Internet Pickpackets

Thursday, February 23, 2006

How would you like to pay per email you send? Or have your email program give preferential service to those emails that were paid for, putting them at the top of your email inbox, perhaps delaying other emails that were sent free and clear? You know, for now, until free email is something that we tell our kids about like 8-track tapes and CDs. Well, it's on the way. Yahoo! and AOL are both implementing a scheme that drops the proverbial shoe, under the auspicies of spam prevention. Essentially, they'd charge a cent per email to big companies on an initially voluntary basis. The claim is that it would help them sort spam by only allowing companies that follow guidelines about only sending to those requesting the emails and having unsubscribe links (nevermind that most unsubscribe links unsubscribe you and then add you to other more profitable lists since you've essentially confirmed that you are checking that email account). In this way, they purport to be able to kill spam.

Sounds okay, doesn't it? Big companies isn't you or I, and it's only a cent. Well, first of all, let's look at how it works right now - forget about the future. If you're a legitimate company sending out millions of emails a month, whether it's bank statements or updates that your site visitors have requested, that amounts to thousands of dollars. To give you the same service you have now, except, and this is important, with guaranteed access to the inbox without going through any spam filtering. Essentially, you're being blackmailed to either pay or be filtered. Now let's say you're a spammer. You have no friends, live alone in mustard-stained pyjamas, sending emails about a product you'll never use: viagra. Not that they can get it up, necessarily, just that sex isn't something they're likely to be getting much of. If you're a spammer and I've offended you, good! I'm offended daily, and so are many millions of others. That's why this scheme of Yahoo/AOL's is so brilliant. It plays on that hatred of spam to allow them to get their foot in the door. Because, really, what are we doing here? We're saying to spammers that they can continue as they were, some spam getting past the filter and other stuff not, by continuing to send free email. OR, they can now pay a cent and get guaranteed access to your inbox, past the filters. That service is easily worth the cent to spammers and while Yahoo & AOL say that people would have to follow guidelines, there have been laws for a long time stating the same thing and they, too, have been circumvented. Consider. A cleverly worded spam delivered straight into the inbox, past filters, and 'guaranteed' is bound to be read. Response rate will rise dramatically, say that only one person in 100 responds to a given spam message. But that means that for $1 advertising, you've gained at least one customer. Admittedly, I don't foresee response rates that high, but even a tenth of that and you gain. Which is the conclusion Yahoo and AOL will use to justify their increases over time. But let's leave that future stuff for later on.

With the current system, who benefits? The end user, you, potentially gets just as much spam, not to mention that now someone can pay to place themselves in your inbox. Spammers have a guaranteed way to get past spam filtering or can continue writing spam to get past existing filters for free. If, as they claim, Yahoo & AOL are planning to keep email free for individuals, then that means that the filters will still have to be there and all non-paid emails can't be blocked, so spam can get in the same as it does today. So a blessing for spammers. And of course, a blessing for Yahoo & AOL, who stand to make money of spammers and honest corporate citizens alike. Of course, legitimate corporate clients are the losers in this, essentially being charged for being the good guys rather than trying to stop the bad guys. It's like trying to stop graffiti by taking a toll from everyone who own a painting company. Well, maybe not really like that. But certainly punishing the wrong group.

Even so, all this amounts to little more than a bad idea for the moment, but it will get worse. First of all, since it supposedly is a voluntary pay structure, you have to entice companies to go this route. Guaranteed delivery isn't enough when, in order for their filters to not have false positives, they should continue to get through free anyway. Unless of course, they blackmail companies into a pay-or-else scheme where they block non-paid (which essentially is no longer voluntary). Failing that, you're going to want something out of your return that you wouldn't get sending it for free. Which means that either:

a) Preferential service based on moving other emails down in the inbox.
b) Faster times than regular emails. Given that servers currently use best effort send-now schemes, there is no way they can send faster than that. Which means, my friend, that the only way to make this email faster is to slow other mail down.
c) Eliminate free mail so there is no standard to compare against.

