It's Just this Little Chromium Switch Here

Weblogging and commentary by Chip Rosenthal

Earthlink DNS Hijack

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screenshot of Earthlink DNS hijackRemember that terrible, awful time three years ago when Verisign broke the Internet? Well, looks like Earthlink has gone and done the same thing. Earthlink has started intercepting Internet host name lookups. When a lookup fails (host does not exist), they are replacing the failure response with one that points to their own web site.

The funny thing is that when Verisign did it, Earthlink didn't much like it. As I noted back then, Earthlink took steps to neutralize the Verisign redirects. It appears, however, they seem to have changed their mind on the matter. It's still a bad idea technically, but they seem to be willing to do it now that the money for advertisements served goes into their pocket.

The good news is that I just chatted with Earthlink support and found that there is a workaround available. I was told to use the DNS servers at 207.69.188.171 and 207.69.188.172. I will have to reconfigure my router to do so, at least as an interim measure.

Although there is a workaround, I'm not pleased. This is information that the network should set automatically. It's a hassle to override the automatic settings. Also, this makes my connection more susceptible to network changes. So, long term, I'm seriously considering whether we should switch our service to another broadband provider.

Austin Technology Matters

As I noted last month, I've taught myself video production and started shooting for public access. Last week, I worked camera in studio for the Beyond Television program. I've also started producing my own shows.

I've been trying to figure out what I wanted to do with all this, and I think I've come up with a plan. I'd like to produce a monthly program called "Austin Technology Matters", about community technology events and issues around town. I'm nearly done editing the first show, for airing later this month. It will be about the Dorkbot Austin gathering last month.

I'm really excited about this. The event footage is nearly done. I've even got a nifty theme song, thanks to Greg Bueno's Eponymous 4. All I need to do is videotape the intros, and I should be able to wrap it up.

Oh, and then there is the web site. Every show needs a web site. (The jury is still out on the issue of a Myspace page.)

So, stay tuned for news. I'll post an announcement once the web site is available.

Recently, in a Smoky Bar

One recent night, I dropped into a local bar for a beer. There were two people there, one on either side of the bar. There was a pack of cigarettes sitting on the bar. The stench in the room told me that the pack had been opened recently. Or maybe there was a recent tobacco bonfire in the room.

Taken aback, I asked the bartender if there was smoking in there. The bartender mistook my query for a request to smoke, and said, "Sure, go ahead."

That's illegal in Austin. So, I thought I'd file a complaint.

Even if I stipulate that your right to satisfy your physical addiction trumps my right not to get cancer, this is still wrong. The law says "no smoking" and cheating isn't fair to the venues that stick by the rules.

I called the local Health and Human Services Department (972-5600) during business hours. I asked to file a complaint for a smoking ban violation. I was connected to some department, presumably the Environmental and Consumer Health Unit. They asked me for the name of the business, its address, the date and time of the occurrence, and what happened.

They also asked if I wanted to leave my name and telephone number. I asked if the information is confidential, and if it is subject to an open records request. They said they could not guarantee confidentiality, so I chose to make the complaint anonymously.

My understanding is that an inspector will visit the venue and if a violation is found they will work with the owner to bring them into compliance. Legal action occurs after repeated violations.

A lawsuit to overturn the ban was back in the news recently. The main claim is that bar owners want individuals, not businesses, responsible. The bar owners say that the rules are unclear as to what they need to do.

This is disingenuous. The bar owners are trying to manufacture a chasm of gray out of a split hair. Let's start here: when a patron asks, "Can I smoke?" just say, "No."

You don't say, "I don't care, it's your responsibility." And certainly not, "Sure, go ahead." The answer is simple: tell them the law says no. If you do that one simple step, then most of the uncertainty crumbles away.

So what if the person won't comply? For goodness sake, we are talking about bars here. What business (besides the Mafia) has more experience and ability to deal with uncompliant patrons?

The current complaint driven process is the right way to go about this. When I file a complaint, an inspector will investigate, and action will be taken if warranted. If I had to complain against an individual, I'd instead have to call 911 and summon an officer to make an arrest. The "smoking police" that live only in the rhetoric of the ban opponents would become a reality. If there is going to be a smoking ban, the way we are doing it makes sense.

I left the smoky bar and went down the street to another bar. A packed bar. One that enforces the smoking ordinance. Who knows, maybe someday soon, the smoking ban actually could turn out to be good for business.

Freddie Steady in Galveston

Freddie Steady Krc

Since there wasn't a lot of music happening in town last weekend (ha! ha!), I thought I'd drive down to Galveston to catch Austin's own Freddie "Steady" Krc at the Old Quarter Acoustic Cafe. Most recently, Freddie has been drumming behind Roky Erikson as well as fronting the Freddie Steady 5.

Freddie brought along Bradley Kopp (one of my favorite Austin guitarists) to play electric guitar, and Cam King (recent Austinite by way of Nashville) on acoustic guitar (and comedy relief).

Freddie and crew played a great set. They played a mix of Freddie's originals and covers (Beatles, Texas garage rock, and more).

Bradley is going to be playing tonight (Wednesday) down south at Evangeline Cafe. He's going to have Bill Browder playing with him. I really wish I could attend (I'll be out of town), because those guys are my all-time favorite guitar duo on the planet. The show could be a lot of fun.

Action!

My contract wrapped up last month and now I'm in the downtime between work. I planned to use this break to learn about video production. I renewed my producer's card at the public access center and signed up for a couple classes (basic camera and digital video editing).

Duly trained but still not having a clue what I'm doing, I figured the best thing would be to just grab some equipment and do a shoot. So last night I headed off to Dorkbot to tape the merriment and mayhem.

