There are quite a few conflated statements and actions in
circulation regarding America's economy and monetary policy. While
it is true that raising a debt-ceiling does not in fact increase
overall debt, rather just re-calibrates a county's ability to fulfill
its outstanding obligations, and despite evidence to the contrary
about past fiscal cycles, history and precedence and possibly the
very definition of madness in expecting any other outcome, such a
correction does not necessarily speak to thrift and discipline. On
the contrary, a commitment to not default and continue to match the
caretaking and stewardship responsibilities of a government
demonstrates a discipline usually understood to be the opposite.
Thursday, 19 September 2013
invisible hand
Wednesday, 18 September 2013
polling place or fragenbogen
A section of the German electorate is gifting its ballots to expatriates and EU citizens unable to influence the outcome of the campaign via a social-media group called Electoral Rebellion in order to lend a voice to those outliers affected by Germany's stance in the European Union, like the Spaniards and Hellenes in the face of austerity measures and others further afield with the potential to be touched by new German policy. From a legal standpoint, it appears, that the volunteers are simply soliciting the advice of foreigners, and participants—with no expectation of quid pro quo, would have probably voted for the candidates most sympathetic to the views of those voting by proxy, but the action does raise a needed discussion on supra-national politics and infringements as well. What do you think? Is this action, stunt not far from buying and selling votes or a broader and necessary world-view?
shutter-bug
Monday, 16 September 2013
biometrics or cutting off your nose to spite your face
Not long ago, a group of hacktivistas requisitioned the fingerprints of a high ranking German minister from a water glass in order to illustrate inherent flaws in the personal security prescription that the minister was championing.
The lifted prints were circulated and used in this experiment for impersonation, showing that any element of biometric data released into the wilds (that's why it proves useful for police in forensics) is prone for use and abuse and not such an advisable method for locking and unlocking personal troves. Of course, passwords not generally circulated are prone to other methods, but owning that false-sense of security is an expensive proposition. For the interim, I can envision people doffing and donning their shoes and socks for verification-purposes. There are of course methods to suppress ne'er-do-wells but I wonder with thieves wearing charm necklaces of trophy thumbs and toes if the sort of safety that is being sold to us is possible.
catagories: ๐ฉ๐ช, ๐ก, ๐ฅธ, networking and blogging
mmm mmm mmm mmm or tip of the tongue
As part of its weekly digest of innovative and new ideas, the excellent blog Brain Pickings features an interesting review of a new work from Clive Thompson about how technology are collaborating in positive ways to augment how we remember, learn and triangulate novel and familiar concepts. The book, “Smarter than You Think: How Technology is Changing our Minds for the Better,” smartly covers a lot of emergent and age-old praises and cautions and is by no means swerving to avoid the counter-argument or discussion, neither a retreat into apologies for new standards of etiquette and work-ethics nor a luddite bemoaning short attention-spans and information overload, but rather presents an extended thesis that certain aspects of on-line resources can prove to be transcending, proving one knows how these tools function.
catagories: ๐ญ, ๐, ๐ง , networking and blogging, technology and innovation