david galbraith's blog
August 22, 2006
Dave Winer on the JonBenet story.

Dave is right on to keep banging on about the morbid obsession with the JonBenet story.

My take is that this is somewhat apallingly taking the place of a light relief story, like a dog on a skateboard clip.

Current geopolitical stories in the Middle East in particular are difficult to grapple with or find a clear cut answer to - so when a Paedophile is wheeled in, people find no moral ambiguity there, and just react on gut without having to think, venting their anger with a 'burn the witch' chorus.

To saturate the news with this makes Paedophile baiting a form of light entertainment distraction, although nobody will admit to the fact, which is very disturbing.

Posted by david galbraith on August 22, 2006
April 29, 2006
Publicly Traded Internet Gambling Company, 888, Blacklisted by Marketing Body for Illegal Spamming Prior to its IPO

888 Holdings is a $1.5billion company built on spam. Last year, prior to their CSFB underwritten IPO I noticed that a large portion of the comment spam on my own site was from them and called them up in their gangster den in Gibraltar (largely for a laugh).

Their share price is holding up nicely, after all, blog spamming etc. is far too geeky and seems too trivial for people to listen to. I would argue that 888's revenues, and certainly their initial competitive edge, are significantly dependent on spam. Recently one of their own industry organizations, the International Gaming Affiliate Marketing Initiative, IGAMI, has blacklisted them because of spamming.

If this had been a company employing the same techniques in traditional marketing, their IPO would have been pulled and some of its employees would likely have ended up in jail. But no investigative journalist has so far covered the case.

This is from a report by the IGAMI:

"iGAMI has been meticulously investigating and tracking unscrupulous marketing activities since September of 2005 conducted by and/or for the online casino - Casino on Net / 888; which is currently listed on the London Stock Exchange – FTSE - 888 HOLDINGS PLC.

Our investigation indicated that this casino has engaged in and benefited directly from unethical marketing techniques leading up to, during, and after their floatation late last year.

We discovered numerous instances of blog and forum spamming* where domains owned and operated by Cassava Enterprises were being impermissibly promoted on unsuspecting websites. We have further discovered thousands of domains; which were and continue to this day to employ a technique referred to as scraping**.

Based on these findings and 888’s failure to address the issues in a comprehensive and timely manner the iGAMI Advisory Board voted to place the 888/Casino On Net affiliate program and its casino clients onto an industry blacklist."

The International Gaming Affiliate Marketing Initiative

Posted by david galbraith on April 29, 2006
July 21, 2004
Bullshit statistics

Two very different headlines in the UK press illustrate a truism in news - people always gravitate towards the sensational. Overall, crime has dramatically fallen.

BBC: Violent crime figures rise by 12%

Independent: New figures reveal that crime has fallen 39 per cent over the past nine years - the biggest sustained fall since the 19th century

Posted by david galbraith on July 21, 2004
January 31, 2004
Blowing away the romance of violent crime

Excellent review of a myth busting biography of Dick Turpin the 18th Century highwayman who according to popular mythology was the epitome of the glamorous and likeable villain, an archetype that stretches from Robin Hood to Butch Cassidy to the fictitious Hannibal Lecter.

How far then is the squalid reality of Armin Miewes, the German cannibal, from the dapper and erudite Lecter. The real Turpin it seems was just as different, an unattractive, unchivalrous and brutal thief who raped and murdered.

"In April 1739 a pock-marked butcher was hanged at York for crimes against His Majesty's Highways. Richard Turpin's death was just about the only thing in his shortish life that conformed to anyone's idea of how a highwayman was supposed to be."

Posted by david galbraith on January 31, 2004
August 28, 2003
27 Million people are slaves

"There are more slaves today than were seized from Africa in four centuries of the trans-Atlantic slave trade."

21st-Century Slaves - National Geographic Magazine

via Zeldman

Posted by david galbraith on August 28, 2003
April 16, 2003
The hypocrisy of the outcry at the looting of Iraqi museums

An old work colleague told me a story of how he used to work at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London as a student in the 1950's. Periodically they would throw stuff in the garbage that they didn't feel was worth restoring. A restorer who had worked there all his life used to salvage these pieces and restore them, at home, in his spare time. When the restorer fell ill and, unusually, didn't show up for work, his boss decided to visit him and check if he was OK. On entering the restorer's house he found an Aladdin's Cave of salvaged artifacts. The restorer was fired and his pension withdrawn. The restored artifacts were removed from his house, placed in a pile and burned.

Curators are outraged by the loss of Iraqi antiquities, but unless they offer up some of their own collections they are hypocrites. Looting during war was the very process by which much of the contents of Western museums was originally obtained. There are two solutions to the loss of antiquities in Iraq: 1. document and try and get back objects as they come on the market; 2. fill the Iraqi museums with objects sitting in the US and UK. Not surprisingly I don't hear anyone at institutions like the British Museum suggesting the latter.

