foomandoonian’s halfblog - ( blog > tumblelog > halfblog > microblog > nanoblog )
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How to spot a Twitter follow bot

It's not that hard frankly! I've attached a graph showing the last three months of followers and following for the @web_cardiff account, and you can see the pattern clearly: The green line is the bot. It follows a bunch, waits a few days and unfollows those who didn't follow back. Repeat. (My graph isn't 100% accurate, but you can see the numbers for yourself: followers / 'friends'.)

What do you think? Is this bad practice? In this case, the information isn't bad - a few links go to the owner's site, but most point to genuinely useful resources. Friendly spam or useful resource worth promoting in this way?

Filed under  //   rants   twitter  

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Dan Gillmor's 22 new rules of news

I think this is an excellent list (slightly ironic, given rule 11) about how journalistic practices should be reformed for the web age. This article from the Guardian is Creative Commons licenced, so I've taken the liberty and reproduced below Dan Gillmor's list of 22 things that he'd insist upon if he ran a news organization:

1. We would not run anniversary stories and commentary, except in the rarest of circumstances. They are a refuge for lazy and unimaginative journalists.

2. We would invite our audience to participate in the journalism process, in a variety of ways that included crowdsourcing, audience blogging, wikis and many other techniques. We'd make it clear that we're not looking for free labour – and will work to create a system that rewards contributors beyond a pat on the back – but want above all to promote a multi-directional flow of news and information in which the audience plays a vital role.

3. Transparency would be a core element of our journalism. One example of many: every print article would have an accompanying box called "Things We Don't Know," a list of questions our journalists couldn't answer in their reporting. TV and radio stories would mention the key unknowns. Whatever the medium, the organisation's website would include an invitation to the audience to help fill in the holes, which exist in every story.

4. We would create a service to notify online readers, should they choose to sign up for it, of errors we've learned about in our journalism. Users of this service could choose to be notified of major errors only (in our judgment) or all errors, however insignificant we may believe them to be.

5. We'd make conversation an essential element of our mission. Among other things:

- If we were a local newspaper, the editorial pages would publish the best of, and be a guide to, conversation the community was having with itself online and in other public forums, whether hosted by the news organization or someone else.

- Editorials would appear in blog format, as would letters to the editor.

- We would encourage comments and forums, but in moderated spaces that encouraged the use of real names and insisted on (and enforced) civility.

- Comments from people using verified real names would be listed first.

6. We would refuse to do stenography and call it journalism. If one faction or party to a dispute is lying, we would say so, with the accompanying evidence. If we learned that a significant number of people in our community believed a lie about an important person or issue, we would make it part of an ongoing mission to help them understand the truth.

7. We would replace PR-speak and certain Orwellian words and expressions with more neutral, precise language. If someone we interview misused language, we would paraphrase instead of using direct quotations. (Examples, among many others: The activity that takes place in casinos is gambling, not gaming. There is no death tax, there can be inheritance or estate tax. Piracy does not describe what people do when they post digital music on file-sharing networks.)

8. We would embrace the hyperlink in every possible way. Our website would include the most comprehensive possible listing of other media in our community, whether we were a community of geography or interest. We'd link to all relevant blogs, photo-streams, video channels, database services and other material we could find, and use our editorial judgement to highlight the ones we consider best for the members of the community. And we'd liberally link from our journalism to other work and source material relevant to what we're discussing, recognising that we are not oracles but guides.

9. Our archives would be freely available, with links on every single thing we've published as far back as possible, with application interfaces (APIs) to help other people use our journalism in ways we haven't considered ourselves.

10. We would help people in the community become informed users of media, not passive consumers – to understand why and how they can do this. We would work with schools and other institutions that recognise the necessity of critical thinking.

11. We would never publish lists of ten. They're a prop for lazy and unimaginative people.

12. Except in the most dire of circumstances – such as a threat to a whistleblower's life, liberty or livelihood – we would not quote or paraphrase unnamed sources in any of our journalism. If we did, we would need persuasive evidence from the source as to why we should break this rule, and we'd explain why in our coverage. Moreover, when we did grant anonymity, we'd offer our audience the following guidance: We believe this is one of the rare times when anonymity is justified, but we urge you to exercise appropriate skepticism.

13. If we granted anonymity and learned that the unnamed source had lied to us, we would consider the confidentially agreement to have been breached by that person, and would expose his or her duplicity, and identity. Sources would know of this policy before we published. We'd further look for examples where our competitors have been tricked by sources they didn't name, and then do our best to expose them, too.

14. The word "must" – as in "The president must do this or that" – would be banned from editorials or other commentary from our own journalists, and we'd strongly discourage it from contributors. It is a hollow verb and only emphasizes powerlessness. If we wanted someone to do something, we'd try persuasion instead, explaining why it's a good idea and what the consequences will be if the advice is ignored.

