Tag internet

Everything is dead

Inspired by this great post by Alex, here is a list of some things that are dead, and which therefore nobody ever uses:

It seems the only things that aren’t dead, and which have apparently replaced most of the things listed above, are Twitter and Facebook. The main problem with that being:

Unfortunately, this leaves Internet Explorer 6 as the last technology standing.

Under Construction

Geocities has now been taken down by Yahoo!, but at least Archive Team have managed to save some of the most historically significant images from it before it went:

Under Construction

Be sure to click through to see them all in their animated glory.

Also brilliant is xkcd’s Geocities-tribute homepage (a screenshot is here, for when it changes back to normal).

Denial of Service

A few days ago, The Atheist Foundation of Australia and Global Atheist Convention had their websites brought down by a DDoS attack. In response, they decided to perform a denial-of-service attack of their own:

This is a call to all non-believers and advocates for freedom of speech to join us in a global co-ordinated minute of prayer with the aim of inundating God (in this context, the Christian god, God, as distinct from the Greek god, Zeus, the Egyptian god, Ra etc etc) with so many useless prayers that it causes his divineness to go offline as as result of our own DDOS (‘Divine’ Denial of Service).

The prayer minute will be at exactly 8pm (Eastern Standard Time) & 9am (Greenwich Mean Time) on Sunday 8 November 2009.

Please join us in this important task, with any luck it will take God a while to get back online, ensuring us at least a few days of godless peace. It will also give the Westboro Baptist Church some much needed time to catch up on paperwork.

[via]

Just fucking Bing it

Microsoft launched a new search engine this week named Bing. The name seems odd, but, Microsoft being Microsoft, there are a lot of marketing reasons why it is so – the most interesting for a lexicographer being the (possibly optimistic) hope that it will start to get used as a verb:

If Bing turns into a verb like, say, Xerox, TiVo or, well, Google, that would be nice too. Steven A. Ballmer, Microsoft’s chief executive, said Thursday that he liked Bing’s potential to “verb up.” Plus, he said, “it works globally, and doesn’t have negative, unusual connotations.”

This verbification is an unusual thing for a company to want to one of its trademarks, for reasons explained by the Chambers Editors’ blog:

Becoming the generic term for a class of product is certainly confirmation of a brand’s dominance. However, if a trademark becomes genericized, the owners’ intellectual property rights to the word are threatened. Syntactic or morphological shifts such as verbification and pluralization can often signal a trademark’s demise and so are actively discouraged by the likes of Google™, Hoover™ and Xerox™ wishing to avoid the fate of escalator, kerosene, trampoline and yo-yo.

Google made the jump from noun to verb years ago: the verb is first attested in the OED with a quotation from a Usenet post from October 1999, made just over a year after the search engine itself launched. It remains to be seen if the verb Bing catches on in the same way, not least because Binged resembles a common spelling of the past tense of the verb binge – which might have what Steve Ballmer calls negative, unusual connotations.

Using spammers to solve AI problems

By breaking CAPTCHAs and other anti-spam measures, spammers are inadvertently solving artificial intelligence problems. So, New Scientist asks, why not deliberately set spammers problems you want to be solved, and have their efforts and resources be unwillingly brought to bear on something useful?

Spammers have already written software able to match humans at some CAPTCHAs. But when CAPTCHAs finally fail, their co-creator Luis von Ahn at Carnegie Mellon University says there will be reason for celebration as well as concern.

Software that can solve any text-based CAPTCHA will be as much a milestone for artificial intelligence as it will be a problem for online security.

“If [the spammers] are really able to write a programme to read distorted text, great – they have solved an AI problem,” says von Ahn. The criminal underworld has created a kind of X prize for OCR.

That bonus for artificial intelligence will come at no more than a short-term cost for security groups. They can simply switch for an alternative CAPTCHA system – based on images, for example – presenting the eager spamming community with a new AI problem to crack.

Link.

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