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Wednesday, January 29, 2003

OUCH! Opaserv

The opaserv worm recently spread to about 70,000 hosts, and guess what, I know who they all are. That's because the writer of the virus used a domain name pointed at a server that I administrate. Suffice to say that the traffic generated by those 70,000 infected hosts did manage to slow our site down for an hour or so, until we got a good filter in place. About 100,000 of our clients were affected by the slowdowns.

This is on the heels of about a dozen spam attacks against our servers, and the SQL slammer attack last weekend that is *still* trying dozens of times each second, from hosts around the word, to infect our windows boxes.

On top of that my dad's site is having problems. (To be perfectly honest, that's way more annoying than all the worms and viruses put together....)

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Monday, January 20, 2003

Why are we afraid?

One of the issues that "The Culture of Fear" and Bowling fail to address is "why". Why are so many people afraid? The close association of religion and politics might be to blame.

Fear-mongering religions tell us that "if you don't believe in [Our Ideas] then [Bad Things] will happen". Most popular religions claims that "people who don't follow or believe" will be "spiritually damaged" somehow. The problem is, they can't all be right. And most of the prophets (Jesus, Mohammed, Abraham, Buddah) would agree with me.

Our prophets were poor, simple people who rose above their lowly births, and difficult circumstances, to speak out against the controlling fear-dominated states of their time. They preached doctrines of love and cooperation, not fear. The whole idea of "God-fearing", so prevalent among all major religious institutions, was "written in" by disciples and kings, not prophets, in order to turn religion into a political tool.

The current administration knows that religion was a powerful political tool, and that unsupported claims of "spiritual correctness" can blind voters when decisions of policy need to be made. Bush shamelessly uses proximity to the Church in major speeches, and events. Somehow, only those leaders who want to kill and bomb other countries have the balls to use the word "God" in every third sentence.

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Tuesday, January 14, 2003

Fear of Guatemala

We're back from Guatemala. Read The Culture of Fear by Barry Glassner on the plane. Still not sure if the "media" is to blame for our increasingly misguided culture. In my experience, endemic problems such as this stem from the management. Extremest media is easily sold to an oppressed populace (ie: christian-eating lions). The problem is, Americans shouldn't feel oppressed. We the freeest country in the world, right?

Attempt at a quick trip summary, better pics to come later:

Following a tactless comment, we lost our spanish-speaking travel partner at a mall, during our Houston layover. In Guatemala we went directly to Antigua from the plane, via reckless minivan. Wandered from the dropoff into a bar, where a stoic German directed us to a beautiful hotel that was open late. "Bang on the door loud, the guy's probably asleep". Courtyards, flowers, clean rooms and baths for US$5/person/night. Danced and drank 'till late. Tasty "typico" in central park morning, wander cobblestoned streets, entertained locals with hackeysack and harmonica, and rented a car.

Panajachel by evening, more dancing and drinking at the local pubs. More than an ounce of marijuana for $12. Boated across lake Aititlan, framed by volcanoes, to visit San Pedro and Santiago and San Antonio Palopo. Played the harp and shared a Pepsi with a kid on a dusty road while Ben fed a cow. Coke and Pepsi are, apparently, more popular in "Guate" than in the US. The 3 chatty Australian guys and 2 chicks from Honduras got left behind. We worried about them for a bit, while boating back across the beautiful lake.

Drove north to Sacapulas, typical dinner at a comedor. Two Manhattanites and an Indian guy were hanging out outside a hotel. We asked them where the hotel was. 2 Israelis walked up and asked the same thing. Cerveca Gallo, politics with the Israeli's. Immersion-coil tea. Accidentally drove to Nebaj in the morning. Impossibly dangerous and beautiful winding moutain roads. Bought Guate-mixed reggae tapes at the Nebaj market. Vacca-vacca-vacca, dancing all the way to Coban. Wooden Indiana-Jones-style bridges over lush river jungle mountainscapes that can "only" support 1 car at a time. Met a dusty, stoic German biker group that reluctantly gave terse directions when prompted. "Donde esta a Coban?" Well, "derecho" sounds damn similar to "derecha", so don't blame me. Splurged on a palatial US$25 hote and margaritas in Coban.

Lanquin Caves, swimming in Semuc Champey, yet another large group of German bikers (really!). Cahabon by evening where beautiful Peace core girls made us a nice dinner, helped us find a hotel. Possibly from the swimming - a 12-hour bout of dysentary, fever. A marketplace sprang up around our car. Bribe the guy to move his cart? Nearly, but when we started playing Orangutan Soup on the dashboard (card games are an international sign of infinite patience), he gave up and moved for us. Onward on dangerous chicken-bus roads to El Astor, where we took a boat on the lake and saw howler monkeys and all sorts of big, beautiful and presumably rare birds. A bird in every branch of every tree for miles. Massibve blue herons. Some places, the sky was so thick with birds, it blocked the sunlight. Gave a ride to Harry from Austria back to Zacapa (overnight), and then to Guatemala city.

The people in Guatemala are generally happy, generous, confident and friendly. It's nothing at all like the U.S. Twice I saw a woman signing while putting out clothes on the line. It's like watching some cash-poor, Central American version of Donna Reed.

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