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The Googlewashing Of Our Language

KIondike writes "The Register talks about how a term ("Second Superpower") coined by the anti-war culture suddenly got radically neutered and altered by a weblog that a lot of people link to. Searching for the term on Google now brings up his blog and other people talking about his blog for the first several entries. Can Google's power to give information to the people be misused and perverted? This only took 42 days." First the widespread usage of "googling" to mean web searching, and now this.

512 comments

  1. I love the google* words. by Xerithane · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Googlewhacking, Googlewashing, Googling, what else are there?

    Google is a freaking web-based index and search tool. Why is this a concern at all? If Second Superpower is the name of a company, than I would expect to see it be on the list where it belongs. If someones blog or site is named that, what is the issue? Many people are linking to it, and it escalates the PageRank.

    Welcome to proof that Google works the way it was intended, in only 42 days!

    --
    Dacels Jewelers can't be trusted.
    1. Re:I love the google* words. by 56ker · · Score: 3, Interesting

      "Why is this a concern at all?" - because Google is the most popular search engine among visitors to /. :)

      It's an issue because the popular (and on /. theregister is popular) has picked up the story. Like you I just file it under "filler". Stories with not much in them IMHO (maybe not in yours) that get padded out to fill out a publication on a slow news day.

    2. Re:I love the google* words. by Oculus+Habent · · Score: 2, Informative

      Indeed, google is mentioned as a method for finding answers to technical issues in a recent Microsoft survey I participated in.

      Google is the Next Big Thing.

      --
      That what was all this school was for... to teach us how to solve our own problems. -- janeowit
    3. Re:I love the google* words. by Rubbersoul · · Score: 1

      Agreed, if people that cared about the 'original' definition of "second superpower" cared so much this same sort of phenomena would have taken place. It would have show up on a bunch of websites, and its PageRank would have gone up.

      It is just like you said, welcome to proof that Google works ... should we be mad a Google for that?

      --
      man .sig
      No manual entry for .sig.
    4. Re:I love the google* words. by Alrescha · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "Google is the Next Big Thing"

      Permit me to disagree. Google *was* the next big thing.

      This page-ranking nonsense almost guarantees that hard to find things remain hard to find. Why? Because the easier to find things float to the top (people have *found* them and linked to them).

      I already have to include -this and -that all the time to get rid of the common junk that I *don't* need to search for.

      A.

      --
      ...bringing you cynical quips since 1998
    5. Re:I love the google* words. by erikharrison · · Score: 1

      Just like PR agents work the way they are intended? That doesn't mean that PR agents are not without the ability to adversly affect the public psyche


      But the issue here is not Google. The issue here is the internet, the rapid revolution of content and web based nature of hypertext give us a world where linguistic evolution is radically increased. Increased to the point where in a month and a half we can radically alter the common world meaning of phrase. Google is simply the internet's face, and the interface to which these events happen. It is a major player, but the internet as a whole is the phenomenon under scrutiny, legitimately I think.

    6. Re:I love the google* words. by Com2Kid · · Score: 5, Insightful
      • I already have to include -this and -that all the time to get rid of the common junk that I *don't* need to search for.


      You think that is bad? You must not remember the web around 96 or so. . . .

      IIIIICK!!!

      HUUUGE ass searches. Search Engines has basic introductory lessons to Boolean Logic, almost necessary just so users could find something

      It

      was not

      pretty.

      And when the first web based forums started showing up (in all their slow loading CGI glory), search results got completely destroyed almost over night.

      (thankfully more and more people began to take notice of robots.txt . . . . )
    7. Re:I love the google* words. by L-Train8 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      No, the point of the article is that the PageRank of the "new" definition of "second superpower" shot up because of basically one essay on a popular blog. The blog is linked to by a few other popular sites, and that's all it takes to change the lexicon. A few dozen netarati with popular blogs can make the original hard news article that coined the term to be dropped from the first page of the search results. This is in fact proof that google sometimes doesn't work.

      --

      Don't forget that Friday is Hawaiian shirt day.
    8. Re:I love the google* words. by enomar · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Welcome to proof that Google works the way it was intended, in only 42 days!

      Yeah, it works like it was intended, but not the way it should. This is similar to stuffing your meta tags to get a higher page rank on search engines. It hacks a publicly known algorithm to get the desired results. Using weblog syndication, one could reduce the page rank of static pages. If you wanted your opinion to be the 'google truth', just artificially create more links to it. With so many dynamic, interlocked websites on the web these days, it becomes much easier. This is proof of concept that you could cover up static content within weeks. If this becomes popular, it could reduce Google's usfullness. OTOH, they'll probably just change their algorithm to take RSS syndication into account.

      --

      :wq
    9. Re:I love the google* words. by bughunter · · Score: 5, Funny
      Googlewhacking, Googlewashing, Googling, what else are there?

      How about these?

      Googlingering - wasting time, usu. at work, performing Google searches on random or unimportant subjects unrelated to one's occupation.

      Googlewanking - One-handed Googling, usu. when performing Google searches for pr0n or special interest advocacy.

      Googlevision - a type of retinopathy caused by excessive Googlewanking.

      Googlehacking - manipulating the process by which Pagerank(TM) is assigned in order to move your listing to the top of Google search results.

      Googooling - using the influence of your weblog circle to increase the Pagerank(TM) of infantile web pages and opinions.

      Googlesmacking - similar to Googlehacking but done with the intent of overwhelming the target server to the point of incapacitation. See also "slashdotting."

      Googolplexing - successfully receiving a Google search link as the top result of a Google search.

      --
      I can see the fnords!
    10. Re:I love the google* words. by letxa2000 · · Score: 2, Interesting
      I agree. This may become a problem but if it becomes any serious problem then I'm sure Google will adjust their algorithm. Call it blacklisting of known blog sites or simply some kind of feature where not only is the number of links taken into account but the content on the pages that link to it. If it's linked from a page where links make up 80% of the page on a byte-count basis then it's probably worthwhile to actually reduce the "weight" of that link back to the original site.

      Point is, this "problem" can be fixed by Google if it becomes a real problem. The fact that some silly "second superpower" term coined by antiwar activists prior to the war has decreased in relevance at about the same time as the antiwar activists themselves have decreased in relevance doesn't sound like a problem to me. Sounds about right!

    11. Re:I love the google* words. by Bob+Bobbinson · · Score: 3, Informative

      The idea of page-ranking surely is more to do with relevance of a search term than to find information that is hard to find.

      I think the last thing I want to do is search for a term and then find some obscure reference to it that has no actual relevance to what I was searching for.

      I don't want to be searching for Slashdot and then find some obscure reference to it on some random site I never even cared about in the first place.

      If you want to find something less relevant to what you're searching for then use more complex search terms, and luckily Google, and most other search engines allow you to do this.

      If you don't want to find Slashdot in your search for Slashdot, for some perverted reason, then -site:slashdot.org.

    12. Re:I love the google* words. by 0x0d0a · · Score: 1

      Call me cynical, but you wouldn't happen to be a webmaster who didn't get ranked highly, would you?

    13. Re:I love the google* words. by Alrescha · · Score: 2, Interesting

      "You think that is bad?"

      I didn't say that, though I did imply that it was undesireable.

      "You must not remember the web around 96 or so. . . ."

      I'm not sure what leads you to this conclusion. I remember it quite well. Indeed, I had been reading Wired for three years by then.

      Google won't let me do some things that I could do then. It doesn't really respect a quoted string (try to find "A.R.P.A." without finding "ARPA", for example).

      I do agree with you about web-based forums, I still mostly hate them. I wish is was all netnews under the covers so I could search it in Google (I don't think Google Groups uses page rank).

      A.

      --
      ...bringing you cynical quips since 1998
    14. Re:I love the google* words. by 0x0d0a · · Score: 0, Troll

      Googlewanking - One-handed Googling, usu. when performing Google searches for pr0n or special interest advocacy.

      ? There are people that jerk off to "Focus on the Family" or similar?

    15. Re:I love the google* words. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who cares what the term was originally coined as? If a more popular artical (or whatever) that contains the term overrides the original, then wouldn't that make the new definition of the term correct?

    16. Re:I love the google* words. by p-k4 · · Score: 2, Funny

      Googlewashing isn't a word. I know, I checked on google and there were no sites.

      --
      Dean's Rule #45. The truth hurts for a moment. A lie hurts for a long time.
    17. Re:I love the google* words. by Alrescha · · Score: 1

      "Call me cynical, but you wouldn't happen to be a webmaster who didn't get ranked highly, would you?"

      No. I don't have a web page. I have very little to say to the entire world (that's printable, anyway :-). I prefer a slightly more directed method of communication.

      Please don't get me wrong - I *like* Google. I think it's the greatest. But it isn't perfect, and sometimes it is downright annoying. Throwing away characters in a quoted string is my current peeve.

      A.

      --
      ...bringing you cynical quips since 1998
    18. Re:I love the google* words. by jechonias · · Score: 1

      This is like complaining that on google the words "escort" (as in ford escort motor car) and "oral" (as in dental hygine) are being misused by the pron industry!

    19. Re:I love the google* words. by Alrescha · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "The idea of page-ranking surely is more to do with relevance of a search term than to find information that is hard to find"

      Is something more 'relevant' just because a lot of people link to it? I might suggest that this is not always so.

      "Popular" and "relevant" are not equivalent terms. If we are discussing social relevance then the meaning changes a bit, but we are talking about relevance with regard to the thing being searching for, and the fact that an item is popular does not automatically make it a better match.

      A.

      --
      ...bringing you cynical quips since 1998
    20. Re:I love the google* words. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Indeed, I had been reading Wired for three years by then.

      Oh Golly, you're impressing us.

    21. Re:I love the google* words. by nobodyman · · Score: 3, Interesting
      "This page-ranking nonsense almost guarantees that hard to find things remain hard to find. Why? Because the easier to find things float to the top (people have *found* them and linked to them)."


      Nonsense. Google's page ranking system ensures that less popular things will remain less popular because, *shocker*, it is rarer that people will click through to things they are less interested in.

      Would you prefer alternative? That google return arbitrary matches and assign no weight to more popular click throughs? You'd wind up with infoseek circa 6 years ago. You can have it man, I'll stay with google.

      I don't get this counter-culture behaviour of resenting popular things. Now that Google is "big", people knock it. Grow up.
    22. Re:I love the google* words. by GMontag · · Score: 4, Insightful
      After reading the article, it seems the Andrew Orlowski's core complaint is that Greenpeace, and the other special interest groups that he names, do not control the language. At least this particular phrase that Patrick Tyler of the NYT allegedly coined.

      Odd that the Mr. Orlowski invokes Orwell, as the way Google ranks the pages this phrase appears is as far from a "Big Brother" operation as one can get! Many people, independantly linking to a particular web page? How on earth is that "Orwellian"? He does not even suggest that Google is "cheating", he just tosses the phrase about like so many random hand grenades.
      Googlewash Writing about Google's collusion with the People's Republic of China to block access to mainland users, censorship researcher Seth Finkelsetein observed:

      "Contrary to earlier utopian theories of the Internet, it takes very little effort for governments to cause certain information simply to vanish for a huge number of people."

      Rub out the word 'government', and replace it with 'weblog A-list'. In this case a commons resource, this very potent and quite viral phrase, was created by millions of people. But it was poisoned by a very select number of 'bloggers'. Possibly a dozen, but no more than 30, we'd guess.
      Well, if you want to swap words with quite different meanings I guess you can pretend to make any arguement you like. Note that the author does not bother acknowledging that the "handful" of 'bloggers that link to the page and phrase in question are all quite popular themselves, because many other individuals in turn link to them. If anybody is engaged in Doublespeak here it is the author, not the masses that evolve the language. Compairing a lone 'blogger to Communist China is obscene.
    23. Re:I love the google* words. by Alrescha · · Score: 2, Interesting

      "Nonsense. Google's page ranking system ensures that less popular things will remain less popular because, *shocker*, it is rarer that people will click through to things they are less interested in."

      Well, perhaps you are making my point for me, though I suppose it depends on what you want Google to do.

      To me, Google is a search engine. That means I want to give it words and have it do the best job possible in *finding what I'm looking for*.

      A search engine, I am taught, is judged on two scales. How much of the desired data available is returned, and how little of the undesireable data that comes along with it. More wheat, less chaff please.

      Now, I happen to be a particularly misanthropic geek, so find *popular* things isn't necessarily useful to me. I'm usually searching for something that I can't find easily. My complaint with page ranking is that the well-known/well-linked 'popular' data is pushed to the top. Well, if it was that easy to find, I didn't *need* a search engine!

      Take for example the current thread. Use Google and try and find the *original* reference to the 'Second Superpower'. No cheating and using the Register article as a hint for search terms. If you can do it at all, you'll have wade though pages of chaff. By definition, that's a bad search engine.

      "Grow up."

      You might try taking your own advice. Using an ad hominem attack because you've run out of relevant things to say isn't a very polished debate technique.

      A.

      --
      ...bringing you cynical quips since 1998
    24. Re:I love the google* words. by perdelucena · · Score: 4, Funny

      What about google opinions about their competitors?
      After the MS hostilities, you could guess it

      --
      Someonelse patented my sig.

    25. Re:I love the google* words. by Catnapster · · Score: 0, Redundant

      The link to the search was the funniest thing I've seen in weeks. Mod this guy up.

      --
      The world can be wrong today for once.
    26. Re:I love the google* words. by Jerf · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "Popular" and "relevant" are not equivalent terms.

      I eagerly await your search engine implementation which directly determines page rank based on relevancy.

      Perhaps if you seriously tried you'd discover just how hard it is.

      Google's algorithm isn't perfect but it beats the pants off of nearly everything else, and all of its serious competition at this point seems to use basically the same techniques. There's a reason for this, and it's not a lack of brain power in any of the search engine companies.

    27. Re:I love the google* words. by unitron · · Score: 1, Redundant
      Well, let's see, the first definition of 'second superpower' was 'huge anti-war demonstrations', and the second was 'worldwide peace campaign'. Those might not be two different ways of talking about the same thing but it's not blindingly obvious.

      Google is neither a dictionary nor an encyclopaedia. It doesn't tell you what your search terms mean, it shows you who else is talking about them.

      Why should there be a single, fixed definition of 'second superpower' when you won't find universal agreement on the meaning of 'superpower'? The best you can hope for is an indication of the relative percentages of the various opinions.

      --

      I see even classic Slashdot is now pretty much unusable on dial up anymore.

    28. Re:I love the google* words. by Alrescha · · Score: 2, Interesting

      "I eagerly await your search engine implementation which directly determines page rank based on relevancy."

      The quality of Google's search engine is not based on whether or not I write another. Nor does my programming ability (or lack thereof) have any bearing on the discussion.

      "Google's algorithm isn't perfect but it beats the pants off of nearly everything else"

      On this we are in violent agreement. But the whole point of this topic was to illustrate that Google isn't perfect. It's great. It's awesome. It's the best. (It still throws away characters that I put in quotes! - damnit).

      A

      --
      ...bringing you cynical quips since 1998
    29. Re:I love the google* words. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hey, fuckwad troll.

      If you had any intelligence at all you would know that you can exclude "unwanted" search terms.

      Take for example:

      http://www.google.com/search?q=pussy+-sex&source id =opera&num=0&ie=utf-8&oe=utf-8

    30. Re:I love the google* words. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ahh fuck.

      I really should RTFC before I go calling people trolls.

    31. Re:I love the google* words. by ksuMacGyver · · Score: 1

      Hehe, funny, now try this.

      --

      Ad Majorem Dei Gloriam

      Interested in AI? MACR
    32. Re:I love the google* words. by GnarlyNome · · Score: 1

      what did you expect.?

      --
      Diplomacy is the art of saying "Nice doggie" until you can find a rock. Will Rogers
    33. Re:I love the google* words. by sir99 · · Score: 1

      I have one: googlebashing. Which is what the article is doing ;) "perverted the language." Heh. the original usage of "second superpower" was just as much a "perversion." How amusing.

      --
      The ocean parts and the meteors come down
      Laid out in amber, baby.
    34. Re:I love the google* words. by werwerf · · Score: 1
      I'm progressively getting away from Google when I search for "technical" or "less common" subjects...I try to use instead Alltheweb or just ask friends about it.

      Try to find papers about LCD technology... You end up with tens of thousands of links to "cheap LCD" or "best LCD display".

      Search engines (in general) are getting too "comercial" (Hey! they have to make a living...) Maybe a good idea would be a "Techie" search engine? does anybody know about something like that?

    35. Re:I love the google* words. by ThaReetLad · · Score: 1
      Use Google and try and find the *original* reference to the 'Second Superpower'. No cheating and using the Register article as a hint for search terms. If you can do it at all, you'll have wade though pages of chaff. By definition, that's a bad search engine.

      Well I took up your challenge and see what I got first time

      --
      You can't win Darth. If you mod me down, I shall become more powerful than you could possibly imagine
    36. Re:I love the google* words. by Carewolf · · Score: 1

      Trying the same on alltheweb.com is funnier..

      The top match is "Sunglasses Seach on sunbrain.com" Apparently a search-engine for finding sunglasses. LOL

    37. Re:I love the google* words. by Carewolf · · Score: 1

      I think you are using google the wrong way.

      It's a replacement for bookmarks. Just use ggl: in konqueror and you always gets the homepage you are looking for. Using it to search for advance topics is pratically impossible since it doesnt support even the most basic logic or simply ignores it.

    38. Re:I love the google* words. by olip · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I can't find the original NYT article by Patrick Tyler. If Google doesnt index the NYT because of registration, this would be just plain normal that the original "second superpower" is nowere to be found.

    39. Re:I love the google* words. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Is something more 'relevant' just because a lot of people link to it? I might suggest that this is not always so.

      I have a site listed by Google. It has a decent pagerank, and has not been linked to by anybody.
      No poster here can honestly claim to be intimate with their ranking algorithm, which I think is a little more intricate than you give them credit for.

    40. Re:I love the google* words. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...bringing you cynical quips since 1998

      Ooh..... unkind AOL joke restrained.

    41. Re:I love the google* words. by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > Take for example the current thread. Use Google and try and find the *original* reference to the 'Second Superpower'.

      Since this has come up, most people searching for the phrase "Second Superpower" will be looking for the "new definition." Therefore, Google is working perfectly. Just because it doesn't return exactly what you want doesn't mean it's not working, it just means you don't know well enough what you are looking for. Google is a tool, not an index of all possible thoughts.

    42. Re:I love the google* words. by Mr+Guy · · Score: 1

      Democracy at it's finest.

      A handful of people, regardless of how "important" they are made up a word to describe something. A much larger handful or people now use that term to describe something else.

      Google starts with the more common definition and presents the definition only a few "important" people use farther down the list.

      I think that despite his desires to keep the term "pure" according to the minority of the people, Google is an index of majority preference, even if the majority is spouting nonsense.

    43. Re:I love the google* words. by Oculus+Habent · · Score: 1

      Perhaps less than a "techie" seach engine, an option to start somewhere down the list would be good. For many "uncommon" searches, weeding out the top of the list would be a good start. Other than that, how do you break down into "This is a popular technical page, this is a popular general page..."

      --
      That what was all this school was for... to teach us how to solve our own problems. -- janeowit
    44. Re:I love the google* words. by MasTRE · · Score: 1

      > "Why is this a concern at all?" - because Google is the most popular search engine among visitors to /. :)

      Did you mean to say "Google is the most popular search engine among visitors to /., who are retarded?"

      This is a non-issue.

      --
      Must-not-watch TV!
    45. Re:I love the google* words. by nobodyman · · Score: 1
      "You might try taking your own advice. Using an ad hominem attack because you've run out of relevant things to say isn't a very polished debate technique."


      Aye, but it's fun nontheless.
    46. Re:I love the google* words. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, your karma has gone up like what - a billion points since the start of this discussion?

    47. Re:I love the google* words. by jafuser · · Score: 1

      "You must not remember the web around 96 or so. . . ."

      I'm not sure what leads you to this conclusion. I remember it quite well. Indeed, I had been reading Wired for three years by then.


      I'm not flaming, but, since when is reading Wired magazine a yardstick of internet familiarity?

      That's not much unlike me saying I know what it's like to live in "the ghetto" because I've been listening to rap music for the past three years... =P
      --
      Please consider making an automatic monthly recurring donation to the EFF
    48. Re:I love the google* words. by gjm11 · · Score: 1
      Take for example the current thread. Use Google and try and find the *original* reference to the 'Second Superpower'. No cheating and using the Register article as a hint for search terms. If you can do it at all, you'll have wade through pages of chaff. By definition, that's a bad search engine.

      OK. I tried, pretending that I knew nothing about the original meaning of the term other than that it was different from, and more "radical" than, the one in Jim Moore's blog. It took me about five minutes to get to an article by David Edwards that says: "American dissident, Phyllis Bennis, writes of how the US superpower has been joined on the world stage by a second superpower - global public opinion.". It's clear that the article is referring to the original meaning, not to Jim Moore's watered-down one.

      I don't think that's unreasonable.

      I don't think we can reasonably expect Google, or any other search engine, to hand over the pages I'm interested in without any work, as long as there's variation in what people are interested in.

    49. Re:I love the google* words. by cicho · · Score: 1

      Except that Google will not be 'blacklisting' blog sites - they just recently *bought* the biggest blog site (blogger.com). Surely they didn't but blogger in order to reduce the weight of its content.

      To the main point though, I don't see a problem here. "The Second Superpower" is by no means a common phrase with a fixed meaning that's been "hijacked" and redefined. Two months ago the phrase meant exactly nothing, and you could attribute to it any metaphorical meaning you wished (if you had thought of it then). It's a very cool phrase indeed, but it's 100% abstract and loaded with ideology. It's brand new and it can take on many meanings and be pulled in various directions.

      Those who complain about having somehow been deprived of the catchy slogan would do better to use the same power of GoogleNet to their advantage - by writing about it, defining it as they see fit, and linking to it. Because this is how it works.

      Google works in the opposite direction, too. Try 'hacker'. This term too was "hijacked" and burneded with a negative meaning, much to the dismay of "true" hackers. But goggle it and you'll be pleasantly surprised - only because enough people keep using the term in the original, untainted meaning. That's how it's supposed to work, and I believe it's a good thing.

      --
      "Only the small secrets need to be protected. The big ones are kept secret by public incredulity." - Marshall McLuhan
    50. Re:I love the google* words. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm not flaming, but, since when is reading Wired magazine a yardstick of internet familiarity?

      Ha... it isn't... NOW

    51. Re:I love the google* words. by 56ker · · Score: 1

      I'm too tactful/ diplomatic to write such an inflammatory statement.

    52. Re:I love the google* words. by Runagate+Rampant · · Score: 1

      So how long until the word "hacker" googles to its "more common definition" instead of to gnu.org? Or should the minority definition continue to dominate in this case?

  2. Tough guy, huh? by concatenation · · Score: 4, Funny

    You may have handled Google.

    Now, prepare to get Slashdotted.

    --
    "5... 4... 3.. 1... OFFBLAST!"
    1. Re:Tough guy, huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ... and the 32nd rule of slashdotting is to point out glaring contradictions...

      The article derides blogdom's small population: But the real marvel is that they did it with so few people. Pew Research Center's latest research says the number of Internet users who look at blogs is " so small that it is not possible to draw statistically meaningful conclusions about who uses blogs." They peg it at about four per cent. But we're looking at a small sub-genre of blogdom, the tech blogs, and specifically, we're looking at an 'A list' of that sub- sub-genre.

      However, the group the author wants to own "second superpower" is composed of war protestors, whose roughly three million malcontents account for about 0.05% of the world's 6 billionish people. Clearly, by the author's own statistics, bloggers (4%) far outnumber protestors by a factor of 80 to 1, so Google's claim to democracy wins hands-down.

      The author is just mad that there are 80 times as many people who read blogs as rally against our troops, so he's taking his extremist frustrations out on Google. Typical radical kook. Of course, I shouldn't say that. War protestors as a percentage of world population are "so small that it is not possible to draw statistically meaningful conclusions about who" protests.

      Q.E.D.

    2. Re:Tough guy, huh? by sbszine · · Score: 1

      It's a troll, but I'll bite...

      "War protestors as a percentage of world population are "so small that it is not possible to draw statistically meaningful conclusions about who" protests."

      At the last anti-war protest I went to, a quarter of a million people were present, from a city of 4 million. That's 12.5%. Your percentage may be accurate for the USA (I doubt it though), but other countries have diversity of opinion.

      "However, the group the author wants to own "second superpower" is composed of war protestors, whose roughly three million malcontents account for about 0.05% of the world's 6 billionish people. Clearly, by the author's own statistics, bloggers (4%) far outnumber protestors by a factor of 80 to 1, so Google's claim to democracy wins hands-down."

      4% of internet users != 4% of the world's population. Duh.

      --

      Vino, gyno, and techno -Bruce Sterling

    3. Re:Tough guy, huh? by duffbeer703 · · Score: 1

      How many were just stuck in the mob, and how do you get the 250k number?

      The Nation of Islam claimed to have 1 million men march on Washington DC, yet the number of people present looked far less that marches claiming 90,000 or less people.

      --
      Conformity is the jailer of freedom and enemy of growth. -JFK
    4. Re:Tough guy, huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      yea yea i know some professor thinks it was 90K people at the million man march. bullshit.

      they ALWAYS underestimate crowd size.

    5. Re:Tough guy, huh? by sbszine · · Score: 1

      The organisers claimed 300,000, the police claimed 200,000, and the media said 250,000. Organisers usually exaggerate number while police usually play them down.

      I don't think anyone was 'stuck in the mob' (revealing choice of word, BTW). The protest asembled in Hyde Park (in Sydney, Australia), and police diverted traffic and blocked off roads that were affected by the march. In Sydney you can actually book portions of the city for a protest providing you give advanced notice and have sufficient interest.

      There were some good aerial shots of the march showing its size pretty well in the Sydney Morning Herald and on smh.com.au, but I think these are now in a paid archive.

      The second article on this page mentions the numbers in a summary (sorry about the huge URL).

      Remember that most Ausralian citizens oppose the war, so naturally there are larger turnouts here than in pro-war countries.

      --

      Vino, gyno, and techno -Bruce Sterling

  3. Second Superpower? by Zapdos · · Score: 0

    What power? Isn't so super then.

  4. "Second Superpower" by Ignorant+Aardvark · · Score: 2, Funny

    "Second Superpower" would make a great band name.

    (apologies to Dave Barry)

    1. Re:"Second Superpower" by mgblst · · Score: 1

      ...or a washing detergent.

  5. Re:The first superpower.._IS A Troll by Tuna_Shooter · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    I read the original post with enthusiasm... but alas it seemed like a simple troll to me...

    --
    *--- Sometimes a majority only means that all the fools are on the same side. ---*
  6. Re:public opinion? by minusthink · · Score: 1

    i don't remember ever being consulted about my stance on war in any poll.

    so did you just make up at statistic, or do 7 of your 10 friends support the war?

    --
    "when life gets complicated, I like to take a nap in a tree and wait for dinner" - Hobbes.
  7. troll already? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Haha thats great, musta pissed off a tree hugger. Oooohhh I'm making eddie vedder cry!

  8. They even mention Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    New forms of communication and commentary are being invented continuously. Slashdot and other news sites present high quality peer-reviewed commentary by involving large numbers of members of the web community in recommending and rating items. Text messaging on mobile phones, or texting, is now the medium of choice for communicating with thousands of demonstrators simultaneously during mass protests. Instant messaging turns out to be one of the most popular methods for staying connected in the developing world, because it requires only a bit of bandwidth, and provides an intimate sense of connection across time and space. The current enthusiasm for blogging is changing the way that people relate to publication, as it allows realtime dialogue about world events as bloggers log in daily to share their insights. Meta-blogging sites crawl across thousands of blogs, identifying popular links, noting emergent topics, and providing an instantaneous summary of the global consciousness of the second superpower.

    1. Re:They even mention Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      To bad all these forms of communication involve 90% idiots. See example: this one.

    2. Re:They even mention Slashdot by optikSmoke · · Score: 1
      present high quality peer-reviewed commentary

      .........Except they obviously don't really know that much about Slashdot......

    3. Re:They even mention Slashdot by unitron · · Score: 1

      Once you assume that it was ghostwritten by Jon Katz all becomes clear.

      --

      I see even classic Slashdot is now pretty much unusable on dial up anymore.

    4. Re:They even mention Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      To bad all these forms of communication involve 90% idiots. See example: this one.

      Wait.. you or the parent post?

  9. 70% ?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    70% of Texas, maybe..

    Get your head out of your CNN ass.

    1. Re:70% ?! by Grieveq · · Score: 1

      How about you get your head out of your ass. Try Gallup, FoxNews Dynamics, and Zogby polls that all back up the 70+% number.

  10. Am I the only one... by donutello · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ... who does not see a huge difference between the two definitions of the phrase "Second Superpower"?

    --
    Mmmm.. Donuts
    1. Re:Am I the only one... by Derkec · · Score: 1
      Original Def: World-wide anti-war protesters. Guys in the street waving signs and making their government's life hard.


      New Def: Users of the internet.

    2. Re:Am I the only one... by asscroft · · Score: 1

      nope. I don't see much difference either. Apparently it's subtle yet HUGE and will mean the difference between being slaves forever now, or in a few more years.

      guess we're screwed though. good think MS is taking on google, huh?

      --
      because I have been enjoined by this Holy Office to abandon the false opinion which maintains that the Sun is the centre
    3. Re:Am I the only one... by anonymous+loser · · Score: 2, Interesting
      New Def: Users of the internet.

      Really? Did you actually read the weblog in question? Here's a quote from the second paragraph (no pun intended):

      The beautiful but deeply agitated face of this second superpower is the worldwide peace campaign, but the body of the movement is made up of millions of people concerned with a broad agenda that includes social development, environmentalism, health, and human rights.

      Sounds like an anti-war movement to me, especially when they use the words "peace campaign" in the description.

    4. Re:Am I the only one... by miTTio · · Score: 1

      i was thinking the exact same thing.

    5. Re:Am I the only one... by Otter · · Score: 1
      New Def: Users of the internet.

      Well, that's what the article claims, but reading the essay itself, I find it indistinguishable from the "real" definition. Even by Register standards, this strikes me as transparently dishonest.

      Personally, I have no stake on this -- as far as I'm concerned it's just the latest version of leftists deciding that basic citizenship is some courageous, novel secret weapon they should adopt, and giving it a pomopus title. (Do they ever realize that it's precisely those things that have given majority views their power? No, because they're too juvenile to acknowledge that majority views are genuinely supported and retreat behind conspiracy theories of super-powerful corporations and oligarchies.) But as a disnterested party -- Andrew Orlowski is doing a smear job on this Moore guy, and blaming Google along with him.

    6. Re:Am I the only one... by Nyktos · · Score: 1

      Nope... I don't get it either.

      Although Moore seems to make "The Second Superpower" somewhat dependant on the internet and the inhierent information readiness.

      He make some claims about the second superpower being a sort of "collective"... well, we all know how "collective" minds turn out :) mmm.... Seven...

    7. Re:Am I the only one... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah I don't see much diff either

    8. Re:Am I the only one... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Did you find the original references to the second superpower? The articles says it is not in the first 30 entries to google. So if you read it and compared the two definitions, you would presumably see the difference between the two version.

      If on the other hand, you read the article and only the single version the article links to, then you have fallen for the whole point of the article. The point of the article (for the dimwits who cant be bothered to read), was that the original definition is completely lost and replaced by this new completely sanitized and boring definition.

      witness the fact that none of the posters here mention the original definition and just show a bit of confusion. The whole point of the people that co-opted the term in the first place. Chock it up as a win for A-List, and a loss for Worlds second superpower.

    9. Re:Am I the only one... by ralphclark · · Score: 4, Insightful

      In caricature, then, to clarify the distinction:

      First definition: large crowds of booted skinheads and homeless "alternative lifestyle" (eg alcholic and heavy drug abusing) ex-punks with spiderweb tattoos, on the rampage, smashing in storefront windows, defacing public monuments and lobbing half-bricks at the riot police.

      Second definition: you and me with our short attention spans, surfing on slashdot, getting extra annoyed for a few minutes about the latest outragous piece of IP legislation and maybe thinking about possibly sending an angry email to, well, whatever email address somebody was kind enough to post. Well, hell, at least we'll actively gripe about it to our friends at the water cooler in the office the next day.

