When life gives you the Triforce, make Triforce grenades.
[Source]
Len Komanac, also known as Flickr-user DarthLen, builds detailed models of Star Wars characters using cardboard, duct tape and glue. This giant Artoo is 96-inches (8-ft) tall and made of 4 fridge boxes, 5 AC boxes, 3 dryer boxes, 3 rolls of blue duct tape, 1 roll of aluminum tape, 52 glue sticks, 1 can of white paint and 2 sharpie pens. That’s a lot of work, but the result is really cool.
All images All Rights Reserved by Len Komenac.
Science has long been a field dominated heavily by men, so seeing the first Google Science Fair award its highest honors to three young women with an interest in the workings of biology gave me a serious case of warm fuzzies. The top three awards, one in each age group, and an overall Grand Prize went to girls. That’s not nothing, as they say. The winners are:
Bose was awarded the Grand Prize as well; her research has strong implications for the future of treatment technology for cancer patients. According to the judges panel, “the unifying elements of all three young women were their intellectual curiosity, their tenaciousness and their ambition to use science to find solutions to big problems.” They each took home prizes from Google, NatGeo, LEGO and CERN.
You may have heard that Google+ started culling accounts – businesses first, which didn’t seem like such an awful thing since they’re promising special support for business accounts in the future. But now the crackdown has extended to pseudonyms as well – that’s right, now you have to use your real name on both Plus and Buzz or you risk getting your account suspended. According to the community standards, this means “the name your friends, family, or co-workers usually call you.” For the two of you out there who still use Google Buzz, you might have noticed some name changes this morning – as the service now requires users to use a last name. And it has to be your real last name.
Here’s an example of something that’s not a “real” name: Opensource Obscure, whose account was suspended because of this issue. A partial response from Google is the solution of having an “other names” field on the profile, noting that “we are generally working with people to change their profile to include their real name, and then use their ‘avatar-based name’ in the field that asks for other names.” Though it looks like Obscure’s account has been reinstated under this rule, that doesn’t help anyone who specifically doesn’t want to tie their online pseudonym to their real identity.
Though a lot of people don’t understand why this is an issue at all (why would you need a fake name?), there are actually a lot of people that this could inspire not to use the service. I for one have people whose real names I don’t know that I would still consider part of my social network. Good examples are people who play roleplaying games or otherwise spend a lot of time in virtual worlds online – it’s not unreasonable that you might want to interact with people in those “online only” social networks in a setting outside the game, and equally reasonable that you might not want someone that you’ve never met in person to know your real name. Or perhaps the issue is more of specifically keeping your real identity separate from another persona – maybe you participate in online communities that you don’t want your family/friends/coworkers knowing about. Using Plus’s “circles” doesn’t solve the problem of two completely separate identities.
The problem is Google assuming here that people don’t ever have separate identities. Other privacy issues aside (e.g., someone who doesn’t want to use their real name because of a stalker), the truth is that the Internet has provided a way to compartmentalize parts of our lives if we want to, and a good online social network should support that. I know plenty of people who have used Buzz, with its myriad issues, rather than Facebook, for that very reason. If most social networks start moving toward identity verification I guess we’re stuck with Twitter and interacting in 140 characters or less.
What about you? Do you think Google should allow pseudonyms? Do you use one?
Image Source: Big Google brother ? / Alain Bachellier / http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/2.0/
University of Illinois student Arthur Nishimoto designed what is perhaps the single most awesome Star Wars game of all time (including a substantial part of the near future). Fleet Commander is designed for a 52-inch multi-touch LCD tabletop TacTile display, which means we won’t be getting to play it at home anytime soon. But these 56 seconds of video will blow your mind. Here’s hoping they adapt this for tablet gameplay (and that it has the support of recently stingey Lucas) sometime soon.
[G.TDW]
A Colorado court case could set a precedent on whether the right to remain silent extends to encrypted files.
The Justice Department wants a federal judge to rule that defendant Ramon Fricosu must decrypt a laptop that prosecutors believe has evidence showing her guilt in an alleged mortgage scam.
Fricosu’s lawyers say doing so could incriminate her, and thus she has the legal right to refuse to do so under the Fifth Amendment, specifically the best known section, which reads “nor shall [a person] be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself.”
There is, to say the least, an element of confusion over how both the constitution and previous legal interpretations of it relate to computer encryption. The government lawyers believe the case should be likened to ordering a defendant to provide a key to a safe, which has been judged legal in the past.
The defense side counters that Fricosu is being required to provide a form of “compelled testimonial communications”. It’s preferred comparison is to a defendant asked to provide the combination to a lock on a safe, a request previous rulings have said cannot be mandatory.
With the ball back in the government’s court, the most important element may be that it’s request in the case is not for Fricosu to provide any information such as handing over a decryption key. Instead it wants her to decrypt the files herself, with nobody else seeing the decryption key. At that point the government would have the full legal right to look at the unencrypted files on the laptop, having lawfully seized it in the first place.
In previous high-profile cases on the matter, courts have ruled that defendants cannot be forced to hand over the encryption key itself (which isn’t the issue here.) The most directly relevant case, where prosecutors wanted to force the defendant to decrypt files, didn’t get as far as a ruling because the defendant complied.
It’s pretty clear this case is likely to go all the way to the Supreme Court if neither side backs down. Indeed, Colorado state officials already got the go ahead from the Assistant US Attorney General before seeking the court ruling.
(Picture credit: Boris Anthony, via Creative Commons license)
Alex Schranz (Orion Pax on Flickr) built this massive Batcave replica from his horde of Caped Crusader pieces. Somewhere between 800o and 9000 LEGO and a neon blacklight later, the construction houses a Batmobile, scaled-up Batman and Robin figurines, and an artistic interior worthy of Mr. Wayne’s approval. At 68 bricks tall on a 40×40 stud base, it’s nearly big enough to host a visit from Barbie-turned-Selina Kyle. (OK, not really, but you can’t blame a girl for trying to sneak Catwoman into the secret lair.)