in-chief:

We use it across the whole digital squad, so we have channels for all the different sections within the team. We’re a big organization with offices in Miami and New York, Oakland and L.A. It’s a lot of people to keep track of, so Slack is kind of our national office in the cloud.
snapchat-cc
One of the things we’re interested in is what we’re calling “Slackalytics.” How can we put data on stuff that’s going on around the broader web in front of our writers, right in the middle of their workflow? Instead of people going to check Chartbeat, maybe we can just slide in a notification as they’re doing what they’re doing; maybe that alleviates some of that weird Chartbeat crack addiction. We’re trying to see if there are other things we can pull in from the wider web into Slack to help people know what they should be writing about.

The most difficult thing about Slack right now is there’s a real tradeoff between using private rooms for section teams and their editors to get work done, versus public rooms. We’re trying to have people default to doing their work in public, so teams can drop in and see what everyone is working on, but private conversations are okay. That’s the biggest question for us.

The cool thing about Slack is that it’s simultaneously synchronous and asynchronous. You can get immediate feedback on something, but if someone comes into the room later, they might be able to add something, whereas if you didn’t go to a [physical] meeting, you’re not going to be able to contribute later.

If someone’s going on vacation or their anniversary, or if they’re going to be away on a long weekend, we tell them to delete Slack from their phone because otherwise the temptation to check it is too great. Deleting the app really helps people disconnect, because it’s that addictive as a social experience.

If I could give one piece of advice to other media companies, it’s that they should be cool with people deleting the app.

@mat @jbasher @JMBooyah @cwarzel @hshaban @jessmisener I asked everyone in Slack!! Wow @SlackHQ fails us as a workflow tool

— Katie Notopoulos (@katienotopoulos) June 3, 2015

Slate

Julia Turner, editor-in-chief:

In terms of a vivid, vibrant, virtual community that isn’t stodgily stuck in your Outlook inbox, Slack has been great. We have channels for the New York office and D.C. office. We have #Slate-Cute where people post pictures of their dogs and babies. We have much more tactical channels as well. One of my favorite channels is a group called #Headlines-and-Framing. Any editor or writer can pop into the channel, offer the headline ideas they’re working through, and ask who has feedback. There are always people who have a few moments to hang out and workshop a line.

Another channel we have is #Whereabouts. People chime in in the morning and say, okay, I’ll be at my desk, or today I’m working from home, or does anybody have an office I can do an interview from at 11? You can just ignore the channel until you suddenly want to find someone.

We also have a channel called #Breaking-News. When someone posts in it, it pings the folks on staff who are responsible for managing our coverage of breaking news.

We have an editors’ channel where the editors at the magazine can touch base with each other. But we tend to use Slack more for coordination than for official decision-making. Because Slate is a big newsroom filled primarily with writers who are working fairly autonomously and directly with their editors, most decisions happen in a very decentralized way, and Slack becomes a nice place to just flag something.

It would be great if Slack could implement a proper away message or vacation notification. If you’re on vacation, is Slack something you have to check when you get back to your desk, or should it just be for real-time alerts and questions? That remains an open question here at Slate.

The whole notion of these newsroom chat tools was that they’d free you from the burden of email, this horrible thing that you have to check all the time; with chat, you were supposed to be able to do all things in real time. But, depending on how you use Slack, sometimes you just have two sets of things to check.

The Times of London

Matt Taylor, production editor, digital strategy and development:

I work on The Times’ Digital Development and Strategy team, and we’re the main users of Slack in the organization. We started when the service was still in private beta, and immediately became paying customers when it was launched. I initiated our using the service, after being frustrated with other chat solutions that are generally forced upon you (Google chat, for one), and wanting more of an overview of what is going on across the team without having to have a stand-up meeting every morning.
margaret-thatcher-red-box-cc
We’ve grown our use of the service quite organically since we initially picked it up, and have only had a few “Slack sense checks” where we decided what our policy or rule on how something should be done is. We use the standard general/random channels as you would expect, but also have 34 others, with varying memberships. Some have basically the same number of people as in general, such as #Development, which contains the development team and their managers, but smaller teams have their own presence, such as #Data-Team, which is our data journalism unit.

We have channels for WordPress plugins we’ve built to track the issues coming through GitHub, which only have a few users. We have a #Conference channel, where a lot of users keep track of the one person who represents us in morning and afternoon news conference.

In many ways, Slack has totally removed the need for internal email inside the team, though outside the team we have few people taking it up — generally people that work with our team a lot. [It hasn’t just changed] our communications with each other, which now happen over Slack, but also things like GitHub notifications that now come over Slack, or build confirmations, or systems-reporting issues.

Slack helps alert everyone without the mess of mailing lists, and allows people to effectively catch up without having to be forwarded a long list, and then still remain included in the conversation. It’s a much more effective way to catch up and keep up. We’re a lot more public in our communications now, and people try, even though the nature of newspapers is against this, to talk in public channels as much as possible to keep everyone in the loop.

We’re planning to eventually get round to introducing Slack to more of the editorial staff. We’re thinking of working with the picture/graphics desks first, as they are often sending files to each other over email, and we think Slack’s benefits of the archive and multiuser awareness are more instantly visible for these kinds of workflow.