      The Second Superpower has no teeth. As witness the way support for the anti-war movement just melted away in the last days leading up to the war - right about the time it became really clear that Bush didn't give a flying fuck about public opinion. The vast majority of people just gave up. I don't wish to be hypocritical; I count myself among them.

      It's just the way people are. Trouble is, we all know that you can only take a protest so far before it becomes outright revolution, and then things get broken and you might get in trouble with the law or get hurt. As long as people have comfortable lives to return to they will have no truck with revolution. You need to have nothing to lose before you will risk everything.

      That's why every government likes to create and maintain a large and comfortable middle class even if there are some people without a job or a roof over their heads. The apathy of the former acts as an effective buffer against the anger of the latter ever gaining enough support to make a significant impact.

    10. Re:Am I the only one... by eugene+ts+wong · · Score: 1

      I don't see a difference either. That's the only reason that I bothered to read these comments. I was hoping for a clearer definition.

      To be frank, I don't really care for these people's complaints about their phrase. If they want to define it properly, then have an official place of where people can find the definiton. Otherwise shut up. Quite ironically, these masses of disorganized people are reaping the rewards of disorganization.

      Just so that everybody knows, I've never heard of the phrase till today. Also, I am against redefining words & phrases. 42 days, without an official definition, is still too early to start complaining about redefinition.

    11. Re:Am I the only one... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Here's a quote from the second paragraph (no pun intended):

      Do you have any idea what a pun is?

    12. Re:Am I the only one... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I didn't get it or it was total crap.
      I'de like to believe the second option.

    13. Re:Am I the only one... by meta-monkey · · Score: 1

      So, then, if the two definitions are the same, then maybe this is really just about the protest writer getting pissed off because it looks like the 'blogger coined the phrase. Jealousy, I suppose.

      --
      We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
    14. Re:Am I the only one... by Some+Dumbass... · · Score: 1

      The Second Superpower has no teeth. As witness the way support for the anti-war movement just melted away in the last days leading up to the war - right about the time it became really clear that Bush didn't give a flying fuck about public opinion. The vast majority of people just gave up. I don't wish to be hypocritical; I count myself among them.

      I assume you mean _International_ Public Opinion (from George Bush's point of view, that is). With as popular as this war is in the U.S., and with Bush's otherwise lackluster record (what else did he do these last two years except wars and tax cuts?), I would recommend viewing this war as a lead in to the next election season. Remember, the Primaries are only 9 months away, and the campaigning will doubtless start well before that...

    15. Re:Am I the only one... by 0x0d0a · · Score: 1

      clear that Bush didn't give a flying fuck about public opinion.

      The GOP will, come elections.

    16. Re:Am I the only one... by Tailhook · · Score: 1, Redundant

      Not that polling has any great claim on credibility, but according to polls from before the start of hostilities, Americans supported this action. Since the start support has increased dramatically, but the actions of the US been supported by the majority throughout. This runs counter to your assertion that "the vast majority of people just gave up." Perhaps you meant the vast majority of anti-war folks. The truth is anti-war people were before, are now, and will continue to be the minority in the US. Regardless of how vocal they think they are.

      --
      Maw! Fire up the karma burner!
    17. Re:Am I the only one... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mod this up if it's true. I was too lazy to read that guy's BS.

    18. Re:Am I the only one... by ralphclark · · Score: 1

      Well, no...I guess the picture you get depends upon the media you get your news from, but a couple of weeks before kick off when opposition to the war was at its strongest here in the UK, it was - disappointingly - very much under-reported even on domestic BBC news broadcasts. CNN etc. seemed to be showing even more anti war activity in the US so assuming the inevitable biased reporting I'd have to guess that opposition to the war in the US was at the least very significant. At the same time also, the increasing pro-war "support" seemed to consist, for most people, of a kind of resigned and grudging acceptance (pretty much as it has been in the UK).

      Although the mainstream media falling in line with the govts have tried to show boosted support (some attempts to do so looked pretty contrived) the only representatives of the public who've been shown on TV openly supporting the war in broadcasts from both your country and mine are so uncritically flag-wavingly gung ho about "our boys" (cringe) and the heroic, humanitarian mission (please!!) that they probably ought to be out there on the front line themselves.

      Now *there's* an idea that makes me smile...

      and its supposed aims looked to be from the less-educated sections of society and were

    19. Re:Am I the only one... by ralphclark · · Score: 1

      Drat.. the orphaned line at the end was hidden from me by font problems which cropped up since I installed the latest KDE updates. It broke anti-aliasing in mozilla too, which is actually starting to give me a headache.

    20. Re:Am I the only one... by ralphclark · · Score: 1

      If so, that's not only depressing, it has horrible implications for future global peace and stability.
      But maybe the polls were rigged - and I do admit that as far as anecdotal evidence goes, people on both sides of the issue are likely to claim that they are in the majority.

    21. Re:Am I the only one... by anonymous+loser · · Score: 1

      Oh, _good_ one! Way to zing me! I'll bet you'll sleep well tonight, knowing you got me on that one.

    22. Re:Am I the only one... by Some+Dumbass... · · Score: 1

      Well, no...I guess the picture you get depends upon the media you get your news from, but a couple of weeks before kick off when opposition to the war was at its strongest here in the UK, it was - disappointingly - very much under-reported even on domestic BBC news broadcasts. CNN etc. seemed to be showing even more anti war activity in the US so assuming the inevitable biased reporting I'd have to guess that opposition to the war in the US was at the least very significant. At the same time also, the increasing pro-war "support" seemed to consist, for most people, of a kind of resigned and grudging acceptance (pretty much as it has been in the UK).

      Although there has been lots of anti-war protesting in the U.S., the general public is for the war. The last poll I saw showed 68% of the public supporting the war. That's a pretty solid majority.

    23. Re:Am I the only one... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So...

      Original Def: Useless wankers.

      New Def: Useless wankers.

    24. Re:Am I the only one... by John+Ineson · · Score: 5, Informative
      First definition: large crowds of booted skinheads and homeless "alternative lifestyle" (eg alcholic and heavy drug abusing) ex-punks with spiderweb tattoos, on the rampage, smashing in storefront windows, defacing public monuments and lobbing half-bricks at the riot police."

      Catchy rhetoric, but ignorant of the facts. Britain has a population of around 60 million. On the 15th of February around a million of us were not only against the war, but felt so strongly that we spent our free time and money making our way to London to protest.

      There was no violence, no vandalism, just a monumental expression of public opinion. Young and old; families and people in suits outnumbering the dreadlocked and tie-died. It was the biggest political protest in this country, to date, and similar events happened in cities across the globe. Very few saw violence instigated by the protesters, because -- like myself -- the majority were totally unlike the provocative stereotypes you invoke.

      The very thing that makes these people a superpower is that they are not just extremists, rather a vast number of responsible, everyday people who will not support military agression without international consensus, especially where it promises numerous economic and political rewards to the participants.

    25. Re:Am I the only one... by dfenstrate · · Score: 1

      That's why every government likes to create and maintain a large and comfortable middle class even if there are some people without a job or a roof over their heads. The apathy of the former acts as an effective buffer against the anger of the latter ever gaining enough support to make a significant impact.

      I'm going to assume, for the moment, that you mean the United States government, or that of a similarly advanced European or Asian Nation.

      What makes you think a government can create and maintain anything of that scale? A massive, and usually inept beuracracy could orchestrate the financial success of at least several hundred million people around the planet- is that what you're saying?

      Pardon me if I find this ridicoulous, and say it betrays some variety of socialist hippie attitude you harbor. Hey, again, I could be wrong about your intentions, but I've launched into a rant, so I'm not going to stop.

      The rise of the middle class in the United States and other countries is the result of their governments not meddling in economic affairs, and only ensuring rule of law. The middle class wealth was created by the people under a framework of internal peace and law. It was not orchestrated by any government to keep the masses mollified or under control- if that was your wish, Saddam has shown us it's far cheaper to do that with bullets, fear and torture than with governmental propping up of a huge portion of the nation.

      In fact, I dare say that the attempts of many European governments to maintain every member of their societies to a minimally accepted level is leading their countries into failure. What I mean is the socialistic redistribution of wealth, and laws that restrict employers and employess from engaging in mutually acceptable terms.
      A welfare nanny state creates a disincentive to work- in Germany and France, for example, their unemployment rates are double the US rates, and their growth for the past ten years has been half of the US- and it's not getting better anytime soon. The more people on welfare, the higher the rest have to be taxed in order to pay for it, reducing their take home pay, creating even less of an incentive to work, and just go on welfare.... Their jobless benefits are triple what's in the United States, and last longer- also, companies can't lay people off (in Germany anywa), so they have to maintain idle workers until the entire firm goes under- hardly a desirable case for those whose jobs could have been preserved, and only delaying the inevitable for those who would have been cut initially.

      You get the idea.

      My point is that when Governments try to prop up a middle class, socialist europe has shown this starts to decay within a generation or so. They're headed for trouble, because they've tried to create and artificially maintain a middle class. The US, while not completely lasseiz-faire, has been doing much better (compared to Europe, not the last decade. Things are rough right now.)

      If some people are without a job or roof over their heads- that kinda gives them incentive to work, doesn't it? Private charities long served the downtrodden, helping them to get back on their feet, before the government took things over, and screwed it up.

      The Government created no middle class. When it comes to meddling in economics, Government projects typically make things worse.

      My $0.02 anyway.

      --
      Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms should be the name of a store, not a government agency.
    26. Re:Am I the only one... by 1000101 · · Score: 1

      the GOP will probably gain more seats in the next election just like they did the last one. especially if this war ends soon and things turn out for the better in iraq. it also doesn't help that the democratic party's leadership is in disarray.

    27. Re:Am I the only one... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you don't obviously know anything about the diversity in europe, don't you?

      there is no simple 'european' way, nordic countries differ vastly from south european countries in their handling of welfare.

      if you're out of house you _can't_ get a job anyways, and don't think that usa doesn't have at least as many street bums as france.

      in french they got their own project ghettos too...

    28. Re:Am I the only one... by Malcontent · · Score: 1

      "Americans supported this action"

      That is to be expected considering they are only getting one side of the story. If the US had free press then you'd probably see more dissent. Americans are not even allowed to see the people they kill on TV. They can go on pretending that all those bombs falling on Bagdad spew cinnamon buns instead of body parts.

      --

      War is necrophilia.

    29. Re:Am I the only one... by Malcontent · · Score: 1

      "The rise of the middle class in the United States and other countries is the result of their governments not meddling in economic affairs, and only ensuring rule of law"

      Which country do you live in? DO you honestly believe that the US govt govt does not meddle in economic affairs and only ensures the rule of war?

      Honestly why should we listen to anything else you say when you are so utterly naive?

      --

      War is necrophilia.

    30. Re:Am I the only one... by Dun+Malg · · Score: 1
      ...future global peace and stability..

      We've never had either in the past. Why do you expect the future to have any?

      --
      If a job's not worth doing, it's not worth doing right.
    31. Re:Am I the only one... by haystor · · Score: 1

      So you would vouch for Saddam to lead Iraq into a peaceful future?

      --
      t
    32. Re:Am I the only one... by bugg_superstar · · Score: 1
      really clear that Bush didn't give a flying fuck about public opinion.


      public opinion for the war has been hovering around 70%. maybe bush does give a flying fuck about public opinion, since over 2/3rds of the people in america support him.
    33. Re:Am I the only one... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But at least in France everyone smells the same...

    34. Re:Am I the only one... by CyrusSukhia · · Score: 1

      The Second Superpower has no teeth...well maybe very small teeth as this bit of legislation shows. Talking about a new anti-terrorism bill that would jail street-blocking protesters. From the article it identifies a terrorist as a person who "plans or participates in an act that is intended, by at least one of its participants, to disrupt" business, transportation, schools, government, or free assembly. Hmmm...disrupting free assembly? Wouldn't that make the person who proposed the bill and all those who vote for it terrorists?

    35. Re:Am I the only one... by horza · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      As witness the way support for the anti-war movement just melted away in the last days leading up to the war - right about the time it became really clear that Bush didn't give a flying fuck about public opinion. The vast majority of people just gave up. I don't wish to be hypocritical; I count myself among them.

      The vast majority of anti-war protesters didn't have a clue as to what they were really protesting about. It was more "well... it's well... WAR man. War's not... uh cool". I didn't come across any that could coherently argue as to why the negative effects would outweigh the positive. Without a real belief and conviction it's only natural enthusiasm will wane.

      That's why every government likes to create and maintain a large and comfortable middle class even if there are some people without a job or a roof over their heads.

      A government that tries to get as many people as well of as possible, decently fed and housed with good jobs? Sounds like a pretty reasonable government to me. Better than one that prefers a small ruling elite and a majority poor and working class (eg China, France and Russia).

      Phillip.

    36. Re:Am I the only one... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      especially where it promises numerous economic and political rewards to the participants.


      The United States got rich off of world war 2 because our manufacturing sector was undamaged while europes was in ruin. I suppose we shouldn't have supported that either.

      Guess what- when you open a country up to democracy and capitalism, someone is bound to be better off economically. This is not a bad thing.

    37. Re:Am I the only one... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you think we're that fucking stupid? That we don't know that people are going to be killed by our bombs? We know this. We know that our own soldiers are going to be killed. We weigh these costs against the potential for what could happen if we leave country of Iraq under the power of a ruthless dictator. How many lives would be lost later? How many of his own people has he killed and will he kill in the future compared to who might die in our fight to disarm Iraq?

      Some disagree. Some think we would be better off if we left Iraq alone. That the costs outweigh the benefits. That's a perfectly valid opinion. But don't sit here and say that we're all a bunch of mindless idiots that can't fathom the consequences and price of war.

    38. Re:Am I the only one... by joss · · Score: 1

      > I didn't come across any that could coherently argue as to why the negative effects would outweigh the positive.

      What, were you out there taking surveys ?

      --
      http://rareformnewmedia.com/
    39. Re:Am I the only one... by flyhmstr · · Score: 1

      Something to remember with some clever work on the questions being asked you can get even those against the war to appear to be in favour of it. For those of you in the UK just look at the various polls on the 24h news channels.

      --
      -- The Flying Hamster
    40. Re:Am I the only one... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The reality is that most of Europe's socialist nations such as France and Sweden have destroyed poverty at it's lowest levels but those country's overall wealth is eroding rapidly. What's your motive to pursure wealth when the government is just going to take 50 - 80 percent of it in taxes? You create an apathetic and unmotivated invisible hand.

      The US government meddles in economic affairs much more than it should, but compared to some countries, it's nothing. I believe France has a maximum work week of 35 hours. That's a good example of horrible government meddling.

    41. Re:Am I the only one... by Ashen · · Score: 1

      You're right- the government doesn't create a middle class. They create a lower class that is not poverty stricken, but lives off of welfare and other social programs such as rent subsidies, earned income tax credits, food stamps, etc. Now if you're the political party that supports such program, all you would need to do is create a 55% majority that lives off of the other 45%. You stay in power and can use your policy decisions to redistribute wealth in your favor and everything is just peachy.

      If anyone isn't convinced of a scenerio such as this, remember that the wealthiest 10-20% of Americans already pay something like 70 - 80% of all the taxes.

    42. Re:Am I the only one... by Bananenrepublik · · Score: 1

      If you asked something along the lines of "Would you support our troops if they went to war in Irak?", certainly a lot more people would have answered "yes" than if you had asked "Do you think the US should unilaterally declare war on Irak?". Are you pro-war if you answer "yes" to the first question?

    43. Re:Am I the only one... by flamingmoose · · Score: 1

      ... who does not see a huge difference between the two definitions of the phrase "Second Superpower"?

      The difference between these two definitions is irrelevant. The point is that Google's page ranking system resulted in the almost complete vanishing of the first definition. In this case it's not that big a deal, because both definitions are pretty similar. But a relatively small number of internet users can make a new phrase disappear from Google's lists. Either unknowingly or on purpose.

      --

      .sigs - is there anything they can't do?
    44. Re:Am I the only one... by jeremyp · · Score: 1

      Did they actually stop the war? The word "power" suggests to me the ability to actually have an effect on events. Super-piss-in-the-wind seems more accurate to me.

      --
      All I want is a secure system where it's easy to do anything I want. Is that too much to ask ~~ Randall Munroe
    45. Re:Am I the only one... by greenrd · · Score: 1
      I didn't come across any that could coherently argue as to why the negative effects would outweigh the positive.

      Yes, it's difficult to make that case convincingly, I think. But here's a first attempt (typed in a hurry, relies on people Googling for more information - in any event it simply isn't possible to give people a good education in US/UK foreign policy in 60 seconds. For that, you need to read Chomsky or Pilger or someone like that).

    46. Re:Am I the only one... by Zigg · · Score: 1

      ...if you had asked "Do you think the US should unilaterally declare war on Irak?"

      Good thing we didn't! 50 countries on-board last I heard; mostly former communist bloc countries who know what it's like to live under a repressive regime.

    47. Re:Am I the only one... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      speaking of the brits the protesters caused a huge rebellion in Labour so it will be exceedingly difficult for Blair to maintain his leadership, despite the fact that except for the Iraq issue his government has been extremely popular. So, no, the protesters didn't stop the invasion of Iraq, but they definitely excercized some power. It's like democracy, you know, not facism or mob rule.

    48. Re:Am I the only one... by signer · · Score: 1

      The poll I saw showed that ~65% supported the war on Iraq, but ~20% believed that all the Sept. 11 hijackers were Iraqi and ~25% believed that at least one of the Sept. 11 hijackers were Iraqi. If you assume that the people who believe that at least one hijacker was Iraqi support the war and eliminate them (basing their support on incorrect information spun by the US Government), that's 20% (of the original total) supporting the war with correct information and 35% (of the original total) not supporting the war. Suddenly, it's not so popular anymore...

      --

      Independent musicians and registration-free net radio at EmergentSound

    49. Re:Am I the only one... by operagost · · Score: 1

      I see casualty reports every day on CNN. I don't know where you get your news on the war. Slashdot? There aren't exact numbers like there are for the coalition for the obvious reason that we can't afford to take body counts of the enemy, just estimates.

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    50. Re:Am I the only one... by TGK · · Score: 1

      The the Soviet Union stamp out capitalism?

      Maybe it's time to re-evaluate your decision. Acheiving ones goals is not the only measure of power.

      --
      Killfile(TGK)
      No trees were killed in the creation of this post. However, many electrons were inconvenienced.
    51. Re:Am I the only one... by sql*kitten · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Catchy rhetoric, but ignorant of the facts. Britain has a population of around 60 million. On the 15th of February around a million of us were not only against the war

      Well, in 1938 61% if the British public opposed war with Nazi Germany too. When it comes to the important stuff, the mob is usually wrong. Which is why we have a representative rather than direct democracy. How many of those protestors showed up because they believed the nonsense that a million Iraqi children would be killed, the Moslem countries would rise up against us etc, etc? You know, all that stuff that didn't happen?

      The complaints about googlewashing are nothing to do with democracy - they're about how one special-interest group got it's propaganda outvoted by another special-interest group.

    52. Re:Am I the only one... by hageshii · · Score: 1
      On the 15th of February around a million of us were not only against the war, but felt so strongly that we spent our free time and money making our way to London to protest.
      Don't you think that group of people would fall under the second definition? I would think the first-definition people are the kind who feel so passionately about their issues that they protest/riot for months/years, often growing in intensity. Whereas the second-defintion people seem to only have temporary objections that quickly fade with time, indicating a certain apathy. The protesters in the UK (or anywhere in the world, for that matter) have not been out and about on the scale of their pre-war numbers, meaning they fall under the second-definition. The only difference is that instead of talking quietly at the water-cooler, they are talking a bit louder on street-corners.
      --
      .sig: No such file or directory
    53. Re:Am I the only one... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And so by inference, the other 59 million either didn't care or supported it. Outnumbered 59 to 1 against, and you call your little bowel movement 'vast'?

      What the fuck ever.

    54. Re:Am I the only one... by Glock27 · · Score: 1
      As witness the way support for the anti-war movement just melted away in the last days leading up to the war - right about the time it became really clear that Bush didn't give a flying fuck about public opinion.

      I don't see it that way at all. Before the war, something like 60% were in favor of it. Right now, somewhere around 80% are in favor of it. Not ambivalent, in favor of it.

      As to Bush, you have to admire his chutzpah.

      The vast majority of people just gave up. I don't wish to be hypocritical; I count myself among them.

      I don't think so. Wasn't that 100,000 strong crowd of dupes, er, protesters in NYC well after the war started?

      I do think it's funny that the news networks aren't carrying antiwar protests much now. They may be run by liberal editorial staff, but they know who pays the bills...and the great majority of the public simply doesn't want to see antiwar anything right now. Ratings speak louder than ethics, apparently.

      On the other hand, there is Fox with actual pro-American coverage. What a concept. ;-)

      --
      Galileo: "The Earth revolves around the Sun!"
      Score: -1 100% Flamebait
    55. Re:Am I the only one... by mfrank · · Score: 1

      I don't think the GOP is worried about losing the votes of French and German citizens.

    56. Re:Am I the only one... by Some+Dumbass... · · Score: 1

      The poll I saw showed that ~65% supported the war on Iraq, but ~20% believed that all the Sept. 11 hijackers were Iraqi

      I've seen a poll which claimed that 53% of the population believes that Hussein was personally responsible for the terrorist attacks on 9/11. A recent Tom Tomorrow cartoon claimed that it was 45%.

      So yes, you're right. There are a lot of clueless types (or at least people who have a lot of facts wrong) supporting the war.

    57. Re:Am I the only one... by cicho · · Score: 1
      and only ensures the rule of war?

      That it does.

      --
      "Only the small secrets need to be protected. The big ones are kept secret by public incredulity." - Marshall McLuhan
    58. Re:Am I the only one... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      BULLSHIT. the wealthiest 10-20% might pay 70% of all INCOME taxes -- but there are also payroll tax, sales tax, etc. etc. you wall street journal / freeper supply siders lie out of your ASS every time the topic of taxes comes up.

    59. Re:Am I the only one... by fbg111 · · Score: 1

      No, I didn't either. I read the whole article thinking, wtf doesn't he clearly state what "Second Superpower" is, and what it has been "googlewashed" to. It took me a minute to figure it out.

      Originally, "Second Superpower" referred to the only force in the world that could stand up to America's political (and by inclusion, economic and military) power - world public opinion. The Soviet Union vanished, to be replaced by world public opinion in opposition (how reassuring that is). However, "Second Superpower" was Googlewashed by some noobie blog to refer to a vague, borderless, leftist utopian ideal.

      Given the fact that the leaders of anti-US world public opinion are the same leftist idealists who pine for such a utopian ideal, the distinction is not very clear, especially not in Andrew Orloski's article. Unless of course, you are one of them.

      --
      Flying is easy, just throw yourself at the ground and miss. -Douglas Adams
    60. Re:Am I the only one... by Malcontent · · Score: 1

      Freudian slip.

      --

      War is necrophilia.

    61. Re:Am I the only one... by ralphclark · · Score: 1

      You mean, mostly former communist bloc countries which are very strapped for cash and ready to ingratiate themselves with the world's richest nation.

    62. Re:Am I the only one... by ralphclark · · Score: 1

      It's facile to suggest that you can create peace by making war. The whole Arab world is now even more hostile to the US (and now the UK too) than ever it was before.

      You reap what you sow. As witness the events of September 11.

    63. Re:Am I the only one... by ralphclark · · Score: 1

      I hear what you're saying but I don't agree that a dry, remote intellectual knowledge of the possibility of casualties can be compared to actually seeing the devastation first hand. If the nightly TV news broadcasts showed you the dead, mutilated bodies close up like you'd see if you were there yourself - that would carry an emotional impact you couldn't ignore as easily as you can a mere reported total number. I am sure it would influence your views on the desirability of this war in a way that statistics alone cannot.

    64. Re:Am I the only one... by ralphclark · · Score: 1
      it will be exceedingly difficult for Blair to maintain his leadership

      I can't see us getting anybody that different to replace him - even if Labour were voted out of office. There is simply very little diversity in UK politics at present.

      I believe the reason for that is that the axis of the political debate, has tilted away from left vs. right but it's going to take time for this to be reflected in the party alignment of professional politicians. Simply speaking, the parties we'd need to represent the opposite ends of the new political spectrum just don't exist yet.

    65. Re:Am I the only one... by ralphclark · · Score: 1
      Whether a demonstration is being given for pro- or anti-war causes only the most motivated people will turn up. Those million that did, represent the high end of spectrum of dissent including an unknown number of people who agreed with them but had other things to do on that day.

      You conveniently ignored the fact that there has been NO sign of any million-strong demonstration supporting the invasion of Iraq. Only a fool would try to argue that this indicates a population broadly in favour of a war.

    66. Re:Am I the only one... by ralphclark · · Score: 1

      In both the US and the UK, anti-war sentiment lessened once open hostilities were actually declared. That was only to be expected. There are two main reasons:

      1). A war, having started, is not so easy to stop and would probably be over anyway by the time a dissatisfied citzenry could cause enough trouble to force their government to pull out. So many people more or less give up and just hope it will be over quickly.

      2). As soon as the military goes into battle, debate is squelched by right wing bigots who go all purple-faced and start shouting things like "Are you saying you don't support our troops? Are you saying you'd rather Saddam won? Well? Are you? Are you?"

      Personally I'd like to take these purple-faced ignorant fuckwits and drop them right into the front line to see how fond of war they really are.

      That apparent 20% swing isn't made up people who changed their mind and thought war was a good idea after all. It's made up of people who have been intimidated by hawks into adopting a "patriotic" attitude.

    67. Re:Am I the only one... by Glock27 · · Score: 1
      Personally I'd like to take these purple-faced ignorant fuckwits and drop them right into the front line to see how fond of war they really are.

      "Fond" isn't the right term. However, I'm sure the Coalition forces are much more positive about how things are going than are the Iraqis. :-)

      That apparent 20% swing isn't made up people who changed their mind and thought war was a good idea after all. It's made up of people who have been intimidated by hawks into adopting a "patriotic" attitude.

      Au contraire. (Ack that was French. :-P)

      No, many of the folk that made the switch (finally) realized we are DOING THE RIGHT THING.

      Its really very simple.

      --
      Galileo: "The Earth revolves around the Sun!"
      Score: -1 100% Flamebait
    68. Re:Am I the only one... by ralphclark · · Score: 1
      many of the folk that made the switch (finally) realized we are DOING THE RIGHT THING.

      That's arrant nonsense. Although I'm sure you'd like it to be true, it's just not borne out by talking to people who switched - as long as you avoid trying to force them to adopt one side or the other, that is. The attitude you've adopted tends to suggest that any questioning along those lines from you would strongly seek one particular answer.

    69. Re:Am I the only one... by Glock27 · · Score: 1
      The attitude you've adopted tends to suggest that any questioning along those lines from you would strongly seek one particular answer.

      It's called "having an opinion". However, I have a very open mind. If I see evidence of other motives from our administration than those stated, or evidence that Saddam is really a great guy that should stay in power, or atrocities by Coalition troops (as opposed to the numerous, well documented atrocities by Saddam's troops)...THEN I'll reconsider my position.

      Further, I'm of the view that this war will help American interests and prestige worldwide, especially once a free Iraq is a reality. Most Iraqis that aren't under the gun (literally) seem to be very happy to see Saddam go.

      Our leadership should be commended for doing a great job, not denigrated by those without a clear understanding of the situation, or simply with an axe to grind.

      Honestly, what percentage of the remaining antiwar folk do you think are simply "Bush haters"?

      --
      Galileo: "The Earth revolves around the Sun!"
      Score: -1 100% Flamebait
    70. Re:Am I the only one... by Ashen · · Score: 1

      So where are you statistics? Yeah, that's what I thought...

      Here are some more on the income tax:

      Did you know that 95.7 percent of all personal income taxes are now paid by just the top 50 percent of earners?

      Certainly, we should not begrudge them some relief from the disproportionate tax burden they are bearing.

      The top 1 percent of earners are currently paying 32.3 percent of personal income tax receipts! Is that fair?

      The top 5 percent pay half (actually 50.8 percent) of the total personal income tax burden.

      The top 10 percent carry 62.4 percent of the total load.

      The top 25 percent pay 81.3 percent of personal income taxes.

      By contrast, the lower 75 percent of earners pay only 18.7 percent of the taxes.

      The lower half pay just 4.3 percent!

      I'm currently looking for what percentage of the US governments income comes from income taxes and what percentage comes from other taxes.

  11. Time for Redundant and overrated mods to go! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Due to the many different formats which /. can be read in, Redundant is a very silly moderation. Nesting is primarily the cause of this, as you can put the same comment in the previous thread and appear to have commented first. It is also difficult to catch in Meta-moderation.

    Overrated moderation was initially a good idea, but the fact that it is shielded from metamod defeats the purpose. Oft times I have posted a comment at 0, only to have it modded overrated. I ask you how is an unratted comment overrated? It is simply an abuse of the moderation system. Also, how can you metamod an overrated comment if you do not know when the overrated moderation occured. Did it occur at 1 or 5 points? You see the dilemma.

    Cmdr Taco, it is time to bring fairness back to Slashdot!

    1. Re:Time for Redundant and overrated mods to go! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While they're at it, the lameness filter needs some mods, too. If you have good karma, you shouldn't be subject to the "must wait 2 minutes in between comments" and "must wait 20 seconds after clicking 'reply'" rules. Those annoy the hell outta me.

    2. Re:Time for Redundant and overrated mods to go! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Especially with the tabbed browsing that Mozilla offers. It's so easy to be in two threads at once, but /. doesn't care, even though they suck Mozilla's dick every chance they get! I say If you're logged in and have good karma, post the fuck away! D to the Motherfuckin' C!

  12. will leave as soon as it came by certron · · Score: 2, Informative

    While the effects of linking are multiplicative in their effect of raising a page's ranking, the problem is that it requires someone to actually put those terms into the search engine to get to them. If someone is going to find a definition of a word, they'll probably go to a dictionary. While I do see an increase in the practice of entering a phrase into the search engine to learn more about it (I've done it) I would consider this more mis-/dis-information or tangential discussion than actually changing the meaning of the words.

    Then again, it is kind of an interesting phenomemon, sort of similar to that blog-scraping-trend-watching program that appeared a few weeks ago on here. The difference is that people don't really see trends unless they look for them, or look at many different examples of something. The meaning of the word isn't going to change because a few people over a short period of time are talking about it differently. It won't change the meaning for people who already know the word and aren't exposed to any of the discussion, which will probably be far more than those taking part in the discussion of the alternative meaning of the word or phrase.

    I have the feeling that I've spoken much but said little...

    --

    fair.org counterpunch.com truthout.com indymedia.org salon.com
    eff.org guerrilla.net debian.org gentoo.org
    1. Re:will leave as soon as it came by L7_ · · Score: 1

      you've basically hit the nail on the head about why time seems to pass so fast online.

      1/ Things are only relevant if they're being talked about.
      2/ Things are only linked if they are talked about.
      3/ Therefore, things are only relevant when they are linked.

      The links (i.e. 'see also') in the dictionary never change, so relevancy is pretty much set during its publishing. When links online change every day or every hour, then things seem to come and go: definitions change.

      Isn't that what the article about: definitions changing?

      P.S. 4/ PROFIT! :D

    2. Re:will leave as soon as it came by meta-monkey · · Score: 1

      I also find it interesting that the people who are upset because "their" word got re-defined were trying to re-define another word in the first place. "Second Superpower" redefines "superpower" to mean hippies and the French rather than an actually relevant, powerful nation.

      --
      We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
  13. Re:public opinion? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://www.cnn.com/2003/ALLPOLITICS/03/18/sprj.irq .bush.poll/index.html

  14. Re:public opinion? by alanshitface · · Score: 1

    I think the point is that I might hear someone mention the phrase "Second Superpower" and trust Google to give me an authoritative answer. Google are free to return whatever results they choose.

    They might choose to flood the results for "war" with articles which espouse a particular political stance in return for a fee. But most people assume that search engines are politically neutral.

    Remember a lot of people are using Google to search for amazon.com. These are the same people who believe that what it says in the dictionary is what a word "really means".

  15. Re:Tough guy, naw. Just overrated! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Due to the many different formats which /. can be read in, Redundant is a very silly moderation. Nesting is primarily the cause of this, as you can put the same comment in the previous thread and appear to have commented first. It is also difficult to catch in Meta-moderation.

