10.24.12

DVFD: Useless advice, really

Posted in Culture of Lickspittle, Extremism at 8:14 am by George Smith

Another Christian totalitarian, knowing his crowd:

NEW ALBANY, Ind. — Mitt Romney is distancing himself from Richard Mourdock after the Republican U.S. Senate hopeful said in a debate Tuesday night that all pregnancies are “something that God intended to happen” — even in cases of rape.

“I’ve struggled with it myself for a long time, but I came to realize that life is that gift from God. And even when life begins in that horrible situation of rape, that it is something that God intended to happen,” he said.

You can’t update the list fast enough. We have tribes so different there will never be common ground.

I’m considering getting this book at Vroman’s today. Really.

10.23.12

They Live

Posted in Culture of Lickspittle, Phlogiston at 7:08 pm by George Smith


Oops. Overlords let mask slip, seen on the internet.

Gaming YouTube (continued)

Posted in Culture of Lickspittle at 2:47 pm by George Smith

Google, YouTube and the social networks have enabled a digital culture of manufactured bootlicking where cheating flourishes. When numbers of likes, views, reads and inbound links are the only measures of worth, where the person at the top — in the first page of results — is the only winner, it is the way things turn out.

A week ago or so I wrote about Mr. Mega Grilled Ham & Cheese, a YouTube user who rips the videos of others and uses them as test fodder for various pumping schemes on the system.

All of the videos on Mr. Ham & Cheese’s accounts were rigged, from manipulation of likes and views done by scripting to the posting of comments which generally point to make money fast Internet advertising come-ons. And while the videos are rather obviously gamed to a trained eye, apparently none of Google/YouTube’s algorithms for detecting abuse of this nature worked.

I discovered Mr. Mega Ham & Cheese upon when noticing a duplicate of “GE & Jeff (Taxavoidination)” on the network and it’s transparently falsified view count generated by automation run through Facebook profiles (probably dummy accounts, also violating FB’s terms of service).

If you observe this manner of numbers boosting long enough you get a feel for what is being used to do it.

In the case of Mr. Grilled Ham & Cheese, it’s something called the addmefastbot. It’s made specifically to game likes, views and followers. It’s sold on the back of the blackmarket for such things.

Some threads, showing apparently rather young people, eager to push up video views on YouTube, as well as other places, with automated addmefast scripting, are here, here and here.

You can use Google to find some random fat nerd describing use of a similar social network numbers rigging bot front end, called YouLikeHits.

If readers look closely they’ll notice many of the rigging bots were originally made by agencies which pretend legitimacy. That is, they operate sharing networks where users are encouraged to run up views and likes of other enrolled users’ pages in quid pro quo logrolling.

Invariably, such operations design scripting front ends for their users. These users then turn around and hack the front ends to enable free and faster automated numbers rigging free of the sham of running up someone else’s properties in return.

On the wish for authoritarians

Posted in Culture of Lickspittle, Extremism, Psychopath & Sociopath at 12:19 pm by George Smith

It’s difficult for grasp how the Republican Party retains any support. That is, until you recognize that human beings, and the way they think, haven’t changed much.

Here’s William L. Shirer, in a yellowed 1959 copy of “The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich,” with something to say on people who live in media cages:

I myself was to experience how easily one is taken in by a lying and censored press and radio in a totalitarian state … It was surprising and sometimes consternating to find that notwithstanding the opportunities I had to learn the facts and despite one’s inherent distrust of what one learned from Nazi sources, a steady diet over the years of falsification and distortions made a certain impression on one’s mind and often misled it. No one who has not lived for years in a totalitarian land can possibly conceive how difficult it is to escape the dread consequences of a regime’s calculated and incessant propaganda. Often in a German home or office or sometimes in a casual conversation with a stranger in a restaurant, a beer hall, a cafe, I would meet with the most outlandish assertions from seemingly educated and intelligent persons. It was obvious that they were parroting some piece of nonsense they had heard on the radio or read in the newspapers. Sometimes one was tempted to say as much, but on such occasions one was met with such a stare of incredulity, such a shock of silence, as if one had blasphemed the Almighty, that one realized how useless it was to try to even make contact with a mind which had become warped and for whom the facts of life had become what Hitler and Goebbels, with their cynical disregard for truth, said they were.