As far as features we wish Slack had: Out-of-office would be a key one. Better statistics. Better integration with documents. Slack should buy Quip and offer it as a single payment, in my opinion. The ability to create a private group for the discussion of a new product), and then launch it as a public channel. The ability to invite interns to channels without giving them the full archive.

Above anything else, I think, integration between teams. News UK has another Slack with our Technology department, and News Corp has Dow Jones and News Corp Australia. We all have our own instances and don’t really have a way of chatting between them, except via a [third-party technology] like Slackline.

The Associated Press

Troy Thibodeaux, data journalism team editor:

I lead a distributed team of data journalists at AP. One of the primary reasons we started using Slack was to create a common space, an easy way to throw out a question or comment to the group, and while we frequently do bat around ideas there and offer opinions, I find that inevitably we hop on a Google Hangout to come to a final decision. I think the visual component of Hangouts gives us a better sense that we’ve reached consensus — or at least that everyone has been heard.
ios-iphone
Because Slack communication can be asynchronous, it’s easier for a decision to slip past without everyone recognizing that it has been made. There’s a sort of decision whiplash that can result: either the topic has to be reopened later, or important considerations get left out.

Another time when we avoid Slack is when we’re discussing anything source-sensitive. Our investigative editors would rightly balk at using it for any conversation relating to stories on a number of sensitive topics. We have more secure communication channels for that work.

Slack helps avoid maddening email chains, and it gives us some possibilities for serendipitous conversations that didn’t exist with our other communication channels. I’ve hoped it would become a sort of virtual water cooler or break room. So far, it has been fairly focused, which is fine, as well. But as we become more comfortable tossing ideas around in Slack, I hope the conversation there can encompass a bit wider range.

We’ve also started to bring our colleagues into the Slack chats — both folks from the tech group and designers and front-end developers from our Interactives team. The latter simply couldn’t have happened while we were still using IRC.

Thought Catalog

Chris Lavergne, publisher:

We encourage the staff to disable Slack notifications, particularly for groups. At least in our work environment, we don’t need to be tethered to Slack all day. If it’s super important, someone will call you. Concealing notifications also adds a nice asynchronous feel to the Slack workflow, which helps us slow down and make more deliberate decisions. It lets it be more like email, almost. People can click into it when they want to check it, instead of it being this constant presence.

We have a Slack room connected directly to WordPress VIP, so every time we make a change on Thought Catalog or Shop Catalog, the staff is notified. This has been a real boon for us because writers and producers are in tune with the development roadmap and start to think about how technology can simplify their workflow, or make the site better for readers. It gets some of our writers to think like coders or product people. Features like this came directly from our editorial team, and so have hundreds of micro changes.

Photo at 2014 Slack executive retreat by kris krüg used under a Creative Commons license.

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01 Aug 14:29

German prosecutors give spies a walk, but investigate journalists for "treason"

by Cory Doctorow

The German prosecutors who dropped all action against the US and UK spy-agencies who trampled German law and put the whole nation, up to and including Chancellor Angela Merkel, under surveillance, have decided instead to open an investigation into the bloggers at Netzpolitik, who revealed the wrongdoing.

Netzpolitik are an important source of independent news, analysis and campaigning for privacy and freedom in Germany. This is a genuinely shameful moment for the nation. We stand with Netzpolitik and its supporters around the world.

The investigation’s cause are the articles „mass data processing of the Internet’s content“ and „a new unit for expanding internet surveillance“ executed by the Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution whereof we had reported with the aid of the original documents.

We have reported on this matter because we deem it necessary to start a social debate. Two years after after Snowden’s revelations, the Federal Government has no better ideas than spending more and more money and responsibilities on largely uncontrolled secret services instead of ensuring a better control of secret services and reducing the system of total surveillance.

Naturally, we uploaded the original documents relating to our article because there was still enough disk space and because it is part of our philosophy to enable our readers to inform themselves using the original source. Thus, they can scrutinise us and our reporting.

Apparently, this suffices for a twice charge for treason because it seems to be confidential when the Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution expands the Internet’s surveillance and keeps social networks under surveillance using the dragnet principle. This affects everybody, e.g. we could be under surveillance because we have sign up for the same Facebook event as a potential terrorist. But a public debate thereon is undesired.

The charge was published the day after the Deutsche Bundestag (German parliament, translator’s note) has passed a reform of the Federal office for the Protection of the Constitution containing expanded surveillance authority for it.

Criminal Charges From Domestic Secret Service: Federal Prosecutor Investigates our Publications, Leaks and Sources [Markus Beckedahl/Netzpolitik]

30 Jun 15:16

Take control of the media with this media and news literacy course

by Dan Gillmor

This was the theme of my last book, Mediactive (here's Cory's super-kind review; blush...), and it's at the heart of my online teaching and much of my recent writing.

So it was logical to extend the mission -- and next week (July 6) we're launching a "massive open online course" (MOOC) on media/news literacy in the digital age. It's called "MediaLIT: Overcoming Information Overload."

That overload, in this media-saturated age, is leading to all kinds of good and not-so-good outcomes. Having vast amounts of information about just about anything means we can learn more--a lot more--about almost anything. That's the most exciting part of what's happening.

But all that information also means, as the jawdropping CNN "ISIS flag" debacle demonstrates, that we have to be a LOT more careful about what we believe. To use guest lecturer Howard Rheingold's framing, we have to employ "crap detection" in a big way these days.

