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By Sheila Lennon
'
Bottom-up' journalism from the pros

July 17, 2002

Meet the Nigerian E-Mail Grifters: It's a story that's been begging to be done, and Wired did it.

A Nigerian student named Taiwo, allegedly a member of a spammer family, spills the beans during an interview in a Manhattan coffee shop.

Among the surprises: The spam scam's real objective is to get the gullible to come to Nigeria, where the grifters make sure their papers are not in order.

This explains a lot: The informant swears he only wrote the letters -- beginning at age 11:

"...he guiltily admits to taking pride in the letters he created, and said he worked very hard to "suit the form." The letters are intended to resemble soap operas that are popular in Nigeria, Taiwo said, but with language that evokes someone who is "educated, upper-class, out of touch with the common people... I was told to write like a classic novelist would," Taiwo explained. "Very old world, very thick sentences, you know?"

We know.
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Amazon Light is a search engine page for the Amazon.com site patterned after Google. There's even a "Serendipity" link like G's "Feeling Lucky" that serves up a random book. Much easier...

On the same site: Luciferous Logolepsy, a collection of over 9,000 obscure english words. "Galilee" caught my eye; besides being a New Testament spot and a Rhode Island fishing village, it's also a "church porch, or chapel at entrance." via Boing Boing
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Tomorrow is Blog MeetUp Day in 200 cities. The Providence MeetUp page is here. The site is AS220, 115 Empire Street, 7 p.m., but at least four bloggers have to RSVP or it's canceled.

Unfortunately, I can't make it -- going to the K19 - Widowmaker movie premiere -- but I hope it happens. Here's the background on the MeetUp idea.
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Shopping for a laptop? An Ars Technica user, Al "MR HAPPY" Prescott, has started the research for you:

"Here is a link to an Excel spreadsheet (HTML version here) of about a dozen laptops from many popular manufacturers. It included: cost, processor, LCD, Video, LAN/WIFI, CD/DVD, Dimensions, weight, battery life, warranty, etc..."

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Reader comments: Tom Poe of Reno, Nev., writes in response to Monday's item about Time Warner cable testing a set-top TV recorder,

"You know what I saw when I read the stuff about opting in for a price?

"That's EXACTLY what they're all after. They take everything away, and then pay-per-view-per-monitor-screen. Well, so much for Fair Use and for Public Domain. Can't have both. Put that together with keyboardless-devices, and they'll be happy campers."

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July 16, 2002

Public Knowledge is a new public-advocacy group "dedicated to fortifying and defending a vibrant 'information commons' - the shared information resources and cultural assets that we own as a people...." They hope to represent the interests of "a wide spectrum of stakeholders - libraries, educators, scientists, artists, musicians, journalists, consumers, software programmers, civic groups and enlightened businesses. "

What's interesting here is that they intend to plump for both artists and consumers; notably missing are the middlemen.
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21C is a new online culture magazine trolling for intelligent readers. Its lead story is by Jaron Lanier (who, among other groundbreaking acts, coined the term "virtual reality") and begins, "A while back I was asked to help Steven Spielberg brainstorm a science fiction movie he intended to make based on the Philip K. Dick short story Minority Report..."

Among others signed as contributors are William Gibson, Greil Marcus, Rudy Rucker, Douglas Rushkoff, R.U. Sirius and Bruce Sterling.
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Inside-out photojournalism: Here's a photo essay (loosely) about fashion that the clueful Doc Searls calls "brilliant." After checking it out, I agree. Famous faces, no i.d.s, but the captions are a running commentary that works. Click on each photo to advance; the last "slide" dumps you out to the blog of creator Tony Pierce.
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Organic businesswoman: Family reasserts control at Rodale is a long, interesting profile in the Allentown (Pa.) Morning Call of Maria Rodale's involvement with her family's namesake business -- including kicking out the corporate managers at the Emmaus, Pa., firm whose Organic Gardening magazine kicked off a movement:

"The mission was about helping people help themselves stay well, through healthful eating, vitamin regimens and fitness. It was fulfilled in books and magazines such as Prevention and Men's Health. But Maria's new mission includes publishing information on healing, for people who are already sick. It's perhaps a subtle shift to many observers, but a sacrilege to others because it dared to stray from the original Rodale vision."

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Blog goes to a movie premier: Thursday night, I'll be putting on a prom dress and going to my first-ever Big Movie Premiere, right here in Providence, thanks to my big brother Frank Lennon, who's arranged a permanent berth in Providence for the Russian sub that stars in the movie K19, The Widowmaker, opening nationally Friday.

Journal film critic Michael Janusonis writes about a History Channel documentary tonight on the sub and the movie:

Paramount will hold the New England premiere of its $100-million big-screen version of the calamity, K-19: The Widowmaker, on Thursday night at Providence Place. It will be a benefit for the USS Saratoga Museum Foundation, which owns the former Soviet diesel sub that doubled for the K-19 in the film and now resides at Collier Point Park in Providence.

Tonight, The History Channel cable network will present its own version of the tale in The Real Story of the K-19, a documentary airing at 9 p.m.

The documentary is the first in a three-part series called Inside the Soviet Military Machine, which will run at 9 p.m. tonight through Thursday. Remarkably, according to The History Channel, Hollywood got much of the K-19 story right. There are many parallels to real life in the movie, which opens nationally Friday and stars Harrison Ford as the skipper of the ill-fated K-19. More...

