Reports have been popping up around the place lately, claiming that MySpace is, or about to, sell data on their users to third parties.
This is a sensitive issue for me after discovering back in 2008 that Australia Post was conducting a 'lifestyles' survey and using that to create mailing lists for sale to pretty much anyone who wanted them. I still maintain that Australia Post did not properly alert survey respondents about what was happening with their responses. Getting offers from 'partners' is reasonably common, but wholesale selling of individual data to pernicious junk mailers is something else entirely. I was staggered by the array of organisations using that data, including the ubiquitous Readers Digest - get on their list and you never seem to get off again!
So when I first read these stories of MySpace selling data to third party users, I became rather concerned. When you consider the MySpace links to Google and the latter's quite blatant attempt to rip off rights of authors via its digital library, I believe my concerns were justified. I contacted MySpace direct and here is their response.
Thanks for contacting MySpace.
Numerous blog posts have surfaced over the last few days that have created confusion surrounding MySpace’s user data. We want to set the record straight - MySpace is not selling user data.
Through the MySpace Developer Platform, third party developers can access - free of charge - MySpace users’ publicly available real-time data (such as status updates, or updates about when a user adds music, photos, or videos to their profile) using our Real Time Stream feed. This is the same MySpace data that is already publicly available through Google’s real-time search feature.
Sincerely,
The MySpace Support team
So it would appear that MySpace are not selling or making available data to third party users but merely aiding those third party users to access what is already publicly available. So the moral of the story is don't put up anything about yourself in your MySpace pages that you would not want another party to make use of.
Friday, March 19, 2010
Sunday, March 14, 2010
Another Popsicle Award

It has been a while since I awarded one of these.
Earlier today, I watched an absolute lunatic, joyriding in a nearby car park. He was throwing his vehicle around in all manner of wild skids, at one point sliding off to bump around in the vegetation at the road's verge. The carpark was jam-packed full. This idiot was using it as a high-speed obstacle course.
I could not believe what I was seeing.
This was late morning. The office block beside said car park had a quite clear view of it all. Being a government building subject to security restrictions, there will be sure to be security cameras all around the place. Neighbouring places such as my residence had a clear view of the idiot's antics. As did the secondary school next door.
I wonder just how many calls the police received about it, apart from mine?
So I hereby bestow a Popsicle Award on this anonymous effwit for only having a Popsicle stick keeping his ears apart!
not so much a race as a stately procession
There was a time when I loved motor sport. Nowadays, I have little interest in it at all. Part of me wonders at the dichotomy of glorifying competitive use of the internal combustion engine at a time when we are generally trying to minimise the impact of that infernal device on the rest of our environment.
It has to be admitted that there was still an element of excitement - drivers jousting for position, the tactics of the race including when to head to the pits, the challenge of aligning a vehicle to prevailing conditions. And let's be honest - the horrible thrill of seeing a prang.
Yesterday's Spanish Grand Prix (last night, Australian time), showcased the full range of the accumulated new rules which include:
First there is little incentive to conserve fuel as you have to carry enough for the entire race to begin with which has direct implications for exactly how the drivers approach things on the track, removing a major element of tactical approach.
Next, the homogenisation of design etc, while arguably helping the lesser teams to catch the bigger teams in terms of vehicle performance, has at the same time created a real sense of sameness about it all, pulling the leaders back to the pack.
The old trick of pulling in behind someone to ride in the slipstream has no benefit any longer as you do not have the incentive of the fuel efficiency that creates. When riding in that slipstream, drivers have less direct control of their tire's grip on the track and the vehicle moves around more. This is harder on tires and as everyone runs on the softer tire, there is now an active disincentive to joust for position by sitting on someone's tail in their slipstream. Consequently drivers now sit further back from each other, no longer jostling for position with those lightening slips around the man in front. Changes of position only happen if someone ahead makes a real mistake.
