Sexy Jihad

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Dutch Immigration Officials Go Too Far

March 16th, 2006 · Freedom & Democracy, Humor

Gay men kissing

In a comical yet absurd article, yahoo sheds some information on the latest the bright minds at the dutch goverment have to offer to curb immigration and get new applicants to fit in:

The camera focuses on two gay men kissing in a park. Later, a topless woman emerges from the sea and walks onto a crowded beach. For would-be immigrants to the Netherlands, this film is a test of their readiness to participate in the liberal Dutch culture.
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If they can’t stomach it, no need to apply.

Despite whether they find the film offensive, applicants must buy a copy and watch it if they hope to pass the Netherlands’ new entrance examination.

The test — the first of its kind in the world — became compulsory Wednesday, and was made available at 138 Dutch embassies.

As a dutch born citizen seeing two men kissing in the park isn’t something I find pleasant to endure, let alone the poor souls who are forced to watch it to attain citizenship. This my friends is dutch liberalism stepping out of bounds for the umpteenth time.

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India To Have Massive Power Problems

March 15th, 2006 · Business, Globalization & Debt

Power tapped off in India

The good old BBC has an eye opening piece on India’s current electricity predicament:

Slum dwellers’ unofficial hook-ups are the most visible sign of India’s power theft crisis, but there are yet bigger problems dogging the country’s energy sector.

Meter tampering by middle class households seeking to pay less than they should costs still more, says Sangeta Robinson, an official with local utility North Delhi Power Limited, a subsidiary of energy giant Tata Power.

And yet another huge loss – albeit one which no-one can quantify – is electricity theft by industrial enterprises.

Giresh Sant, who works for an NGO called Prayas campaigning for more efficient and accountable government, says the problem is one of corruption – and a vested electoral interest in turning a blind eye.

No-one likes paying their utility bills, he says, so often politicians regard laxness about revenue collection as a vote-winner.

And opportunities for personal enrichment through corruption related to industrial power theft have given them, as well as civil servants and utility officials, further incentives not to rock the boat.

The political aspect is probably most blatant in rural areas.

At least 20% of India’s power is consumed by farmers’ irrigation systems. Frequently they either get free power or pay low set charges that bear no relation to the amount of electricity used.

The powerful farmers’ lobby is hard for politicians to ignore in country where a majority of the population still makes its living from agriculture.

However my favourite piece of the article is this:

If the current 8% growth rate continues, India’s energy planners reckon generating capacity will need to expand sevenfold over the next 25 years – and that means as much as $300bn on new power stations and transmission lines.

Meanwhile, power theft means most of India’s state run electricity companies are close to bankruptcy, collectively losing $4.5bn a year.

You don’t have to be Einstein to see that this will cause major problems for India in the future. Also for a lot of other thirld world countries where corruption is the norm, and poor people just can’t afford electricity. Before people start campaigning for a computer in every home, they should probably figure out how to get people connected to the electricity grid first.

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The Pirate Bay Is Here To Stay

March 14th, 2006 · Bittorrent, Warez

The Pirate Bay Logo

Wired has a well written article on how The Pirate Bay is gaining notereity in Sweden and with international anti piracy organizations:

Last month, the Motion Picture Association of America announced one of its boldest sorties yet against online piracy: a barrage of seven federal lawsuits against some of the highest-profile BitTorrent sites, Usenet hosts and peer-to-peer services. Among the targets: isoHunt, TorrentSpy and eDonkey.

But, as always, one prominent site is missing from the movie industry’s announcement (.pdf), and it happens to be the simplest and best-known source of traded movies — along with pirated video games, music, software, audio books, television broadcasts and nearly any other form of media imaginable. The site is called The Pirate Bay, and it’s operated by a crew of intrepid Swedes who revel in tormenting the content industries.

“All of us who run the TPB are against the copyright laws and want them to change,” said “Brokep,” a Pirate Bay operator. “We see it as our duty to spread culture and media. Technology is just a means to doing that.”

A quick look at The Pirate Bay’s lineup suggests which side is winning the piracy wars. Among the site’s most popular downloads are recent Oscar nominees and winners like Closer and Brokeback Mountain, Steven Spielberg’s Munich, the latest Harry Potter film and even stinkers like Underworld: Evolution and The Pink Panther. Downloading doesn’t require users to register or install spyware — if one has a BitTorrent client installed, anything listed is just a click away.

Good to see that there are still people with the clout to fight back against the ridiculous anti-copyright laws we have these days. Let us hope that they gain more influence and Sweden doesn’t succumb to the MPAA and its buddies.

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Cool New Building Projects in Dubai Showcased

March 4th, 2006 · Business, Middle East

Dubai Sports City

Businessweek online has made a nice showcase of the cream of the current building projects in Dubai:

A building boom in the emirate has led to a whole host of chart breakers, in categories including highest apartment, biggest mall, and one of the world’s most unique resorts

Dubai has been grabbing headlines lately — for more reasons than one. First on everyone’s minds is the current controversy over Dubai Ports World’s acquisition of Britain’s Peninsular & Oriental Steam Navigation Co., making the Middle Eastern company the possible operator of shipping terminals at major U.S. ports.

