A blog doesn't need a clever name
Cyberethics, Crypto, Community, Freedom, Privacy, Property, Philosophy, MP3, Online Ed, Copyright, Iran, other current topics and fun stuff
Last updated:
4/1/05; 7:47:51 AM


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Friday, March 04, 2005

Liberty upsets patterns.

What would you have paid to take a class with Nozick? The end of the article linked is, as it says, priceless.

[Crooked Timber]
10:08:18 PM    comment []

Whose Patent Is It, Anyway?. In one sector after another, companies warn that China's swift industrial rise is being greased by brazen and increasingly sophisticated theft of intellectual property. By HOWARD FRENCH. [NYT > Technology]
10:07:39 PM    comment []

Power to the Iranian people?.

"The Bush administration is considering a more aggressive effort to foster opposition inside Iran and seeking ways to use a new $3-million fund to support activists without exposing them to the risk of arrest," reports the L.A. Times. "The approach would represent a change since President Bush's first term, when the administration was more wary of such potentially dangerous moves, officials said."

[Salon.com]


6:21:45 PM    comment []

Dave asks:

How did I miss this? Sony Music has a 26-CD set of music from the 20th century, list price $329, Barnes and Noble has it for $296. I may buy it, but what I really want is a lot more music, for say $2000 and it comes pre-loaded on a hard disk so I don't have to scan it to get it on my iPod. This is the next thing after podcasting, opening up the archive at the big music warehouses and letting us buy wholesale. What a music renaissance that will be. Hope I live to see hear it.

[Scripting News]


6:21:29 PM    comment []

2600 MEETINGS TODAY.

It's the first Friday of March which means it's time once again for the monthly 2600 meetings to take place all around the world. Visit our meetings section to see details for the meeting nearest you.

[2600: The Hacker Quarterly]


7:24:51 AM    comment []

"The Coming Crackdown On Blogging" - Declan McCullagh's At It Again.

The Coming Crackdown On Blogging is today's hype. I had more material, but I dumped it, as not worth it. I do have something original to add:

Folks, here's a tip. Whenever you see Declan McCullagh flacking one of these "product placements", search against the Cato Institute site for the person's name. Works like a charm. It's like looking at the levers which move the mouth of the ventriloquist's dummy.

In this case, a Bradley Smith search quickly tells us all about campaign-finance reform from the Libertarian perspective, and just a little more searching give various opposition.

This flackery may not reach the height of Declan McCullagh's Al Gore hit-piece, or even the Howard Dean hatchet-job. But it's of similar ilk.

[Infothought]
7:24:16 AM    comment []

Domain Owners Lose Privacy. The U.S. government says owners of .us domains can no longer register using proxy services. Critics say the move violates the First Amendment right to anonymous free speech. By Kim Zetter. [Wired News]
7:21:59 AM    comment []

"'Economic Man' in Cross-cultural Perspective.

"'Economic Man' in Cross-cultural Perspective: Behavioral Experiments in 15 Small-Scale Societies" -- a preprint from a multi-author study -- makes some interesting observations about an aspect of cooperation studies. The Ultimatum Game has long been used as a probe for understanding the way people engage in economic transactions: two players, neither of whom has played before, are in separate rooms; neither knows who the other player is, nor can they communicate. The first player is given a significant sum such as $100 and asked to propose a split -- fifty-fifty, eighty-twenty, whatever the proposer thinks is appropriate. The second player is told of the proposed split and can either accept it, in which case both players are paid and the game is over, or reject the offer, in which case neither player is paid and the game is over. The self-interested rational individual -- the assumed actor in modern economic theories -- should not turn down a dollar because some unknown stranger in another room gets ninety-nine. Yet that is what a significant portion of American, European, and Japanese college students did over hundreds of trials. The result implies that there might be an innate and universal sense of fairness, which is what makes this recent research so interesting: in fifteen different societies, including slash-and-burn agriculturists in South America and nomadic pastoralists in Central Asia, people in different societies reacted to the Ultimatum Game and other public goods games in wildly varying ways -- suggesting that cultural institutions influence what individuals believe to be fair in an economic transaction.

(Thanks, Bill!)

Researchers from across the social sciences have found consistent deviations from the predictions of the canonical model of self-interest in hundreds of experiments from around the world. This research, however, cannot determine whether this uniformity results from universal patterns of human behavior or from the limited cultural variation available among the university students used in virtually all prior experimental work. To address this, we undertook a crosscultural study of behavior in Ultimatum, Public Goods, and Dictator Games in fifteen small-scale societies exhibiting a wide variety of economic and cultural conditions.

We found, first, that the canonical model -- based on pure self-interest -- fails in all of the societies studied. Second, the data reveals substantially more behavioral variability across social groups than has been found in previous research. Third, group-level differences in economic organization and the structure of social interactions explain a substantial portion of the behavioral variation across societies: the higher the degree of market integration and the higher the payoffs to cooperation in everyday life, the greater the level of prosociality expressed in experimental games. Fourth, the available individual-level economic and demographic variables do not robustly explain game behavior, either within or across groups. Fifth, in many cases experimental play appears to reflect the common interactional patterns of everyday life.
[Smart Mobs]
7:20:26 AM    comment []

The Fine Art of Sampling (Donna Wentworth).

Winners of the Creative Commons "Fine Art of Sampling" contest have been announced -- and we hear they're really freaking good.

[Copyfight]
7:17:01 AM    comment []

"Philosophy Talk" Radio Show now has a blog....

...here.   (Thanks to Joe Paxton for the pointer.)

[Leiter Reports]


7:17:00 AM    comment []

Martha Stewart to be freed in hours. On CNN [NewsIsFree: Popular Items]
7:16:40 AM    comment []

More Martha.

More Martha photoshopping: Check out Worth 1000's jail cell makeover and here. (via: Ken Lebow)

[rexblog: Rex Hammock's Weblog]


7:16:40 AM    comment []



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