Saturday, December 30, 2000

Britannica.com
Enjoy a full season's worth of Britannica.com's "Annotated Dennis Miller"
This is totally wild!!
http://www.britannica.com/bcom/original/article/0,5744,12870,00.html

Friday, December 29, 2000

Big Brother Knocked in 2000
Workplace surveillance was the leading privacy concern in 2000, according to an analysis released Thursday by the Privacy Foundation, a Denver-based nonprofit that performs research and educates the public on privacy issues.
http://www.nytimes.com/cnet/CNET_0_4_4302729_00.html?pagewanted=all
ZDNet: News: eBay targets offline deal making
eBay is cracking down on offline business deals between its buyers and sellers that circumvent the fees normally paid to the online auction company.
Effective immediately, eBay will first warn, then suspend, members who use their eBay connection to conduct business offline. For example, it is against eBay rules for a person to contact a losing bidder on eBay to offer that person the same product without going through eBay.
http://www.zdnet.com/zdnn/stories/news/0,4586,2669105,00.html

Thursday, December 28, 2000

Jan/Feb 01: The Technology Review Ten
What if you had a crystal ball that foretold the future of technology? Imagine, for example, if you had known in 1990 just how big the Internet was going to be 10 years hence.
http://www.technologyreview.com/articles/jan01/TR10_toc.html

Wednesday, December 27, 2000

Users cry foul with Netscape 6
Many users, turned critics, have reported that the product seems unfinished and the company would have better served users by waiting for the completion of the open-source Mozilla browser, set to be released in early 2001.

User complaints about Netscape 6 vary from lack of stability, to performance drags caused by new customizable "skins", to the lack of business-oriented functions.

Officials at AOL's Netscape subsidiary said they stand by the release of 6.0, and that it provides great improvements in personalization and user-requested features.
http://www.infoworld.com/articles/hn/xml/00/12/22/001222hnnetscape6.xml

Tuesday, December 26, 2000

Five Questions: Renewing a Union in the New Economy Q. Considering that high-technology workers earn
more than most other workers and are so highly
skilled, why should they be interested in a union?
Q. With so many high-tech workers jumping between companies or working as freelancers, how can unions
help the high-tech work force?
http://www.nytimes.com/2000/12/24/business/24FIVE.html

Saturday, December 23, 2000

PBS - JAZZ A Film By Ken Burns: Home
http://www.pbs.org/jazz/"
WebReview.com: Swaine's Frames: The A2Z of B2B B2B is big business, but P2P is where the action
is. To stay ahead of the curve, though, you
need to know what the next hot x2x will be. If
you're confused by all these numeric acronyms,
or acronums, here's a little list that you can
tack up on your cubicle wall.
http://webreview.com/swaine/2000/12_22_00.shtml
The New York Times: Privacy on the Internet
http://www.nytimes.com/library/tech/reference/index-privacy.html
Canada Strengthens Internet Privacy A new law to
protect personal information disclosed
through electronic transactions will take
effect in Canada on Jan. 1, and it will eventually
affect all domestic companies and those in the
United States that have Canadian subsidiaries.

Initially, the new law, the Personal Information
Protection and Electronic Documents Act, will
cover only companies that are federally regulated —
mainly banks and airlines. But by 2004, anyone
doing business in Canada must comply.
http://www.nytimes.com/2000/12/23/technology/23PRIV.html?pagewanted=all
Traditional Chains Making Inroads in the Online Market Internet shoppers have flocked
increasingly to affiliates of conventional stores —
Wal-Mart Stores, Kmart, Toys "R" Us, J. C.
Penney and Best Buy — compounding the
difficulties of the increasingly endangered Web
start-ups that led the way last year.
http://www.nytimes.com/2000/12/23/technology/23ONLI.html?pagewanted=all

Friday, December 22, 2000

Protest Over Web Filtering Business some of the filtering companies'
business plans include tracking students' Web wanderings and selling
the data to market research firms. In addition, one company's software
includes advertising to students on every screen.

"We have to ask, what are these companies' intentions with respect to
our kids, and are their activities solely dedicated to improving the
educational environment?" asked Nancy Willard, who heads the
Responsible Netizen Center for Advanced Technology in Education
at the University of Oregon.
http://www.nytimes.com/2000/12/21/technology/21FILT.html

Monday, December 18, 2000

ClickZ : Site Design With Advertisers in Mind You've got a niche-oriented site that has
at least 30,000 visitors a month. You have
the email addresses of at least 5,000 of
those visitors.
http://clickz.com/cgi-bin/gt/article.html?article=3027
We Now Interrupt Your Browsing for This Commercial Message Until recently, most Internet advertisements have been relegated to
the margins of Web pages — and easy to overlook. What advertisers
want, these dot-coms have been painfully learning, are catchy,
riveting and compelling advertisements; in other words, impossible
to ignore.
http://www.nytimes.com/2000/12/18/technology/18STEL.html?pagewanted=all
E-Commerce Report: Internet Merchants Adapt to Survive one question for 2001 is whether
any pure-play Internet merchants will survive intact.
According to industry executives and analysts, few,
in fact, will. And those companies that do hang on
will look profoundly different from the predictions of
12 months ago.
http://www.nytimes.com/2000/12/18/technology/18COMM.html?pagewanted=all
Outlook 2001: Can the New Economy Navigate Rougher Waters? This is the third or fourth new
economy since the 19th century — each one offering a similar
promise — and yet none could stop a persistent downturn.
http://www.nytimes.com/2000/12/18/business/18ECON.html?pagewanted=all
ZDNet: Sm@rt Partner - Personalization Bill Of Rights The dark side of web personalization is the potential for privacy violation, as
e-marketers amass more and more personal information on consumers.
http://www.zdnet.com/sp/stories/column/0,4712,2660835,00.html

Saturday, December 16, 2000

The First One's Free, Kid / Refresh Daily / a column perpetrated by David Fiedler / WebDeveloper.com ® The First One's Free, Kid
Drug dealers attempt to get people hooked on their wares to insure
a healthy downstream market. Now a major Internet player seems
to be operating the same way, by planning to charge money for the
free services they built their reputation on.
http://webdeveloper.com/refresh/refresh_121500.html

Friday, December 15, 2000

Aliases Subject of Internet Libel Case "There are a lot of areas in law where the offline and online worlds are treated similarly," he said. "Libel is
one of those. If you libel someone anonymously and your ID is discovered, the law of libel is going to apply.
It's that way on the Net and that way off the Net."

Nor is anonymous speech, uttered on a wild and woolly online message board, subject to lesser standards of
care than anonymous speech published in a newspaper…
There's one big difference between defamatory speech in the online and offline worlds, however, said Professor
Lidsky of the University of Florida. On the Internet, the ordinary person is a publisher, and thus the
possibility that a small fry can become a defamation defendant is magnified.

After all, if the Internet didn't exist, the defendant in the Graham case may have simply talked around a water
cooler and no suit would have been brought…
http://www.nytimes.com/2000/12/14/technology/15CYBERLAW.htm
ZDNet: Sm@rt Partner - Microsoft Supports Windows Media Services On Linux Remember when Microsoft said that the only way any of its products would
ever show up on Linux would be over its dead body? Bring out your dead!

