Posts Tagged ‘cyberterrorism’
Fall Break Links!
*record scratch*
*freeze frame*
"Yup, that's me. You're probably wondering how I got in this situation…" pic.twitter.com/ATInPq8AGL— Emma Roller (@emmaroller) October 19, 2016
Happy birthday to Ursula K. Le Guin: "We live in capitalism. Its power seems inescapable. So did the divine right of kings." pic.twitter.com/c0Ku5nBu9G
— Jacobin (@jacobinmag) October 21, 2016
* CFP: The Fourth Annual David Foster Wallace Conference, June 2017. CFP: The Marxist Reading Group 2017.
* Tolkien news! Beren and Lúthien coming in 2017. Elsewhere in things from my childhood that I’ll almost certainly repurchase: Inside the new D&D Monster Manual.
* “Whoa,” said the gangster/minotaur, awed at how close he’d just come to losing his forearm. He was beginning to understand that this wasn’t the relatively straightforward world of street-level dope dealing anymore; this was Dungeons and Dragons.
* I’m glad somebody finally paged KSR: “Why Elon Musk’s Mars Vision Needs ‘Some Real Imagination.'”
* Forget Mars. Here’s Where We Should Build Our First Off-World Colonies.
* “People worry that computers will get too smart and take over the world, but the real problem is that they’re too stupid and they’ve already taken over the world.” This is how computer scientist Pedro Domingos sums up the issue in his 2015 book The Master Algorithm. Even the many researchers who reject the prospect of a ‘technological singularity’ — saying the field is too young — support the introduction of relatively untested AI systems into social institutions.
* TFW you cut down a 600-year-old tree.
* On translating Harry Potter. Harry Potter by the Numbers. And did you know Harry Potter was nearly a major cultural phenomenon?
* On The Strange Career of Steve Ditko.
* If you want a vision of the future.
* Mistake on a Lake: In Michigan, privatization and free-market governance has left 100,000 people without water.
* One teaching artist sees it differently. “There will always be bad artists with a lot of money who want to go to art school,” she said. On the Future of the MFA.
* The Professor Wore a Hijab in Solidarity — Then Lost Her Job.
* The Secret History of Leftist Board Games.
* There’s More to Life Than Being Happy: On Viktor Frankl and Man’s Search for Meaning. Relatedly: The World’s Happiest Man Wishes You Wouldn’t Call Him That.
* Degree programs in French, geology, German, philosophy and women’s studies are suspended, effectively immediately. Eight additional majors within existing departments, six teaching programs and four graduate programs have been shut down. The university is planning a teach-out program for currently enrolled students. Tenured faculty members in affected programs will be reassigned to different departments. The future of the campus’s nursing, dental education and medical imaging programs is still under discussion. Degree programs in environmental geology and environmental policy were cut previously, in July.
* Advice for how to use Twitter as an academic. Of course, as everyone knows, the only winning move is not to play.
* From David M. Perry: “My non-verbal son communicates through ‘Hamilton.'”
* From Adam Kotsko: From his rebellious debut to modern day, the devil has always been a political figure.
* Dylan, Christ, and Slow Train Coming. Teaching the controversy: Kurt Vonnegut in 1991: “Bob Dylan Is the Worst Poet Alive.” Imperialism-in-Artistry: Bob Dylan’s Nobel Win Is Proof Adichie Is Right about Beyonce. Local Boy Makes Good. But not too good: The Nobel Prize Committee Have Given Up on Trying to Get in Touch with Bob Dylan.
* Game of Thrones is even whiter than you think.
* The self-driving car, Baudrillard, and America.
* On the history of fantasy scholarship.
* David Letterman and his beard.
* The LSAT and class struggle.
* Interview With a Woman Who Recently Had an Abortion at 32 Weeks. ‘What Kind of Mother Is 8 Months Pregnant and Wants an Abortion?’ No, There Are No Ninth Month Abortions.
* The notion that American literature might have an imperial bent—that it might be anything other than a string of lightly co-influential works of “imaginative power,” and might itself reflect our national desire to dominate—is lost on its critics, both right and left.
* Another gerrymandering primer. I’m inclined to make a joke about Obama’s proceduralism even ruining his post-presidency but this really is a major issue worth throwing his weight against.
