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19 Aug 06:53

Practicing “Open” at Mozilla

by Mitchell Baker

Mozilla works to bring openness and opportunity for all into the Internet and online life.  We seek to reflect these values in how we operate.  At our founding it was easy to understand what this meant in our workflow — developers worked with open code and project management through bugzilla.  This was complemented with an open workflow through the social media of the day — mailing lists and the chat or “messenger” element, known as Internet Relay Chat (“irc”).  The tools themselves were also open-source and the classic “virtuous circle” promoting openness was pretty clear.

Today the setting is different.  We were wildly successful with the idea of engineers working in open systems.  Today open source code and shared repositories are mainstream, and in many areas the best of practices and expected and default. On the other hand, the newer communication and workflow tools vary in their openness, with some particularly open and some closed proprietary code.  Access and access control is a constant variable.  In addition, at Mozilla we’ve added a bunch of new types of activities beyond engineering, we’ve increased the number of employees dramatically and we’re a bit behind on figuring out what practicing open in this setting means.  

I’ve decided to dedicate time to this and look at ways to make sure our goals of building open practices into Mozilla are updated and more fully developed.  This is one of the areas of focus I mentioned in an earlier post describing where I spend my time and energy.  

So far we have three early stage pilots underway sponsored by the Office of the Chair:

  • Opening up the leadership recruitment process to more people
  • Designing inclusive decision-making practices
  • Fostering meaningful conversations and exchange of knowledge across the organization, with a particular focus on bettering communications between Mozillians and leadership.

Follow-up posts will have more info about each of these projects.  In general the goal of these experiments is to identify working models that can be adapted by others across Mozilla. And beyond that, to assist other Mozillians figure out new ways to “practice open” at Mozilla.

19 Aug 06:53

Using Freenet over Tor

This post outlines a method of using Freenet over Tor based on posts I wrote on my Freenet hosted blog and subsequent discussions about it. If you read my Freenet hosted blog there's little new here, I'm just making it available on my non-freenet blog.

One issue I've had with Freenet is that it exposes your IP address to peers. Recent law enforcement efforts to monitor Freenet have shown that they have been able to obtain search warrants based on logging requests for blocks of known data and associating them with IP addresses. If law enforcement can do this, so can random bad people.

You can avoid exposing your IP address to random strangers on opennet by using darknet but even then you have to trust your friends aren't monitoring your requests. If it was possible to run Freenet over Tor hidden services then only the hidden service address would be exposed using this logging method. A problem is that Freenet uses UDP which Tor does not support.

A recent post on the Freenet development mailing list pointed out that onioncat provides a virtual network over Tor and tunnels UDP. Using the steps they provided, and some tweaks, it's possible to set up a darknet node that doesn't expose its IP address. It uses the onioncat generated IPv6 address for communicating with peers - and this address is backed by a Tor hidden service.

The steps below outline how to set this up. Note that this is quite experimental and requires care to not expose your IP address. There are some Freenet issues that make things difficult so you should be aware that you do this at your risk and understand it may still expose your identity if things go wrong.

I'm assuming a Debian/Ubuntu like system for the steps.

Install Tor

Install Tor:

$ sudo apt-get install tor

Edit the /etc/tor/torrc file to enable a Hidden Service with an entry like:

HiddenServiceDir /var/lib/tor/freenet/
HiddenServicePort 8060 127.0.0.1:8060

Restart Tor and find your hidden service hostname:

$ sudo systemctl restart tor
$ sudo cat /var/lib/tor/freenet/hostname

Install onioncat

Install onioncat:

$ sudo apt-get install onioncat

Edit /etc/default/onioncat and change the lines matching the following:

ENABLED=yes
DAEMON_OPTS="-d 0 hiddenservicename.onion -U"

Restart onioncat:

$ sudo systemctl stop onioncat
$ sudo systemctl start onioncat

Find your onioncat IP address with:

$ ocat -i hiddenservicename.onion

Install Freenet

Install Freenet in the usual way and go through the browser based setup wizard. Choose "Details settings: (custom)" for the security option. On the subsequent pages of the wizard:

  • Disable the UPnP plugin.
  • Choose "Only connect to your friends"
  • Choose "High" for "Protection against a stranger attacking you over the internet"
  • Click the "I trust at least one person already using Freenet" checkbox.
  • For "Protection of your downloads..." pick any option you want.
  • Pick a node name that your darknet friends will see.
  • Pick a datastore size that you want.
  • Choose the bandwidth limit.

The node will now be started but have no connections. There will be warnings about this.

Configure Freenet over Tor

The following settings need to be changed in "Configuration/Core Settings" - make sure you have clicked "Switch to advanced mode".

  • Change "IP address override" to your onioncat IP address retrieved in the previous section.
  • Apply the changes.

Shut down Freenet and edit the wrapper.conf file in the Freenet installation directory. Change the line that contains java.net.preferIPv4Stack=true to java.net.preferIPv4Stack=false. In my wrapper.conf this is:

wrapper.java.additional.3=-Djava.net.preferIPv4Stack=false

Edit freenet.ini file in the Freenet installation directory. Change or add the following (replace "onioncat IP address" with the IP address obtained installing onioncat):

node.opennet.bindTo=onioncat IP address
node.bindTo=onioncat IP address
node.load.subMaxPingTime=2500
node.load.maxPingTime=5k

Save the file and restart Freenet. There might be a warning about "Unknown external address". Ignore this as you've explictly set one. I provide a patch later in this post if you want to get rid of the warning.

Add a friend

Now is the time to add a Darknet friend who is also using Tor/Onioncat. Go to "Friends/Add a friend". Choose your trust and ability to see other friends settings and enter a description of the friend. Paste their noderef in the "Enter node reference directly" box.

Give your noderef to your friend and have them add it. Once both connections have been added you should see "Connected" in the Friends list for that connection. The IP address should show the onioncat IPv6 address, beginning with "fd".

Optional Freenet patch

When running a Tor based node Freenet thinks the onioncat IP address is a local address. Some places in the Freenet code base check for this and reject it as a valid global routable address. In the FProxy user interface a large warning appears on each page that it couldn't find the external IP address of the node. The other issue is that local addresses aren't counted for bandwidth statistic reporting. The bandwidth box on the statistics page is empty as a result.

I use a patch, onioncat.txt, that provides a workaround for these two issues. The patch is optional as the node works without it but it's a useful improvement if you plan to run a Tor based node long term. You should check the patch before applying it blindly and assure that it's not doing anything nefarious.

Hybrid nodes

If you run a Tor based darknet node then at least one hybrid node must be in the darknet to bridge to the non-tor nodes. These hybrid nodes will have a public clearnet IP address exposed. I outline how to set up a hybrid node later below. For those that trust me, if you send a darknet tor noderef to me at the freemail address on the bottom of this page, or via normal email, I'll connect and send you a noderef of a hybrid node setup in this manner.

Install Tor and Onioncat as described previously. Install Freenet in the usual way and go through the browser based setup wizard. Choose "Details settings: (custom)" for the security option. On the subsequent pages of the wizard:

  • Enable or Disable the UPnP plugin as necessary depending on what you need for your clearnet connection to work.
  • Choose "Connect to strangers"
  • Choose "Low" or "Normal" security as desired.
  • For "Protection of your downloads..." pick any option you want.
  • Pick a datastore size that you want.
  • Choose the bandwidth limit.

