2020年7月14日 星期二

A plague of petty grievances

People having fun isn't the reason the virus is winning.
A bartender in Corpus Christi, Texas where cases of COVID-19 have recently spiked.Christopher Lee for The New York Times
Author Headshot

By Paul Krugman

Opinion Columnist

The great re-closing has begun. California is entering a de facto second lockdown. Many southern states, which actually have worse outbreaks than California, should be doing the same, although it seems all too likely that Republican governors will, true to form, wait too long to take effective actions. Nonetheless, it’s now clear that the rush to resume normal life was an act of immense folly, for which we will pay a heavy price in both lives and money.

In today’s column, I emphasized, in particular, the folly of permitting large gatherings and opening bars. This was in part, I have to admit, because I liked the rhetorical device of suggesting that we compromised our children’s future so we could go out drinking. But it’s also true that drinking in groups, a situation in which people naturally become loud and boisterous, has to be among the activities most likely to fuel a pandemic spread by airborne droplets.

It occurs to me, however, that some readers might think that I have a problem with the idea of people having fun, or that I think we got into this mess because people wanted to have a good time. I plead not guilty on both counts.

There may be an element of censoriousness in some critiques of reopening; enough with the photos of crowded beaches! But Puritanism, which H.L. Mencken famously described as “the haunting fear that someone, somewhere, may be happy,” wasn’t a major factor in the alarm I and others felt as we barreled toward our current crisis.

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And for what it’s worth, while bars aren’t my thing, indie music concerts — lots of people standing in a small space, beers in hand while the performers and sometimes the audience sing — are. Today’s music selection is a video I shot eight months, and an eternity, ago.

Nor do I believe that the natural human desire for a good time is what got us into our current crisis.

People are people, and can’t be expected to behave with inhuman self-restraint. Anyone who imagines that we can reopen colleges and expect undergraduates to practice social distancing has forgotten what it was like to be 19.

But fun-loving young people didn’t drive the disastrous March/April push to LIBERATE (as Donald Trump put it) states under lockdown. Much of that push, instead, came from the top down — from Trump and his allies who wanted to goose the stock market, from business interests who wanted to bring back lost profits.

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And the psychology behind grass roots opposition to social distancing — behind all those people raging against being required to wear a face mask — doesn’t have much if anything to do with a desire to enjoy life.

What it reflects, instead — or at least that’s what I believe — is a pervasive resentment among some Americans at the idea that they might be asked to bear any burden, even a small inconvenience, for the sake of others. In fact, the small inconveniences seem to provoke the biggest displays of rage.

I first noticed this phenomenon decades ago, when I was living in Massachusetts and saw how a local talk radio host whipped up rage against the state’s mandatory seatbelt law. (The law was reinstated after a surge in deaths.) I’ve seen it on environmental issues, with right-wing pundits suggesting violent action against local officials over things like the ban on phosphates in detergents — hey, this was meant to prevent toxic algal blooms, but possibly means that your dishwasher doesn’t work quite as well.

In other words, the problem isn’t people who want to enjoy themselves, it’s people who act out their petty grievances — encouraged and empowered by the pettiest, most grievance-filled man ever to occupy the White House. And in the face of a pandemic, pettiness can be lethal.

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Quick Hits

How New York and its governor, after a bad start, rose to the occasion.

Arizona’s governor didn’t, and the public has noticed.

The president doesn’t need experts, he can listen to game show hosts.

Of course Stephen Moore is leading the smear campaign against Anthony Fauci.

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If you’re enjoying what you’re reading, please consider recommending it to friends. They can sign up here. If you want to share your thoughts on an item in this week’s newsletter or on the newsletter in general, please email me at krugman-newsletter@nytimes.com.

Facing the Music

I’m not into bars, but I am into concertsYouTube

I shot this on my phone at Rockwood Music Hall last November — without magnification. (I got a friend to hold my beer.) How long it will be before we can have experiences like this again?

