I just got an RSS notification that my Muxtape had been updated. I thought this was strange, since I hadn’t, you know, updated it. So I went to look at it and, lo and behold, my playlist now comprises “Aim (with Stephen Jones) – Good Disease [Babybird does a Prince thing]” eight times in a row. All the songs I had actually uploaded have disapparated. This is strange, obviously, but I did a little more digging by clicking on a bunch of random featured muxtapes on the main site page–what do you know? They’re ALL the same.

I logged in and tried to delete the songs from my playlist, but just got an error message. So it’s not just a weird caching problem, or an odd programming error–clearly there’s something in the system setting these lists and keeping them that way.

So what’s going on here? My guess is someone figured out an exploit and performed what is indisputably a goofy, harmless hack. But there’s always the slight delicious chance that the entire site was created for this purpose–to garner a large use base, get them used to the interface and hooked on the service, and then take advantage of it by spamming everybody with some unknown band’s latest piece of crap single.

Unfortunately, that is almost certainly not true, but wouldn’t it be wonderful if it were?

Incidentally, I haven’t actually bothered to listen to the song yet (amazon.co.uk review here–you’re welcome, Aim). But if it happens to be any good, I’m pretty sure we’ll be hearing a lot about it in the next day or two.

Update: Yep, Muxtape is saying they got hacked. Bummer.

 

Last weekend, I graduated from law school. Now I have a few days off before I start studying for the bar, and I’ve been using the time to Get Stuff Done.

So in that spirit, as you can see (if you aren’t reading this via RSS), I’ve changed the look of the blog. I’m customizing a bunch of stuff, and will probably break things as I go along, so let me know if you notice anything that doesn’t look right.

Update: The new theme sucked and was written by a moron so customizing it made it look like garbage. So I’ll be trying some other one(s). Wish me luck.

Update 2: This is a new new theme, and I’m liking it so far. Same deal–let me know if it doesn’t look right.

 

Turns out that on his first day, Jon Stewart was neither funny nor well dressed. Still, I think we can all agree that it’s pretty cool that the Daily Show website offers (immaculately tagged!) clips from shows going back to 1999. Thanks, internet, for this (from before Colbert was a hawk!):

 

First I posted this Washington Post article to my shared items thing. It’s about young teachers in the DC area whose facebook profiles (and other online things) included questionable content. It’s worth a read, but here’s a highlight:

Erin Jane Webster, 22, a long-term substitute teacher in Prince William, keeps a page similar to other teachers’. Portions are professional, but some parts suggest the author is in the throes of sorority rush.

Under a “Work Info” heading, the page reads, “Employer: Prince William County Schools. Location: Parkside Middle School Language Arts Teacher.” The section lists where she attended college (Radford ’07) and high school (Osbourn Park High ’03).

But the page features multiple “bumper stickers,” including one that uses a crude acronym for attractive mothers and another that says: “you’re a retard, but i love you.”

Teensy problem: Webster teaches students with emotional and learning disabilities. In an interview, she acknowledged her use of “retard” could be misconstrued. The word, generally considered offensive, circulates among some young people as acceptable derogatory slang.

“My best friend, she always calls me that because I say ditzy things,” Webster said. “My best friend and I would never go around calling people that. All of my [students] have emotional disorders or learning disabilities. . . . I love them.”

Anyway, my friend Lauren emailed me:

I think the answer is if you want a job in this day and age, you need to clean up your personal BUT PUBLIC profiles. I don’t think it’s that crazy to ask of someone. Yeah you might be 22 and “young” but you’re also asking to be part of the “adult” world. I mean when I applied to grad school I made my friendster profile private and I don’t keep a myspace or facebook page. And I have to accept that when I am on the job market or up for tenure, anything they can google about me becomes acceptable grounds for my evaluation. I guess the slippery slope is when you put something public that you don’t see anything wrong with, but the examples the article gave were clearly stupid!

And then I replied:

Yeah, some of those examples were egregious—might not want to call people “retards” when you work with the developmentally challenged! But there are real issues here, too—people our age put so much stuff online and if we ever become important, it’ll all come out. I don’t think I’ve posted anything that’s a big deal, but I’m sure some of it is objectionable. It’ll be weird once everybody in the public eye has this problem, we’ll have to revise our views of what constitutes “problematic material.”

Now I’m going to post this exchange, and it will become part of your permanent online file!

And that’s the story of how I spent 20 minutes I should have been spending writing a paper.

Edit: I just reread this and I hope it doesn’t seem like the point of this post is to make fun of Ms. Webster and the other examples in the article. I just think this issue–the effect of the public/private barrier getting blurred (or erased)–is important, and getting more important every day.

 

CNN.com has this weird new thing where you can take a headline and put it on a t-shirt. This is silly enough, but thanks to someone who wasn’t super careful you can easily hack the HTML to make your own. So I guess my point is, please buy me this. Thanks.

In case CNN wises up and yanks this feature:

cnn shirt

 

So, a guy on the internet got his hands on an old cache of files from the company (now defunct) that released a bunch of great text-based computer games, including the Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, a huge hit game (based on Douglas Adams’s masterpiece) that made a lot of money. They also worked on a sequel, The Restaurant at the End of the Universe, but the project and company self-destructed. The story is fascinating. Especially in the comments, where a guy who comes off looking bad in the history chimes in to make himself look even worse. He complains that the material Biao uses paints an unbalanced picture, and that Baio made no effort to contact him in advance of publishing it, and generally that it’s bad journalism.

The irony is that I think he’s probably right–this isn’t very good journalism. Baio should have tried to get in touch with the relevant persons (just about all of whom seem to be quite available) before publishing. No question, it’s a thorny issue–the material he’s citing was company property, so he doesn’t need permission from the employees to post it–and who knows what happened behind the scenes.

At any rate, there’s a lot to enjoy here, if you’re patient enough to wade through it all.

 


CAN’T TELL HIM NOTHING!!! from kwest on Vimeo.

No time to write anything substantive, but this is pretty funny. [Kanye's Blog]

 

If you don’t already know, Twitter is a silly little site that you update with 140 character (think text message length) “tweets”. They are generally inane little things–akin to the status messages on Facebook–but once you get a critical mass of friends in on it the site becomes pretty fun. And it can be useful, too–you can update it via text message, and you can set it up to have other people’s updates sent to your cell phone, so that you can keep up with your friends’ whereabouts when you’re away from the internet (e.g., Friday night at the bar).

For me, though, the greatest use is keeping up with people without phone calls/emails/telegrams. I like knowing what my friends in other cities are up to, but I’m a pretty crappy one-on-one correspondent. So I keep up best with friends who have blogs and/or twitter–all I have to do is check Google Reader or Twitter to see what’s new with dozens of people. It’s lazy, perhaps, but it works. And since clearly most of you are never going to start blogging, my best hope is that you’ll start twittering.

Now, I should warn you, despite its simplicity, Twitter is not necessarily easy to get into. At first, especially when you don’t have many friends on it, it seems like a serious waste of time. But if you stick with it for a week or two, I think you’ll come around–and the more of you that give it a shot, the better it’ll be.

C’mon, people. Get on Twitter. It’s time.

You can find my tweets @calamityjake.

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