The node will start and connect to opennet.

Shut down Freenet and edit the wrapper.conf file in the Freenet installation directory. Change the line that contains java.net.preferIPv4Stack=true to java.net.preferIPv4Stack=false. In my wrapper.conf this is:

wrapper.java.additional.3=-Djava.net.preferIPv4Stack=false

Edit freenet.ini file in the Freenet installation directory. Change or add the following:

node.load.subMaxPingTime=2500
node.load.maxPingTime=5k

Save the file and restart Freenet. If you base64 decode the "physical.udp" section of the noderef for the node you should see that it now contains the onioncat IP address as well as the public clearnet IP address.

Adding friends to this node will give those friends access to the wider Freenet datastore when they reciprocate.

Don't forget to check your noderefs to ensure that the ARK and the public IP address contain data you are willing to reveal. Check both the darknet noderef and the opennet noderef. You can decode the base64 of the "physical.udp" line with the GNU base64 command:

$ echo "physical.udp base64 here" |base64 -d

Final steps and caveats

Try visiting a Freenet index site and see if it loads. If it does then the Freenet over Tor setup is working. It will be slower than normal Freenet usage due to Tor latency. If you connect to more darknet nodes it will get faster.

When adding a friends noderef you can check what IP addresses it will connect to by looking at the "physical.udp" line. This is a base64 encoded list of IP addresses. You might want to check this to ensure that there are no clearnet addresses in there. If there is a clearnet address then it could deanonymize your node when it tries to connect to that in preference to the onioncat address.

The "ark.pubURI" portion of the noderef is an SSK that points to updated IP address information. A node can subscribe to the USK version of this and learn about IP address changes. Your friends node could change their IP address to a clearnet address resulting in you connecting to that.

To avoid the above two issues it's worthwhile running Freenet in a VM or container that does not have clearnet network access and only has access to the onioncat network setup. Alternatively you can use iptables to only allow onioncat traffic for the Freenet process or user running it.

The IP addresses exposed in the noderef include all local link addresses and their scopes. This is Freenet bug 6879. This may leak information you don't want leaked. It pays to check the "physical.udp" and "ark.pubURI" to see what you are exposing. Remember that any IP addresses exposed over the ARK is discoverable by looking at previous editions of the USK.

The traffic footprint of Freenet may make it easier to track down your IP address from your Tor ID. The volume of data and the nature of the traffic may make certain types of Tor de-anonymization techniques more effective.

Ideally it would be possible to have an opennet of Tor nodes so the exchange of darknet noderefs wouldn't be needed. I haven't been able to get this working yet but I'll continue to investigate it.

I've been running a Tor darknet node for the past week to test how well it works. With three darknet connections it runs well enough for browsing freesites. Sone and the Web of Trust took quite a while to bootstrap due to the lower speed but once it was running it works well. FMS and Flip are also usable. I'd expect performance to be even better with more connections.

19 Aug 06:53

Comment about Hard to believe winter is coming :-)

by Vancouverscape.com

Vancouverscape.com has posted a comment:

Say it isn't so!

Hard to believe winter is coming :-)

19 Aug 06:53

Haha n00b, learn to hack!

by Don Marti

The web ad business is full of deception, according to...you thought I was going to say Bob Hoffman, didn't you?

No, I'm going to cite no less an authority than Interactive Advertising Bureau CEO Randall Rothenberg, who advises that any brand that has to deal with companies in his industry had better hire someone with mad hacking skills.

The problem begins with the unwillingness of major marketers to insource significant, senior-level technical expertise.

At Marketing Week, Thomas Hobbs quotes Alessandra Di Lorenzo, chief commercial officer for advertising and partnerships at Lastminute.com.

Anyone who is a non-digital, native brand is probably less skilled in the inner workings of media and should be more on guard about what is really going on.

This is like needing a Chief Power Supply Officer because you buy PCs and you don't trust your vendor not to put in a bad power supply. In any other business, if you have a problem with deceptive sellers, a halfway decent trade organization would be all over that. "Tired of getting ripped off by crooks who sell other people's condos on Craigslist? Next time, call a Realtor® from the National Association of Realtors®." You know the drill. Every trade organization does this.

Except the adtech business. From adtech, brands get roughly the same message that a WordPress user with a security problem would get on a phpBB site tricked out with a black background and rotating ASCII-art skulls. haha pwned n00b! Better learn 2 h@ck nxt t1m3!!!1! The IAB puts an ideological committment to unlimited third-party tracking ahead of the interests of its honest members' customers.

It's not an "advertising" thing—magazine ads really get printed, bus ads really get stuck to the bus, radio stations really transmit. Adfraud is the unavoidable by-product of today's web ad system that allows ads to be targeted across high and low reputation sites. You don't need a fraud expert to buy magazine ads, but the web is another story. And that "senior-level technical expertise" that IAB wants you to get is not cheap. Software companies have enough trouble hiring people with hacking skills—and now any brand that wants to run a web ad is going to need one?

Judy Shapiro writes, "Marketers' trust in the ad-tech world is on the decline for lots of reasons: complexity, lack of transparency or standards."

I suppose that's a nice way of saying that people who are responsible for brands are sick of being told that deception is here to stay and it's up to you to learn to deal or hire a hacker who can.

Dr. Augustine Fou writes,

We are, after all, dealing with hackers who are very advanced in the use of technology AND who don’t play by the normal rules of engagement. The good guys are at a disadvantage before the race even starts. Something other than technology must be applied at the same time – like changing the financial motives or changing the metrics used to calculate ROI. For example, rather than use quantity metrics – such as number of impressions, traffic, and clicks – that are easily faked, if advertisers focused on actual sales or other ‘conversion events’ that only humans would do, they would be far better off, and less prone to fraud stealing their ad dollars.

But unless you have Dr. Fou or some other expert working for you, attribution is no solution. One thing everybody can learn from the Steelhouse/Criteo controversy is that attribution models are subject to gaming, and it's hard to work backward to see where the attribution snatching happened. Fraud can piggyback on a user's activity in order to let a fraudulent ad take credit for a real sale. This is even worse than straight-up bogus impressions, because it encourages you to move marketing money to places where it doesn't reach real users. Most of the people who really understand attribution models are fraud hackers.

Bob asks, Will The P&G Story Bring Down Ad Tech? Please?

(P&G is an interesting example for all the behavioral economists out there. This company is mostly selling products that you buy because Society expects you, as a sanitary human being, to use them. If you don't know that Society is seeing the same ad, why take the risk of overspending on making life less stinky for others when you don't have to?)

The answer to Bob's question is: no, this story won't have much impact all by itself. But it does make people think: how can we transform web advertising from a hacking game that brands can't win into a reputation game where brands have the advantage? Some more on behavioral economics and possible next steps.

19 Aug 06:52

Your Collaboration Score

by Richard Millington

Would you rate yourself as a good collaborator?