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2020年7月13日 星期一

Top 18 Best Websites To Learn Hacking 2018

  • Black Hat: The Black Hat Briefings have become the biggest and the most important security conference series in the world by sticking to our core value: serving the information security community by delivering timely, actionable security information in a friendly, vendor-neutral environment.
  • Hack Forums: Emphasis on white hat, with categories for hacking, coding and computer security.
  • HackRead: HackRead is a News Platform that centers on InfoSec, Cyber Crime, Privacy, Surveillance, and Hacking News with full-scale reviews on Social Media Platforms.
  • DEFCON: Information about the largest annual hacker convention in the US, including past speeches, video, archives, and updates on the next upcoming show as well as links and other details.
  • NFOHump: Offers up-to-date .NFO files and reviews on the latest pirate software releases.
  • Metasploit: Find security issues, verify vulnerability mitigations & manage security assessments with Metasploit. Get the worlds best penetration testing software now.
  • Makezine: Magazine that celebrates your right to tweak, hack, and bend any technology to your own will.
  • SecurityFocus: Provides security information to all members of the security community, from end users, security hobbyists and network administrators to security consultants, IT Managers, CIOs and CSOs.
  • Phrack Magazine: Digital hacking magazine.
  • Hackaday: A hardware hack every day.
  • Exploit DB: An archive of exploits and vulnerable software by Offensive Security. The site collects exploits from submissions and mailing lists and concentrates them in a single database.
  • The Hacker News: The Hacker News — most trusted and widely-acknowledged online cyber security news magazine with in-depth technical coverage for cybersecurity.
  • KitPloit: Leading source of Security Tools, Hacking Tools, CyberSecurity and Network Security.
  • SecTools.Org: List of 75 security tools based on a 2003 vote by hackers.
  • Offensive Security Training: Developers of Kali Linux and Exploit DB, and the creators of the Metasploit Unleashed and Penetration Testing with Kali Linux course.
  • Packet Storm: Information Security Services, News, Files, Tools, Exploits, Advisories and Whitepapers.
  • Hakin9: E-magazine offering in-depth looks at both attack and defense techniques and concentrates on difficult technical issues.
  • Hacked Gadgets: A resource for DIY project documentation as well as general gadget and technology news.

On Tech: YouTube’s factory workers are angry

There's a power imbalance between the internet companies and those who make the posts and videos.

YouTube’s factory workers are angry

Ana Galvañ

People who make YouTube videos don’t clock in every morning or hang out in the break room. But for those who make money off their science videos or baking tutorials, YouTube is a job.

That might sound fun, but there is a big economy built around online popularity, and like any large industry, it comes with disputes and questions over how the workers are treated.

Two researchers, Robyn Caplan and Tarleton Gillespie, found a common refrain from speaking to YouTube video creators and analyzing their work: Video makers were frustrated by YouTube’s complicated rules and unpredictable paychecks.

Think of YouTube as a virtual factory, and its labor relations are not great.

For those of us who watch YouTube, this tension matters — just as it does if schoolteachers or autoworkers are unhappy with their bosses: It affects the product.

On YouTube, the company shares the money from commercials with the people who make videos. It’s common for video creators to complain that the amount of money their videos generate can be unpredictable, and it’s often not clear why.

There are also intricate, constantly changing rules about what material violates YouTube’s guidelines against harassment or poor taste and therefore might be deleted or disqualified from ads.

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If your paycheck were unpredictable and you didn’t get an explanation, you’d probably be mad at your boss, too. (YouTube typically says it continually adjusts its policies and applies them consistently.)

Caplan and Gillespie aren’t the first to notice the uncertainty that comes with making a living from online influence. Their research, however, cleverly identifies a couple of root causes of YouTube’s labor unrest.

First, there is a fundamental tension between YouTube’s promise to give everyone a shot at expressing themselves and the reality that openness makes YouTube’s advertising relationships vulnerable to people who might post tasteless, vile or dangerous things. “Users provide the labor and cause the trouble,” they wrote.

