"Although [Russell "Queer As Folk" Davies] says he wants to
'introduce the character to a modern audience', Lorraine
Heggessey, the controller of BBC1, insisted yesterday
that she did not expect a gay Doctor Who..."
http://news.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2003/09/26/nwho26.xml
...foppish "Time Lord", travels with entourage of "companions"
- what could be straighter than that?
>> HARD NEWS <<
what happened to MOOs?
A contrary couple of weeks among the forces fighting the
good fight - or at least, convincing everyone else they are.
MSN certainly added a few people to their buddy list after
many outlets ran MSN's cancelling of their chat services
without a glimmer of analysis. MSN UK head Gillian Kent was
on all media, recommending people switched from "free and
unmoderated" chatrooms to... MSN Messenger. Oh yes, much
safer. Anyone wanting to write a real follow-up story might
want to try opening MSN Messenger. Click on "Search for a
Contact". Choose "Search By Interest". Browse "Profiles By
Interest". Click on "People > Romance". Click on "13-19".
Voila. A list of potential penpals, sorted by age and gender.
Any chance of MSN Messenger getting shut down now? Or is the
AIM-killer a bit more profitable than free, moderated chat?
http://www.currybet.net/archives/000099.shtml
- more quotes
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/scotland/3139754.stm
- and while you're running that press release, could you put this one up too?
It got even weirder in Parliament last Thursday, when the
Lords debated a bit in the Sexual Offences Act that would
let police and GCHQ "make" their own child porn. While the
Lords wandered off into a fascinating fancy that Al-Qaeda
was using steganography to send sekrit messages in illegal
material, the rest of us were left wondering exactly what
kind of David Icke-level conspiracy was going on here. Turns
out that it's not just the cops "making" pr0n. Since 1999,
"making" child porn, in the legal sense of the term,
includes caching indecent GIFs, preserving them for the
police, or even seeing them fly past as a moderator or
suspicious sysadmin. Everyone, it turns out, involved in the
self-policing of the Net: from the Internet Watch Foundation
helpline callers to those very same MSN moderators keeping
an eye on chat rooms, yea even unto GCHQ spies who must
stare at every Usenet binary until their eyes bleed, have
been "making" the stuff. A crime which, understandably, has
no possible defence. And which carries a hefty penalty of
ten years in jail. Currently the police are pushing for an
"authorisation" fix - which means that every sysadmin would
have to apply for a special "Yes, I Make Child Porn But It's
Okay" license, or face possible prosecution for even
investigating dodgy practices. FIPR, very sensibly, are
arguing that perhaps caching isn't *quite* same as "making"
child porn, and could have extenuating circumstances under
the law. Whatever the final form, for now, a huge chunk of
Britain's "family" ISPs are discovering they're legally the
same criminals as they're trying to catch. Which might
further explain why MSN - and other ISPs - would rather
close down their entire service than see employees thrown in jail.
www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/pipermail/ukcrypto/2003-September/028553.html
- mostly funny stuff about Al-Qaeda
http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/~rnc1/SexualOffencesBill.pdf
- look what I made!
So the European Parliament, after some bitching, did the
right thing in the end, and voted for enough of the
amendments to stop software patents. And who have we got to
thank among British MEPS? Not Labour, who voted with Arlene
"nasty dirty voters bullying me with their opinions"
McCarthy. Not the Tories (although apparently there were a
couple of dissidents). How about the Liberal Democrats,
then, whose JURI committee member Diana Wallis spoke to
their conference on Monday about how "We should be exposing
the political choices that lay beneath... technical issues.
For example we are currently dealing with a directive on the
patentability of computer generated inventions; we have been
lobbied to death by various individuals. This is about
liberty, about choice, about protecting innovative small
enterprises and the consumer." Oh, do guess. The British
LibDems voted against fellow European Liberals and for
software patents. Only the Greens and the UK Independence
Party consistently voted down the bad provisions. Just so
you know who is on your side next election.
http://lwn.net/Articles/50722/
- directive, with useful comments
>> ANTI-NEWS <<
berating the obvious
new minimalism: http://www.ntk.net/2003/09/26/dohlogo.gif ...