People like Howard have helped us take the course beyond the standard lecture-readings-quiz format. We have words of wisdom, in a collection of videos, from some experts in the media and media-literacy fields, in addition to just plain experts in subject areas who deal with the media on a regular basis.

Here's a taste--snippets from the videos we'll be using in the course--of their wisdom. Wikipedia's Jimmy Wales:

and Margaret Sullivan, public editor (ombudsman) at the New York Times:

and Lawrence Krauss, an ASU colleague who's one of America's best known scientists:

and Amanda Palmer, a brilliant musician and Internet innovator:

You get the idea.

These folks are among many who were kind enough to discuss how various kinds of media work (and don't); the vital role of journalism in our world; how we as consumers of media need to handle the deluge of information; and much more.

CNN's Brian Stelter (one of our guests) recently told me, speaking of his move from newspapers (the New York Times) to television, that the latter is "a team sport." So, I can assure you, is a MOOC. Putting this all together has been an amazingly complex process. And it wouldn't be happening without other people's time, talent and effort.

I've had lots of help from colleagues at Arizona State University's online arm (I teach online courses for ASU's Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication), and from our platform partner edX, the MOOC operation founded by Harvard and MIT.

We're all well aware that the jury is out on whether MOOCs are going to be a major way people learn in the future. Of course they won't replace traditional education, I'm optimistic that they will be at least helpful, if not transformative in some ways. We all see this project as an experiment that we hope will move the genre forward.

Most of all, however, we envision this MOOC as useful. While putting it together has been (shhh) a lot of fun in addition to hard work, the point of it all is to bring media and news literacy to a wider community.

The course is free and open to all. I'm hoping some of you will sign up, though I also know that regular readers of Boing Boing already possess well-calibrated BS detectors. As we all should!

29 Jun 11:05

A Researcher Used a Honeypot to Identify Malicious Tor Exit Nodes

by Lorenzo Franceschi-Bicchierai

Do you know who handles your internet traffic when you use Tor? And do you trust them?

The Tor network, used everyday by thousands of people around the world to surf the web anonymously and to circumvent internet censorship, depends on its volunteer “operators,” the people who run and maintain the network’s final set of servers, also called “exit nodes.”

Whoever controls these exit nodes can potentially see the traffic coming out of the Tor network, and, if they want, spy on it. In an experiment dubbed BADONION, an independent security researcher that only goes by the pseudonym “Chloe” devised a clever way to find out who, among these operators, is maliciously sniffing and intercepting traffic.

“I always knew that you can't trust the exit nodes but I wanted to test how malicious they actually were,” Chloe told Motherboard.

“I always knew that you can't trust the exit nodes but I wanted to test how malicious they actually were.”

With her experiment, she found that, out of the 1,400 nodes she tested, seven intercepted traffic and stole passwords. Chloe said she wasn’t surprised by the low number, “because Tor is mostly ran by good people,” but she also said that this should serve as a cautionary tale to Tor users.

“You should never trust the exit node and use HTTPS,” Chloe said in an email.

For her experiment, Chloe created a fake and tempting honeypot website, not protected by HTTPS web encryption, called Bitcoinbuy.

bitcoinbuy.png

She then wrote a script that automatically logged into the site using every Tor exit node she could reach during a month, assigning a unique password for every different exit node. The site was also designed to register every login attempt. If a unique password was used more than once, it meant the exit node operator stole it and used it to log into the site. (It’s worth noting that it’s possible that other nodes intercepted the traffic but didn’t reuse the password.)

Her experiment proves once again that some Tor exit nodes are used to sniff traffic to steal data and credentials.

There have been famous cases of this, such as in 2007 when a Swedish researcher intercepted thousands of private email messages and dozens of passwords and usernames by monitoring traffic on his exit nodes. Even WikiLeaks started out by intercepting documents sent over Tor.

“An exit node can see traffic between itself and the destination. This is by design; it is unavoidable.”

“An exit node can see traffic between itself and the destination. This is by design; it is unavoidable,” Kijin Sung, a web developer, wrote in a Hacker News thread commenting the research. “The experiment shows that some exit nodes actually are recording that traffic and extracting login credentials from it. There's nothing surprising about it. It's what we've all been suspecting for a long time.”

This research is a reminder that Tor is tool that makes you anonymous, not a tool that secures your connection. Also, this type of attack only works on websites that are not protected by HTTPS, the more secure TLS web protocol, which encrypts the connection between a user and a site.

A Tor Project spokesperson declined to comment specifically on this research, simply saying: “We strongly support ethical Tor research.”

The Tor Project encourages researchers to flag and report bad relays, whether they are malicious, misconfigured or simply broken. The nonprofit also scans the network itself looking for bad relays.

“My overall goal is to make Tor a safer place for everyone.”

Chloe said she’s now working on new tools to scan for sniffing exit nodes, improving upon BADONION. One downside of the BADONION experiment, she said, is that it only detected malicious nodes that reused the password, not those that simply intercepted it and stored it away.

“My overall goal is to make Tor a safer place for everyone and this first published results shows that there are bad people in the network and more people need to be aware of this,” Chloe said. “This issue can be fixed on both sides, the site owner should offer HTTPS for its users and Tor should work even harder to find these bad nodes.”
29 Jun 11:02

Is Solutions Journalism the Solution?

