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20 May 14:38

Trans Hack

by Freiya

Reposted from SF Cronicle.

“Kenya Boudreaux met a guy on a dating site. She liked his photo, his personality. She agreed to meet him in person. That’s when things got weird.

He wanted to wander down alleys. He pressured Boudreaux, 19, to drink.

“It made me feel very unsafe,” said Boudreaux, a black transgender woman and student at San Francisco State University.

Last year, 23 trans women and gender nonconforming people were murdered. Most of them were black or Latino.

“There’s already this life expectancy of we probably won’t make it past 35 years old,” she said recently. “That’s very harrowing for me, so I feel like if I do end up murdered, I want that person found and charged.”

So Boudreaux, a mechanical engineering and computer science student, got to work making an app to help with just that.

Last week, Boudreaux and more than a dozen others participated in a hackathon to build “solutions to social problems unique to transgender people of color.” It was organized by TransH4ck, an Oakland organization that acts as a hub and a home for transgender and gender nonconforming folks and allies in the tech industry. The organization encourages the creation of open-source technology for this population.”

More Info here!

16 May 18:40

Good versus evil

Stockholm-born Herr Nilsson comments on good versus evil. He represents innocent characters to teach us that the bad can always come from the unexpected.

16 May 18:35

Art-Nouveau x Miyazaki

26 Apr 19:40

pr0ncave: Hayden Winters, Riley Reid - “On Top of Pleasure”



pr0ncave:

Hayden Winters, Riley Reid - “On Top of Pleasure

18 Apr 19:10

Fashion Illustrator Clothes Women with Food

by John Farrier

Edgar Artis, a professional fashion illustrator, sometimes draws dresses that you'll never see on the runway. Recently, he's been drawing women wearing dresses made out of food. His vivid gowns include lemon slices, kiwifruit, cake frosting, and popcorn.

-via Walyou

18 Apr 19:07

Jerry Lewis' Lost Film: The Day the Clown Cried

by Miss Cellania

Neatorama presents a guest post from actor, comedian, and voiceover artist Eddie Deezen. Visit Eddie at his website or at Facebook.

[Ed. note: this post is in commemoration of Jerry Lewis’ 90th birthday today.]

Man at a 2001 press conference: "when are you going to release The Day the Clown Cried?"

Jerry Lewis: "none of your g*****n business!"

Jerry Lewis' The Day the Clown Cried is one of the most famous "never released films" in movie history. In 1971, while appearing at the Olympia theater, Jerry was approached by "producer" Nat Wachsberger. Wachsberger told Jerry of his idea for a film called The Day the Clown Cried. Written by Joan O’Brien and Charles Denton, the film's story (the following is pretty much the gist of it) told of Helmut Doork, a circus clown in nazi Germany who was recently fired.

Helmut gets drunk at a local bar, pokes fun at Hitler, and is taken to prison camp. After his act bombs with his fellow prisoners, Helmut goes out alone to the prison yard and tries out his shtick. There, he overhears some children laughing at him. Helmut is given the job of putting new prisoners on the train to Auschwitz, the nazi concentration camp.

Like the Pied Piper, he leads a group of children on to the train, and at the film's conclusion he leads kids to their death in the gas chamber. He goes to entertain the kids, but feels remorse, so he steps inside the gas chamber to join them. As Helmut is inside the gas chamber and has the children laughing inside with him, the movie ends. (This is actually the film's story- more or less. No kidding!)

Dick van Dyke, Milton Berle, and Bobby Darin had all been approached about playing Helmut in the film and all had (wisely) declined. But Jerry, probably to his eternal regret, decided to take the role (and agreed to take the directing helm to boot). Reportedly, he dropped 40 pounds to play Helmut, by going on a six-week all-grapefruit diet.

To prepare himself for his role, in February of 1972, Jerry toured the remains of both Auschwitz and Dachau concentration camps in Germany (the film's concentration camp scenes were actually shot in a Swedish military compound).