  • Do you understand the unique value you bring to a project? Do others agree?
  • Do you resist documenting that unique value to stay unique?
  • Do you share expertise when asked without trying to take over or reinvent the entire project?
  • Do you get yourself up to speed before you contribute and try to understand why things are done that way?
  • Do you get the job done or go the extra mile to ensure it’s as good as it can be?
  • Do you work to build good relationships with other team members?
  • Do you adapt to other collaborators’ way of working or do you demand they adapt to you?
  • Do you clearly communicate when the project will be done and keep people updated?
  • Do you clearly identify everything you need in advance or drop challenges on others at the last minute?
  • Do you claim your time is more valuable than anyone else’s?
  • Do you notice and uncover when other collaborators are uncomfortable?
  • Do you listen and embrace feedback or do you resist and deny it?
  • Do you give unsolicited opinions before checking if they’re wanted?
  • Do you leave projects when you’re no longer needed?
  • Do you compromise your point of view when necessary for a team to complete a project?
  • Do you make other collaborators feel better about their work or do you bring them down to demonstrate your superiority?

Now ask the rest of your team how they would rate your collaboration abilities.

You might be surprised.

19 Aug 06:52

Muse Feed

by Stephen Thomas

Greg Capetty is 45, separated, lives in Livonia, Michigan, and works at Roonys Pizza and Pop. His social world is limited to his coworkers and his son, Jordan. Once, at a gas station, a woman named Crystal approached him as he was “picking up a cracker or chip,” and asked him out. Before their date, Crystal left a bouquet of red roses at Greg’s door, and Greg posted a picture of the flowers to Facebook. During their first date, Crystal made anda bhurji, which Greg described as “like scrambled eggs but makes your mouth hurt more.” At some point during their “whorl wind” romance, Crystal posted to Greg’s Facebook:

***AHEM-HEM*** Greg’s going to be a little busssssy for awhile and doesn’t need silly distractions. He only gets his phone back IF he’s a good boy, if you meow my drift…

Crystal’s guest status got 49 likes, becoming one of Greg’s most successful posts to date, and signaled a new level of engagement with the profile’s fans, which is what we were, really, because Greg Capetty is a fictional character who exists only as a Facebook profile. Welcome to Weird Facebook, an unlikely community on an unlikely platform.

The term “Weird Facebook” is fast becoming synonymous with Facebook pages dedicated to posting ironic memes — some of which, like Bernie Sanders’s Dank Meme Stash and I play KORN to my DMT plants, smoke blunts all day & do sex stuff, can clock over 100,000 followers. New York Magazine called them home to “thousands of the web’s most innovative weirdos,” while the Daily Dot called them “fodder for the guy you bought weed from in high school.” These larger groups often act like fan pages: One or a handful of admins make and post the memes for subscribers to like and share. But the delight of Weird Facebook is the network itself, which spills beyond these Facebook groups to the feeds of many of their members. “Dank Meme Stash” is only one realization of a vital and much more expansive sensibility. Weird Facebook lives in the posts that a loose community of artists, writers, weirdos and depressives make on their personal accounts and in conversation with each other. A genre emerges in these personal posts, something like a combination of performance art and comedy, and uniquely Facebookian: The art is in the performance of self, real or fictional or some combination thereof, with the depth and scope that a full profile, photo album and Timeline can allow.

The characters involved — or the most successful ones, the ones that spawn imitators and summon haters — are big, uncomplicated, and consistent, in a way that belies just a notch more brand awareness than an actual personality. Honey Martin is a vulnerable, hilarious 21-year-old woman who lives in New York and will post about plucking a huge hair from her neck as soon as a flattering selfie of her new haircut, with no shirt on. Rachel Bell, a poet in Chicago, plays the working-class ingénue and girl next door who’s as open about her sexual trauma as she is about her karaoke playlist. Heiko Julien is the reformed troll who engages more sincerely these days but is still kind of an ass.* The pleasure of Weird Facebook is as a petri dish of social dynamics and a real-time reality show you can mainline directly from your News Feed.

If you’re going rogue, an error message will ask, “Do you know this person outside of Facebook?” As a result, Facebook encourages strangers in a strange scene to think of themselves as friends

The Weird Facebook community lives in the personal profiles of the kind of high-status individuals described above, who act as hubs, and whose posts — rather than the kinds of kitchen-sink “this is what I did today” or “this is what I’m thinking about right now” posts that tend to dominate normal Facebook — act more like little poems, or statements, or reports from a more inner world, and are mostly meant to stand alone. The comment threads within these posts act as places to see and be seen, via riffing and/or trolling. Weird Facebook also lives in thousands of groups much smaller than the typical meme page, with memberships in the hundreds and a flatter hierarchy between member and admin. These groups are named after made-up micro-aesthetics like #SANDPUNK and “Think About the Ocean” that mean nothing at first; the membership — total strangers, mostly, until they’re not — creates the meaning. The privacy is often members-only, and posting in them is usually more about feeling like part of something than creating shareable content. The creators of Weird Facebook, by and large, are not trying to “make it,” but rather to make each other happy.

All good art is a mix of innovation and structure. But Facebook art has no fixed form, only a stable goal: to please a fixed audience. The ways that people please each other vary and evolve; figuring out new ways to get likes becomes the focus of innovation. If this sounds strange, think of Tolstoy’s definition of art: any form of human communication refined by attention, intention, and practice. Weird Facebook artists are merely early adopters in the ever-evolving progression from new technology — language, paint, video cameras — to art tool. And Facebook has produced a new kind of artist.


II: Facebook as Setting

Where I live, in Toronto, I’m a peripheral spectator to a community sometimes called “the Double Double Land scene,” which revolves around the eponymous art venue and a few other galleries and spaces in the same neighborhood run by people who all know each other. The scene has porous boundaries, open to anyone who learns the language. The art ranges from performance art to painting to music, video, and comedy, and shares a kind of family resemblance. Any individual work is arguably less important than the people involved and their relationships with each other. The scene is small; few outside Toronto and not even that many within Toronto will ever see the work. But for those who create it, the work is very real, with real consequences, and knowing that you’ll have an audience to impress gives you a reason to create. Weird Facebook is similar. Plenty of members aren’t trying to reach anyone outside of their immediate circle, but those who do, like those Double Double Land artists who tour and show and get written up internationally, tend to keep one foot in the local scene, because that’s where all their friends are and that’s where they live.

Facebook is still, after a half-decade of death forecasts, the entry-level social network — as New York Magazine pointed out, it’s “where everyone already is.” The platform was initially designed to connect people who knew each other already, or might bump into each other soon, and site guidelines still reflect that. If its algorithms sense you’re going rogue, an error message will ask, “Do you know this person outside of Facebook?” As a result, unlike Tumblr, which is designed to allow anonymity, and Twitter, where following is nonreciprocal, the national culture of Facebook encourages even strangers in a self-consciously strange scene to think of themselves as friends. Anyone can see what you looked like in 2007, and a message from a stranger will show up in between messages from your best friend and your mom. This makes the content more character-based — a user’s past and present are available, and sometimes required, for context — and more intimate. Running jokes, call-backs, and self-referentiality are possible in a way that resembles how you talk to your closest friends: Someone like John Trulli (both a single Weird Facebook personality and the admin of the popular meme page Cabbage Cat, before it was deleted) can do a whole “series” of memes on Bagel Bites that would make no sense at all if you didn’t know he’d had a confrontation with that company months earlier.

