2012 / 01 / 23 | linklist

The weekly (not technically) list – 2012 W3

Busy week. I’ve only had time to read one article, and I read it on the wrong week. But it’s an interesting article. The notion of automating humans as cheap labour is proven to be quite a successful endeavor.

Breaking CAPTCHA with automated humans
Troy Hunter

So CAPTCHA prevents all this, right? Only humans can break the code and complete these signup processes, right? But what if we could automate the humans; I mean what if we could take CAPTCHAs and solve them at such a rate that these registration processes could be easily automated? Well it turns out you can and it will only cost you a couple of bucks.


2012 / 01 / 15 | linklist

The weekly! 2011 W2

This week has been hectic, and truthfully I only finished this three articles this week, the last one a couple of minutes ago. Although it would be super nice to always have this list posted on Fridays, I feel that as long as I have it up within the correct week I’m on top of things.

I hope you enjoy this week’s articles, as I have.

  • Lockdown
    Cory Doctorow, Boing Boing

    And, if you think of protocols and websites as features of the network, then saying “fix the Internet so that it doesn’t run BitTorrent”, or “fix the Internet so that thepiratebay.org no longer resolves,” sounds a lot like “change the sound of busy signals,” […]

  • How did molecular machines evolve?
    John Timmer, Ars Technica

    If a molecular machine requires so many precisely positioned parts to function, how could it possibly evolve? That question has been part of a populist attack on evolution but, contrary to its proponents, scientists have a number of ideas about the evolution of this machinery.

  • A Spellchecker Used to Be a Major Feat of Software Engineering
    James Hague

    Here’s the situation: it’s 1984, and you’re assigned to write the spellchecker for a new MS-DOS word processor. Some users, but not many, will have 640K of memory in their PCs. You need to support systems with as little as 256K. That a quarter megabyte to contain the word processor, the document being edited, and the memory needed by the operating system. Oh, and the spellchecker.


2012 / 01 / 06 | linklist

The Weekly List – 2012 W1

Due to the Christian, and national, holiday the Epiphany (Theophany, or Twelfthday), which is called the Thirteenthday here in Sweden, I am somewhat late with last week’s list. I have however backdated it for posterity and in order to not confuse it with week 2 of 2012.

Internet Access Is Not a Human Right
Vinton G. Cerf, NY Times, Op-Ed

[T]echnology is an enabler of rights, not a right itself. There is a high bar for something to be considered a human right. Loosely put, it must be among the things we as humans need in order to lead healthy, meaningful lives, like freedom from torture or freedom of conscience.

CV Dazzle
Adam Harvey

CV Dazzle™ is camouflage from computer vision (CV). It is a form of expressive interference that combines makeup and hair styling (or other modifications) with face-detection thwarting designs.

Google+ Is Going To Mess Up The Internet
Jon Mitchell, ReadWriteWeb

But never forget that you’re Google’s product, not its customer. Why does Google want to facilitate long, riveting conversations on Google+ (with only one permalink, so the search results don’t get confusing)? Exactly. For the same reason blogs allow comments, despite the outrageous overhead of fighting spam. Traffic and search engine optimization.


2011 / 12 / 30 | linklist

The Weekly – 2011 W52

The last linked list for this year! I have some exciting things coming up next year, but all in due time. It might or it might not have something to do with “Gamification”.


  • Gamification sucks
    Brent Simmons

    “Gamification” is a word and concept invented by idiocrats who confuse humane with manipulative.

  • Gamification is bullshit
    Ian Bogost

    This rhetorical power derives from the “-ification” rather than from the “game”. -ification involves simple, repeatable, proven techniques or devices: you can purify, beautify, falsify, terrify, and so forth. -ification is always easy and repeatable, and it’s usually bullshit. Just add points.

  • Pirate, colonist, slave
    N/A, The Economist

    ONE cold morning in 1591 an English sailor found himself shivering on Ilhabella, now an island of yacht clubs and well-appointed weekend houses that is to Brazil what Martha’s Vineyard is to America. He had been left for dead—again—the fourth or fifth time Fate had deserted him in his short career as a pirate.

  • The Dangerous Effects of Reading
    David Tate

    In our personal lives we tend to optimize for one of two things: input or output. Reading or writing. Consuming or creating. The environment we live in – the prevailing culture – by default is optimized for consumption.


2011 / 12 / 23 | linklist

The Weekly — 2011 W51

This week’s list is brought to you by Influenza. I’ve been in bed most of the time since last Friday, watching reruns, too tired to read. But I have gathered some articles and links during that time. Here we go.

First, a couple of awesome web sites curated by my coworker Lucas:


Now, links curated by me:

  • What SOPA Means for a Non-US Citizen
    Drew Wilson, ZeroPaid

    Once the entertainment lobby, several over corporate entities and who knows what else starts ordering the takedown of numerous websites, the threat will become real for many non-US citizens. Non-US citizens will be able to fully appreciate the type of threat the legislation has whether they want to believe it or not.

  • What Google believes your interests are

    Below you can review the interests and inferred demographics that Google has associated with your cookie. You can remove or edit these at any time.

  • Why Privacy Matters Even if You Have ‘Nothing to Hide’
    Daniel J. Solove, The Chronicle

    One can usually think of something that even the most open person would want to hide. As a commenter to my blog post noted, “If you have nothing to hide, then that quite literally means you are willing to let me photograph you naked? And I get full rights to that photograph—so I can show it to your neighbors?”