... football, football - that's all you ever think about:
www.ntk.net/2003/09/26/dohstoke.gif ... 'cos no-one has an up-
to-date laptop: http://www.ntk.net/2003/09/26/dohobs.gif ...
impressively eclectic lineup for triple-CD PiL tribute album:
http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/ASIN/B000007UDQ/ ... Open
University project threatens to set research back 70 years:
http://computing.open.ac.uk/Research/Showproject.cfm?ProjectID=39
... e-Envoy's idea of "html version of full list of e-
Champions" is - an html page with another link to the Word
file: http://www.e-envoy.gov.uk/EStrategy/EChampions/fs/en ...
nothing more annoying than forgetting to rewind your DVDs:
http://www.ntk.net/2003/09/26/dohdvd.gif ... Brit initiative
in action: http://www.ntk.net/2003/09/26/dohbdi.gif ... The
Friday Thing blog lambasts Bowie, Morissette for elementary
geographical goofs: http://www.ntk.net/2003/09/26/dohbelt1.gif
- yet believes "Beltway" [sic] to be "a suburb of Washington":
http://www.ntk.net/2003/09/26/dohbelt2.gif ...
>> EVENT QUEUE <<
goto's considered non-harmful
Obviously we have only the vaguest idea of what a "private
view" might involve, so instead we've decided to hold a "gala
opening" for FROM DESPAIR TO LEISUREWEAR: NTK - THE T-SHIRT
YEARS (5.30-8pm, next Fri 2003-10-03, Access Space, 1 Sidney
St, Sheffield S1 4RG, admission free, exhibition continues
11am-7pm Tue-Sat until end of Oct). It's not just 20 or more
of our most technically sophisticated t-shirt designs draped
over the walls and shop-window dummies - there'll also be rare
and hard-to-get collector's items (like the mythical "red
Adminspotting"), and an educational "designer's commentary"
explaining the jokes on each one. Plus free wine and nibbles
at the opening. And supermodels. Possibly. And next weekend
threatens to be a busy one for fans of the esoteric and
bizarre, incorporating what seems to be the UK premier of
MCSWEENEYS VS THEY MIGHT BE GIANTS (7.30pm, Sat 2003-10-04,
the Barbican, London, tickets from UKP10), and the innovation
of a "strippers" and a "curry" track at Birmingham 2600's
informal computer-security fest BRUMCON III - RETURN OF THE
FED GUY (also Sat 2003-10-04), though their site currently
seems to be down, making its Birmingham location perhaps even
more "top secret" than they'd originally planned.
http://www.leisurewear.lowtech.org/
- next: the return of "Memes don't exist, tell your friends"
http://www.barbican.org.uk/generic/details.asp?eventID=1776
- "McSweeney's deserves no praise and accepts no blame"
http://brumcon.org/
- (slightly) more info at http://www.phreaking.org/
http://www.infowar.com/
- please "Be civil" for InfowarCon, Washington, next Tue
>> TRACKING <<
sufficiently advanced technology : the gathering
KNOPPIX 3.3 is the most convincing argument for Linux on the
desktop we've seen. Hell, it's the most convincing argument
for thin clients we've seen. Use the free distrib-on-a-CD on
your nearest laptop, and the chances are you'll be terrified
by its hardware detection skillz (it spotted video card, USB,
sound and wireless networking on a straight-out-of-a-box
Vaio). Then, after a while being taken aback with its 2GB of
speedily uncompressed apps (including two office suites and
most of the KDE collection), you'll wonder whether you need to
install it at all. If you do (with 3.3's knoppix-installer),
you'll get the easiest Debian distribution you could ask for.
If you don't, you can content yourself with hardware config
and home dir details on USB storage or floppy (optionally
encrypted), and keep your precious hard drive virginally
intact.
http://www.knopper.net/knoppix-mirrors/index-en.html
- git your isos
http://www.knoppix-std.org/docs/crypto_home.html
- keep your keychain on your keychain
>> MEMEPOOL <<
contains a source of http://snackspot.org/
bad worm pics - "surf without rhythm" to avoid attracting
them?: http://www.ecommercetimes.com/perl/story/31632.html ,
http://wireless.newsfactor.com/images/story-computer-worm.jpg
... http://www.anandasangha.net/mysticmicrosoft/ vs power of
prayerware: http://www.ultraedit.com/products/story.html ...
the laser beam-reflecting game that hasn't disappeared into
Macromedia's subscription area: http://www.dyson.co.uk/game/
... dull Amazon title of the week (falls asleep while typing
it?): http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/ASIN/920111186X ...
SETI@home "successful", reveals www.climateprediction.net/ ...
well, thanks for clarifying the whole "heterosexual" aspect:
http://www.cannibalism.org.uk/ ... token Japlish of the week:
http://www.webtribe.net/~davidgentle/2000_10_29_8factsarc.html#1241216
... Kieren McCarthy lashes out at Prof Kevin Warwick's latest
pronouncement, unfortunately omits when or where it took
place: http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/28/32991.html
(under heading "Welcome back, Master of Gibberish")...