Weird Facebook is a product of the intersection of a wide array of internet micro-scenes: 4chan, VampireFreaks, alt lit, net art, Hipster Runoff, vaporwave, Reddit, popserial.net, dump.fm, Ello, rhizome.org, 4chan’s /b, Feminist Frequency, and the fan communities of Macintosh Plus and Yung Lean. (My way into the scene was through alt lit, and groups like People Who Write Poetry Sometimes and Are Also Poor.) Some users trace the seeds as far back as 2010; in any case, the community gained momentum throughout 2014 and 2015, when controversies like the rape scandals that disintegrated alt lit and the Gamergate debacle that turned a lot of people off Reddit caused the more progressive members to come together in the one space they already shared: Facebook. But whereas a handful of people I spoke to had highly developed Weird Facebook origin stories, many had no idea where the scene came from, and often were only hazily aware of themselves as being part of a scene at all. “Weird Facebook?” said Mei Shi, an artist in Philadelphia with whom I have 500 mutual friends (my only and best metric for determining someone’s involvement). “Is that like doggo memes?” Corey Holmes, a 21-year-old chef at a restaurant in Houston and a popular personality said, “Yeah, I’ve heard of it. Remind me what it is?”

What would be a really boring short film can be a really funny livestream; the form is so easy to consume that we’re not annoyed at clichés

This cluelessness is actually integral to the scene’s culture. The fact that joining is as easy as sending friend requests to the people involved and just letting their content slowly take over your News Feed means that, for an art community, the barrier of entry is incredibly low. Some people take it very seriously; some people have been cultivating their audience for years. But randos don’t need to know any of this. Anyone can just wander in off the street, walk onto the stage, and start singing. And if they’re good, heads will turn, and because Facebook’s algorithm rewards popularity with popularity, a new voice can emerge overnight.

A.W., for example, through his blunt, untrendy opinionating on everything from video games to white people, became notorious enough to gain “a small core of hardcore adherents, then a slightly weaker ring of sycophants,” and then an outer ring of “spectators,” many of whom “probably resent me a bit.” Before any of this, A.W. had a single IRL friend involved in Weird Facebook; he just started adding the people whose names he’d see in his friend’s comment threads. Rax King, who lived in Philadelphia at her Weird Facebook peak but now lives in New York, stumbled onto the scene through Ideas, a public megagroup on Facebook which is not really part of Weird Facebook — it’s more of a “normal” place, where people unironically talk about the subject in the group’s name. One night, King posted, “Idea: Men are bad at sex.” In a matter of hours she was flooded with friend requests from all corners of the Weird Facebook world, which is always ready to welcome like sensibilities.

The constant influx of randos to an otherwise relatively stable community makes for a fast-evolving environment. So does the fact that Facebook is a flexible platform: It has most of the functionality of Twitter, Instagram, YouTube, and Tumblr, and is constantly being remade to grab more of our minutes per day. As soon as Facebook Live debuted, for example, it became a new site of pranking and experimenting: The livestream deemphasizes the photographic or cinematographic choices that would normally be important in video art and emphasizes the choice of when and what to livestream. What would be a really boring short film can be a really funny livestream, like a slow pan of warehouse workplace that leads to some papers being shredded. The form is so easy to consume that we’re not annoyed at clichés, and so new combinations of old tropes can be exciting. A talented mind with something to show off but no access to traditional art or publishing or performance venues — and perhaps without the ambition or know-how to claw their way into those venues — can find themselves with a readymade audience. All this immigration keeps the work fresh and the competition fierce. Even the most established personalities can find themselves forced to reinvent their game or become obsolete.


III: Pop Artists

The text-only status update, the selfie (captioned or uncaptioned), the meme, the ironic share, the snap-like video update, the livestream, and even the long series of links to existing pages and groups, which has become a signature Weird Facebook in-joke — these are the forms available to the Weird Facebook artist. In contrast to this diversity of form, however, there is a relatively stable sensibility: emotional, manic, critical (but usually with oneself as the target); fatalistic, inward-turning. The best glassware for this cocktail is, again, something like a hybrid of a comedian and performance artist. Honey Martin and Corey Holmes are both masters of this form: hilarious and consistently exhibitionist. If you follow them, you follow the turns their lives take, and you feel like you know them. The details from life deepen the comedy, and the comedy is the honey that attracts you to the character. This formulation works best for the platform, because jokes and selfies and serialized life updates are what people like on Facebook, and the engine of Facebook art is like-chasing — the point is to appeal to as many friends, and friends of friends, as possible. That which gets likes wins, and becomes the standard-bearer.

Take Rachel Bell, whose Facebook career best illustrates the art of acquisition. Nominally a poet, Bell’s real genius is for the massively liked Facebook post — her first two books were compilations of her statuses. It’s nothing for her to get 300 likes on a flashy, funny, finely wrought little story accompanied by a relevant (or not) selfie. Last Christmas she posted a pic of an unremarkable college bro flashing the peace sign with the caption “downloaded tinder to find someone to sell me weed and well it’s a christmas miracle because this dude rode a hoverboard to my aunt’s house lmao” — a perfect storm of memes and references and low-key titillation mixed into a basically heartwarming tale — and got 617 likes. To see Bell evolve over the years is to see a highly responsive creator creating highly responsively, using the immediate feedback loop that Facebook provides to develop her work and its presentation. Her very pointed selfie-memes are funny and rebellious and elliptically political; they also capitalize on her physical beauty, not because that’s what she’s most proud of or what she wants her “thing” to be, but because that’s where the likes are, and she’s a “like” artist.

Just as Stefani Germanotta’s sensi piano ballads transformed into Lady Gaga’s club bangers, art tempered by the force of the “like” market can be a perfect union of selfishness and selflessness

Despite the difference in scale, Facebook “like” art is essentially the art of the pop star. Incomers’ idiosyncrasies and indulgences are tempered by the force of the like market. Just as you see Stefani Germanotta’s sensi piano ballads transform into Lady Gaga’s club bangers, so you see Bell’s early Nabokov references give way to her makeup tutorials. This might seem like pandering, but the flip side is that it’s a form of generosity: you’re literally giving people what they want. If you gain acclaim at the same time, as all entertainers know, it’s a perfect union of selfishness and selflessness.

Something else is drawn from today’s pop star, too: In the same way that Beyoncé documents her every waking moment and releases documentaries about her life, and DJ Khaled gives us a never-ending backstage pass to his life through his snaps, the artists of Weird Facebook package themselves as a kind of “friend experience.” On the surface, a Weird Facebook artist’s output might not seem that different from what a comedian on Twitter or TV provides, but the “total personality experience” of the non-funny stuff — the bed selfies, the sincere posts, the minor breakdowns; everything your real Facebook friends are doing — sets the overall performance apart as its own genre: It provides the entertainment we look to celebrities for, while offering the intimacy, by way of 360-degree mundanity, of an actual friendship. As Andy O’Leary, another comedian/performance-artist who takes their Facebook content seriously, says, “I basically treat it like a show where I’m the showrunner, writer, and star.”


