Once More Unto etc. etc.

As news of Ryanair suffering a hacking attack of some sort which resulted in the loss of actual money broke, I wondered why the Costa Coffee Club story from a few days earlier hadn’t got wider pickup. Is there just a lack of media interest if there isn’t cash involved? It’s a very well-known high street brand, and access to the club required parting with quite a chunk of personal data –

The app-accessed club requires a fair amount of customers’ information, including names, emails, birth dates, phone numbers and physical addresses

This yet again illustrates the slack security around customer data shown by a range of surprising organisations. Presumably few people are kept awake worrying that their favourite coffee shop is leaking their personal information.

Not at the tipping point for public awareness / anger or interest quite yet.

Sunday Whatthehellany, Volume Three

This week’s documentary of the week from BBC Radio 4 is on the Shipping Forecast. Essential listening if you’ve ever been lulled to sleep by the forecast, or daydreamed yourself away to the faraway places conjured up by it.

Design + stealth + subterfuge + war = the story of the US Army’s ‘Ghost Army’ in World War II.

Sunday Whatthehellany, Week Two

For adventurous recipes, ask a supercomputer. Specifically, IBM’s Watson. Listen to the background above and  get your own nightmarish yet delicious suggestions from Watson here.

 

Two grown men watch and review Sex and The City 2 once a week, which really is a terrible idea. It is pretty entertaining though

Whilst you’re listening to those, you could do far worse than having a quick read of this, which is day-to-day reality for women on this planet.

Now you sit as close to the driver as possible but it sometimes means a split-second judgment call on whether the man in the seat beside your prospective seat looks like a weirdo. You wonder which seat is the safest. You text your friends to let them know you made the last bus.

‘Don’t go anywhere: Risk management for women’ by Stephanie Lord.

What can I say?

I haven’t gotten anything done. Oh well. My mind is like a bunch of nothing. Today was a total loss, but it’s not important. I’ve just been letting everything happen without me these days.

Current Mood: [Face] phlegmatic

(This entry was brought to you by a little bit of obscure Web history, the Brunching Shuttlecocks Apathetic Online Journal Entry Generator. Lots more links to Shuttlecock stuff on MetaFilter.)

Sunday Whatthehellany

Some leisurely listening for a Sunday.

This digs a little deeper into the myth constructed around Rosie the Riveter,  brought back briefly into the public consciousness by Beyonce recently. Amongst other things covered is the tort of seduction, if you happen to be a fan of that patronising piece of law.

A look back at Twin Peaks and how it allowed David Lynch to become an unexpectedly influential part of American popular culture for more than a decade. Keep the entire Pacific Northwest weird.

 

If you listen to just one thing this weekend, make it this. No, seriously, just listen to it now. It’s about animals and people and conservation and the past and the future, awith a cracking musical accompaniment.

All 6 episodes of the BBC Radio 4 production of Terry Gilliam and Neil Gaiman’s book Good Omens have been broadcast. That means they’re available online for another twenty four days if you’re interested. I’ve only listened to the first one so far, but it sounds very good.

✩ Want You To Know: Meet The …

WYTK header

Weekend ahoy! Here’s some worthwhile reading, if you can find the time.

You’ve probably been following the rumbling fallout from George Oborne‘s departure from the Telegraph and the questions this has raised about the thickness of the walls between editorial and advertising in media organisations. In all the column inches that have been and are yet to be generated about that, I hope we don’t lose sight of the smaller picture: the importance of adherence to the house style guide. Tom Chivers, another ex-Telegraph writer noted that the “Telegraph style guide explicitly bans the use of “refute” to mean “deny” but the paper’s statement on Osborne uses it”. Other eagle-eyed folks noticed that the BBC had carefully corrected this oversight on the part of the Telegraph in a story published later in the day. Nothing quite like a good usage spat, eh?

Of course these days you have to be careful not just what you do and don’t publish in an extremely well known broadsheet newspaper, but even what you tweet.

In the beginning, Twitter was supposed to be a vessel for fleeting thoughts. People posted about their lunches, their sports teams, the news of the day. But because tweets are public and permanent by default, all of those ephemeral tweets congealed over the years into a kind of global permanent record. Now, everything the vast majority of Twitter’s 288 million monthly active users have ever tweeted is searchable, indexable, and usable against them in courts of law or public opinion.

‘Meet the tweet-deleters: people who are making their Twitter histories self-destruct’

The air was muggy and smelled faintly of cedar. Japanese commuters glided past on bikes. A flock of girls dressed in school uniforms and frilly knee socks passed us going the other way. Nobody stared, because that would be rude, but they definitely looked. We were not just foreign, but we were also accidentally louder than everyone else, if only because everyone else seemed utterly silent.

‘Meet the Unlikely Airbnb Hosts of Japan’

A first, essential step toward progress is to stop the bad practices that lead to misinforming and misleading the public. I offer several practical recommendations to that effect, drawing upon research conducted for this report, as well as decades of experiments carried out in psychology, sociology, and other fields.

How Lies Spread Faster Than Truth: A Study Of Viral Content

Yet my aim here is to offer a window into my view of a repugnant European capitalism whose implosion, despite its many ills, should be avoided at all costs. It is a confession intended to convince radicals that we have a contradictory mission: to arrest the freefall of European capitalism in order to buy the time we need to formulate its alternative.

Yanis Varoufakis: How I became an erratic Marxist

Worth Pondering

cereal-cookies

Eye Candy

An Extraordinary Macro Timelapse of Aquatic Wildlife by Sandro Bocci

Totally Confused

Photoshop at 25, expanding cows, toys are fun, creepy Facebook and random’s not so random after all

Finally, the British Library has digitised over four million endangered photos. Much more of this please.

Yours etc., @loughlin


 

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