    Overrated moderation was initially a good idea, but the fact that it is shielded from metamod defeats the purpose. Oft times I have posted a comment at 0, only to have it modded overrated. I ask you how is an unratted comment overrated? It is simply an abuse of the moderation system. Also, how can you metamod an overrated comment if you do not know when the overrated moderation occured. Did it occur at 1 or 5 points? You see the dilemma.

    Cmdr Taco, it is time to bring fairness back to Slashdot!

  16. Re:public opinion? by HowlinMad · · Score: 1

    ohhh man... do you know what this means.... every poll is BS, cause they didn't all ask me, and if they did, what if they didnt talk to you.

  17. Re:public opinion? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Quote from this article:

    A Gallop survey for CNN and USA Today released on Friday said public support for the war remained steady at about 70 percent, in line with findings from other opinion polls released on Friday.

  18. So is there freedom of speech or not??!! by univgeek · · Score: 5, Informative

    Okay, let me get this straight. One guy calls world public opinion a second superpower. Another guy calls informed netizens a second superpower a few days (weeks?) later. Now the Reg is upset that the first guy is not showing up on Google? What the f*** ??

    Does he have a right to come first on a google search? Maybe if more people linked to him, he would be first. How is this a conspiracy? Is there any evidence that Google actively did this? If they are so pissed about it, may be they should start a link campaign, or propagate their version of the "second superpower" more...

    --
    All bow to his Noodliness!! His Noodle Appendage has touched me!
    1. Re:So is there freedom of speech or not??!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thanks for clarifying the "subversion", I had no idea what's the big f_ deal :-)

    2. Re:So is there freedom of speech or not??!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      RTFA. The first meaning became so widely used and caught on so fast that Kofi Anan has used it. It seems wrong that the second meaning has erased the first, still in widespread use.

    3. Re:So is there freedom of speech or not??!! by jmccay · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I find it funny that the complaint is over that part of the deffinition. Last time I checked power meant to have actual ability to change something (or to have power), and super power was power above normal power.
      Given these two facts, how can peace freaks of the world be considered a second power? The truth of the matter is that they have no power! Thay haven't changed anything. They've increased the arrests, and in some case proven themselves hipocrits(sp?)--fyi, the college incedent where one prowar supporter was beat up by peace freaks protesting the war. Since they haven't changed anything becaus ethe last time I checked America is still liberating Iraq, they have no power. Since they have no power, they can't be considered a power, and they can most deffinately not be considered a super power.
      Most democratic countries allow people to speak their minds to some certain degree. If these people go overboard, or get carried away, then they will be arrested. If they attempt to stop a city, state, country, etc., they'll be warned and then arrested after a little while.
      Peace protesters have NO POWER. Thus, they cannot be a super power. I really don't see why they are arguing about the the stupid phrasing when it's a moot(sp) point.

      --
      At the next eco-hypocrisy-meeting, count the private jets used to get to the meeting. Should be interesting to see that
    4. Re:So is there freedom of speech or not??!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      [flame] Speaking of censorship... AHEM! Some things deserve to be censored... [/flame] Back to the point. The article isn't about the definition, or about the futility of protest, or about the glories of protest, or the glories of war for oil, or whatever. It's about a MINORITY changing the meaning of a word by using a flaw in a search engine. A massively popular search engine... Please take your rant somewhere relevent. /. doesn't care, unless Saddam took up arms against GPL, or implimented MS in his country.

    5. Re:So is there freedom of speech or not??!! by Original+AIDS+Monkey · · Score: 0

      I've never heard that phrase used in that way before. Maybe Kofi Annan should use it more often to catch up.

      Also, who gives a shit? Someone invented a term and it didn't stick with the public. Boo-frickin'-hoo.

      --


      =======
      P.S. Bite! You've been bitten by the Original AIDS Monkey! You have AIDS now!
    6. Re:So is there freedom of speech or not??!! by Slurm-V · · Score: 1

      Definite storm in a teacup material. Google is an Internet search engine - not a Life, the Universe and Everything search engine. If the second meaning is how it's being used on the internet then whoop de doo - Google is doing it's job and all is right with the world. Try searching google news for the term, though, and you get three articles on the 'googlewash' and the rest seem to be using it in the first sense. Can'. Quite. See. The... Problem.

      --
      Of course it's going off the rails. How else is it ever going to fly?
    7. Re:So is there freedom of speech or not??!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You missed the point. The subject of the article doesn't matter. It's like two people arguing over whether a color is red or Indian red when in truth the color is green. The search engine is working like it's supposed to work. Meaning of words change (research gay in American dictionaries if you don't believe me). It is only natural for meaning to change quickly in todays mass information society--especially when someone along the line didn't completely understand the original meaning. The article is the meanless rant of a liberal British snob. You need to get over it.

    8. Re:So is there freedom of speech or not??!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes I'm sure you've really looked into this, judging by the fact that you couldn't be bothered to spell "hypocrites" even remotely correctly, even though you knew it wasn't right.

    9. Re:So is there freedom of speech or not??!! by Lars+T. · · Score: 1
      This article isn't about a tiny change in the definition, or that "the first guy is not showing up on Google".

      First of all, the term wasn't used by just one guy, but apeared in several newspaper articles and press releases from major NGOs like Greenpeace, and was even used by Kofi Annan. But that isn't the point either.

      The point is that 7 weeks ago Google showed a wide range of articles if you searched for that phrase, and now it almost only shows that page and others talking about it. Now if the phrase was "Open Source" or "File Sharing", and 27 of the top thirty hits would point to microsoft.com or riaa.com and assorted back-patting sites - would you still not get the point?

      --

      Lars T.

      To the guy who modded me down from perfect to terrible Karma - Apple haters still suck

    10. Re:So is there freedom of speech or not??!! by henele · · Score: 1
      Thay haven't changed anything. They've increased the arrests,

      Intrestingly, I think if you look at the numbers the Feburary London 'million' march actually reduced crime in the parts of London it spread through - no muggings, car accidents/theft, drug-induced distrubances etc..

      Probably more police than usual, and lots of (partially ironic) litter but no arrests to my knowledge - which is lots less than normal :)

    11. Re:So is there freedom of speech or not??!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then London is lucky that the peace ativists haven't turn violent yet, and don't count on that luck holding out.

    12. Re:So is there freedom of speech or not??!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Too bad that's not what they wanted to change. They didn't achieve their objective--so one can only conclude that the peace protests (or peace assults in the USA) have failed. The fact is those involved in the war to liberate Iraq know more than the peace freaks.
      Those involved in the liberation of Iraq think women have the right not to be raped, and the citizens have a right to live without the fear of terror. Those that think that Bush is a cruel dictactor should move to a country where their is a real dictator, and then they should trying living their and doing the same things (ie protesting the government).
      It's funny because the peace protestor are supporting one of the cruelest tyrants in history--even Hitler didn't use his own people as human shields. By default then, the hands of the peace freaks are cover in the blood of those Iraqies that have been tortured, raped, mamed, etc over the years.
      That is their true legacy. The legacy of the peace freaks is the blood of the Iraqi people!

    13. Re:So is there freedom of speech or not??!! by donutello · · Score: 1

      Given these two facts, how can peace freaks of the world be considered a second power? The truth of the matter is that they have no power! Thay haven't changed anything.

      The peace freaks do have a lot of power. It's because of these peace freaks that more countries are not united against Saddam Hussain. It's because of these peace freaks that Saddam thinks that if he gets enough innocent civilians killed there is a chance the US will pull out. Don't let the peace freaks off the hook this easy - they are responsible for a lot of dead Iraqis right now.

      --
      Mmmm.. Donuts
  19. Thanks a lot by sburnett · · Score: 1

    Thanks Taco! Now, thanks to your creations of yet another link to this blog, the meaning of the phrase can be contorted even MORE, all thanks to the help of Page Ranking!

  20. Re:public opinion? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes, because polls must consult every member of society in order to be valid. You must need a remedial course in statistics.

    Cretin. And don't be the type of ass who immediately starts talking about "flawed sampling", or "biased questions".

    Oh, and just so you don't think my post is devoid of facts and totally ad hominem...go argue with Gallup whose last datapoint (3/25-3/30) shows 70% of Americans favor the war.

    Posting Anonymously because I just don't give a shit.

  21. Say hello to "Metagoogling" by Wee · · Score: 2, Informative
    The really funny part is that this story will help increase his ranking. The Register has linked to it, and lots of people here will "search Google" for the phrase.

    The first rule of Googlewashing is you don't talk about Googlewashing. The second rule of Googlewashing is you don't talk about Googlewashing.

    -B

    --

    Ash and Hickory, straight-grained and true, make excellent bludgeons, dandy for the cudgeling of vegetarians.

    1. Re:Say hello to "Metagoogling" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please dont paraphrase "Fight Club". Great movie, however.

    2. Re:Say hello to "Metagoogling" by Wee · · Score: 1
      Please dont paraphrase "Fight Club". Great movie, however.

      That was from "Fight Club"? For real? No kidding? Wow.

      ...

      You don't get that whole sarcasm thing very much, do you?

      -B

      --

      Ash and Hickory, straight-grained and true, make excellent bludgeons, dandy for the cudgeling of vegetarians.

  22. Re:public opinion? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There have been several recent national polls, all putting the supporters at about 70%.

    This idea of polling is actually quite efficent, not perfect but its the best method that we have.

    Perhaps most of your friends oppose it, but I doubt that your opinions vary on two many issues.

  23. See what Google says about Skullfuck! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Searched the web for Skullfuck. Results 1 - 10 of about 2,940. Search took 0.06 seconds.

    unicycle skullfuck
    Description: A metal/punk-influenced rock band from Wichita, Kansas. With news, lyrics, MP3s, pictures, and release...
    Category: Arts > Music > ... > Rock > Alternative > Bands and Artists > U
    www.unicycleskullfuck.com/ - 2k - Cached - Similar pages

    Team Fragadelic: DM SkullFuck
    > Title: DM SkullFuck. > Author: Silus. > Download Links: Fileplanet
    UnrealCenter. This is mapping history as it's the final map Silus ...
    www.planetunreal.com/fragadelic/utmaps/skullf .htm - 22k - Cached - Similar pages

    Datenschlag - Der Papiertiger: Skullfuck - [ Translate this page ]
    Der Eintrag im Papiertiger, der Datenschlag-Enzyklopädie des Sadomasochismus,
    zum Thema Skullfuck. Papiertiger. Der Papiertiger: Skullfuck. ...
    www.datenschlag.org/papiertiger/lexikon/skull fuck. html - 12k - Cached - Similar pages

    UK Skullfuck ... Buy & Sell Music: Discogs Marketplace. UK Skullfuck / artists (U). Profile:
    none yet. URLs: Shopping. Find Sellers of this artist. Search ...
    www.discogs.com/artist/UK_Skullfuck - 7k - Cached - Similar pages

    www.angelfire.com/fl2/SkullFuck/
    1k - Cached - Similar pages

    Skullfuck
    What's in a name? EVERYTHING. Some may be questioning my reasons for naming
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  24. The Register is a big old complainer by Elwood+Blues · · Score: 1

    The Register article complains solely because a search for "second superpower" now links primarily to an article on a Harvard weblog about something increasingly similar to the term they preferred ("second superpower" being those global antiwar protestors).

    What does this mean? Google's relevance works -- I saw links to the Harvard article on almost every major weblog I read--it's a popular concept, and google reflects that.

    Google is not an encyclopedia, nor is it a movement organizer. Google categorizes information based on some perceived level of web popularity. I think its doing its job.

  25. Socialists have done this for a century by TheSHAD0W · · Score: 3, Insightful

    As a libertarian I've become well-acquainted with the "hijacking" of terminology -- to the point of which it becomes exceedingly difficult to discuss some subjects because the people discussing it may not be talking about the same thing...

    One example of this is the term "liberal". Once upon a time this had a very different meaning, and "classical liberalism", while on some issues resembles modern liberalism, is very different on many others. I doubt someone like Tom Paine would agree with much of what today's Democratic party supports.

    Another example is "anarchy". To the Republicans, it's equated with chaos and a lack of any form of control, though in actuality it's meant to describe a social system that relies on self-control. To the socialists, it could only mean "classical anarchy", or "anarchosocialism", a sort of communist utopia. Libertarians often support "anarchocapitalism", where people can own the means to production.

    The term "libertarianism" has been similarly obscured in meaning. Socialists have attempted to claim it for their own in the past. Many people, including the leadership of the Libertarian party, consider it equivalent to minarchism, while other influential people seek to equate the term to a restriction against the initiation of force. Meanwhile, other organizations also wish to subsume the term.

    1. Re:Socialists have done this for a century by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Your commentary is ahistorical. The term "Libertarian" BEGAN as synonymous with "anarchist" (And anarchism was then understood as a form of socialism). The ones hijacking the term are those right-wing capitalists who now describe themselves as "Libertarians". They are attempting to do the same thing to the term "anarchism" as your use of the word "anarchocapitalism testifies. Anarchism is diametrically opposed to capitalism first and foremost.

    2. Re:Socialists have done this for a century by TheSHAD0W · · Score: 1

      Well, first off, I disagree with your categorizing (modern) libertarianism as "right wing". Even the party members don't (usually) fit under that category. Some libertarian positions agree with the left, some the right, and some send both sides screaming and running away. The Nolan chart theory gives some insight into the libertarians' inability to be categorized; check out the World's Smallest Political Quiz (and yes, the test is kinda biased and nowhere near complete, but it does give the theory).

      I'd also have to take issue with your last statement, "Anarchism is diametrically opposed to capitalism first and foremost." CLASSICAL anarchism is, definitely. It is my belief, however, that the lack of government does not necessarily lead to the socializing of the means of capital, nor that it would be desirable.

    3. Re:Socialists have done this for a century by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      To the Republicans, [anarchy is] equated with chaos...

      Umm, maybe because there is no such thing as self-control without checks and balances (i.e. military force)? Have the liberals actually brainwashed you into thinking anarchy is sustainable and there is a Republican conspiracy to reshape the word? I think only common sense, and not Republicans are to blame for the association of anarchy with chaos. I mean, why work in an anarchy if you can just take something from your neighbor? Your neighbor will want to guard his home with a gun and stay awake 24 hours a day to make sure nobody steals his stuff. That's an impractical solution because people need sleep. So your neighbor starts a sleep rotation cycle within his family members. One stays awake while the rest sleep. That's a little better but still not very efficient because at any one time one family member will do nothing but guard the house. So.. why not add a few more (err..) soldiers and guard a whole neighborhood? That's even better. Soon you will want to elect some leaders in charge of finding and training soldiers and boom! you have a government. Bye bye anarchy. Anarchy will never result in a stable equilibrium because it's premise is that people are honest when in fact people aren't. Don't believe me? Just look at the dotcom boom.. lots of phoney CEOs making huge chunks of cash off of premature IPOs when the companies involved didn't even have business plans. Computer programmers worked for an hour and web browsed the rest of the day while daydreaming about winning a Ferrari in a company drawing. The human race simply cannot survive without controlling selfishness.

    4. Re:Socialists have done this for a century by TheSHAD0W · · Score: 1

      Do YOU have a 24 hour government guard on your property? Heck, I don't. I have a monitored burglar alarm, and if it goes off, the monitoring company calls the cops.

      So let's say there weren't any cops. Fine. I take the cash I'd otherwise have taxed out of me to pay for the police, and hire a security company to respond instead. Problem solved.

      Does this make the security company a government? No; it's a voluntary relationship between myself and that company. If I don't like their service I can hire their competitors down the road. With a government I have to put up with whatever quality service they offer and pay whatever they demand.

      As for the dot-com bust... Sure, the government REALLY helped there. After all those people got swindled, they held hearings and commissions and passed new laws -- that will do absolutely nothing to stop future swindles from happening.

      Let me ask you something -- when you invest money somewhere, do you depend on the government to be sure you won't be swindled? If there were no government to protect you from swindlers wouldn't you be a hell of a lot more careful where you put your money?

      Maybe if people didn't have government to lean on they wouldn't be so stupid.

    5. Re:Socialists have done this for a century by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Americans are hilarious! "As a libertarian"!! You're a human being you idiot, (hopefully, god _hopefully_), you hold a whole host of ideas in your head, some of them may even be contradictory. Feel free to stop being a libertarian and start being a human.. we'll welcome you back.

    6. Re:Socialists have done this for a century by Troed · · Score: 1

      I call myself an anarchist, even though I'm politically to the right. In my view of things it works out just nicely.

    7. Re:Socialists have done this for a century by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, the libertoonians I've known weren't quite human.

    8. Re:Socialists have done this for a century by geekoid · · Score: 1

      " As a libertarian I've become well-acquainted with the "hijacking" of terminology "

      because libertarians do it so well.

      ba-do-bum, chaaa

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    9. Re:Socialists have done this for a century by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There's a reason they call them RANDROIDS!

    10. Re:Socialists have done this for a century by riptalon · · Score: 1

      Well, first off, I disagree with your categorizing (modern) libertarianism as "right wing".

      Obviously, there are economic and social issues and so at a minimum you need two coordinates rather than one to measure someones political viewpoint (another more complex test that might interest some people is the Political Compass). However the right-left catagorisation really applies to economic issues and on that axis american "libertarians" are very "right-wing". They may differ significantly from Republicans and Democrats on social issues but to a much lesser extent on economic ones.

      "Anarchism is diametrically opposed to capitalism first and foremost." CLASSICAL anarchism is, definitely.

      Precisely, you admit that anarchism is opposed to capitalism but you want to redefine it (by you I mean american "libertarians"). Anarchism is opposition to all hierarchy, including capitalism. Anarcho-capitalism is a contradiction in terms.

    11. Re:Socialists have done this for a century by riptalon · · Score: 1

      Politics is replete with examples of words being hijacked and used to mean the total opposite of their real meaning: the Democratic People's Republic of Korea is a dictatorship and the National Socialist German Workers Party (Nazis) weren't socialists. This is undoubtedly what Orwell drew on for the idea of Newspeak in 1984. This also extends to much more subtle redefinitions of words over time for political reasons.

      For instance democracy orignally meant rule by the people (Greek city states) and a republic was rule by an elite, with the people getting a vote on which section of the elite would rule them (Rome). When these ideas resurfaced a few hundred years ago republics were instituted but they were called democracies, to give people the feeling that they were getting more than they were (classic bait and switch). So democracy has effectively taken the meaning of republic and republic has been relegated to meaning "government without a monarch".

      However, some of the examples that you use, are in fact entirely the opposite way round. Libertarian is a term that had been associated with anarchism for over a hundred years before if was appropriated by some american capitalists in recent years. Likewise anarchism has meant opposition to all hierarchy, including capitalism, for most of the last two centuries, although you are right that many people in power have done their best to make it a synonm for chaos in everyday speech.

      Your reference to "classical anarchy" shows you are as much as fault as the people you are critising. Calling real anarchy, "classical anarchy", and then using the word to the mean the opposite of its true meaning, is as duplicitous as any other sneaky political redefinition. "Anarcho-Capitalism" is a contradiction in terms, since anarchy means without hierarchy but capitalism is a hierarchical economic system.

      I also disagree that socialists are the main offenders since it is those in power that have the most oppitunity to alter the meaning of words, through their control of the media. Hence while Marxists were probably the main culprits in altering the meaning of words behind the iron curtain, at most other times and places where right wing ideologies have held power, they are likely to be the main offenders.

    12. Re:Socialists have done this for a century by TheSHAD0W · · Score: 1

      I think you've very clearly illustrated part of the problem. You say that I wish to redefine the term "anarchism". I suppose you're right, in that I disagree with the way Mencken defined the term. By its derivation, "an-archy" simply means "no government", or "ungoverned". It should not be defined the same as "anti-hierarchism". There is a distinct need for a term describing the entire class of government-free social systems, including anarchocapitalism, anarchosyndicalism, and classical anarchy. The logical term is simply "anarchy" -- but Mencken's definition has contaminated the use of that term for the purpose, since to some people, calling a governmental system "anarchic" would reflect on the classic definition.

      So... Should we formally redefine the term "anarchy"? Should we invent a new term? Something ought to be done because this conflict is interfering with rational discourse.

    13. Re:Socialists have done this for a century by TheSHAD0W · · Score: 1

      As a matter of fact... Yes.

      *laughs*

    14. Re:Socialists have done this for a century by TheSHAD0W · · Score: 1
  26. How DARE they use Free Speech against liberals??? by Nova+Express · · Score: 5, Insightful

    That seems to be what the entire article amounts to: "Gosh, we were trying to create this "meme" that large global gatherings of communists, students, and people without jobs were some mysterious force known as a 'Second Superpower,' and then someone went off and used those words in an ENTIRELY DIFFERENT WAY without asking our permition! It's not fair not fair not fair! How DARE they used free speech differently than we do?"

    This is news? (I know, it's a slashdot story, so it has no requirement to even resemble news.) Whatever happened to "the cure for speech you disagree with is more speech"? It's not like anyone has a copyright on a silly phrase like "Second Superpower." Get a grip already...

    --
    Lawrence Person (lawrencepersonh@gmailh.com (remove all "h"s to mail)

    http://www.lawrenceperson.com/

  27. Much whining about nothing by Bigtoad · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I read the article, and it looks like one big whine to me, that could be summed up as "Some other small social group stomped the arbitrary phrase that my small social group created." Ho hum, so what? I had never heard that phrase until I read it today in Slashdot.

    Unlike some other posters who also commented on this story, I do believe the polls that claim 70%+ support for the war among americans. I run in a number of real life social circles, and some of these social circles are rabidly anti-war. They make the same claims about made up polls and mass media conspiracies. The funny thing is, most of these people choose to include only other liberals in their group of friends. A side effect of that choice is that they don't have any friends who support the war. That side effect of their personal choices gives them a very skewed view of overall public opinion. I'm not so selective of friends, and I know far more people who support the war than who oppose it.

    1. Re:Much whining about nothing by TaoBear · · Score: 1

      Yet, considering the fact that it is not possible for you to know the opinion of every single individual in regard to this, it is just as presumptuous for you to assume that because you know "...far more people who support the war than oppose it." that this is any truer than those who know far more people who oppose the war than support it, because of the groups of people they interact with. In sum, every single person's view is skewed, including yours and mine.

    2. Re:Much whining about nothing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Go easy, that truth can break some people.

  28. this is /. by SHEENmaster · · Score: 3, Interesting

    We just bitch a lot; we aren't "protestors" of anything more than megalomaniacle corporations and bribed governement officials. See the difference now?

    --
    You can't judge a book by the way it wears its hair.
    1. Re:this is /. by ces · · Score: 4, Insightful

      If 1 out of 10 US citizens who bitch on slashdot would actually write their elected representatives instead of hitting the "submit" button things might begin to change. Otherwise our legislators will only hear from the lobbyists on most issues.

      --
      Happy Fun Ball is for external use only.
    2. Re:this is /. by leonbev · · Score: 1

      If I had mod points, I'd try to bump up this statement to a 5+ insightful.

      Most people don't seem to realize that bitching about Microsoft/AOL/DMCA/Government on Slashdot doesn't solve anything.

    3. Re:this is /. by fenix+down · · Score: 1

      Do you honestly think Slashdot can even approach the volume of mail a dedicated special interest group can produce? They don't even have to write fake letters to create a fake public outcry.

      Example: My grandfather wrote over a dozen letters to various representatives and entities a few weeks ago in support of the French boycott shit on the urging of a letter from one of the conservative think-tank things he donates to. He wasn't joining the boycott himself, he just wanted to help increase the group's political influence.

      There's just no way for a representative to differentiate between astroturf and genuine public opinion. Even polls don't really work. I know I intentionally go against the answer the guy doing the poll is obviously going for, regardless of how I feel. A few days ago I said I don't support the war, even though I really only feel it just shouldn't have happened in the first place, because it was pretty obvious my yes would be used as support for Bush's handling of the shitbucket. I'm sure there's people out there with weaker convictions and a better understanding of polling methods that just toe the party line on everything.

    4. Re:this is /. by ces · · Score: 1

      First of all if you mail YOUR representative it carries far more weight than most other letters since it comes from someone in his or her own district.

      Secondly an honest constituent letter stands out in another way, it is not an exact duplicate of 10,000 other ones.

      Believe it or not your elected represenatives do actually have to listen to the voters back in their districts. What the voters giveth the voters can take away.

      As far as special interest groups go I think slashdot can be pretty effective. Last time I checked there were over 600,000 accounts on slashdot. Lets assume 25% are inactive or duplicate accounts. Lets assume another 25% belong to people who are not US citizens or cannot vote (too young, resident alien). This leaves 300,000 users. If we could get 1 in 10 to write letters that is 30,000 letters. I think every represenative and senator in Congress receiving a couple hundred letters on a single issue that hasn't generated much public comment would be noticed. It's not like the AARP or NRA cares much about most geek issues.

      --
      Happy Fun Ball is for external use only.
    5. Re:this is /. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting
      if 1 out of 10 slashdotizens takes the time to update their personal website/blog to include a link to the original articles with the original use of the word, then it will be linked to way ahead of the new version.

      hell, i'm doing that as i type this. in another month (i'm due for a googling in a couple weeks, plus the time to ooze through the various google db's) the original term will again occupy at least one of the top ten slots.

    6. Re:this is /. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      your grandpa is a hateful jackass. the only good thing about him is that he is old, and will likely die soon, taking his hateful beliefs with him.

    7. Re:this is /. by The+AtomicPunk · · Score: 1

      Well, probably not. Not as long as it's only the same two halves of one party (democrats/republicans) in control. Why should they do anything?

      Don't get me wrong, I write 'em, but I don't expect anything. Until a majority of people dare to vote third party (I don't even care which much anymore!), nothing's going to change. Freedoms will continue to go down, taxes will continue to go up.

    8. Re:this is /. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not really. each article gets about 300 comments. Say 2/3rds are US citizens (over 18). Then you have 20 people writing their representatives. Might be enough to call their attention, but not enough for change.

    9. Re:this is /. by Havokmon · · Score: 1
      If 1 out of 10 US citizens who bitch on slashdot would actually write their elected representatives instead of hitting the "submit" button things might begin to change.

      You assume we all have the same opinions.. As far as anyone knows, 1 out of 10 DO write their congressman. It's probably just all conflicting rambling shit.

      --
      "I can't give you a brain, so I'll give you a diploma" - The Great Oz (blatently stolen sig)
    10. Re:this is /. by nfsilkey · · Score: 1

      But legislators cant mod me up nor give me good karma. ;)

    11. Re:this is /. by mfrank · · Score: 1

      Or maybe his grandpa has a brother buried at Normandy. Jackass.

    12. Re:this is /. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If 1 out of 10 US citizens who bitch on slashdot would actually write their elected representatives instead of hitting the "submit" button things might begin to change. Otherwise our legislators will only hear from the lobbyists on most issues.

      Forget that. Just voting for the right representative should do the trick!

      With love from Florida,

      AC

  29. Laughable by Com2Kid · · Score: 3, Funny

    "second superpower" my arse.

    Listen.

    Do you have nukes?

    No?

    SHUT UP

    Do you have military installations world wide?

    No?

    SHUT UP

    Do you have a network of spies and counter spies embedded in governments and multinational corporations around the world?

    No?

    SHUT UP

    Do you have spy satellites capable of taking high accuracy pictures of, oh, just about anything?

    No?

    SHUT UP

    Do you have ICMBs, the worlds LARGEST military air force capable of decimating any section of the earth, and nuclear subs submerged beneath all the worlds oceans?

    No?

    SHUT UP, FUCK OFF, AND GET A GRIP ON REALITY

    Maybe nobody ever made it clear to these irritants. The United States is NOT a super power because of its "large world wide voice". The United States is a super power because IT IS POWERFUL ENOUGH TO COMPLEATLY DESTORY EVERY MAN WOMAN AND CHILD IN ANY NUMBER OF NATIONS AT ANY POINT IN TIME IT SHOULD SO CHOOSE TO DO SO

    1. Re:Laughable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No way man... I am going to throw my hard drive at you -- it is full of weblogs! You will die!

    2. Re:Laughable by Izeickl · · Score: 1

      The US could have a good go, but im sorry the sum of every other Nation out there DOES outweigh the US...you could destroy a heck of alot, but theres alot of nukes in other countries also, and far bigger armies. You may have the hi-tech, but it will only last so long. So Yes, we do have nukes/ICMBs, yes we do have spies in all areas of the world although the only area to really count is the US so we at least can concentrate on there, hell the US was so shocked that someone would attack it on its home turf the aircraft sent up at 9/11 were not even armed. Dont be so arrogant, dont be so ignorant. Have a nice day.

    3. Re:Laughable by mselmeci · · Score: 1

      Exactly.
      Were I to hear Second Superpower without any additional info, I would think of Soviet Russia (by analogy with 'second world').

    4. Re:Laughable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Soviet Russia never really was a super power, it was more of a regional power. It's economy was far too small and the population wasn't up to the task of being a second super power. If you wanted to say that there was a second Superpower, the closest thing you could saw would be China but even then they have more to worry about from their own population than us and they aim to keep it that way.

    5. Re:Laughable by Com2Kid · · Score: 1
      • The US could have a good go, but im sorry the sum of every other Nation out there DOES outweigh the US...


      This before or AFTER we blow it up all nice and first strike like?

      • you could destroy a heck of alot, but theres alot of nukes in other countries also,


      A good number of which where built with US aid and assistence, or at very least with US 'approval'. China, India, and Pakistan being the three major exceptions. (well, and Russia, but they have changed a wee bit since they had their nuclear program in full swing. ^_^ )

      • and far bigger armies.


      Heh. Have fun getting here. :) Your ships / airplanes wouldn't last half a second in the seas. Heck, for that matter your PORTS wouldn't be around for very long either.

      • You may have the hi-tech, but it will only last so long.


      True, traditionaly technology in war has been a matter of cooperation between various nations in a number of projects with some "other" projects going on within each nation seperatly.

      • So Yes, we do have nukes/ICMBs,


      Some pitifuly small amount.

      • yes we do have spies in all areas of the world


      Any one European nation can not have the number and diversity of spies that the united states has from a pure resources and population point of view.

      • although the only area to really count is the US so we at least can concentrate on there,


      I don't know, the British might be worrying about Ireland at least a bit, and the French seem to be having constant fun just keeping the citizens of their own nation from beating the puddin out of each other.

      • hell the US was so shocked that someone would attack it on its home turf the aircraft sent up at 9/11 were not even armed.


      The US is spoiled, somebody actualy got a hit in on us. Please compare, while we have a royal ton of ICBMs (ah, unforunatly some idiots are working on REDUCING that number, WTF?), and a very high number of other nuclear goodies,

      well

      screw it

      I mean after all that is lauched, the entire world is dead ANYWAYS. So what does it really matter?

      Earth

      Gone

      poof.

      Super. Power.

      Dont be so arrogant, dont be so ignorant. Have a nice day.
    6. Re:Laughable by Com2Kid · · Score: 1

      edit: Snitch that last line, forgot to remove it from the copy paste job I was doing of your post.

    7. Re:Laughable by capitalsucks · · Score: 0

      Not true man. It is a fact that the US Gov't has stockpiled more of every single weapon than every other nation combined. Yep, every weapon.

      --
      "I feel it is my duty to look at the porn that kids download before I delete it, to be sure what it is."--School Admin
    8. Re:Laughable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "Oh yeah, well my daddy can still beat up your daddy."

      That's about the level of intelligence and maturity evinced by your post.

    9. Re:Laughable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      By the time the rest of the world united enough to take on the US, the US would have already picked off the first ones to join.

      I used to teach kid's karate. Every so often I'd let 5 or so smaller ones "team up" against me, just for fun. The only reason they didn't lose damn quickly is because I pulled my punches. Unfortunately, the US has stopped pulling punches against the little guys.

    10. Re:Laughable by fenix+down · · Score: 1

      This is what I love about this country. We have no verifiable evidence of the existence of any single living thing with more power than George W. Bush. Don't you just feel all tingly inside?

    11. Re:Laughable by pingflood · · Score: 1
      IT IS POWERFUL ENOUGH TO COMPLEATLY DESTORY


      JeffK, is that you???

      lalalal bypassing lameness filter lalala

    12. Re:Laughable by soulsteal · · Score: 1

      IT IS POWERFUL ENOUGH TO COMPLEATLY DESTORY EVERY MAN WOMAN AND CHILD

      Oh well I hope they don't. I dunno what I'd do without my stories.
      -----------
      Lameness filter jerk off fun
      asdlaiwmd8aenmdlasdimliemd

    13. Re:Laughable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ah, so what you are saying is "people power" doesn't work.. therefore democracy doesn't work, and therefore the US (and every other democratic country of course) is run by lies? Interesting...

