 Some interesting new technologies, and some new insights into politics, highlight this week's list:
Technology
For Sale By Owner: At last, a challenge
emerges to the North America Wide MLS monopoly and the ludicrous (in
today's inflated housing market) flat 6% commission on all housing
sales. For Sale By Owner is only established in one or two places, but
it's poised to take off. It was either this -- FSBO's flat rate $150
commission by a cooperative -- or else eBay or Google was going to do
it. My prediction: This model will have 80% of the market in five years.
Gambling Peer-to-Peer: Also on the get rid of the expensive middleman front, BetBug
allows you to wager with other gamblers for a maximum flat-rate $20
commission, instead of the high variable percentage that both
government-sponsored gambling (casinos, racetracks, lotteries) and most
Internet-based gambling businesses charge.
Free Storage of Your Video & Audio: OurMedia
offers it. Apparently a bit slow at times, but what do you want for
nothing? Anyone used it for their podcasts or vlogs? I want to do
blog-hosted conversations but Radio Userland won't store my .mp3 or
video files.
Free Skype Voice Messaging: Orb offers it. It lets you access your messages (and other media on your 'home'computer) from any computer anywhere. Thanks to Dale Asberry for the link.
Politics
Alito Supports Gerrymandering: The NYT's Adam Cohen points out one more reason to reject this reprobate.
Microsoft joins Yahoo in Toadying to Chinese Censors: Microsoft has sucked up
to Chinese government censors by shutting down the leading Chinese
blogger from its MSN Spaces blog without notice and deleting all his
files. He's a freelancer for the NYT. Not quite as bad as Yahoo turning
in the names of people on its Chinese network so they could be
imprisoned or worse, but still despicable. Glad to see Robert Scoble speaking out
about this. As long as China keeps getting away with all this shit, and
gets a free ride from the mainstream media, we'll keep trading with
them and making them even stronger.
Mangroves Saved Lives in Tsunami:
Just as the destruction of wetlands has made the US Gulf Coast much
more vulnerable to hurricane damage, new research from the World
Conservation Union indicates
the destruction of mangrove forests in Asia has made its coasts much
more vulnerable to tsunami damage. When will we discover that the
'first, do no harm' Precautionary Principle isn't left-wing politics, it's life-saving common sense? Thanks to Dale Asberry for the link. Dale also points out a new US tap water database will tell you what poisons you're drinking.
GE Workers Sue Monsanto for Killing Them, and GE Backs Monsanto: If you ever had any doubts about the true stripes of corporatists, this article
by Carey Gillam for Reuters should put them to rest. GE has been trying
to greenwash itself by spending millions cleaning up a mess at one of
its upstate New York facilities that has been poisoning thousands of
workers. The mess was caused by Monsanto, who says when GE took over
the facility they assumed any liability, and besides, they say,
Monsanto spun off their toxic chemicals division as Solutia years ago
and then put it into bankruptcy, so there's no point suing a defunct
entity. Pfizer Pharmacia, which owned Monsanto but then spun it off
because the legal liability was too high, says it's no longer theirs so
don't look at them. And GE, worried that its shareholders might have to
pay once it gets known that they knew they were putting workers into a
toxic site, is denying that the epidemic of illnesses at the plant has
anything to do with the toxic soup all around them, essentially
supporting Monsanto in the lawsuit. What a disgusting and irresponsible
bunch.
Dog photo from Crazyshin's Flickr pages, just because it's so adorable. |