The shoot seemed to go pretty well. I only looked at a few minutes from the first tape, but it seems to have come out well. That really pleases me, because it was shot outdoors at night without much light.

I intend to produce a 30-minute show from this, but the primary purpose was a learning experience. And learn I did. Here are some things I'll do differently at my next shoot:

  • Bring a flashlight. Because it's hard to see in the dark.
  • Bring more extension cords. Because extension cord singular is not enough.
  • Bring more audio cables. Because the sound board is further away than you think.

I'm pleased that I thought to bring an audio cable. I was able to plug into the PA to record the sound, so I think my audio may be pretty good. That was good thinking.

My next step is to edit it all together. I'm anticipating that will be a lot of work. I'll let you know how it turns out—and what I learn from that.

When the Levees Broke

Just finished watching When the Levees Broke, Spike Lee's documentary on Hurricane Katrina. I recommend it highly. I was surprised—and pleased—at how much Lee stayed out of the way and let the participants tell the story themselves. I think the documentary does a remarkable job capturing the scope of human suffering.

If I was to find fault, it's that Lee's documentary does not capture the scope of the physical devastation. You see the houses ripped off their foundations by the force of the waters. That doesn't capture the power of driving through the neighborhoods and seeing the destruction for miles on end. Or the awesome mountains of debris created in parks and medians as the city began to dig out. Or the eery, gray, lifeless moonscapes left behind immediately after the waters receded.

Here are three critically important things about the Katrina disaster that people may not realize:

This was an engineering disaster, not a natural disaster. At least, that's the case in New Orleans. The hurricane hit full force in Mississippi. What hit New Orleans was barely category one, and that was enough to breech the defective levee system. You cannot blame the current occupant of the White House for that. That's a failure of several decades of presidencies—and corrupt New Orleans politics.

Brownie was not the problem. Here is where you can blame the Bush administration. Michael Brown was a lousy administrator with bad political acumen, but he's not the one responsible for emasculating James Lee Witt's FEMA. According to Cooper and Block, Brown actually tried to do the right thing with FEMA. His bosses (Bush, Ridge, Chertoff) are the ones who destroyed our nation's ability to respond to natural disasters, by redirecting most resources not specifically earmarked for terror threats. They are the architects of our dysfunctional, imcompetent homeland security apparatus. Brown is an easy fall guy for the people really responsible for this tragedy.

The disaster continues. Spike Lee captured the situation six months out. Here we are a year later and it's still bad. My sister-in-law is still waiting for the insurance check to be released to pay for the tree that Katrina pushed through her roof. And she's one of the lucky ones.

You're doing a heck of a job, Bushie.

Patent Troll Forgent threatened with Delisting

According to the Austin Business Journal, local company Forgent Networks has been threatened with delisting from the NASDAQ. Forgent's main product is lawsuits: threatening people who use standard JPEG image technology. Earlier this year, the US Patent and Trademark Office was convinced to look into the validity of the Forgent patent, and has opened up a review. If overturned (please please please), the anti-innovative company will lose its main business. Thus, the stock price has crashed, leading to the delisting notice.

Last Call for Jean Caffeine

Long time Austin artist/musician Jean Caffeine is pulling up stakes and heading off for the great white north. She will be doing a farewell show this Wednesday evening (Aug. 23) 7:30pm at Mozart's Coffee Roasters. She's written a lot of great songs over the years, and it will be good to hear them live one final time.

She hasn't been doing a lot of public playing the past few years, so don't expect a tight Vegas-style extravaganza. Just a heap of laid back, old-time Austin fun.

The Weddening

Tomorrow is the two month anniversary of my marriage. In early discussions, my then-fiancee and I considered two places for the ceremony: Chez Zee and Green Pastures. Somehow along the way Green Pastures fell from consideration and we went with Chez Zee. It was totally wonderful, but now I wonder if cake 214 might be one reason why my now-wife nudged us in that direction.

(via Jim Parkhurst on the ALG mailing list)

Phone Company Innovations

I'm wearing my Bell Labs t-shirt today. That—and some recent press articles—have me thinking about telco innovation.

First, a June 7 article in the New York Times reports that the original Bell Labs facility in Holmdel, New Jersey is being sold to a real estate developer to be demolished. This great industrial lab has given us amazing discoveries from the the first (bipolar junction) transistor to theories of the origin of the universe. Today's open source software movement has its basis in the Unix Operating System, developed at the labs. Engadget (taking a break from their usual gizmo-porn) published a great retrospective that expresses the enormity of the loss.

Maybe we should just write off the loss as a vestige of the old Bell System. For today's vital research and innovation, maybe we should look not towards the remains of the old Western Electric, but rather to the vibrant and vigorous Baby Bells.

Last week, Business Week published an article that suggests the phone companies don't do much innovation at all. Sometimes it seems like phone company innovation is limited to creating the business processes that assemble blocks of technology invented by others. The article suggests that if you want to see who is doing exciting work in industrial research you should be looking at Google, not SBC (now renamed AT&T). Maybe that's why Vint Cerf and Rob Pike jumped from telcos to Google.

I think innovation is an important element of the net neutrality debate. The telcos claim that laissez faire regulation of Internet will foster innovation. I disagree. That policy almost certainly will lead to replacing the open, neutral Internet with a tiered network.

One of the most important benefits of net neutrality is that an open Internet allows thousands of organizations to innovate. As you start imposing tiering barriers, you have fewer and fewer organization able to participate, thus fewer able to innovate. Eventually you reach the point of a closed network (like cell phones) where the only organization that can deploy innovation is the network provider.

I don't like the idea of a non-neutral network where the phone companies can control who is allowed to innovate. After reading the Business Week article, I wonder if there would be much innovation at all on a tiered Internet. After all, how many innovations like transistors or Unix have you seen come out of SBC or Verizon?