15. We'd routinely point to our competitors' work, including (and maybe especially) the best of the new entrants, such as bloggers who cover specific niche subjects. When we'd covered the same topic, we'd link to them so our audience can gain wider perspectives. We'd also talk about, and point to, competitors when they covered things we missed or ignored.

16. Beyond routinely pointing to competitors, we would make a special effort to cover and follow up on their most important work, instead of the common practice today of pretending it didn't exist. Basic rule: the more we wish we'd done the journalism ourselves, the more prominent the exposure we'd give the other folks' work. This would have at least two beneficial effects. First, we'd help persuade our community of an issue's importance. Second, we'd help people understand the value of solid journalism, no matter who did it.

17. The more we believed an issue was of importance to our community, the more relentlessly we'd stay on top of it ourselves. If we concluded that continuing down a current policy path was a danger, we'd actively campaign to persuade people to change course. This would have meant, for example, loud and persistent warnings about the danger of the blatantly obvious housing/financial bubble that inflated during this decade.

18. For any person or topic we covered regularly, we would provide a "baseline": an article or video where people could start if they were new to the topic, and point prominently to that "start here" piece from any new coverage. We might use a modified Wikipedia approach to keep the article current with the most important updates. The point would be context, giving some people a way to get quickly up to speed and others a way to recall the context of the issue.

19. For any coverage where it made sense, we'd tell our audience members how they could act on the information we'd just given them. This would typically take the form of a "What You Can Do" box or pointer.

20. We'd work in every possible way to help our audience know who's behind the words and actions. People and institutions frequently try to influence the rest of us in ways that hide their participation in the debate, and we'd do our best to reveal who's spending money and pulling strings. When our competitors declined to reveal such things, or failed to ask obvious questions of their sources, we'd talk about their journalistic failures in our own coverage of the issues.

21. Assess risks honestly. Journalists constantly use anecdotal evidence in ways that frighten the public into believing this or that problem is larger than it actually is. As a result, people have almost no idea what are statistically more risky behaviours or situations. And lawmakers, responding to media-fed public fears, often pass laws that do much more aggregate harm than good. We would make it a habit not to extrapolate a wider threat from weird or tragic anecdotes; frequently discuss the major risks we face and compare them statistically to the minor ones; and debunk the most egregious examples of horror stories that spark unnecessary fear or even panic.

22. No opinion pieces or commentary from major politicians or company executives. OK, this is a minor item. But these folks almost never actually write what appears under their bylines. We're being just as dishonest as they are by using this stuff. If they want to pitch a policy, they should post it on their own web pages, and we'll be happy to point to it.

Earlier versions of this article appeared on Mediactive. It is published under a Creative Commons attribution-noncommercial-share alike 3.0 (US) license

Filed under  //   inspiration   rants  

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Ubuntu for girls

Mark Shuttleworth has kicked up a bit of a storm by apparently saying that Linux was "hard to explain to girls". There is an open letter post about this on the Geek Feminism Blog, followed by a hell of a lot of comments on the subject. It seems to boil down to 'he didn't really mean it like that', 'it's not okay to say that kind of thing, even if you didn't mean it like that' and 'has anyone seen this video or a transcript anyway?'

Anyway, I've made a little graphic that Ubuntu could use for their 11.10 release if they wanted to tackle this issue. :)

(Please note this was produced with a high level of sarcasm and irony. If you are offended, please look up those words before commenting!)

Filed under  //   linux   politics   rants   ubuntu  

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How do you turn 3.9million internet pirates into 7million? A lesson in statistics.

Where the British Government's official figure on the level of illegal filesharing in the UK came from:

  • Survey 1,176 people
  • 136 admit of filesharing - that's 11.6%
  • Beef that up a bit, some must have been lying: 16.3% sounds good.
  • Let's assume there are 40million people in the country with net access
  • (Actual figure according to the ONS: 33.9m)
  • That's a shocking 7million pirates in the UK!
  • (Actual figure: 3.9million)

And guess where the figure came from: Government > Forrester Research > Jupiter Research > Commissioned by the BPI, the music trade body. This stuff drives me batshit.

Filed under  //   piracy   politics   rants  

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Loss of gadgets: £21,000, Loss of private data: PRICELESS

Apparently in the last three years almost £21,000 worth of gadgets have been lost by Welsh Assembly civil servants and even the odd minister, Huw Thomas reports.

Breakdown of losses
2005: no losses were reported
2006: 16 laptops lost/stolen [All civil servants]
2007: 4 laptops lost/stolen [All civil servants]
2008: 8 laptops lost/stolen [All civil servants]; 7 blackberries lost/stolen [6 civil servants and 1 Minister/Deputy Minister]; 2 mobile phones lost/stolen [All civil servants]

So far in 2009 they have already lost: 'three laptops (civil servants), four mobiles (civil servants) and three Blackberries (from two civil servants and one special adviser)'.