This note Jimmy Carter left for Ronald Reagan before Reagan took office says everything about how politics have changed. pic.twitter.com/OSNtZ2SIly
— CalmTomb (@CalmTomb) October 21, 2016
* Texas?
trump_firstnuclearwar
trump_secondnuclearwar
trump_ritual_demonbody
trump_clones
trump_mechatrump_mechatrump2.0 https://t.co/AIWspOgRjG— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) October 16, 2016
A non-tacky but equally scary Trump would have been in the coin-flip range, and maybe the favorite. https://t.co/FYkoiGXaki
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) October 20, 2016
I honestly think we could get some “the Constitution says the president has to be a he” cryptolegalism stuff. https://t.co/3btrsozsRe
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) October 20, 2016
* In The Hollow: The changing face of Appalachia—and its role in the presidential race.
* The Anthropocene and Empire.
* How Trump’s Casino Bankruptcies Screwed His Workers out of Millions in Retirement Savings.
* Atlas Obscura: The Land of Make Believe.
* A People’s History of John Stewart, Green Lantern.
* And then there’s this one: Earlier this October, at a ceremony at the Royal Courts of Justice, London paid its rent to the Queen. The ceremony proceeded much as it had for the past eight centuries. The city handed over a knife, an axe, six oversized horseshoes, and 61 nails to Barbara Janet Fontaine, the Queen’s Remembrancer, the oldest judicial position in England. The job was created in the 12th century to keep track of all that was owed to the crown.
* Breastfeeding as captivity narrative.
* I’ll allow it, but know that you’re all on very thin ice.
* Thank god the Mac version isn’t ready yet: Civ VI is out.
* A dark, grittier Captain Planet: Leonardo DiCaprio wants to make a Captain Planet movie.
"DiCaprio announced that he will be playing both Ma-Ti and Kwame, while Gi will be played by Benedict Cumberbatch."https://t.co/F7tuLxU3h4
— Saladin Ahmed (@saladinahmed) October 18, 2016
* Hungerford makes Infinite Jest represent how commercial publishers and their enablers in the mainstream media engineer a novel into a canonizable success. The market is corrupt, she says. But is it any more corrupt or distasteful than the publication and marketing of her university press book? “Post 45” is a scholarly association; Hungerford is one of nine Board members. Two other Board members are the series editors for the “Post 45” imprint. The “Advance Praise” for Making Literature Now includes effusive comments by two people whom Hungerford praises in the book, a blurb by a former colleague at Yale, and other comments so hyperbolic that they appear to have been written under the influence of laughing gas. Hungerford put out a misleading trailer for the book in the Chronicle, excising the misogyny charge that’s essential in her closing chapter, perhaps because she feared anyone who had read Infinite Jest would see through that charge and not order Making Literature Now. Her title is grandiose because her data is extremely limited. Rather than the survey that the title implies, Making Literature Now is literary tourism combined with two takedowns.
* Nonsense paper written by iOS autocomplete accepted for conference.
* Student writing in the digital age.
* Live long and trick or treat.
* I’m telling you, the simulation is crashing.
* And ours is truly a fallen world.