    14. Re:Laughable by Nintendork · · Score: 1
      Here's the definition of superpower.
      A powerful and influential nation, especially a nuclear power that dominates its allies or client states in an international power bloc.

      I'm sorry, but the sum of every other nation is not a superpower, it's an alliance of less powerful nations. The alliance would be more powerful, but there's too much bickering between our enemies for this to happen. The biggest and most plausible threat is North Korea joining up with the arab nations. Can you say World War Three?

      -Lucas

    15. Re:Laughable by corbettw · · Score: 1

      "The US could have a good go, but im sorry the sum of every other Nation out there DOES outweigh the US"

      I'm sorry, when you say the "US", you mean the United States, right? Not some other country? Because according to the CIA's World Fact Book (http://www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/geos ), the military spending of the United States is $60 billion more than the combined spending of Great Britain, France, Russia, China (the other four permanent members of the Security Council), and Japan, Germany, Canada, and Italy (the other members of the G8). So, if the difference between how much we spend on our military, and how much all of those "great" countries spend on theirs is greater than the next largest spender (China, between $20 and $60 billion, depending on how you count it), who, exactly, do you think can stand up to us?

      Oh, and those are 2002 figures. From what I understand, 2003 is gonna be a bumper year for military spending in the States.

      --
      God invented whiskey so the Irish would not rule the world.
  30. well... by heXXXen · · Score: 1

    Of course, by posting the link on slashdot, Google's pagerank for this site will only jump higher.

  31. read. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Who reads the articles before saying 'crap' ?

  32. top hits on google == language definition? by Vellmont · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Call me a skeptic, but I think it takes longer than 42 days (and the limited audience of blogs) to coin the meaning of a new term. I've never heard this term used before I read this article. It seems to me new word definitions come about because of a need for them, not some strange, perverted miss-use of google.

    I guess I'm a little confused by the article. Is the author saying there is some causation of this new word meaning stemming from Google? If so, that is their any apreciable percentage of the populace doing google searches each time they encounter a new word? If Google is merely a tool to tell us the more accepted definition of a word, then is google really an accurate tool for this?

    Sorry, but I see this a very weakly supported theory, and don't think it deserves enough attention to have been posted to slashdot.

    --
    AccountKiller
    1. Re:top hits on google == language definition? by Phroggy · · Score: 1

      Call me a skeptic, but I think it takes longer than 42 days (and the limited audience of blogs) to coin the meaning of a new term.

      Well, there's an interesting legend about the origin of the word "quiz"...

      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
    2. Re:top hits on google == language definition? by Dirtside · · Score: 1

      It only takes as long to "coin the meaning of a new term" as it takes you to think of a term, and think of a meaning. Voila! It's coined. Whether it becomes an accepted part of the language is another thing entirely.

      "Second Superpower" was a term apparently invented a month or two ago, and spread rapidly throughout certain communities. I'd never heard it myself until I saw this article, but then there's a lot of words I don't know. (Anyone who thinks ve knows all words, is deluding verself.) The author is not saying that Google defines the word or provides a usage for it -- you didn't read the article, did you? -- but rather that the usage of the term was coopted by Google (probably accidentally), because of the placement of a particular article high in the search results for that term. Moore's usage of the term is now more prevalent, according to Google, than the original usage.

      Phrases like "Second Superpower" come and go all the time. Remember "Family Values"? Remember "Mistakes were made"? Neither of those have left English entirely, but they are certainly far less prevalent than they were before. Language is a very fluid thing; it is not defined by dictionaries any more than the species of birds are defined by books on ornithology. The key phrase to remember is, "Dictionaries give usages, not definitions" (see this article and this article).

      --
      "Destroy science and religion. Science would re-emerge exactly the same; but not religion." - Penn Jillette, paraphrased
    3. Re:top hits on google == language definition? by GnarlyNome · · Score: 1

      You forgot Silent Majority.

      --
      Diplomacy is the art of saying "Nice doggie" until you can find a rock. Will Rogers
  33. Dubya's secret search phrase by idfrsr · · Score: 1

    I do remember that at least a while ago if you googled (hehe) "Dumbmotherf@#cker" and took the first link (feelin' lucky) you ended up at G.W.B's campaign webpage....

    --
    "The large print giveth, and the small print taketh away" -Tom Waits
  34. funny google! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    My website has become the first site in every
    google search for several models of laptop
    computer. This in spite of the fact that it
    is served over a 128k link from a P120 laptop
    in my kitchen.

    90% of the traffic from this machine is people
    downloading the .pdf formatted spec sheets for
    these rather popular computers... apparently my
    site is the only one in the United States that
    has the spec sheets, so I rose to the top based
    on some preference for U.S. based sites. Most
    of the hits come from overseas, so it is not just
    that they weight toward the nearest site, but that
    they weight U.S. sites more heavily.

  35. So? by Xacid · · Score: 1

    I really wish I cared,only...I just dont give a google.

  36. Re:public opinion? by bcboy · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Uh, no. There are exactly two countries in the entire world where a majority support the war: the US and Israel. In every other country -- including those whose governments are supporting the war -- it is wildly unpopular.

  37. Only one result for "Third Superpower" by alanshitface · · Score: 1

    and "secnod superpower" is I believe a googlewhack!

    I might as well mention the phenomenon of registering misspellings.

  38. Google works.. by zcat_NZ · · Score: 4, Informative

    Try searching for Second superpower -moore and all the references to the James Moore article magically vanish. Wow, that was hard.. .. and no, I see very little difference between the term as defined in this article, and the term as defined elsewhere. "Public Opinion" in the Moore article, "Public Opinion" in all the other search results. Where's the Googlewash?

    The register article didn't make it very clear what the 'original' definition was supposed to be, and I had assumed that the US Government and/or pro-war groups had been trying to redefine the "Axis of Evil" as the "Second Superpower.", because otherwise I just don't see what the problem is.

    --
    455fe10422ca29c4933f95052b792ab2
    1. Re:Google works.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I never heard of Second Superpower until today. But if I wanted to know about the World Opinion context, I'd probably use a much more specific search.

    2. Re:Google works.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Was this a troll? Because I googled your phrase Second superpower -moore and still only got references to the moore article. The difference was that the name moore did not appear as prominently. They all refer to the moore article though.

      That explains why you "see very little difference", because you are reading the same point of view. I have yet to see someone here post a reference to the original definition.

    3. Re:Google works.. by PickaBooga · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Imagine if you typed "freedom of expression" in Google, and instead of articles about protecting speech that governments want to suppress, the first 50 hits were articles about AT&T's wireless service, back when they were using the slogan 'Freedom of Expression'.

      The point is an important idea got replaced with a completely banal phrase. And it only took a few bloggers to decide that they liked the banal phrase better than the important idea.

      The danger is that the phrase loses all meaning. So you might march under the banner 'Freedom of Expression', and all the passersby will think you are complaining about your cell phone reception.

    4. Re:Google works.. by Fnkmaster · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Yes, but that's the whole point of PageRank. It is not a _flaw_ in PageRank. It's a feature. If more people put up webpages that link to a page, then it becomes more important in Google-land. Thus their definition, however banal you may think it is, gets priority. Tough shit. You wanted a democratic source of information, now you've got it in the web. If you prefer infofascism and centralized control of meanings and definitions, then you can find that too out there, I'm sure.


      Personally, I don't get the problem here. All Google measures, and all ANY computerized searching system can measure, is what *other people* think is important. It can't measure the actual relative import of different ideas - that would be known as a strong AI problem. Now here we are critizing and whining about Google for doing its job too well. If the "other meaning" of "Second Superpower" is so fucking important, why aren't more people talking about it and linking to articles about it?

    5. Re:Google works.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Indeed, it's not PageRank's fault, but this is NOT the point. It is not a PageRank criticism. The whole argument is not if PageRank is right or wrong, but how people are using it to pass a different impression of reality.

      I think you misunderstood what is being talked about.

    6. Re:Google works.. by Fnkmaster · · Score: 1
      No, they are not "using it to pass a different impression of reality". It merely reflects that more people linked to and were interested in a definition that the author believes is banal, and which he describes as "revolution lite". Tough shit, I say.


      Now there are real cases of abuse of PageRank - those abuses pretty much about to ways of piling on links to _falsely_ improve PageRank ranking. And we all agree those are bad because they don't reflect _real_ links or _real_ interest from the broader internet community. Is that happening in this case? The author of this article presents absolutely NO EVIDENCE WHATSOEVER that it is, and in fact presents description of what I would describe as evidence to the contrary (that many blogs are linking to this article). He simple considers that illigitimate because those many blog authors share a view other than his own. How on earth does this mean that PageRank is being used to pass on an _incorrect_ impression of reality? It's certainly a "different" impression of reality as you describe it, than the one the author holds, but that doesn't make it wrong unless there was actual abuse of the system and PageRank.

  39. Did the original definition die for other reasons? by MyNameIsFred · · Score: 1

    The article asserts that the original definition was destroyed by a weblog. I'm not convinced. If the anti-war movement had been able to stop the U.S., then claiming to be a second superpower would have had some legitmacy. However, the anti-war movement did not stop the U.S. In my view, that's what killed the original definition.

  40. google can't seem to find by asscroft · · Score: 1

    the parody of All Your Base starring George Bush and Saddam Huessien. Any of you got the link? I know that this is off topic, but this topic kinda sux, doesn't it? In 42 days these blogs will have other linkages and this will move down in pagerank(tm) and return to it's "original" meaning. At least the All Your Iraq are belong to U.S. is funny - even if it is a litte lacking in photos and photoshopped photos at that.

    --
    because I have been enjoined by this Holy Office to abandon the false opinion which maintains that the Sun is the centre
  41. not a new phenomenon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When done intentionally, this is called "search engine bombing". Check out numerous old alt.religion.kibology articles for examples. For the lazy, here's a link to some articles at Google's archive.

    HTH. HAND.

    (P.S.: Looking at it from another point of view, language changes. Deal with it. That's what everyone has had to do for as long as language has been around.)

  42. OMG THATS SO SAD!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I really want some strawberry mini-wheats with ice-cold milk, christ. I'll get some tomorrow.

  43. One-stop-research by _bug_ · · Score: 2, Interesting

    So how does one quote a search engine as a source in a term paper anyways?

    I don't know about anyone else but Google certainly isn't the single source to define whatever topics I'm doing research into.

    And by research I'm not talking specifically some kind of thesis or paper. I mean even the little stuff such as a definition of a word or phrase that I've come across in a book or an online article.

    There are plenty of other search engines and plenty of other indexing algorithms to go with it. I can't let one "fuzzy logic" formula control my view of the world.

    This is why when learning how to write a term paper in high school we're told to get at least X number of different sources. Perhaps a refresher course where we replace the concept of "term paper" with "internet".

    And lastly, is this a trend that we need to worry about? Does Google really have that kind of influence that if it starts linking to one definition of a phrase instead of the other, the world is going to conform to what Google tells us?

    Farked if I know. Or care.

    [insert response noting reference to fark and its influence over me. TIC ppl.]

  44. Alright, so google isnt perfect, whats new? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Frankly, I couldnt care less wether im getting the proper context of the phrase "second superpower". Who even knows if the original article was the first one to have the published meaning of that phrase. (Hence its not the original).

    Bravo for pointing out the fact that you cant trust the internet.

    Heres a new phrase "googlebashing". Why does google, a company who provides a service, have to be held responsible for the worlds problems. Why should they have to care if the Chinese are upset, or if the Scientologists dont like what someone has to say about them. They are a company providing a service. A FREE FU(expletive)CKING SERVICE at that.

  45. Mmmmm, tastes like spam. by DumbSwede · · Score: 2, Interesting
    I think you can detect the intersection of two common promotion techniques here:
    1. Define your idea/agenda in a proactive, positive way, ala pro-life vs. anti-abortion or pro-choice vs. pro-abortion.
    2. Parasitic exposure to a wider audience, or an audience that is seeking something other than what you have to deliver. Consider this the Spammizing of culture and marketing.

    As to this latter trend, the more media channels there are to promulgate a message, the more intense seems to become the competition to exploit them by whatever means.

  46. Orwell by meta-monkey · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I read the article (yeah, yeah, I know) and several times they mention Orwell's newspeak, and how the totalitarian state would try to co-opt the meaning of words, to redefine them, and reshape public opinion to their liking. People respond to keywords, so if you know how someone is going to respond to a certain keyword, and then you can associate that keyword to something else, people will project their feelings about the keyword towards the "something else." Kind of like how since September 11th, everybody wants to call anything they don't like "terrorism," and try to link everything from driving an SUV to smoking pot to file sharing (!!) to terrorists. I'm just waiting for the next time I'm at the movies and the guy behind me won't stop talking. I think I'll call him a "whisper terrorist."

    Anyway, I digress. So, the protesters are pissed off because they think this blogger re-defined their "Second Superpower" bit. Well, hello, protesters, you did it first. People associate "Superpower" with powerful nations like the US or the former USSR. Somebody that, even if you don't like what they say, you have to listen to, because they're a SUPERPOWER, damnit!

    Now, the classic definition of "Superpower" has always been "somebody really big and important, with lots of money, and guns, and influence." The result is, you listen to a superpower. Now, the protesters want somebody to listen to them. So, they re-define "superpower" to mean "college students looking for something to crusade against, aging hippies, the unemployed and employable, oh, and, uh, France." "See!! Now WE'RE a Superpower, so you have to listen to us! We're the SECOND SUPERPOWER, get it!?! Except, umm, instead of money and guns and nukes and tanks and influence, we have signs, slogans, and a VW with flowers painted it. But you still have to listen!" Oh, well, looks like your re-definition just got re-defined.

    --
    We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
    1. Re:Orwell by ErikTheRed · · Score: 1

      Dammit, the one day I don't have mod points. I couldn't have said it better myself.

      --

      Help save the critically endangered Blue Iguana
  47. Slashdot troll, found dead at 54! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I just heard -- Slashdot troll was found dead in his parent's basement. There weren't any more details. I'm sure everyone in the Slashdot community will miss him - even if you didn't enjoy his work, there's no denying his contributions to popular culture. Truly an American icon.

  48. Re:Tough guy, naw. Just overrated! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How fucking lame, deal with it. If a Score:2 comment is is modded overrated down to one and you metamod it, it's still only at 2.

  49. Google is the web search SUPERPOWER (Googlepower) by maromig · · Score: 1

    And there really isn't a second goolepower. The parallels are obvious. When you have a leader, far ahead, Microsoft Corp., McDonalds, USA, Google, the vast majority benefit from what is involved, but that's not to say a critique won't occure. Indeed, as Google has grown, so has the anti-google-ites. Privacy issues and now issues like knowledge flow manipulation. Obviously, Google is the best and I'll keep using it....Hmmm hasn't that logic been applied to: Microsoft, USA, etc.

    --
    ------ Michael A. Romig
  50. Re:public opinion? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No matter what you yanks think, you're not the world...and _much_ less than 70% of the world supports this stupid fucking war of yours.

  51. Google and Blogs by The+Ape+With+No+Name · · Score: 1

    To be honest, I would love to have a switch in google that excludes blogs. Given the way Google works and the culture of linking to and fro between many different blogs, sometimes (another annoying feature of google) an innocuous search on "Talmudic discourses" will produce a raging Anti-Semitic diatribe in a blog. I think that person has a right to post such stuff, but I wish I could filter on it to get to what I am looking for. "Talmudic discourse -blogs." Yes, currently the search is not producing the blog I saw the first time. Grrrrrrr.

    --
    Comparing it to Windows will be a moot point, since El Dorado is going to have a 40% larger code base than XP.
    1. Re:Google and Blogs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am going to report you to the A List.

  52. best quote in the article: by Xzzy · · Score: 2, Funny

    "the number of Internet users who look at blogs is " so small that it is not possible to draw statistically meaningful conclusions about who uses blogs.""

    phew!

    Considering how much they're talked about lately, I was afraid I was the only one that thought they were pointless.

    1. Re:best quote in the article: by Kalak · · Score: 1

      Last I checked, we're reading what can be defined as a web log right now. Is /. statistically insignificant or is the /.effect in our collective heads? An old .sig:

      "Disraeli was pretty close: actually, there are Lies, Damn lies, Statistics, Benchmarks, and Delivery dates." (from fortune)

      --
      I am, and always will be, an idiot. Karma: Coma (mostly effected by .hack)
  53. I think the "So What" people miss the point... by wdavies · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I think the gist of the article is that a not very widely read, techno-elite, blogger network has out "Page Ranked" the original New York Times article that was the origin of the term "Second Superpower".

    The register article is pretty long, and mind you it would be pretty funny if it ended up being the number one search result for "Second Superpower"...

    Remember how PageRank is supposed to work - it ranks websites in order of "importance". I still not sure if I agree with this as a whole (and prefer the HITS algorithm). It seems hard to imagine that the (in this case anti-war) Blog community is more authoritative than the NY Times.

    Not sure that there's any solution to this issue, but I think its more of an observation on the limitations of PageRank.

    Winton

    1. Re:I think the "So What" people miss the point... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps if the NY Times didn't require registration more people would link to it and it wouldn't get out page ranked.

    2. Re:I think the "So What" people miss the point... by epeus · · Score: 1

      Well,as the NYT just pulled its archives from the net, you can't read the original any more, but it did not contain the phrase 'second superpower', instead having the 'two superpowers' bit that Orlowski quoted.

    3. Re:I think the "So What" people miss the point... by wdavies · · Score: 1

      heh, touche, good points on both of the above. I guess I'll have to track down the original (presumably Google has it cached somewhere?)

    4. Re:I think the "So What" people miss the point... by wdavies · · Score: 1

      Here's the google cached version of a copy of a copy... and indeed, no sign of "second superpower".

      Idjuts over at The Register... and me bad for not doing better research.

      A New Power In The Streets (Google Cached version)

      Back on yer heads,
      Winton

    5. Re:I think the "So What" people miss the point... by wdavies · · Score: 1

      Whoops, erratam, not quite true - the text does indeed contain "second" and "superpower" but a LONG way apart...: So the Phrase search certainly wouldn't find it, but it should be in the search results *unless* the part about registration stopped indexing or the pageranking...

      two superpowers on the planet: the United States and world public opinion.

      In his campaign to disarm Iraq, by war if necessary, President Bush appears to be eyeball to eyeball with a tenacious new adversary: millions of people who flooded the streets of New York and dozens of other world cities to say they are against war based on the evidence at hand.

      Mr. Bush's advisers are telling him to ignore them and forge ahead, as are some leading pro-war Republicans. Senator John McCain, for one, said today that it was "foolish" for people to protest on behalf of the Iraqi people, because the Iraqis live under Saddam Hussein "and they will be far, far better off when they are liberated from his brutal, incredibly oppressive rule."

      That may be true, but it fails to answer the question that France, Germany and other members of the Security Council have posed: What is the urgent rationale for war now if there is a chance that continued inspections under military pressure might accomplish the disarmament of Iraq peacefully?

      The fresh outpouring of antiwar sentiment may not be enough to dissuade Mr. Bush or his advisers from their resolute preparations for war. But the sheer number of protesters offers a potent message that any rush to war may have political consequences for nations that support Mr. Bush's march into the Tigris and Euphrates valleys.

      This may have been the reason that foreign ministers for 22 Arab nations, meeting in Cairo today, called on all Arab countries to "refrain from offering any kind of assistance or facilities for any military action that leads to the threat of Iraq's security, safety and territorial integrity."

      War, like politics, is affected by psychology and momentum. The strong surge in momentum the Bush administration felt after Secretary of State Colin L. Powell's Feb. 5 presentation to the Security Council on the case for war has been undermined by at least four converging negatives.

      The most obvious is the rupture in relations between Mr. Bush and some of his principal partners in Europe: France and Germany, now joined by Russia, China and a growing list of other countries. Just weeks ago, it seemed that Mr. Bush was successfully coaxing France and Germany into the war camp, especially after one of the chief United Nations weapons inspectors, Hans Blix, delivered a negative report on Jan. 27 on Iraqi compliance.

      But the swell of popular opposition to war across Europe, the second negative.

    6. Re:I think the "So What" people miss the point... by wdavies · · Score: 1

      I guess I'm talking to myself at this point, but:

      Pluralization is the enemy for not getting matches...

      Google: "A New Power" site:psychoanalystsopposewar.org (2 hits)
      Google: second superpowers site:psychoanalystsopposewar.org (1 hit)
      Google: second superpower site:psychoanalystsopposewar.org (ZERO hit)

      So, to sum up. Google search would NEVER have found results for the Second Superpower in the NY Times article

      Winton

  54. It's just democratic by geddes · · Score: 1
    You're especially susceptible to this if you subscribe to the view that Google's PageRank? is "inherently democratic," which is how Google, Inc. describes it.

    And this Googlewash took just 42 days.

    PageRank _is_ democratic! The internet started talking about Moore's writing about "Second Superpower", linking to it, etc, and so it showed up on google, that only makes sense The high rank in google is justified because the majority of links on internet blogs with the text "second superpower" were pointing to moore's page. Google never claimed to be a measure of what THE WORLD was talking about, just a measure of what THE INTERNET is talking about, and that is precisly what it is doing here.

    If the original coiners of the term want thier definition to be the top definition on the internet, then they should have thier own blogs where they talk about it, and democracy will take over in google's pagerank process, whichever sites get the most links will have a higher ranking.

    Google is a COMPUTER it isn't making value judgements, it is just following a formulla that gives every website a vote.

    1. Re:It's just democratic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      This is not Democracy, it's merely statistics. Why ?
      Just As you said at the end of your post, there's not value jugements made by Google. It's only pattern matching. So I could put up a web site talking about the latest SuperHero movies and their Superpowers, and if it becomes popular, it will rank high in Google, though it doesn't speak about what you'd expect.
      If internauts were to vote for or against the war, do you think we could really use Google as a voting system ? What would be the query ?

    2. Re:It's just democratic by metamanda · · Score: 1
      You made the point I was planning to make, geddes. I gotta wonder whether that guy knew what he was talking about.

      To add to what you said, something as "inherently democratic" as google can suffer tyranny of the majority -- the majority being composed of geeks who blog and read /. as opposed to people who read the NYT -- which seems to be what is happening here. "Tyranny" is probably too weighted of a term to use when you're referring to search results, but you get what I mean.

      I'll cut him a little slack because he's from the Bay Area, but he needs to calm down for a minute and realize that the rest of the world doesn't get all their information from Google.

  55. Re:public opinion? by capitalsucks · · Score: 0
    In fact, Google is not politically neutral at all. Google NEWS is especially guilty in this aspect. They refuse to list Indymedia as one of the search possiblities and *almost* stopped http://unknownnews.net from listing a PAID ad on in the search results of very appropriate keywords. You can read about that Here. They're also blacklisting Infshop INews, which is alot like Slashdot indeed. I don't know if Slashdot is blacklisted. But I was never able to find anything from Raise The Fist! on there either. You can read their various excuses on the unknownnews page. The reason this gets even more away from politically neutral and further disqualifies their excuses is via the fact that most if not all of the sites mentioned in this comment were listed there before. Here is a little e-mail between me and google news team you might be interested in reading:

    My First Message To Them:

    Subject: Infoshop News
    Sender: PJ


    Date: 3/22/2003 12:29 PM
    To: News-Feedback@google.com

    I am writing to encourage your editoral team to include in the new Google news feature, (which I use quite frequently throughout the day) the news reports and services of infoshop.org
    If you continue to reject your users the right to use such a great service as Infoshop News, we will organize a boycott of google, which you should know, I have bought products thru your little in-search advertisements, but I am willing to give this up if google is going to be a nationalistic, plutocratic, indymedia hating group of individuals. I will do my searching elsewhere.
    Thank you for your time,
    --Paul Madore, Frequent Google User

    Their First Response:

    Subject: Re: Infoshop News [#1908026]
    From: news-feedback@google.com
    Date: 3/24/2003 6:10 PM
    To: ph uck auth ority at maineindymedia.org

    Hi,

    Thanks for your email. Google News is highly unusual in that it provides a news service compiled solely by computer algorithms without any intervention from human editors. To ensure high quality content on Google News, we require the following criteria from our news sources: (1) the organization must be made up of more than one individual and (2 ) they must guarantee that all articles will be reviewed by their respective editors prior to publication on the web.

    Infoshop.org does not meet these requirements. We appreciate your taking the time to provide feedback on Google News and hope you will contact us in the future with additional observations and suggestions.

    Regards,
    The Google Team

    My Response To That:

    Subject: Re: Infoshop News [#1908026]
    From: PJ
    Date: 3/25/2003 5:36 PM
    To: news-feedback@google.com

    Hi,
    Here is my future observation,
    Firstly, I have had articles rejected from infoshop's Inews section. So therefore THEY ARE REVIEWED. Secondly, Chuck0 is not the only person reviewing them, he is just the head editor. How does this sound to you?

    "BOYCOTT GOOGLE, BOYCOTT FASCISM"

    It's up to you.

    And to think, I actually wrote a comment awhile back that said "Google is coogle"...

    Think what you want guys but Im thinking that this google boycott may be just the thing..we can do better anyways..if we pull together..I know we can..I mean google started out as a college project..

    Thanks,
    -CapitalSucks
    --
    "I feel it is my duty to look at the porn that kids download before I delete it, to be sure what it is."--School Admin
  56. What a crock by Grieveq · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    "By contrast, it is the strength of the second superpower that it could mobilize hundreds of small groups of activists to shut down city centers across the United States on that same first day of the war."

    What a crock of shit. This guy's definition of a "Second Superpower" is to have cival disobedience everytime you don't agree with the government? It's comforting to know that instead of supporting our troops, liberals are more interested in being economically destructive.

  57. IT'S A SEARCH ENGINE by Stonan · · Score: 2, Interesting

    No matter how much 'crap' you pile on, at the base core Google is search engine. It's not a creator or define-or of words and phrases.

    Google's ranking system (IMHO) is just like a movie critic - there for information but if you base everything on it you'd better remove the horseblinders so you can at least see someone slapping you upside the head!

    Orwell's Big Brother will come to pass if we continue to let others tell us what what we should think. I know it's hard for some people but try to draw your conclusions AFTER consulting more than one source...

    --
    The GEEK shall inherit the earth...
    1. Re:IT'S A SEARCH ENGINE by wbaustin · · Score: 1
      Yes, it is. And a good one at that.

      After someone posted about this article, some other folks decided to try to
      re-define the article as one more object of the class:

      "silly googlebombing stories"

      It only took about 10 hours for the term to start showing up in search results.

      --
      Bill Austin, Famous Quotes and Sayings
      http://home.att.ne
  58. Yikes! by Otter · · Score: 1
    The story seems to be this: the "anti-war culture" invents a cutesy, alliterative bit of new jargon. Somebody turns it into an essay that gets widespread praise and attention, with the result that it becomes the top hit on Google. Someone else decides that the essay deviates from acceptable doctrine (although I'll be damned if I can see how), and is upset that, by entirely objective measures of importance, it leads Google rankings.

    So, he writes an article shamelessly distorting the essay, and makes dark pronouncements about how Google is too powerful and an enemy of Truth. Others apparently agree that "Google's power to give information to the people [can] be misused and perverted".

    Anyone else extremely grateful that these people don't have any substantive power in the US? Any surprise that things turned out the way they did when they got power in other places?

  59. What about the long term? by sielwolf · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Right now there is heavy linkage to the blog. Sure, but what about in the future? When the links get archived and Google stops seeing them? As time progresses the web graph should stablize and the "true" meaning should come to the front.

    Of course, I think both effects are great. Why? Well if a term takes on a certain meaning for a local period of time... wouldn't you assume that most searches/links to it are using that definition? And that over time a more stable definition would dominate? I don't see this as a bad thing.

    --
    What is music when you despise all sound?
  60. Make it the First Superpower by LegendOfLink · · Score: 1

    If only somehow we could harness the power of all the people surfing for pr0n on the net...

    1. Re:Make it the First Superpower by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      and channel it directly into the flux capacitor, will we go back to the future?

  61. Two comments on the blog article by goodchef · · Score: 1
    One:
    "Slashdot and other news sites present high quality peer-reviewed commentary by involving large numbers of members of the web community in recommending and rating items."

    Obviously that man has never been here.

    Two:
    "The shared, collective mind of the second superpower is made up of many individual human minds - your mind and my mind - together we create the movement."

    Sounds like the Borg.

    --

    "Inflammable means flammable? What a strange country!" -Dr. Nick, The Simpsons

  62. This just in... by Kaz+Riprock · · Score: 1

    "second superpower" pushes ahead of even "al-jazeera" (which recently passed "sex") in today's Google Zeitgeist...but only for 7 hours, starting around 7:34 PM.

    --
    Mordor...a magical, mythical land where women are more rare than dragons--but where every man would rather find a dragon
  63. Re:How DARE they use Free Speech against liberals? by glenebob · · Score: 1
    "Gosh, we were trying to create this "meme" that large global gatherings of communists, students, and people without jobs were some mysterious force known as a 'Second Superpower,'
    Yeah that's the part that's getting to me too. It appears to me that the phrase was coined in a really stupid way, so it only seems inevitable that someone else would coin it in a way that actually seems to make some sense. Can't have that though.

    As far as Google's involvement is concerned, where's the beef? Google is working as designed. Just because it links to stories in a way you don't happen to agree with, too stinking bad. Life's rough; get a helmet.

  64. Re:How DARE they use Free Speech against liberals? by Angst+Badger · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The point of the article isn't about competing "memes", it's about flaws in Google's PageRank system. In this case, the weighting of site importance on the basis of the number and authoritativeness is being thrown by the incestuous linking behavior of weblogs.

    If there's a flaw in the article, it's that it implies -- without ever quite coming out and saying it -- that there was some sort of conspiracy or malice aforethought. Obviously, there was not.

    Also implied but not stated directly is that Google has some kind of responsibility to make sure that its results aren't skewed by anomalous inputs. Whether they do or not is a matter of opinion, but the article would have been much stronger if the author had addressed the point directly. OTOH, considering how little traction the idea of social responsibility has among the center-right libertarian crowd that reads the Register, I can see why the author declined to wander into that quagmire.

    --
    Proud member of the Weirdo-American community.
  65. This just in.. by Frank+of+Earth · · Score: 1

    France has just officially surrendered to the "Second Superpower".

    1. Re:This just in.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      France demanded to be placed in charge of the Second Superpower. When it got no reply, France angrily threw its ice cream cone on the floor and started to cry.

  66. Didn't anyone else... by ekephart · · Score: 1

    find the community of ants analogy just a bit amusing?

    In any event, this blog seems a bit lofty. Ok fine, there is no government like NO government, yada yada, whatever. The best democracy is unanimous and direct (i.e. what everyone would vote on is what everyone would have done anyway). Since this is unlikely to manifest itself anytime soon the only alternative is a pluralistic democracy in which people disagree. I'm in college too, but I get sick and tired of people talking about "the revolution" and what not. Look, you don't like the way things are? Write your representative a letter, not an email, a letter. If he or she doesn't listen, vote them out of office. People often say they don't vote because there is no one that they feel they can vote FOR. Some of these people vote anyway just to vote AGAINST someone (e.g. you hate A? vote for B, because you hate them less). Well, here's an idea, don't vote for a candidate, just vote out the incumbent, whoever it is, until you get someone good. No rational politician wants to get voted out after one term.

    We've got a good system here, people should use it. And be glad you can vote freely.

    --
    sig
  67. Close to lying by Gumby · · Score: 1
    Rub out the word 'government', and replace it with 'weblog A-list'. In this case a commons resource, this very potent and quite viral phrase, was created by millions of people. But it was poisoned by a very select number of 'bloggers'. Possibly a dozen, but no more than 30, we'd guess.

    Wrong. As described in Register story, the phrase was created by one guy in a newpaper article. Just because HE choose it to describe a significant movement - is that suppose to automatically override the tech weblog A-list?
    1. Re:Close to lying by croddy · · Score: 1
      I would really like to see google implement a web-log filter for searches. I don't think I've EVER found any kind of interesting or useful information on a web-log page.

      google would vastly improve their product IMO if they simply erased all the most popular blog domains.

