This is what happens when you don’t have your authentication on your CMS setup properly. Whoops…
Category: Sad
You Know What’s Sad?
Over the years, this site has had 8683 published comments. The thing that’s sad? The automatically incremented comment ID number in the database for this site is 22887. Which means I’ve had 14,204 spam, duplicate, or otherwise deleted comments (and I generally pretty much let anything get published, unless it’s spam or a duplicate). That means for every 1.6 spam comments, I get a regular comment.
Luckily, MovableType 3.2’s spam blocking settings sends the bulk majority of the comments either to the junk folder or sets them to unpublished status, so they’re not appearing on my site and they’re not sapping server resources on rebuilds, but it’s still annoying (and I can’t install mod_sec or other things like that, as they’ve caused some issues in the past and have slowed things down too much).
Update on 4/9: 8780 comments published, 26,630 total, so 17,850 spam (big attack last night — all dumped into the junk folder, as they were all that Mike Furir spam and I had that stuff blocked a long time ago during the first wave of attacks.
How Is This Possible?
Our government can’t afford to give all of it’s FBI agents e-mail?
NEW YORK (AP) — Budget constraints are forcing some FBI agents to operate without e-mail accounts, according to the agency’s top official in New York.
“As ridiculous as this might sound, we have real money issues right now, and the government is reluctant to give all agents and analysts dot-gov accounts,” Mark Mershon said when asked about the gap at a New York Daily News editorial board meeting.
Now I understand that their e-mail system is a bit more complicated than your every day setup like I have on this server, but that seems a bit ridiculous to me.
You Knew It Had To Happen
They’ve pretty much found a way to create viruses for every other technology out there (Cell phones, PDAs, etc…) so it comes as no surprise to me that scientists have discovered a way to infect an RFID chip with a virus.
One In 200 Folks In Bend Is A Realtor?
That’s really sad, but the Boy In The Bubble is surprised the percentage isn’t even higher.
We Had To Kill It
Remember that fish we were trying to treat? We had to kill it.
Freedom Of The Press Gets A Serious Blow
When I was in college, and for many years after as part of my job, I closely followed college media trends. I still read up on it whenever possible, am still a subscriber to many college media mailing lists, and was even asked to judge in a college online media competition recently (which I am probably going to have to turn down due to the time involved). That being said, I was deeply saddened to hear that the Supreme Court decided it would not hear Hosty v. Carter (case No. 05-377) and let stand a June 2005 decision by the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. The news flash from the Student Press Law Center is here with their background on the case here. An AP-Wire story is here, but the long and short of it is that the case gives administrators at public colleges and universities the authority to censor student produced newspapers and publications, using the Hazelwood decision (which affected high schools, not grown adults) as a basis. It’s a sad, sad day, really, and I really hope that colleges make formal declarations (like some schools in the 7th circuit have) that protect their students from administrators who have issues with content.
Thankfully, many college newspapers (like the newspaper at Oregon) are fully independent organizations and corporations which cannot be touched by administrators (and I know that in the past that UO administrators have made it clear they will never require prior review or censor the publications there). Just the same, the administrations at these campuses should still make it clear — in official writing — that the publications on campus are a designated public forum and that student editors, for better or for worse, have the authority to make all content decisions without fear of being censored or requiring prior review.
I know for more people who read this site, this is not a big deal. But as someone who probably spent more time in the newsroom in college than I did in the classroom, this is a very big deal.
Ordering Pizza in 2008, Redux
Over a year ago, I posted a joke about how wiring everybody up to a national information registry will make pizza ordering a pain in the butt. The joke’s been around in various forms for years, and it looks like the ACLU has taken the joke, made it visual, and rolled with it a bit. Funny, but sad, all at the same time.
Further Proof That Men Never Read Directions
Women all know that most men never read directions, so obviously this story will give them a bit more fuel in that argument.
They thought bugs were their problem. But a bug bomb explosion several families are forced to find new homes. It’s a real tough lesson on making sure you follow directions.
A tenant in an apartment complex in Hitchcock had a roach problem. So she and a maintenance man set off foggers — but they used 18! That’s what caused the explosion.
The explosion ripped through one apartment — blowing the door out, buckling brick walls and causing extensive damage to the inside of the apartment. Two people were injured.
But hey, at least the apartment is now bug free. Thanks Dren for the link.
That’s Just Wrong
I’ve heard of extreme measures to smuggle drugs into the US, but sewing them into live puppies is just wrong. Thanks Barn for the link.