SOCIALIST: late capitalism has created a moral rot that pervades our entire society
NEOLIBERAL: but imagine if we monetized the rot— The Discourse Lover (@Trillburne) July 6, 2016
For sale. Baby shoes. Never worn. Ya my wife said its irresponsible to spend $160 on baby sized Jordans. Just to clarify my baby is not dead
— the slim reaper (@radvilliany) October 17, 2016
Written by gerrycanavan
October 22, 2016 at 9:00 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with a new life awaits you in the off-world colonies, abortion, academia, administrative blight, alt-right, America, Amitav Ghosh, Amy Hungerford, apocalypse, Appalachia, artificial intelligence, autism, Barack Obama, Baudrillard, beards, Ben Robertson, Beren and Lúthien, bitherism, Bob Dylan, books, breastfeeding, Brittle Paper, Buffy, cancer, Candy Crush, Captain Planet, casinos, CFPs, Civilization VI, class struggle, climate change, comics, conferences, cryptolegalism, cyberterrorism, David Foster Wallace, David Letterman, DC Comics, Derek Black, Don't mention the war, Donald Glover, Donald Trump, Dr. Strange, Dungeons & Dragons, Elon Musk, empire, existentialism, fantasy, fathers and sons, feminism, Flint, for sale baby shoes never worn, free speech, futurity, Game of Thrones, games, gerrymandering, gibberish, Green Lantern, Halloween, Hamilton, Han Solo, happiness, Harry Potter, Hemingway, Hillary Clinton, imperialism, Indiana Purdue Fort Worth, Infinite Jest, Islamophobia, Joe Piscopo, John Stewart, Joss Whedon, kids today, Kim Stanley Robinson, Lando Calrissian, late-term abortion, lead, lead poisoning, leftism, Leonardo DiCaprio, literary criticism, literature, London, Lord of the Rings, LSAT, magic, make believe, Man's Search for Meaning, maps, Mars, Marxism, Marxist Reading Group, MFAs, Michigan, military-industrial complex, millennials, misogyny, Monster Manual, music, New Jersey, Nnedi Okorafor, Nobel Prize, parentings, plastics, politics, pollution, prison, publishing, race, racism, reading, record scratch, Rent, rivers, science fiction, self-driving cars, spells, Spider-Man, Spike, Springsteen, Star Trek, Star Wars, Steve Ditko, Stormfront, students, television, Texas, the Anthropocene, the Devil, the Internet, the oceans, the Singularity, theory, Tolkien, trash, trees, Twitter, Ursula K. Le Guin, Utopia, Viktor Frankl, Vonnegut, water, West Virginia, Wheaton College, white supremacy, writing, zunguzungu
Getting into the Real Good Procrastination Now Links
* Bush-era flashback and general-election-2016 flashforward, courtesy of Chris Hayes: George Saunders’s The Braindead Megaphone.
* Today in stadium boondoggles: St. Louis has stadium debt, but doesn’t have a team.
* An ecological argument sure to catch fire: What we can do is learn to offer each other patience, compassion, courage, and love. We can learn to accept that just as every human life has its natural end, so too does every civilization. Contrary to what Purdy argues, we don’t need more politics. We need more hospice. We need to learn how to die.
* It doesn’t have to be this way, though. While neoliberal capitalism has been remarkably successful at laying claim to the future, it used to belong to the left — to the party of utopia. Nick Srnicek and Alex Williams’s Inventing the Future argues that the contemporary left must revive its historically central mission of imaginative engagement with futurity. It must refuse the all-too-easy trap of dismissing visions of technological and social progress as neoliberal fantasies. It must seize the contemporary moment of increasing technological sophistication to demand a post-scarcity future where people are no longer obliged to be workers; where production and distribution are democratically delegated to a largely automated infrastructure; where people are free to fish in the afternoon and criticize after dinner. It must combine a utopian imagination with the patient organizational work necessary to wrest the future from the clutches of hegemonic neoliberalism.
* Eugene V. Debs, accelerationist.
* Keep your scythe, the real green future is high-tech, democratic, and radical.
* Inside the Police-Industrial Complex.
* Sesame Street has heard your gentrification jokes, and they have decided they are really into it.
* From my friend James Tate Hill: On Being a Writer Who Can’t Read.
* Keywords for the Age of Austerity 25: Competencies.
* Before I Can Fix This Tractor, We Have to Fix Copyright Law.
* Relax, nerds: It Turns Out the Next Game of Thrones Book Isn’t Late at All.
* The Joyful, Illiterate Kindergartners of Finland. A counterpoint.
* My favorite little bit of fan fiction/overthinking from The Force Awakens, I think. Elsewhere on the Star Wars front: The 13 Most Nonsensical Theories About The Identity of Supreme Leader Snoke.
* MST3K is that for me. It saved my life, at least twice.
* An interview with Ahmed Best. From the archives.
* Successful squirrel cyber attacks as of January 2016.
* Angry Militia Leader: Stop Mailing Us Dildos.
* Life in Wisconsin: Was it a ‘frostquake’ or an Air Force sonic boom? And then there’s the education beat.
* If left-liberal people don’t stop embarrassing themselves with this Ted Cruz eligibility stuff I might vote for Cruz in protest. Okay, no, but seriously this is embarrassing.