Times Online:

"Unlike Greece, Iraq has, up till now, never made any demand for the return of what may be considered its patrimony and heritage. Most of the vast holdings, some 250,000 items in the BM [British Museum] alone, were acquired long ago."

The only justification for keeping stolen goods such as the Elgin Marbles (the sculpted frieze of the Parthenon) is protection. For many artifacts, this is a myth. Many museums do not have the funding to catalogue, or protect, let alone display a large proportion of their collections. The Victoria and Albert Museum in London reputedly has the largest collection of Indian Art anywhere - including any museum in India, yet the true extent is not known as it is not completely catalogued. The last complete specimen of the extinct Dodo rotted in a cupboard at the Oxford University Mueum of Natural History and had to be burned in the 19th century. Only part of its beak and a foot were salvaged, retrieved from the flames by a thoughtful curator.

Will there be an international architectural competition for a new Mesopotamian museum in Baghdad, to be stocked from the existing collections of institutions like the British Museum? I doubt it.

Posted by david galbraith on April 16, 2003
February 11, 2003
Sober up before judgement

State Can Make Inmate Sane Enough to Execute

"In 1986, the United States Supreme Court held in an opinion by Justice Thurgood Marshall, that the execution of the insane was barred by the Eighth Amendment, which prohibits cruel and unusual punishment. "

What were the Supreme Court thinking here?
Surely the issue with insanity is that it diminishes reponsibility, i.e. some lunatics aren't responsible for their own actions, and therefore get treatment.

To say that not being of sound mind makes the process of execution cruel means that the sedatives that are used prior to lethal injections are potentially unconstitutional.

Posted by david galbraith on February 11, 2003
January 24, 2003
Dancing with cats

More books from the minds of the criminally insane:

Dancing With Cats

other related titles include "Cat Artists and their Work" (Shouldn't that read 'Con Artists'?) and "Test Your Cat's Creative Intelligence: Eighteen Easy-To-Use Test Cards to Verify Your Cat's Artistic Ability"

Thanks Nick

Posted by david galbraith on January 24, 2003
December 03, 2002
An invisible suicide bomb, are suicide 'infectors' a threat?

The raised awareness of the potential horrors of bio-terrorism may shortly lead to the vacination of 0.5M healthworkers in the US against Smallpox and measures to detect containers of bio weapons. Surely then, the most difficult bio weapons container to detect would be a human.

In other words, could a suicide terrorist infect his or herself with a disease and take employment somewhere that put themselves in contact with lots of people e.g. in a large restaurant, in order to carry out a biological terrorist attack?

The thought that created this fear, was the memory of the story of Typhoid Mary. - Didn't thousands of people die when she deliberately infected people with Typhoid as she worked as a cook?

Looking into the true story of Typhoid Mary however reafirms the notion that one of the most worrying things about biological weapons is that they are more readily weapons of mass hysteria than destruction.

Urban Legends Reference Pages: Medical (Typhoid Mary)

Posted by david galbraith on December 03, 2002
December 02, 2002
Glenn Reynolds' half truths

Glenn Reynold's quotes a story from the UK's Daily Telegraph.
Fewer guns: more crime

The 'fewer guns' is Glenn's addition, and conclusion to explain the UK's growing crime rate (incidentally the numbers of guns are also on the increase in the UK - but I don't need to go into that).

From the same newspaper:

"Robberies in America are much more likely to be at gunpoint, which is one reason why the murder rate is much higher. The main reason for a much lower burglary rate in America is householders' propensity to shoot intruders. They do so without fear of being dragged before courts and jailed for life.

If American tourists coming to Britain are frightened of being murdered, a rare crime in any case, it is much less likely to happen in London than in any American city... Murder is the most likely cause of death in young men, who are 50 times more likely to be killed in Washington than in London, mainly because guns are so easy to obtain."

Remember Sweden and the Netherlands have higher crime rates than the US - but the US is a much more violent place to be.

Fewer guns: fewer murders, QED.


Posted by david galbraith on December 02, 2002
October 25, 2002
killing children

Christopher Hitchens lauds the American people's patriotism and restraint after 9/11:

"He [Hitchens] was, however, slightly disturbed by Gornick's suggestion that the increase in patriotic displays over the last 18 months was nothing more than collective insecurity masquerading as civic engagement. "In my day, Vivian," he said, "we called it 'solidarity.'" Hitchens added--rather calmly, for a change--that none of the looting, pillaging, and persecution predicted after 9/11 occurred because people were acutely aware of the danger of turning into something completely antipodean to American values."

