There is nothing that man fears more than the touch of the unknown. He wants to see what is reaching towards him, and to be able to recognize or at least classify it. Man always tends to avoid physical contact with anything strange. In the dark, the fear of an unexpected touch can mount to panic. Even clothes give insufficient security: it is easy to tear them and pierce through to the naked, smooth, defenceless flesh of the victim.

All the distances which men create round themselves are dictated by this fear. They shut themselves in houses which noone may enter, and only there feel some measure of security. The fear of burglars is not only the fear of being robbed, but also the fear of a sudden and unexpected clutch out of the darkness.

✖ Via Crowds and Power by Elias Canetti, tr. Carol Stewart, New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, [1960]1962, p. 15 (originally published as Masse und Macht, Hamburg: Claassen Verlag, 1960)

• Jul 13, 2010 link notes tagged: communication  community  relation  touch  fear  together  politic  body  skin  society  panic  security  immunity  space  distance  protection  defense  aggresion  environment  crowd  mass  power  Canetti 

Mac OS X is like living in a farmhouse in the country with no locks, and Windows is living in a house with bars on the windows in the bad part of town.
✖ Via H-Online: “Mac OS X: ‘safer, but less secure’”, March 18, 2010

The quote is from Charlie Miller, a computer security researcher (he has a Ph.D. in mathematics). Learn more about him on Wikipedia and read this recent interview with him.



• Mar 22, 2010 link notes tagged: technlogy  computer  security  hack  Apple 

TWO centuries after Gutenberg invented movable type in the mid-1400s there were plenty of books around, but they were expensive and poorly made. In Britain a cartel had a lock on classic works such as Shakespeare’s and Milton’s. The first copyright law, enacted in the early 1700s in the Bard’s home country, was designed to free knowledge by putting books in the public domain after a short period of exclusivity, around 14 years. Laws protecting free speech did not emerge until the late 18th century. Before print became widespread the need was limited. Now the information flows in an era of abundant data are changing the relationship between technology and the role of the state once again. Many of today’s rules look increasingly archaic. Privacy laws were not designed for networks. Rules for document retention presume paper records. And since all the information is interconnected, it needs global rules. New principles for an age of big data sets will need to cover six broad areas: privacy, security, retention, processing, ownership and the integrity of information.
✖ Via The Economist: “A special report on managing information: New rules for big data”, Feb 25th, 2010.

• Mar 21, 2010 link notes  [via] tagged: technology  communication  rules  law  regulation  privacy  copyright  data  network  Internet  security  ownership 

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