  68. After reading the whole thing twice... by MMaestro · · Score: 1
    "We do not have to create a world where differences are resolved by war. It is not our destiny to live in a world of destruction, tedium, and tragedy. We will create a world of peace."

    Can you say, utopia? The article is extremely bias and obviously anti-war. It doesn't seem to be able to really understand the human psych either. I will use just -one- line in order to prove how badly thought out the article is.

    "Perhaps the best symbol for the second superpower would be a community of ants."

    Ants have a queen to guide them. If all the people in this "second worldpower" were mere 'worker ants', as I dub them, then who will be the queen? Obviously not the government since the 'first worldpower' is the US government according to the article. No, this article is calling for the utopian version, or a 'perfect' version, of Marx's Communism where everyone shares the wealth and reaps the benefits of the majority.

    1. Re:After reading the whole thing twice... by Chris+Johnson · · Score: 1
      No- the best symbol would be the tide.

      In order to produce coordinated action, such as to go invade someplace, you generally need a leader, just as your criticism holds.

      If the problem being addressed is 'warmongering governments and untrammeled corporations are combining their forces and KILLING US left and right', with that you don't need the centralized leader. It's a more gut-level reaction that can be summed up as 'I don't wanna die', or 'I don't wanna eat poison for breakfast', or 'I don't wanna starve', or 'I don't want to get beat in the head by cops', etcetera.

      Some things DON'T NEED discussion. You don't have to sit through a boring argument about why poison in your drinking water is bad, if your kid's died of it and your whole town is sick.

      If you are made to sit through a boring argument about how that is GOOD and all you ever see for argument is that it is good ("Toxic Sludge Is Good For You!"), your kid will STILL be dead and your town will STILL be sick. No matter how many Queens and Kings are telling you it's for your own good, your personal reality tells you to rise up in self protection and make it stop- somehow.

      That's why popular uprisings are uninformed and weak on long range planning. They are not a superpower, they are the tide. When you damage enough people, people start responding whether or not they have a plan.

      With or without things like Google being reliable sources for information, whether you call it protest or call it terrorism, these uprisings will continue to happen. They are not coming from some commie leader or stalinist 'A.N.S.W.E.R.'. Those guys are just trying to ride the tiger for their own benefit, but the uprising is from natural causes and can't be made to go away.

  69. A win for geek culture by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This turn-of-events really demonstrates how geek 'literature' has attached itself to a machine capable of wielding popular knowledge. Our weblogs are a powerful driving force behind google; and google is THE system whereby the denizens of the majority-world seek their need-to-have, always connected, information. The voice of truth now comes from anyone who is capable at the art of electronic communication (and surely we number ourselves in the few), and influence over a community of likewise zealots. Witness the rise of the techno-aristocracy!

  70. /. will use any cheap trick... by samhalliday · · Score: 1

    ... just to say "42"!

  71. Re:public opinion? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think the point is that I might hear someone mention the phrase "Second Superpower" and trust Google to give me an authoritative answer.

    I think this is the problem. You should trust google to give you a list of results relevant to the keywords you typed in, then sort the results yourself.
    This is a simplistic example, But I think it illustrates my point.
    If you read the sentence "The package had a red bow on it", and looked up the word bow. the first definition you read is " To incline the body or head or bend the knee in greeting, consent, courtesy, acknowledgment, submission, or veneration.". Would you assume this this is the correct definition and be confused, or would you look for more results, knowing this is incorrect?

    It is in Google's best interest for Google to be neutral. If they start to show bias, they lose credibility. It's the same as if they listed paid advertisements in their results, they would be useless. Just as some other search engines have done.

  72. Maybe Google isn't the best way by methical2 · · Score: 0

    Having a system that rewards a site on a search engine for both links for and against the content on that site seems flawed. I don't want a corporation to be my authoritative source. This could be a better way.

    1. Select the site you want to be the root of your search.
    2. Search out from there based on the sites that both link to the root as well as are linked to from the root. This adds a layer of relevence to the search.
    3. Display the results.
    4. ???
    5. Profit!

  73. How many divisions does the Second Superpower have by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How many divisions does the Second Superpower have? :-)

  74. Think that's a `washing job? by I-R-Baboon · · Score: 1

    Soooooooooooooooo...the riots in L.A. are the results of a superpower? Tienamen Square, superpower as well?

    Personally I think if you stupid enough to beleive everything you read off the web, and from just a single search on a single search engine you just _may_ deserve what you get. So one search on a search engine takes away some of your dim light, cry me a river. What does this say about the real morals here, what is more important the publicity of the message of the people protesting for peace by breaking shop windows and forcing stores to close early so paychecks are short and sales destroyed for the day creating economic hardships for many, or the attainment of peace itself through peaceful means? I don't think that the recycling of a silly buzzword from a single search engine is the real cause for alarm here.

    *tosses two bits

    --
    -1 Overrated (Too many big words for me to comprehend)
  75. China (PRC) is already the 2nd superpower by jbs0902 · · Score: 2

    . China is already the 2nd superpower and has been since the fall of Soviet Russia.

    We used to live in a world of 3 superpowers now we live in a world with only 2.
    China has the economic and military might and 1/8th of the world's population needed to supplant the USA as the dominant player in the late-21st/early-22nd century. I hate when people say "the US is the only superpower" because it lets me know they have a huge blindspot. China is smart enough to exploit that blindspot.
    Sorry, some people have pipedreams of "people power" and the EU being a counterweight to "the only superpower," but you're seriously disconnected from reality.

    And, to state my bias (because everyone has one), I am a pro-American, American. I don't like the idea of the PRC, and not the Angloshpere, running the planet, but the smart money is on China.

    1. Re:China (PRC) is already the 2nd superpower by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      definition of a "superpower" is one who can project its self interest to every part of the world such that locals ignore it at their peril.

      A global version of "regional power".

    2. Re:China (PRC) is already the 2nd superpower by Mr.Sharpy · · Score: 1

      I tend to disagree about China. In my opinion, while they are on the verge, China is not yet a superpower because they do not project major influence beyond their borders. They probably could, but they don't.

      And further, while it would seem that China is destined to supplant the US and be THE superpower because of their growing economy, population, etc., a look at history casts their future world role in doubt. Several times throughout its history, China has been on the edge of the ability to reach out and grow into a world influencing power; but for one reason or another Chinese society collapses and they start all over again. I don't see why their current run-up to power should be any different, other than the fact that they have a huge chip on their shoulder because they feel like the power that got left behind.

      Unfortunately, I don't think that the US will be able to maintain its superpower status far into the future if things continue on the path we are now on. Corporate greed and governmental corruption will be our downfall.

  76. Re:How many divisions does the Second Superpower h by Frank+of+Earth · · Score: 1

    One Milllllllllllllllllllllllllllllion divisions. Each division has laser beams attached to it's head too.

  77. *wah wah wah* by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hey want some cheese with that whine you liberal piece of euro trash.

    1. Re:*wah wah wah* by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You want some hill with that billy you fucking warmongering yank? And I'm not from europe.

  78. WTF! by capitalsucks · · Score: 0
    Excuse the above web-chro-nym, but this definately calls for it. About half an hour after I posted my previous comment, I recieved this:

    Subject: Re: [#1908026] Infoshop News
    From: news-feedback@google.com
    Date: 5:16 PM (which makes no sense because I run the server..)
    To: PJ

    Hi, Thanks for requesting that we include infoshop.org in Google News. We are working on this, and hope to include Infoshop within a few weeks. Regards, The Google Team

    I wish this were a lie. I'll forward the e-mail to anyone who requests it.....!
    --
    "I feel it is my duty to look at the porn that kids download before I delete it, to be sure what it is."--School Admin
  79. Amazing by Musashi+Miyamoto · · Score: 0, Troll

    Im suprised that so few people here do not see how huge this is. This just proves that there are a lot of people out there that do not realize how duped they are.

    People don't realize how powerful words are. Notice how the Bush regime and their in-the-pocket media put a newspeak spin on things:

    USA word - transaltion
    regime - administration
    propaganda - news
    irregulars - people defending their country
    weapons of mass destruction - deterrant
    collateral damage - murder of innocents
    detention - arrest
    unlawful combattant - POW

    Here is a link with more.

  80. The Internet strikes back by GammaTau · · Score: 1

    As to this latter trend, the more media channels there are to promulgate a message, the more intense seems to become the competition to exploit them by whatever means.

    Yes, but the Internet will eventually strike back. To borrow the words from an anonymous author at alt.religion.kibology, I suspect a new emerging trend on the net is about to become the standard course of action:

    "The Internet interprets blogging as damage, and routes around it."

  81. I need some help understanding this. by RobinH · · Score: 1

    Okay, I'm not quite grasping how weblogs enter that much into Google ranking. I understand how Google ranks based on how many other sites link to you. However, I don't understand exactly, from a technical perspective, what's going on here. How did this Moore character subvert Google? Can someone help?

    --
    "I have never let my schooling interfere with my education." - Mark Twain
    1. Re:I need some help understanding this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the answer is that these "name" Weblogs all link to each other to boost their sense of importance. It's a pat on the back thing - you link to someone, and you're inviting them to link to you. Do it whorishly enough (and hardcore bloggers are the cheapest of media whores) and very soon you're in the Magic Circle and getting thousands of links a day, entirely from other blogs that no-one reads except the yr pals in the community of bloggers. Finally, contribute to a few stupid books to give the impression that this is a serious enterprise, and not just the collected teenge diaries of a bunch of losers who can't find a real publisher, newspaper or magazine.

  82. Anti-american sentiment by tweek · · Score: 3, Insightful

    You know what? I don't care who the "second superpower" turns out to be. It can be a nation. It can be a people. What gets me is that people seem to think there has to be one.

    I'm going to be point blank honest. If someone has to be the dominant superpower, I want it to be the United States.

    Why? Well several reasons but the main one is that I'm a United States Citizen. It's in my best interests for the U.S. to be on top. The United Nations doesn't hold my best interests. France sure as fuck doesn't.

    Another reason is that I consider the Constitution of the United States to be the single greatest document ever known to man. The United Nation's Human Rights charter tried to be that but it's little caluse about all right's being null and void if they go against the goals of the U.N. really fucked it up. The Constitution puts the power into the hands of free men and not the government.

    I love how both the republicans and democrats seem to think that our rights are confered on us by the federal government. What kind of bullshit is that? Did they read the document they swore to uphold? Our rights are endowed to us by our creator. It is the governments job to safeguard those. If they fail, we have the power to put in a government that WILL.

    Just as in everything, it's survival of the fittest. If another nation rises to be a superpower then bully for them. I personally think it's stupid for a government to be more concerned about what the U.S. is doing and how they stack up to the U.S. than to be concerned about it's own people.

    --
    "Fighting the underpants gnomes since 1998!" "Bruce Schneier knows the state of schroedinger's cat"
    1. Re:Anti-american sentiment by /dev/trash · · Score: 1
      Another reason is that I consider the Constitution of the United States to be the single greatest document ever known to man.


      bah the Constituion wouldn't even be around if it were not for the Magna Carta.

    2. Re:Anti-american sentiment by I-R-Baboon · · Score: 1

      (Off-topic but...)

      DAMN RIGHT!

      `Nuff said

      --
      -1 Overrated (Too many big words for me to comprehend)
    3. Re:Anti-american sentiment by Dirtside · · Score: 2, Insightful
      While there's some truth to your sentiments, I think you may be missing something important (although I certainly could be wrong).

      I think the idea is that, yeah, it's all well and good if the U.S. is the sole superpower... except that if we retain that position because we abuse everyone else, then there's going to be serious backlash if we ever lose that position. Other nations can't really abuse the U.S., because we're so powerful. When we're not so powerful, some nations might remember any slights they suffered from us, and act on them. Yes, I want to retain my quality of life, but if doing so now means that in 20 years we're gonna get invaded and abused by other nations, maybe it's not such a good idea. It may not be a likely outcome, but that's where much of the debate lies.

      It's a cliche, I know, but with great power comes great responsibility. The U.S. is abusing its power in certain ways, and it's going to bite us in the ass eventually.

      I personally think it's stupid for a government to be more concerned about what the U.S. is doing and how they stack up to the U.S. than to be concerned about it's own people.
      Some of them are concerned for their own people, namely, how the U.S.'s actions are affecting the quality of life for their own people. When the U.S. wields its economic power to affect the economy of other countries, that's bad for them, so they naturally bitch to us, especially those who have long been our allies.

      Am I claiming that we need to completely give in to all of the sundry demands by other nations? No, of course not. But I do think we should rethink our stance on foreign relations. We may be more powerful than any other country, but we're not more powerful than all of them.

      --
      "Destroy science and religion. Science would re-emerge exactly the same; but not religion." - Penn Jillette, paraphrased
    4. Re:Anti-american sentiment by tweek · · Score: 1

      This is a good point. I think we do more damage with stupid shit like sponsoring Iraq in the Iran-Iraq war. These kind of actions create more animosity than anything.

      My personal opinion is this. We negotiate treaties VERY carefully with other countries. We avoid the "entanglements" we were warned against so long ago.

      We stop all foreign aid. We go back to semi-isolationist. That's what everybody really wants anyway, right? For the US to get out of other people's business? Well we'll do that and I don't want to see anyone bitch. Put the U.N (if they have any relevence left) in Switzerland.

      We will pick and choose who we do business with very carefully.

      --
      "Fighting the underpants gnomes since 1998!" "Bruce Schneier knows the state of schroedinger's cat"
    5. Re:Anti-american sentiment by novakreo · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Another reason is that I consider the Constitution of the United States to be the single greatest document ever known to man.
      [snip]
      The Constitution puts the power into the hands of free men and not the government.

      If you love it so much, what are you doing about the people at Guantanamo Bay who have been denied their constitutional rights ever since shortly after 9/11?

      I personally think it's stupid for a government to be more concerned about what the U.S. is doing and how they stack up to the U.S. than to be concerned about it's own people.

      Governments are concerned about the U.S. because the U.S. has just demonstrated that they have no qualms whatsoever about invading another country if it has something they want. Do you honestly believe that Iraq poses a credible threat to the United States? Put simply, governments are concerned about what the U.S. is doing because they don't want to be on the receiving end of America's 'justice', 'liberation', and whatever else you may choose to call it.

      --
      O frabjous day! Callooh! Callay!
    6. Re:Anti-american sentiment by maubp · · Score: 1
      Put the U.N (if they have any relevence left) in Switzerland.
      I'm not sure the Swiss would go for that - they only joinded the UN in late 2002, fearing it could damage their neutrality.
    7. Re:Anti-american sentiment by tweek · · Score: 1

      The people in Gitmo are not U.S. citizens. If they wanted those rights ensured to them, they should have come to this country and becomed citizens in which case I would bitch about them being denied due process. If you ever read my website, you would see that I bitch to high heaven about Jose Padilla and Mike Hawash.

      Do I believe Iraq poses a DIRECT threat to the United States? Not at this moment. An Indirect threat? Yes. Credible? Hell yes. I never considered Afghanistan and the taliban a direct threat and we see how that turned out. As much as people don't want to admit it, Al-Qaueda and The Taliban were linked at the hip.

      I'm willing to trust Colin Powell and our military reports more than Kofi Annan. Why? Because Kofi Annan has done nothing to show that they are interested in protect my freedom.

      I have no problems seeing a scenario where some Bin Laden somewhere, while despising Saddam as a bad muslim, goes to him for help in attacking the United States. Saddam doesn't like us so he agrees.

      That scenario alone is enough for me to feel some justification in this action. Not the "liberation of Iraq" or "Deposing a ruthless dictator".

      But if you want some justification for the human rights route, why is it okay to go after Milosovich and not Hussein?

      --
      "Fighting the underpants gnomes since 1998!" "Bruce Schneier knows the state of schroedinger's cat"
    8. Re:Anti-american sentiment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You mean that "single greatest document ever known to man" which was compatible with slavery for a long period of time?!?

      Sorry, I just read "puts the power into the hands of free men". Now I see.

      Try to read the French constitution for a change.

    9. Re:Anti-american sentiment by mfrank · · Score: 1

      The people in Guantanomo Bay aren't Americans. They're lucky they didn't get killed in Afghanistan. Unless you're a citizen of Yemen or Pakistan (the only nations that ever recognized the Taliban as the government of Afghanistan), those people can't even be considered POWs. They're criminals, like the Barbary pirates. Most of them are stateless, and it's pretty likely that the ones that aren't (like any Saudis) would be even worse off if we send them home.

      The only governments that should be worried about being on the receiving end of America's 'justice', 'liberation', and whatever are North Korea and the like. Let them worry.

      The Europeans are concerned because their nose is being rubbed in the fact that they're irrelevant, and there's no chance of that changing. They can't have a decent military and be socialists states at the same time. They'll go broke like the Soviet Union.

    10. Re:Anti-american sentiment by Thunderhead · · Score: 1
      Did they read the document they swore to uphold? Our rights are endowed to us by our creator.

      Did you read this document yourself?

      The "endowed by their Creator" bit, as well as the other jingo, ahem, patriotic concepts are in the Declaration of Independence, not the Constitution.
      --

      THS
      ---
      "Poor girl looks as confused as a blind lesbian in a fish market." - Simon R. Green
    11. Re:Anti-american sentiment by tweek · · Score: 1

      I don't believe I said anywhere that those words were specific to that document. The statements in the Declaration of Independance are insured by the Constitution.

      --
      "Fighting the underpants gnomes since 1998!" "Bruce Schneier knows the state of schroedinger's cat"
  83. Not a new phenomenon by jemenake · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Searching for the term on Google now brings up his blog and other people talking about his blog for the first several entries. Can Google's power to give information to the people be misused and perverted?
    Google merely orders the stuff by which one has the most links to it. Google, itself, didn't drive the inane sites to the top. Rather, other inane sites that chose to link to it are to blame.

    And the fact that the stupid stuff got pushed to the top through this democratic process is nothing new. Just like the stupid people seem to out-breed the smart ones, the general populace has an appetite for pseudoinformation; content that is more aimed more at stirring emotions than at informing.

    Real information is burried under lots of chaff. As one of the "intelligent" people of this world, you should already understand (and expect) that you have to dig to get to it.
  84. Jewbat? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Gas Chambers work better!

    You fucking kikes! Even the Germans are sticking up for Iraq, the peopley that YOU call dogs. Where does that leave you?

  85. Re: Googlepower by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Googlepower????.... damn, another google word; when will the new words end!!! Time to go hide in a corner.

  86. Re:How DARE they use Free Speech against liberals? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Quoth: "The point of the article isn't about competing "memes", it's about flaws in Google's PageRank system."

    The article seems pretty vehement about the "new" meaning of the phrase. The author clearly prefers the first definition and considers it "unfair" that the new definition has supplanted it.

    It seems that they are arguing against this specific mem being polluted, with the PageRank scheme an unwitting accomplice, as other interested (highly ranked) parties link to it.

    How is this different than the "topic of the moment" discussed by the literati in high society?

  87. That's not news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    France has always surrendered, backed down from, tucked their tail over their balls, when the second super power comes their way.

    They are always submitting to the Second Superpower at that time. England, Spain, Germany, etc, etc, etc....

  88. He sort of has a point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    While I agree that you can get around this by adding "-moore" to your search and remove this blog how does his commentary rate at the top of the list? Page hits? What does Google do to determine that a particular link is at the top?

    What this really highlights is the weakness in the way information on the internet is indexed and sorted. I'm not going to offer a solution here because I don't have any. If I did I'd put Google out of business ;) However, we should be asking why searches are so difficult to perform with any degree of accuracy. Even using Google I often have a difficult time finding information I want on the internet. Booleans only work so well and often times search engines consider each seperate word of the string instead of the entire string as a whole.

  89. PageRank != Democratic, is the point! by flaneur · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I agree with some posters claiming that the Register article isn't the best example...like many, I think the two meanings of "Second Superpower" don't seem that different, and both seem productive.

    But to focus on that alone is to completely miss the point of the article! What's much more interesting are the claims it makes about PageRank. It makes the case that bloggers only make up 4% of the web-surfing population, which might be a BIT low but sounds right to me. THEN they point out that because of how PageRank works with its distributed scores, all it takes is for 10-20 "A-List Bloggers" (ie. a very small fraction of an already small 4%) to link to something to catapult it to the very top of a Google search. We all use Google, so we know how important this is.

    The point, then? PageRank claims to be democratic, yet the article demonstrates that 20 or so people can effectively dictate the order of search results for certain terms. It's not a conspiracy...yet. Certainly worth noting, however!

    1. Re:PageRank != Democratic, is the point! by Profane+Motherfucker · · Score: 2, Funny

      I wish they'd use their influence for something more important. Like best fucking site in the world or even better: 12" cock. If it only takes 20 people to do that, I'd still have most of the morning to bask in the glow.

    2. Re:PageRank != Democratic, is the point! by Dirtside · · Score: 1

      The key phrase in your post is "certain terms." It seems to me that in order for 20 or so people to "effectively dictate" the order of search results for a term, that term has to be in pretty narrow usage, and mostly among only those people. Jargon would be susceptible (try searching for the word "jurples" -- has exactly 1 hit, because it's a made-up word), but only if it was EXTREMELY narrow.

      I don't think this shows that PageRank is, on the whole, any less democratic than was previously thought. Also note that Google's page about PageRank doesn't claim that PageRank itself is democratic; it says that it takes advantage of the democratic nature of the web. It's a subtle but important difference.

      --
      "Destroy science and religion. Science would re-emerge exactly the same; but not religion." - Penn Jillette, paraphrased
    3. Re:PageRank != Democratic, is the point! by geekoid · · Score: 1

      nut once people see that that erm gets them to the top of the list, they'll add it to their web page, relevant or not. so in the long term, its a wash.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  90. Slashdotters prove the article is accurate by Everyman · · Score: 1

    The basic point of The Register piece is that PageRank often causes mediocrity to rise to the top.

    Look at the comments in this thread. A perfectly coherent, valid critique of PageRank, posted by The Register, is now drowning in a sea of blogger-like idiocy surrounding the keywords "second superpower," due to the fact that Slashdot, with its scandalously-high, Googly-geeky ranking status, couldn't leave well enough alone.

    Shame on Google. Shame on Slashdot.

  91. rise of the word 'morph' by Thagg · · Score: 2, Interesting

    At PDI, we did some of the very early, but not the earliest, morph animation. The earliest developers/users were Tom Brigham at NYIT and Doug Smythe at ILM.

    One thing we did, though, as our tool was used over and over again back in '90 and '91 was to push the use of the word 'morph'. We were working on things like the Michael Jackson Black or White video, things that really pushed the technique into many people's eyeballs. ILM was pushing the word 'morf'.

    A Stanford student did a survey of the use of the word 'morph' in the news media, and it exploded from almost unused to being used in thousands of articles over the period that we were striving to push the word out, and as we were doing those videos. It was fun to coin a word, and have it become accepted.

    thad

    --
    I love Mondays. On a Monday, anything is possible.
    1. Re:rise of the word 'morph' by freeweed · · Score: 1

      Around 1985 or so, when I was just starting high school, I had the privledge of working with a Unisys Icon computer. Really neat machines, ran on some QNX variant from what I've been able to dig up.

      Anyway, one interesting piece of software on this machine was a vector graphics editor. Monochrome, but still, compared to the Commodore 64 and Geopaint, the detail level I could do here was amazing. However, the best feature of the software was that it would take a series of vector images, and 'animate' them - by taking the vertices that were closest together between frames, and moving them (and attached lines) towards the position of the next frame.

      Sound familiar? Yup, a very crude form of morphing. When the hype began around T2, all I could think about was 'wow, those Icons sure have improved' :)

      The word 'morph' predates all of this by a fair bit though - it stems from morphology, or shape. Change something's shape == morph it. Clever eh? That's the original Greek root, iirc. I saw this being used in comics at least as far back as the early 80s, hence why I used the term when I was working on primitive morphing software.

      --
      Endless arguments over trivial contradictions in books written by ignorant savages to explain thunder in the dark.
  92. MOD PARENT UP by Anenga · · Score: 0, Troll

    Exactly.

    How can the anti-war/anti-america protests call themselves "The Second Superpower". Please! What are their powers exactly? The powers to "annoy", their powers to stop traffic until they're thrown off of the streets, the power to get bulldozed, the power to jump off bridges, not very impression powers IMO. And what do those powers accomplish? The public's annoyance with them and their lack of respect and legitimacy towards them.

    Now this? Oh boy, my article isn't turning up on Google! Google must be conservative fat cats! Give it a rest. I'm actually appaled that Google would post this up. What rubbish.

  93. What polls? by valkraider · · Score: 1

    I do believe the polls that claim 70%+ support for the war among americans. I run in a number of real life social circles, and some of these social circles are rabidly anti-war. They make the same claims about made up polls and mass media conspiracies. The funny thing is, most of these people choose to include only other liberals in their group of friends. A side effect of that choice is that they don't have any friends who support the war. That side effect of their personal choices gives them a very skewed view of overall public opinion. I'm not so selective of friends, and I know far more people who support the war than who oppose it.

    I would disagree here. Wait, I am disagreeing here. Hmm. Anyway, I would say that 70% of the people do NOT support the "WAR" but that 70% of the people support out troops. After all, our troops are our brothers, sisters, moms, dads, children, friends, and co-workers. Not many people want them to die, and few people understand *really* why we are in Iraq anyway. Most people just don't have enough time / money to spend a lot of effort for ANY side of the war. (and I bet many anti-war protestors still drive oil-burning cars)

    But what *my* question is - What the F is up with all these polls? I mean, I have been a registered voter for over 10 years. I own a home, I give to charities. I am in the phonebook, and not hard to find. I have *never* been polled once (unless GM calling to see if I was happy with my service at the Chevy dealer counts). So I just won't believe a poll, until they can poll more than 15% of the actual population.

    I think the issue is more evenly split - just like the country. I would imagine that urban centers are predominatly anti-war, and rural areas pro-war. Hmmm, strange that, eh?

    I do agree that this particular article is a bit odd. Isn't the point of a search engine to find relevant results? If you search for "Second Superpower" and the engine returns a bunch of discussions about it - isn't that good? Or is it bad simply because you might disagree with the pages topic? Whether you agree with the political message or not - it DID discuss "Second Superpower"...

    Other factors can influence things - more than just of the political orientation of friends. How about economic status, religious affiliation, geographic location? Maybe people might have more liberal friends because they live in Eugene Oregon, and are unemployed.... Maybe not...

    1. Re:What polls? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      unscientific --yeah, like calling 1104 people on the phone and bugging them with stupid questions is science-- but there's a poll at irishecho.com where 50% of readers fully supported the Shrub, and another 40% support the troops but not the war. I don't think of Irish Americans as especially pacifist or left-leaning. So with these stupid polls you always have to look at what questions are asked and not asked, what options are presented, how the questions are ordered, etc.

      In my own circles nobody likes this war. I am strongly suspicious of any claims that is overwhelmingly popular. (Well, I'm more deeply suspicious than that, as I see the bandwagon technique as a staple of propaganda, and I believe the military has turned its psyops against domestics. This polling nonsense is crude infowarfare in my book.)

    2. Re:What polls? by valkraider · · Score: 1

      Interestingly, check out today's Boondocks.

  94. 42! by Jaeger · · Score: 1, Troll

    Does anyone else find it amusing that the number of days this great and horrible tragedy took happens to be the answer to life, the universe, and everything? Douglas Adams, anyone?

  95. Second Superpower by ZZ-Type · · Score: 1

    The anti-war people are quite free to put up Web sites that talk about the "Second Superpower" and link to other Web sites that are sympathetic to their cause. They might actuallly go up in the search engine rankings if they did this in an organized fashion.

    I think that the real beef is that the anti-war guys don't have as much mindshare as they believe that they should have. So they're upset that their use of the term is overshadowed by some blogger who happens to have more links and references than they do.

    Search engines just report what's there and what's referred to by others. They don't make moral judgements on the importance of the content. They don't really care if you personally think your definition or usage is more important than the next guy's.

    --

    Those who forget the past are doomed to repeat it.
    Those who forget the past are doomed ... oh
  96. Andrew Orlowski by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Go to the Register and read some of the works of
    Andrew Orlowski:

    You'll see the rants of a wannabe-techie who's more political than tech.

    See his article bemoaning someone fired over anti-war protests...

    Now see his reaction to Dell pulling "hate-radio" ads...

    No conspiracy here.

    I think that perhaps they should consider drug testing at the Register....

  97. Re:How DARE they use Free Speech against liberals? by MourningBlade · · Score: 1

    I would like to add a bit to this. The modern "liberal" movement essentially hijacked the term "liberal." It used to refer to what we would now call neo-liberalism, or free-market.

    This is not to say that the label as applied to "liberals" is completely unjustified: the liberals of old believed that the free market was a good way to promote personal freedom. The New Deal Liberal (the longer term for what many people think of as "liberal") believes that government can be used to promote personal freedom. Both are oriented towards personal freedom, they just take radically different approaches.

    This causes the huge confusion related to libertarian. I remember trying to talk to my step-dad (a Republican) about libertarians, and he was absolutely convinced that libertarians were communists. Because they had the word "liberal" in their title. Kinda. Sorta.

    Chomsky and Nader, two of the more influential "liberals" have tried to distinguish themselves by calling themselves "socialist libertarians", and calling libertarians "neo-liberal libertarians" or "free-market libertarians." The goal here is to a) clear up some massive confusion in terminology, and b) separate the "socialist libertarians" (greens and many, many others) from the "socialist authoritarians" (Communists, Democrats, Republicans - though those last two are hazy. I say that mostly based upon the way they tend to vote).

    One of the perils of free speech is one of lexicon: many concepts are usually gathered under one word. What do you do when someone starts using that word to mean what they consider to be a significant subset (the "true" subset) of the word? People often forget this, but one of the elements of speech being free is being able to choose your own words - even when those words are wrong. Just something to think about.

  98. Right on. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Cute as a plumb,
    Sweet as a pear;

    As delicious as an apple,
    And as lovely as a leaf;

    Truly nature knows no greater beauty
    then what it has made
    into you

  99. Power isn't just about killing people. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    See "Ghandhi", the movie, for a primer.

  100. This Guy Just Doesn't Know How To Use Google by istartedi · · Score: 1

    "second superpower" -moore

    Presto! The first link that comes up makes no mention of Moore's essay, and in fact it links to somebody else's essay that expounds upon the exact point of view that the article wants.

    But that's beside the point. A search engine is a tool that responds to rules. If one side is better at manipulating those rules than the other, tough noogies. If one side is exceptionally good at manipulating the rules, it will become obvious to the point of diluting the value of the search engine.

    Furthermore, I never heard the phrase "second superpower" before this was posted to Slashdot! So my language can hardly be said to have been "googlewashed" of this phrase. Besides, "second superpower" is just a symbol for "antiwar movement". Symbols don't change the underlying meaning. They are just that--symbols. I think the author overestimates the value of symbolism. Most people can see through to the real meaning. Take "USA Patriot Act" and "People's Republic" as examples. What do you think when you see these symbols? If the coiners of these phrases assumed that they would be taken at face value, they were both sorely mistaken, and so is the author of the article.

    --
    For all intensive purposes, "whom" is no longer a word. That begs the question, "who cares"?
    1. Re:This Guy Just Doesn't Know How To Use Google by GreenHell · · Score: 2, Informative

      Did you read the first link? As of right now this is what I get.

      Now, let's look through the page. Nope, Moore doesn't appear anywhere. Ok, this seems fine.

      Oh. Wait. That paragraph that's triggering the Google hit looks familiar. Thankfully there's a link to where the page's creator got it. Let's follow it, shall we?

      Hmmmm... Well, what do you know? She got the paragraph from the page we are at, which, if you check the link to the original article on that page, got it from Mr. Moore's essay.

      Hmmmmm.... Let's take a look at the rest of the links on this 1st page of results, shall we?

      Well, the second one makes an explicit mention of "JimMoore?'s idea" right in the Google summary. So it's out.

      The third one seems a little confused as to what the hell it means by it, but it references "Joi Ito" which, having read the Register article, means that it's a reference to Moore's definition.

      Numbers 4 and 5 are links to different pages as the same site for number 1.

      6 links to a sports article from the Palm Beach Post.

      7 & 8 link to "Library Planet discussion on Second Superpower" which, if you follow the link on the page, ends up being Mr. Moore's article again.

      9 links to comments on an article called "The Second Superpower" which, if you go back to the site's main page, turns out to m=be Mr. Moore yet again.

      That leaves just site number 10 on the first page. It's a historical discussion on the Truman doctrine and the Cold War.