And second, Caplan and Gillespie said they were surprised at the intricate tiers of YouTube’s work force that give the popular video makers more moneymaking opportunities and help figuring out (or skirting) YouTube’s rules than their less popular counterparts. Caplan and Gillespie told me that there would be less tension if the video-making middle class had the same help as the stars.

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Yes, we want YouTube to weed out horrible videos. But lack of clarity about the rules and the feelings of uneven treatment have made video creators — whether they post horror videos or white-nationalist ideas — unsure if YouTube was cracking down on the kind of material they made.

What the duo highlighted was the inherent power imbalance between the internet companies and all of us who make a vast majority of the tweets, posts and videos.

Twitter, Facebook, YouTube and other websites are trying harder to give people explanations for why something they posted might have been deleted, and a chance to appeal. But it’s incredibly difficult to do this with billions of people.

I’m also not sure the internet companies have an incentive to do this. If you get frustrated that Facebook disabled your account or if YouTube banned ads on a chef’s videos, it might be devastating for the people and not make a ripple for the companies.

We make the product in this internet factory, but the bosses have far more power.

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Set your YouTube searches to self-destruct

Brian X. Chen, a personal technology columnist for The New York Times, walks us through how to make YouTube and other Google websites forget our old habits. The big internet companies don’t need to keep every morsel of your online activity forever.

People change. So do our hobbies and interests. So there’s no practical purpose for letting Google keep a permanent record of our internet searches. Google hoards the data so that it can build detailed profiles on us, helping marketers better target us with ads.

For many years, Google has recorded our complete search histories by default, and only recently the company announced that it would set search data to auto-delete after a period of time for new users. (How many of us are new users to Google, though?)

Last fall, I wrote about how we should seriously consider taking advantage of Google’s auto-delete controls for purging search histories on Google.com, Google Maps and YouTube.

Let’s use YouTube as an example. A few months ago, I did a YouTube search on a video game I was playing. I have since finished the game, so I don’t need YouTube to keep recommending videos related to that game (nor do I need it to constantly remind my wife that I am an RPG nerd).

So in this scenario, I would like my YouTube search history to auto-delete periodically. Here’s how I set that up:

  • Visit Google’s privacy control panel called My Activity at myactivity.google.com.
  • Click on Activity controls.
  • Scroll down to YouTube History and click Auto-delete.
  • Choose when you want your search activity to self-destruct. Your options are after three months or after 18 months. (I chose three months.)

Using this My Activity tool, you can also go through this process to auto-purge voice requests made with Google Assistant, destinations that you looked up on Maps and searches in Google’s Play app store.

Before we go …

  • Those who have the data have the power: It’s hard for all of us to understand the real-world impact of big technology companies, in part because they tightly control their data for competitive reasons. My colleague Noam Scheiber looks at one consequence of the tech black boxes — a debate over whether a study of Uber and Lyft driver wages was unfairly influenced by the companies, which provided their internal data to a handpicked academic.
  • {Screams out loud}: Anne Borden King, who researches medical misinformation online, found her own Facebook feed crowded with ads for bogus cancer treatments after she posted about her own diagnosis. She wrote an opinion piece for The Times about why social networks that people turn to for support in their health crises also provide a playground for pseudoscience companies to pitch false hope. (Tuesday’s newsletter will have more about health misinformation online.)
  • What happens to the radio tinkerers in their basements? Ham radio operators — people who make their own home radio transmitters — talked to IEEE Spectrum about whether their hobby can survive now that smartphones let anyone easily talk with the world without a radio antenna. (Fun facts: Drunk dialing is apparently a thing in ham radio, and there’s a program for amateur radio operators to speak directly with crew members on the International Space Station.)

Hugs to this

What did you learn today from this technology newsletter? That baby skunks are called “kits,” and that they are supremely cute.

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