Journalists make careers out of covering the symptoms and causes of bad urban public schools, writing tragedies about students falling through the cracks, scoring scoops from school board investigations, and chasing scandals alongside concerned parents, angry teachers unions, and others. The Seattle Times and the Solutions Journalism Network took a different approach.

Reporters and editors at the Times’ Education Lab team felt their audience was desensitized to the laundry list of challenges facing schools in Washington State. Unruly teenagers, poor performance among low-income students, and high dropout rates weren’t news to anybody anymore.

So the team flipped the script on education reporting. Instead of identifying the worst schools in the region and explaining why they were failing, they set out to find the schools that were improving and ask how their educators and students excelled despite poverty, crime, and other challenges. Instead of reporting on the problems in the schools, they would cover the solutions. “[W]e’ve committed to … telling you about some of the places that appear to be doing things right,” wrote Seattle Times editor Kathy Best when she launched the Lab with the Solutions Journalism Network in October 2013. “Our hope is that rigorously examining the elements of success might help spread them.”

Answering that mandate, Education Lab reporter Claudia Rowe dove into classroom discipline—a large part of most teachers’ jobs—and discovered how a few local schools had cut suspensions by engaging closely with students who behave badly rather than ostracizing them.

The Kent School District in suburban Seattle adopted a softer touch in disciplining students, for example, opting for in-school suspensions where students study instead of kicking them off school property, and training security guards to act as mediators as well as rule enforcers to cut down on the extreme behavior that leads to harsh discipline. One Kent middle school brought in two new assistant principals to deal with student behavior, and now calls its detention hall the “Focus Room,” to reflect an emphasis on students keeping up with classwork. Critics said the new policies amounted to warehousing students, but advocates of the new approach cited national research that found that draconian out-of-school suspensions resulted in the worst students often giving up on school entirely. Kent schools went from battling an NAACP lawsuit for handcuffing and pepper-spraying students to cutting suspensions by more than 30 percent, The Seattle Times reported.

In another story, Big Picture High School instituted a policy called “restorative justice” that showed great potential to reduce discipline problems. Under restorative justice, suspended kids remain in school but don’t just go to study hall. They answer for their infractions in person before a special forum of teachers and students, a meeting that’s a combination of a group intervention and peer counseling session, and complete reading and writing assignments that force them to reflect on their behavior. Teenagers opening up emotionally to adults and peers improves their behavior dramatically, according to educators. The Seattle Times reported that Big Picture High had only assigned eight days of suspension as of January, compared to 700 a year before they implemented restorative justice.

The numbers were only part of the story, however. Rowe portrayed a school where teachers and administrators genuinely touch students’ hearts. One Big Picture student wept in front of her teachers and classmates as she discussed her marijuana use. “It’s a lot harder than a regular suspension,” the 18-year-old girl, who had been kicked off campus for discipline at other schools, told Rowe. “You can’t run from anything, and to have people talking good about you, telling you they’re truly disappointed—it hurts. It was kind of overwhelming, actually.”

Big Picture High School reducing its suspension rate through the restorative justice program is what the nonprofit Solutions Journalism Network calls a “positive deviant”—an example of people or policies that defy trends with beneficial results. The term plays a key role in so-called solutions journalism, a concept that’s gaining currency, as evinced by work being done at the Network in partnerships with the Education Lab and others. Advocates define it as the opposite of negative news, but hesitate to label it exclusively as positive. Rather than pointing out solely what’s wrong with the world—think political gridlock, war, terrorism, and catastrophic climate change—solutions journalism aims to show how people are making things better.

David Bornstein, a co-founder of the Network and coauthor of the Fixes blog in the Opinionator section of The New York Times, cites three trends that illustrate why solutions journalism has come of age: the proliferation of businesses, nonprofits, and other institutions alleviating social ills; the explosion of online information that allows people tired of negative news to avoid the mainstream media; and journalists’ desire to cover positive social change and reach more readers. “For journalism to help society self-correct, it’s not enough to be a watchdog to increase awareness or produce outrage about problems,” says Bornstein. “We need new and better recipes. For society and also for journalism to thrive, it needs to be regularly highlighting with rigor new ideas and models that are showing results against our most pressing problems.”

Founded in New York in 2013, the Network’s function is largely educational. Its staff of 12 held training seminars for 370 journalists in 20 newsrooms last year, according to its annual report. But the group also has secured grant funding for projects like Education Lab, surveys on readers’ receptiveness to solutions journalism, and new initiatives to compile reporting and data on successes in reducing violence and improving healthcare. Early this year, the group received funding for a schools coverage project with The Boston Globe that’s in its early stages.

The approach is not a call for feel-good stories. The motivation for The Seattle Times’s Education Lab, for example, stemmed from serious concerns about the future of news, Best says. She and other editors were growing tired of duds—the epic journalism projects that take long periods to complete but more often than not deliver little social impact when they hit the newsstands. “There’s been for years this definition of investigative reporting: ‘We will spend a year so that we can tell you in full and florid and depressing detail about all of the aspects of this major societal problem and maybe on the very last day we’ll do a 30-inch story on how we’re going to fix it,’” says Best. “That hasn’t worked necessarily. For many people, they start reading it and they become too depressed and they stop.”