Microsoft isn't actually moving the Windows Media Services (WMS) server
to Linux. That's still a Windows-only play. Instead, they're doing the next
best thing: cutting a deal with a company to allow Windows Media Format
(WMF) streams to be served up from Linux servers.

Microsoft has licensed StarBak Communications, a small Ohio company to
deliver Microsoft's media streams on StarBak's Torrent streaming media
network appliance lines and streaming media cache products using its
reverse engineered WMF server.

The kicker? StarBak will be delivering Microsoft proprietary media services
from embedded Linux systems. Yes, that's right; Microsoft is officially
blessing Windows server functionality delivered from a Linux platform.
http://www.zdnet.com/sp/stories/news/0,4538,2664804,00.htm
Sell Goods or Services on your Web Site Sell Goods or Services on your Web Site
http://www.workz.com/content/446.asp

Thursday, December 14, 2000

Study Finds That Caching by Browsers Creates a Threat to Surfers' Privacy Browsers speed up Web use by storing, or caching, recently viewed Web pages, or at least elements of them,
on their user's hard drive. The next time the user summons that page, the browser speeds up its retrieval by
pulling it from the hard drive rather than going out and extracting it from the Internet. (Not all pages can be
cached. Sports, news, weather and other pages that are frequently updated are designed in a way to block the
process, at least for content. But portions of even these pages, like logos and page design elements, are
generally cached to help speed up downloads.)

As a browser cache gradually accumulates pages, it effectively becomes a detailed electronic record of its user's
Web browsing. For that reason, Web browsers have several security elements to prevent outsiders from
reading their contents.

The cache attack method discovered by Dr. Felten and Mr. Schneider does not break that security barrier.
What they have found, however, is a way for outsiders to probe caches to see if they hold files from specific
Web pages. If attackers find the files they're seeking, it's a clear sign that the browser user has recently visited
the site that produced those files.
http://www.nytimes.com/2000/12/14/technology/14PRIV.html?pagewanted=all

Wednesday, December 13, 2000

Stolen Credit Data Put Online An online security expert said such attacks could largely be avoided if companies kept sensitive data on
computers separate from those running their Web sites. "Your credit card is only as secure as the Web site
it's going on," said the expert, B. K. DeLong of Attrition.org, a nonprofit computer security site.
http://www.nytimes.com/2000/12/13/technology/13HACK.html
As Boldest E-Commerce Ventures Fall, Modest Dreamers Fly On If anything is unarguable amid all the dashed hopes
and wagging fingers, it is that it takes longer to
change the world, or even build a business, than it
does to make a pretty Web site. The real effect of
the Internet remains to be seen.

Tuesday, December 12, 2000

Deregulation Called Blow to Minorities The 1996 landmark law that was
warmly embraced by the Clinton administration and many
Republicans as a way to begin deregulating the nation's
telecommunications industry has had the unintended effect of raising
substantial new barriers for companies controlled by minorities and
women, new independent studies commissioned by the federal
government have found.
"Today small firms face barriers erected by deregulation and consolidation in both wireless and broadcast," one of
the studies said. "Minorities and women confront those same barriers; and yet those obstacles stand high atop a
persistent legacy of discrimination in the capital markets, industry, advertising and community — and prior F.C.C.
policies, which worsened the effects of discrimination."

"The barriers to entry have been raised so high that, left standing, they appear virtually insurmountable," the study
concluded. "Minority, women and small-business ownership in these industries is diminishing at such an alarming
rate that many we spoke with felt we had passed the point of no return."

http://www.nytimes.com/2000/12/12/business/12BARR.html
ZDNet: News: Personal firewalls: Not so safe? many of these personal firewalls have a design that's
easy to compromise with just a few lines of code,
according to several sources. In fact, to prove the point, one
source sent code to eWeek with the claim that it
compromised Sygate Technologies Inc.'s Personal
Firewall. But the source said it would work on Symantec
Corp.'s Norton Personal Firewall and others, as well.
eWeek Labs tested the code and confirmed that it will open
a back door in several personal firewalls.
http://www.zdnet.com/zdnn/stories/news/0,4586,2663028,00.html
Is privacy possible in the digital age? How much can Internet companies learn about you while you're surfing? Quite a lot,
actually. As you surf, prying eyes can learn more and more about you -- your likes and
dislikes, your habits, your purchase history. Here's a hypothetical example of one surfer's
day online.
http://www.msnbc.com/news/498514.asp?cp1=1
ClickZ : How to Join the Online Conversation: Part 1 Consider rethinking the ways you've always done things.
These days, web consumers are much more savvy and aware
of time wasters and marketing ploys, so review those areas
that may grow unwieldy if left unchecked -- like FAQs and
in-depth content.
http://www.clickz.com/cgi-bin/gt/article.html?article=2755
ClickZ : What Makes a Site Link-Worthy? Because useful content gets linked.

Recent articles written by Eric Ward:
›› What Makes a Site Link-Worthy?
›› A Link Too Far: Understanding Link Depth Origination
›› What Your Link Request Should Contain and Why
›› Link Popularity Is Not Your Only Linking Goal
›› Building an Effective Linking Strategy

http://clickz.com/cgi-bin/gt/article.html?article=2970

Monday, December 11, 2000

Online Advertisers Pay Donors' Tabs The Hunger Site was the brainchild of John Breen, a computer programmer from Bloomington, Ind., who
created a site showing a map of the world, with one country darkening every 3.6 seconds to represent a death
from hunger. The sponsors agreed to pay the United Nations food program for each click on the "Donate Free
Food" button; only one click a day by each visitor would be counted. But as the number of visitors
skyrocketed, the time and costs involved in running the site rose, too, and by late last year, Mr. Breen was
overwhelmed. In February, he sold the site for an undisclosed price to GreaterGood, a Seattle-based online
shopping mall that gave part of its sales to charity.

Since then, the site has become more obviously commercial, offering extra donations if visitors buy holiday
wreaths or Hunger Site hats, or click the link to Amazon.com and make a first-time purchase there.

GreaterGood, which has created five more click-to-donate sites since buying the Hunger Site, takes a 25
percent cut of the donations to cover its costs, and has recently been having cash-flow problems.
Online Advertisers Pay Donors' Tabs It was so simple: Go to the computer, sign on to
TheHungerSite.com, click the "Donate Free Food" button, and, with
each click, every business advertising on the site would donate a
half-cent to the United Nations World Food Program, enough to buy
a quarter-cup of grain for the world's poorest people.

But these days, the Hunger Site has hit rocky times. In November, the United Nations World Food Program
suddenly ended its participation, concerned about the finances of the organization that now runs the Hunger
Site and troubled that the donations were being passed on more slowly. Though the Hunger Site now
supports two other food programs, it has fewer visitors and fewer sponsors, in part because of the new
competition it spawned.

Sunday, December 10, 2000

The Soul of the Ultimate Machine Several times in the past, Dr. Smarr had equally radical ideas about where computing was headed, and each
time he correctly spotted the Next Big Thing.

He founded the National Center for Supercomputer Applications at the University of Illinois at Urbana-
Champaign in 1985, and helped to develop a network that linked it to the nation's other four supercomputer
centers.

His center also did pioneering work in scientific visualization, and one of its brightest scientists, Stefen
Fangmeier, went on to become a leading graphics animator in Hollywood. There, he helped to create special
effects for movies like "Jurassic Park" and "The Perfect Storm."