The lunacy of the new pitlane restrictions was demonstrated when Aussie driver, Mark Webber, was in the pits, finishing his pit stop, when another driver entered. As the new arrival's pit was further along pitlane than that of Webber's team, Webber had to wait until the latter had finished his pit stop. If Webber had left any earlier, he would have breached the minimum distance restrictions by virtue of driving past the other's pit.
Consider the difference between two tennis players, each hovering at the baseline, patting it back and forth, merely waiting for the other to make a blunder, compared to the excitement of serve and volley. Someone like Chrissie Evert who was a master of baseline play could run her opponents ragged. But all too many baseline players are doing nothing more than just waiting for their opponent to make a blunder. The new state of Formula 1 racing is the equivalent of those boring, uninspiring baseline players. When something merely relies on one person holding on long enough to profit by another making a mistake, it becomes about as exciting as watching bottles of beer come off an assembly line.
Good one, Bernie.
It has to be admitted that there was still an element of excitement - drivers jousting for position, the tactics of the race including when to head to the pits, the challenge of aligning a vehicle to prevailing conditions. And let's be honest - the horrible thrill of seeing a prang.
Yesterday's Spanish Grand Prix (last night, Australian time), showcased the full range of the accumulated new rules which include:
- carrying sufficient fuel for the entire race, rather than strategic pit-stops for refueling or nursing a vehicle for economy;
- mandatory use of only two types of tire - hard and soft - and who is going to use a slower hard tire when they can use a faster soft tire that grips the track surface better;
- safety rules in pit lane - no longer relying on speed restrictions but instead on space between vehicles, a driver cannot head out if a vehicle has pulled into the pits somewhere ahead of him i.e. driver A hits the pits and is just finishing a lightening speed pit-stop as driver B pulls into a bay ahead of him - driver A is now not allowed to head out of the pits until driver B's vehicle heads out at which time A can head after B but only while maintaining the minimum distance restrictins, despite the fact that A was in there first and had already finished; and
- mandatory design and engineering restrictions.
First there is little incentive to conserve fuel as you have to carry enough for the entire race to begin with which has direct implications for exactly how the drivers approach things on the track, removing a major element of tactical approach.
Next, the homogenisation of design etc, while arguably helping the lesser teams to catch the bigger teams in terms of vehicle performance, has at the same time created a real sense of sameness about it all, pulling the leaders back to the pack.
The old trick of pulling in behind someone to ride in the slipstream has no benefit any longer as you do not have the incentive of the fuel efficiency that creates. When riding in that slipstream, drivers have less direct control of their tire's grip on the track and the vehicle moves around more. This is harder on tires and as everyone runs on the softer tire, there is now an active disincentive to joust for position by sitting on someone's tail in their slipstream. Consequently drivers now sit further back from each other, no longer jostling for position with those lightening slips around the man in front. Changes of position only happen if someone ahead makes a real mistake.
The lunacy of the new pitlane restrictions was demonstrated when Aussie driver, Mark Webber, was in the pits, finishing his pit stop, when another driver entered. As the new arrival's pit was further along pitlane than that of Webber's team, Webber had to wait until the latter had finished his pit stop. If Webber had left any earlier, he would have breached the minimum distance restrictions by virtue of driving past the other's pit.
Consider the difference between two tennis players, each hovering at the baseline, patting it back and forth, merely waiting for the other to make a blunder, compared to the excitement of serve and volley. Someone like Chrissie Evert who was a master of baseline play could run her opponents ragged. But all too many baseline players are doing nothing more than just waiting for their opponent to make a blunder. The new state of Formula 1 racing is the equivalent of those boring, uninspiring baseline players. When something merely relies on one person holding on long enough to profit by another making a mistake, it becomes about as exciting as watching bottles of beer come off an assembly line.
Good one, Bernie.
Oh come on
Am I the only one finding it rather hard to swallow Joe Hockey's latest public stance?
In a recent speech, Hockey made himself out to be some sort of deep, feeling, civil libertarian.
Oh please.
