January 29, 2004
I want my Internet back [ Rants ]
goddammit.
(Time for a rant.)
I just spent over half an hour deleting over a hundred comment spams on this site before installing a comment queuing system to prevent spammers from using my site as a free linkfarm. I spend probably 3-5 minutes per day deleting spam emails that make it past my mail filters. I go to some amount of effort to use browsers like Mozilla Firebird that include pop-up blocking by default, and install blocking software like the Google Toolbar or PanicWare's Pop-Up Stopper with IE to ameloriate its terminal b0rk3d-ness. I've tried running web proxy software like JunkBuster and SquidGuard with Squid to stop pop-ups.
But it only goes so far. This is a fair selection of what's out there, and it STILL doesn't completely work.
I mean, here I am - I've been using computers for 20-odd years, I've been connected to the 'net for nearly a decade and seen three major ages of its lifetime, I'm computer-savvy enough to get a job fixing security, networking and systems problems for corporations and government organizations, and it frustrates the hell out of me! This is my hobby, my work, and my play, and there's times when I just want to get up and LEAVE to find a world where this shit doesn't go on and doesn't suck up my time.
What on earth would a brand new user, who's never browsed the web or used email before, think of this cretinous mass of garbage that's thrown in their face? If you went down to Wal-Mart, put down $450 of your hard-earned money for a bargain PC with a monitor, and forked out $30 or $40 per month for high-speed access from the local telco or cable joint, would you even WANT to use it after dealing with this crap?
There's something seriously wrong here. When I first started poking around on BBS's and at my school library into this shiny ethereal concept, it was beautiful, exciting, raw around the edges, but new and filled with possibility and wonder. That's not there anymore. I still get a thrill from finding cool new technical tools and tricks to use, seeing well-engineered designs in action, building systems and networks and fixing problems, but it's not centered on the Internet itself anymore.
You have to go out of your way to find these experiences. That's true of any good thing, and one can argue that the changing face of the 'net reflects that. Once people realize it's useful or attractive or interesting, more people come. Once more people come and use something, it's not as special. And that makes it worth going out of your way to find new and interesting things.
But the 'net held such promise, such hope - gigabytes and then terabytes and petabytes of data at your fingers, search engines and indexes to seek out and guide you to new places, history and art and sport and literature and programming, all there for the taking. Sure, there were commercial areas, there always were, but they embraced the 'net as a means of better communication. And there were always those who would abuse the commons, but they were held in check by the rest of the population.
None of that complaint is new, I suppose. But there's a real tragedy when a communications medium with such promise is completely raped and pillaged and rendered close to useless (minus defensive measures) by pop-ups, spam, virii, worms and filth raining down like dark hail from the heavens.
I don't have a solution beyond the incremental arms-race I've tried so far. Maybe something will emerge - IPv6 buddy lists? Internet3? Strong SMTP authentication? Hardended out-of-the-box operating systems and applications? Encrypted-protocol-over-IP networks like Gnutella? - but it's an exhausting battle to fight.
"Pending" queue for comments [ Site Info ]
I've added some code to my MT install to create a submission queue for comments. This isn't something that I wanted to do, since it creates a delay between submission of a comment and the comment becoming visible on the site, but the volume of comment-spam I've received (over 100 spams today, took me half an hour to go through and delete them) forces me to do this.
See below for quick download & install instructions.
Continue reading ""Pending" queue for comments"January 23, 2004
Updates and news [ Site Info ]
It's been over a month since I've posted last - Jessica & I are now the proud parents of a beautiful baby girl, Katherine Eva Dobbs (see the pictures if you're interested). She was born at 7:34am on Tuesday December 23rd, after only 5 1/2 hours of labor, and we all got to go home on Christmas Day. It's been tiring and fun so far, but she's starting to sleep for 6 hours at a stretch now, so we're getting a bit more rest now.
We've had lots of people visit and bring food and baby clothes, which is great - less cooking and shopping that we have to go out and do. Since Katherine's definitely pro-clothing right now, this helps quite a bit. Although now that we're parents, even going to Costco can be considered a date.
Not much on the techie front recently, I've just started to catch back on up on mail lists and current news. Most of the *nix boxen are sitting quiet and dark on the basement, and probably will for a little bit yet.
Original content copyright ©1995-2006 Eric Dobbs, except where otherwise noted.