Yet those advances pale beside the fact that seven years ago, a small group of student and faculty researchers
working at Dr. Smarr's center created the first graphical Web browser, Mosaic, igniting the World Wide Web
and the electronic- commerce explosion.

The center's advances flowed directly from Dr. Smarr's passion over the last three decades: to use powerful
computers to improve the quality of science. His goal in developing the supercomputer centers was to give
tools to scientists that had once been available only to bomb designers and code breakers.

The Internet and the World Wide Web grew in part from his drive to build better computer tools to permit
scientists to collaborate and share information.
The Soul of the Ultimate Machine The Internet, he explained, is
evolving into a single vast computer fashioned out
of billions of interconnected processors. Then he
went another step: "The real question, from a
software point of view, is: Will it become
self-aware?"

Saturday, December 09, 2000

U.S. Supreme Court Orders Florida Recounts to
Stop


The 2000 Election The bitter division on the court, awkwardly papered over only last Monday with an order to
the Florida Supreme Court to clarify an earlier ruling, burst into the open with the action this
afternoon.

About 15 minutes before the Supreme Court order, the United States Court of Appeals for the
11th Circuit, in Atlanta, denied a request by the Bush lawyers to halt the recount. But the
court said said that the Florida secretary of state could not certify the results of the recount
until the Supreme Court ruled in the case.

The Supreme Court decision came just hours after lawyers for Mr. Gore had urged the United
States Supreme Court to let the counting of Florida's presidential votes proceed while the
court considers whether to hear Gov. George W. Bush's appeal of the Florida Supreme Court's
latest ruling.
It would be the
vice president, and not Governor Bush, who would suffer irreparable injury from a stay that
would push a final count beyond the Dec. 12 date set in the law known as Section 5, which
grants a "safe harbor" to electors chosen by that date.

"What a stay would do, of course," the Gore brief said, "is prevent Vice President Gore from
ever gaining the benefit of the Section 5 presumption."

Friday, December 08, 2000

Opera Software - Press Releases - Opera Software and Be Provide Enhanced Internet Experience for BeOS Users -Opera 3.62 for BeOS Launched Opera Software today unleashed Opera 5.0 for Windows, making its Web
browser available for free for the many millions of surfers around the world that are longing for a faster,
better Internet experience. With this move the popular browser enters the reignited Browser War in full force
as a third player besides AOL/Netscape and Microsoft's Internet Explorer.
The Last Green Mile when we wake up 20 years from now and find that the Atlantic Ocean is just outside Washington,
D.C., because the polar icecaps are melting, we may look back at this pivotal election. We may wonder
whether it wasn't the last moment when a U.S. policy to deal with global warming might have made a
difference, and we may ask why the party most concerned about that, the Greens, helped to elect Mr. Bush by
casting 97,000 Nader votes in Florida.
Are Parents Legally Responsible for Their Children's Internet Use? According to a state judge in Illinois, that parent can face trial in
court.

In a controversial decision issued November 28, Judge Ward S.
Arnold of McHenry County, Ill., ruled that the father of a high school
student accused of digitally grafting the picture of a female classmate's
face to a hard-core sexual image displayed on a Web site can be sued
for damages.
The Nexus of Privacy and Security Nick Mansfield of Shell Services
International, a computer services subsidiary of the
Royal Dutch/Shell Group, praised consumer
privacy rules passed by the European Union and
said that in contrast, "I don't see anything
intelligent in the privacy field in North America."

Do I have this straight?


If I lived in Florida, someone could say, "Have an early Christmas, here's a color TV,." and if it turned out to be stolen, I could keep it, because I'd done nothing wrong?


You've gotta love those Florida laws.


Or not!

Thursday, December 07, 2000

ZDNet: News: Free-ISP closures strand millions Millions of users can't help
And Spinway.com Inc., which had signed up even more subscribers through
a collection of retail partners from Barnes & Noble.com to Kmart Corp. has
also made the untimely discovery that not even millions of users can
sustain a business if none of them are paying a dime.
ZDNet: News: Free-ISP closures strand millions Some 3 million customers who got onto the Internet for free through an
AltaVista-branded service will have that connection severed this Sunday as
AltaVista's ISP partner, a San Francisco company called 1stUp.com, goes
out of business
The 2000 Election Mr. Boies responded that the trial judge ``based his conclusions'' on errors of law, namely,
finding that a recount needed to be done statewide, rather than just in Palm Beach and
Miami-Dade Counties, as the Democrats want; that the canvassing board in Miami-Dade
County that stopped the recount had discretion to do so; and that Mr. Gore had to show a
``reasonable probability'' that the outcome of the election would change even before looking at
a ballot.

And that last issue, in fact, seemed to interest several of the justices most in questioning Mr.
Richard.

Justice Barbara J. Pariente questioned him closely on whether Judge Sauls should have
considered the disputed ballots, which are under lock and key at the courthouse in Tallahassee,
before ruling.

``Are you really saying the votes, the 9000 votes in Dade County ... should not be looked at
in contest action?'' she asked, a slight note of skepticism creeping into her voice.
The 2000 Election Vice President Al Gore's lawyers, in a
hearing before the Florida Supreme
Court, made what could be a final
plea today for a court to count 14,000
disputed votes, his best hope of capturing the
presidency.

The justices vigorously questioned lawyers for
both Mr. Gore and for Gov. George W. Bush
during a one-hour proceeding in which the
court heard oral arguments.

The justices' questions to Mr. Gore's lead
lawyer, David Boies, focused on whether the
court had the authority to order such a count.
And they asked Mr. Bush's legal team, led by
Barry Richard, whether a state Circuit Court
judge was right to ignore the disputed ballots
in Mr. Gore's contest of the election.
Keep Them Out! he tactics have changed, but the goal remains depressingly
the same: Keep the coloreds, the blacks, the
African-Americans — whatever they're called in the particular
instance — keep them out of the voting booths.

Do not let them vote! If you can find a way to stop them, stop them.

So here we go again, this time in Florida.

Wednesday, December 06, 2000

ISPs Find Free Internet Costs Them Online search portal AltaVista on Sunday will cut off some 3 million users from its free
Internet access service, the latest sign that freebies over the Web do not always pay.

The announcement comes after a host of smaller free Internet service providers shut down earlier this year and
as Kmart-owned BlueLight.com said Monday it is considering dropping its free service after the holidays.

``We're seeing a very necessary shakeout among the free ISPs,'' said Dylan Brooks, an analyst at Jupiter
Research. ``The ad-supported ISP business grew far too quickly for what was healthy.''

The demise of AltaVista's Web access giveaway is linked to the downfall of 1stUp.com, an Internet service
provider that funneled 3 million out of its 5.5 million paying and non-paying clients through AltaVista.
1stUp, which like AltaVista is a unit of CMGI Inc, is closing down by Jan. 31.