So when Rolling Stone’s Matt Taibbi wrote last night that Mitt Romney had “fucked the dog” in the debate, he immediately followed it with: “This should be the death-blow to Romney, but I’ve said that before and been wrong.”

The Psychopath Vote, the Romney vote, has its media, much like the one Shirer described experiencing in his book. The internet did not give anyone a free, uncensored world. In practice, it made it easier to encapsulate the space of one’s own tribe.


As far as foreign policy went, viewers will have noticed how the GOP, using its media, has made global warming a third rail issue in American politics.

Over the weekend, the Los Angeles Times ran a front page story on how global warming has opened up so much water in what was formerly the ice-locked Arctic, the Coast Guard has had to expand its patrols.

“The rapid melting of the polar ice cap is turning the once ice-clogged waters off northern Alaska into a navigable ocean …” reads the piece.

However, in 2012 America, one insane and dangerous political party, often faced by only supine opposition, has successfully convinced half the country that this isn’t happening or is of no consequence.

And so we’ve had debates in which the the incumbent and the gazillionaire menace squabble over who will be most aggressive digger and miner of fossil fuels.

He sank Mitt Romney’s battleship!

Posted in Culture of Lickspittle, Extremism at 12:29 am by George Smith

UPDATED

The worst candidate for president in my lifetime pulled his inane 1917 navy argument in the debate and the president sank him in thirty seconds of zingers:

“Well, governor, we also have fewer horses and bayonets …We have these things called aircraft carriers, where planes land on them. We have these ships that go under water, nuclear submarines … The question is not a game of Battleship, where we’re counting ships …”

Early in the debate Romney also apparently forgot Iran has a southern coastline on the Persian Gulf, making the claim that Syria was its route to the sea.

In any western nation except the United States, a Mitt Romney-esque candidate would be toast after his last two performances, each generating their own viral collective guffaws. (“Binders full of women” and tonight’s WWI navy excrement.)

And Romney was not just beaten last night. Obama destroyed him, showing the country exactly what the man is — a gazillionaire poseur who only gets away with continual mendacity because the US system is badly broken.

The Republic Party is insane and their candidate is but one symptom, albeit a big one, of the illness.


Mitt Romney is obviously surrounded by lickspittles. The proof? If his staff weren’t just a bushel basket of apple-polishers, someone would have told him to drop the ridiculous WWI navy shit weeks ago before it blew up in his face.

And, quite obviously, no one did. And the president politely kicked his teeth in.

From the archives — Romney’s battleships.

10.22.12

Collateral damage

Posted in Culture of Lickspittle at 2:49 pm by George Smith

UPDATED

Google/YouTube’s search algorithms always consign you to the dungeon, literally, in the case of Binders Full of Women Blues. All the videos served with it are like this, despite mine being plainly labeled “Comedy,” political satire in the form of music and with no pictures of real exposed women.

Between worthless advertising schemes, lousy search recommendations and merit based purely on easily faked numbers, if you thought the game was rigged, now you know it is.

Google enterprise, always putting the capital A in “Assholeo” through the miracle of technology. That Don’t Be Evil rubbish is so last decade.

If you had button to push that could make them go away with no one the wiser, you’d use it.

NSFW Warning: Titties.


UPDATE: A day after linking to the slightly dirty bondage video proffered as related to “Binders Full of Women Blues” by YouTube’s great automated sifters, it was yanked for obvious nudity.

Coincidence? Probably not. Our digital overlords are so trivially bad you almost have to love them.

10.20.12

On the alleged skills gap & unemployment argument

Posted in Culture of Lickspittle, Decline and Fall at 9:59 am by George Smith

From Krugman:

One last point: we still keep hearing the “structural??? argument, that we have to expect prolonged high unemployment because it takes time to turn construction workers into manufacturing workers or whatever. One answer is that this portrait of the economy is factually wrong: job losses have not been concentrated in a few sectors or professions, they have been broadly spread across the economy. But there’s also a conceptual answer: if shifting workers across sectors requires mass unemployment, how come the bubble years — when we were moving out of manufacturing into housing — weren’t high-unemployment years? Why does moving into the bubble sectors mean more jobs, but moving out into other sectors mean fewer jobs? I’ve never heard a coherent answer.