* More Than Half of Americans Reportedly Have Less Than $1,000 to Their Name.
* This Professor Fell In Love With His Grad Student — Then Fired Her For It. And you’ll never guess what Caltech did next!
* I’m considered adding a running closer to these link posts that’s just headlines from the day’s Journal-Sentinel that amuse me. Today, that’s Shorewood man pursues insanity defense in voter fraud case.
* But for now, nothing gold can stay: Mysterious Wow! Signal Came From Comets, Not Aliens, Claims Scientist.
Written by gerrycanavan
January 13, 2016 at 1:13 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, accelerationism, actually existing media bias, Ahmed Best, Alice Goffman, aliens, America, apocalypse, austerity, blindness, books, boondoggles, Bush, Chewbacca, Chris Hayes, civilization, class struggle, collapse, comets, communism, competencies, copyright, Cory Doctorow, cyberterrorism, dildos, ecology, Episode 7, Episode 8, Episode I, Eugene V. Debs, footballs, frostquakes, Fury Road, Game of Thrones, general election 2016, gentrification, George R. R. Martin, George Saunders, grad student nightmares, HBO, How the University Works, insanity defense, Jar Jar Binks, kids today, Los Angeles Ram, Mad Max, militias, Mystery Science Theater 3000, natural born citizens, neoliberalism, NFL, Oregon, outer space, PBS, play, police-industrial complex, politics, race, racism, recess, Sesame Street, sexual harassment, Shorewood, skills, socialism, sociology, squirrels, St. Louis, stadiums, standardizing testing, Star Trek, Ted Cruz, The Braindead Megaphone, the Constitution, the courts, The Force Awakens, the law, the Left, The Phantom Menace, the truth is out there, UFOs, Utopia, voter fraud, Wisconsin, Won't somebody think of the children?, Wow! signal, writing
Friday Night Links
* Income inequality, as seen from space.
* Maxim’s oral history of The Wire.
* Robert Ebert reviews Moonrise Kingdom.
Wes Anderson’s mind must be an exciting place for a story idea to be born. It immediately becomes more than a series of events and is transformed into a world with its own rules, in which everything is driven by emotions and desires as convincing as they are magical.
* The Cup of Coffee Club: Major league baseball players with just one start. The president, surely, is Larry Yount:
Yount holds the unique distinction of being the only pitcher in MLB history to appear in the official record books without ever actually having faced a batter. In his only major league appearance on September 15, 1971, he had to leave the game during his warm-up pitches due to injury.
* Doug Henwood: The New York Fed is out with its credit report for the first quarter of 2012. It shows student debt bucking the trend (“Student Loan Debt Continues to Grow”), rising while all other kinds of debt fell from the end of last year. Student debt, at $904 billion (not yet the much-advertised trillion), is now considerably larger than credit card and auto debt. A decade ago, student debt was a less than half credit cards and autos.
* ThinkProgress looks at the Catholic Church’s case against the contraception mandate.
* And the U.S.’s crack cyberterrorism division gets caught with its pants down.
Written by gerrycanavan
June 1, 2012 at 5:49 pm
The Cyberwars Are Finally Here
Written by gerrycanavan
September 22, 2010 at 11:16 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with computers, cyberpunk, cyberterrorism, cyberwar, Iran, nuclearity
Behold, the Mother of All Saturday Linkdumps!
* Polish President Lech Kaczynski has apparently been killed in a plane crash in western Russia, alongside much of the leadership of the country. Updates at MeFi.
* Yesterday Stevens made it official. The timeline. A shortlist. The politics of shortlists. An offbeat shortlist. How about Cory Booker? Why Obama shouldn’t shy away from a confirmation fight. Why Glenn Greenwald is lukewarm on frontrunner Elena Kagan. Why the GOP may use the SCOTUS hearings as another excuse to freak out about health care. Or maybe just another excuse to flip out period. Still more at MeFi.
* Totally independent of anything anyone anywhere has said or done, threats against members of Congress have increased threefold in recent months. It’s a funny coincidence that means absolutely nothing.
* George W. Bush, Dick Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld covered up that hundreds of innocent men were sent to the Guantánamo Bay prison camp because they feared that releasing them would harm the push for war in Iraq and the broader War on Terror, according to a new document obtained by The Times.