Only Netzero, Juno and Bluelight.com remain as the major free Internet service providers, with BlueLight's
giveaway potentially coming to an end.
Consortium Offers Unfiltered Advice on Filtering Software The consortium has established a Web site -- underwritten by filtering company N2H2, the Education
Networks of America and America Online -- that provides additional information about the Safeguarding the
Wired Schoolhouse iniatiative. The site includes information to help administrators to evaluate whether they
should install Internet filters, rely on acceptable use policies or use a combination of both. The consortium
advocates that, at a minimum, schools should enact acceptable use policies for all district computer users.
Acceptable use policies, typically signed by students, parents and school personnel, outline a district's rules
for using its computer equipment.
ZDNet: News: FCC to cause higher Net fees? The Association for Local
Telephone Companies (ALTS), which represents phone companies competing
with Baby Bells, says many of its clients handle calls for Internet service
providers, which tend to receive a lot of calls but not make many. These
telephone companies -- known as CLECs -- have come to rely on this
income from calls sent from Bell customers to ISPs, and they say that if
they're forced to give up this income, they'll raise the fees they charge
ISPs, which then might raise monthly fees for consumers.
Palestinian Economy in Ruins, U.N. Says Under economic arrangements negotiated as a corollary to the Oslo peace accord, the
Palestinians are entitled to customs duties, sales taxes and other levies on goods bought and
sold within their own autonomous territory. The Israelis, who control the seaports and
border crossings used for Palestinian commerce, collect the import taxes themselves, and
transfer the payments monthly to the Palestinian treasury. Most sales taxes are also
collected by Israeli authorities, and transferred later to the Palestinians.

Until recently, those payments averaged more than $50 million a month — enough to meet
the entire Palestinian government payroll, from doctors and schoolteachers to bureaucrats
and policemen.

In the seven weeks from early October through the end of November, official sources say,
the transfers came to no more than $8 million, as Israel reduced and delayed the payments
for political and bureaucratic reasons. The Palestinians had amassed unpaid debts and failed
to provide all the invoices and other paperwork needed for reimbursement, Israeli officials
said.

Tuesday, December 05, 2000

A Plan to Intimidate Judges the impeachment and removal of federal judges who issue rulings
that are objectionable to some conservatives has been very seriously
proposed by Representative Tom DeLay, one of the most powerful
members of Congress, and other right-wing extremists in the
Republican Party.

And Robert Bork, whose nomination to the Supreme Court by Ronald Reagan was blocked, has — even
more incredibly — called for a constitutional amendment that would allow decisions by federal and state
judges to be overruled by a simple majority in each house of Congress.
Gwendolyn Brooks, Whose Poetry Told of Being Black in America, Dies at 83 The Gwendolyn Brooks Chair in Black Literature and Creative Writing was established at Chicago State
University in 1990, and there is a Gwendolyn Brooks Center for African-American Literature at Western
Illinois University and a Gwendolyn Brooks Junior High School just south of Chicago in Harvey, Ill. She
was selected by the National Endowment of the Humanities as its Jefferson Lecturer in 1994 — "the absolute
award crown of my career," she said. And in 1995 she received the National Medal of Arts award.

Despite such praise, Ms. Brooks preferred to stay outside what she called "the hollow land of fame" and
quietly live and work on the South Side.

"All my life is not writing," Ms. Brooks once told an interviewer. "My greatest interest is being involved
with young people." To that end, she devoted much time to giving readings at schools, prisons and
hospitals and attending annual poetry contests for school-age youngsters, which she sponsored, judged, and
often paid for out of her own pocket.
Gwendolyn Brooks, Whose Poetry Told of Being Black in America, Dies at 83 Ms. Brooks said that her reputation was bolstered by a review of "Bronzeville" in The Chicago Tribune by
Paul Engle, a poet and founder of the Iowa Writers School. Mr. Engle maintained that her poems were no
more "Negro poetry" than Robert Frost's poetry was "white poetry."

Among the poems in "Bronzeville' was "the old-marrieds," a portrait of an aging couple:

But in the crowding darkness not a word did they say.

Though the pretty-coated birds had piped so lightly all

the day.

And he had seen the lovers in the little side-streets.

And she had heard the morning stories clogged with

sweets.

It was quite a time for loving. It was midnight. It was

May.

But in the crowded darkness not a word did they say.
Sale of Data Raises Privacy Worries So far, the Federal Trade Commission and many state attorneys
general have intervened in at least two cases to prevent defunct
Internet companies from selling customer information, or to impose
conditions on how that data could be sold. But some lawyers now
argue that certain provisions of bankruptcy law may override F.T.C.
rules.
An Inside Story of Racial Bias and Denial, New Jersey Files Reveal Drama Behind Profiling The 91,000 pages of state documents released last week about
racial profiling by the New Jersey State Police offer a rare
look at one of the most contentious battlefields in the
nation's war on drugs.

Taken as a whole, the reams of memos, internal investigations,
complaint letters and confidential reports show how the institutions
of state government denied accusations of selective enforcement for
nearly a decade before grudgingly admitting it and making changes.

But the words written by the thousands of people involved —
troopers, civilians, attorneys general and state officials — also tell an
intensely emotional story: one of gung-ho troopers who saw
themselves as unappreciated as they risked their lives to protect New
Jersey's minority members from drug violence, and who sought
promotions based on high-visibility drug arrests; the anger and
defensiveness of police commanders who believed their tactics were
unjustly branded as racist; the outrage of minority troopers ordered to
view their own neighbors as drug suspects; the bewilderment of black
and Hispanic drivers who could not understand why they were
detained by the police simply because of the color of their skin.
The Digital Tea Leaves of Election 2000 While the Internet may not have played the transformational role in the election of the U.S. President in 2000 that some predicted, this new medium of political
communications suggested what an Internet-driven transformation in political communications might look like.
News Search EnginesIf you are still looking for news using "normal" search engines, stop doing it! You'll find the services below to be a
much better way to search for the latest news stories from hundreds of sources on the web. These services provide
exceptionally good results for current event searching, because they crawl only news sites once or twice a day. Thus,
the results are usually focused and timely.
Yahoo Drops Free Submit For Commercial Categories Yahoo has dropped the ability for sites to submit for free to the commercial portion of its directory.

Sites wishing to be listed within the "Shopping and Services" or "Business to Business" areas of the web guide must
now use Yahoo's $199 "Business Express" service. A free submission option remains for those submitting to other areas
of the Yahoo.com site or to regional commercial areas at Yahoo's non-US editions.

Yahoo becomes the second major directory to limit its free submission option. LookSmart made a much more expansive
move earlier this year, requiring all commercial sites to pay a submission fee. In contrast, Yahoo's remaining free
submission option remains much more liberal, still available in vast portions of the guide.

Yahoo said it was making the change so that it could affordably build out its commercial listings to be as
comprehensive as possible.
ClickZ : What Do Publishers Really Sell? There is no single factor more important to
a site publisher than audience. Your
understanding, knowledge, and awareness
of your audience, and your relationship to
it, defines your business. Period.

Sunday, December 03, 2000

Political Cartoons and Cartoonists Judged on the basis of influence per square inch, it would be hard to find a match for the political cartoon in
the history of modern American journalism. Although the history of political cartoons in what is now the
United States dates back to the days of Benjamin Franklin, their use as a daily commentary on the news did
not begin until the end of the nineteenth century when advances in technology made it possible to reproduce
drawings without the laborious and time-consuming process of creating woodblock engravings.
An Ailing Russia Lives a Tough Life That's Getting Shorter In a country whose most overworked word is "krizis" — crisis — here is a genuine one: Russian life
expectancy has fallen in 6 of the last 10 years.