IV: Non-Ambitious Motivations

Some of these artists have “made it.” Bell tours around the country constantly. Like Bell’s early poetry books, the first ebook by Heiko Julien comprises Facebook or Facebook-like content; it has been downloaded 50,000 times. Alfred English, a DJ/producer/graphic designer in Los Angeles who works the same territory as Bell, sells his beats for $200 a pop on his Facebook page and gets recognized as “that meme guy” around Los Angeles. John Trulli used his Facebook success as a jumping off point to get his start on Instagram, where, as Cabbage Cat, he now has almost 200,000 followers.

As a rule, however, Weird Facebook success does not generally translate into success on any larger stage. And this is how an interestingly large number of members like it: Like-chasing is not the same as fame-chasing. There is a contingent who view their Facebook popularity as a step on the path to bigger things, but as many just want approval and validation from a small inner circle, and actively spurn contact with a larger audience.

Rax King, who blew up because of “Idea: Men are bad at sex,” got so popular at one point that strangers were messaging her asking for advice on their personal problems. “I was like, I don’t know why you’re asking me these questions,” she said. “I’m just someone who likes to crack jokes on the internet.” A.W., for whom Facebook “got weird,” did not like the experience of being well-known either. “When a lot of people pay attention to you, you can be the target of some unsavory characters,” he says. “I don’t want that.” Lacey Day, who was well-known (as “Lazy Daze”) in the scene a couple years back and at one point put out “a couple of poetry scrapbooks on Scribd,” has since scaled down her involvement. She is now working toward a chemical engineering degree, and in a relationship. “I used to have a lot of free time,” she says.

Talking with other popular Weird Facebook personalities, I was struck by the discrepancy between how hard they clearly work at their content and how often they claimed to have no interest in being known by more people: It seems strange to shoot for stardom on a semi-private platform, working as hard as any self-styled artist in a medium barely acknowledged to be an art forum. “My real art is poetry, but I can never get it right,” says Rax King, who supplements her jokes with an impeccable and labor-intensive selfie game that shows a twist of brand consciousness. She has never published a poem.

This raises the question: Does Facebook present a new way to do art, or is it a sort of art karaoke? Is each post a creative act, or is it a single unit of giving up? Maybe it’s both, or something other. “I do not consider my Facebook content as art,” says Daneil Ian, whose day job is delivering clinical equipment throughout a large hospital in London. “But I do treat each thing as I would a piece of writing/poetry. As in, I value it just as much, if not more, because I know people will see it.” The difference might be semantic: It’s as if people like Ian hear the word “art” and attach the phrase “for a gallery,” and don’t want to be mistaken for Amalia Ulman. But people often make art for the same reasons they frequent social media, and many, if not most self-identified artists, are creating for an audience. Having an instant, readymade audience is not just an ego boost — it summons your creative, performative energies, even if the performance is not what you envision your work to be. “I’ve connected with folk all over the world just by being myself,” Ian says proudly, sounding very much like an artist.

Immanent art is everyday art. It holds your hair back from the toilet and asks of you little or nothing

Ashley Kennett, who lives outside Detroit and has issues with depression and anxiety that keep her mostly unemployed, said she doesn’t feel like she works on her posts. “It’s more of a compulsion to me. That is my motivation a lot of the time, but I would be lying if I said I wasn’t dependent on it as a quick self-esteem boost. The likes can be powerful in that way. I like that I have an interactive way of getting some of the shit that’s in my head out.” Honey Martin was sexually assaulted regularly as a child, and during her teen years was thrown out of her home by her mother and was suicidal, prone to self-harm, and heard voices. “I don’t rely on Facebook,” she says, “but I feel there’s people on here that rely on me, you know? Nobody helped me when I needed it, and I want to tell them that they can get through anything.”

It makes sense that creative people in bad situations aren’t in expansion or acquisition mode. Social acquisition, or climbing, which is what making art for strangers is — it’s trying to reach people you haven’t secured yet — is easier, Maslow-wise, with a more stable base. For Alfred English, who makes personally-branded memes about himself and performs his persona as slickly as anyone, Weird Facebook can feel like hanging out at Hot Topic with your friends when you were 14. Compared to other social networks, where “you just watch your numbers go up,” referring to followers, in Weird Facebook “real shit happens and we can discuss it in full.” For many users, being in this scene is as much about building relationships as getting noticed, but you have to be noticed to make new friends. These modest aims have emergent properties, and one is art.


V: Unintended Art

Like conceptions of God, art can be split into the transcendent and the immanent: Transcendent art evokes the limits of human experience and sometimes requires caffeine, a full night’s sleep, and for you to do some of the work. It is not your friend; it’s your challenger, and it stands above you, asking you to reach for it. Sans Soleil, Robert Ashley’s “In Sara Mencken, Christ and Beethoven there were men & women,” and Ulysses are examples. There’s no denying how good — transcendent, even — this kind of art can be, but real human beings are rarely in the mood for it. Immanent art, on the other hand, is everyday art. It holds your hair back from the toilet and makes you laugh when you’re your worst self, and asks of you little or nothing; yet it can be every bit as good as transcendent art. Hyperbole and a Half, “Girls Just Wanna Have Fun,” and Transparent are all highly consumable and immensely good. Weird Facebook, to me, is immanent art.

Weird Facebook art is a collaboration between the individual and the crowd. There are many talented creators in the scene, including all the ones I’ve named in this piece, but it’s the aggregate effect of the whole News Feed that produces the feeling of the intimate, funny artwork — the algorithm, responding to what I like best, creates the perfect world for me. In this way, Weird Facebook operates like a Massively Multiplayer Online Role-Playing Game, where thousands of people pursue different goals but follow the same rules in the same world — only, instead of waging martial campaigns, players build an aesthetic together.

Take the Facebook group “soft negi,” which exists as a repository for thoughts and observations of things “softly negative” — an aesthetic unique enough that it spurs a pleasantly active half-collaborative, half-competitive conversation/competition of updates by a bunch of random strangers connected only by their having stumbled onto the group. Any individual post is simple enough (“When another trans girl compliments the small stature of yr junk and like… o” or “I ran into an old v close friend who kinda made me feel shitty in a lot of ways at the craft store she works at”), and at first glance seem to present no problem of interpretation. But step back and look at the whole group, and it becomes clear that although the individual statuses themselves are perhaps not notable, the cumulative effect of reading them has the effect of any important work of art: It gives you a new appreciation for an aspect of existence, and makes you see the world in a different way.

Weird Facebook, then, is a macro version of one of those micro-aesthetic groups: one big swamp of perfect conditions for content creation, where the momentum of the scene, the context, is at least as responsible for the work as the individuals. As a teen loops bar chords, a tradition can eclipse the artist; the environment takes on a life of its own, and produces feelings perhaps unintended by any one individual. Like the sentient ocean in Stanisław Lem’s Solaris, the movements of the scene, the replication and propagation of memes and the mutations of in-jokes, all modulated by Facebook’s algorithm, can feel like an enormous, amorphous mass of ambiguous consciousness that makes elaborate, alien patterns of great beauty. A great beauty that will hold your hair back from the toilet.