 

Billed as Jerry Lewis' first "serious" movie, filming began in Stockholm, and trouble started almost from the word go. Film equipment was either lost or delivered late and the necessary money was nowhere in sight.

Ostensibly the film's producer, Nat Wachsberger did not appear on the set. He ran out of money, giving the production just $5,000 and failing to come up with the $50,000 he'd promised prior to production. Although he kept promising Jerry that "the money was coming,” Jerry eventually ended up footing the bill for the movie himself. Wachsberger had also neglected to pay Joan O’Brien for the rights to her script.

Jerry had re-written much of the O’Brien's original draft anyway, changing Helmut's character, trying to make him into a more sympathetic “Charlie Chaplin-like" figure. Both O’Brien and fellow writer Charles Denton hated the changes Jerry gave to the Helmut Doork they had created and envisioned.

Cast members working on the film recall Jerry as being "distracted, nervous and preoccupied with money.” Not much is known about the actual production of the film, adding to its cloak of mystery.

After production had ended, Jerry claimed (rightfully so) that Wachsberger had failed to make good on his promise of financial obligations. Incredibly, Wachsberger threatened to file a breach of contract suit against Jerry and claimed he had enough footage to finish the film without its star. The studio held the film's negative, but Jerry took a rough cut of the film for himself.

(YouTube link)

After production, Jerry claimed that the film was invited to be shown at the Cannes film festival and would be released sometime in 1973. Neither of these two events ever came to pass.

As late as 1982, in his autobiography, Jerry said he was was hopeful The Day the Clown Cried would someday be released. But various lawsuits between various involved parties stopped any hope the film would ever see the light of day. Joan O’Brien, the film's writer, saw a rough cut and said it "was a disaster.”

In the early 1980's, Europa Studios announced their plan to edit the negative of the film and finally release it. But O’Brien (and Denton) stopped this from happening, saying it could never be released.

Interestingly, Jerry has screened the film, for a very, very select few Hollywood insiders over the years. Harry Shearer (of The Simpsons) is one of the rare people to have actually seen The Day the Clown Cried. (Note: James Neibaur, author of The Jerry Lewis Films and a close friend of Jerry's, vehemently disputes Harry's claim and says he never saw the film at all.)

In Harry's words: “This was the perfect object. This movie is so drastically wrong, it's pathos, it's comedy, are so wildly displaced, that you could not, in your fantasy of what it might be like, improve on what it is. ‘Oh my God!’ That's all you can say.” Shearer told Jerry, after the screening, that the film was "terrible." Jerry, says Harry, was furious.

 

Jerry's original motive in making the film was to make more people aware of the horrors of the Holocaust, a noble goal. But since the film was made, other movies, most notably the two multiple oscar-winners Life is Beautiful (1997) and Steven Spielberg's now-classic Schindler's List (1992) have been made and the purpose Jerry wanted to serve with his movie would seem to have been amply served. Life is Beautiful appears to be strikingly similar to Jerry's concept in The Day the Clown Cried (it may have been wholly or partly based on the film) with Roberto Benigni, like Jerry, both starring and directing.

Although a few decades ago, Jerry thought “The academy can't ignore this,” about The Day the Clown Cried and vowed in his autobiography that “One way or another, I’ll get it done,” he has definitely soured on it over the years. Jerry keeps his copy (the only copy of the film on video cassette) locked up in his vault to this day. Nowadays, he refuses to discuss any facet of the movie with any reporters or pretty much anyone else.

In 1980, The Day the Clown Cried was Nominated for a “Golden Turkey Award" (the precursor to today's “Razzies,” awards for the worst films). It was nominated in the "worst movie you never saw" category, but it couldn't even win that, losing to Billy Jack Goes to Washington -which, in contrast, was eventually released on DVD.

To this day, when Jerry is ever ever asked about the film by any reporter or fan, he usually bristles. It is obviously a sore spot for him.

How many people have ever actually seen The Day the Clown Cried? According to Shawn Levy, who wrote an excellent biography of Jerry Lewis (King of Comedy), the figure may be as low as eleven, and may be as high as a few hundred.