It fell every month last year alone, to an average of 65.9 years for both men and women — about 10 years
less than in the United States, and on a par with levels in Guatemala. Moreover, government statistics
through last August point to a further drop in 2000.

It is a sore-thumb symptom of a precipitous decline in Russia's public health, a spiral not seen in a
developed nation since the Great Depression, if then. Life expectancy is not just a medical issue but a
barometer of a society's health. In a sense it is a lagging indicator of poverty, of stress, of cohesion and
stability — and of a government's ability or willingness to take care of its own.

Since 1990, according to the most recent figures, the death rate has risen almost one-third, to the highest of
any major nation, and the birth rate has dropped almost 40 percent, making it among the very lowest.
Mortality from circulatory diseases has jumped by a fifth; from suicides, a third; from alcohol-related causes,
almost 60 percent; from infectious and parasitic diseases, nearly 100 percent.

Not all the toll was registered in deaths. The rate of newly disabled people rose by half.
Sharply Split Congress Faces a Herculean Job Mr. McCain, chairman of the Commerce Committee, predicted, "We're going to have to have 50-50
committees." He said he had told his committee's senior Democrat, Senator Ernest F. Hollings of South
Carolina, that "I am fully ready to accept an even committee" while retaining the chairmanship himself.

"We were shutting out the Democrats from their legitimate rights as a minority in the Senate, and there is a
lot of anger among the Democrats about it," he said. "We have to do business differently.
Sharply Split Congress Faces a Herculean Job Even those steeped in the history of Congress say
there has never been a situation quite like what
Washington is about to face. In 1953, a very popular president, General Eisenhower, dealt with an 83rd
Congress controlled by Republicans by only eight votes in the House and two in the Senate.

But those were easier times, when cooperation across party lines was instinctive on many issues, not just one
tactical alternative as it is today. The new president, whoever he is, will take office with the most tenuous of
electoral margins, considerable public doubt that he won fairly, and a severe level of rancor on Capitol Hill.

Saturday, December 02, 2000

Through A Glass Darkly There was also a heavy irony in Mr. Olson's central argument that the Florida Supreme Court had changed
the rules after the game was played. Governor Bush and his people have accused that court of in effect making
an ex post facto law.

Yet at this very moment Bush supporters in the Florida Legislature are polishing up a plan to meet in special
session and choose the state's electors themselves, overriding the people's vote if it turns out to be for Vice
President Gore. That would be ex post facto with a vengeance.

One curiosity is that none of the lawyers seem to have noticed Section 2 of the 14th Amendment. Its framers,
to prevent any Southern denial of the vote to blacks after the Civil War, provided that a state lose
representatives in Congress if it denied the right to vote "at any election for the choice of electors for
president. . . ."

That clause has never been enforced to reduce any state's representation. But the language shows, at the least,
that when the 14th Amendment was adopted, in 1868, the assumption was that citizens, not legislators,
would choose presidential electors. It makes the Florida Legislature's plans look even more brazen.
ZDNet: News: Digital copyright battle sharpens The right to resell
The entertainment behemoths say they want to ensure copyright holders are
properly compensated for their works on the Web, but digital media
companies say Hollywood is trying to stifle technology to keep control over
distribution. Experts say billions of dollars could be involved.

At Wednesday's hearing, DiMA representatives and executives from new
media companies will argue that consumers must be assured that digitally
downloaded purchases enjoy the same flexibility and value as physical
media, including the right to resell, lend, or give away media products.

Specifically, these companies say that when a song, for instance, is
streamed, the webcaster should only have to pay a royalty on that
performance once.

Copyright holders, however, feel royalties should be paid on copies that
may be produced incidentally on the computer's buffer as a result of the
streaming.
ZDNet: Story: Top Tech News INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY DEBATE IN D.C.
The battle over intellectual property on the Internet goes in front of
federal officials today. Representatives of the Digital Media
Association and other new media companies will make their case today
before the U.S. Copyright Office and the National Telecommunications
& Information Administration. The groups will argue that consumers
must be assured that digitally downloaded purchases enjoy the same
flexibility and value as physical media, including the right to resell,
lend or give away media products. This puts them at odds with some
old media companies who they accuse of trying to control distribution.
Click for more.
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THE US DOMAIN OVERVIEW - Who Can Register Anyone can register under the US Domain as long as the naming structure is followed.

The US Domain currently registers businesses, individuals, federal government agencies, state government agencies, K12
schools, community colleges, technical/vocational schools, private schools, libraries, museums, and city and county
government agencies.

Any computer in the United States may be registered in the US Domain hierarchy. Generally, computers outside the United
States are expected to register in other domains, however, there may be exceptions when a computer is used as part of a
project or in a community with other computers in the US Domain.
THE US DOMAIN OVERVIEW
THE US DOMAIN All state and local governments (city, county, township, parish, village), K-12 districts and schools, community colleges,
technical schools, museums, libraries, organizations, businesses, and individuals can register under .us. The structure of the
US Domain is a hierarchy based on localities (e.g., name.los-angeles.ca.us). This structure provides for more unique names,
more easily located names, and national identification. The US Domain is the sixth largest domain after .com, .net, .edu,
.jp (Japan) and .uk (United Kingdom) [Internet Software Consortium Survey, January 2000].

The US Domain Registry is administered by VeriSign Global Registry Services.

The information on these Web pages takes precedence over RFC 1480 - The US Domain.
InternetNews - Web Developer News -- ISI Gives Up Administration of .us The University of Southern California's Information Sciences Institute (ISI) Tuesday ceased administration of the .us
domain, a country code top-level domain (ccTLD) similar to those used by Canada (.ca), Germany (.de), Norway
(.no) and other countries. VeriSign Global Registry will temporarily assume administration of the domain until a
permanent administrator is selected.

VeriSign will administer the domain with no change in policies through the existing system of delegated
administrators across the country. The U.S. Department of Commerce (USC) will ultimately decide on a permanent
administrator for the domain and has set up a Web site for comments on the management and administration of the
domain.

Friday, December 01, 2000

HarpWeek | Hayes vs. Tilden: The Electoral College Controversy of 1876-1877 Read about the potential parallels between the presidential elections of 1876 and 2000,
and about the Congressional Plan of Settlement.

Online Buyers Gain Ability to Sue The European Union passed rules
today that would allow consumers to sue in their own
country an online retailer based in another union country.

European officials argue that such a consumer right is essential to
help get e-commerce off the ground in Europe.

"A lack of consumer confidence is the main thing holding up the
development of e-commerce here," said Leonello Gabrici, a
spokesman on judicial matters for the European Commission, the
executive arm of the European Union.

