Wikipedia, academia and Seigenthaler

Excellent essay on the phoney rows about Wikipedia’s alleged inadequacies and limitations. Sample:

What pissed me off more was how the academic community pointed to this case and went “See! See! Wikipedia is terrible! We must protest it and stop it! It’s ruining our schools!” All of a sudden, i found myself defending Wikipedia to academics instead of reminding the pro-Wikipedians of its limitations in academia. I kept pointing out that they wouldn’t let students cite from encyclopedias either. I reminded folks that the answer is not to protest it, but to teach students how to read it and to understand its strengths and limitations. To actually TEACH students to interpret web material. I reminded academics that Wikipedia provides information to people who don’t have access to books and that mostly-good information is far better than none. Most importantly, i reminded academics that the vast majority of articles on Wikipedia are super solid and if they had a problem with them, they could fix them. Academics have a lot of knowledge, but all too often they forget that they are teachers and that there is great value in teaching the masses, not just the small number of students who will help their careers progress. Alas, public education has been devalued and information elitism is rampant in an age where we finally have the tools to make knowledge more accessible. Sad. (And one of the many things that is making me disillusioned with academia these days.) I found myself being the Wikipedia promoter because i found the extreme academic viewpoint to be just as egregious as the extreme Wikipedia viewpoint…

The piece goes on to quote Jimmy Wales’s wonderful defence of Wikipedia with an analogy about steak knives in restaurants.

Inside the Prius

As some readers know, I’ve had a Toyota Prius hybrid since June 2004. It’s easily the best car I’ve ever owned, as well as having very low emissions (104 gm/km) and reasonable fuel economy. Tech Review has an interesting Flash-based exposition of how it works. It’s a fantastically complex piece of engineering — so much so that I’m sometimes amazed, not that it works so flawlessly, but that it works at all.

Evoca

These services just keep springing up. Evoca allows one to create, organize, share and search voice recordings. Post audio to your blog using your phone. Record family stories for posterity. Etc., etc.

Posted in Web

Pictures in a bubble

This is interesting — BubbleShare. It’s a Flickr-type service, but with the added punch of allowing you to put audio alongside your pictures to create a narrated slideshow. It’s neatly done — as this demo by Wade Roush shows. This stuff just gets better and better.

Posted in Web

John McGahern…

died unexpectedly this afternoon in a Dublin hospital. He was the nearest thing to Chekhov that Ireland has ever produced. Had he lived, he might have been in line for the Nobel Prize. His last book, Memoir, is a moving, unflinching examination of his childhood. The Guardian has a nice obit.

Those Bush accounts

Memo from KPMG to George W. Bush concerning their audit of his political capital account. Excerpt:

1. We’re having trouble reconciling assets and liabilities (we ran the numbers three times and still couldn’t come up with the positive balance you reported). Do you have a single person responsible for managing this account we might talk to? Is it still Mr. Rove?

2. We think you may have overstated earnings in November 2004. While assets may be depressed due to “market panic,” it seems unlikely they will recover to 2004 levels. And frankly, it’s time to write off some, such as Social Security reform, that have been “under water” for a while now.

3. Anticipated income from specific investments can no longer be reported before it has been fully realized (so called “mark-to-market” accounting). Can you clarify whether the earnings you claimed in 2003 and 2004 from your Iraq holdings—”Spreading democracy in the Middle East” and “Restoring U.S. prestige”— actually occurred? If not, can they be reasonably anticipated before 2009? (Please note, after that date they cannot accrue to this account.)

4. We have moved some assets to the liability column (Mr. Claude Allen, Ms. H. Meirs). Others appear highly troubled (e.g., the Medicare Drug Benefit, Donald Rumsfeld) and may need to be revalued or reorganized…

Nice spoof, by David Atkins.

Agency exempts bloggers from campaign spending Laws

Hmmm… According to the NYT, the FCC has decided to exempt “most of internet” from campaign spending laws. Here’s the gist:

WASHINGTON, March 27 — The Federal Election Commission ruled unanimously Monday that political communication on the Internet, including Web logs, setting up Web sites and e-mail, was not regulated by campaign finance laws.

The commission, in a 6-to-0 decision, also ruled that paid political advertisements placed on Web sites were covered by the 2002 campaign finance law, which includes restrictions on spending and contributions and bars corporations and unions from using their treasuries to purchase Web advertisements.

The decision marked a significant step in the rapid evolution of the Internet — and, in particular, Web logs — as a force in American politics. It is the latest chapter in the conflict between First Amendment guarantees of freedom of expression and efforts by Congress to regulate campaign spending.

The commission ruling came two years after it had decided that all Internet activity was exempt from the campaign finance laws. That ruling was challenged by Congressional sponsors of the law, and a federal judge upheld that suit, ordering the commission to write rules to apply the 2002 law to the Internet.

The commission ruled that the law applied to paid political advertisements, but offered a broad exemption for all other Internet political activity, conducted by individuals or groups, even in direct coordination with a candidate.

“The commission established a categorical exemption for individuals who engage in online politics,” Michael E. Toner, the chairman of the commission, said in an interview. “The agency has taken an important step in protecting grass roots and online politics.”

At first sight, this looks like good news — it means that Bloggers’ exhortations to their readers to contribute to, support or work for candidates would be counted as contributions to candidatges and therefore fall under the contribution limit of $2,000.

My gloomy fear is that this will actually lead to massive pollution of the blogosphere, as political parties figure out ways of assembling masses of ‘individual’ pseudo-bloggers to support candidates.

The Founders Never Imagined a Bush Administration

And while we’re on the subject of Attorney-General Gonzales, here’s a sobering piece by Joyce Appelby and Gary Hart…

Relying on legal opinions from Attorney General Alberto R. Gonzales and Professor John Yoo, then working at the Justice Department, Bush has insisted that there can be no limits to the power of the commander-in-chief in time of war. More recently the president has claimed that laws relating to domestic spying and the torture of detainees do not apply to him. His interpretation has produced a devilish conundrum.

President Bush has given Commander-in-Chief Bush unlimited wartime authority. But the “war on terror” is more a metaphor than a fact. Terrorism is a method, not an ideology; terrorists are criminals, not warriors. No peace treaty can possibly bring an end to the fight against far-flung terrorists. The emergency powers of the president during this “war” can now extend indefinitely, at the pleasure of the president and at great threat to the liberties and rights guaranteed us under the Constitution…

Puzzle: this essay was published on George Mason University’s History News Network. A few minutes ago I looked to see what were the current most popular queries on search engines and was puzzled to discover that “George Mason University” was second only to ‘Tiger Woods”. Could it be that people had heard about the Appleby/Hart piece and were hunting for it? Curious…

Most expensive Google AdWords

Not sure I believe this, but John Battelle posted the list, and he’s pretty reliable. He got it from here.

Recently updated highest paying keywords from Google. Top Ten:

$54.33 mesothelioma lawyers
$47.79 what is mesothelioma
$47.72 peritoneal mesothelioma
$47.25 consolidate loans
$47.16 refinancing mortgage
$45.55 tax attorney
$41.22 mesothelioma
$38.86 car accident lawyer
$38.68 ameriquest mortgage
$38.03 mortgage refinance

As ever, lawyers seem to be in the thick of things. To my shame, I didn’t know what mesothelioma was until I came on the list. (It’s the type of cancer you get from breathing asbestos dust.)

The prices are interesting too — they show why click-fraud is such a potential danger. A few hundred fake clicks on any of those AdWords could make a tidy dent in the advertiser’s cash flow.