Why is there no warning about conflict of interest here? Everytime the Washington Post opens its mouth about Higher Education Policy of any kind, it should be known that they are owners of the $2.3 billion business Kaplan, a major profiteerer in the War on Poor Students...
My counter(?) hypothesis is that the long tail of articles grows most, and gets no to little proof-reading. Therefore I'd love to see the results normalized by (log maybe) of Page Views (from http://stats.grok.se/ ). I've also a few doubts about the quality of randomly sampled pages in general, and also whether the growth of jargon (which may or may not end up as spelling-errors has increased).
Its unusuable. Thank god my secondary account still has the old school interface.
Netflix had been doing great, especially with the grouping multiple seasons of DVDs finally, and then they pull a stupid stunt like this. What were they thinking.
I wish to god whoever decided that making websites should only display well on iPads comes to a swift and painful death.
Plenty of experiments have shown that market knowledge doesnt help much. The only place it really helps is if you are an insider, and in which case you are likely to go to prison:)
As someone who has family in the public policy business I know that there are generally two sides in these debates - the corporate side and the public side. Usually there's one or more non-profit that leads the public interest comment-gathering, regulation reading/wrangling and lobbies on our behalf (ie read not the corporations behalf).
I see nothing in this discussion so far about a coordinated campaign to seriously propose pro-Net-Neutrality regulation. CREDO has been posting some stuff, as have EFF I think, but is there an umbrella organization that is organizing opposition to a corporate reign of this area?
Incidentally, despite all the bribery and corruption, a lot of lobbying is simply about who has the ear of the right Senatorial and Congressional aides, and advising them about the difficult issues on a debate. The challenge for the public is having an organized lobbying ability on every issue. Too often its just the corporations who have the resources to make their case.
Indeed, and Google is a classic case in point. It wasn't Altavista, Infoseek, Excite, or even GOTO (remember them, they invented bidded search ads), it was Google that came after and put together a very scalable and flexible architecture. They refined the standard IR algs, refined bidded ads, etc as well, but they weren't the first movers. Same goes for Ford, and I suspect Boeing (hello, Wright Brothers Airlines anyone?)
Its the person that gets the large scale infrastructure right that wins. What is the correct infrastructure is going to be almost unpredictable at the start of a new technology.
First of all, no offence, but who is Doctor Valek? and SouthTownStar.com? Bring me a refereed journal article next time...
As a counterpoint to all the anecdotal Google saved my life (and I have no problem with the claims), was the time 6 months ago when I went to the ER after I had misidentified my swollen uvula as the epiglottis, and after googling swollen epiglottis, found out I was likely to die if I didnt get to a hospital (which is true). When I got there, the ER doctor was pretty amused, and sent me home with a hard copy of http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Palatine_uvula after he googled it for me... then my wife laughed a lot.
I sponsored them, out of a sense that their idea (distributed ownership of social networking) is a good idea. I think Facebook's multiple faux pas added a huge impetus to their publicity, the least of which was the NY Times article. Frankly, if you can get a NYTimes article you are heads and shoulders ahead in publicity.
However, one thing did bother me about this, not the lack of contracts or whatever, it is a donation, with no expectations. But what are the rules that govern micro-finance loans, venture capitalism, etc. I mean, why couldnt you just have KickStarter work as a micro-VC plain and simple, and get shares in these projects? VC tend are required to only get money from large net worth individuals. Microloans it appears anyone can participate in? So why not micro-VC ? I guess the difference is in Oversight? If I donate money to something, I know I am giving it away (and presumably have a motivation such as supporting free software or whatever). However if I invest it in a MVCfund I have some expectation of getting it back - Micro-loans have a much lower degree of risk - VCs are at 5% or whatever, chance of success.
The title of the original paper is: Private Information Disclosure from Web Searches.
They found a security vulnerability, and retrieved the information using probable prefixes. The reason I dislike the title is because it sounds a lot like the SIGIR 06 paper
where they actually did reconstruction using publicly available information combined with collaborative filtering like technology against anonymized data.
This article isn't a bad one, and interesting, but it's title is misleading. Its a security hole, not a fundamentally powerful data-mining technique.
+1 mod this to 5 and then re-edit the article & title please. This is not the same as the work identifying people from their movie ratings for example.
Also, more obvious on a resume, and not as neat as this trick, but easier if you dont have your own hosting, is to use the + sign on gmail.com, eg joeblow+google@gmail.com
It actually part of the email spec, but not every website will validate correctly, but I always try to use it when entering my email.
actually, I believe physics shows there is an energy cost to data, or rather more precisely maintaining information. Too early in the morning for me to go and look it up in Wikipedia. I'm sure someone can elaborate. I believe data doesn't have an independent existence - if a picture is on a hard-drive, and you drop it in acid, that picture, is gone. Sure it existed in some time frame, but you REALLY can't afford the energy to retrieve it.
The best free sci-fi on podcast I've come across is from Escape Pod.
Currently at about 200 short stories narrated often by the original authors, includes original and award winning works. Kudos to the guy who does it. I've stopped listening now I dont drive 2 hours a day to work and back.
