It’s a quagmire — official

Yep. Now we have the official confirmation.

UK premier Tony Blair has endorsed US President George Bush’s assertion that coalition troops must stay in Iraq as long as necessary to defeat terrorism.
Mr Blair told the Associated Press it was “vital” the US-led coalition remained until the country stabilised.

Defeating “insurgents and terrorists” there would lead to the destruction of terrorism across the globe, he said.

Isn’t capitalism wonderful

PartyGaming floated on the London Stock Exchange today.

PartyGaming’s shares rose 11% on the first day of dealings yesterday, defying doubters who thought it would be impossible to float a business in London whose activities are considered illegal in the US. Strong demand for shares in the world’s biggest online poker company meant the four founders sold extra into the flotation. The quartet of two Indian computer engineers plus an American former porn entrepreneur and her husband will now collect a combined £1bn in cash and retain stakes collectively worth £3.5bn.

PartyGaming peppered its float prospectus with warnings about the risk of criminal and civil proceedings in America, notably from the US Department of Justice, which regards gambling over the internet as illegal.

Funny how nobody in the City seems concerned about the ethics of this. I bet if I tried to float a company whose services were illegal in other jurisdictions I’d be condemned from a great height by men in suits from City institutions. (Unless, of course, it was making huge profits.)

Interesting fact no. 3443: the programmer who wrote the original software for PartyGaming is called Dikshit. He will collect £420m and keep a 30.4% stake worth £1.5bn.

Steam age communications

When was the last time anyone gave you a telex number? (Does anyone still use telex?) From a manhole cover spotted today.

More: Wikipedia claims that “Telex is still in use for certain applications such as shipping, news, weather reporting and military command.”

What a difference a year makes

June 28, 2004

In a few days, Iraq will radiate with stability and security.

Iyad Allawi, newly sworn-in Prime Minister of Iraq.

26 June, 2005

The insurgency could go on for any number of years. Insurgencies tend to go on for five, six, eight, ten, twelve years.

Donald Rumsfeld, US Secretary of Defense

The Grokster decision

The US Supreme Court has ruled against Streamcast et al. I’ve just downloaded the Judgment for a closer look. At first sight, it seems to hinge on intent — i.e. whether a technology was created with an intent to copy or distribute protected material. If that’s what the Judgment really says, then the decision needn’t have the chilling effect on innovation that so many of us feared. But these are deep waters, Holmes, and I’m submerged just now.

Can you imagine the discussion-fest there will be on Blogs tonight? I want to know first what Ed Felten and Larry Lessig think. Neither has said anything substantive yet (17:30 UK time). It will be a long night.

Update: Interesting discussion going on at SCOTUSblog.

Unfinished business

My attempt to be artistically enigmatic. Er, in reality it’s a belt which happened to be lying on a duvet cover. Must take a course in pretentiousness sometime and get myself a New York agent.

What will you do when your hard disk fails?

Note: “when”, not “if”. This morning’s Observer column. Excerpt:

Until recently, hard drive failure was a catastrophe only for really heavy users of computing, or for those running network servers – which is why both those categories of user have always been paranoid about backing up their data. But most ordinary users didn’t keep that much stuff, and in general much of what they did keep consisted of documents that could easily be backed up onto removable disks or filed in paper form.

But about three years ago, millions of such ‘ordinary’ users began buying digital still- and video-cameras and MP3 players. And all of a sudden, their hard drives began filling up with images, movies and music that really mattered to their owners because they documented their lives.