      So: 8 out of the first 10 results returned by "Second Superpower" -moore reference Mr. Moore. The other two have nothing to do with the definition referred to in the Register article.

      It seems to me that knowing how to use Google has little to do with why the authors were unable to find it.

      --
      "I won't mod you down - I feel the need to call you a twit explicitly, rather than by implication."
    2. Re:This Guy Just Doesn't Know How To Use Google by istartedi · · Score: 1

      OK, but as others have pointed out, the essay that the author was complaining about describes a concept that's no different than what the author was describing. The only thing you miss with this "google bombing", as others have called it, is the provenance of the symbol "second superpower". So what? When expressions become popular, they tend to find uses outside their original context, and Google is not geared towards etymology. It has a crude time interface consisting of "updated within the past year, 6 months, 3 months or anytime". Hence the usefulness of etymological documents such as the Hacker's Jargon File.

      You might say that a phrase destined for popularity passes through 3 distinct phases. First, it's early use, in which a Google search will quickly reveal it within its original context, and only within that context. Second, the phrase expands in popularity, clouding out the original context. Third and final stage, the phrase becomes so popular that people wonder about its origin, so somebody feels compelled to publish an etymology--which Google can find.

      The article laments that "second superpower" is in the second stage, and rather ironicly begins to place it in the third stage without realizing what it's doing.

      For example, when I search for:

      "collateral damage" coined

      I get a lot of links that lead me to believe this phrase came out of the 1991 Gulf war. I have to add the keyword "origin" to obtain this link which says the phrase became mil-speak circa 1975.

      That's not much of an etymology, but it's better than nothing.

      The bottom line? If you let your world be shaped only by Google, you deserve the world you get. Remember--you saw this on the internet. It must be true. Now... who said that first?

      --
      For all intensive purposes, "whom" is no longer a word. That begs the question, "who cares"?
    3. Re:This Guy Just Doesn't Know How To Use Google by GreenHell · · Score: 1

      "Remember--you saw this on the internet. It must be true. Now... who said that first?"

      Definitly not me.

      I get exactly what you are saying, and agree with your points.
      I'm just a picky bastard about other things.

      --
      "I won't mod you down - I feel the need to call you a twit explicitly, rather than by implication."
  101. Yep.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm sure google has a staff of people with the Censorship department, deciding what's good to pu tup and what's not. Get your head out of your ***.

  102. Googlewash? More like hogwash by epeus · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Separating out the bizarre attacks on Joi Ito for eating lunch, his thesis seems to be that 'A-list bloggers' have hijacked and neutered the phrase from the Anti-war (or anti-Bush) protestors, and swamped Google with this new interpretation.

    In fact, the original article he cites (reproduced here) did not contain the phrase 'second superpower'; it had a throwaway rhetorical flourish in the first sentence:
    The fracturing of the Western alliance over Iraq and the huge antiwar demonstrations around the world this weekend are reminders that there may still be two superpowers on the planet: the United States and world public opinion.

    (Orlowski elides the first part about the Western alliance to support his these that it's all about the street, man).

    As he says, this meme circulated about the web a bit, and eventually James Moore explored the idea in more detail, and a broader context than just marching against Bush, combining it with the preceding discussions on 'emergent democracy' that had been going for a while. Of course this gets a higher rank for 'second superpower' - it is in the title, and enough people found it interesting enough to link to.
    Instead of a lot of incoherent slogans, here are people discussing how to bring it about.
    Orlowski then completely distorts the quote from Patrick Nielsen Hayden I posted to the list. Discussing a report on the very disruptive, street-blocking protests, where protesters in San Francisco, Boston, Washington and elsewhere shouted the same slogan, "This is what democracy looks like!"

    Patrick said
    No, that's not what democracy looks like.

    It's what protest looks like, and it's often the right thing to do. And of course "democracy" had better entail significant tolerance of unruly protest, or it's not very democratic.

    But that slogan is stupid, even by the standards of slogans. Long and often boring meetings are what democracy looks like. Tiresome horse-trading is what democracy looks like. Talking to your neighbors is what democracy looks like.

    Democracy can function perfectly well without people painting their faces and blocking streets. It can't function at all without that other stuff.


    The emergent democracy group is about how to build tools and structures to capture democratic intent in a digital world. If you're interested in this, join in.

    Perhaps what Orlowski is really worried about is that a group who aren't part of the clerisy of professional Journalists and activists are taking an interest, and actually discussing ideas calmly and rationally, and thereby attracting links from other people, Doc and Dave earned their high Google ranking by writing lots of things that people found interesting enough to link to, day after day for over 5 years.

    Andrew, if you have interesting things to say about the future of democracy, join the discussion, but don't troll for cheap links by stooping to selective quotation and ad hominem attacks.

    1. Re:Googlewash? More like hogwash by Chris+Johnson · · Score: 1
      Actually when I read what this guy is literally saying, I must agree. Democracy does look like 'boring'.

      There's a problem: fascism also looks like 'boring' in that sense. When you totally submit to authority, that's what it looks like- people running dull meetings and such.

      The distinction is almost entirely in what happens to the people who are NOT holding boring meetings, namely those protestors. The distinction is about what's in place to either suppress or empower those people. Maybe it's like cold war Russia in which it's all about suppressing them. Maybe it's like early America, in which protestors like that were absolutely expected, and catered to, specifically to defuse their possible desire to wage bloody revolution. That's the lesson of 'democracy': a formalized admission that you can't please everybody, that there is no stability anywhere, and therefore you've got to be able to coexist with protestors of whatever nature, because if you try to stamp them out it never works and it only helps them foment actual revolution.

      And THIS is what's being complained about with the 'googlewashing'. The idea is that authority figures are colluding to stamp out, defuse, confuse, and otherwise neutralize 'protestors'. If they say 'second superpower' and it's got a ring to it, hijack the word and stop it from representing the ideas it originally was expressing. Astroturf. Make it so that no person can possibly trust their neighbor, that you can't believe anything anyone says.

      "Shared Source".

      "Hey, fellow barfly, did you know I can play video games on my phone?"

      And now, "Check it out, fellow protesters: what we REALLY want to do is support democracy by not making any waves, or disrupting anything, because that would be bad."

      This is a problem for exactly the reasons understood in Colonial days. If you hijack the movement, in order to shut off activity that supports an underlying mood ('kill the corporations! smash the warmongering state! force the machine to stop before it kills us all!'), you don't in fact address the mood itself, you are only blocking one avenue for it to vent.

      This is very, very relevant in the case of anti-war protests blocking streets. There are people who are _desperate_ to stop governments from running amok. It is exactly the situation that could be fomented into revolution.

      To acknowledge and empower this defuses that risk. If you brought those people _into_ the government without toning them down at all, you seriously reduce the grounds for them taking over against your will- or even blocking your streets.

      If you busily co-opt all their outlets, so that suddenly their commie cell leader is saying 'Hey, guys, let's look on the good side of illegal unprovoked war for a change!' and 'Second Superpower' means 'be good and don't rock the boat- we value your opinion!', then the underlying core beliefs are frustrated to the point where only the most desperate action remains.

      Reminds me of 'Fight Club' or something, in a way- when your buddies in the secret commie underground movement are trying to sell you cell phones with video games, and the vaunted Internet is returning info-warfare neuterings of concepts, and no form of media can be trusted, what is even left to do except pick some target that you're sure is bad, and destroy yourself against it, like suicide bombing, like Columbine, all that?

      Right now, the reality is very dangerous. The venting NEEDS to remain possible. The freaky-radical-commie-ideas NEED to be not only expressed, but they've gotta be taken seriously, considered as part of a synthesis, not swept under the carpet.

      To fail in doing this means blood and death.

      You cannot suppress or redirect an idea that refuses to die.

      So you'd better get used to people painting their faces and blocking streets, because if you can stop that, the next step is terrorism out of complete desperation- something that has ALREADY happened from US citizens operating from the inside, not always with a really clear agenda, but it's already started.

      Either the problems get addressed in a serious way, or it'll get worse. Period.

    2. Re:Googlewash? More like hogwash by mvicuna · · Score: 1

      I agree. Andrew Orlowski really seems like he didn't read the essay or he has some huge axe to grind.

      Here is a copy of the letter I sent to the editor. I was very angry at their 'journalism'.

      Hello,

      In your essay "Anti-war slogan coined, repurposed and Googlewashed... in 42 days" posted 03/04/2003 on www.theregister.co.uk you seem to display a lack of reading comprehension or you have a large axe to grind against James F. Moore or google.

      From his essay:

      "There is an emerging second superpower, but it is not a nation. Instead, it is a new form of international player, constituted by the "will of the people" in a global social movement. The beautiful but deeply agitated face of this second superpower is the worldwide peace campaign, but the body of the movement is made up of millions of people concerned with a broad agenda that includes social development, environmentalism, health, and human rights."

      He does not change the 'meme' of 'second superpower'. He still defines it as the 'global social movement' that took part in the world peace campaign.

      He also does not say we must co-operate with the World Bank. He says, "Perhaps too often we attack institutions like the World Bank that might, under the right conditions, actually become partners with us in dealing with the first superpower." He is saying we should try and cooperate with global institutions like the World Bank if they can be partners with the 'second superpower' in their fight with the first.

      He does not call upon netizens to form a new democracy. He says this movement uses the net and other modern forms of communication to organize.

      I suppose being a "Bureau Chief" allows you to sidestep editorial controls, but maybe they should pay more attention to your essays now that you've shown your lack of reading comprehension.

      I won't be returning to your site, even though I used to be a regular visitor, until I've heard you've improved your editorial process or you've been to remedial reading course.

      MarkV.

  103. Spot on by 0x0d0a · · Score: 1

    Google is a mechanism, but it's not the drive. People picking up new phrases is the drive. The Register itself is part of it -- a popular, respected site, it will now drive the meme further and further.

    Google is a good, efficient mechanism for a meme to spread, but it certainly isn't dangerous or evil.

  104. It seems to me... by gilroy · · Score: 1
    ... that if a new word, or a new meaning, can go from pervasive to invisible in just 42 days, maybe it just didn't have staying power... The whole Google conspiracy thing has one flaw: Why would you go looking for "Second Superpower" at all, unless you hit upon it from some other context? Or do people really sit around and just type random assortments of words into Google?


    Look, Google isn't the messiah. But it isn't Orwell redux. It's a tool, and it seems to be one that does what most people want when they use it.

  105. Lock out blogs by GuyZero · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The logicical conclusion, IMO, is to bar blogs from being spidered by google.

    If nothing else it will prevent me from having to hear about everyone's freaking lunch any further.

    1. Re:Lock out blogs by jayayeem · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Weblogs are certainly the lowest common denominator of the web. Everyone has one, and most of them stink (to reference a well known simile).

      But blocking them out of search results seems elitist. Do we only count the opinions of people who are technically savvy enough to use site creation tools? Why not block out sites created with MS Front Page? Obviously the opinions those people have are not worth counting

      The case referenced in this article, Weblogs are probably the best gauge of what this made up phrase should mean. New phrases enter the lexicon through popular use, weblogs are the popular voice on the web right now. Wasn't there a story on /. not long ago about using weblogs to measure marketing penetration of new campaigns? Pretty similar concepts if you ask me.

      --
      I metamoderate, therefore I am
    2. Re:Lock out blogs by GuyZero · · Score: 1

      Elitist, perhaps, but that's the advantage of the "old media" - it's pre-filtered by people with talent and style.

      Blogs are by no means the only offender, but until Google developers a "taste" filter, leaving them out will do.

      Besides, have you seen any "A-list" blogs lately? Google News is better written than scripting.com. Winer's blog is a list of single-word hyperlinks to more single-word link blogs. Cripes. I'd make a Zork joke, but really, being trapped in the twizty maze of passages is more enjoyable than reading scripting.com.

  106. Slashdot! The Third Superpower! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Now with WMD!

    (Weapons of Mass Denial [of Service])!

  107. Re:How DARE they use Free Speech against liberals? by fenix+down · · Score: 1

    He's just using the Fox News logic where they trace back the spinnoffs of the anti-war groups to the 19th century when they were all communists. Hey, did you know Fox News spun off of tabloids... oh, wait, no-spin zone, duh. They didn't spin off.

  108. The proper response is... by alispguru · · Score: 1

    Rather than whining about having their meme hijacked, they should try and take it back, by starting/colonizing a zillion lefty-leaning blogs that use "Second Superpower" the way they want it to be used. This is right in line with the traditions of free speech and the democratic nature of the net, which the original posters support, right?

    Granted, this takes work and resources. It's far easier to just post a complaining article with just a hint of conspiracy theory...

    --

    To a Lisp hacker, XML is S-expressions in drag.
    1. Re:The proper response is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      it's not about conspiracy theory. it's the idea that this pattern exists and that we should be aware of it. i don't see it as complaining, just as an exploration of an idea. and the notion that this phenomenon could be misused, which is something to think about.

  109. verbaldiarrhea by rocjoe71 · · Score: 1
    Personally, I am feeling quite disenfranchisd over the normalcy we seem to be leveraging to this whole "Second Superpower" paradigm.

    Google that.

    --
    Height: 38U, Weight: 0 Newtons, Eyes: #0000FF, OS: Gray Matter 1.0 (Alpha)
  110. Single Digit Superpowers Are Going Fast by istartedi · · Score: 4, Funny

    A Google search for "eighth superpower" returned zero hits, so I hereby declare myself the eighth superpower. First through Seventh already had hits. I didn't check 9 so there may be no single digit superpowers left! Ha!

    What is my superpower? I make people puke over the network. Hey... whaddya expect, I mean, by the time you get to 8th all the cool stuff like teleportation and x-ray vision is taken. At least I got single digit though. I pity the foo who has to settle for 135th superpower.

    Oh, BTW, negative superpowers are evil.

    --
    For all intensive purposes, "whom" is no longer a word. That begs the question, "who cares"?
    1. Re:Single Digit Superpowers Are Going Fast by jayayeem · · Score: 1

      If I had a weblog, I'd link to you.

      --
      I metamoderate, therefore I am
    2. Re:Single Digit Superpowers Are Going Fast by binford2k · · Score: 2, Funny
    3. Re:Single Digit Superpowers Are Going Fast by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Negative superpowers are evil because they have that damn "evil" bit set.

    4. Re:Single Digit Superpowers Are Going Fast by geekoid · · Score: 1

      sweet! I just looked and there is no -1 superpower!
      I declare Ming the merciless as the number -1 superpower, and Evil supreme!
      Hail Ming!
      Hail Ming!
      Hail Ming!

      Well, If I kept it for myself, he just would of killed me an taken it.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  111. Offtopic, but needed... by Omestes · · Score: 1

    After reading all the posts on this thread, I've realized something, most (not all) are not replying to the actual article, it's actual meaning. Everyone is argueing the term "Second Superpower", and not the fact that Google is flawed towards a minority of web-log people. (just say no to BLOG!).

    While I too have strong sentiments towards war, and protest, I have the clarity of thought to SEE what is actually going on, mainly nothing to do with glorifying protest.

    So everyone now please, turn off CNN, take a deep breath, and RTFA! If you still want to rant for/against war and protest, please buy a dog, thats what their here for.

    Nobody is going to be swayed by your opinion anyway. Who's seriouly going to revamp their value system because some /.'er told 'em too? when a /.'er gives me advice I advise you to do the opposite, especially if it has nothing to do with tech.

    Sorry, just one moment of coffee driven zen-like clarity.

    --
    A patriot must always be ready to defend his country against his government. -edward abbey
    1. Re:Offtopic, but needed... by NullProg · · Score: 1

      Nobody is going to be swayed by your opinion anyway. Who's seriouly going to revamp their value system because some /.'er told 'em too? when a /.'er gives me advice I advise you to do the opposite, especially if it has nothing to do with tech.


      There is always the hope that a person can see the truth through correct information (which may or may not exist on /.). Opinions, backed by fact, sometimes does work to persuade the un-informed.

      No flame intended,

      Enjoy,

      --
      It's just the normal noises in here.
  112. beats FOX-washing by g4dget · · Score: 1
    Until recently, the only people who really were heard were those who were part of large broadcasting organizations. Sure, the Web isn't perfect, and neither is Google, and sometimes this sort of thing happens, but it's still a lot better than it used to be.

    Now, as for Google itself, I do think it's not good to have a single search engine that everybody relies on. Google seems to be trying to play nice, but they do make mistakes, and who knows what their management will be like in the future. If it bothers you, there is a simple thing you can do: use another search engine as your default.

    1. Re:beats FOX-washing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I take it your view was beat up on by FOX. Did they not have on, someone who represented your view and speak it on national television? I think they did.

      They sell fair and balanced as the product. They are not about being a one way network (Like CNN). If you don't like the politics of your view, then email them. They do listen.

    2. Re:beats FOX-washing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I take it your view was beat up on by FOX.

      You consider using FOX as an example of a big network "beating up on it"? Gosh, talk about sensitive.

      Beating up on FOX would be something like pointing out that it is a channel run by morons for morons whose political views are more aligned with Mussolini than Washington or Jefferson. But, of course, I would never beat up on FOX that way.

  113. That's not the point. by Erris · · Score: 4, Insightful
    The difference was subtle, but the point was how Google got bombed with the second meaning. The Register noticed that the "NPR" version filled up all but three of the first 30 Google search results for "Second Superpower". It's not a big deal as long as you know that Google is not always the best source of information.

    How it could miss a freaking NYT article? Well, it's probably because the New York Times makes it difficult to link to themselves. They take down older articles and charge for "research" forcing most people to trudge off to the library or do without. Most people who don't want to look like loons pointing to non-extant links don't point at the NYT and so the NYT is going to sink very low in Google results. They deserve it.

    Just the same, we should all be aware that Google can and does miss the originators of ideas. It's a huge step up over pulp publications which could miss entire social movements or hoplessly prevert them according to the world view of the publisher. Google can shine it's light on fledgling ideas you would never have found 20 years ago, much less in today's consolidated media. Yet for all it's goodness, it has not earned its PhD yet.

    --
    DMCA, Hollings, Palladium. What might have sounded like paranoia is now common sense.
    1. Re:That's not the point. by ivan256 · · Score: 1

      You've caught The Register's point, but you missed the overall picture. Google is a tool for using the internet. Now, sombody on the internet attached a meaning to a phrase, and sombody wo writes for the New York Times attached a different meaning to that very same phrase. It doesn't make a difference who was first because they both pulled it out of their asses. Regardless of how popular the New York Times is in the real world, the other usage had a greater impact on internet publishers, and Google is accuratly reflecting that. This isn't a change in our language as El purports-to-be-a-tech-rag Reg suggests, since both usages are less than a few months old, and they're both acceptable analogies for different concepts. This whole discussion is basically the equivalent of Milhouse on the Simpsons saying "Hey, that's my thing. I say Radical." Grow up, learn to play nice and don't loose sight of what you're trying to do (protest a war) because somebody else "stole" your catch phrase. When you support the minority side of a cause you need to learn to deal with the disadvantages that come with supporting that side. You're not going to win supporters by fighting these other silly little battles.

  114. Dumbest. Article. Ever. by nobodyman · · Score: 1


    So, let me get this straight. Basically, the argument is "you stole our word!!" We're talking about one colloquialism's meaning competing with another. Spare me.

    Google didn't kill your word. This is a non-issue.

  115. Well said.... by Beebos · · Score: 1

    As a member of the left, I am so dishearted by the left's willingness to stand up for itself. Democratic politicians have apparently decided that their electoral success lays in being Republican-lite. War protesters have been cowed into silence by the right wing and the media by the slightest suggestion that war protesters are unpatriotic. People who consider themselves liberal are frightened to confess that in public.

    Read 1984 people. Groupthink is not patriotism.

    The left needs to stand up and fight back. Especially now, since the right's vision of the future is a government that is keeping tabs on people who buy 1984 and Cather in the Rye from Amazon.com.

    The difference between a liberal and a conservative is that the liberal cares about you and the conservative doesn't.

  116. Humm funny... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I can now see all the trolls trying to get that page replaced with goatse.

  117. Not the 1st time: look at Gay and Chauvinist by gtshafted · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I don't know why people are complaining, this isn't the first time a word's meaning was replaced by another, nor will it be the last...
    Look at the words, gay and chauvinist. Gay used to mean "to be happy", but now when most people use it; it ussually refers to homosexuality. Chauvinist use to mean, "to be ultra patriotic/nationalistic", but now it's used to denote a male sexist... More recently look at the words, bad and sick... same thing....

  118. what about.. by xo0bob0ox · · Score: 1

    what about google affecting our spelling... by that i mean that becuase it auto corrects spelling maby our spelling isn't getting any better.... i shure as hell know mine isn't...

    --
    Support Objectivism and the United States,

    Ayn Rand

  119. Re:public opinion? by derubergeek · · Score: 1

    Based on increasing interviews with Iraqis, you might want to bump that up to 3...

    --
    Trust me. This is an inactive account. Regardless of what the /. bean counters might report.
  120. Dilution of Trademark by eldb · · Score: 1

    I think more important than the story is the recent trend to use the term "Google" as a common phrase - "to google," "googlewashing." Xerox, Kleenex, and Microsoft are all aware of the possibly of losing exclusivity of their trademarks by having their brand become a household name.

    I hope Google is paying attention.

  121. Hercubush by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hercubush is(was) STRONGER!

  122. bombs away by Erris · · Score: 1
    Well, not very well. Try:

    "Second superpower" -moore Patrick Tyler

    and see three big hits. Kinda wimpy after the 813 hits to inofensive blather Also shocking after a New York Times article then a Quote from the Secratary General of the UN, no?

    The point of the Register article is that Google can be bombed. People who wish to influence public opinion can set up a few web pages and screw Google over. I noticed this durring the 2000 presidential election where Al Gore used his great knowledge of the internet to capture the first 100 hits for three articles published in various pages all with duplicate text for the phrase search "Al Gore" "liar".

    --
    DMCA, Hollings, Palladium. What might have sounded like paranoia is now common sense.
    1. Re:bombs away by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm not sure what point you're making with your post, but your sig is damn insightful. I never thought of it that way, but, yeah, those who can't serve can't influence. Nice.

  123. Re:How DARE they use Free Speech against liberals? by HiThere · · Score: 1

    I'm not sure that was the point of the article to the author, but that was it's point to me. It seems to rather cleanly point to a weakness in the pagerank system that Google will need to address.

    (No, they aren't obligated to address it. But now that someone has identified a weakness, others will rush to take advantage of it. And that will reduce Google's utility unless they take steps to correct it.)

    --

    I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
  124. New Lingo? by CyanideHD · · Score: 0

    Has anyone changed their tongue due to works from google? I haven't modified my vocabulary with words like googling, but I have used l337 sp34k as a joke.

  125. I've Got Your Second Superpower by jayayeem · · Score: 0, Troll

    The second superpower is in my pants.

    --
    I metamoderate, therefore I am
  126. Googled, Registered and Slashdoted by Jungle+guy · · Score: 3, Funny
    I would add a new twist to this matter: this story has appeared on The Register and on Slashdot. I predict that, in a couple of days, when you google for "the seccond superpower", this story will have a high ranking. Even higher than when it first appeared on Dave's Winner scripting.com.

    Oh! The irony!

    1. Re:Googled, Registered and Slashdoted by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you spell it like that, indeed, your post will be one of the few results that show up...

  127. I've finally found you! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1
    France sure as fuck doesn't.

    You are truly the ugly American. I'd say you should travel a bit to broaden your view. But then again, as an American tourist, I really don't want to encourage you to take a serious piss on the local culture wherever you go. That would cause more people to treat me badly when I travel abroad. So please, stay locked in your basement with your copy of the constitution and your arsenal of guns. The liberal media conspiracy are coming to get you!!!

    I consider the Constitution of the United States to be the single greatest document ever known... Our rights are endowed to us by our creator.

    Look out, your creator might think the bible is better than that constitution.

    1. Re:I've finally found you! by tweek · · Score: 1

      I've actually been outside of the United States. I was in India for a month. I was also in Zurich for a short jaunt.

      As to the creator comment, the founding fathers (at least Thomas Jefferson) were fairly humanistic. I think the fact that they DIDN'T say "Jesus" or "Yahweh" or "Buddah" says quite a bit about the fact that the rights you have are inherent as a human being.

      --
      "Fighting the underpants gnomes since 1998!" "Bruce Schneier knows the state of schroedinger's cat"
  128. the first definition by Erris · · Score: 1
    I think it speaks for itself, but the author claims that hitting the streets made a difference. The Harvard definition is something closer to sitting on your ass for a few extra hours of overtime while bitching, emasculated and without effect. Sounds like Harvard.

    Oh yeah, it was hard to find that link. A search for "Second superpower" -moore "Patrick" "Tyler" pulled up a big three links. Flush.

    --
    DMCA, Hollings, Palladium. What might have sounded like paranoia is now common sense.
  129. Fourty-two... by AnyoneEB · · Score: 5, Funny
    42 Days
    Orwell would be amused, indeed.
    Orwell would be amused? What about Douglas Adams? ;)
    --
    Centralization breaks the internet.
    1. Re:Fourty-two... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What about Douglas Adams?

      He's dead.

  130. +1 Sarcastic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wow that was funny.

  131. Re:How DARE they use Free Speech against liberals? by 0x0d0a · · Score: 1

    The point of the article isn't about competing "memes", it's about flaws in Google's PageRank system. In this case, the weighting of site importance on the basis of the number and authoritativeness is being thrown by the incestuous linking behavior of weblogs.

    First, I don't see it as a flaw.

    Second, I'm not sure what one would do that would be considered "better".

  132. No results for "Jesus Christ Superpower" by Ignominious+Poltroon · · Score: 1

    But it would also be a good band name...

  133. do you remember? by squarefish · · Score: 1

    a couple years ago, I think it was right after the election, if you typed 'dumb motherfucker' into Google it brought up a link to the bush jr. official store. You can see one of the original stories about it in this wired article.

    I think they actually threatened to sue Google over it- Google had to force the removal of it from their system. It was very funny!!

    --
    Creationists are a lot like zombies. Slow, but powerful and numerous. And they all want to eat our brains.
  134. You heard it here first... by dfay · · Score: 1

    Google is the real "second superpower".

    First of all, I don't have any problem with the PageRank system. But you have to admit, google has entered our vernacular ("googling") and affected the way we perceive the internet. Google is, and stands to remain, the dominant web search engine. People are beginning to equate google with web search. Imagine how you would use the internet if you had absolutely no search capability? (Of course, there are other search engines, but what I'm saying is that people are starting to think that google=web searching. When they do that, they subconsciously assign that level of value to google.)

    This is the latest sign. The story is not whether google is "fair" or not about some stupid attempt at creating a meme. The story is that:
    1) People are starting to think about whether something that google does is "fair" or not. That's the kind of language usually used to describe government entitlements, social conventions, democratic processes, etc. Remember, Google is a company. It used to be a little company; it's probably not very large still. Think of the kind of power that they have!
    2) Google was able to spread this new meme extremely far in 42 days. That may sound like a long time to people used to thinking about how quickly an email virus can propagate, but it seems really very fast for a meme to propagate. An email virus can infect the next host by an automated electronic process. For a meme to be effective on google, the meme must be part of something that one user reads, thinks about, and posts an essay or some comments about, then a latency is incurred until the next person(s) reads these comments. Brains are much slower meme-processors than computers are virus-processors. But google is proving to be a very fast "network" connecting us as nodes.

    It's no wonder that Microsoft wants to compete with google. They are beginning to see how much power google holds and they envy it. I hope google wins that battle, because I trust their excellent track record of good decisions over Microsoft's.

    Still I can't help wondering if the growing power that they enjoy over the "internet experience" is a healthy thing. It's kind of like living in a country that has a benevolent king. Things are great, but it makes you wonder what the king's son is going to be like.

    Dave

  135. Monopoly! by bmantz65 · · Score: 0

    Someone shut down Google! We want fair competition! Only MS can save us now

  136. Misunderstanding Orwell by Zhe+Mappel · · Score: 1
    There are two pretty obvious problems with The Register's argument. One, the meaning asserted in the New York Times article and that asserted in the Moore piece aren't drastically different. Two, what is in question is only a recently-coined neologism, anyway, and not some fundamental concept upon which everybody agrees already (e.g., "election" -- oh, wait, scratch that; "liberation" -- whoops; ok, how about "monkey brain"). There's nothing Orwellian at all about speech communities refining, altering, and even appropriating meaning in slang. It happens every day. Get wid da shiznit.

    Now presumably Orlowski has read his 1984, but if he has then he missed the point: Orwell was (quite properly) concerned with official mutilations of common, fundamental language; indeed the ever-shrinking Newspeak dictionary is conceived in order to make the population mum with no choice but consent -- that is, to end the very possibility of recourse to a language capable of opposing government power. We don't have much to worry about from bloggers in this regard. At last check, they still aren't the Big Cheese -- no matter where Google ranks them.

  137. Wake UP! by mimmm · · Score: 1
    Futile futile futile, I know...since most of /. are by now refreshing the front page constantly so they can try and post first on the next topic to appear....anyway:

    I think most people have missed the point to this topic, and have rushed to the defence of beloved Google, informing us how to - and : and & and whatever to refine our searches.

    The point raised is that it may be possible for a small number of people to subvert any searchable term - in a fairly short time - by working the pagerank system.

    Most posters who suggest that you can simply use Google's (excellent) filtering and logic abilities to cut the cr!p out are really just reinforcing this the articles suggestion...by applying a filter, you have to know what you want to be filtering out! And lets face it - if you're searching for a term for the first time, that you are unfamilar with, how many people filter? What do you filter with?

    In the example in the article (and this is what it is, not some leftist whinging - you can tell this if you actually read the words) a keyword to a specific body of information which was not widely known but was reasonably well defined, was replaced by a completely different body of information in one month! WTF?!

    It's been worrying me now for a while that Google ranks ideas (yes, those things you search, are all some form of idea) by popularity...not relevence. You all know that popular things are not mostly relevent. Hands up all S-Club 7 listeners. Touche.

  138. Re:How DARE they use Free Speech against liberals? by iabervon · · Score: 2, Informative

    Google essentially fails to correct for the number of links a page author tends to put in, meaning that authors who just put in a lot of links have a larger effect of google than authors with a sparser linking style. Since authors who put in a lot of links tend to have readers you do so as well, communities with this behaviour are overrepresented on google (when they happen to mention the subject you're searching on, at least).

    Probably the PageRank effect should be reduced if the linking page links a lot (*1/root(links) or *log(links)/links). Of course, google can probably come up with a better solution.

    The other thing is that google should probably attempt to produce the most unconnected highly-ranked pages, since if a page is connected to a search result, you can probably find it that way. This would lead to having a blog entry at the top and no other blog entries near it.

  139. Many americans live in the dream made by G.Bush by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It is quite certain that just one man did all this paraferanria to create the war to Iraq. Is it good or bad?, this is not the goal of this post.
    What I want to say is that Americans must check their actual president, where he comes from and what has done to get the precidency.
    What is he?, well, he is a member of a rich family. His family has been inmersed in oil business.
    Where does he come from? From a party that is pro the arms (whats the name of the rifle and something that permits the use of guns to the americans in america (he hope that never would impose to the rest of the world)? The same party has slow down the process of Microsoft antitrust (maybe, Microsoft would not exist if AlGore had won). And many other details that you remember better that me (a very young american girl).
    What did he do to get the precidency. I'm just 10 years old, and I know that he did something grong in not letting to recount all the votes made in Florida. What I think he did is to superpass all the legal elements of the country (in the "right" of doing it).
    The same thing happens now. If George Bush did not care about the transparency and legal democracy of HIS own nation and people, what actions should we expect he to do to other countries and people from other nations? Answer: to corrupt all the legal procedures (like he did with, in my humble opinion, with this war).
    Please, co-nationals, maybe I'm just a very young girl (who reads (and stopped reading) many newspaper everyday) from america. Let's think better who are the rulers of the FirstPower, where we are very lucky to live in.
    Thanks,
    Nancy W.

  140. the USA government is interested in the rich by wadiwood · · Score: 0

    And making the rich get richer.

    if they had your interests as a USA citizen at heart, you would have
    free health care
    free good quality education to tertiary level(ie everyone gets the same quality environment, and texts to learn from)
    social welfare for anyone who fell out of a job or house for what ever reason.
    rehab not punishment for criminals, ie provide them with the life skills they need to live straight when they get out.
    no capital punishment
    proper minimum wage and benefits that people could actually live on
    enviromental control on pollution, so that you are not made sick by where you work or live.
    proportional representation (see NZ) and independent election supervisors (see Florida for how not to do this)
    Foreign aid that actually benefited foreigners not USA companies. Ie make it nice to stay at home.

