Monthly Archive for April, 2005

Backingbertie.com

Caoimhe mentioned a site called backingbertie in her blog today. Bertie Ahern is the Taoiseach (prime minister) of Ireland and the site is set up to

register a highly visible and damaging protest vote against Bertie Ahern, his style of government, his right-wing leanings, and his lies about the ’state’ of the country, our health, our safety, our education and our money

I did a bit of digging and found that the domain was registered using the cloaking service of Domains by Proxy. I think this is very low - Bertie is a public figure, if you want to have a go off him, fair enough but at least let him know who is criticising him - why hide behind a cloak of anonymity?

A reverse DNS on the ip address of the site (80.68.90.8) resolves to oireachtas.vm.btyemark.co.uk - note the correct spelling of oireachtas and the mis-spelling of bytemark.

If the site owner(s) have named their VM Oireachtas (the Oireachtas is the Irish word for our parliament), you have to wonder who in the Oireachtas is next in their sights!

Protect yourself from identity theft

James pointed me to a very interesting post on Owen’s site on ways to protect yourself from identity theft.

If you ignore the US specific advice (Social Security number stuff), there’s some very useful advice there.

Vatican changes its view on euthanasia

“Who can judge the dignity and sacredness of the life of a human being, made in the image and likeness of God?”; “Who can decide to pull the plug as if we were talking about a broken appliance?” so wrote L’Osservatore Romano, the Vatican newspaper referring to the debate around the case of Terry Schiavo.

Now the Pope is close to death, his breathing shallow and his heart and kidneys failing, we are told. And yet he is not in hospital.

The Pope has decided not to go back to Rome’s Gemelli hospital in order that he can die at home, in the Vatican. How do we know that his health wouldn’t be turned around, once more, if admitted to the hospital?

How is this different from Terry Schiavo’s wish, not to be artificially kept alive, being honoured?

It is good to see that the Vatican have finally come around to an enlightened view on euthanasia.

Credit card fraud

How often do tellers check what’s written on the slip?

How secure is this system?

What can you get away with signing as your signature on credit card slips?

Zug decided to find out - with hilarious results

Would you support an SEO-spam company?

I was asked this question on a mailing list I’m on by a poster there in relation to the current WordPress hosting spam story which is doing the rounds.

This was my response:

I would never support an SEO-spam company.

In this case however, there are a number of caveats. First off, WordPress is not a company - this is more than simply semantics. A lot of the hosting costs etc. involved in keeping WordPress going have been borne by Matt Mullenweg - the principle author of WordPress. Matt made a decision to host articles on the site for commercial ends (to earn some money to offset the costs the success for the software was incurring). The articles were generated by another company and were spam for various high cost Adwords. WordPress’ high PR was being leveraged. There is no doubt that this is a sharp practice and Matt should have known better.

Matt is on holidays at the moment but has promised to respond with an explanation. In the meantime, Google has banned the WordPress site and the articles in question have been removed from the WordPress site.

So, to return to your question -
I, and many WordPress users like me, have never supported WordPress - perhaps if we had donated a couple of Euro to WordPress, Matt wouldn’t have made this mistake. I think Matt has learned from his mistake but we’ll know more about that as he responds during the day.

In the meantime, will I continue to use WordPress (a different question, I realise)? Hell yes. The fact that Matt made this mistake doesn’t take from the quality of the product. If Matt continues these kinds of practices, I will remove the link to WordPress on my site - as that is the only form of support I have given WordPress since I started using it, I’m ashamed to say.

By the way, how many people on this list pay to use (i.e. commercially support) products by Microsoft - a company which has been convicted in the courts of abusing its monopoly to kill off competitors? Not just an unethical practice, but an illegal one.




Tom Raftery’s Social Media is Digg proof thanks to caching by WP Super Cache!