10.19.12

The Cult of Cyberwar and Iran (continued)

Posted in Culture of Lickspittle, Cyberterrorism, War On Terror at 1:15 pm by George Smith

I just got off the telephone with the BBC. And this was because, overnight, the news media had renewed its interest in the ongoing denial of service nuisance attacks against major banks in the US.

Excerpted, from NBC, last night:

Ally Financial on Thursday became the latest U.S. financial institution to face cyber attacks that may stem from hackers in Iran …

Regional bank BB&T and credit card issuer Capital One confirmed disruptions earlier this week. A spokeswoman for Ally, the former auto lending arm of General Motors, said the bank was investigating the “unusual traffic” on its website.

Sources have previously told Reuters and NBC News that the attacks could be part of a year-long cyber campaign waged by Iranian hackers against major U.S. financial institutions and other corporate entities.

And today, from The Daily Ticker, with the provocative title “U.S. Banks Under Cyber Attack from Iran: Is Your Money Safe?”:

The number of cyber attacks on U.S. banks is rising …

Larry Castro, a managing director of The Chertoff Group (yes, that Chertoff), tells The Daily Ticker, that there’s been no breach of customer personal data or financial information as a result of these attacks, according to bank reports. Castro, who spent 44 years at the National Security Agency, says these “denial of service” attacks are “a significant nuisance” but not as serious as a loss of actual personal data.


Earlier this month Defense Secretary Leon Panetta warned about a possible “cyber-Pearl Harbor,” saying it could potentially wreak havoc on the nation’s financial system, power grid, transportation system and government.

It’s always worth repeating that, as a nation, the US has put itself in a situation where it’s in no position to complain about cyberattacks from Iran. And that is because we have been attacking Iran and other Middle Eastern nations with malware produced by a state-run virus-writing lab (or labs).

However, the current round of news has been a convenience — in terms of publicity — for both sides. Those launching the attacks get the gratification of seeing stories which tend to exaggerate their impact in the mainstream press. And US government officials, anonymous and publicly, get to use them in scare statements meant to grab attention.

As Frank at Pine View Farm put it last week:

As near as I can figure, it’s a threat because because people say it’s a threat and because they don’t like President Ineedashaveabad’s manners.

____________________

*Loopy theories about “cyberterrorism??? are not admitted as legitimate arguments. They are part of the “full employment for security consultants??? movement and aren’t taken seriously by persons who know how computers and networks actually work.

The persistent meme from the Cult of Cyberwar is that nothing of the infrastructure is safe. Especially the financial system.

Earlier in the year, the National Security Agency’s Keith Alexander tried to get people to believe that cyberattacks on the US have constituted “the greatest transfer of wealth in history.”

In the real world, Dean Baker, an economist and scholar at the Center for Economic Policy, wrote:

The amount of damage being inflicted on countries around the world by bad economic policy is astounding. As a result of unemployment or underemployment, millions of people are seeing their lives ruined. The current policies have led to trillions of dollars of lost output. From an economic standpoint this loss is every bit as devastating as if a building had been destroyed by tanks or bombs. And people have lost their lives, due to inadequate health care, food and shelter, or as a result of the depression associated with their grim economic fate.

If an enemy had inflicted this much damage on the United States, the countries of the European Union, or the countries elsewhere in the world that have been caught up in this downturn, millions of people would be lining up to enlist in the military, anxious to avenge this outrage. But, there is no external enemy to blame. The villains are the economists, still mostly men, in business suits …

the United States is also losing close to $1 trillion in output each year, with close to 23 million unemployed, underemployed or out of the workforce altogether because of poor job prospects.

The economists in policy positions are doing their best to convince the public that the economic catastrophe that they are living through is a natural disaster that is beyond human control. But that is what Vice President Biden would call “malarkey.??? This is a disaster that is 100 percent human caused and is being perpetuated by bad policy.

The original collapse was the result of central bankers who were at best asleep at the wheel, or at worst complicit in the financial sectors’ wheeling and dealing, ignoring the risks that massive housing bubbles obviously posed to the economy. However the response to the downturn has made a bad situation far worse than necessary.