Eschew the old masters. Its a seperate subject. Eschew most fantasy (sorry, I love Orcs as much as the next guy, but its a lighter subject).
Here's a modern list of classic authors:
Iain M. Banks: Use of Weapons, Consider Phelpas, Feerdsum Enjun (super power societies,nano, planetary/space) Neal Stephenson: Anathem (weird society) William Gibson: Neuromancer (cyber, near future earth) Alistair Reynolds: The Prefect (nano tech society) Ken MacLeod: The Star Faction (politics) C j Cherryh: Cyteen (bio engineering, lighter imo, a little older than I'd like to put in here, but its better than say the Foreigner series) Mary Gentle: Ash (alternate histories, Ash and the sequel is a work of art).
Re:Why Donald Knuth?
on
Coders At Work
·
· Score: 2, Interesting
Interestingly, I do wonder how Knuth would be rated in these days of massive (have you seen Java recently?) APIs, agile, test-driven development ? One thing that seems in common with all these guys is that they have written code which is of the old-school low-level infrastructural variety. His algorithm code is awesome, but a little spartan on the variable naming conventions. This is coming from someone who has an autographed set of TaoCP (and attended his occasional rare seminars).
Does the book actually have interviews with the front-liner programmers who have to deal with product management and managers in their day to day development work on web apps?
Ok, this is beyond strange. We know Arthur C Clarke predicted the creation of geo-stationary satellites - but predicting the name of the father of the first man to reach Mars too! Marc Bowman? Father of Dave Bowman by any chance (http://www.imdb.com/character/ch0002896/). That is a weird coincidence....
Anyway:) I'm sure he probably just changed his name to make history come true:)
Yeah this could be a big loss. I was just experimenting with some search similarity stuff, and Yahoo BOSS was orders of magnitude better than Bing and and Google in terms of result retrieval! Mod Up above please.
Why is there no warning about conflict of interest here? Everytime the Washington Post opens its mouth about Higher Education Policy of any kind, it should be known that they are owners of the $2.3 billion business Kaplan, a major profiteerer in the War on Poor Students...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Washington_Post_Company
Hi,
My counter(?) hypothesis is that the long tail of articles grows most, and gets no to little proof-reading. Therefore I'd love to see the results normalized by (log maybe) of Page Views (from http://stats.grok.se/ ). I've also a few doubts about the quality of randomly sampled pages in general, and also whether the growth of jargon (which may or may not end up as spelling-errors has increased).
Excellently interesting piece though! Great work.
Winton
There's a related study about how succesful managers in modern corporations are closer to pyschopaths than average.
http://www.medkb.com/Uwe/Forum.aspx/alternative/43595/Question-Authority
Its unusuable. Thank god my secondary account still has the old school interface.
Netflix had been doing great, especially with the grouping multiple seasons of DVDs finally, and then they pull a stupid stunt like this. What were they thinking.
I wish to god whoever decided that making websites should only display well on iPads comes to a swift and painful death.
W
I'd prefer if you called it a Plutarchy please.
"Plutocracy is rule by the wealthy, or power provided by wealth. The combination of both plutocracy and oligarchy is called plutarchy"
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plutocracy :-)
And don't forget the TEA we shipped you guys...
Pictures from ww2 of inflatable decoy tanks:
http://www.google.com/images?client=safari&rls=en&q=inflatable+tanks+ww2&oe=UTF-8&um=1&ie=UTF-8&source=univ&ei=wU2zTOqDCIn6sAO2lYyyDA&sa=X&oi=image_result_group&ct=title&resnum=4&ved=0CDwQsAQwAw&biw=1178&bih=718
Plenty of experiments have shown that market knowledge doesnt help much. The only place it really helps is if you are an insider, and in which case you are likely to go to prison :)
As someone who has family in the public policy business I know that there are generally two sides in these debates - the corporate side and the public side. Usually there's one or more non-profit that leads the public interest comment-gathering, regulation reading/wrangling and lobbies on our behalf (ie read not the corporations behalf).
I see nothing in this discussion so far about a coordinated campaign to seriously propose pro-Net-Neutrality regulation. CREDO has been posting some stuff, as have EFF I think, but is there an umbrella organization that is organizing opposition to a corporate reign of this area?
Incidentally, despite all the bribery and corruption, a lot of lobbying is simply about who has the ear of the right Senatorial and Congressional aides, and advising them about the difficult issues on a debate. The challenge for the public is having an organized lobbying ability on every issue. Too often its just the corporations who have the resources to make their case.
W
mod this up. I hadn't gotten the implication of the exploit either until now.
Stephen Fry would be an awesome Dr! I suspect he could be the next Pertwee - the best of all so far.
Indeed, and Google is a classic case in point. It wasn't Altavista, Infoseek, Excite, or even GOTO (remember them, they invented bidded search ads), it was Google that came after and put together a very scalable and flexible architecture. They refined the standard IR algs, refined bidded ads, etc as well, but they weren't the first movers. Same goes for Ford, and I suspect Boeing (hello, Wright Brothers Airlines anyone?)