Although £7,000 per year may seem insignificant in the grand scheme of things, you have to wonder what data was on these devices. Was it anything private? Secret? Was it encrypted? Also, it's unclear whether most of the gadgets were lost or stolen - are these civil servants incompetent, or are they being targeted by criminals or opportunists?

I think we need to know more.

Filed under  //   datahole   rants  

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A quick rant about linking on Twitter

Here's an innocent link being shared on Twitter:

Free Font FP Head Pro by Fontpartners http://post.ly/T7r Font72


I don't want to pick on @imjustcreative, but this is a complete link fail. It could only be worse if it used a framing short URL.

When you click on the link you get taken to Graham's Posterous blog, then to fontsquirrel. They appear to be the vendor, but confusingly their download button takes you offsite and dumps you on fontpartners.com. You have finally arrived at your destination, but now you have to remember what the font you wanted was called and find it yourself.

This is the link you needed in the first place: http://fontpartners.com/fpHead_pro.html

Spot anything wrong? Yup, that's right, no 'free download' link. Just the option to buy at the top.

In the time it has taken me to compose this, @imjustcreative replied to my moan on Twitter:

@Foomandoonian now ur just being lazy and whingy, just be thankful you have a link at all :)


Yeah, thanks buddy.

Filed under  //   rants   twitter  

Comments [2]

A dirty little trick to get more followers on Twitter

About a year ago I gave up caring who started following me on Twitter, largely because of the proliferation of blatant spammers. I put up a note on my bio saying that if people really wanted me to reciprocate, the should send me a message, and I would certainly follow back if they were an interesting real person, and not some spam account (or worse). This still seems perfectly reasonable to me.

More recently though I decided I should take a more active interest in those who choose to follow me. I started using the excellent Topify, which makes it easy to identify spammers and I check out anyone who seems interesting.

Consequently, I've spotted an annoying trend.

There are many, many users who follow about 200 more people than follow them back. They are taking advantage of the fact that about half of the people that they follow, will follow them back! For whatever reason a large number of people feel it is the done thing to just blindly follow back anyone who follows them, however spammy, offensive or bizarre the new follower is! Personally, I don't understand this behaviour in the slightest: I don't want spam in my Twitter stream - so I don't follow spammers. It's simple.

Nonetheless, if you want to steadily grow your follower base, add 100 new people a day. Then, after you've been doing this for a few days, go back and unfollow all those who didn't follow you in return, while continuing to follow new people. This way your ratio will always be near enough 1:1, making you look legitimate and popular. Eventually, when you reach an acceptable target (say, 10,000 followers) you can have a big purge and get rid of a lot of the mindless sheep you have accumulated. Say, 20-30% of them. Now it looks like you are a power user. Any new visitors to your profile will assume that you are hugely important and that maybe they should listen to you too.

So there you go, now you can claim to be an SEO-demigod, and have huge numbers of low-quality followers seeming to back it up.

Or you could just use Twitter like a normal person.

Filed under  //   rants   twitter  

Comments [5]

Sci Fi Channel renaming themselves SyFy

TV Week: 'Sci Fi Channel Aims to Shed Geeky Image With New Name'

Syfy itself is not such a bad name, except I want to pronounce it 'Siffy' (or 'Skiffy').

“When we tested this new name, the thing that we got back from our 18-to-34 techno-savvy crowd, which is quite a lot of our audience, is actually this is how you’d text it,” Mr. Howe said. “It made us feel much cooler, much more cutting-edge, much more hip, which was kind of bang-on what we wanted to achieve communication-wise.”

That speaks volumes to me. If you can read past the executive-speak, it's clear they're not interested in conveying depth or substance. I don't know if they ever really were, but this no longer seems like the kind of channel that would attempt to adapt Dune for the small screen. Hmm, maybe that's a bad example...

So, what sort of programming should we expect?

Warehouse 13

The series, about a secret government facility in South Dakota where all mysterious relics and supernatural souvenirs are housed...

Well, that's hardly anything groundbreaking, but shows like Buffy sound stupid on the face of it. Let's see what else they have to say about it:

“It is a dramedy ..."

Fuck me, a dramedy! He used that word? Really? I hope I am missing a huge layer of irony! Sorry, I should let him finish:

“It is a dramedy and it is set in the here and now. It’s a kind of an Indiana Jones meets ‘Moonlighting’ meets ‘The X-Files,’” Mr. Howe said. “This is a very accessible, relatable, fun show.”

Well, I'm not keeping my fingers crossed or anything.