Make no mistakes, soon this is the beginning of the war for the internet, which pits the group trying to maintain the philosophy of a shared/distributed network that founded the internet and built its popularity against the group that is looking for any way to grab money from users. It is a calculated and conniving move, designed to work on the average user's apathy for big companies in order to slowly introduce the concept of paid email to a currently free medium. There are other companies, telcos primarily, that are already deep into the fight, trying to get content providers and end users to pay a second time for something we're already paying for: bandwidth. Jeff Chester, president of Digital Democracy, has an article talking about what I like to call the Pickpacketing that's well worth the read.

So what to do? In the case of cable companies and telcos, you can write your MP/member of congress, but who has the time? Hopefully some people do, but supporting the companies that are fighting the good fight is a start. As for the email frauds, don't use them. Write them, and tell them you want your email account closed, or at least let them know you are against this policy and will be leaving them. Closing the account is better, because Yahoo will still make money off emails going to your inbox that you don't see, presumably. Just make sure you tell the three people emailing you at that address that AREN'T spam to switch to your new address. Which could be at many other sites, I recommend Google of course, but even Hotmail is better than supporting Yahoo/AOL. And for the love of hickory, if you're using AOL as a service provider, get the heck off! Why people still use that crummy service is beyond me. Whatever case, stand up, do something to make a difference. Once we go down this road, there will be no going back, and nothing will happen if nothing DOES happen to oppose it. Good luck!
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Enhanced Podcasts, MP3s, and Laughter!

Saturday, February 18, 2006

FrankBlack.Net Podcast Logo (for now)
On Valentine's Day, many people were out with their significant others, dallying through some fine dining, a movie, and perhaps creating their own home movies after. Aside from working at the restaurant that evening, I actually kicked off my first foray into the podcasting world: The Frank Black.Net Podcast. It's been pretty succesful so far, over 800 downloads at the time of writing, not even a week later. We had some an exclusive premiere of a heretofore unreleased Frank Black track from his next CD, Fastman Raiderman, which definitely helped. Anyway, today I'm debuting my own personal podcast as well, and that has me wanting to do it right. So it was with some dissatisfaction that I discovered the enhanced podcasts that enable you to skip sections and have graphics and URLs associated with them, can not even be created on my Windows XP PC. I resolved to do something about this. WARNING: It may get geeky. Read on at your own peril.

As it stands right now, there are two types of enhanced podcasts. There is the ubiquitous Apple variety, which can ONLY be created on an Apple and must be either M4A or M4B file format. You need software that will encode the audio in those formats (instead of MP3) and then software that will create 'chapters'. Again, both of which are Apple only. There is also a Windows enhanced podcast, but it likewise requires the use of WMA files which can't be used on iPods and, to be honest, are a pain to make even if you wanted to. So, to offer broad support, I would need my podcast in both of those formats, plus MP3, that's THREE files for the same exact podcast. If I could just create an MP3 enhanced podcast, I thought to myself, life would be good and one file would be fine.

So I did some looking around. ID3.org, it turns out, just released an update to their specification for the ID3 tags that give MP3s the ability to display artists, song titles, and so on. ID3 tags now support chapters! That means there is already a defacto standard for encoding the MP3 with chapter information, the standards people are on the ball. That's one less thing to do. There are two other things that must be done. The first is to get publishers of popular music software, such as WinAmp, iTunes, MusicMatch, et al, to recognize and handle these new features. This should not be a difficult update for any of the parties involved, but there must be demand for it. Currently, there is no software out there for creating enhanced MP3 podcasts. Which means that nobody out there is developing them, which means no demand, which means that it might be difficult to persuade mp3 player producers to incorporate those features.

So what the world needs now is a way to create those MP3 Enhanced Podcasts. Badly. A command line application shouldn't take long for someone in the know and with the correct tools. I even attempted it myself briefly, but the tools I have aren't quite up to the task. I downloaded the ID3 library to find out it was C++ and intended for use with Visual Studio, which I don't have. As well, I'm pretty sure the library doesn't support these new chapter/contents frames yet, so I'd have to wait for them to update or else, and more likely, go and write the new frames in myself. But I am extremely interested in seeing this come to light, so I've not given up all hope yet. I just need some time and a better grasp of how the ID3 tag is set up. Most of that information is laid out on the id3.org site. But not all. So what I'm asking is that anyone interested in such a tool let me know so I know that it's not just for me, and if there are developers out there working on it or interested in doing so, definitely, let me know about that too. Let's get these MP3 enhanced podcasts out there.
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Site Update

Saturday, May 07, 2005

Well, the site has gone under some hasty changes to get it usable (for me at least) whilst I'm in Europe. This past month has been busy and full of preparation, so much so that I've had little time for anything non-work related, and so this blog has been left alone. It won't be staying that way once I cross the pond. Incidentally, the date which that happens is actually May 10 (you can check it out on my nifty new calendar that I just finished writing).

