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Welcome back Endeavor

Despite the tile problems, the shuttle landed without incident. Welcome home Endeavor!

The Sellout-osphere

In an attempt to further understand the degree to which information is controlled in the allegedly user-driven blogosphere, I examined the Top 30 "linked to" sites as listed by ebizmba.com.

Mainly I read "about pages", checked the wikipedia and attempted to sort the sites into the following categories: Corporate (13), Government (3) and Independant (14). (by company: Gawker: 6, AOL: 5, Other: 2)




Gawker Media (6) (corporate)


1. Gizmodo

4. Lifehacker

7. Gawker

8. Kotaku

16. Defamer

17. Wonkette



AOL (5) (corporate)


2. TMZ - The site is a collaboration between AOL and Telepictures Productions, a division of Warner Bros. While positioning itself as an independent celebrity news site, the site is more widely regarded as a tabloid journal but is unusual for its major corporate backing. [wiki]

3. Engadget - Engadget is a member of Weblogs, Inc., a blog network with over 75 weblogs including Autoblog and Joystiq and formerly including Hack-A-Day. Weblogs Inc. was purchased by AOL in 2005. [wiki]

14. Auto Blog - Autoblog is a member of Weblogs, Inc., a blog network with over 75 weblogs including Engadget and Joystiq and formerly including Hack-A-Day. Weblogs Inc. was purchased by AOL in 2005. [wiki]

19. Joystiq - Joystiq is a member of Weblogs, Inc., a blog network with over 75 weblogs including Engadget and and Autoblog formerly including Hack-A-Day. Weblogs Inc. was purchased by AOL in 2005. [wiki]

22. Download Squad - Download Squad is a member of Weblogs, Inc., a blog network with over 75 weblogs including Engadget and and Autoblog formerly including Hack-A-Day. Weblogs Inc. was purchased by AOL in 2005. [wiki]



Other Corporate (2)


5. Huffington Post - In August 2006, it was announced that Softbank Capital would invest $5 million in the online news site, which has grown dramatically popular in only a year, to help expand it. [wiki]

9. Tree Hugger - Acquired by Discovery Channel [link] Nick Denton, publisher of Gawker Media, is on the Board of Advisors. [link]



Government (3)


15. Daily Kos - Daily Kos was founded by Markos Moulitsas Zúniga (Kos from the last syllable of his first name) in 2002. In 2007 parent company Kos Media, LLC began a fellowship program to help fund a new generation of liberal activists. Kos Media does not have a website. [wiki] Zúniga may also be from a rich Salvodoran Hotel Family, and claimed to have spent only "six months" in the CIA, only to "quit" to work on the Dean Campaign. [truth about kos]

23. Crooks and Liars [wiki] As reported on the truth about kos, C&L has been deleting comments regarding the North American Union, the NAFTA Highway and the Amero.

28. Little Green Footballs - In the United States, LGF is perhaps best known for playing a key role in raising doubts about the authenticity of the Killian documents regarding President Bush's pathetic military service, which preceded the resignation of CBS' Dan Rather. In late 2005 Johnson, along with blogger and author Roger L. Simon launched a news site called Pajamas Media (briefly called Open Source Media) featuring mostly conservative and neolibertarian bloggers and journalists. For "promoting Israel, and Zionism" and "presenting Israel's side of the conflict," LGF won the "Best Israel Advocacy Blog" award from the Jerusalem Post in 2005. [wiki]



Independant (14)


6. Perez Hilton [wiki]

10. Ars Technica - The Ars Technica web site is owned by Ars Technica, LLC, and is based in Malden, Massachusetts. [wiki]

11. Boing Boing [wiki] - Ads by Federated Media.

12. Tech Crunch [wiki]

13. AlterNet - AlterNet, a project of the non-profit Independent Media Institute, is a progressive news website that was launched in 1998 and receives over 2 million visitors per month. [wiki]

18. Mashable [link] - Ads by Federated Media.

20. Search Engine Land - Published by Third Door Media.

21. I Can Have Cheeseburger? [wiki] [about]

24. Giga OM GigaOM.com is an online news and weblog published by GigaOmniMedia, Inc., a San Francisco-based company. [about]

25. Smashing Magazine [about]

26. Post Secret - The PostSecret website is the largest advertisement-free Blog on the web. [wiki]

27. A List Apart - It was co-founded by web design lecturer Jeffrey Zeldman. ALA started as a mailing list in 1997 by Zeldman and Brian M. Platz. A year later, in 1998, ALA was launched as a website. [wiki]

29. Read Write Web - Read/WriteWeb was founded and is edited by Richard MacManus, from Wellington New Zealand. Richard MacManus is currently a paid adviser to Nooked, an RSS marketing company based in Ireland. [about]

30. Dumb Little Man [about]

Gouge Found on Space Shuttle

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) - NASA discovered a worrisome gouge on Endeavour's belly soon after the shuttle docked with the international space station Friday, possibly caused by ice that broke off the fuel tank a minute after liftoff.