By handing jurisdiction of cross- border disputes to the courts in the
consumer's country, the regulation will encourage consumers to
purchase online, he said.
Self-Employment on the Decline n fact in many ways, running a small business or acting as an independent consultant has become harder
than it once was, analysts say. Health care costs have grown faster for self-employed people than for big
companies, and the increase in families with two working parents has made the demands of running a
business all the more difficult.
Self-Employment on the Decline Rather than booming in recent years,
self-employment has declined both in numbers and
as a share of the work force. In the strong economy, it seems, large companies desperate for additional
workers have managed to lure employees from all over, in part by offering some of the benefits of
self-employment. At the same time, the difficulties of entrepreneurship have become less tolerable.
New Role for the Supreme Court's Web Site Until last week, the court's official Web site was a stodgy place with
an un-rushed air. While new opinions have been posted relatively
quickly, transcripts of oral arguments have rarely been made available
until 10 to 15 days after the sessions. Briefs and other legal
documents submitted by lawyers have never been posted, and audio
recordings of oral arguments have only been made available to the
public via the National Archives, a process that can take year or
more.

But given the intense public interest in the Florida election case and,
perhaps, the outcry over its decision earlier this week to reject a
request to televise the argument session, the court has changed its
Web rules.
Supreme Court of Florida: The Presidential Election Case

This is an info junkies dream!
Florida Election Cases - U.S. Supreme Court

If you're an information junkie this is irresistable.

Thursday, November 30, 2000

ZDNet: Printer Friendly - E-Con 101 How would you like to have access to a reliable labor pool with 24/7 availability, practically no turnover, and no benefits? Welcome to the world
of prison inmate labor, a rapidly growing sector of the new economy where annual revenues have topped $1 billion since 1998.

Around 2 million people are currently behind bars in this country, a growth of more than 300 percent since 1980, reflecting the highest per capita
incarceration rate among all developed nations. Combine that with the lowest unemployment and tightest job market in 30 years and you've got
the formula for tapping into what might be the only low wage, labor-intensive workforce left.

In fact, inmate laborers could be the missing variable that pries assembly jobs away from the Third World and back into the American GDP. "The
benefit is that it provides a reliable, productive, motivated workforce that can reduce production costs—and that's the business bottom line,"
claims Knut Rostad of the Enterprise Prison Institute, a company that specializes in leasing inmate labor.

Made in Sing-Sing

Less talked about is what Jenni Gainsborough, communications director of the Washington, D.C.–based criminal policy analysis firm The
Sentencing Project (www.sentencingproject.org), calls a "modern business dilemma" (read: a huge publicity nightmare). Gainsborough, a former
public policy coordinator of the ACLU's National Prison Project, says, "It seems absolutely wrong that individual liberty and public safety should
be put out to bid to companies whose first concern is their shareholders and expanding their market."
South Africa to Ask for International Gem Certification South Africa plans to ask
all nations on Friday to back an international certification
system for gems, saying it is concerned not only that
diamonds are fueling civil wars among other Africans but also that
adverse publicity and calls for boycotts will hurt its own
diamond-mining industry.

Ambassador Dumisana Kumalo of South Africa, who will introduce a resolution in the 189-member General
Assembly, said in an interview today that piecemeal attempts to control diamond exports, which finance
rebel organizations like the Revolutionary United Front in Sierra Leone and Unita in Angola, are not enough.

In two weeks, publication is expected of an expert panel's report to the Security Council on the illegal trade
in what are called "conflict diamonds."

"One thing that they will show in their report is that the same characters who are involved in trading in
Angola are the ones who pop up in the Congo, the ones in Sierra Leone," Mr. Kumalo said. "So there is a
very small network wherever these conflict diamonds are." He said that without concerted action worldwide,
there can be no hope of stopping the trade.
Netscape 6 Browser: Mixed Bag But if Web-page designers are mostly pleased with Netscape 6, ordinary mortals are in for a broad array of
disappointments. The program is a memory glutton, hoarding 20 to 25 megabytes of RAM. (Abandon all
hope, ye with 32-megabyte PC's.) Its speed is fine once you're online, but it takes nearly a minute to start
up, even on fast Macs and Windows PC's — long enough for you to say, "I wish this browser were built
into the operating system" 20 times in a row.

Once Navigator is finally ready to show you some Web, you may be surprised to discover that several
popular features of the previous version, Navigator 4.7, have disappeared. The print-preview feature is gone,
as is the ability to drag a Web site's address-bar icon directly into the Bookmarks menu. You can no longer
copy or paste a Web address in the Address bar by right-clicking there, either. And you have to resize the
browser window every time you begin surfing; Navigator doesn't remember how you had it the last time you
ran the program.

The most alarming flaw, however, is that you can't highlight the entire Address bar with a single click. You
must highlight the current Web address by dragging the mouse over it each time you want to type a new
address, an oversight blatant enough to make you wonder exactly how much time the program's designers
actually tested Navigator by, say, browsing the Web.
Nasdaq Continues to Fall Yesterday, the Dow Jones industrial average rose 121.53 points, or
1.2 percent, to 10,629.11, but the Nasdaq composite index fell 28.05
points, or 1 percent, to 2,706.93. The Nasdaq's decline gave it yet
another new low for this year.

The broader Standard & Poor's 500-stock index advanced 5.82 points, or 0.4 percent, to 1,341.91.

Despite the decline in technology stocks, investors traded with cautious optimism on new evidence that the
nation's economic growth was slowing, analysts said. The Commerce Department said yesterday that the
gross domestic product grew at an annual rate of 2.4 percent last summer, the slowest rate in four years and a
steep decline from the 5.6 percent rate in the second quarter.
Lernout & Hauspie Files for Bankruptcy Within the last year, as its stock price soared above $70, Lernout & Hauspie bought two leading American
speech-recognition software makers, Dictaphone and Dragon Systems. But yesterday's bankruptcy filing
accelerated the company's long tumble from the top of the industry, which included the recent resignation of
its founders, Jo Lernout and Pol Hauspie.

Lernout & Hauspie's shares were suspended indefinitely this month on Easdaq, the European stock market,
and on Nasdaq, where the price had dropped below $7.
ShopGuideNews

65 percent of shopping trips failed due to usability barriers. Despite the incentive of free money, two out of three efforts to
locate and purchase an item ended in an incomplete transaction.

Major obstacles interfered with completing a purchase. One example, a participant wishing to make his purchase using an
Amex card was forced to abandon his cart when the site only accepted Visa or MasterCard.

Minor obstacles can also get in the way of a completed transaction when enough of these problems pile up. The frustration
of a series of annoyances, especially during checkout, will cause a shopper to abandon the sale.
ShopGuideNews Can "voter intent" be determined in a fair and objective manner by a hand recount of ballots? In an effort to replicate a hand recount of
punch cards (exactly like those at the center of the current controversy in Florida) rejected by election machines, Boston-based online
legal services provider AmeriCounsel.com recently conducted an experiment to simulate the tabulation process.

In the AmeriCounsel election, 373 members of the public were asked to vote for their favorite ice cream flavor and season of the year.
The ballots were then sent to an official election tabulation center, where machines could count the votes. The machines rejected 10
percent of the cards, but hand counters determined that one-third of those ballots were actually valid because voter intent could easily
be discerned.
ZDNet: Sm@rt Partner - E-commerce Tax Update The e-commerce taxation debate, hotly contested for the past two years,
may be losing some of its steam.

The potential turning point? Barnes & Noble last month revealed plans to
integrate its brick-and-mortar and online (BN.com) businesses. The move
marks the end of the bookseller's earlier strategy of maintaining separate
physical and electronic storefronts to free its cyber operation from having to
collect sales tax. Currently, remote sellers—including e-tailers—are not
compelled to collect sales tax in states in which they lack a significant
physical presence. Barnes & Noble's online isolation kept BN.com an
Internet-only play, keeping it on the same tax footing as Amazon.com.