Imagine Greater

Plucking a leaf from the Apple school of bad grammar sloganeering ('Think Different') is fine, but I hope they can live up to the promise. Mostly I'm just worried that the rebranding is the signifier of a downward trend. Sci Fi is already a dumbed-down variation on Science Fiction. SF may have been a step upwards, but instead Syfy dumbs things down further, and more importantly, distances the channel from an obligation to present science fiction programming.

One final quote that leaves me unimpressed, and slightly insulted:

“What we love about this is we hopefully get the best of both worlds,” Mr. Howe said. “We’ll get the heritage and the track record of success, and we’ll build off of that to build a broader, more open and accessible and relatable and human-friendly brand.”

Filed under  //   rants  

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Spam from the UN?

You can't make this crap up:

 

FROM: UNITED NATIONS COMPENSATIONS PAYMENTS
OVERSIGHT SERVICES DEPARTMENT.
REF/PAYMENTS CODE:06654 $B(B5M MILLION POUNDS.

THIS IS TO BRING TO YOUR NOTICE THAT I AM DELEGATED FROM THE UNITED NATIONS OVERSIGHT SERVICES DEPARTMENT, LONDON TO PAY 100 PEOPLE IDENTIFIED AS NIGERIAN 419 SCAM VICTIMS 5MILLION POUNDS EACH, YOU ARE LISTED AND APPROVED FOR THIS PAYMENT AS ONE OF THE SCAMMED VICTIMS, GET BACK TO ME AS SOON AS POSSIBLE WITH A SCANNED COPY OF YOUR INTERNATIONAL PASSPORTS OR DRIVERS LICENSE FOR IDENTIFICATIONS AND FOR THE IMMEDIATE PAYMENT OF YOUR $B(B5M POUNDS COMPENSATION FUNDS. ON THIS FAITHFUL RECOMMENDATIONS, I WANT YOU TO KNOW THAT DURING THE LAST UN MEETINGS HELD AT LONDON, IT WAS ALARMED SO MUCH BY THE REST OF THE WORLD IN THE MEETINGS ON THE LOSE OF FUNDS BY VARIOUS FOREIGNERS TO THE SCAMS ARTISTS OPERATING IN SYNDICATES ALL OVER THE WORLD TODAY, IN OTHER TO RETAIN THE GOOD IMAGE OF THEIR COUNTRY, THE PRESIDENT OF THE COUNTRY IS NOW PAYING 100 VICTIMS OF THIS OPERATORS $B(B5M EACH, DUE TO THE CORRUPT IN THE SYSTEMS IN NIGERIA, THE PAYMENTS ARE TO BE PAID BY BANK TO BANK THE PAYING BANK UNDER FUNDING ASSISTANCE BY THE UN.

ACCORDING TO THE NUMBER OF APPLICANTS AT HAND, 35 BENEFICIARIES HAVE BEEN PAID, HALF OF THE VICTIMS ARE FROM THE UNITED STATES, WE STILL HAVE MORE THAN HALF LEFT TO BE PAID THE COMPENSATIONS OF 5 MILLION POUNDS EACH. YOUR PARTICULARS WAS MENTIONED BY ONE OF THE SYNDICATES WHO WAS ARRESTED IN LAGOS-NIGERIA AS ONE OF THEIR VICTIMS OF THE OPERATIONS, YOU ARE HEREBY WARNED NOT TO COMMUNICATE OR DUPLICATE THIS MESSAGE TO ANY BODY FOR ANY REASON WHAT SO EVER, THE US SECRET SERVICE IS ALREADY ON TRACE OF THE CRIMINALS. FOR MORE VITAL INFORMATION, PLEASE VISIT: HTTP: //HOME.RICA.NET/ALPHAE/419COAL/NEWS1JUL.HTM, YOU CAN RECEIVE YOUR COMPENSATIONS PAYMENTS VIA ANY OF THE BOTH OPTIONS YOU CHOOSE, ACCOUNT TO ACCOUNT FAST WIRE TRANSFER OR BANK DRAFT PAYMENT MODE, I SHALL FEED YOU WITH FURTHER MODALITIES AS SOON AS I HEAR FROM YOU, SEND A COPY OF YOUR RESPONSE TO MY PRIVATE EMAIL ADDRESS: geraldnelson00r@jpg.ir

YOUR CO-OPERATION WILL BE HIGHLY APPRECIATED IN REGARDS.

BEST REGARDS,
GERALD NELSON


Related News: Spam Crackdown Threatens Koy4Goff's Penis Enlarger, Free iPod Industry

Filed under  //   funny   rants   spam  

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Twitter hands over another username

This time it's Daily Mail parody @Notdailymail_uk (formerly @dailymail_uk) who one day found their username had been taken without warning or opportunity for defence. The key difference here is that this account is clearly parody.

Read the full story here

Filed under  //   rants   twitter   virgin media  

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