The current Coalition i.e. the Liberal Party, under Tony Abbott's leadership, has regressed right back into the Howard years, to the point of practically recreating the Howard Cabinet in Opposition. Recycling does have its limitations as a good thing, you know.
Joe Hockey was a vigorous and vocal supporter of John Howard from before they even first assumed government in 1996. Only about two months out from the 2007 election, I vividly recall listening to Blubberguts on ABC radio, ranting about how the entire party was 100% behind John Howard. He dismissed results from a survey conducted by a university, that showed significant public opposition to his government's Work Choices legislation, as only being the product of union influence and interference. Yet it was with almost indecent haste that after the disaster of the 2007 election for the Coalition, Blubberguts jumped onto the "I didn't really support Howard or Work Choices" bandwagon.
Anyone who really thinks that the Abbott-led Oppostion will win the next Federal election, whensoever it is called, is frankly kidding themselves. Should Abbott last that long in the leadership, he would be sure to fall on his sword. Blubberguts is rather obviously positioning himself to then be seen as the Party's 'saviour'.
Mind you, last time I looked up the definition of 'saviour', it did not include words like opportunistic, self-serving hypocrite.
In a recent speech, Hockey made himself out to be some sort of deep, feeling, civil libertarian.
Oh please.
The current Coalition i.e. the Liberal Party, under Tony Abbott's leadership, has regressed right back into the Howard years, to the point of practically recreating the Howard Cabinet in Opposition. Recycling does have its limitations as a good thing, you know.
Joe Hockey was a vigorous and vocal supporter of John Howard from before they even first assumed government in 1996. Only about two months out from the 2007 election, I vividly recall listening to Blubberguts on ABC radio, ranting about how the entire party was 100% behind John Howard. He dismissed results from a survey conducted by a university, that showed significant public opposition to his government's Work Choices legislation, as only being the product of union influence and interference. Yet it was with almost indecent haste that after the disaster of the 2007 election for the Coalition, Blubberguts jumped onto the "I didn't really support Howard or Work Choices" bandwagon.
Anyone who really thinks that the Abbott-led Oppostion will win the next Federal election, whensoever it is called, is frankly kidding themselves. Should Abbott last that long in the leadership, he would be sure to fall on his sword. Blubberguts is rather obviously positioning himself to then be seen as the Party's 'saviour'.
Mind you, last time I looked up the definition of 'saviour', it did not include words like opportunistic, self-serving hypocrite.
Labels:
election,
hypocrite,
Joe Hockey,
John Howard,
Tony Abbott
Sunday, March 7, 2010
breaking news over Gurshan Singh death
Several hours ago, Victorian police charged one Gursewak Dhillon with manslaughter by criminal negligence over the death of three-year old Gurshan Singh. Dhillon lived at the same address as Singh. Details are still somewhat sketchy but according to police, Dhillon placed the unconscious child in the boot of his car and drove around for at least three hours before dumping the child's body in long grass where it was later discovered. Exactly what Dhillon was trying to do and how Singh came to be unconcious are still unclear.
Dhillon appears to have taken his court appearance rather calmly going by the news reports I have seen. One would have thought that an innocent man would have been protesting vigorously even though his appearance at an out-of-hours court session was merely a bail hearing, with bail being refused.
One would hope that this swift result will put paid to any potential beat ups about racial attacks in this case.
The burning question in my mind at this point, is what on earth Dhillon was doing?
Dhillon appears to have taken his court appearance rather calmly going by the news reports I have seen. One would have thought that an innocent man would have been protesting vigorously even though his appearance at an out-of-hours court session was merely a bail hearing, with bail being refused.
One would hope that this swift result will put paid to any potential beat ups about racial attacks in this case.
The burning question in my mind at this point, is what on earth Dhillon was doing?
A tragedy - and let's not make it worse
How horrific has been the death of three-year-old boy, Gurshan Singh? Pictures in the media show an innocent young boy whose death seems pointless, not to mention strange. How on earth did a child of that age end up some 20 kilometres away from his home unless someone took him?