Best acknowledges that hardcore investigative reporting is still central to journalism’s role as a watchdog. She never intended Education Lab to ignore the problems facing Seattle-area schools. She wanted to showcase the successes in tackling those problems to jumpstart conversations among parents, teachers, and policymakers. “We did not get into this because we thought there were too many negative stories,” says Best. “We did get into it because we thought there were too many negative conversations. People had become too polarized over education issues.”

Bornstein doesn’t want good news for good news’ sake, either. Stories have to pass a threshold to qualify as solutions journalism. At a minimum, they need to identify social ills and potential remedies to them. They need to include the voices of people who have seen those remedies at the ground level. They must include evidence about whether the remedies work, and report any caveats or limitations associated with them. The Network even put together a list of “imposter” solution stories, like “hero worship” pieces that glorify individuals but pay too little attention to causes or animal rescue stories that are entertainment.

The only bias in solutions journalism should be toward data-driven evidence

Bornstein stresses that journalists must obtain data that shows how a solution is working. Data inoculates reporters against charges they’re giving favorable coverage to a group because of its political affiliation, for instance. The only bias in solutions journalism should be toward evidence, says Bornstein, and the facts should speak for themselves like in any other news story. “We feel very strongly that you can report on responses to social problems in a very rigorous manner without telling readers, ‘This is the best response’ or ‘You should go out and do something about this,’” he says. “I don’t feel comfortable with journalists necessarily urging readers to act.”

That line can be hard to distinguish. Media coverage grants legitimacy and authority to solutions, potentially to the exclusion of other fixes that reporters or their sources never encountered—an easy oversight on big, complicated topics like healthcare, clean water and other global issues, says Arizona State University journalism professor Dan Gillmor. Gillmor wonders if journalists might compromise their objectivity when they approach a story with the goal of proving that a specific solution is valid. “The journalist goes into the topic with some sort of outcome in mind,” says Gillmor. “That’s fine if you are looking for examples of agreement.”

The MIT Center for Civic Media’s Ethan Zuckerman believes the proponents of solutions journalism are trying too hard to distance themselves from advocacy. He co-founded a citizen journalism website, Global Voices, in part to advocate for freedom of expression. To Zuckerman, purposefully motivating readers to act on the issues raised in stories is perfectly respectable—indeed, necessary. As confidence in the mainstream media ebbs, why shouldn’t top-notch journalists tell audiences how they might become involved in an issue that energizes them. “What Bornstein is actually doing is essentially saying, ‘Let’s find the problem solvers and let’s do traditional journalism stories about them. Let’s look at them with caution and scrutiny. Let’s evaluate their claims,’” says Zuckerman. “Is it enough that we find a solution if it is a solution that our viewers or our readers can’t be a part of? For me, that’s the most challenging feature of this. Can we give our readers something positive and constructive they can do?”

Solutions-oriented news outlets have covered the Afghan Institute of Learning’s success in educating females across Afghanistan

Solutions-oriented news outlets have covered the Afghan Institute of Learning’s success in educating females across Afghanistan

A host of new media ventures has sprung up in recent years that blend Bornstein and Zuckerman’s visions. The Christian Science Monitor launched its Take Action section last year. Upworthy, founded three years ago, claims to reach 50 million people per month through stories shared on social media that inspire readers. The Huffington Post now has an Impact section that sports the theme “What’s Working.” Editors hope to appeal to readers who want the news to be empowering—not necessarily to tell people which causes or programs they might support, but to provide models for discussions about fixing community ills. In many cases, readers were already filling comment sections with requests for more information about becoming involved and helping with issues covered in stories.

At the Monitor, editors say the Take Action section’s intended audience is readers who have expressed an interest in volunteering with, contributing to or sharing their professional experiences around the globe, either through letters to the editor or reader surveys. That audience wants to read about including the poor in the solar energy boom and education for girls in Afghanistan, for example, because they are passionate about income inequality and human rights, according to Susan Paardecamp Hackney, chief strategy and marketing officer at The Christian Science Monitor. They want to see how their progressive interests might advance in the world rather than read a litany of the obstacles they are up against. “They care more than the average news reader about the human condition,” says Paardecamp Hackney. “They care more than the average news reader about wanting to see something happen and maybe actually doing something themselves.”

The newspaper’s weekly edition editor, Clayton Collins, thinks of the Take Action section as living up to the goals of Christian Science founder Mary Baker Eddy, who called on the newspaper “to injure no man, but to bless all mankind.” To Collins, the section is less about solutions and more about progress. “Looking at it through a progressive lens is more than putting a happy face on the news,” he says. “We are changing from becoming a straight information broker to providing tools and relevance to this global community that is interested in the advancement of human progress as we are.”

Collins might be right in thinking stories about positive social change engage readers. The Solutions Journalism Network collaborated with the Engaging News Project at the University of Texas-Austin to conduct a survey on how readers responded to solutions stories compared to ones that focused only on problems. The survey found that readers of solutions stories were more likely than readers of problem-oriented stories to say they felt inspired, and more likely to say they wanted to learn more. Those readers also said they were more likely to share solutions stories on social media, an important metric today for measuring performance.