*This line was amended on August 20, 2016, to correct a statement made in error.

19 Aug 06:52

Global terrain maps from Stamen

by Nathan Yau

Global terrain map

Missed this one from last month. Stamen announced the release of a whole lot of new terrain map tiles for around the world. Four billion of them.

The original Terrain style only covered the United States. As part of a new Knight Foundation grant, we expanded Terrain to cover the entire world. The Knight grant also funded prototyping for some totally-different new terrain styles, so to avoid confusion we are calling the this reboot of the old style “Terrain Classic.”

I don’t know if I’ll get the chance to use these any time soon, but they sure are pretty to look at.

Tags: Stamen, terrain

19 Aug 06:52

The Daily Edit – Bonded by Bikes

by Heidi Volpe

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Screen Shot 2016-08-14 at 7.11.24 PMDarren Hauck


Milwaukee public schools
NICA mountain bike series

Heidi: How often do you ride and do you race cyclocross?
Darren: Cycling is a huge part of my life and when I am home I tend to ride around at least 5-6 days a week typically. I live in the midwest so I ride until there is snow on the ground or it dips below the low 20’s outside for the most part, then I ride on a compu-trainer in the basement. I just started racing cyclocross a few years back on and off for a local team where I live, it has been a blast when I am not suffering so bad I can’t see straight.
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How was you being a rider helped you be a better witness of the sport? and in turn take better images? 
I think like anything, be it sport or a specific interest, you are deeply involved and part of the scene and this helps you know what is going on and better try to predict what is happening or is going to happen. Just being in the same place mentally and knowing physically how they feel as what you are shooting helps you get in a better position and feel out what might happen next. Also I think being involved in it lets you explore how to photograph something differently because you have shot the typical image so many times before you feel more free to take chances and look for something different. Also it’s easy to relate to the subjects and just blend in and hopefully get images without being in the way.
What are your hopes for this body of work?
Well for one I did this work with no real intentions other than I could give the pictures to the group to help raise awareness and gather more support to help expand the team and get more kids involved. Beyond that I also shot it just for myself to photograph something I love and just have fun, no restrictions or end goals just shoot and see what happens. Its been a lot of fun and I will shoot some more this fall of the team to see some of the kids from last year and some of the new kids who joined over the summer. After all, shooting for the joy of just taking great pictures is why most people got into photography.
What have been the rewards of this personal project?
The rewards I have gotten so far is just seeing these kids who some have never really ridden a bike get together with others and just enjoy  being outside having a blast. I heard so many times after a race when asked how it went and many of the kids would all say “oh man that was so hard I was suffering so bad I did not think i could finish”. Then they would pause and all say the same thing, “that was awesome can we do it again?!!” That enthusiasm is contagious and just makes you want to keep charging along and remember in life you just have to have fun and keep moving forward.
Are you planning on trying to commercialize these images? 
Now that I have made a promo and gotten some real positive response from the images I am trying to use this to reach out to potential new clients and show them some fresh work that has a positive feel to it. I think most people can relate to this project even if they do not ride bikes, it has a great universal positive vibe to it.

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19 Aug 06:51

In honor of Woman’s Equality Day

by Gail Mooney
Taylor Laverty, Pilot of Good Year Blimp, Carson, CA
Taylor Laverty, Pilot of Good Year Blimp, Carson, CA Shot for Like a Woman

In honor of upcoming Woman’s Equality Day http://ow.ly/I0kY303lQUQ #askhermore #mediawelike #representher #unmasked #notbuyit/ #distrustthenarrativeIn honor of Woman’s Equality Day


Filed under: Business, Inspirational, Personal Stories, Photography, Video, Women Tagged: equality, feminism, Gail Mooney, Kelly/Mooney, women, Women's Equality Day
19 Aug 06:51

Beyond Comments: Finding Better Ways To Connect With You

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Scott Montgomery, NPR, Aug 21, 2016


The lede of this stories is NPR's decision to eliminate comments on its stories but the core it its decision to embraace social media to generate discussion. More interesting is this: "in addition to refining our live interaction approaches on Facebook, we'll begin testing a promising new engagement tool that is rooted in public media. Hearken is a digital platform that allows journalists and the audience to partner on the development of story ideas." It's a good idea to involve readers from the beginning; this idea that we present content only when it's finished and polished dates back to the days of publishing on paper. But I think the key to success with commenting (or interaction generally) is this: posting not on someone else's site (which invites spam, abuse and more) but posting on our own site and sharing with our own community.

[Link] [Comment]
19 Aug 06:51

The emptiness of branding universities for “success”

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Sue Sorensen, University Affairs, Aug 21, 2016


I'm sympathetic with Sue Sorensen's argument that universities ought to be about more than "success' but I wondered why she referred twice to their religious origins. The answer lies in her defense of reading with faith. That's all fine, but while it is true that the Bible states "I am among you as one who serves" it is equally true that the Tao Te Ching  states that "If the sage would guide the people, he must serve with humility" and indeed, "Allah is with those who are of service to others." And it is repeated frequently in business literature that the key to success is to serve; by helping others you return measurable benefit for yourself. Service is even the key to happiness; as Gandhi says, "The best way to find yourself is to lose yourself in the service of others." So, yes, I agree that universities should focus on service - and also on broader social needs, "commitment, dissent, justice, open inquiry, insight, compassion," a focus on these is not as she says "an act of faith." It is an act of reason and will. That's why service should be core to the university's mission. The weak man serves himself; the wise man serves others. Image: Civil Rights and Labor History.

[Link] [Comment]
19 Aug 06:51

New MagPi Essentials book: simple electronics

by Russell Barnes

Less than a month has passed since we released Hacking & Making in Minecraft and we’re back again with our seventh Essentials book!

Simple Electronics with GPIO Zero is dedicated to helping you build your own electronics projects in easy steps – everything from push buttons to Raspberry Pi robots, and from laser-powered trip wires to motion-sensing alarms.

Essentials-07-GPIO-ZERO_Flat_Cover

Those GPIO pins aren’t as daunting as they might first appear!

The book boasts 12 chapters and 100+ pages of GPIO Zero – but wait, hang on… just download the free PDF and get reading already! If you can’t grab it straight away, here are a few of the chapter highlights:

  • Program LED lights
  • Add push buttons to your project
  • Build a motion-sensing alarm
  • Create your own distance rangefinder
  • Make a laser-powered tripwire
  • Build a Raspberry Pi robot
  • Create a motion-sensing alarm
  • and much more!

We think our latest Essentials book is a great introduction to using the GPIO pins on your Raspberry Pi and programming them with the fab GPIO Zero Python library. It unlocks a whole new world of potential for your projects and it’s much easier to learn than you might think!

You can also buy Simple Electronics with GPIO Zero in our app for Android and iOS. The print version is coming soon too. In fact, we’re just off to have a word with the printers now…

Simple Electronics with GPIO Zero is freely licensed under Creative Commons (BY-SA-NC 3.0). You can download the PDF for free now and forever, but buying digitally supports the Raspberry Pi Foundation’s charitable aims.

