This photo of the still-living Skrillex was run through an auto-glitch utility that is currently making the rounds.
You can drop any photo into this website, set your preferred "glitch rate," and the page spits back an aesthetically pleasing scrambled image somewhat resembling a 3D glasses mishap at the local multiplex.
January 2012
Skrillex raster portrait
cross-posted to Computers Club Drawing Society
Update: This post was revised and re-titled. Originally it was called "RIP Skrillex" - don't believe everything you read on the internet.
year-end links; war on general purpose computing
Paddy Johnson invited 34 people to cite their favorites links of 2011.
Mine was dump.fm. Even in its current semi-visible, invitation-only state it continues to be a creative force on the Internet.
My second choice might be Cory Doctorow's talk "The coming war upon general purpose computation." (General purpose or Turing-complete computers as opposed to chips in appliances that only perform one function.)
Doctorow believes the battle over SOPA is preparing us for a larger battle, which is the use of rootkits and hardware keys to disable computers for other purposes besides copyright enforcement. He mentions the control of gene-sequencing or radio frequencies as places where the need for government intervention may become stronger in the future, but of course the danger is that the control goes beyond regulating these areas into all-purpose political meddling. He thinks winning at the SOPA/copyright stage might slow down later, larger attempts at techno-repression.
He's entirely too optimistic in believing (i) that efforts to make "unhackable" computers aren't already underway and (ii) that people aren't willing to shackle themselves through the use of iPhones and large-scale social media platforms. Regarding the latter, he believes "middle class," Western, "technocratic" people know they can always hack around such systems and will not become too dependent on them. This suggests he is living in a bubble of other professional futurists and tech-savvy folk and has no idea how easily the "middle class" could allow itself to be controlled and vote "yes" to, say, computer-disabling to "fight terrorism."
new year's police state
Dampening the urge to celebrate over the weekend was President Obama's Dec. 31 signing of an indefinite military detention bill that violates every principle of freedom the US stands on. Our forebears fought for such protections as right to counsel, right to speedy trial, and habeas corpus proceedings requiring authorities to show cause for imprisonment. They believed in basic human rights. These might be limited or curtailed in "war" with respect to our "enemies" but while wars end, under the Obama detention law, cruel imprisonment does not. (Many of the Guantanamo prisoners have been locked up since the first Afghan war of ten years ago.)
Obama "promises" this won't be used on US citizens - ha ha ha.