At The Huffington Post, editors are keen for stories that readers share on Facebook and elsewhere. They view sharing as the best measure of impact. “Sharing is you thinking about what other people should know about it, so much so you want to brand yourself with it on social media,” says Jessica Prois, executive editor of HuffPost Impact and HuffPost Good News. “Sharing is more powerful than liking.”

Upworthy’s focus is getting readers to share the content it creates and curates. Backed by venture capitalists that include Facebook co-founder Chris Hughes and working with partners like Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative outlet ProPublica, the website considers itself the antidote to regular news outlets that bombard audiences with depressing stories about faraway places they are powerless to change. “We have so much news that we have this sense of learned helplessness,” says Amy O’Leary, Upworthy’s editorial director and a former reporter for The New York Times and public radio’s “This American Life.”

Upworthy’s critics consider it a news aggregator that purveys clickbait and lulls readers into thinking they’re changing the world by posting an article on Reddit. But O’Leary thinks that complaint ignores the website’s success in drawing large audiences. People absorb negativity by themselves, O’Leary argues, while uplifting news excites people and draws them together into a community, especially on social media platforms. “The real difference at Upworthy is that we are interested in stories that move people, stir their hearts, stir a strong emotional drive,” she says. “Those are stories that traditional news organizations shy away from often. At Upworthy we say it’s ok to have feelings about this.”

Positive emotional responses that build inclusive communities, including news audiences, is at the heart of the work of Cathrine Gyldensted, a former Danish Broadcasting Corporation correspondent who founded a media consultancy after receiving a graduate degree in positive psychology from the University of Pennsylvania. Gyldensted conducts seminars for journalists in the U.S. and Europe seeking to break out of the doom-and-gloom reporting that turns off audiences. Gyldensted and colleagues coined the term “constructive journalism” to describe their version of reporting along the lines of O’Leary, Bornstein, and others.

Recently Gyldensted worked with De Correspondent, a Dutch online news startup that launched in 2013. The website has a “progress” reporter, Rutger Bregman, who writes constructive journalism on issues in the Netherlands and around the world. One of his stories, “Why we should give free money to everyone,” cites experiments in giving large sums of money to the homeless in London, the poor in Uganda and elsewhere with no strings attached. Rather than squandering the money, as many might expect, the majority of recipients used the funds to improve their lives and lessen their dependence on public assistance.

De Correspondent received $1.7 million in launch funding from nearly 19,000 people via crowdsourcing. Its website now claims it has 34,000 subscribers who pay about $65 a year. To Gyldensted, stories like Bregman’s leave readers with a sense of hope about tackling problems that many readers refuse to accept as insoluble: “Journalism is detective work. We need to understand who did what, where, how to identify who is responsible. I get that. I think we should still do that. But I think we should ask what are the consequences if we are not facilitating a debate that is future oriented. There is a huge lust for positive, uplifting, inspirational content.”

Balancing inspiration and gumshoe reporting was a challenge the journalists at The Seattle Times’ Education Lab worked hard to achieve. Rowe knew she needed emotional moments like the 18-year-old’s suspension meeting to demonstrate the stakes of school discipline policies. She also ended the piece with a moving quote from one teacher, the son of two New York State correctional workers, who appears converted to restorative justice: “‘It’s a way,” he said, “to turn the most negative thing into possibly the most positive thing you’ve ever done in school.”

She and the Education Lab labored, however, to report straightforwardly on restorative justice and other policies. They included the voices of critics who didn’t believe the softer disciplinary procedures really improved student behavior. They spent time reporting on how restorative justice fared in other cities. They pulled no punches in their reporting but still managed to pull the heartstrings of readers. “Readers are fairly sophisticated, and they know when they are being force-fed something,” says Rowe. “They believe from nuance. The idea is not to change minds; it’s to show possibilities.”

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29 Jun 09:15

Talking to Penelope Spheeris about time, rock 'n' roll, and The Decline of Western Civilization

(Shout! Factory)

When director Penelope Spheeris finished interviewing Chris Holmes during the tail end of the 1980s for her documentary The Decline of Western Civilization Part II: The Metal Years, she figured the footage was worthless. Plenty of the musicians she’d talked to around Los Angeles’ Sunset Strip metal scene were drunk while she filmed them, but Holmes was beyond obliterated. As Spheeris barked questions at him in the California night, the lead guitarist for W.A.S.P. spent the session floating on a chair in his swimming pool while still decked out in black leather. He poured a bottle of Smirnoff vodka on to his face and into his mouth, and punctuated his ramblings with farts noises, all while his mother sat behind him, almost wordlessly, her face shifting between concern and resignation. “I thought we’d have to figure out if we could get him back again,” Spheeris says. “I thought it was just trash.”

Spheeris salvaged what she could from the shoot and placed it towards the back of the documentary, after all the party boys and girls have had their chance to posture for the camera. The segment is hilarious and ridiculous, but underneath Holmes's antics is a world of pathos. "I work a job, and I'm a piece of crap," he says with a mirthless cackle. It has since become the most famous part of the cult classic film.