Another reason this United Arab Emirate is gaining widespread global attention: Dubai is experiencing a construction boom, with new buildings going up at a pace that rivals China’s development — albeit on the scale of an emirate roughly the size of Yosemite National Park, and with a population of only 1.4 million.

While some of you will know my stance on the current boom in dubai, I must nevertheless say that these projects are impressive indeed!

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Desert Bus, Most Boring Game Ever Made?

March 3rd, 2006 · Humor, Video Games

Desert Bus Screenshot

After 11 years of waiting, here it is. The most boring game ever for the Sega:

Desert bus is probably one of the best games ever. Unfortunately the game was never released, until now. 11 years after the planned release date Waxy is hosting a torrent for this mythical game. The game is part of a long-lost Penn and Teller videogame.

The goal of the game is pretty straightforward. You have to drive a Bus through the desert from Tucson, Arizona to Las Vegas. The hard part is that the whole trip is in real-time, so it takes 8 hours at least.

Click here for torrent. And here I thought that the Advanced Lawnmower Simulator was bad……

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It’s Official, Oil Peak Has Been Reached!

March 2nd, 2006 · Business, Middle East

Oil Drum

The oil drum has written an (as ever) intelligent piece on why oil production is peaking now:

This post is for the benefit of those readers whose friends or relatives just spat out their coffee over their morning New York Times in surprise that oil is starting to run out and nobody warned them before now. If you are looking around for more background information, I would like to summarize a series of arguments and analyses that have led me to the view that peak oil is most likely occurring about now, give or take a year or two. My personal coffee-spitting incident occurred about a year ago, and this is some of what I’ve figured out in the meantime.

This is a quick summary of past analyses with links for further detail.

…..

While no one piece of evidence is conclusive, I find the overall picture here to be suggestive that oil production is close to it’s peak value and is not likely to increase too much more. Whether May 2005 will stand as the highest ever month of production or some month in 2006 or even 2007 rises a little higher is certainly hard to call. However, I would be quite surprised if the world is able to bring enough new production on stream to overcome those high decline rates in existing production for much longer. And with each passing year, it’s only going to get harder to do.

Lots of nice graphs and numbers included to back up the claim. We are in some serious doodoo ;-)

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BBC Sets It Right With Bittorrent

March 2nd, 2006 · Bittorrent

Bittorrent Schema

After quite a bit of negative feedback after a recent episode of Newsnight, the BBC has written a piece setting the record straight:

Now we’ve got that out the way, let us ask you a question. Why is it that every time the media starts to talk about the internet they feel compelled to bang on about paedophiles and terrorists and generally come over like a cross between Joe McCarthy and the Childcatcher from Chitty Chitty Bang Bang?

So we seek to equate the internet with all bad things to scare you off it. At some corporate freudian level, there’s some truth to that accusation.

But there’s a third explanation as well. Sometimes it’s legitimate.

Friday’s piece sought to make a very sophisticated point in the space of four minutes. The point was this: a file sharing protocol called BitTorrent now takes up a third of internet traffic, even by the most conservative estimates. The true figure is probably higher.

Some internet service providers aren’t very pleased about that, because although they sell their internet connections as unlimited usage, if people actually take them up on the offer then they can’t actually cope with demand.

“Boo hoo,” I hear you say to them. “Build some more wires in or whatever it is you do. That’s what we pay you for.” But no. The wicked ISPs have, increasingly, opted to block BitTorrent (and indeed other P2P protocols as well) using technology known as traffic shaping.

Good piece which shows (as ever) the the BBC is capable of intelligent journalism and discussion (unlike certain other networks….)

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The SNES Was As Good As It’s Gonna Get?

February 26th, 2006 · Video Games

SNES with Super Mario World
XYZ Computing has an interesting editorial touting that the SNES was the best console ever made, and that we’ll probably never achieve that kind of gaming perfection again:

As a long time console gamer I have made certain observations about the progress of consoles over the past few years. I, like everyone else, have enjoyed the technological advancement which has come as time has marched on. As systems get more powerful, games can get more complex, graphics can improve, sound quality can increase, and so on. As much as I enjoy Xbox and I will enjoy PlayStation 3, I constantly find myself comparing these systems to previous iterations and all too often I find them wanting.

It is my opinion that console gaming peaked with the Super Nintendo Entertainment System (SNES). Though it has just 16-bit graphics and a CPU which can’t even power one of today’s cell phones, this is arguably the best console gaming system of all time. After being introduced to the US market in September of 1991 the SNES went on to sell over 48.4 million units by 1999 (though the Nintendo 64 was introduced in 1997). The SNES replaced the aging Nintendo Entertainment System (NES) which had been available in the US since 1986. At the time Sega was controlling the 16-bit gaming scene with their Genesis, but it soon proved to be no match for the SNES. Ultimately the SNES ended up selling more than twice as many total units as the Genesis.