The gouge - about 3 inches square - was spotted in zoom-in photography taken by the space station crew shortly before the linkup. [link]

Undercover NBC Reporter Discovered at Defcon -- all your base are belong to us

Undercover reporter Michelle Madigan (Associate Producer of NBC Dateline) got a little more than she bargained for when she tried to sneak in to DEFCON 2007 with hidden cameras to get someone to confess to a felony. When DEFCON staff announced the “spot the undercover reporter” game and told the audience that an undercover reporter was taking video to catch someone confessing to a hacking crime, Madigan bolted from the conference premises followed by a pack of ~150 DEFCON attendees and reporters trying to photograph and video tape her. DEFCON officials never got the chance to bring Madigan on stage to offer her a press badge so that she could cover the rest of the event above board.

DEFCON organizers caught wind of this from undisclosed sources and casually contacted Madigan to see if she wanted official press credentials and a press badge to cover DEFCON. Reporters in the pressroom were then fully briefed on the situation before the “spot the undercover reporter game” so that they could cover the event.

According to Senior DEFCON official “Priest” who works for the Government in his day job, Madigan declined press credentials on four separate occasions (twice on phone and twice at DEFCON). Madigan proceeded to register as a regular DEFCON attendee and even told a DEFCON staffer that she was going to the bathroom to get her hidden camera ready. When a DEFCON goon (staffer) explained to Madigan that secret video taping wasn’t allowed, Madigan not knowing she was speaking to a goon replied that she didn’t think it wasn’t a problem. The staffer then followed Madigan around and watched her as she panned her hidden camera around the entire “Capture the flag” room to get unauthorized video of the members.

Madigan was apparently trying to do a shock piece for NBC Dateline to show middle America how criminal underground hackers had descended on DEFCON Las Vegas to learn tricks of the trade and how Federal Agents were tracking them down. When a DEFCON staffer spoke to Madigan posing as regular attendee, Madigan commented that people in Kansas (reference to middle America) would be very interested in what was “really” going on in DEFCON. DEFCON official “Priest” also had reason to believe that that Madigan was planning to out uncover federal agents attending DEFCON and expressed some serious concern about the safety and privacy of those agents. Because of this, staffers used this to lure Madigan to the room where they planned to out her instead in front of DEFCON attendees in the “spot the undercover reporter” game but Madigan bolted from the scene before her photo was put up on the projector.

The sad part of this story is that Madigan was given every opportunity to get a press pass and get access to any of the speakers and attendees above board. Even after the secret video taping she was offered a chance cover the rest of the conference with an official press badge. This is my second year covering DEFCON and I’ve never had any problems getting photos or video from willing attendees and speakers but that’s not what Madigan was going after. She wanted to paint a picture that would shock “people in Kansas” about DEFCON and that’s not what DEFCON is about. The Feds, Press, and hacker community have built up a level of mutual trust at DEFCON so that we have a place to talk openly and honestly. After taking an unofficial poll in the press room here, not one person appreciated Madigan’s antics. [link]

PC World wants to see More Software Piracy!

So apparently Microsoft's just dropped the price of Windows Vista to just $66 in China. This compared to the $199 we American saps pay for Vista Home Basic. One key reason for the lower cost: Rampant software piracy. Who's going to pay $200 for an OS, when they can grab a copy on the street for $1?

Now I don't know about you guys, but I'm thinking we need to seriously ramp up our software piracy problem in this country. And I'm not just talking about burning warez discs downloaded over your new FiOS connection. We need to take this to the streets!

I want to see $5 copies of Vista, Photoshop, and 3DS Max available from dodgy vendors on every street corner. I want back-room software sales at every CompUSA and Best Buy in the land. Need a copy of Windows for a friend's new PC, but he can't scrape together the $200? It's OK, you'll say, "I know a guy." Then and only then will we get the software prices that are clearly our birthright as Americans.

And hey, while we're at it, is anyone from the RIAA listening in out there? Here's an idea for you guys: You say the music industry is losing tons of money to rampant piracy? How about taking a page from the tech industry and lowering your prices, instead of finding new and exciting ways to bump them up. I'm just saying... [link]

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