During the first two decades of Spheeris's expansive film career she would periodically check in with a loud-mouthed, comical, chaotic, and often out of control youth-fueled music scene of Southern California for her The Decline of Western Civilization documentary series. She always found something human and honest in her subjects, even as she got older and they stayed the same age. Spheeris says she tried to be non-judgemental in how she portrayed these communities. She knew that some would see the people she trained her camera on as buffoons or threats to society, while others would see peers and role models. And now-classic moments like Holmes' drunken interview would not have worked without that unfazed gaze. "That particular scene shaped my whole career, to be quite honest with you," says Michael Starr, the lead singer of comedy metal band Steel Panther. "At that point, heavy metal was at its peak. It was awesome to be drunk, floating in a pool. You knew you had a disease and you were going to kill yourself eventually, but that was cool back then. People just looked at that and said, ‘Wow, this guy knows how to party. Everybody knows how to party.'"

On June 30, Shout! Factory will release the entire The Decline of Western Civilization trilogy as a box set, marking the first time any of them have officially been on DVD or Blu-ray. The first installment of the series, which had previously only been available on VHS and LaserDisc, was released in 1981 and is all about L.A.'s punk scene, with performance footage and interviews from crucial bands like X, Black Flag, and the Germs. The final installment, which never even got a proper theatrical release, much less a home entertainment one, was made in 1996 and '97 and focuses on the city's often tragically substance-abusing gutter punks, as well as hardcore bands like Final Conflict and Naked Aggression.

For decades, Spheeris has resisted giving the Decline films the archival treatment they deserve, mainly because she didn't want to revisit her past work. Then three-and-a-half years ago, Spheeris decided she wanted her daughter Anna Fox to take over the family business of making movies and managing their rental properties around the city. Fox agreed, on one condition: that her mom finally release a collection of the Decline trilogy.

What followed was a labor-intensive period of work on all three movies at once. "It's been a year of pure hell," Spheeris says.

The Decline of Western Civilization Part 2

Spheeris and Bret Michaels during the filming of The Decline of Western Civilization Part II: The Metal Years

Spheeris grew up in trailer parks around the beach cities of Orange County in the 1950s and '60s. Her father owned a traveling carnival in the American south and she describes her mother as "a trailblazing hoarder." When she was same age as the young teens that populate the Decline movies, she too was speeding around Southern California unsupervised, seeing concerts by surf rock kings like Dick Dale and the Deltones. "We'd go the [Rendezvous] Ballroom on Balboa Island, we'd go to El Monte Legion Stadium, we'd go to Cinnamon Cinder [in Studio City]," she says. "When I was 13 or 14 years old, I'd go in a car with a bunch of lowrider friends and head out to all the shows."

After getting her masters in film at UCLA, Spheeris began working as a producer for Albert Brooks, handling his pre-taped segments during the early years of Saturday Night Live and his first feature, Real Life. At the same time, Spheeris started her production company Rock ‘N' Reel, which made music videos for acts like the Staples Singers, Seals & Croft, and Funkadelic — years before MTV existed or most people even knew what a music video was. Though she earned a living from the work she got from major record labels, she wasn't into most of the music they were putting out. But after hearing the Sex Pistols for the first time, she went to a show at the Masque, the Hollywood club that welcomed many of L.A.'s early punk bands, and became fascinated with the local scene.

Shot between 1979 and 1980, the first Decline of Western Civilization captures Los Angeles punk at a critical period, as the more art-influenced original bands from the city proper were being drowned out by the hyper aggressive hardcore bands from Orange County and the fans who followed them. Punk was also becoming increasingly stigmatized around the city, as cops would raid shows and certain acts got banned from most venues. It got to the point that Spheeris had to rent a soundstage to shoot the performances by the Germs and Black Flag for the film because there wasn't anywhere else they could play.

"You look at documentaries that have come out about other scenes and other moments in history, and Decline of Civilization holds up so well. You can still show that movie to someone and say, 'Here, this is L.A. punk,'" says Damian Abraham, the lead-singer of the Toronto band Fucked Up and the host of the Turned Out a Punk podcast. "A few months later a lot of those bands would break up. A few years later, a few of the key players would be dead. It's a perfect snapshot of this incredibly important moment in music history where people are only now realizing how important it was."

In the years since the first Decline's release, some from within the punk scene have criticized Spheeris for not featuring now marginalized bands like the Screamers or the Weirdos in favor of Black Flag or Circle Jerks. While Spheeris admits she was particularly drawn to the hardcore acts because they came from the same part of Southern California that she did, these were also groups that would go on to have a monumental impact on punk and D.I.Y. culture over the next 20 or so years, whether people like it or not.

And considering the underground subject matter, it's impressive Spheeris got much well-shot and intimate footage just as the era was cresting — oftentimes taking her camera right into the mosh pit. This was long before it was commonplace for up-and-coming musicians to post video to their various social media accounts, or to have camera crews from publications or brands come to their practice spaces to document their early phases. "[Spheeris] was in there filming Black Flag living in the Church," says Katy Goodman of La Sera and formerly of the Vivian Girls (who also admits to having a giant Germs circle logo tattoo on her butt). "It isn't just memories or reenactments or going back to old places. She's right there filming it as it happens, and that's what makes it so amazing."

Despite positive reviews, the first film didn't get much distribution during its actual theatrical release. (The hectic scene at its 1981 L.A. premiere also resulted in Police Chief Daryl Gates sending Spheeris a letter telling her to never show the movie in the city again.) Instead, the first Decline amassed fans through tape trading, bootlegs, and revival house screenings. Meanwhile Spheeris' interest in punk found its way into her narrative work — it's at the center of Suburbia, her first released scripted feature, as well as 1987's Dudes, a punk road movie starring Jon Cryer and Flea from the Red Hot Chili Peppers.