Read the entire piece. It makes sense, encapsulating the story of economic collapse and continued suffering, all due to western financial systems and easily verified economic policies.

It is not some arrant and callow bullshit about cyberwar catastrophe emitted for the benefit of stenographers on the security beat in the mainstream media.


In 1998 I wrote “Electronic Pearl Harbor, Not Likely” for the National Academy of Science published magazine, Issues in Science and Technology.”

That was fourteen years ago. When I mention to reporters who call how long I’ve actually been looking at these issues they seem to have a hard time getting their brains around such a fact.

While all the technology mentioned in the piece has dated, as a general prediction, it’s still pretty great. I was right.

And that was an unpopular position then, as it is now. What’s perhaps more surprising is that genuine education and debate on these matters has become much worse.

You can’t write critical things like this at big venues, or even publicize them very much anymore.

Cyberwar, like many other topics in national security, has been converted into a third rail issue. There is only one way it is discussed or publicized: Catastrophe is looming, always coming, imminent.

Call it the radioactive fallout of the war on terror. Careful thinking on national security was washed away in favor of compiling enemies lists and creating a great professional corps of paranoids and salesmen to develop cant on how easy it would be for just about anyone, anywhere, to bring down the US or kill tens of thousands, at any time.

Yes, we are all going to die someday. That’s certainly true.

In 1998, me:

Another reason to be skeptical of the warnings about [cyberwar] is that those who are most alarmed are often the people who will benefit from government spending to combat the threat. A primary author of a January 1997 Defense Science Board report on information warfare, which recommended an immediate $580-million investment in private sector R&D for hardware and software to implement computer security, was Duane Andrews, executive vice president of SAIC, a computer security vendor and supplier of information warfare consulting services.

Assessments of the threats to the nation’s computer security should not be furnished by the same firms and vendors who supply hardware, software, and consulting services to counter the “threat” to the government and the military. Instead, a true independent group should be set up to provide such assessments and evaluate the claims of computer security software and hardware vendors selling to the government and corporate America. The group must not be staffed by those who have financial ties to computer security firms. The staff must be compensated adequately so that it is not cherry-picked by the computer security industry. It must not be a secret group and its assessments, evaluations, and war game results should not be classified.

Quaint. And where did that reasonable suggestion go?

Nowhere.

The exact opposite is what we have today: A national security infrastructure totally permeated with conflicts of interest in threat assessment and revolving doors in which people routinely go from positions of oversight to the national security private sector and vice versa.


Trivia: Bill Clinton was president in 1999. And Leon Panetta, who probably did not even know the word cyberwar at the time, was the White House Chief of Staff.

The Clinton administration’s “digital Pearl Harbor” man was Assistant Secretary of Defense John Hamre. Hamre is now CEO of the Center for Strategic and International Studies, one of those many think tanks now responsible for finding and analyzing all the many enemies we must build our fortresses against.


Now be good people and listen to Binders Full of Women Blues. That’s not faked, either.

Polling the Heevahavas

Posted in Culture of Lickspittle at 8:41 am by George Smith

The Stupid Voter demographic, pilloried by Fiore as the “Undecided Flakes.”

Go!

Junk from the Economy of Tech Artisans

Posted in Culture of Lickspittle at 8:10 am by George Smith

Acoustic guitars can be ridiculously cheap. By contrast, a premium model like something from Gibson’s top of line can go to three thousand.

From the Plaster Caster press, on 3-D manufacturing of a plastic acoustic guitar:

Industrial designer Scott Summit has created what is believed to be the first 3D-printed acoustic guitar. Businessweek reports that although he thought the pressure of the strings would be too much for the plastic, he says it sounds like a much more expensive custom guitar.

3D Systems, which recently acquired Summit’s prosthetic printing startup Bespoke Innovations, transformed the graphic model into an actual instrument using its 3D printers. It used around $3,000 worth of plastic and features a 3D-printed sterling silver headstock and stainless steel plate on the neck.

“Somewhere down the road [Summit] figures people will be able to use software to pick out what sort of treble, bass, or sustain they desire and then print a guitar to match those qualities,” writes Businessweek. “It will arrive in the mail and sound just the way you wanted,” says the annoying person.

Invariably, it will be for the 1 percent or some of their shoeshiners. Because that’s the future promised by these things.

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