* Everything old is new again: Gingrich says Republicans will shut down the government if they take over.
* Tony Judt on crisis, neoliberalism, greed, the end of history, and the need for a new New Left.
For thirty years students have been complaining to me that “it was easy for you”: your generation had ideals and ideas, you believed in something, you were able to change things. “We” (the children of the Eighties, the Nineties, the “Aughts”) have nothing. In many respects my students are right. It was easy for us—just as it was easy, at least in this sense, for the generations who came before us. The last time a cohort of young people expressed comparable frustration at the emptiness of their lives and the dispiriting purposelessness of their world was in the 1920s: it is not by chance that historians speak of a “lost generation.”
If young people today are at a loss, it is not for want of targets. Any conversation with students or schoolchildren will produce a startling checklist of anxieties. Indeed, the rising generation is acutely worried about the world it is to inherit. But accompanying these fears there is a general sentiment of frustration: “we” know something is wrong and there are many things we don’t like. But what can we believe in? What should we do?
* Full with polls: The IRS is more popular than the tea partiers.
* “Kind of a Glenn Beck approach”: On male studies. More at Salon.
* Another great segment from the Daily Show about blatant Fox News dishonesty, this one on the lies they’re telling about the START treaty. But the quote of the day on this comes from who else but Michele Bachmann, who calls for the U.S. to commit to nuclear retaliation in the event of a devastating cyber attack.
* Matt Yglesias on Treme‘s battle between realism and sentimentality.
* Comic book cartography. Their link to the principles of Kirbytech from my friends at Satisfactory Comics is pretty great too.
* Could our universe be located within the interior of a wormhole which itself is part of a black hole that lies within a much larger universe? I’m surprised there’s even debate about something that is so trivially true.
* Negative Twenty Questions, John Wheeler’s analogy for quantum mechanics.
* Of all the people in human history who ever reached the age of 65, half are alive now. Welcome to the elderly age.
* Multicellular life found that can live entirely without oxygen.
* xkcd’s version of hell is now fully playable.
* Chris Christie working overtime to destroy public universities in New Jersey.
* In Washington, D.C., you’re not a rape victim unless police say so. Via Feministe.
* HIV-positive Michigan man to be tried as bioweapon.
* Are we still waiting for the other shoe to drop on Greece?
* The Texas miracle? Wind power in an oil state.
* Two from Krugman: Building a Green Economy and Al Gore Derangement Syndrome.
* Somewhat related: Tim Morton on hyperobjects.
Hyperobjects are phenomena such as radioactive materials and global warming. Hyperobjects stretch our ideas of time and space, since they far outlast most human time scales, or they’re massively distributed in terrestrial space and so are unavailable to immediate experience. In this sense, hyperobjects are like those tubes of toothpaste that say they contain 10% extra: there’s more to hyperobjects than ordinary objects.
* The Illinois Poison Control Center has a blog. MetaFilter has highlights.
* And Gizmodo has your periodic table of imaginary elements.
Written by gerrycanavan
April 10, 2010 at 1:34 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, airplanes, Al Gore, anti-feminism, Barack Obama, biology, blogs, Chris Christie, climate change, comics, Cory Booker, crisis, cyberterrorism, Daily Show, David Simon, disaster, ecology, Elena Kagan, eliminationism, end of history, energy, Fox News, Greece, greed, Green Recovery, Guantánamo, health care, Hell, HIV and AIDS, How did we survive the 1990s?, How the University Works, hyperobjects, Jack Kirby, John Paul Stevens, Krugman, Krypton, lies and lying liars, male studies, many worlds and alternate universes, maps, Michele Bachmann, neoliberalism, New Jersey, New New Left, New Orleans, Newt Gingrich, nuclearity, oil, periodic tables, poison control, Poland, politics, polls, quantum mechanics, rape culture, realism, Republicans, Satisfactory Comics, science fiction, sentimentality, student debt, Superman, Supreme Court, taxes, Tea Party, television, Tetris, Texas, the cosmos, the elderly, Tim Morton, Tony Judt, Treme, violence, war on terror, Washington D.C., when you stare too long into the abyss the abyss stares back into you, wind power, xkcd