I desperately hope that this does not end up being portrayed as another supposed 'racial' attack on Indian nationals within Australia merely because of the child's nationality. This has been tragic enough without a media beat up making it more so.
If someone is responsible for the child's death then they deserve all that is coming to them and more. Having said that, I have not long finished reading an account of the appalling murder of a young girl in Melbourne in 1921.
In response to a public outcry, public pressure and what can only be described as ineptitude by police and the judiciary, an arrest was quickly made and just a mere three months later, the accused found guilty and swiftly hanged, the accused's rights to appeal blatantly trampled on. Evidence relied on was hopelessly tainted, with the Crown's 'expert' witness testifying whether or not hair discovered belonged to the victim, making a totally bizarre finding that flew in the face of the facts. Only the determined efforts of a researcher 70 years later and the chance discovery of hair used as evidence in the case still in existence within the official file rather than having been destroyed, revealed that an innocent man was hanged. The real perpetrator was never found and almost certainly long since died of old age.
Let us not lose sight of reality, justice and due process in getting to the truth of such things including this tragic and puzzling loss of young Gurshan.
I desperately hope that this does not end up being portrayed as another supposed 'racial' attack on Indian nationals within Australia merely because of the child's nationality. This has been tragic enough without a media beat up making it more so.
If someone is responsible for the child's death then they deserve all that is coming to them and more. Having said that, I have not long finished reading an account of the appalling murder of a young girl in Melbourne in 1921.
In response to a public outcry, public pressure and what can only be described as ineptitude by police and the judiciary, an arrest was quickly made and just a mere three months later, the accused found guilty and swiftly hanged, the accused's rights to appeal blatantly trampled on. Evidence relied on was hopelessly tainted, with the Crown's 'expert' witness testifying whether or not hair discovered belonged to the victim, making a totally bizarre finding that flew in the face of the facts. Only the determined efforts of a researcher 70 years later and the chance discovery of hair used as evidence in the case still in existence within the official file rather than having been destroyed, revealed that an innocent man was hanged. The real perpetrator was never found and almost certainly long since died of old age.
Let us not lose sight of reality, justice and due process in getting to the truth of such things including this tragic and puzzling loss of young Gurshan.
Monday, March 1, 2010
Are medicare staff snooping on your personal information?
In news posted only about two hours ago, a large number of employees of Medicare have been busted for unauthorised access to people's private information.
According to the ABC, 1058 employees have been investigated since November 2006 for unauthorised access. Apparently just over half were found to have spied on personal information but 30% of these were just looking at their own records.
Let us assume for a moment that it was exactly half who were found to have spied on personal information ie 529. Deduct the 30% who were just looking at their own files and we are still left with 370 - that is 370 employees of Medicare making unauthorised access of other people's personal information! 370!! And of course it is actually more than that because it was just over half who were found to have made unauthorised access.
What sort of outfit is Medicare if 370 of its employees feel safe in snooping in other people's personal information? What sort of system controls do Medicare have in place, or more to the point, what is missing that should in fact be in place?
This is ordinary to put it mildly. And why is it only now that action is being taken on matters that occured as much as three years ago?
Not happy, Jan
According to the ABC, 1058 employees have been investigated since November 2006 for unauthorised access. Apparently just over half were found to have spied on personal information but 30% of these were just looking at their own records.
Let us assume for a moment that it was exactly half who were found to have spied on personal information ie 529. Deduct the 30% who were just looking at their own files and we are still left with 370 - that is 370 employees of Medicare making unauthorised access of other people's personal information! 370!! And of course it is actually more than that because it was just over half who were found to have made unauthorised access.
What sort of outfit is Medicare if 370 of its employees feel safe in snooping in other people's personal information? What sort of system controls do Medicare have in place, or more to the point, what is missing that should in fact be in place?
This is ordinary to put it mildly. And why is it only now that action is being taken on matters that occured as much as three years ago?
Not happy, Jan
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