In the mid-'80s, as her daughter was entering her teens, Spheeris used to take Anna to shows with her to make sure she'd be able handle herself at concerts once she got older. By the time Fox was 17, she was dating Nikki Sixx, the bassist of Mötley Crüe, one of the superstar bands of L.A.'s hairsprayed and debaucherous metal scene. A new era of rock and roll had descended on the city, and as Spheeris began noticing the crowds of people jamming the sidewalks and spilling out onto Sunset Boulevard night after night, she got the idea to make a second Decline movie about this world.

When Spheeris turned her attention toward about metal, a genre that birthed platinum-selling bands, many of her friends from the punk years considered her a sell-out. But watching the two films back-to-back, you can't help notice some similarities between the two worlds. Sure, punk was nihilistic, but there was a still a shtick to it, even if it didn't involve smoke machines and tying scarves to your mic stand. In the first Decline, when Derf Scratch of Fear baits the hostile crowd with wisecracks about the similarities between girls and six packs of beer or how many punks it takes to change a light bulb, you can hear someone in the audience call out the punchlines before he can get to them. They've heard these jokes before.

But while the bands and crowd members Spheeris talked to for the first Decline were relentlessly negative, convinced that society was fucked beyond repair, there's a single-track optimism that defines most of the interviews in The Metal Years. The insistence of these aspiring rock stars that they are destined to be rich and famous is so unflagging that it can come off as desperate. And watching it now is an almost bigger bummer, considering that very few of them actually made it to where they dreamed they'd be.

The Decline of Western Civilization Part 3

The Decline of Western Civilization Part III

In the early 1990s, Spheeris landed the directing job for the first Wayne's World film. It became a box office success millions and millions of dollars beyond what anyone expected. Though the movie is set in suburban Illinois, you can see that same naïve self-assuredness from the second Decline film in Wayne and Garth's "she will be mine, oh yes, she will be mine" convictions. But after the financial wellspring of Wayne's World, Spheeris passed on the sequel, and spent most of the rest of the decade making middling comedies like The Beverly Hillbillies, The Little Rascals and Black Sheep.

One day in 1996 while driving, Spheeris noticed some punks hanging out on Melrose Avenue. She approached them, excited that the world she first encountered in '70s might still around in some form. (This is a very Spheeris move, it turns out: she first asked Fear if they wanted to be in Part I after driving past them on Laurel Canyon as they put up posters for an upcoming gig.) She imagined it would be fun to do a follow-up on the first Decline featuring kids who weren't even born when it came out, but she soon learned how many of them had run away from or been kicked out of abusive households, and had now turned into full-blown teenage alcoholics. Throughout the Decline series she had documented kids who were hopeless in many ways, but by the end of 1990s, she realized how bad things had gotten. "The title was [originally] meant to be ironic, but by the time I got to Part III, it became a self-fulfilling prophecy," Spheeris says.

"When I did Decline III, it was totally life changing for me," she continues. "I had no idea that shit was going on out there. At that point in my career I was really rich from being paid millions of dollars for doing studio movies, and I did not have a sense at all what real life was like. That's when I went out and got my foster parent license. I had five foster kids to try to help a little bit — we all should, because it's a fucking mess out there."

Using her paycheck from Senseless, a comedy starring Marlon Wayans and David Spade that she contentiously made for the Weinstein brothers (and which tanked miserably), she financed the third Decline on her own. "I showed it to my agent at the time. I asked if we could get distribution for it and he just threw his hands up and walked away," she says.

The distribution offers she did manage to get would have required her to give up the rights to the first two installments, so she passed, and the film was scarcely shown. Regardless, Spheeris remains connected to the film, which makes it all the more fortunate that more people will now finally be able to see it. "Decline III is my favorite movie I ever did, and the people in Decline III are my favorite people I have ever worked on a movie with," she says.

And perhaps for that reason she left the series at that. Nowadays Spheeris is dismissive of the idea of continuing with future installments of Decline. "I've been there and I've done that and I don't give a shit anymore," she says with a laugh. She says she's not interested in any new music, but it's a great game to imagine how she would have approached the Southern California scenes of this new century. Her take on Odd Future and other circa-2010 Fairfax Avenue rap acts fueled by streetwear and Tumblr could have been amazing. Anna Fox says Spheeris's 15-year-old granddaughter now goes to shows by herself and is into the goofball garage rock world of Fullerton's Burger Records, a community through which Spheeris could have gotten back to her Orange County roots. Who knows — maybe at this moment some yet-to-be-discovered young filmmaker is picking up where she left off.

Of the stylistic conventions that link the three Decline movies — from the light bulb-lit interviews, to the montage of the bands reading the filming release, to somebody always making eggs for breakfast — perhaps the most telling is the quick text at the start of each movie that states the exact span of months during which it was filmed. Asked why she decided to note such a specific demarcation, Spheeris says, "In my opinion, nothing lasts. There's a beginning and a middle and an end to everything. And I mean everything. I mean my fingernails and I mean the universe. To have that little mark in time is important."


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