What is so great about the SNES? First of all there is the system itself. The SNES came packaged with two controllers and Super Mario World. Many systems, including Genesis, included just one controller and consumers had to buy another one if they wanted to play against one another. As for Super Mario World, the included game, it is one of the finest video games of all time. Though some would say it was impossible to successfully follow up Super Mario Brothers 3, this game did just that, even surpassing in it some ways. The system also features a simple, yet sound, design. I hesitate to call the SNES “rugged” but it could take the rigors of everyday use, unlike the first generation CD-based systems which replaced it. The system cost $200 dollars when introduced- adjusting for inflation that is about $270 today. Though not cheap this is still far below the expected prices of either the PlayStation 3 or the Xbox 360.

The other major strength of the SNES, the one that gives it the lasting power that is has, are the games. No system before or since has had a set of games on par with the titles (http://www.nintendo.com/doc/snes_games.pdf) offered on this console. Part of being the successor of the NES meant that consumers would be expecting new versions of their favorite titles. They were not disappointed with games like Super Contra, Final Fantasy 3, Mega Man X, or the new Zelda, A Link to the Past. These games had updated graphics and a few new moves, but did not completely forsake the game play or the spirit of the originals to which people had become attached. The SNES was also home to a crop of new games, many of which would not have been possible on earlier systems. These include such legendary titles as Street Fighter 2 and Super Mario Kart.

Read on to see how the author defends his opinion and makes some valuable points. I must say that this article bought a nostalgic tear to my eye, as it made me remember the hours I spent playing such classics as Super Mario Kart and The Secret Of Mana.

It may just be sentiments of youth, but games like these just don’t get made anymore. With a few exceptions, I have never been totally immersed in modern games like I was in those. So many quality games with excellent gameplay. This brings a tear to my eye indeed.

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A Black Day For Freedom Indeed

February 23rd, 2006 · Freedom & Democracy, Privacy

I as a blogger and citizen of the European Union am disgusted and ashamed to have to report that today, the EU has passed legislation requiring all participating countries to log all internet traffic for a period of up to 24 months:

EU justice and interior ministers have sealed a landmark data-retention law, forcing telephone operators and internet service providers to store data in the fight against terrorism and organised crime.

The data retention directive was approved by ministers in Brussels on Tuesday (21 February), putting an end to a heated debate in and outside EU institutions for over a year and a half.

The directive aims at tracking down terrorists, paedophiles and criminal gangs, but civil liberties campaigners have argued it damages basic privacy rights and breaches the European Convention on Human Rights.

According to the directive, member states will have to store citizens’ phone call data for six to 24 months, but the deal does not stipulate a maximum time period, cooling anger among member states who want longer storage periods.

The data would only detail the caller and receiver’s numbers, not the actual conversations themselves, while so-called failed calls – calls that do not get through – will not be covered.

EU countries have 18 months to implement the rules, which already have the backing of the European Parliament.

“This is a wonderful example of how co-operation between the council [member states], the commission and the parliament can work,” Austrian justice minister Karin Gastinger, hosting the ministers’ meeting, said.

This means that every website you go to, every file you download, everything you do on the internet will be logged if you’re a citizen of the EU. I don’t have to explain to you, dear reader, the consequences of this. 1984 is indeed a typo.

What sickens me most is that this is not in the news, and few people except for computer nerds and privacy advocates even know this is going on. Indeed, since 9-11 goverments all over have used fear and ignorance to pass these sort of laws. This however, is the culmination of the control our so called leaders desperately want.
No longer can we as Europeans ridicule Americans because of their Patriot Act. Where once the free world started where Amerca’s borders ended, now we too are being shrouded in darkness. The situation we are in is pitiful, just pitiful.

In case you are wondering what you can do to protect yourself? Install tor, at least that way the fuckers won’t be able to see what you’re doing. For more information click on the banner above and let us pray that one day we will all come to our senses.

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Make A Million Dollars In 4 Months!

December 30th, 2005 · Business, Internet

Million Dollars

It seems it still is possible to get rich quick with almost no work and a good idea:

If you have an envious streak, you probably shouldn’t read this.

Because chances are, Alex Tew, a 21-year-old student from a small town in England, is cleverer than you. And he is proving it by earning a cool million dollars in four months on the Internet.

Selling porn? Dealing prescription drugs? Nope. All he sells are pixels, the tiny dots on the screen that appear when you call up his home page.

He had the brainstorm for his million dollar home page, called, logically enough, www.milliondollarhomepage.com, while lying in bed thinking out how he would pay for university.

The idea: turn his home page into a billboard made up of a million dots, and sell them for a dollar a dot to anyone who wants to put up their logo. A 10 by 10 dot square, roughly the size of a letter of type, costs $100.

He sold a few to his brothers and some friends, and when he had made $1,000, he issued a press release.

That was picked up by the news media, spread around the Internet, and soon advertisers for everything from dating sites to casinos to real estate agents to The Times of London were putting up real cash for pixels, with links to their own sites.

So far they have bought up 911,800 pixels. Tew’s home page now looks like an online Times Square, festooned with a multi-colored confetti of ads.

A million bucks! Now why didn’t I think of this…. To see the site in question click here

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