So check here for what's going on. I'm going to use this instead of mass emails, but if you'd like to drop me a line, please do! I'll definitely get back to you.

NOTE: I will *only* be using my katsris@gmail.com (intentional misspelling).

Alternatively, you can easily leave a comment after any one of my sure-to-be-verbose posts.

Anyway, tonight I'm going to be at the old Speckled Belly at around 9:00, so if you happen on by for a visit before I go, I'd certainly love to see you. Otherwise, I'll catch you on the other side.

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All Systems Nomin...

Saturday, February 26, 2005



To be fair, I knew it was coming. Starting as early as last weekend, my computer started acting funny. I was playing Pirates, as I am known to do lately, and my computer crashed completely. I installed a new video driver and solved some of the lock ups, but the crashes continued. And not just the game, the whole system. A blue screen would flash and then before I could read anything on it, the computer reset. It started to happen more and more frequently, sometimes just in Windows. Once I rebooted and it scanned my harddrive. I decided that my hard drive was probably about to go, so I went out to Future Shop on Friday night and bought a new one (160 GB) plus a DVD burner, 100 blank DVDs (cheaper than 50), and 10 blank CDs for under $300. Before that, I had copied all important can't-lose data so that it was on both hard drives that were already in my system (since I didn't know which drive was about to crash).

Then I was out at Athena with John 'til oneish, then we watched a Futurama and I showed him Pirates, but we couldn't get anywhere without the computer crashing. Saturday morning I woke up at 9 and started working on my computer. I wanted to get XP installed on my new hard drive and then attach the other drives one by one and get the data off them. Nope. Turns out Windows XP (without SP 2) can't deal with a drive bigger than 137 GB. NOW they tell me. Western Digital has a utility that claims to do the job, but on the contrary, it didn't at all. I spent the better part of the day struggling to partition a 40 GB system disk and then after some registry tweaks, the other 120 GB. Nope. Worse yet, I try booting my system as it was before just to partition my drive (since I've got SP2 downloaded from Microsoft). It's no longer booting. Agh! Finally, Dan called me to come out, so I went by Beiley's and sat with him, Amanda, Trinity, Alex, and a girl that I always think is Erin (which is weird 'cause they're nothing alike and moreover, Erin was sitting in a table beside us). Seems like Beiley's is doing pretty well, which is cool, it's a decent place to hang out for someone as old as I am. :)

I got home Sat night and remembered that Mariah's new computer probably had XP with SP2 on the original CD since it was so new, so I used that disc and got XP running finally. My computer's finally operational again, though programs still need to be reinstalled. I'm kinda' waiting out a full reinstall until I have a stable and working system, as I've seen some crashes with the new hard drive as well, though not as frequent. This led me to believe that it probably wasn't the hard drive that caused the problem last time - instead, it was something else crashing while writing the drive that caused the drive problems. The next and more obvious step, then, was to look at RAM. Towards the end of last year (i.e. a few months ago) I picked up another 512 MB stick of RAM. I downloaded a utility called memtest86 to check out my RAM on Wednesday, and sure enough there were errors. Quite a few of them.

Thursday, John was over, but seeing as I knew my RAM had errors (just not which stick) I took out my new stick and we used the computer all day without a crash of any sort. I scanned the old stick alone over night and didn't turn up a single error.Then, before leaving for work Friday morning, I put the old disc in to scan. Within 10 seconds of starting it had found errors again. Now I have to attempt to return/exchange my RAM at FutureShop. Gah! Not to mention my DVD Burner, though I'm going to try that a little more with the good RAM to make sure that it wasn't somehow the culprit as well. I have a friend that works there, hopefully he can help me though I shouldn't need it since I bought both of them within the year (and the DVD last weekend). But I've heard plenty of horror stories. I'll let you know.

DISCLAIMER: The preceeding blog contained moments of extreme tedium and should not have been read by young children.
[Listening to: The Neins - Sunday Anthems]

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