>> GEEK MEDIA <<
get out less
TV>> forget muzzle velocity and armour penetration - it's all
about reliability when GREATEST MILITARY CLASHES (8pm, Fri,
C5) pits the AK47 vs the M16... according to the now-defunct
http://web.archive.org/web/20001018091551/magi.com/~rhdf/scms/arnd.html
Arnie's body count hits just 15 in THE RUNNING MAN (9pm, Fri,
C5), compared to a whopping 105 in COMMANDO (9pm, Thu, C5) -
couple of suggestions for recreating that "futuristic escaped
prisoner" look http://www.nokia.com/nokia/0,,43613,00.html ,
http://store.yahoo.com/sharperimage-gb/iu558.html yourself ...
and who knows what kind of scary RFID metal-strip technology
was involved in tracking THE LIFE OF A UKP10 NOTE (11.35pm,
Fri, BBC2)... hang on, is this a Saturday afternoon kid-
friendly edit of LOGAN'S RUN? (3.50pm, Sat, C4)... in the
quest to find the UK's dullest people, the champion of sports
reality show BORN TO RUN (5.30pm, Sat, BBC1) goes on to face
the winner of WIFE SWAP (9pm, Tue, C4) in the final... while
Jonny Lee "Hackers" Miller seems unlikely to correct the
popular misconception that Ada Lovelace was "the world's first
computer programmer" in BYRON (10pm, Sat and Sun, BBC2)...
first they renamed Opal Fruits and Marathons, now Boadicea/
Boudicca loses another letter to become BOUDICA (9.20pm, Sun,
ITV)... still, she comes across as something of a peace-loving
diplomat compared to whatever goes on INSIDE THE MIND OF TONY
BLAIR (8pm, Sun, C4), itself preceding 1983-era Rory Bremner
style impersonation political drama THE DEAL (9pm, Sun, C4)...
as if you care, being glued - if that's the right word - to
the original-and-best AMERICAN PIE (9pm, Sun, C5)... the Radio
Times describes "erotic manga cartoons" as one topic of the
final WHATEVER TURNS YOU ON (10.55pm, Tue, C5), though GOTHS
MAKE BETTER LOVERS (1.15am, Wed, C4), argues C4's "Outside"
strand... Robert Winston uses computer graphics to probe THE
HUMAN MIND (9pm, Wed, BBC1)... and tough call for Brad Pitt
fans between Guy Ritchie rubbish SNATCH (10pm, Wed, C4) and
Terry Gilliam's TWELVE MONKEYS (11.20pm, Wed, BBC1) - also
rubbish, of course, but - hey - partly set in the future...
FILM>> interestingly, Kevin Smith's "Critical Mess" coterie
http://www.moviepoopshoot.com/mess/10.html claim that being
friends with Ben Affleck *isn't* why they haven't done a spoof
poster for not-as-bad-as-you'd-hoped "Chasing J-Lo" remake
GIGLI ( http://www.screenit.com/movies/2003/gigli.html : we
see [Lopez] in a sports bra (that shows cleavage) and small
and tight shorts as she exercises and does various stretches,
some of them sexually suggestive; [Affleck] threatens to put a
gagged man through a spin in an industrial clothes dryer)...
"best" of an odd week is Robert Rodriguez's characteristically
incoherent El Mariachi III actioner ONCE UPON A TIME IN MEXICO
( http://www.capalert.com/capreports/onceuponatimeinmexico.htm :
firearm threat to crotch; thong nudity, repeatedly; death by
fire; death by bus; invasive medical procedure, twice, once to
gouge out eyes)... the accent-fest continues in grim 1950s
"Confessions of a Canal Drifter" Scottish odyssey YOUNG ADAM
( http://www.cndb.com/movie.html?title=Young+Adam+(2003) :
Emily Mortimer shows ample breasts in three sex scenes with
Ewan McGregor)... while almost all the Australians from this
month's other movies - Heath "Sin Eater" Ledger, Naomi "Le
Divorce" Watts, Joel Edgerton and Rachel Griffiths from "The
Hard Word" - reunite in armour-plated period shoot-em-up NED
KELLY ( http://www.bbfc.co.uk/ : contains infrequent strong
violence)...
>> SMALL PRINT <<
Need to Know is a useful and interesting UK digest of things that
happened last week or might happen next week. You can read it
on Friday afternoon or print it out then take it home if you have
nothing better to do. It is compiled by NTK from stuff they get sent.
Registered at the Post Office as
"parseable"
http://membled.com/work/apps/xmltv/presentation/12future.html
NEED TO KNOW
THEY STOLE OUR REVOLUTION. NOW WE'RE STEALING IT BACK.
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