Archive for the ‘Ramblings’ Category

Sleepy Times At Gordon Square

Wednesday, August 19th, 2009

Ignore the title. It’s random. Random times.

So I returned from Cancun, Mexico last weekend. I went to an all-inclusive resort in the hotel area. It was nice. People were cleaning up my messes and feeding me. I usually do these things for myself, usually. Overall, not bad for my first real vacation in several years. I should do it again. I will.

Now, what to do for school? I’m torn between three different colleges. All have their pros and cons. The biggest con in my situation is that I can’t actually *go* to college. It has to be either fully online or mostly online (i.e. some UCF night classes). The colleges in the running are FSU, UWF, and UCF.

Wish there were three sided coins.

My blog broke and I didn’t even know about it. All the pages were coming up blank. Turns out wp-super-cache was not updated and, well, it messed up a bit. I haven’t visited my own blog in so long. Wonder how long it was broken. No one reported it. Ha-ha! No one reported it. Good one.

asdf.

Manchester United lost to Burnley today. That makes me angry and sad.

Ate at a Japanese steak house today with department folks from work. I think what I ate made me sick. Either that or dinner.

On Monitoring Kids’ Online Activities

Tuesday, July 8th, 2008

I am not a parent myself. In fact, I was a preteen myself as recently as a baker’s dozen years ago; so I guess my opinion is still very much from the other side of the fence.

I feel that having a pre-teen life where discipline is stressed makes for better adults down the road. In fact discipline where a semi-strict schedule is followed with activities and the like, in my opinion, gives kids the framework necessary to function in today’s hectic and high-tech society. I wish I had more of a strict schedule in my yearly years as I currently have a bit of trouble with getting things done. (I’m working on it and making huge strides toward fixing it).

Monitoring what kids do on the internet is a part of developing discipline. It’s simply too easy to fall for the addictive nature of the internet, which makes it a potentially dangerous influence to self-discipline. However, the monitoring, in my opinion, shouldn’t be coupled with blocking of many websites. Perhaps just the NC17+ websites being written to a log for later review by a parent, guardian or older sibling. I’m talking more of a benevolent monitoring where you know all the potentially questionable websites the kid has been to. This would give the monitors a chance of talking to the kids about it down the road, if they happen to notice some interesting websites in the logs.

One should also take into the account the undeniable fact that kids nowadays do not stay kids for long. I’m not saying whether that’s a good thing or a bad thing; what I’m saying is that it changes things. We need to acknowledge their earlier maturity by not applying completely arbitrary age laws.

People tell me that my opinion will change when I have kids. Perhaps, and we’ll see. I can’t predict the future.

As a recent user of public school computers, let me say just how annoying the filters are and how easy to get by the them it is. I was often very inconvenienced when doing research on school computers. Many topics involving war and sex (as in anatomy and reproduction) were blocked. Also, sites about hacking (the good kind), computer gaming, news and many others found themselves on the blacklist. It took me all of 10 minutes to bypass all this by using port 22 to connect to my home network and funnel all the traffic through there.

It seems like there is a huge misunderstanding between children and their parents on this issue. I have yet to see someone over the age of 11 being permanently hurt by something they have seen on the Internet (again, I’m not an expert; this is just my personal experience). In fact, these people are the prime and willing audiences for some of the most disturbing content on the Internet-content which even I shy away from.

Also, there is the issue that now there are laws requiring schools and libraries to use approved install blocking software in order to get federal funding. This gives few select companies all the profit and takes the initiative away from schools to find the best suited solution for their case.

The whole idea of content blocking is untenable at its core. There are hundreds of millions of sites on the Internet. If filters decide to block the bad sites, they will fail due to the numbers being stacked against them. If they choose to block everything and only allow the good sites, they will greatly inconvenience the users of network by blocking necessary resources.

Please, before you respond to this, keep in mind that I’m still very much thinking about this issue. We shouldn’t be too quick to reach a conclusion about something as important as this. If you disagree, tell me why and I may change my mind. After all, I don’t have kids and I’m still very young myself.

Goooooooooooooooooogle!

Friday, March 28th, 2008

Stream of consciousness…

Remember when MySpace was the only big game in town? Many of your friends had profiles full of tasty information. Perhaps you studied your friends’ profiles in–let’s just say–painstaking detail. You may have even found out information about your friends that you didn’t know. They put stuff online which they didn’t even tell you in person. They put it all online for everyone to see. Weird, huh?

Remember FaceBook? Remember when all of your college friends were on FaceBook? Remember how you used to look up girls/boys which were in your classes and use the information gathered for various “investigative” reasons. All that information that was out there probably caused some tension. I’m just guessing; I never went to college… in that way.

The point is information. The more you know, the more power you have over the present, as well as over the future. We all strive to have more information because we instinctively know that it will help us with survival and procreation.

One secret revealed caused the New York governor Eliot Spitzer to resign. How many can come forward and say they don’t have any secrets which they’re not afraid to share with the whole world?

The more power you have, the more you’re able to influence other peoples’ lives. You become the present day incarnation of a 4th century Byzantine emperor. It’s really hard to deal with the realization that you have power over many people–that they have to do anything you command them to. Better yet, many of the people you rule over worship you. Surely that’s an unwelcome boost to your ego.

History is full of people who have used great power in order to make the lives of other people better. There’s no denying this. The problem is that in the succession of power, the good people tend to die and go away, but the power stays there for the taking.

I believe that Larry Page and Sergey Brin are largely responsible for the–up to this point–responsible use of knowledge by Google. They are also responsible for the current culture at Google. This is a culture of decent respect for peoples’ privacy (or in other words, it’s respect for the people’s lives because by not breaching people’s privacy, you’re effectively granting them liberty from yourself and your agents).

What happens when Larry and Sergey step down? What’s to prevent the business equivalent of the Roman emperor Caligula from taking over after a few successive owner/CEO generations? Who’s to say that all your porn browsing won’t come to bite you in the nether regions when this new emperor decides that you don’t belong in government?

Sadly, I don’t have any answers.