Jerry Lewis has had a brilliant, delightful and unforgettable movie career. And the truth is, The Day the Clown Cried is a minor blip on the screen, a small bump on a golden road of wonderful laughter and hilarity. Nonetheless, The Day the Clown Cried, much like JFK’s assassination, Amelia Earhart's disappearance, or the Shroud of Turin, in the eyes of us Jerry Lewis fans, remains a great "mystery,” unseen, and unsolved in our minds and in our hearts.

(YouTube link)

15 Apr 19:20

Woolen Unfuckables Pattern Book



Woolen Unfuckables Pattern Book

05 Apr 15:07

These Disney Paintings Are Incredibly Vivid, and Just A Little Bit Creepy

by Germain Lussier

When Walt Disney was at his best, his movies worked on many levels. As family entertainment, they were brilliant. But the subversive themes and winks to the adult audience were there too, and this Disney art by Heather Theurer is in the same vein.

Read more...










05 Apr 14:47

The Politics of Marvel's Black Panther

by Evan Narcisse on Kotaku, shared by Cheryl Eddy to io9

Marvel’s most important black superhero has evolved a lot over 50 years. The Black Panther has gone from being an under-utilized figure in the background of Avengers group shots to arguably being the most fearsome strategist in the Marvel Universe. His elevation to Marvel’s top tier is a fascinating meta-story.

Read more...










04 Apr 18:07

ESPN's attempt to shame Cuba for its slums backfires

by Mark Frauenfelder

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ESPN SportsCenter tweeted this photo of a poor urban area next to the Havana stadium where Obama attended a baseball game. The photo was accompanied by the caption, “Meanwhile, next to the stadium in Havana...”

People responded by sending a barrage of photos of areas next to stadiums in US cities:

[via]

04 Apr 17:53

Nixon started the War on Drugs because he couldn't declare war on black people and hippies

by Cory Doctorow

800px-Elvis-nixon

Nixon aide/Watergate jailbird John Ehrlichman confessed to Dan Baum that Richard Nixon started the War on Drugs because "We knew we couldn’t make it illegal to be either against the war or black, but by getting the public to associate the hippies with marijuana and blacks with heroin, and then criminalizing both heavily, we could disrupt those communities." (more…)

01 Apr 13:24

Paperless Billing for Property Tax Now Available in Gwinnett

by Doug Gross
Homeowners will receive an email in August instead of a paper bill under the new system.
31 Mar 17:49

An open letter to Sec. Ashton Carter

by noreply@blogger.com (Robert Graham)
Hi.

For security research, I regularly "mass scan" the entire Internet. For example, my latest scan shows between 250,000 and 300,000 devices still vulnerable to Heartbleed. This is legal. This is necessary security research. Yet, I still happily remove those who complain and want me to stop scanning them.

The Department of Defense didn't merely complain, but made threats, forcing me to stop scanning them. You guys were quite nasty about it, forcing me to figure out for myself which address ranges belong to the DoD.

These threats are likely standard procedure at the DoD, investigating every major source of scans and shutting down those you might have power over. But the effect of this is typical government corruption, preventing me from reporting the embarrassing detail of how many DoD systems are still vulnerable to Heartbleed (but without stopping the Chinese or Russians from knowing this detail).

Please remove your threats, so that I can scan the DoD in the same way I scan the rest of the Internet. This weekend I'll be scanning the Internet for system susceptible to the DROWN attack. I would like to include DoD in those scans.

I write to you now because you are making overtures to Silicon Valley, and offering bug bounties. Fixing this problem would help in this process.

Regards,
Robert Graham


31 Mar 17:48

Practical TEMPEST Attack

by schneier

Four researchers have demonstrated a TEMPEST attack against a laptop, recovering its keys by listening to its electrical emanations. The cost for the attack hardware was about $3,000.

News article:

To test the hack, the researchers first sent the target a specific ciphertext -- ­in other words, an encrypted message.

