Friday, September 8, 2017

Sorry-not-sorry

Since I am still playing catch-up with this cockamamy preso-to-video, let me leave you on this intra-hurricane Friday with Facebook’s response when I tried to tell them that I don’t really need (nor do I want) them to remind me of my “memories”.


But they lie. They may not show me this specific mashup, but when they say “manage preferences” they mean “we’ll give you the impression that we give a flying whatever what you want and we’ll continue to dish up whatever we think will serve our purposes.”

Because they never give you the option of opting out of all their little “suggestions”.

Oh, well. It’s Friday, and so far we are not under water.



Thursday, September 7, 2017

No thanks for the memory

You know, for supposedly having some of the brightest algorithm-designing minds in the world, Facebook spends a lot of time screwing the pooch when it comes to delivering what their customers want.

I mean, it’s one thing for them to try out the SoMe equivalent of pumpkin spice latte, just to see if people either individually or collectively will take them up on it. It’s another thing entirely to keep trying to foist their “suggestions” on me, especially since I take every opportunity to tell them I do not want [whatever], I have never wanted [whatever] and I will never want [whatever].

But they’re the online freaking Energizer Bunny. They just keep popping this crap back up.

Viz.: their “memories”—an indiscriminate kludge of graphics you’ve uploaded during some arbitrary period of time. Every time they serve this up to me, I click on the make-it-go-away arrow and tell them I don’t want to see it. They, like a four-year-old, wait until they think I might have forgotten, and they serve it up again.

Here’s what they suggested I might treasure revisiting, from July—with the expectation that I’d be so dag-blamed ecstatic at seeing it I’d immediately share it with my acquaintances, so they could not only ooh and ah at it, but be inspired to also dredge up some mashup of “memory” and share.

Like some ghastly chain letter.


Now, here’s the thing: They served this up in August. Is it their premise that I’m so gaga that I need reminding what July was like two weeks into the next month? Or are they implying that I lead such a dull life I’m entirely capable of not recalling July once I’ve turned the calendar page over?

I can’t believe they pay people stupid money to come up with this crap, and keep doing it even after I’ve told them to cut it out.



Wednesday, September 6, 2017

Family plannning

I spent most of the evening fighting with inadequate equipment to produce a voice-over narration for a slide show in aid of a competition I by default cannot win; ergo don’t have much for you today.

So I’ll just leave this with you, courtesy of an ad campaign for condoms in Brazil:





Tuesday, September 5, 2017

Eye of the butterfly

Google Nest and Elf-on-the-Shelf—step aside. There’s a new nanny-cam in town, I am very creeped out to discover. And even creepier is its über-fey name: Butterfleye.

Ugh.

Being able to “keep an eye” on somewhere you don’t happen to be at the moment is like the car phone of the 21st Century: it’s a tremendous status symbol. It proclaims at maximum volume both an overwhelming obsession with your possessions (real or imagined) and the indisputable fact that you almost literally have money to burn.

I discovered the existence of this iteration in a “sponsored post” (read “ad”) on Nextdoor-dot-com, offering $50 off the hardware. (Making it $150 for the cheapest single-unit kit. If you want to store your home spy video longer than 12 hours, subscriptions range from $9.95 per week to $29.95 per month for the cheapest version.)


Here’s how they word their full come-on:

What’s the worst thing about being away from home? Not knowing what’s actually happening. Check in on your home and live stream 24/7 from anywhere in the world with a Butterfleye wire-free security camera. Butterfleye provides real time, accurate alerts whenever something of concern arises. We keep your home secured while you are at work or enjoying life. Package theft and home burglaries are on the rise, homes with a security camera are much less likely to be targeted. 26 million Americans were victims of package theft in 2016. Butterfleye easily mounts to your front door and can tell you exactly when the package was dropped off and if there is anyone snooping on your porch (no wires, simple installation). Put your mind at ease and know everything is okay.”

Around here, I’m thinking you’d get a lot of nocturnal wildlife, like deer, raccoons and opossums for your technology purchase.

I’m not discounting the fact that there are some valid cases for wanting to install security equipment. Package theft…meh. But checking on whether your teenagers are throwing nightly parties while you’re on your 20th Anniversary Mediterranean cruise, or verifying that your cat is, in fact, getting up on the kitchen counter in clear violation of House Rules while you’re at work—yeah, sure.

Although what, precisely, you’re going to do about either of those crimes post facto, I do not know. Certainly the cat is not going to be impressed that you “caught” her.

