No easy fix for protecting kids from porn sites

No easy fix for protecting kids from porn sites
“NYT” article, May 3 2002.

One of the most thorough reports ever produced on protecting children from Internet pornography has concluded that neither tougher laws nor new technology alone can solve the problem.

“Though some might wish otherwise, no single approach — technical, legal, economic or educational — will be sufficient,” wrote the authors of the report, “Youth, Pornography and the Internet,” issued yesterday by the National Research Council. “Rather, an effective framework for protecting our children from inappropriate materials and experiences on the Internet will require a balanced composite of all of these elements.”

Lots of good stuff and common sense here. For example…

The report compared the problem of protecting children from online risks to dealing with a more mundane hazard of daily life. “Swimming pools can be dangerous for children,” the authors wrote. “To protect them, one can install locks, put up fences and deploy pool alarms. All of these measures are helpful, but by far the most important thing that one can do for one’s children is to teach them to swim.”

From a review of a new biography of Sonia Orwell…

From a review of a new biography of Sonia Orwell…
Jenny Diski in the London Review of Books.

“I understand from reading and anecdote that some people do die with a smile and the words ‘It’s been a good life’ on their lips. But not many, surely? It seems to me almost unreasonable, indecent even, not to feel some degree of regret as life winds down towards the end. And life, of course, has generally only just got properly started before it begins to show signs of not going on for ever. So when I read in David Plante’s Difficult Women (1979) that Sonia Orwell in her final years complained to him, ‘I’ve fucked up my life. I’m angry because I’ve fucked up my life,’ it doesn’t seem to me necessarily to imply a particularly tragic or wasted life. At least not necessarily more tragic or wasted than most. Unless you take the Chinese view, an interesting life is the best we can hope for in an existence which ends, for all of us, prematurely with illness or ageing and death.”

Why doing the right thing is sometimes in one’s best interests

Why doing the right thing is sometimes in one’s best interests

According to the World Wildlife Foundation, plants have created a quarter of all the medicines currently prescribed by ‘scientific’ medicine. And four out of five children with leukaemia are saved by the rosy periwinkle, which originated in the tropical forests of Madagascar. So why then are we so blase about the industrialisation which is reducing biodiversity by the day?

Mobile Surprises. Two surprises today.

The first is to discover that my new phone, a cheap and unassuming Ericsson T39, actually has a builtin POP email client and can be configured to send and receive email via my regular account over GPRS, which I’m starting to believe is therefore worth the rather high costs charged here in the UK.

Setting the phone up for a non-standard connection isn’t entirely trivial, though, and the second surprise, when I called my service provider, Orange, was to get through immediately to somebody who understood my rather technical questions and knew the answers. And this was just before midnight. Amazing! [Status-Q: Quentin Stafford-Fraser’s notepad]

A picture named new11.gif NY Times: “A Microsoft executive told a federal judge that the company should be allowed to make changes in its Windows operating system that impair the performance of other programs so long as the company believes it is acting in the best interest of Windows users.”  [Scripting News]

Irish government in top ten for online services

Irish government in top ten for online services
Irish Times story.

“Ireland’s online government services are ranked among the top ten in the world according to new study published today.

The report carried out by technology consultant group, Accenture, surveyed eGovernment activity in 23 countries and analysed over 160 national government services.

Governments are graded on how successful they have been in moving their services online.

Canada was found to have outperformed all others in eGovernment innovation and penetration with Singapore in second and the US in third. Ireland improved its ranking this year, moving up from 13th to 10th place, with an overall Internet penetration rate of 31 per cent.

The study found that of 120 services for which the Irish Government is responsible, 107 are available online to some degree, giving a Service Maturity Breadth rating of 89.2 per cent. This is marginally above the global average of 85.8 per cent. “

I love that phrase “Service Maturity Breadth”. I bet my countrymen talk of nothing else when they gather in pubs and clubs to discuss online business.

Are we walking into a patent trap by adopting new protocols like SOAP?

Are we walking into a patent trap by adopting new protocols like SOAP?
ZD Net story.

I can understand the excitement surrounding the idea that protocols like SOAP could enable us to create a truly distributed data-processing and exchange network. But IBM and Microsoft hold important patents in this area, and are not going to give them up. If the new protocols become as central as TCP/IP is now, then the principle of an open (non-proprietary) Net will be violated and we’ll all be poorer as a result.