  • Smoke Screening
    Charles C. Mann, Vanity Fair

    What the government should be doing is focusing on the terrorists when they are planning their plots. “That’s how the British caught the liquid bombers,” Schneier says. “They never got anywhere near the plane. That’s what you want—not catching them at the last minute as they try to board the flight.”

  • Why We Haven’t Met Any Aliens
    Geoffrey Miller, Seed Magazine

    Basically, I think the aliens don’t blow themselves up; they just get addicted to computer games. They forget to send radio signals or colonize space because they’re too busy with runaway consumerism and virtual-reality narcissism.


2011 / 12 / 16 | linklist

The Weekly List – 2011 W50

This week’s list is going to be a short one. It’s been a hectic week, and haven’t had time to indulge in too many articles, or links. To compensate, I present you with this fantastic story about the Unabomber from 2000, and Give Me Something To Read’s 2011 Highlights.

Harvard and the making of the Unabomber, part one
Alston Chase, The Atlantic (2000)
Part two, part three, and part four.

In the fall of 1958 Theodore Kaczynski, a brilliant but vulnerable boy of sixteen, entered Harvard College. There he encountered a prevailing intellectual atmosphere of anti-technological despair. There, also, he was deceived into subjecting himself to a series of purposely brutalizing psychological experiments — experiments that may have confirmed his still-forming belief in the evil of science. Was the Unabomber born at Harvard? A look inside the files

Give Me Something To Read’s 2011 Highlights
Richard Dunlop-Walters, Give Me Something To Read.


2011 / 12 / 10 | interesting, linklist

A List of Posts on the New Twitter

This is an extra list, in addition to yesterday’s list, regarding the recent changes to Twitter. For the most part, they touch not only the visual changes but also the philosophical shift of Twitter from a service to an environment. I was going to write my own impressions, but this list covers most of my thoughts on the subject.


Also, I’d like to point out that very little has been written about Tweetdeck. Along with the updates, they’ve also changed Tweetdeck into a “native” app (HTML5 in a native shell), ridding themselves of the Adobe Air platform.

Personally, I’ve not used either of the versions a lot, so my opinions shouldn’t matter too much. The desktop version does look a whole lot better than the old version, yet I cannot rid the feeling that it has also been simplified, although I’m not sure where and how much. I’m not seeing the “Twitter Pro” Dan Frommer is talking about right now, and which Twitter mentioned in May that it would be.


2011 / 12 / 03 | linklist

The list – 2011 W49

This week’s list of links and articles I’ve seen and read during the week. Note that their publishing dates may vary. Yet, I’d like to point out that these lists are curated by my own indulgence. They are not trying to be first with anything. That being said, enjoy!


Native Client, Google’s could-be secret grand unifier
Anonymous writer:

Google have now built a unified mobile/desktop platform everyone wants on their phones, tablets, netbooks, and eventually even desktops, that only they have full control over, and is available as a single click installer that any user can run without admin privs on an existing corp Windows desktop.. game over.

How Much Should People Worry About the Loss of Online Privacy?
Julia Angwin – WSJ:

We asked a diverse group of panelists how much our readers should worry about the vast array of privacy threats. […]Stewart Baker, a partner in Washington, D.C., at the law firm of Steptoe & Johnson. […] Danah Boyd, a senior researcher at Microsoft Corp. […] Jeff Jarvis, an associate professor at the CUNY Graduate School of Journalism […] Christopher Soghoian, a fellow at the Open Society Institute, created the first browser software—called TACO—that blocked online tracking.

I Don’t Understand What Anyone Is Saying Anymore
Dan Pallotta – Harvard Business Review:

We have forgotten how to use the real names of real things. Like doorknobs. Instead, people talkabout the idea of doorknobs, without actually using the word “doorknob.” So a new idea for a doorknob becomes “an innovation in residential access.”

Why Are Finland’s Schools Successful?
LynNell Hancock – Smithsonian Magazine:

The second critical decision came in 1979, when reformers required that every teacher earn a fifth-year master’s degree in theory and practice at one of eight state universities—at state expense.


2011 / 12 / 02 | linklist

This week’s list – 2011 W48

I’m starting a recurring theme here. Each week I’ll summarise and link some of the stuff I’ve encountered. I’m going to use the very Swedish model of week numbers, as described in ISO 8601. Here’s a couple of things I’ve enjoyed this week:


The Social Graph is Neither
maciej, Pinboard Developer blog:

If the social graph is crude oil, doesn’t that make our friends and colleagues the little animals that get crushed and buried underground?

Here’s The Information Facebook Gathers On You As You Browse The Web
Dylan Love, Business Insider:

Bejar told USA Today that Facebook technically could link your name to your logged-out browsing data, but he “makes it a point not to do this.”

Giving it Away: How Free Music Makes More Than Sense
Derek Webb:

This means it will take upwards of 3,500 streams of a single song on Spotify to earn $1.00 versus that same revenue for one iTunes song purchase […]

When People Use Different Devices
Luke Wroblewski:

As these examples illustrate, the type of device clearly influences when people use distinct types of content and services.


2011 / 11 / 29 | linklist

Some articles to read

I’ve created a linkli.st of some of the articles I’ve read during the past two months. I hope you enjoy them as much as I did and still do.