Features editor Phil Kukielski, meanwhile, reviews the book: K-19 The Widowmaker: The Secret Story Of The Soviet Nuclear Submarine by Peter Huchthausen, Capt. USN (ret.). National Geographic Books. 243 pages. $16 (paperback)

I intend to blog the glitter, the glamour, the apres-flick borscht on Friday.
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July 15, 2002

Back: Vacation's over, and 1,268 emails greet me. The Nigerians are fading, but garlic from Iran is coming on strong in the spam race.

"Natural remedies used to navigate menopause" from today's The Seattle Times is a welcome introduction to alternatives for women in the wake of the increased risks that halted the JAMA study on Hormone Replacement Therapy. via Paul Andrews
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Replay that again, please? From within the AOL Time Warner empire, conflicting messages. First, the Rochester (N.Y.) Democrat and Chronicle reported Wednesday, "TV viewers gaining control: Time Warner to add replay and more on-demand options":

The dominant cable company in Rochester (Time Warner) will launch several new cable features this summer, including movies on demand, a set-top recorder that pauses and records live TV, and a way to dial up all the old episodes of cable shows such as The Sopranos.

If such gadgets sell well in Rochester, Time Warner will launch them nationwide, part of its parent company AOL Time Warner's drive to compete against satellite TV providers that have attracted millions of customers away from cable.

Among the offerings,

"Digital Video Recorders -- Launching in August, this is an extra set-top box that works like a VCR, but can record, pause and playback live television. Instead of buying the box, subscribers will rent it from Time Warner for $9.95 a month. This puts Time Warner squarely in competition with another digital video recorder company, TiVo, which currently counts more than 400,000 subscribers nationwide. A TiVo box retails for about $400 for the unit, plus a $12.95 monthly service fee. "

But nobody apparently told Jamie Kellner, Chairman of Turner Broadcasting, an AOL Time Warner company, who earlier achieved dubious recognition for telling CableWorld magazine that viewers who skip commercials are "stealing" programming, violating a "contract" no TV viewer remembers initialing.

AP reported Friday, Viewers could pay for skipping ads:

Television viewers could face paying for channels they now receive free if digital video recorders kill commercials, said Jamie Kellner, chairman of Turner Broadcasting System. The wider use of systems like TiVo and ReplayTV, which allow viewers to easily skip through ads, would force a change in how broadcast and basic cable TV is supported, Kellner said Friday. "Don't think for a moment there's a free lunch involved in this," Kellner told the Television Critics Association. Viewers could end up paying about $ 250 a year above any cable or satellite fees, he said, based on his own rough calculation.

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"Behind the news" is a nice news and reference blog by Elizabeth Donovan, news research editor at the Miami Herald. I found her site in my vacation blog's referrer logs -- it's more than a pleasure to discover a colleague, a stranger, who likes my work and says so. This one is on the blogroll.
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DoubleClick "cookies" might turn to spam: Rebecca Blood reports, "This is important. Online marketing services company L90 said Monday that it has signed a deal to acquire DoubleClick's ad sales business. What this means is that DoubleClick's privacy policy will no longer apply to the information they have collected about you as you have travelled around the Web (and if you haven't opted out, they have collected a long list of many commercial sites you visit.)... You may opt out of your DoubleClick cookie here." L90 has since changed its name to MaxWorldwide.

Blood, whose weblog is just one part of the Rebecca's Pocket site, is the author of a new book about blogging, The Weblog Handbook, and writes the introduction and one of the articles in We've Got Blog: How Weblogs Are Changing Our Culture by Perseus Publishing.
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Wired profiles Karin Spitzer, "a young fashion entrepreneur who is building a business out of nothing but a copyrighted phrase," no time. "She sells bracelets that read "no time for boys" or "no time to shop," mouse pads saying "no time for spam," sticky notes that read "no time to type," and an assortment of similarly branded lapel pins, temporary tattoos and arm bands ("no time for war"). ....She dreamed up the 'no time' phrase while working on a bus-shelter art installation in a busy business district and studying at the Rhode Island School of Design."

And sure enough, on her site Spitzer includes a photo of the Kennedy Plaza bus shelter and it's "no time" phrases, with a RIPTA bus and the Biltmore Hotel in the background. Spitzer now lives in Brooklyn, N.Y
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Name that gadget: Here are its features:

* Internet: Web, e-mail, etc. Reads Handwriting
* TV: Flat/Clear image, smart remote controller
* Music: FM radio MP3, download from Internet
* Cook: Cookbook, update recipe through Internet
* Stored Food: Food List, storage time alarm
* Memo: Video, Audio, Drawn & Text messages, New Message Alarm, Password for playing Messages
* Diary: Phone Book, Schedule Management/Alarm
* Album: Digital photo Album, Screen saver, built in digital camera
* Management: Self-Diagnosis & Cyber Service, Inform Water Filter Change, Background & Internet Set-Up

What is this? It's an Internet fridge by LG. The photo suggests there's ice and water through the left door -- the right side has the flat screen -- but the cooling details get short shrift here. No, it's not portable. And I think the "stored-food food list and storage time alarm" only work if you log (or scan?) your food in when you bring it from the store.

I can see it now at my house, "Joe, the fridge says we have chicken salad!"

"Sorry, honey, I ate it and forgot to tell the fridge." via The Shifted Librarian
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Nice lead: "Wall Street roared into reverse again this morning, backing over President Bush as he tried futilely to talk up the economy." Jerry Knight filed it this afternoon on Washingtonpost.com

Subterranean Homepage News
by Sheila Lennon
features & interactive producer of projo.com

 

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