The post New MagPi Essentials book: simple electronics appeared first on Raspberry Pi.

19 Aug 06:51

6 reasons why an executive should care about writing without bullshit

by Josh Bernoff

If you’re an executive or senior manager, why trouble your people about clear writing? Does it really make a difference to how your organization runs? Dramatically. It will change the tenor of how you work. Frankly, “Writing Without Bullshit” is a departure for me. After 20 years as an analyst, I’m used to giving strategy advice to … Continue reading 6 reasons why an executive should care about writing without bullshit →

The post 6 reasons why an executive should care about writing without bullshit appeared first on without bullshit.

19 Aug 06:51

Dear Wirecutter: How Big Is Too Big for a Projector Screen on a Tight Budget?

by WC Staff

Q: I am turning my 2.5 car garage into a bonus room. I can get the InFocus SP1080 for $350. The BenQ TH670 for $500 and the BenQ HT2050 for $700.

19 Aug 06:51

Brompton Urban Challenge Toronto August 27

by dandy

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Brompton Urban Challenge Toronto on August 27

The Brompton Urban Challenge Toronto is BACK! Brompton is bringing its celebrated Urban Challenge event to Toronto once more, in conjunction with Curbside Cycle and Brompton Users group, sponsored by Ortlieb.

The Brompton Urban Challenge is a two wheeled scavenger hunt. Participants will spend the day exploring Toronto, interpreting clues and completing challenges and then uploading their successes to social media (#BUCTO). The day starts with coffee and donuts and ends with a BBQ lunch (with a vegan option) and a chance to win GREAT team prizes. This year, the event is sponsored by Ortlieb, so the prizes will be better than ever!

Here are the registration details:

  • The fee is $25 per person - all proceeds will be donated to Cycle Toronto!
  • Cyclists can either register as a team or will be placed into a team on the day of the event.
  • The minimum team size is 2 participants, and the maximum team size is 4 participants.
  • All bikes are welcome, but there must be at least one Brompton bicycle per team.
  • A limited number of Brompton bicycles are available to borrow at the event, so indicate in the registration if you'd like to reserve one!

dandy contributor Jun Nogami will be covering the event for the dandyBLOG, so stay tuned.

For tickets, visit: http://www.brompton.com/Events/Posts/2016/Events-BUC-Toronto-2016

Related on the dandyBLOG:

Cycle 4 St. Joe's on October 2

Friends For Life Bike Rally: Meet Peter

Mid-summer newsletter is here!

19 Aug 06:51

East Pender Street westwards (2)

by ChangingCity

E Pender west 3

Here’s what looks like a companion image to our previous post. We think the taxi in the distance on the left was parked in the same spot, so the two shots were probably taken a few minutes apart. If we were correct in that identification, it dates from around 1980, when the Lee building (behind the circular red sign) had been rebuilt after a 1972 fire, and the Vancouver Centre (perfectly aligned behind the Sun Tower) in 1976. The building in the centre of the picture with the much larger top floor balcony was built for Chinese owners in 1923, designed by A E Henderson and originally called the ‘Business Building’. It replaced an earlier 1914 building designed by W H Chow.

Mings - postcardThe building with the red canopy was altered in 1921 to add a fifth floor, but it was originally built in 1913 by clothing mogul William Dick, designed by H B Watson and cost $30,000. Today it’s the home of the Mah Society (who carried out the 1920 alterations) and it’s currently receiving a comprehensive restoration. On the extreme right is the former International Chop Suey House, later Ming’s restaurant. We looked in greater detail at its history in an earlier post. This postcard gives a sense of what the restaurant was like in the late 1950s or early 60s.

There’s a Fred Herzog photograph of this block from 1968 that shows the street was still lined with telegraph poles that blocked some of the flamboyant neon that shouted for patrons to visit the restaurants that lined the street. This block has seen little apparent change to the buildings since the 1920s, and while other less historic parts of Chinatown are being redeveloped, little change is contemplated here.

Image source: City of Vancouver Archives CVA 800-4779


19 Aug 06:44

Arbutus Greenway — Learning From Experience

by Ken Ohrn

We’ll eventually finish the consultation over temporary surfaces to be applied to the temporary paths on the Arbutus Greenway. Hopefully, the result will be that all the public, all ages and all abilities, will have a chance to get onto the paths and check out all 9 km and all 42 acres of the old railroad corridor.  We’ll end up with much more design input.

And then we’ll get going on the major discussion over the final design. In anticipation, it has occurred to me that we are not starting from scratch here.

Aren’t there several places in metro Vancouver where people of all ages and abilities travel on foot, two wheels, three and four wheels along relatively narrow corridors?  Such as the seawalls in Vancouver, Railway Avenue in Richmond, North Shore’s Spirit Trail.  Aren’t these handy sources to mine for a decade or more experience?

So let’s think about these:   what do we like and don’t like; what has worked and not worked; what’s great, what’s lousy. Then let’s go on from there.

It seems to me that the biggest difference to these seawall designs (pix below)is that the Arbutus Greenway will cross several high-speed high-volume motor vehicle arterials.  Intersection designs, as always, will be a major consideration.  (Underpasses, anyone?)

New.Westminster Arbutus.Ideas.4 Arbutus.Ideas.3 Arbutus.Ideas.2 Arbutus.Ideas.1

[Ed:  we ask commenters on this post to please limit their comments to 3 per day]


19 Aug 06:44

Arrival :: Story of Your Life

by Volker Weber

Arrival promises to be an intelligent movie, even though they added all this global war nonsense to an intelligent story. I have read thousand of SciFi short stories and books throughout my life -- see, you don't know everything about me -- and Ted Chiang's "The Story of Your Life" is among the best. Just read this senctence:

"I'd love to tell you the story of this evening, the night you're conceived, but the right time to do that would be when you're ready to have children of your own, and we'll never get that chance."

There is something odd, isn't it? She knows something about the future. Just a few pages later:

"He and I will drive out together to perform the identification, a long silent car ride. I remember the morgue, all tile and stainless steel, the hum of refrigeration and smell of antiseptic."

What would you do, if you knew the story of your life?

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It's available for Kindle or iBooks. And it contains more than this one story. Strangely enough, Googling the story returns a PDF on the first page.

19 Aug 06:43

Microsoft's Plan B for Windows 8 is Windows 7

by Bardi Golriz

If settings to disable Windows 8-style multi-tasking and to enable booting straight into Desktop wasn't evidence enough, then re-introducing the Start menu must be. Charles Arthur of the Guardian reports on comments made by Microsoft's chief financial offer, Peter Klein, to investors and analysts on a conference call on Thursday:

Klein also hinted that an upcoming revision to Windows 8, codenamed "Blue" and due this year, will reinstate the "Start" button that has been familiar to Windows users since 1995. The changes will be partly due to "customer feedback", Klein said.

When efforts for Blue should concentrate on a deeper and more meaningful integration between the Metro and Desktop environments, Microsoft are in fact doing the opposite. Making an already disjointed experience further disintegrated.  Windows 8 had one eye fixated on the future. Blue, on the other hand, appears to have both concentrated on the past.

