Infospigot: The Chronicles

 The times, the life, the dribbling, of an information spigot.

 

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Thursday, May 27, 2004

Paranoia and skepticism


A note from a friend:
"Sounds paranoid, but has any news outlet checked this out?

http://prisonplanet.tv/articles/may2004/052504digitalwatermarks.htm

[Text at that link:] "There are several postings on message boards suggesting that the digital watermarks on the Berg and Abu Ghraib videos are exactly the same. While at this point we have no concrete confirmation of this, it would fit with other examples of how the Berg execution and Abu Ghraib torture scenes are very similar. The contention is that Berg was killed by the US military as a staged psy-op to distract attention from the torture scandal, an execution blamed on 'CIArabs'."
My response:
"Give me a fucking break. Honestly. The first
conspiracy theories about this were floating around on
the Web within 24 hours of the Berg news being
reported. I'm sorry, I take this as a sign of our
spreading sick credulity, in the same category with
the reports that all the Jews working in the World
Trade Center were told not to come to work on 9/11
(sounds paranoid! but did anyone in the media REALLY
check it out thoroughly???). "
Should the media be skeptical and inquisitive? Of course -- much, much more so than they generally hves been in the whole Iraq affair, especially at the outset. And yeah, of course, rumors should be checked out. But take a look at the link, and you find not a rumor, but an urban legend: People posting that they've seen messages on the Net about video watermarks, about anonymous experts at Kodak who've analyzed the Berg and Abu Ghraib videos, and how the whole thing is going to break on national news "tonite" (at some unspecified point in the past). Do I have a knee-jerk tendency to reject this kind of rumor-mongering? I do, and I often have to check that to see that I'm not reacting out of pure defensiveness or unwillingness to believe unpalatable truths. On the other hand, I wish people were a little less willing to believe whatever some "authority" says on the topic of the day, whether it's Colin Powell talking about the mobile bioweapons labs in Iraq or some doofus pushing his Nick Berg conspiracy theories online.

I think the damage in focusing on nutso rumors, like the ones about the Kodak experts and the digital video watermarking, is that real aspects of the events that led to the Berg murder are overshadowed or ignored. For instance, it's clear that Berg was in custody and had contact with U.S. agents, officials, and troops. How about a full accounting of those contacts, a real timeline, so we can get an idea of how he managed to fall into the hands of his captors? (Yeah, I believe some bad Iraqis who don't like us killed him, not some CIA types doing "psy-ops"; if for no other reason, I believe that because the CIA hasn't managed to get a single thing right in Iraq that we know about, and I find it hard to believe their first successful operation was cutting off this kid's head.) If we get that accounting, then we'd have a picture of U.S. officials' real culpability in what happened to Nick Berg.
11:34:19 PM    comment []

End of TechTV

At 1 a.m. Friday (about two hours and 10 minutes from now), TechTV's signal will be merged with G4's,  and something called G4techtv will be born. What a business: Ziff-Davis, Paul Allen, and now Comcast have dumped hundreds and hundreds of millions into TechTV between the startup, Allen's purchase from ZDTV and other investors (he's reported to have spent $320 million on it), Comcast's buyout of Allen (they reportedly spent $290 million), and all the money that's gone into operating the beast (an unschooled guess would be $100 million total over TechTV's; though I imagine it easily could have been double or triple that). And after all that money and six years, the channel is back to semi-start-up mode (though it's a very well distributed start-up, with 44 million households to start). It'll be interesting to watch the trajectory.

10:49:48 PM    comment []

Crap 3

Long story short (I was writing the long version of this, but thanks to an unmentionable Radio UserLand quirk -- there is no save feature when you're composing a post, and your posts get wiped out if you accidentally hit a link or through other misadventure go to another page before you actually publish it, and that's just what happened to me for the umpteenth goddamn time) I lost three weeks' worth of un-backed-up posts. I retrieved the page source through Google's cache of the site, and have republished the lost posts as Radio "story" files:


May 6-11 posts
May 13-24 posts

11:04:14 AM    comment []

Crap 2

Well, this isn't as big a problem as my previous "Crap" post, I hope. Now I appear to have gotten back most of my archived stuff. What I don't know is whether I can restore my public site to the way it was before this morning, or whether I've lost all or just part of it.

10:01:31 AM    comment []

© Copyright 2004 Dan Brekke.



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