"During the decryption of the chosen ciphertext, we measure the EM leakage of the target laptop, focusing on a narrow frequency band," the paper reads. The signal is then processed, and "a clean trace is produced which reveals information about the operands used in the elliptic curve cryptography," it continues, which in turn "is used in order to reveal the secret key."

The equipment used included an antenna, amplifiers, a software-defined radio, and a laptop. This process was being carried out through a 15cm thick wall, reinforced with metal studs, according to the paper.

The researchers obtained the secret key after observing 66 decryption processes, each lasting around 0.05 seconds. "This yields a total measurement time of about 3.3 sec," the paper reads. It's important to note that when the researchers say that the secret key was obtained in "seconds," that's the total measurement time, and not necessarily how long it would take for the attack to actually be carried out. A real world attacker would still need to factor in other things, such as the target reliably decrypting the sent ciphertext, because observing that process is naturally required for the attack to be successful.

For half a century this has been a nation-state-level espionage technique. The cost is continually falling.

21 Mar 17:27

America 2.0

by jon

2016-03-21-America-2-0

Have you been to the Meatsphere? It might be your last, best choice.

Hey! SCIENCE is SATAN spelled backwards shirts are back in the store! Purchase one today with your human money.

sciencesatan

The post America 2.0 appeared first on Scenes From A Multiverse.

21 Mar 14:09

Things Organized Neatly: a book of knollish greatness

by Cory Doctorow

ThingsOrganizedNeatly_p092-093

The Things Organized Neatly blog (previously), which celebrates the kentucky art of knolling, is now a gorgeous, essential book filled with photos of meticulously arranged wonders of all description. (more…)

18 Mar 19:30

Chelsea Manning gets the US Army to cough up its "insider threat" training docs

by Cory Doctorow

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Imprisoned whistleblower Chelsea Manning writes, "I filed my Freedom of Information Act request in 2014 for Training Material related to the Insider Threat Program. I had almost forgoten about it, when the package arrived in the mail. In it was this slideshow." (more…)

17 Mar 15:01

Barnes & Noble wipes out Nook ebook, replaces it with off-brand "study guide"

by Cory Doctorow
Binaryjesus

Always back up your E-Books.

056c026d-1c66-4d42-9fae-a8e96df290c5-1020x986

Chris writes, "I bought my first e-book in 1998, before my e-reading hardware had even arrived yet. Yesterday I discovered that Barnes & Noble has effectively stolen that book from me, mistakenly replacing it it in my Nook library with another title I never bought." (more…)

15 Mar 14:15

How One Company Can Turn Normal Cars Into Affordable Hybrids Using Supercar Tech

by Máté Petrány
Binaryjesus

Hybridize my FWD land-yacht? Yes, please!

The company that came up with electric drive axle units for the Porsche 918, the BWM i8 and the Volvo T8s , GKN, is behind a lot of the leading-edge technology finding its way into supercars. And now, their upgraded units will also make it into affordable compacts near you, resulting in cheap hybrids for all.

Read more...

15 Mar 14:08

Watch the Horrific Trailer for Sausage Party, the R-Rated, CG Movie About Talking Food

by Katharine Trendacosta
Binaryjesus

Trailer is amazing. "They're eating children!"

Behold, the trailer for Sausage Party, a movie that I am pretty sure exists solely for the name. There’s a great idea lurking in it—namely that the animation conceit of everyday things talking and moving around would actually make the real world a horrifying place. But there’s a chance this trailer goes a bit too far.

Read more...










15 Mar 13:31

Spider Bondage Exists and It Is Gnarly as Hell

by George Dvorsky on Gizmodo, shared by Adam Clark Estes to io9

Spiders are notorious for their bizarre and often violent mating practices. New research shows that, in order to avoid getting eaten during sex, male nursery spiders will tie up their partners with silken threads. And yes, it’s as horrible as it sounds.

Read more...