Interestingly enough, "eBrands: building an Internet Business at breakneck Speed" (Library of Congress Number HD69.B7C37) talks specifically about Barnes and Nobles' need to integrate its internet and brick and mortar brands to compete successfully. A book of Harvard Business School case studies, I think it's flawed. It overemphasizes the stock value of companies. All of the studies were done before the bottom fell out of the market.

Wednesday, November 29, 2000

Often, Parole Is One Stop on the Way Back to Prison Since then, Mr. Peterson has become an apprentice plumber, but he has had his parole revoked three more
times, department records show. Once it was revoked for possession of a dangerous weapon — a serious issue
to the department, given his original conviction — though his mother and lawyer say it was only a
plumber's knife his parole agent found in his toolbox when the agent searched Mr. Peterson's truck.

The next time it was again for possession of a dangerous weapon, what the parole agent described as a hand
grenade in Mr. Peterson's bedroom. Mr. Peterson's sister said it was actually a toy grenade she had bought
for her Halloween costume.

Then last spring Mr. Peterson was charged with assault and making a terrorist threat when he got into an
argument with a former girlfriend, who he said had been harassing his current girlfriend. A department
spokesman said the former girlfriend's mother testified against him, but Mr. Peterson's boss in the plumber's
union, who tried to testify for him, was excluded from the hearing.

So far, Mr. Peterson has spent a year and 11 months in prison on parole revocations, almost as long as he
did on his original two- year sentence. And the total could go on almost indefinitely, because under
California law, each time Mr. Peterson has his parole revoked, he stops earning credit toward his original
three-year parole term. The parole revocations themselves, in California, can last from a few weeks to a year.
Often, Parole Is One Stop on the Way Back to Prison Jason Peterson had lost 60 pounds when he was released after spending almost two years in solitary
confinement at Pelican Bay, California's super maximum-security prison, while serving a sentence for
possession of a pipe bomb.

When he returned to his mother's house in San Francisco, after months without human contact, he refused to
leave his bedroom, his mother, Jeannine Peterson, said in a lengthy interview recently. Her account was
supported by her son's lawyer and a psychiatrist hired by the family.

Concerned about his mental state, Mrs. Peterson, an elementary school special education teacher, called his
parole officer, who offered to take him to the hospital. Instead, she said, the parole officer arrived with police
officers, who handcuffed her son and took him into custody.

The next morning, the parole agent called to say that Mr. Peterson's parole had been revoked for psychiatric
reasons and he had been given an additional year in prison at San Quentin, his mother said.
Often, Parole Is One Stop on the Way Back to Prison This year, a record 600,000 inmates will be
released from state and federal prisons nationwide,
up from 170,000 in 1980.

As the former prisoners return, largely to the poor
neighborhoods of large cities, there is mounting
evidence that they represent what some
criminologists and prison officials now call the
collateral damage of the prison- building boom.

Because states sharply curtailed education, job
training and other rehabilitation programs inside
prisons, the newly released inmates are far less
likely than their counterparts two decades ago to
find jobs, maintain stable family lives or stay out of
the kind of trouble that leads to more prison. Many
states have unintentionally contributed to these
problems by abolishing early release for good
behavior, removing the incentive for inmates to
improve their conduct,
Sins of Emission Why is the United States such a big emitter? Energy use tends to be more or less proportional to gross
domestic product, and we have the biggest economy. But that's not the whole story: We release about twice
as much carbon dioxide per capita as other advanced countries, even though we don't have anywhere near
twice their per capita G.D.P. The main reason for that disparity is that we have much lower taxes on fuel,
especially gasoline. The image of the American filling up his living room on wheels with dollar-a-gallon
gasoline while his European counterpart carefully spoons precious petrol into his mini is a caricature, but gets
at an essential truth.

This comparison suggests that it should actually be much easier for the United States to reduce its energy
consumption and carbon dioxide emissions than it is for Europe. High taxes on fuel have already induced
Europeans to do the easy conservation steps; in America, where gasoline is literally cheaper than (bottled)
water, we haven't even tried.
Ahab vs. The Waco Whale President-elect(?) Mini-Me has not
yet started gnawing on his cat, as the "Austin Powers"
Mini-Me did to the hairless Mr. Bigglesworth.

But W. is starting to weird me out.

Why is our kinda-sorta chief executive the low man on his own
totem pole?

We knew that his political nannies told him stuff only on a need-to-know basis. But now that the guy is
seconds away from the White House, we learn that his handlers deal with him on a needs-not-to-know basis.

Last week in Austin, our Wannabe President George Bush, miniature clone of President George Bush,
happily told reporters that Dick Cheney had "had no heart attack."

The hospital, the Cheney family and Mr. Bush's press aide, Karen Hughes, knew that Mr. Cheney had, that
morning, undergone a heart procedure. But Ms. Hughes did not tell that to her boss before he spoke so rosily
and ignorantly about Mr. Cheney's condition.

When the election ended, Mini-Me was shocked that he had not won in a landslide. His strategists had
apparently failed to inform him that things were getting tight, just as they hadn't alerted him that he was
cratering in New Hampshire. Did they not trust him with the information, fearing he might get cranky?

Presidents get dangerously insulated in the White House. But this boy's in a bubble before he even gets to
the Oval bubble.
U.S. Wrote Outline for Race Profiling, New Jersey Argues New Jersey officials contend that the reason racial
profiling is a national problem is that it was
initiated, and in many ways encouraged, by the
federal government's war on drugs. In 1986, the
Drug Enforcement Administration's Operation
Pipeline enlisted police departments across the
country to search for narcotics traffickers on major
highways and told officers, to cite one example, that
Latinos and West Indians dominated the drug trade
and therefore warranted extra scrutiny.

Since then, the D.E.A. and the Department of
Transportation have financed and taught an array of
drug interdiction programs that emphasize the
ethnic and racial characteristics of narcotics
organizations and teach the police ways to single
out cars and drivers who are smuggling.
U.S. Wrote Outline for Race Profiling, New Jersey Argues New Jersey officials contend that the reason racial
profiling is a national problem is that it was
initiated, and in many ways encouraged, by the
federal government's war on drugs. In 1986, the
Drug Enforcement Administration's Operation
Pipeline enlisted police departments across the
country to search for narcotics traffickers on major
highways and told officers, to cite one example, that
Latinos and West Indians dominated the drug trade
and therefore warranted extra scrutiny.

Since then, the D.E.A. and the Department of
Transportation have financed and taught an array of
drug interdiction programs that emphasize the
ethnic and racial characteristics of narcotics
organizations and teach the police ways to
The 2000 Election "Has
anybody even been able to agree on the time of day
Uniting A Divided Nation, Op-Ed, By Rep. Jesse Jackson, Jr. Elections are supposed to be about choices, and the policy choices between Gore and Bush were relatively stark. In short, the
fundamental choice was between Bush's emphasis on a greater role for state governments and Gore's emphasis on the need for
continuing a significant federal role.

But, since both campaigns knew that the nation was divided over these very policy options, neither side was confident they could win the
national debate if they revealed their true selves. So instead of making the choices clear, both candidates campaigned to conceal their
differences by tailoring and blurring their message for a relatively narrow voting market of undecided suburban independent voters.

