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Permanent link to archive for Thursday, April 10, 2003. Thursday, April 10, 2003

Here's a scoop from Ben Edelman at Berkman. "Testing indicates that SafeSearch blocks at least tens of thousands of Web pages without any sexually-explicit content." 

Picture of a beautiful bouquet of flowers, the symbol for RSS 2.0.Jon Udell spots the PR industry discovering RSS. This gives me goosebumps, big time.  

Reminder: Every Thursday we have meetings for weblog-writers at 7PM at Berkman Center, 1587 Mass Ave. If you are a reader of Scripting News, or a member of the Harvard community, you are welcome at these meetings. We want to bring weblogs into Berkman, and vice versa.  

An editorial on this moment in time. 

Gavin Sheridan posts gruesome pictures of war death. 

Doc Searls comments and links on the war. 

BBC: "French President Jacques Chirac welcomed the crumbling of Iraqi President Saddam Hussein's government." 

Motley Fool: Google in the Crosshairs. "When you're so good at what you do that your brand becomes a verb, the competition starts to notice, big time." 

A personal note. It's been 300 days since I smoked. I still want one from time to time. But I don't do it.  

BBC: Concorde grounded for good

Thanks to Jenny Levine for the pointer to Haiko Hebig's directory of RSS aggregators. 

On this day last year we announced our syndication deal with the NY Times.  

This morning warmth and sunshine in Cambridge. Happy! 

News.Com: "The ACLU on Wednesday lost its first attempt to challenge a controversial 1998 copyright law." 

Editorial 

Like people who favor the death penalty, the war proponents must have a sense of closure, except not so nice because so many more people have died, including our brothers and sisters, sons and daugthers.

MSNBC proclaims Bush a visionary, makes me wonder how this war is changing my country. What vision does it require to start a war? Have we lost our minds?

Eventually discussion will come back to what this war is about. As Rumsfeld says -- it's not over; and we haven't been told what the war was about, because it surely wasn't about Weapons of Mass Destruction (where are they?), and we don't believe our government cares about freedom for Iraqis, because if they did, we'd be at war with China, among many other countries. Our track record for follow-through is abysmal, ask Afghanistan or Pakistan. Our troops will be withdrawn quickly, and what's left behind may be worse than Iraq under Saddam much as the artificial nation of Yugoslavia fell apart when Tito died.

Chirac is a politician, so he must back-pedal now. The French made it personal, I heard an interview with a French official who sneered that Americans didn't understand the world. I hated that. That breeds a dangerous feeling inside the US, where we have to worry what comes next. The only way forward is to keep our heads on straight and think, not resort to emotional arguments.

I've gotten emails requesting an explanation of my thinking in the early days of the war, but I believe it requires no further explanation. Like all weblog posts they belong in the context of the time they were created. Further, don't be sure you know how it turns out. All we saw yesterday was a TV show. It's hard not to be influenced by it, I know. But I'm reading and listening for facts, and that's what I will form my opinion about as we go forward.

     

Last update: Thursday, April 10, 2003 at 10:45 AM Eastern.

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