Its the person that gets the large scale infrastructure right that wins. What is the correct infrastructure is going to be almost unpredictable at the start of a new technology.
Winton
First of all, no offence, but who is Doctor Valek? and SouthTownStar.com? Bring me a refereed journal article next time...
As a counterpoint to all the anecdotal Google saved my life (and I have no problem with the claims), was the time 6 months ago when I went to the ER after I had misidentified my swollen uvula as the epiglottis, and after googling swollen epiglottis, found out I was likely to die if I didnt get to a hospital (which is true). When I got there, the ER doctor was pretty amused, and sent me home with a hard copy of http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Palatine_uvula after he googled it for me... then my wife laughed a lot.
W
I sponsored them, out of a sense that their idea (distributed ownership of social networking) is a good idea. I think Facebook's multiple faux pas added a huge impetus to their publicity, the least of which was the NY Times article. Frankly, if you can get a NYTimes article you are heads and shoulders ahead in publicity.
However, one thing did bother me about this, not the lack of contracts or whatever, it is a donation, with no expectations. But what are the rules that govern micro-finance loans, venture capitalism, etc. I mean, why couldnt you just have KickStarter work as a micro-VC plain and simple, and get shares in these projects? VC tend are required to only get money from large net worth individuals. Microloans it appears anyone can participate in? So why not micro-VC ? I guess the difference is in Oversight? If I donate money to something, I know I am giving it away (and presumably have a motivation such as supporting free software or whatever). However if I invest it in a MVCfund I have some expectation of getting it back - Micro-loans have a much lower degree of risk - VCs are at 5% or whatever, chance of success.
Anyone else thinking about this stuff?
Winton
The title of the original paper is: Private Information Disclosure from Web Searches.
They found a security vulnerability, and retrieved the information using probable prefixes. The reason I dislike the title is because it sounds a lot like the SIGIR 06 paper
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=6474169875352273382#
where they actually did reconstruction using publicly available information combined with
collaborative filtering like technology against anonymized data.
This article isn't a bad one, and interesting, but it's title is misleading. Its a security hole, not a fundamentally powerful data-mining technique.
W
+1 mod this to 5 and then re-edit the article & title please. This is not the same as the work identifying people from their movie ratings for example.
Mornington Crescent.
I win.
I'd go for "iPhatPhonelessPhone"
Also, more obvious on a resume, and not as neat as this trick, but easier if you dont have your own hosting, is to use the + sign on gmail.com, eg joeblow+google@gmail.com
It actually part of the email spec, but not every website will validate correctly, but I always try to use it when entering my email.
W
actually, I believe physics shows there is an energy cost to data, or rather more precisely maintaining information. Too early in the morning for me to go and look it up in Wikipedia. I'm sure someone can elaborate. I believe data doesn't have an independent existence - if a picture is on a hard-drive, and you drop it in acid, that picture, is gone. Sure it existed in some time frame, but you REALLY can't afford the energy to retrieve it.
The best free sci-fi on podcast I've come across is from Escape Pod.
Currently at about 200 short stories narrated often by the original authors, includes original and award winning works. Kudos to the guy who does it. I've stopped listening now I dont drive 2 hours a day to work and back.
http://escapepod.org/
Each is between 30 mins and an hour or so, reading, mostly non-dramaticized.
Eschew the old masters. Its a seperate subject. Eschew most fantasy (sorry, I love Orcs as much as the next guy, but its a lighter subject).
Here's a modern list of classic authors:
Iain M. Banks: Use of Weapons, Consider Phelpas, Feerdsum Enjun (super power societies,nano, planetary/space)
Neal Stephenson: Anathem (weird society)
William Gibson: Neuromancer (cyber, near future earth)
Alistair Reynolds: The Prefect (nano tech society)
Ken MacLeod: The Star Faction (politics)
C j Cherryh: Cyteen (bio engineering, lighter imo, a little older than I'd like to put in here, but its better than say the Foreigner series)
Mary Gentle: Ash (alternate histories, Ash and the sequel is a work of art).
Interestingly, I do wonder how Knuth would be rated in these days of massive (have you seen Java recently?) APIs, agile, test-driven development ? One thing that seems in common with all these guys is that they have written code which is of the old-school low-level infrastructural variety. His algorithm code is awesome, but a little spartan on the variable naming conventions. This is coming from someone who has an autographed set of TaoCP (and attended his occasional rare seminars).
Does the book actually have interviews with the front-liner programmers who have to deal with product management and managers in their day to day development work on web apps?
Winton
Ok, this is beyond strange. We know Arthur C Clarke predicted the creation of geo-stationary satellites - but predicting the name of the father of the first man to reach Mars too! Marc Bowman? Father of Dave Bowman by any chance (http://www.imdb.com/character/ch0002896/). That is a weird coincidence....
Anyway :) I'm sure he probably just changed his name to make history come true :)
Yeah this could be a big loss. I was just experimenting with some search similarity stuff, and Yahoo BOSS was orders of magnitude better than Bing and and Google in terms of result retrieval! Mod Up above please.