The election confirmed the obvious. We are a divided nation. But what was the divide. The professional pundits have focused on the
division between Democrats and Republicans, liberals and conservatives. But, if one looks at the electoral map, the division was as old as
the Civil War itself -- North and South. Bush won the old states' rights Confederacy and the states of small western cities and rural
communities whose politics reflect a similar ideology -- plus Ohio, Indiana and New Hampshire. Gore won the Union states of the North
and Northeast, the larger western states of California, Oregon and Washington, plus New Mexico.

The American people chose a virtual tie for governing in the White House, the U.S. House and Senate. If compared to a chess game,
Gore and Bush, Democrats and Republicans, took no chances, played a perfect conservative game and the result was a stalemate. While
the two presidential and party mates checked each other in the campaign, and neither can really be declared a winner or a loser, the
American people may very well end up the losers with neither person or party able to accomplish much. Our politics could end up in an
ugly mess and a nasty feud.
ABCNEWS.com : Nightline Index TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 28

What do members of Congress think about the
never-ending presidential election? Ted
Koppel traveled to Capitol Hill to find out

Tuesday, November 28, 2000

Jekyll and Hyde If Mr. Bush wins the post-election, it will be,
in part, because he reverted to his true self,
and his party to its true self, after a campaign in which they persuaded
voters that they had become a kinder, gentler, more inclusive G.O.P. If
Al Gore loses the post- election, it will be, in part, because he was never
himself during the real election, but rather somebody else every week.
Therefore he could never ignite the enthusiasm of America's young, or his
own party, so he had to personally solicit supporters for his post-election
campaign.
The 2000 Election

Gore Asks Public for Patience; Bush
Starts Transition Moves;
Administration Withholds Aid

Friday, November 24, 2000

Screen Savers as Artists' Medium "Refresh: The Art of the Screen Saver" is an online
exhibition of 22 artist-created screen-saver programs,
all of which can be downloaded free. The
exhibition, curated by Mr. Buckhouse, opened Nov.
4 on the ArtMuseum.net site.
Police Seek Record of a Bookstore's Patrons nvestigators believe that if they can tie up one loose end — confirming that the books were received by the
person named on the envelope — they can be certain the recipient was the laboratory owner and they can
arrest him. Lt. Lori Moriarty, the task force commander, said that would "turn a probable cause case into
proof beyond reasonable doubt."

And the surest way to do that, Lieutenant Moriarty added, is by retrieving the sales record from Tattered
Cover, which investigators have tried through a search warrant.

But using sales receipts of books to solve a crime has raised concerns among booksellers, publishers and
privacy groups, who are watching the case closely for its implications on the First Amendment's rights of free
speech and privacy. Because of this, the store owner, Joyce Meskis, has refused to comply with the warrant,
arguing that customers, even suspected felons, have a right to privacy no matter the subject of the books they
buy.

Friday, November 17, 2000

Distributor of Flu Vaccine Comes Under Fire
The distributor, Henry Schein Inc., and its
subsidiaries are the exclusive suppliers in the
United States of vaccine made by Medeva, a British
company that is the only flu vaccine producer that
has not had manufacturing problems this year.

Some Schein customers that ordered early, at low
prices, said in interviews over the last week that
they had received only partial shipments or no
vaccine at all. At the same time, Schein is taking
new orders at higher prices, and at least some of
those orders have been quickly delivered.
ZDNet: News: ICANN names new dot-competition
The Internet Corporation for Assigned
Names and Numbers (ICANN)
approved seven new top-level domains
(TLDs), the suffixes attached to a Web
address. Winners are: .name for
personal Web sites; .pro for
professionals; and .museum, .aero,
and .coop for specialty Web sites run
by museums, airlines, and cooperatives, respectively. In addition, the .info
suffix would be available for any Web sites; and .biz would initially be for
businesses and would later be expanded for general use.
Britannica.com
Election Analysis and Commentary: A Selective
Guide from Britannica.com
Grassroots.com Snags Former White House Official
Political services Web site Grassroots.com has signed former White House press secretary Mike McCurry to
be its leader.

The privately held company, based in San Francisco, Wednesday appointed McCurry as its new chief
executive officer, as it gets set to launch its new line of Internet-based products and services.

McCurry, 46, who most notably served as press secretary for President Clinton from 1995 to 1998, also will
remain a Grassroots board member. McCurry replaces co-founder Craig Johnson, who served as the interim
CEO.

Founded in September of last year, Grassroots is a political news site where voters can download video of
candidates' speeches or engage in chat-room discussions about hot-button political issues. The company also
offers online services for candidates aiming to raise money, recruit volunteers and motivate last-minute voters.
The Tally on Dot-Com Deaths
The sun has set for nearly 130 Internet companies since January, leading to about 8,000 layoffs, according to
a new report.

Roughly 21 dot-coms closed down in the first half of November, nearly matching a monthly high of 22 in
October, according to a study from Internet research site Webmergers.com.

E-commerce sites, such as Furniture.com and Toysmart.com, accounted for 60 percent of the casualties.
Business-to-business companies accounted for about 20 percent of the total, with content companies such as
APBnews.com making up a quarter of that group.

Wednesday, November 15, 2000

The 2000 Election
Former State Senator Tom Brown, a Democrat who was chairman of the Florida Senate
Committee on Ethics and Elections in 1989 when the Legislature passed the bill creating the 5
p.m. deadline, said lawmakers assumed the secretary of state would apply common sense to
deciding when a recount was warranted.

"If we are going to allow somebody to request a recount, the intent obviously is that you
expect a recount to be included," said Mr. Brown, who is now retired and living in
Tallahassee. "That would be an extenuating circumstance."

Regarding the secretary of state's earlier position that the deadline must be enforced with
exceptions only for acts of God, Mr. Brown said, "I think that is ridiculous. She obviously
has discretion. You don't write a law giving people the ability to request a manual recount and
then say you can do the recount but then not have it counted. That is obviously an absurdity."
Candidates Use Web to Garner Support During Recount
Republicans say Gore wants to count and recount the votes until he gets the results he wants.

But on his Web site, Gore provides a seven-paragraph explanation for his decision.

"We want the true and accurate will of the people to prevail, and that means letting the legal system run its
course," the notice says. "If at the end of that process, George Bush is the victor, we will respect that result."

Tuesday, November 14, 2000

Fairness for Whom?
Fairness for Whom?

By BOB HERBERT

Take a deep breath. Whatever happens in this election —
whichever candidate is unfortunate enough to win — the
country will survive.
The 2000 Election


By DAVID GONZALEZ and DEXTER FILKINS

WEST PALM BEACH, Nov. 12
— Ron Klein, a Democratic
state senator here, thought
something was amiss minutes after he cast
his vote and left his polling place in Boca
Raton at 7:05 Election Day morning. He
had done a double take when he saw that the
second hole in his punch- card ballot did not
align with the names of the Democratic
candidates, Al Gore and Joseph I.
Lieberman. He voted for the Democrats
anyway and drove to another precinct to
campaign.

"There were a group of people walking out,
and they were totally upset," Mr. Klein said.
"They said they didn't know who they voted
for."
con·cept: 2000