    Notice that only rich people are doing well in the USA and that the revolution may well come from within, just like what happened to Russia.

    Personally I'd much rather support social welfare and prescription heroin programs and the like than be mugged, or burgled because I am lucky enough to have what someone else wants and doesn't have the opportunity to get legally.

    Having the USA government in charge of everything means that truly nasty people like Dick Cheney and Halliburton make off with all the money, wealth and resources of the world, and dump all their toxic waste and anger of the exploited on your doorstep.

    You are right about France. But I'd love to have Medicin sans Frontiers in charge.

    --

    -- it must be true, it's on the internet.
    1. Re:the USA government is interested in the rich by Arandir · · Score: 1

      And why you're at it, maybe the USA that has your and my best interests at heart can just give us a lot of money so we don't have to go to work and can spend all our free time surfing slashdot. Maybe they should give us girlfriends too so we don't have to waste our time at the singles bar. Wouldn't that be wonderful?

      --
      A Government Is a Body of People, Usually Notably Ungoverned
    2. Re:the USA government is interested in the rich by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      wow, you are just fucked in the head, aren't you? I mean, damn!!! Maybe you're just a troll. In which case, IHBT. But, damn!

      TANSTAAFL!! There Ain't No Such Thing As A Free Lunch, buddy, somebody's gotta pay for it, and the Law of Unintended Consequences will come around and bite you in the ass. I won't point out all the ways in which you're wrong, because there are so many, so very, very, many, but it won't change your mind. You need a change in philosophy. Here, read this excellent work of fiction:

      http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/03 12 863551/qid=1049435726/sr=8-1/ref=sr_8_1/104-565883 9-8042318?v=glance&s=books&n=507846

    3. Re:the USA government is interested in the rich by tweek · · Score: 1

      And which part of that is the job of the United States government under the Constitution? I don't remember the "we will be a nice socialist state and provide these things for you".

      You know why the rich get richer? Because they work for it. I don't remember the last time a poor person signed my paycheck.

      Free health care is not a role of the government in my opinion. You end up with bottom-feeder doctors and the cheapest work possible.

      While a society benifits from an educated populace, education is not the pancea that many make it out to be. I've known some people who are over-educated and still stupid and without common sense and work-ethic.

      I personally think our punishments aren't harsh enough. This parole shit needs to go. Actions have consequences. Unless you happen to be someone famous.

      Capital punishment is not a topic to debate. It's just like abortion. It never goes anywhere and breaks down into who's emotions are stronger.

      Why should the government dictate what a business can pay it's employees? Let adult people make adult decisions and agree on a contract. The companies that don't pay for shit won't have enough employees to survive. Competition. Free Market.

      I have no problem with environmental concerns. It comes with having a fiancee who works for the EPD ;) I've learned a bit. I just worry about bad science making decisions that can cost us too much.

      I'll get back to the representation issue when I have a chance to read up on how NZ does it.

      Screw the foriegn aid alltogether. We never get anything in return for it. It's not like any of the countries we've ever provided aid to have done anything in return. If you want to discuss some sort of moral obligation, I say go to church and discuss it. Keep moral issues out of government. It's why we have stupid laws banning consentual adult sex between adults when they both happen to be of the same sex. It's why a woman's right to do whatever she wants with her body is being taken away from her. FYI I'm opposed to abortion but that's a personal, moral choice. I don't want government dictating morality.

      Everyone has the same chance to succeed in this country. As long as a man has his liberty, he can achieve the things he wants (as long as those desires do not rob another of his/her liberty).

      Well you and I probably differ on the role of government in social programs but from a pure cost perspective treatment is cheaper than enforcement. I'd rather the government let adults make stupid decisions that only affect themselves and not try to play parent.

      I appreciate the discussion BTW.

      --
      "Fighting the underpants gnomes since 1998!" "Bruce Schneier knows the state of schroedinger's cat"
    4. Re:the USA government is interested in the rich by mfrank · · Score: 1

      However did you come to the conclusion that having everything paid for by tax money is in the people's best interest?

      Capital punishment? I live in Texas. The problem in Texas isn't that the people are bloodthirsty, it's that, for some stupid reason, it is impossible for a jury to sentence somebody to a life sentence. They can get out on parole. You can't put somebody away for life in this state. So if a jury thinks that somebody is too dangerous to ever be allowed out in public again, their only realistic choice is the death sentence.

      You must be in your 20s. You've obviously never worked through an economic downturn before. Do you know that the average standard of living in the European countries you admire is about two-thirds that of the average American?

      Don't expect a revolution anytime soon within America.

  141. bafijasfnasi hdsifbhsadifhasfsaf by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ed people!
    [ Reply to This ]

    * Re:Parsing error! by Anonymous Coward Thursday April 03, @08:23PM

    This is a fantasy (Score:0)
    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday April 03, @07:45PM (#5657351)
    A world superpower without the ability to kick ass? What a joke! Too bad this is only a pipe dream.
    [ Reply to This ]

    * Re:This is a fantasy by Anonymous Coward Thursday April 03, @08:16PM

    What do you expect... (Score:0)
    by capitalsucks (632554) on Thursday April 03, @07:45PM (#5657357)
    (http://crimethinc.tk/ | Last Journal: Thursday April 03, @12:08AM)
    from a company that M$ is looking into buying? This is exactly the kind of ethics that M$ is looking for, dominating, commandeering and such. Is it any wonder why the Software Emperor Gates has such a keen interest in it? His various czars must be going ape.
    [ Reply to This ]
    42 days? (Score:1)
    by eamber (121675) on Thursday April 03, @07:46PM (#5657361)
    (http://www.amlor.org/ | Last Journal: Friday December 06, @11:15PM)
    Maybe it's somehow connected to the ultimate answer...
    [ Reply to This ]

    * Re:42 days? by Dragon213 (Score:2) Thursday April 03, @08:02PM
    * Re:42 days? by Anonymous Coward Thursday April 03, @08:05PM
    * Re:42 days? by Anonymous Coward Thursday April 03, @08:05PM

    GOOGLE THIS (Score:-1, Troll)
    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday April 03, @07:46PM (#5657365)
    FUCK BUSH & FUCK WAR ... ya that's right bitch. ban my IP--censorhsip gets your nowhere.
    [ Reply to This ]

    * Re:GOOGLE THIS by pirate_mickey Thursday April 03, @07:48PM
    o Re:GOOGLE THIS by Anonymous Coward Thursday April 03, @08:09PM

    I fail to see the crime here (Score:5, Interesting)
    by mekkab (133181) on Thursday April 03, @07:47PM (#5657369)
    (http://apl.jhu.edu/~mekkab | Last Journal: Wednesday March 26, @08:19PM)
    nor do I see the reason for concern.

    People try to say a lot of buzz-words and catch phrases. Some catch on, some don't, and some morph. Didn't Edison try to associate "to Westinghouse" to mean electrocution? (he thought 120 Volts AC was excessive. Guess what's running in my house, eddy?)

    Can I get my story posted on slashdot when I try to bring back the word "Skavoovie!" and it takes 42 days for the internet to decide that I'm a dumbass? NEWS AT 11!
    [ Reply to This ]

    * Aaron Brown of CNN Newsnight by Anonymous Coward Thursday April 03, @07:58PM
    * Re:I fail to see the crime here by Anonymous Coward Thursday April 03, @08:02PM
    * Re:I fail to see the crime here by tux rulez (Score:1) Thursday April 03, @08:02PM
    o Re:I fail to see the crime here by Anonymous Coward Thursday April 03, @08:07PM
    + Re:I fail to see the crime here by tux rulez (Score:1) Thursday April 03, @08:36PM
    * Re:I fail to see the crime here by seanadams.com (Score:2) Thursday April 03, @08:06PM
    o Re:I fail to see the crime here by Anonymous Coward Thursday April 03, @08:22PM
    * Re:I fail to see the crime here by Anonymous Coward Thursday April 03, @08:45PM

    How about 'google chumps' (Score:2, Flamebait)
    by djupedal (584558) on Thursday April 03, @07:48PM (#5657376)
    When are you goggle fan-boys going to realize goggle is not all it's cracked up to be?

    This is a perfect example of how dramatically useless it can be any any given moment. When you put your trust in one resource, you risk cutting yourself off from reality.
    [ Reply to This ]

    * Re:How about 'google chumps' by djupedal (Score:2) Thursday April 03, @08:41PM

    A word's meaning/context was co-opted? (Score:2)
    by Syncdata (596941) on Thursday April 03, @07:48PM (#5657377)
    (http://slashdot.org/~Syncdata/journal | Last Journal: Saturday March 15, @02:18PM)
    In our Culture? Unheard of!
    I'm sorry that the person who originally coined this term had it's context, queered by someone who used it for his own purposes, but t

  142. Not quite...... by Brian_Ellenberger · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "The United States is NOT a super power because of its "large world wide voice". The United States is a super power because IT IS POWERFUL ENOUGH TO COMPLEATLY DESTORY EVERY MAN WOMAN AND CHILD IN ANY NUMBER OF NATIONS AT ANY POINT IN TIME IT SHOULD SO CHOOSE TO DO SO"

    Russia can still do the same, but are not considered a superpower anymore.

    Superpower is one of those words so overused that people forget its meaning. A regional power is a country that has a large amount of power and influence in a particular geographic region. Britian, France, and Germany are European powers. China and Japan are East Asian powers.

    A Superpower is a country whose influence extends far beyond its region to every part of the globe. During the Cold War, United States and Soviet power was evident in every region. The Soviets had power all the way into the Americas as evidenced by Cuba and the communist uprisings in Central America. The United States had power in places as far off as Europe, Korea, and Turkey.

    After the fall of the Cold War the United States is the only country that has that sort of reach. Russia can't extend its power to start uprisings the Western Hemisphere anymore. The United States just a short time ago helped the Northern Alliance take down their enemy the Taliban half a world away in a land notorious for "chewing up" big-shot powers for hundreds of years. That's power. That's a superpower. It is not just being able to blow everyone up. It is also being able to influence people through ideas and arguments. Its about making what you want to happen actually happen.

    Not every country strives to be a superpower. Remember this when you hear about China being the next "superpower". China has shown little interest in what happens outside their region. If they had Taiwan they would be pretty much content.

    Europe recently failed the superpower test by their inability to stop the genocide in the former Yugoslavia and the necessity of the United States to come in and stop the madness once again. That is just embarrassing. Imagine if France had to come over here and deal with Mexico. You have to be able to deal with your own region before you can see yourself as a "superpower".

    Brian Ellenberger

    1. Re:Not quite...... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Damn, Brian, you smart. Wish I had mod-points...you'd get 'em.

    2. Re:Not quite...... by Galvatron · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Not every country strives to be a superpower. Remember this when you hear about China being the next "superpower". China has shown little interest in what happens outside their region. If they had Taiwan they would be pretty much content.

      Once upon a time, the USA didn't care what happened outside of the western hemisphere (the "Monroe Doctrine"). We had to be dragged kicking and screaming into both of the World Wars. Now the USA is a superpower. I have little doubt that China would be similarly unable to resist the meddling impulse if they became as powerful as the USA.

      --
      "The question of whether a computer can think is no more interesting than that of whether a submarine can swim" -EWD
    3. Re:Not quite...... by luisdom · · Score: 1

      It is also being able to influence people through ideas and arguments.
      The US??
      Its about making what you want to happen actually happen.
      Ah, OK, didn't understand at the beginning. You meant "support your ideas and arguments with money and military power".
      Let's be sincere, all the important decisions that the US has made were blatantly in his own interest. Afghanistan? Hunt Bin Laden? No, build an oleoduct. Iraq? Throw out an evil dictatorship? Ha ha ha! They even want to put them CDMA! And how did they get allies? Through money.
      But your point is right. Superpower is getting things done, but in this fu**ed world of us is not ideas and arguments that get things done. It's money. And is not ideas that motivate getting things done. It's the same money.

    4. Re:Not quite...... by musicmaster · · Score: 1
      Remember this when you hear about China being the next "superpower". China has shown little interest in what happens outside their region. If they had Taiwan they would be pretty much content.

      Only Taiwan? You forget that China has borderclaims on most of its neighbours: Vietnam, India, Russia and the Philippines. Just a few years ago they pressured one of the former Sovjet states (Kirgizistan if I remember well) to hand over a large piece of uninhabited mountainland.

      In the past the Chinese were active in faraway countries like Tanzania and Albania too. For the moment they are no match for the US, but that doesn't mean that they don't have the ambition to be a worldpower too.

    5. Re:Not quite...... by Jherico · · Score: 1
      The United States just a short time ago helped the Northern Alliance take down their enemy the Taliban half a world away in a land notorious for "chewing up" big-shot powers for hundreds of years.

      The Taliban are largely made up of the people we armed and trained during the cold war to 'chew up' the russians. Essentially the whole thing back then was just a war by proxy. They weren't bad-assed fighters, they were just backed up by the CIA.

      Of course after the cold war ended, they just became a bunch of fuckers with guns that we didn't really care about anymore, which pissed them off quite a bit and in turn led straight to September 11th.

      With military backing from a major power (super or otherwise), and with world opinion against them after the attack, it was just a matter of flying in and stomping them flat.

      --

      Jherico

      What can the average user can do to ensure his security? "Nothing, you're screwed"

    6. Re:Not quite...... by Dr.+Evil · · Score: 1

      I have little doubt that China would be similarly unable to resist the meddling impulse if they became as powerful as the USA.

      I smell a pre-emptive self-defense action brewing!

    7. Re:Not quite...... by donutello · · Score: 1

      Not every country strives to be a superpower. Remember this when you hear about China being the next "superpower". China has shown little interest in what happens outside their region.

      Except the Chinese have this nasty habit of calling everything "their region". They think Tibet is "their region". They think Taiwan is "their region". They think parts of India are "their region". And if they ever get all that they will want to further expand "their region".

      --
      Mmmm.. Donuts
    8. Re:Not quite...... by geekoid · · Score: 1

      " Remember this when you hear about China being the next "superpower"."

      China is a super power. more importantly they have won.
      Based just on birthrate, within 100 years, "chinese" will be spoken in every city on the planet. Since chinas government is steeply based in there culture, where ever a population of "chinese" settle, there government become defacto within there group.

      China is communistic the way a kitten is a lion. Look at there trade, in a lot of respects, the free market is more widespread in china then it is in the US. For the "chinese" race to take over onlty take time. It is better to have your race be everywhere, then to be on government.

      Now this is not an "anti-chinese" rant. It's not an anti anything, its just whats happening. In a couple hundred years when the globe as intermixed so much, there is really only one race, maybe then we'll be more collective and get are act together.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    9. Re:Not quite...... by Com2Kid · · Score: 1
      • China is a super power. more importantly they have won.

      • Based just on birthrate, within 100 years, "chinese" will be spoken in every city on the planet.


      How does birthrate correlate to population dispersion?

      Oh wait, it doesn't. . . . Unlike the French of the past, the Chinese are NOT making a concentrated effort towards expanding their culture globally.

      • Since chinas government is steeply based in there culture,


      If I where of Chinese origin, I would consider that an insult. :-P

      "Yes yes, you all have overly complicated and HORRIBLY corrupt buercracies that slaughter anybody you disagree with."

      I should sure hope not!!! I know too many nice Chinese Americans for that to be true!

      • where ever a population of "chinese" settle, there government become defacto within there group.


      Ummm. . . .

      *looks towards China Town*

      No.

      • China is communistic the way a kitten is a lion.


      China is communistic the way that a lion acts after being BEATEN IN THE HEAD REPEATEDLY BY ITS TRAINER UNTIL IT OBEYS.

      The US pretty much has FORCED China to turn to SOME form of capitalism.

      But it is by NO MEANS a pure form. Indeed most capitalistic tendencies throughout China ONLY occur because hefty bribes are paid towards key local government officials.

      It is like paying off a judge to make him give the 'correct' verdict. That does NOT make for a "just and morally sound" society, it just makes for one where the big guy with all the bucks gets everything.

      At least in the United States a person doesn't need to outright BRIBE city officials to get anything done. Fill out an butt load of paperwork, yes, but it is possible to open a relatively unfettered business in the US with just a few simple and rather affordable licenses.

      (the main exception being Environmental regulations that indeed big rich companies HAVE shown to be able to pay off officials to have those officials "ignore" the requirements for. Yes it sucks, but the level of corruption in the United States, while quite crappy, is NO WHERES near as bad as it is in China)

      • Look at there trade, in a lot of respects, the free market is more widespread in china then it is in the US.


      If you have money, you can pay off the right people to be allowed "free" trade. If not, you are branded a killer and shot (well, more likely "detained" or "fined").

      • For the "chinese" race to take over onlty take time.


      I care to disagree, I would say that a RACE taking over is not going to happen, a CULTURE taking over, maybe. But the Chinese culture is to, err, culturally specific. More generic cultures such as the "United States'" culture have a far better chance of becoming dominant, because they can mesh into anywheres without too many over major changes happening to a person's daily life. So few rules exist within American Culture that more can be placed on top of it as needed to adapt to an environment.

      • In a couple hundred years when the globe as intermixed so much,


      Dude, at the rate things are going, in another 100 years it is going to be 60% Chinese, 40% "every other race having mixed together and created some freaky thang".

      Except the Chinese will at BEST be dispersed over the rest of the globe, AKA always out numbered, or at WORST be all grouped together, surrounded on all sides.

      No

      One

      Race

      will
      EVER become dominant.

      After the Roman, French, English, Ottomans, and the Germans, how many more freaking times does this have to be learned?

  143. Multi Level Marketing by moankey · · Score: 1

    This is somethign that is also done by a synthetic oil company called "Amsoil"
    If you try to do a search on any info regarding synthetic oil you will get pages and pages of results that point you to Amsoil or one of their multi level marketers, regardless of which search engine you use.

  144. Pedantic Ass Inside! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "irregulars - people defending their country"

    Partially correct, yet the Bush administration is using no spin here.

    Hello hello, Mr. M-W.com:

    2. not belonging to or a part of a regular organized group; specifically : not belonging to a regular army but raised for a special purpose (irregular troops)

    The constant reference to Iraqi irregulars does not refer to their lack of fiber in their diets, but it does refer to the random civillians who were drafted/given guns/had guns pointed at them, and ordered to defeat the Imperialist invaders.

    They're not regular army, and quite frankly, they suck. All irregulars do. The military synonym for irregular is 'cannon fodder'.

  145. In the former Soviet Russia by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Dave Barry" was a great name for a Second Superpower.

  146. More about the Second Super Power by Zapdos · · Score: 1
    Find it here

  147. is this slashdot or salon.com ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nobody else noticed that this was a shameless use of power to voice Mr. Moore's opinions to countless slashdotters?

    Or were they just modded down?

    - Anonymous Coward

  148. Popular is not ubiquitous either by epeus · · Score: 2, Interesting

    One of the things we discussed on the Emergent Democracy list is the problem that Google assumes a link is an endorsement. When I link to Orlowski's hogwash, I am pointing out what is wrong with it,but Google takes that as an endorsement by me.
    My Vote Links proposal is meant to fix this.

    1. Re:Popular is not ubiquitous either by greenrd · · Score: 3, Insightful
      XML could also fix this, in a more flexible way. This is where free-format XML web pages[1] (which aren't really used yet AFAIK, but are on the horizon) could come in useful. You could have different "link types", e.g. , etc. Then if this was standardised (doesn't need to be 1 standard way of doing it, multiple standards would be OK, as long as you use one that's quite popular), Google could take this into account in searching.

      I don't think that this particular "Googlewashing" is intentional by Google, I think it's just a result of their algorithm which looks at link popularity, as mentioned in the article; Google are privately-held (no public shareholders) and the management seem to be liberal/libertarian, e.g. they refuse to take advertising from gun and tobacco companies. On the other hand they have allegedly collaborated with at least 1 government to censor themselves, but in the case of China that was probably a case of "either you censor yourselves or we block you completely", so they probably didn't have much of a choice in that case.

      So anyway, I think they would be quite into these link-type discriminators and would like to use them if they became widely used. Another reason why XML is the future...

      [1] In other words, non-XHTML XML styled with CSS or XSL, if you want to get *really* technical. Using a multiple-output-type delivery system like Apache Cocoon, you can still support older browsers and serve this up to browsers which support it. (Make sure your outgoing proxy, if any, supports the HTTP Vary header though!)

    2. Re:Popular is not ubiquitous either by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >greenrd wrote:
      >the management seem to be liberal/libertarian, e.g. they refuse to take advertising from gun and tobacco companies

      I don't believe that's true. If you search google for 'handgun' you see sponsored links on the right side.

    3. Re:Popular is not ubiquitous either by bash99 · · Score: 1

      I'm in China and don't think they collaborated with China to censor themselves, China use some filter in router to block any keyword, but googel still return them.

    4. Re:Popular is not ubiquitous either by greenrd · · Score: 1
      I don't believe that's true. If you search google for 'handgun' you see sponsored links on the right side.

      I don't. Perhaps it's a country-specific thing? I'm in the UK, where handguns are banned (IIRC).

  149. google doesn't define language by Trepidity · · Score: 1

    As ubiquitous as its usage might seem to us, Google is only used by somewhere around 30% of regular internet users, whose numbers are put at 134 million in the US. That makes google users account for approximately 13% of the US population. The rest of the 87% never use google. Even of the 13%, many probably use it only rarely, or only for school/etc. research. Certainly only a very small percentage of people (slashdotters, basically) are influenced enough by google that it would define their speech patterns. Social influence at school/work/etc. and television/radio are much more likely to do that for the vast majority of people.

  150. they have no power, and that's the point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Bush and his ignorant lackeys who will drive this country into debt-ridden ostracism if not unchecked don't listen to the citizenry. They don't listen to the rest of the world, and they obviously don't give a damn about anything but elections, oil, empire, and dad (to steal a phrase from a foreign dignitary if I recall correctly).

    This is the whole point the article is pointing out: the original meaning of the "Second Superpower" was different: that the current "administration" is too arrogantly stupid to actually listen to anyone--citizenry, military experts, economists, allies--you name it. And the only thing that will put them in check is popular opinion and protest.

    You say that the protesters don't have any power, but I say otherwise. If they continue to protest, and enough people voice dissent, maybe Bush won't get reelected, and maybe future "presidents" who aren't elected will think twice about doing something in as stupid a way as they have done. Maybe if other countries' citizenry gets pissed enough, and boycotts Coke, Levis, McDonalds, Microsoft, and you name it, and the corporations get the fucking point, then maybe Bush and his lackeys will understand that they're pissing friends off.

    Your attitude, that it doesn't matter anyway, and that we should all go home to our SUVs and support the president, and maybe oppose the war after it's over, from the comfort of our own home, is the sort of thing the second meaning of "Second Superpower" implies.

    So ironically, the fact that you don't see the difference is the very problem that the article is pointing out. The original phrase has a very potent meaning and--more importantly, message--that has been usurped and washed out by a small minority.

    1. Re:they have no power, and that's the point by GnarlyNome · · Score: 1

      your point being that Retoric trumps Logic

      --
      Diplomacy is the art of saying "Nice doggie" until you can find a rock. Will Rogers
    2. Re:they have no power, and that's the point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      One small issue is the fact that 95% of the protestors are between the ages of 17 and 23 years old. While not all are in this age group, they make up the majority of the group.
      The reality is that the protestors are a small number compared to the population of the United States, and the world. Protestors only have any power when they are in bigger numbers AND they do something other than protest. Something like voting and spending money only with those companies and organizaitons that agree with their view points.
      Words change meanings all the time. In the past it took longer, but in todays information based society, it can happen over night. That's just the reality of an information society such as ours in which information moves very fast. Get over the fact that the phrase was changed.
      While the repubulicans are liberating Iraq, Assholes like you are still trying to say (orshouldI say crying like a baby) that Bush wasn't elected. He was elected by the United States of America legally and Constitutionally--get over it. Gore tried to hijack the election until he got the results he wanted. Gore should go to jail for what he did. You'll just have to get over it--and that's all there is to it!!!!
      If that ASSHOLE Clinton had done his job, then Bush wouldn't have to clean up after Clinton's messes AND WE WOULD STILL HAVE THE WORLD TRADE CENTER IN NEW YORK. Clinton didn't do his job, and that's the reason we have to liberate Iraq--because Clinton didn't do it.
      You liberal scum have to just get over these supposed gripes of yours. It's SCUM LIKE YOUR THAT LET HITLER RISE TO POWER AND START KILLING JEWS!!!!!

      THe PEACE FREAKS ARE NOT A SECOND SUPERPOWER!!! GET OVER IT BECAUSE THEY DON'T HAVE ANY POWER. It's that simple. The power they have only exists inside the delusional minds of the youth that has lived in a crystal palace compare to the rest of the world. Peace doesn't keep you safe! Peace is only won through constant diligence. 9/11/2001 reminded us of this lesson just like Pearl Harbor did, and we will be reminded again if we forgot this important lesson.
      What the PEACE FREAKS don't realize is that you can't stay free with peace. Peaceful countries get attacked--especially when they are controlled by peace freaks who refuse to keep the military ready to defend the country.
      The whole idea that the military is for building homes in poverty stricten places of the world is completely wrong. The military is for defending a country and striking FEAR in the hearts and minds of our enemies. The Cold War was not won by peace freaks. The Cold War was won by diligence alone.
      Your crying like a little baby because your term got diluted is unimportant because the opinion of those protesting is only a small portion of the population of the United States. Get over it. You are not as important as you think you are, and your idea of how the world works is grossly misguided!!! Grow up and come into the real world!!!

  151. Can Bush's power to give information to the people by No.+24601 · · Score: 1

    be misued and perverted? Yes, everytime he opens his mouth.

  152. this how google is supposed to work by tqft · · Score: 1

    it trawls finds links that link to lots of highly linked stuff ergo clicking on search results take you to "powerful"/"hub" info spots. get a grip people If you don't line it - use aol or msn and have them nanny you through the internet

    --
    The Singularity is closer than you think
    Quant
  153. News vs blogs by DaoudaW · · Score: 2, Interesting

    There are different nuances, but I think the blog is within the bounds of legitimate discussion on "Second Superpower."

    But there are two important issues raised by this example. One, James F. Moore never credits Tyler (or anyone else) with coining the phrase. The only mention of The New York Times is in the context of the importance of big, possibly biased news media. That is out-of-line for legitimate discussion, especially since he seems to indicate a connection to Harvard in his byline.

    The second issue is the way Google separates news from the rest of the web. A search of "Second Superpower" in Google news provides a much broader discussion of the concept than a Google web search. Maybe the real issue is that blogs are not static content, but actually a new form of journalism. A simple fix would be for Google to list blogs with news.

  154. Re:How many divisions does the Second Superpower h by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Clever, very clever. Not funny, not insightful, but clever. If there were a "+1 Clever", it would be yours.

  155. Re:How DARE they use Free Speech against liberals? by GnarlyNome · · Score: 1

    middle class? not outside of the major citys the rest of the country thinks their nuts

    --
    Diplomacy is the art of saying "Nice doggie" until you can find a rock. Will Rogers
  156. Surprisingly enough, google is a search engine by LemurShop · · Score: 1

    Surprisingly enough, google is a search engine, not a dictionary. More "important" pages show up first. More people search, follow searches than link, etc, to the blog that to other pages so it comes on top. I thought that was the point in the first place?

    --

    This sig was cut off by the sla
  157. Plus built in bookmarks for blogs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Home page is google and I've gotten into the habit of typing "david hyatt" and hitting "I'm Feeling lucky" to get to Dave's safari blog.

  158. Don't lynch Moore quite yet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Visible, nonviolent protest with the goal of educating the public is the best means to achieve social change. However, in order for it to be truly effective, citizen of democratic countries need to be also educated that democracy is not a right, it is a duty. Duty to participate in government, duty to be educated in what the government is doing and why it's doing what it's doing. With fewer than half of eligible voters don't participate in the ultimate democratic process, voting (god knows what fraction of those are "truly" educated about the votes they're casting). We are clearly not performing our duty.

    The original Moores main point seemed to be that the internet can be a huge enabler for democracy, because it makes some elements the democratic duty much easier (read cheaper) than it has ever been. These are namely education, including alternative points of view, and the organization of political movement. And yeah, the guy seems to be an idealist (who probably grew up in Marin CA, or Brookline MA, or Princeton NJ, or some other plush suburb), so he plugged his favorite dreams into the log... and what's the big deal?

    But the problem with google is real. And the fact of the matter is that google is a tool, you have to know its limitations and you have to take that into account when using it.

  159. "melted away"? by benedict · · Score: 1

    On March 23, I marched against the war in Manhattan
    with 100,000 or 250,000 other protestors, depending
    whether you believe the cops or the organizers. So don't
    talk to me about opposition "melting away".

    --
    Ben "You have your mind on computers, it seems."
    1. Re:"melted away"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      OMG, there's a war in Manhattan??

  160. OMG by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Stop if you fucking Anti-war freaks.... If you people would stop making up things in your demented pot-filled, happy-place heads, maybe you would see that the world is full of losers, and hell, why not get rid of them. Read any report on the conditions of people in Iraq. Hell, its not even ILLEAGAL for a high-ranking Baath-party member to kill someone!

    You people think blocking the roads so people can't get to work and earn a freaking living is justified, well your screwed. Bush really couldn't care LESS about you, so give up, and GO HOME!

    Get a life, and try to trade in your heads, if they're not rejected as being too damaged.

    I hear Bush plans on finishing up with Zimbabway in 2006, and with anti-war protesters in 2007! (Satarday Night live take-off)

  161. Naming convention by CrazyJim0 · · Score: 1

    Don't name your product something that's easily searchable on google. Name it something badass and cool, but something original that hasn't been big... Unless you want to drive down your profits and the profits of another company with the same name.

  162. Simple, don't use Google as a dictionary by Steeltoe · · Score: 1

    Google is not a dictionary. If you want to look up a word in an "authority-approved" way, don't use a WWW-search engine, better yet, don't use the WWW at all!!

    This is a classic case of people complaining about a tool, when they're using the tool the wrong way. Google doesn't have any more power than you give it.

    Besides, as long as Google rank their pages in a semi-democratic way, I don't see how people can complain about that. The fact that the article ranks so high up, is because of people's interest.

    Do you claim YOUR interest to be worth more than thousands of others? Then YOU might BE the problem.. Often people who just complain, are...

  163. No. You're wrong. by blissful+ignorant · · Score: 1

    Super power does not mean power about normal power. The term super power was created as a level about the Great Powers - France, Germany, Russia, WWI era stuff. After the end of WWII and the emergence of the United States and the Soviet Union at a whole new level, a new term was needed, hence, Super Power.

    To say that peace protesters have no power is incredibly short-sighted. The Vietnam War is the most recent example. The British gave up on the US's revolutionary war partially due to a large peace movement at home. Many, many more examples of protesters changing public policy exist.

    I should think that the opinion of the vast majority of the world(which is what the term "second superpower" assumes) is at least equal to all the planes, tanks, boats, and nukes the US has. Pen and sword, and all.

    --
    Valete!
  164. Where are the mods? by blissful+ignorant · · Score: 1

    This off-topic, didn't read the article, third grade grammer level, illogical, chest-beating rant crystallizes why most of the world believes America to be a land of arrogant jerks.

    --
    Valete!
    1. Re:Where are the mods? by tweek · · Score: 1

      I wasn't commenting on the "googlewashing" so much as I was commenting on the body of work that refers to "second superpower".

      Third-grade grammAr you mean? What is illogical about my post? I will gladly admit it to be a rant but there is nothing that is untrue about my post or in the least nothing that isn't reasoned out.

      And as you might have gathered from the post, why should I care what the rest of the world thinks about the United States much less what you think about the United States.

      --
      "Fighting the underpants gnomes since 1998!" "Bruce Schneier knows the state of schroedinger's cat"
  165. Sounds like a problem for google more than us... by ebyrob · · Score: 1

    If google is begining to provide results where all but 3 of the top 30 spots in a search for anything are a single page, then I doubt I'll be using it much longer.

    I mean, google worked great when it first came out, but the rankings seem to have gotten steadily worse since then. How much longer before it's not worth using?

