Eron Replaced

Howdy kids, we’re back from an extended outage.

Around the 16th of August, the owlmanatt.com server lost one of the disks in its RAID array. This RAID array had two disks in it, one active and one on stand-by. Who would have thought stand-by just meant ‘ready to become active but not actually having data replicated to it’?

That’s fine by me. I have SQL backups. Eron is still limping along and running the bots, but it’s not good for much else. I’m not sure if it will boot under its own steam if it loses power.

Kana is the new webserver.

AT&T Caught Censoring Webcast

Looks like AT&T (the bastardized multi-headed beast of AT&T, SNET, Ameritech, Pacific Telesis, Cinbell, Southwest Bell, Bell South, Cingular, etc.), one of the biggest opponents of network neutrality, has been caught red-handed editing out anti-Bush lyrics from a webcast:

According to Pearl Jam’s website, portions of the band’s Sunday night set at Lollapalooza were missing from the AT&T Blue Room live webcast. . .

. . .

After questioning AT&T about the incident, Lollapalooza was informed that material was indeed missing from the webcast, and that it was mistakenly cut by AT&T’s content monitor. . .

(Source: Portions Censored From Pearl Jam Webcast, CMJ News)

This illustrates precisely where AT&T’s loyalties lay. What’s what, Mister President? You want a top-secret, probably-very-illegal room in our collo facilities so you can sniff every packet going over our network! Well, can you do something about the regulators holding up all of our mergers - yes, I know you guys broke us up like this in the first place, but come on, cut me some slack - and I can do you a few favours!

Thanks, AT&T. Glad you’re looking out for your customers!

Free Speech Suit Filed

A Lewis S. Mills High School student who was barred from running for class office after she called administrators a derogatory term on an Internet blog is accusing top school officials of violating her free speech rights.

. . .

Later that night, about 9:25 p.m., Doninger used her personal computer to post the entry on the blog.

“Jamfest is canceled due to the douchbags in central office. Here is an e-mail that we sent out to a ton of people and asked them to forward to everyone in their address book to help get support for Jamfest,” she wrote. “Basically, because we sent it out, Paula Schwartz is getting a TON of phone calls and e-mails and such. We have so much support and we really appreciate it. However, she got pissed off and decided to just cancel the whole thing all [sic] together.”

A few weeks later, on May 17, Doninger went to the school office to accept her nomination for class secretary. Niehoff handed a copy of the blog entry to Doninger and told her to apologize to Schwartz, tell her mother about the blog entry, resign as class secretary and withdraw her candidacy, according to the lawsuit.

Source: The Courant: Free Speech Suit Filed

Of course, I had something to say about it:

It seems like a lot of respondents to this article are missing a fundamental point - the school officials grossly overstepped their authority. It is *not* the job of a government official to discipline students for inappropriate comments that are said outside of their school. The simple fact is that someone, be it the principal or the superintendent, has abused their position to punish a student over speech protected by the first amendment just because their ego was bruised.

Was Avery Doninger’s comment uncalled for? Certainly, yes. I absolutely agree that one must be cautious with what they post on the Internet - a public forum that is archived. Once you commit something to a web site, you have to assume that it will be available somewhere on the web for the rest of time. And yes, employers do Google prospective candidates - I have seen this first-hand.

But, you must also consider the context of the message. It was obviously an announcement to her friends. Teenagers are going to use this sort of language when talking to their peers; it is a fact of life. The principal and superintendent deal with these sorts of attitudes daily; they are expected to have a thick enough skin to deal with juveniles. That is, unfortunately, how the world works in 2007.

But again, the matter at hand is that a *government official* is punishing a student for referring to her as a ‘douchbag’, even if it was unjustified. That sort of coarse comment is protected speech, like it or not. It is an opinion.

What does this show the students? That any comment that the administration does not like will be dealt with in a heavy-handed manner? That there is no value whatsoever placed on the Bill of Rights? Already, we are seeing students’ privacy stripped away in the name of security - and in most cases, the security measures the schools take are to mitigate liability after-the-fact and would have no real impact if someone truly wished to bring a knife, handgun, or rifle into the building. What does this teach them?

I find it disturbing how many of you are crying ‘Go sit in a corner and cry, liberal scum!’. You are dismissing a dangerous precedent and a horrific, anti-American lesson to her and her schoolmates.

Crusade

Much of the discussion focused on the nature of good and evil, a perennial theme for Bush, who casts the struggle against Islamic extremists in black-and-white terms. Michael Novak, a theologian who participated, said it was clear that Bush weathers his difficulties because he sees himself as doing the Lord’s work.

(Source: Washington Post, A President Besieged and Isolated, Yet at Ease, page 3.)

Let’s Nuke Iran

As pointed out in an eerie article from LewRockwell.com, nuking Iran would be a great idea:

The reason the catastrophe will be so immense is because our nuclear missiles will be vaporizing nuclear sites. When these sites are vaporized, all the enriched uranium and plutonium stockpiled there will be shot into the atmosphere as “weaponized” particles, along with the radioactive particles from the warheads themselves.

These radioactive particles will then be carried eastward by the jet stream and the trade winds across Afghanistan, Pakistan, and the other “stans,” to India, China, and Japan – producing what Truman long ago described as “a rain of ruin from the air” the like of which the world has never seen.

. . .

Sounds like a great idea, huh?

But - wait - who would do such a thing? Sure, Bush is a bit of a loose cannon, but he’ll be gone in eighteen months (or, at least, nobody expected him to be able to cause another major fuckup, but that was yesterday and before Gaza went straight to hell).

Oh, wait. All of the Republican Presidential candidates with the exception of Ron Paul have refused to take the nuclear ‘option’ off the table. Haha, well, gee…

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