Coming from the UK where the Victorian's famously created the idea that children should be 'seen and not heard', an American value that I particularly admire is the celebration of childhood. A large portion of American culture celebrates childhood. As such, the Washington snipers' threat last week that no children were safe, produced an instinctive reaction of revulsion.

So two people have been arrested over the sniper attacks, and one of them is a 17 year old minor. Someone not yet deemed to have the responsibility to vote or drink but who could be held ultimately responsible for their own actions and be sentenced to death if tried in Virginia.

BBC - "US authorities plan to seek the death penalty against the two suspects in the Washington sniper killings."

The execution of minors, children, is only legally sanctioned in the Democratic Republic of Congo, the US and - Iraq.

Robert Bryce wrote in Salon that "During his tenure as governor of Texas, Bush has overseen far more executions than any other governor in modern American history. During his tenure, 112 men and one woman have been executed. That's nearly 20 percent of the 600 people who have been executed in the United States since 1976. Two of the men executed during Bush's tenure -- Joseph Cannon and Robert Carter, both of whom were executed in 1998 -- were 17 at the time of their crimes."

The US's policy on capital punishment has often produced anger abroad, prompting Jack Lang, the former French Education minister to call George W Bush a "murderer."

In 1999 the high court asked Solicitor General Seth Waxman - the Justice Department's second-ranking law officer - to explain why the United States is not bound by the international civil rights treaty, which states: "Sentence of death shall not be imposed for crimes committed by persons below eighteen years of age and shall not be carried out on pregnant women."

"In 1992, the U.S. did ratify the International Convention on Civil and Political Rights, but only after inserting a codicil disavowing the provision that banned the execution of minors. And the U.S. signed the 1989 Convention on the Rights of the Child, which also bans capital punishment for persons younger than 18 at the time of crime, but the Senate never ratified it."

Every country but the United States and Somalia also has ratified the U.N. Convention on the Rights of the Child, which bans the juvenile death penalty.

According to Victor L. Streib, dean of Ohio Northern University's Law School.
"We may be in violation of international law," he said. "But I wouldn't expect to see U.N. troops in Virginia anytime soon."

Posted by david galbraith on October 25, 2002
October 22, 2002
English law is really like a Monty Python sketch

This is a classic - extract from a real court case in the UK, a man accused of stealing 40,000 coat hangars runs rings around the lawyer.

...

Counsel: Yes, m'lud. Now, Mr Chrysler, perhaps you will describe what reason you had to steal 40,000 coat hangers?

Defendant: Is that a question?

Counsel: Yes.

Defendant: It doesn't sound like one. It sounds like a proposition which doesn't believe in itself. You know - "Perhaps I will describe the reason I had to steal 40,000 coat hangers... Perhaps I won't... Perhaps I'll sing a little song instead..."

Judge: In fairness to Mr Lovelace, Mr Chrysler, I should remind you that barristers have an innate reluctance to frame a question as a question. Where you and I would say, "Where were you on Tuesday?", they are more likely to say, "Perhaps you could now inform the court of your precise whereabouts on the day after that Monday?". It isn't, strictly, a question, and it is not graceful English but you must pretend that it is a question and then answer it, otherwise we will be here for ever. Do you understand?

etc. etc.

Transcript:
Independent

Posted by david galbraith on October 22, 2002
September 19, 2002
blueish collar

or could it be this...

"...sentenced Rex to six years on her guilty plea to forgery, suspending four years of the sentence. The first of her four years on probation must be spent on house arrest.

Rex admitted stealing a total of $500 from three elderly residents of the home in West Lafayette. But she paid a total of $700 in restitution."

Posted by david galbraith on September 19, 2002
white collar

So what's the bet for Koslowski's punishment, could it be this...

"Federal judge stands by mild sentence of embezzler

A federal judge sentenced a former bank executive convicted of embezzlement to serve eight hours in custody for a second time after an appeals court asked him to reconsider the sentence.

U.S. District Judge Edwin Nelson on Thursday ordered Mari Sanders of Vestavia Hills to serve a day in jail, six months in a community corrections facility and pay a $10,000 fine for stealing $187,000."

Which works out at a pretty good salary - 2 x 187 - 10 = $364,000 per year

Posted by david galbraith on September 19, 2002
mr. potato head

An $11,000 shower curtain, a $2000 waste basket, wait it gets better...

"Dennis Kozlowski and two of his alleged partners in corporate crime were charged yesterday with looting their own company out of $600 million.
The staggering figure was revealed in criminal indictments and separate lawsuits filed by Tyco and the Securities and Exchange Commission that accuse Kozlowski of using the plundered money to fund a lavish - and cheesy - lifestyle.

Among other things, he allegedly spent $1 million in Tyco money on a birthday bash for his second wife, Karen Mayo, that featured an ice sculpture of Michelangelo's David - which sprayed vodka from its penis."


Posted by david galbraith on September 19, 2002