  166. Social Network Theory by Michael.Forman · · Score: 3, Insightful


    The referenced Register article, which chronicles the "Googlewashing" of the term "second superpower", is an excellent example of social network theory and its effect on language.

    Unfortunately, the Register incorrectly assigns the blame on alluded conspiratorial behavior of webloggers. In fact, the phenomenon is not the result of a conspiracy, but a natural consequence of the dense network that interconnects bloggers.

    The critique of the Register article along with an introduction to social network theory is provided here .

    Michael.

    --
    Linux : Mac :: VW : Mercedes
  167. Re:I love the google* words: Googlegoggled. by Randym · · Score: 1
    ...what else are there?

    You forgot Googlegoggled. As in

    "I have to look through how many hundred thousand pages to find what I'm looking for?!? I'm Googlegoggled!!!"

    Googlegoggled -- despairingly stunned at the amount of work that lies ahead of oneself, especially when that amount of work appears unexpectedly.

    "Just thinking of writing that thesis googlegoggles me!"

    "There I was down to +10 health, when I rounded the corner and was googlegoggled by the number of monsters between me and the exit!"

    "We were at 90%, thinking we could deliver with only 10-hour days the rest of the month, when the client googlegoggled us by changing the specs!"

    (See how useful it is? 8^D )

    --
    DNA is a Turing machine. You, however, being dynamic and emergent, are not.
  168. Re:How DARE they use Free Speech against liberals? by 0x0d0a · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Google essentially fails to correct for the number of links a page author tends to put in, meaning that authors who just put in a lot of links have a larger effect of google than authors with a sparser linking style.

    How do you know this?

    The last whitepaper Google published on their design (cool though it is) is *years* upon *years* out of date, and AFAIK they're not handing out info on the specific metrics, and haven't for a long time. They have definitely revised their system since then to avoid various attacks people have tried on it.

    They could be doing precisely what you're predicting.

  169. I never promised you a Rose Garden by skillet-thief · · Score: 1, Redundant
    A few dozen netarati with popular blogs can make the original hard news article that coined the term to be dropped from the first page of the search results. This is in fact proof that google sometimes doesn't work.

    Nobody ever promised us that Google would be an accurate representation of society, of the language, or anything else. It's just a way of finding stuff on the internet.

    We have started giving Google these almost God-like qualities. Google is still "working" just fine. It might turn out that it is not a sure source of universal wisdom, however.

    It's a search engine. Get over it.

    --

    Congratulations! Now we are the Evil Empire

  170. Google by barry_williams · · Score: 1

    ...The Second SuperPower

  171. Not the first time terms have been redefined by SgtChaireBourne · · Score: 1
    Google's ranking algorithm merely weights pages on their popularity among sites that are themselves popular. Simply put it's tyranny of the majority, and when the majority shifts so does the ranking. This is not the first time that terms have acquired new associations. Because of the way the algorithm works, it won't be the last time.

    Previous examples have been funnier:

    --
    Beta is broken and the link to classic doesn't work. Stop wasting our time or there won't be anybody left here.
  172. it decided the German election by uncoda · · Score: 1

    It may yet decide the Spanish election later this year, and the anti-war sentiment of the populace of Mexico, Chile and Turkey appears to have affected their governments' votes on the Security Council or their cooperation with American military plans.

    Not long ago a new phrase for this sort of thing was "People Power". For a long time we've been calling it "democracy". Now we've had millions demonstrating together worldwide. It's fun to have a global consensus.

    1. Re:it decided the German election by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The point is their's is a small number--it's just that they have a loud voice. Any countries that didn't help such as turkey will face long term consequences of their decisions. In the case of Turkey, they probably won't get any money from the United States to help them--money which they really need.
      Protests, and protestors, only have power when their is many in the protest, and the ages range needs to be more than 17 to 23 for a vast majority of the protestors.
      Protest for the Vietnam Era did have both these things. Peace Freaks are not a Second Super Power, and that's all their is too it.

    2. Re:it decided the German election by mfrank · · Score: 1

      In a few years, you might be surprised to find out what the Iraqi people are saying about the "second superpower". I bet they'll be saying the same things that other recently liberated people like the Poles are saying.

      Of course, the French can just tell them to shut up and remember their place.

  173. Second Superpower by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    Second Superpower?

    imo Orlowski's gripe is unwarranted and Moore's proposition is interesting. Blogs are the big media story of the aggression in Iraq. Even the old, broadcast media (e.g. bbc) are scrambling to get in on it. The key aspect of current media usage is that tv viewing is down, and internet searches are up. People are skeptical and are seeking out alternative sources of information. Blogs are getting crazy traffic. And on search engines "al jazeera" is more sought after than "sex." Story here. This ain't simply armchair resistance; it's a widespread and determined rejection of official viewpoints, and that's way political. The phenomenon suggests that the internet is to some degree realizing its potential for making information free and allowing people to be better informed citizens of the world.

  174. Re:No. You're wrong. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    To say that peace protesters have no power is incredibly short-sighted. The Vietnam War is the most recent example.

    That's kinda the problem, isn't it? If the peace protesters had any clout, this war would be the most recent example.

    I should think that the opinion of the vast majority of the world(which is what the term "second superpower" assumes) is at least equal to all the planes, tanks, boats, and nukes the US has.

    The evidence indictes otherwise. But then again, I don't think the vast majority of people give a crap about this war except to yell at their TVs.

  175. MOD THIS UP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    MOD THIS UP

  176. just 2 points by ThinWhiteDuke · · Score: 2, Interesting

    It's in my best interests for the U.S. to be on top. The United Nations doesn't hold my best interests. France sure as fuck doesn't.

    You know, the same reasoning would (to some extent) make you prefer despotism to democracy. Your neighbor doesn't hold your best interests, you do. Still, you agree (I assume) to give your neighbor(s) some power over you. I don't think that France or French people want to decide what the US or American people should do in their everyday life. The idea here is that in some rare critical international issues (read "war") a "democratic" international body (the UN) should override individual countries interests. I'm not sure how far I can push this nations/people analogy, but I think you get the idea.

    I consider the Constitution of the United States to be the single greatest document ever known to man
    Everybody in the US seems to believe this, or that no country is freer than the US, or whatever along the same lines... This is truly amazing! Do they tell you that repeatedly in school as soon as you can talk? Come on, who can say that the US constitution is better than any other democratic country's. Are you a consitutional lawyer? Have you actually read the US constitution? Have you read other countries constitutions?
    Besides, more important than the constitution is the way it is implemented. Have you visited other countries, do you read foreign newspapers? All democracies have their flaws. I acknowledge that most European countries have serious issues regarding corruption and excessive bureaucracy. But the US is far from flawless! To a foreigner, the deep (incestuous) ties between the government and big business in the US should be a major concern for any responsible American citizen. Also, many Europeans are puzzled (to say the least) by the absence of clear distinction between state and religion in the US. This feeling is exacerbated by the recent drift of the Iraq war toward a religious war. This seemingly absolute faith that the US is right or has moral superiority is both a strength and weakness for America. Yet I think that Americans should think about it a little bit more. It cant't hurt.

    This post is not intended as a flame, nor does it want to protest or support the US intervention in Iraq. I'm just trying to improve my (and maybe your) understanding of these complex issues.

    And yes, I'm French, you can start frogbashing.

    --

    It would be nice to be sure of anything the way some people are of everything.
    1. Re:just 2 points by tweek · · Score: 1

      Actually that's not true. I don't prefer democracy at all. Pure democracy is the worst form of government.

      A democracy is nothing more than mob rule, where fifty-one percent of the people may take away the rights of the other forty-nine.
      Thomas Jefferson

      As to giving my neighbor power over me, that's not really the case. Realising that we live in a world made up of people, there has to be a government to secure those rights. For me, the role of government is very limited. Do the things I cannot do myself i.e. national defense and ensuring that my rights are secured. The second one is handled by laws (or in John Ashcroft's case - NOT secured by creating laws that take them away) and enforcement of those laws. If a man truly believes in personal freedom and liberty, he has to be willing to give that same right to someone else. This is why, while I'm opposed to abortion on a moral level, I don't want the government making laws restricting a woman's access.

      "The legitimate powers of government extend to such acts only as are injurious to others. But it does me no injury for my neighbor to say there are twenty gods or no god. It neither picks my pocket, nor breaks my leg."
      Thomas Jefferson

      I never said that I didn't want some sort of international body but I don't think the U.N. is it. The U.N. has grown into this self-important beast that can't manage itself.

      And not everyone seems to believe this sadly enough. In fact I don't think the Constitution is taught enough. I've not always been this into personal liberty but as I've gotten older, it's something that concerns me more and more. Have I read other countires documents? Not many. I honestly don't see how they have limited the power of government when there are still things like socialised medicine and high rates of taxation to cover that.

      "The democracy will cease to exist when you take away from those who are willing to work and give to those who would not."
      Thomas Jefferson

      I also am frightened by the recent lack of distinction between our government and religion. I do not begrudge our president his right to religion. I do begrudge him for trying to force that on our country with his buddy John Ashcroft. I detest the thought that the United States has some sort of moral obligation to rid the world of "evil" as well. I don't care about "evil" in the world. I consider John Ashcroft and evil man personally. That's a moral classification though and when you introduce moral dictations from a government, you end up with the Taliban.

      I didn't read your post as a flame. I wasn't actively trying to flame France. I just used them as the most obvious example. Mes. Chirac has his own interests at heart as well. He was free to cater to the Muslim world but now he has to deal with those consequences.

      --
      "Fighting the underpants gnomes since 1998!" "Bruce Schneier knows the state of schroedinger's cat"
    2. Re:just 2 points by ThinWhiteDuke · · Score: 1

      I didn't read your initial post as flame either.

      About government power: we tend to be less concerned than Americans about limiting it. Or more precisely, I believe that the government's involvement in economic matters (high taxes, high benefits) is more a problem of enonomic efficiency than of public freedom. BTW I loved your last Jefferson quotation : "The democracy will cease to exist when you take away from those who are willing to work and give to those who would not."

      About the UN: I agree that the UN are far from perfect and I would gladly welcome any proposition to improve it. Yet I'm usually cautious about solutions based on razing and rebuilding from scratch. While this has been necessary in rare occasions, most "revolutions" in history have not met expectations.

      About catering to the Muslim world : I don't know the exact figures but I believe we have more than 10% of Muslims in France. Generally speaking, we've done a poor job of integrating them and they have on average lower incomes and higher unemployment rates. Also, we've been very concerned these years about the rise of "communitarism" (is it a word in English?) i.e. the fact that an increasing number of people define themselves more by the community they belong to (religious, ethnic, even sexual preference) than by their French citizenship. Many people see this as a threat to the social bond and a sign of the failure of our integration model. This may well have been a significant factor in our government's decision to adopt its stance in the UN. Anything that would stir tensions between communities is regarded as a bad thing for our country. We already see too many people overtly supporting Saddam or shouting anti-semitic slogans in anti-war protests. And believe it or not, this is a real concern for us.

      --

      It would be nice to be sure of anything the way some people are of everything.
    3. Re:just 2 points by tweek · · Score: 1

      I think the main reason Americans are so concerned about government power is due to the roots of our country. As to government efficiency, I would wager that the majority of services performed by government could be better handled by a private industry. There are some exceptions to this of course i.e. military.

      Since you enjoyed the quote so much, here is another from Jefferson that he wrote just after visting France ( a country to which he was greatly enamoured)

      The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants.

      I'm sure you can guess which event lead him to make that statement?

      I'm curious as to why nationalism is such a bad thing in the eyes of so many Europeans. I am to understand that in Germany, being vocally pro-Germany garners stares and concerns of racism and neo-nazi association. At one time, France was STRONGLY pro-French culture. Resistance to Euro-Disney and such. I have a legitimate concern because my family lineage is French (A great-grand something or other was a high ranking officer for the French Army during the U.S. Revolutionary war.)

      As to Chirac, here is an article by a frenchman for an admittedly staunch conservative publication here in the states. Do any of the points in that article match personal experience?

      --
      "Fighting the underpants gnomes since 1998!" "Bruce Schneier knows the state of schroedinger's cat"
    4. Re:just 2 points by mfrank · · Score: 1

      Wow. Interesting article. Wonder if American and British troops will be liberating Paris from fascism again in ten years.

    5. Re:just 2 points by tweek · · Score: 1

      Well I take everything I read with a grain of salt. Especially when it comes from a fairly biased source.

      I thought that the main reason Chirac was so opposed to military action, was simply the "illegal" business deals he had negotiated with Iraq. I never realized that there was more to it than that. My french skills are not what they used to be (allthough I've been refreshing them recently - you'd think five years of language classes would stick!) so looking for news sources from France is not a real option. As I said before, as a frenchman in some regard, I'm curious about this attitude and that of the population of France which is why I am enjoying the discussion with ThinWhiteDuke and any other natives who want to join in.

      What really has me upset is the desecration going on at American and British gravesites from WWII right now.

      --
      "Fighting the underpants gnomes since 1998!" "Bruce Schneier knows the state of schroedinger's cat"
    6. Re:just 2 points by ThinWhiteDuke · · Score: 1

      Sorry, I've just read your reply. Don't know if you'll read this but since you seem interested, I'll post this anyway.

      First about the desecration of UK (I didn't hear about US) WWII gravesites. I don't know how it was covered by US media, but you must know that It has been taken very seriously here. ALL major papers, TV channels and radio stations have mentioned it and condemned it. French Prime minister and a number of ministers have made public appearances to condemn it. Chirac has even gone to the very unusual step of writing a letter to UK's Queen (I suppose it's the correct protocol) apologizing and condemning it. Now, about what exactly happened AFAIK: some morons have drawn UK-hating signs and messages on a gravesite. No grave-digging. Happened just once. Basically, everybody in France was disgusted by this and I'm sure you can understand than in a 60 millions people country, there might be a couple wackos who could do something like that. This is an isolated incident and doesn't mean anything about French people.

      About the article you linked to: this really is crap. First, I'm sure you realize that the tone of the paper is extremist and that the guy actually advocates racism. He just stops short of saying that all Arabs/Muslims are jew-hating rapists. I don't know who's that guy, but he's obviously an Arab-hating racist.
      Saying that Chirac is a friend of Saddam Hussein doesn't make sense. They met once in '77, at a time when Iraq was regarded by everybody (including the US, I read Rumsfeld met Hussein in '83) as a legitimate business partner. Period. I must admit that France has not always been very concerned about the human rights track-record of countries we're doing business with but hey, are the US sinless on that matter?
      Chirac has been under a lot of heat about the handling of public funds recently. Most French people (incl. myself) believe that he has been very generous with himself, but not on a huge scale. To put things in perspective, the media and opinion here are VERY suspicious on any connection between the state and corporations. A business executive joining the government while maintaining any kind of interest in a private business would be unthinkable here.
      All French politician advocate human rights, freedom and democracy. Recently, most French politicians have repeatedly stated that they considered the US our long-time friends etc...

      Yes, Bush is often portrayed as a moron; but most of the times articles insist on the new doctrine from US neo-conservatives. Those are not portrayed as moronic but as slightly scaring. You can also quite often read people supporting the US position in mainstream papers or TV shows. All major papers have covered extensively on Irak's regime's crimes. Statements from Iraki officials are always taken with a huge grain of salt. But US statements too!!

      Yes, we've had a surge in anti-semitic acts. Yes they mainly come from radical muslims. But pretending that we don't care or that we excuse them is just a plain lie. Everybody talks about it and the police have taken serious (and, might I say efficient) steps to prevent more of this. And giving the impression that France has now become a country where Jews are forced to hide is just a lie.

      Yes there has been a number of cases of gang rapes in some very unsafe cities. This is a crime problem and is dealt with accordingly. All countries have similar problems. I've lived in San Francisco and would not have let my girlfriend alone at night in the Tenderloin. One rape per month is terrible, but it's not a huge rate in a 60 million people country. Hinting that all Muslims are potential rapists is racist and untrue.

      The problem is not Islam, it's radical Islam. Islam, with approx 6 millions souls is the second religion in France. This comes from both historic (Algeria was once a part of France) and geographic reasons. Overall, we've done a poor job of integrating them. They have a low
      average income and high unemploym

      --

      It would be nice to be sure of anything the way some people are of everything.
  177. Re:I love the google* words: Googlegoggled. by Carewolf · · Score: 1

    mmm. try search for "html documentation"..

    You will be surprised (or maybe not) by how much documentation there exists presented in html.

  178. Is Bill Gates a Socialist? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I remember a time when "windows" was a generic GUI term, now it is a specific operating system. Office was a place to work with typewriters, now it is a software suite. Software ecosystem was the variaty of softwar running on the web, now it is a term for Microsofts products. I guess if he is a socialist, his party is ENGSOC.

  179. Re:No. You're wrong. by Azghoul · · Score: 1

    "The vast majority of the world".

    Dream on. On so many fundamental levels that's so completely ignorant of fact and history that there's nowhere I can begin to correct it.

    LOL, I just noticed your nickname, I guess it makes sense. :) (j/k)

  180. Brilliant analysis. by Futurepower(R) · · Score: 1

    Brilliant analysis.

  181. Libertarians: The Real Enigma by NDPTAL85 · · Score: 1

    What libertarians as a whole do not seem to understand is that the purpose of a society is not to see who can win/survive in the most savage, primitive, undignified and brutal ways imaginable just to satisify the semantic definitions of absolute individual freedom. It is to provide a maximum level of comfort for the greatest amount of people it possibly can.

    Do you honestly think that all the money you pay in taxes goes towards law enforcement? Even if you used all of your tax money to pay for personal gaurds, where will get the money to pay for all the other things the government used to do? How will you maintain the roads? Will we all need Hummers to travel from city to city? When diseases run rampant and there is no government funded CDC to study and combat them what will you do?

    I could go on and on and on but I would much rather know this, WHY do you SEEK to live in such a world? How could your mental processes be so corrupted to think that such a state would be preferrable to what we have now? Are you just criminaly bored, sadistic or both? Are you seething thru your teeth that there are people currently alive who would not survive for 5 minutes in a Libertarian's Dream World of Brutality and Inhumanity?

    I already know what you guys want. Just tell me WHY you want it.

    --
    Mac OS X and Windows XP working side by side to fight back the night.
    1. Re:Libertarians: The Real Enigma by TheSHAD0W · · Score: 1

      Okay, we've gone way off topic here, but I can't help responding to this one.

      No, no, NO. The purpose of a society is NOT to provide a maximum level of comfort for the greatest amount of people. That may be one of the yardsticks used to measure a society, but it isn't the PURPOSE. The purpose is to give people a structure within which they can interact and resolve conflicts. That's all.

      You may think it's okay to tax people's income in exchange for services they may not need or want, or take their property by eminent domain in order to maximize everyone's comfort. You may think that in order for everyone to live happily it's okay to leech off the most productive members of your society. I'm afraid I think you're absolutely wrong.

      As for the "libertarian dream world of brutality and inhumanity" -- I say that the Zero-Aggression Principle trumps your brutality claim, and that state-sponsored "humanity" is cold-hearted at best and ultimately ineffective. If people are naturally inhumane, then why are charities some of the biggest businesses in the US?

    2. Re:Libertarians: The Real Enigma by NDPTAL85 · · Score: 1

      Seeing as how nearly every society on earth whether it be Democratic, Monarchal, Totalitarian or Collectivist seeks to attain a common standard of living for the highest amount of its own citizens I would say they world has rejected your particular stated goals of a society.

      Do you really think that in a world with lttle to no government protection that everyone or even most people would simply operate in a way that is safe for most people? The strong would not prey on the weak?

      Lastly it isn't leeching. Those individuals who happen to currently be the elite of whatever country they are in benefitted from the very things they too are taxed to provide. How many currently rich geeks and nerds would have even survived childhood alive without the protections expected and provided by various levels of municipal, state and federal government? What would be there to stop anyone who decided they wanted to from attacking and stealing the things the rich own? You'd have a much smaller amount of middle class and upper class folks because not even all of they can afford to pay for their own 24/7 private security.

      Charities? If they're so good then why are the causes they exist to solve still around? Some charities have been around for a century or more yet no lasting progress. Not exactly the best solution for the problems they attempt the address now are they?

      --
      Mac OS X and Windows XP working side by side to fight back the night.
    3. Re:Libertarians: The Real Enigma by TheSHAD0W · · Score: 1

      I think your grasp of history has been somewhat romanticized. Monarchal and totalitarian governments have never sought to attain a common standard of living; they benefited the privileged classes and treated the rest as serfs. The only reason they protected the serfs was to not hinder the collection of tax monies and to keep them complacent. There have been "enlightened" kings and despots who apparently worked for the benefit of the country and people, but there were the exception rather than the rule.

      Democratic governments weren't formed to establish a "common" standard of living, though they've usually been corrupted to do so. Collectivist ones were indeed founded on that principle. Both types of governments have been proven by history to indeed create a common -- and low -- standard of living -- save for those few who got to actually run the government.

      As for not "leeching" -- On the one hand, you're worried about the rich getting stolen from, but on the other hand, you don't want to let them take care of their own security. You're giving with one hand, and taking with the other -- without the built-in protections of the free market keeping prices from going through the roof or services from going to hell. And there's no way to practice free market security as it is now; the government would regulate you into oblivion if you tried to run a private security company to compete with the police.

      As for charities -- yes, the world still has problems, despite their existence. Despite the existence of "benevolent" government, too. But charities operate more efficiently. I can also withhold my money from an ineffective charity and give it to an alternate, which I can't do with a government agency.

      Anyway, we've strayed a LONG way from the original topic, of terminology having been corrupted by the deliberate misdefining of adjectives. Let's put this thread to rest and resurrect it somewhere more germane.

  182. complex Superpowers by k2r · · Score: 1

    > I pity the foo who has to settle for 135th superpower.
    > Oh, BTW, negative superpowers are evil.

    Actually, I declare myself [me.person] the complex superpower (i).
    Actually I don't do anything special.
    But engineers need me.

    k2r

  183. Obvious solution by CausticPuppy · · Score: 2, Funny
    This page-ranking nonsense almost guarantees that hard to find things remain hard to find. Why? Because the easier to find things float to the top (people have *found* them and linked to them).


    Then I just thought of a great idea for a new search engine. It would use google's PageRank system, but lowest ranked pages would appear at the top. Presto! The hardest-to-find pages are now the easiest to find.
    I think I'll call it.... Elgoog.
    --
    -CausticPuppy "Of all the people I know, you're certainly one of them." -Somebody I don't know
  184. "second superpower" my arse by bobKali · · Score: 1

    Yea, and just look at how effective this "second superpower" was in enforcing its will. (I'd hardly call the "peace movement" a power, nor would I consider world opinion to be united enough to exist as a single coherant entity.)

    Then again France is still considered by some to be relevant in today's world.

  185. Re:I love the google* words: Googlegoggled. by usotsuki · · Score: 1

    Like looking for the legendary "DOSPLUS 2" OS for PCs. It's hard as fsck to find, but it's known to exist...and no amount of STFW will do anything... :\

    -uso.

    --
    Dreams, dreams, don't doubt dreams, dreaming children's dreaming dreams. Sailor Moon SS
  186. Re:How DARE they use Free Speech against liberals? by gughunter · · Score: 1

    Welcome to Slashdot, Your Holiness! Don't click on the goatse.cx links.

  187. You are not the only one by kilroy_hau · · Score: 1

    And that's the problem

    You see, there are lots of people who never heard the term before (myself included). So one day you hear "Second Superpower" and what do you do?

    1.-Search for it on google
    2.-Find some useless weblog
    3.-Decide that is nothing important
    4.-Ignore that there can be any other possible meaning.

    The "Second superpower" was supposed to be the power of public opinion. You could be interested in joining it. you could be part of this superpower. But because of disinformation, you are simply not interested.

    --


    Kilroy was here!
    1. Re:You are not the only one by donutello · · Score: 1

      The "Second superpower" was supposed to be the power of public opinion.

      I read the article and that's exactly the meaning I got out of it. I fail to see the "other meaning", however.

      --
      Mmmm.. Donuts
    2. Re:You are not the only one by kilroy_hau · · Score: 1

      As I said before, this is a boring article, and i decided it was not worth my time.

      Now you made me read it all to answer you.

      The "other meaning" is more subtle. This weblog focuses on the public opinion in the internet The worldwide population currently connected on the internet is less than 1%. On all the net connected people there are different groups, opinions and goals. This article takes a very little group of people and calls it "The Second Superpower", diluting the meaning of the word.

      If I believe for a moment that this little piece of population is what I see on the news or hear on the streets labeled as "Second Superpower", I may think that it's just a bunch of nerds using their free time to complain. What's so super about it? Why would I want to be a part of it?

      These are some paragraphs on the article


      Meta-blogging sites crawl across thousands of blogs, identifying popular links, noting emergent topics, and providing an instantaneous summary of the global consciousness of the second superpower.


      The weblogs are a very little portion of someone's opinion. Calling them "instantaneous summary of the global consciousness" is like asking a kid on the street what is his favorite TV show and concluding that everyone in his city loves that show.


      the second superpower is not currently able to match the first.

      Wrong. This is not the case. Public opinion is sumarized every election and puts people in power (assuming a legal election). Public opinion IS the power where the First Superpower drains it's own. Again, this is diluting the meaning of "Superpower".

      And toward the end of the article, it states
      we must carefully consider how best to support international institutions, so that they collectively form a setting in which our power can be exercised. Perhaps too often we attack institutions like the World Bank that might, under the right conditions, actually become partners with us in dealing with the first superpower.

      Uh? What does the supporting the World Bank has to do with the power of public opinion?

      So, after reading this, I may decide that this "Second Superpower" (whatever that means) is not worth my time or my attention.

      And that's the problem.

      --


      Kilroy was here!
  188. You're missing the whole point of "endorsement." by VT_hawkeye · · Score: 2, Informative
  189. Wow by MochaMan · · Score: 1

    ICMBs [..] worlds oceans [...] COMPLEATLY

    I guess when you spend all that money to buy all the military hardware you need to become a super-power, you've got to make concessions to other *ahem* social services. But hey, who needs spelling when you've got ICMBs?

  190. Is your search unique? by siskbc · · Score: 1
    If not, then someone else probably made a similar search (thus upping the page ranks). Also, just because something is tough to find in the context of your search (maybe only a few keywords match), that doesn't mean that the site doesn't happen to get a lot of traffic and links for the whole of its content. And ultimately, if you make your search restrictive enough, you WILL find what you want.

    Basically, google CAN function like an old-school boolean search engine if you want - additionally, it can do a whole lot more.

    I think the only kind of site that is more of a problem with google is something that has low traffic, nothing linking to it, and deals with mundane, redundant information that pulls up a jillion links.

    For what it's worth, I search for some wierd shit sometimes, and almost never fail to find what I'm looking for. You just need to know how to massage google.

    --

    -Looking for a job as a materials chemist or multivariat

  191. Re:Sad news ... Stephen King dead at 55 by Stephen+King · · Score: 0
    --
    Karma: Undead.
  192. Page numbers etc. by Arpie · · Score: 1

    Just click on the page numbers at the bottom and go to lower ranked pages.

    I also don't see what's the problem with using -this and -that to filter out the results. You can't expect a computer program to read your mind.

    The great thing is, if you don't wan't the vanilla results, the tool allows you to get them, like this or like this .

    If that's not enough, there's even a Google API for tweaking the way google works. Some information on this and more is in this book.

    I say Google is still efficient, and flexible enough.

    --
    /* TAANSTAFL */
  193. Re:No. You're wrong. by mfrank · · Score: 1

    If the war in Iraq goes on for 8 or 9 years like Vietnam and the Revolutionary war, with nothing remotely looking like victory in the future, yeah, maybe, the peace movement will change policy.

    So we've got, what, at least another 7 years, 50 weeks to go before that can happen.

    Oh, and in the two examples you gave, the soldiers were conscripts. You think Clinton would have been protesting the war if he didn't have to worry about getting drafted (well, he probably would, since it would help him get chicks).

  194. Do not underestimate the power of the Force by christalyss · · Score: 1

    "Do not overestimate the power of this technological marvel you have created. The power of this station is no match for the power of the Force." (or something like that) --Darth Vader

  195. Re:How DARE they use Free Speech against liberals? by Angst+Badger · · Score: 1

    First, I don't see it as a flaw.

    Well, it either is or isn't a flaw, depending on what you want to get out of Google. The author of the article plainly wants to get search results in which websites are ranked in a manner that reflects their offline significance, which is, as you note, probably not possible.

    OTOH, Google's apparent over-reliance on link density as a measure of "authoritativeness" pretty obviously breaks down when blog culture is thrown into the mix. Exactly what practical use can be derived from searching blogs is beyond me. They are useless as a metric of current trends -- there is, after all, a reason why surveys are conducted in accordance with fairly strict statistical standards. As simple sources of information, a blog is roughly equivalent to listening to a random conversation on a bus or a university cafeteria.

    Consider the search keys "meme" and "paradigm". Of the people who use one or both terms, there's probably not one person in a hundred who actually understands them and uses them correctly. And particularly in the case of "paradigm," there are several correct usages particular to different fields -- the CS usage has little to do with the philosophy-of-science usage, and neither have much to do with the New Age usage. How far down the list of Google search results do you have to go to get to useful information about memetics or paradigm shifts? Quite a ways.

    Another example, and one that personally vexes me, is "visualization". As a Google search key, the term retrieves link after link after link about data visualization. Good luck finding anything about mental visualization unless you figure out some additional keys to select psychology-related pages. (Hint: "cognitive" is a good secondary key.)

    The root problem, I think, is that Google doesn't really take into account topic-specific usages. If you were to make a graph of links between "visualization"-related sites, you would see a big island composed of computer science sites, a smaller island of cognitive psychology sites, and a still smaller island of Shakti Gawain fans. Odds are that any given user will be interested in only one of those islands. Northern Light, before it closed its public front to become a CIA contractor, actually did a pretty good job of grouping related subjects in a convenient UI; one can only hope Google eventually will, too.

    --
    Proud member of the Weirdo-American community.
  196. Re:You're missing the whole point of "endorsement. by epeus · · Score: 1

    No, it means more than that. Google takes it to mean that the terms on the page itself are relevant. Some of your PageRank authority is conferred on that page. I want to be able to link to a page and tell Googlenot to give it any pagerank from me.

  197. How Many Divisions Does The Pope Have? by meehawl · · Score: 1
    NUMBER: 55130 QUOTATION: The Pope? How many divisions has he got? ATTRIBUTION: Josef Stalin (1879-1953), Soviet leader. Quoted in Winston Churchill, "The Gathering Storm," vol. 1, ch. 8, The Second World War (1948).
    We must make clear to the Germans that the wrong for which their fallen leaders are on trial is not that they lost the war, but that they started it. And we must not allow ourselves to be drawn into a trial of the causes of the war, for our position is that no grievances or policies will justify resort to aggressive war. It is utterly renounced and condemned as an instrument of policy. --Supreme Court Justice Robert L. Jackson, U.S. Representative to the International Conference on Military Trials, August 12, 1945
    --

    Da Blog
  198. Altavista? by broter · · Score: 1

    Google won't let me do some things that I could do then.

    I'm just curious. Why don't you use a different search engine?

    --
    "One man can change the world with a bullet in the right place."
    - Mick Travis, "If..."
  199. Re:You're missing the whole point of "endorsement. by NoInfo · · Score: 1

    You're always welcome to use robots.txt or the robots metatag. Easy!

  200. Re:robots.txt by epeus · · Score: 1

    That works per page, not per link. I'd have to indirect each link through a refresh page with robots.txt set. Yuk.

  201. whisper terrorist by solferino · · Score: 1

    ...the next time I'm at the movies and the guy behind me won't stop talking. I think I'll call him a "whisper terrorist."

    Nice idea. And by the way, at this point the term still belongs completely to you.

    Anyone feel like doing a bit of googlewashing?
    1. Re:whisper terrorist by meta-monkey · · Score: 1

      Ha! Now THAT'S funny!

      --
      We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
  202. Re:How DARE they use Free Speech against liberals? by iabervon · · Score: 1

    From the fact that they end up ranking blog sites higher than they ought to. If they have corrected for this, they haven't yet gotten it right. Of course, I don't know a better metric than what they're using, but that's why they're running the most popular search site, and I'm not. In fact, I'd be surprised if they weren't in the process of trying to correct the situation.

  203. real karma by SHEENmaster · · Score: 1

    is almost as good as /. karma.

    --
    You can't judge a book by the way it wears its hair.