14 Mar 17:43

J.K. Rowling's History of Magic in North America Was a Travesty From Start to Finish

by Katharine Trendacosta

All this week, J.K. Rowling has been publishing History of Magic in North America, one part a day for four days. When it’s been at its best, it’s been sloppy; when its not at its best—which is most of the time—it’s uninformed and under-researched. At its worst, it is downright offensive, and here’s why.

Read more...










14 Mar 14:48

My Summer Job at the Bohemian Grove, Serving Milkshakes to the Shitfaced Global Elite

by Sophie Weiner on Gawker, shared by Justin Westbrook to Jalopnik

“Anyone can aspire to be President of the United States, but few have any hope of becoming President of the Bohemian Club,” Richard Nixon reportedly once said. But for a kid growing up in Sonoma County, California near the Bohemian Grove, the club’s ultra-exclusive campground, getting a service job there was easy.

Read more...

14 Mar 14:43

Guy Tests Tesla Autopilot Sensors On A Child Because Why Not

by Alanis King

As far as autonomous driving goes, it’s still a bit of a freaky concept for most of us—whether we can trust the cars to detect objects, stay in their lanes and, oh, not kill us. In a test of the autopilot sensors on the Tesla Model S that included things from stuffed animals to kids, a YouTube user found some odd results.

Read more...

14 Mar 14:29

Koenigsegg Is Still Ten Years Ahead Of Everybody Else

by Máté Petrány

While the cutting-edge Regera is entering series production, Koenigsegg is also working on both the Agera’s replacement, a future four-door car and making camless engines a reality. The company is hiring too, so if you feel like being part of all this, now is the time to give them a call.

Read more...

14 Mar 14:13

To download or stream: 1000 hours of classic jazz, mixed and annotated by a master collector

by Cory Doctorow

Louis_Armstrong_Tape_6_Variation_1928-1929

David W Niven began collecting jazz records in 1925, when he was 10 years old. He continued to collect until 1991, amassing a nearly unparalleled collection of 78s and LPs, whose highlights he eventually transferred to cassette, boiling down 10,000 hours of music to 1,000 hours of tape with his spoken commentary, each cassette meticulously annotated with handwritten liner-notes. (more…)

11 Mar 16:14

3D printed battle-armor for cats

by Cory Doctorow

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Carrying on the ancient, honorable tradition of armoring your cat, Print That Thing designed a suit of 3D printable cat armor and uploaded it to Thinigverse for anyone to download and print. (more…)

11 Mar 15:11

No, Now This Is Officially the Hottest Earth Has Ever Been [UPDATING]

by Ria Misra on Gizmodo, shared by Adam Clark Estes to io9

It’s getting pretty hard to keep track of all the heat records we’ve been breaking recently, isn’t it? Don’t worry, we’re here to help.

Read more...










11 Mar 14:42

Never mind “one size fits all”; one size isn’t even one size anymore!

by Joey deVilla

usa l eur xl mex xl

Have you noticed this trend on clothing size tags, where a US “large” is “extra large” to the rest of the world? I stumbled across the photo above last week and then saw the same thing in real life when I bought the shirt below during our first anniversary trip to Disney World:

star wars shirt

Here’s a closer look at the size tag:

star wars shirt tag

I almost fit into the size M shirt, which was pretty large for a “medium”. I could button it up, but I’m not going for the “Benedict Cumberbatch look”:

cumberbatch shirt 2

cumberbatch shirt 3

cumberbatch shirt 1

benedict cumberbatch shirt buttons

We may need to use smaller geographical divisions on clothing tags. Judging from the people I saw during my last visit, I’m “Ohio skinny”.

10 Mar 19:22

Tilting Motor Works Offers a Full Range of Trikes for Harleys and the Gold Wing

by Paul Crowe
We first reported on Tilting Motor Works way back in 2007. Bob Mighell had just built his second tilting trike, a V-Max, to address the problem of too little power from his initial build, a Honda Rebel proof of concept, but even at that early stage, he knew he was on the right track because […]