19 Aug 06:43

Self-Organization and the Semiotics of Evolutionary Systems

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Luis M. Rocha, Aug 21, 2016


Today's new work is "eigenbehavior" (soon to be the theme of a special issue of Constructivist Foundations). The concern is derived from  systems theory and based on  Heinz von Foerster's idea of the eigenform. As Kauffman explains, "Heinz performs the magic trick of convincing us that the familiar objects of our existence can be seen to be nothing more than tokens for the behaviors of the organism that apparently create stable forms." To hazard a metaphor, what counts as a 'cow path' isn't the existence of a cow path, but rather the series of behaviours that led to its creation. If we didn't treat a cow path as a path, it wouldn't exist as a path.  Eagle and Pentland propose "a new methodology for identifying the repeating structures underlying behavior" - the eigenbehaviors - and show how knowledge is socially constructured: "groups of friends can have their own collective ‘ behavior space’ which corresponds to the common behaviors of the community."

But eigenbehavior is tied intimately to human existence; we can  see the relation to Varela and autopoiesis. And as a commentator on  this article about self-organization suggests: "The crux of the constructivist position: in the theory of organizationally closed systems, not all possible distinctions in some environment can be 'grasped' by the autonomous system: it can only classify those aspects of its environment/sensory-motor/cognitive interaction which result in the maintenance of some internally stable state or attractor (eigenvalue)." (p.s. lots of interesting stuff in this blog.)

[Link] [Comment]
19 Aug 06:43

Does China’s worst Olympic Games medal haul since 2000 point to a change in the country’s attitude towards sport?

by kevin.kung@scmp.com

The good news for China is that this won’t be their worst Olympics in a generation. It’s a close-run thing, though.

19 Aug 06:43

Canada tax chiefs knew foreign money’s big role in Vancouver housing market 20 years ago, leaked documents show, but they ‘ignored’ auditors’ warning

by admin

Leaked documents have revealed that Canada’s tax department was warned 20 years ago about the impact of millionaire migration on greater Vancouver, by a team of auditors who discovered the influx was playing a huge role in the luxury housing market and suspected the buyer

19 Aug 06:43

The Future of Programming

by chuttenc

Here’s a talk I watched some months ago, and could’ve sworn I’d written a blogpost about. Ah well, here it is:

Bret Victor – The Future of Programming from Bret Victor on Vimeo.

It’s worth the 30min of your attention if you have interest in programming or computer history (which you should have an interest in if you are a developer). But here it is in sketch:

The year is 1973 (well, it’s 2004, but the speaker pretends it is 1973), and the future of programming is bright. Instead of programming in procedures typed sequentially in text files, we are at the cusp of directly manipulating data with goals and constraints that are solved concurrently in spatial representations.

The speaker (Bret Victor) highlights recent developments in the programming of automated computing machines, and uses it to suggest the inevitability of a very different future than we currently live and work in.

It highlights how much was ignored in my world-class post-secondary CS education. It highlights how much is lost by hiding research behind paywalled journals. It highlights how many times I’ve had to rewrite the wheel when, more than a decade before I was born, people were prototyping hoverboards.

It makes me laugh. It makes me sad. It makes me mad.

…that’s enough of that. Time to get back to the wheel factory.

:chutten


19 Aug 06:42

Mural Festival – 1

by Ken Ohrn

Near Main & Terminal (Station & Southern St):  work in progress. “Knot Yourself”, with rattlesnake.

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19 Aug 06:42

All the National Food Days

by Nathan Yau

Food Days top

Keep track of the 214 days out of the year that are a national food or drink days. Read More

19 Aug 06:42

Mural Festival 2

by Ken Ohrn

“Everything Matters, Nothing’s Important”.  Work in progress, Station and Southern St, near Main & Terminal.

Mural.Location.2.JPG


19 Aug 06:38

My experience Windows 10 and Thunderbird / Firefox freezing

by Matt Harris
This posting is somewhat off topic for me,  but then it is on topic, because the issues I am discussing initially appeared to be in Mozilla branded products.  I am a glutton for punishment sometimes, and as a result I run daily builds of both Firefox and Thunderbird.  The result of this is a mostly reasonable experience with occasional disaster days where you get a Thunderbird or Firefox that basically does not load at all.

In July I bit the bullet and updated Windows to version 10,  the motivation was more a case of I had seen many people in the support forums with Windows 10 issues and really they appeared to be largely inexplicable than any desire to use the latest and greatest from Microsoft.

In all the upgrade of my Dell Vostro went well.  I read the options closely enough to find the tiny option to keep my existing settings and after a number of hours  I was away with the new Windows 10.  I turned off all the phone home things Windows 10 wanted to do, I stopped Cortana and got rid of all the rubbish in the start menu.  Things were looking positive. 

So here I am in August,  frustrated by Mozilla Firefox.  It is horrible and getting worse.  It just stops responding for anything from a few seconds to a minute or more.  Typing in reply dialogs on support.mozilla.org just stops mid word. When it returns large chunks of what was typed is simply not there, not in some buffer waiting for the freeze to end, just not there.

Then Thunderbird started to display this same abhorrent behaviour.  It just stops responding.  Sometime it says it is not responding,  other times it just does nothing.  At least it is not as bad as Firefox.  But it appears to be getting worse

Then I noticed something new.  The command window in Windows 10 was also freezing.  This was when I realized I had an issue with Windows, or some other software freezing windows,  not Mozilla branded software at all.

I started searching on the web and it really only took a few moments to see I was not alone.  There were lots of folk apparently experiencing hangs or freezing.  In my usual approach to these things I read a few of the first hits I got from Google, looking for similarities and common solutions.  Then I clicked on a link to a YouTube video that offered to fix windows 10 freezing.  Cynic that I am I though what are they selling.  Well nothing is the answer! Except a free solution for me.

I found that of the settings mentioned in the video,  only the PCI express setting appeared in power on my desktop.  So like the guy in the video I tuned the setting in power management off.  That was a couple of days ago now.  I have experienced no  freezing at all since that change.

 The lesson for me was just how much of my computer time is spent in Firefox and Thunderbird.  I had the problem for weeks and never even considered I was looking in the wrong place for a solution.
19 Aug 06:32

Google Duo to Soon Gain Ability to Make Audio Calls

by Rajesh Pandey
Earlier this week, Google launched Duo, its new simple video calling app that works on both iOS and Android. Compared to other numerous video calling services out there, Duo lacks a lot of features, including some basic ones like video calling. However, Google aims to make up for it with Duo’s ability to work even on spotty data connections. Continue reading →
19 Aug 06:32

Android 7.0 Nougat Rumored to Launch on August 22

by Evan Selleck
Google has kept it a pretty tight secret as to when its next version of its mobile platform, Android 7.0 Nougat, will land on devices out in the wild. Continue reading →
17 Aug 22:48

Gartner's 2016 Hype Cycle for Emerging Technologies

by Volker Weber

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Source: Gartner (August 2016)

Never heard of Smart Dust? That's easy. There are two types of dust: white and black. White dust settles on dark surfaces, black dust settles on light surfaces. That's smart.

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