Yes, I’ve had a look around the Web, and front-door parcel theft is a thing, although apparently it’s concentrated in the Bay Area. And we are headed into peak package-delivery season, and I’m missing having a concierge at the highrise sign for deliveries and keep them in a secure room for me. But I’ll struggle on without spy cameras.

As an aside, photos of the “team” behind Butterfleye look like mug shots after a gang raid. On the one hand, they don’t give me a lot of confidence in their probity, but on the other, if anyone understands chicanery, I’m thinking it’s this group.




Monday, September 4, 2017

Gratitude Monday: the laborer is worthy of his hire

I don’t know when, exactly, it became Received Wisdom that anyone whose income is derived from salary or wages instead of from investments is a chump. Possibly that started during the Reagan administration, but it certainly has achieved wide circulation in the past 15 years.

We see it all the time in the commoditization of labor in all forms, from bus boys to software engineers, who across the board put in work weeks that would have sent unions out howling on picket lines just 50 years ago. At the lower end, they work two or three jobs to earn a subsistence living; at the upper they risk being replaced by offshored equivalents if they don’t chalk up 60-hour weeks on a regular basis to meet ludicrous schedules.

And all along the way they are ridiculed and demonized as being, at heart, slackers, moochers and unimaginative losers. (If their skin pigmentation contains higher quantities of melanin, then the opprobrium is proportionately greater.) Because if they had any gumption at all, we’re told, they’d have either inherited some wealth, managed hedge funds for obscene fees, or come up with the Next Great Thing (“the Google/Uber/iPhone of [whatever]”) and sold it just after some overhyped IPO and moved on to something else.

In the Valley They Call Silicon, the big dogs all call themselves Serial Entrepreneurs, and venture capitalists fall all over themselves to throw money at them for their next big cookie-cutter thing. The people who do the actual building may or may not make a couple hundred large if they happen to be there when lightning strikes; but they can equally find themselves looking for another job if the serial entrepreneur in a neighboring building’s cookie-cutter thing goes IPO first.

(As for the people who clean the offices, deliver the snacks in the stocked kitchens and drive the corporate commuter buses—they’re all contractors, working for a series of interchangeable vendors with no concern for health, safety or proper accounting practices. The vendors don’t care who the contractors are; the client companies don’t care who the vendors are. All that matters is who’s going to cost the least.)

Because it’s all about the short-term big payoff, not about long-term growth. Only slackers, moochers and unimaginative losers think about long-term commitments; winners aim to take it all. Now.

This being Labor Day, the serial entrepreneurs, investment bankers and trust fund babies are doing whatever they do in their substantial cushion of comfort. The workers are marking the official end of summer, maybe barbecuing or hitting the retail sales. I’m thinking about the generations of men and women who literally put their lives, their subsistence (no fortunes for these folks) and their sacred honor on the line so that workers could receive fair wages for their labor, so that they could perform that labor under safe working conditions and so that they could build pension plans that meant they wouldn’t have to work literally to death.

These were radical notions 150 years ago—the very idea that sharing out some of the proceeds of productivity with its producers was just cray-cray. But those radical notions—and the radical men and women who fought for them—brought the United States to its zenith of innovation and prosperity. When the labor tide rose, so did everyone’s boat.

Sadly, that tide has receded. We are continually being told that American companies cannot compete in the world economy if they have to think about the welfare of their employees. In their minds (as always), welfare = unearned largesse, AKA the dole. No, every penny that doesn’t go to executive compensation must be pinched to the limit by longer hours, tighter budgets and lower taxes. Unless we want all those jobs manufacturing goods and providing remote services to go overseas. This current administration, comprising as it does Goldman Sachs execs, CEOs of oil companies and alt-reich racists and misogynists screaming about turning back the tide of immigration, is only marginally more open about this kind of contempt than Republicans have been since little Newtie’s Contract with America.

I think we’ve hit a situation where a small percentage (say, one percent) of the people have been eying that goose that lays such beautiful golden eggs, and they’re convinced that there’s a simple way to release an immediate gush of gold by applying this cleaver to its neck…

And I’m probably just being contrary when I say that I perceive something flawed in that strategy. But I do not see how an economy can grow if you strangle the buying power of those who actually build it. Just this last week we read so many stories about working stiffs—from cops to hotel housekeepers and bakers—literally risking their lives to show up for work and keep things going for their neighbors and customers in Houston, while the obscenely wealthy sat it out in their multi-million-dollar enclaves. They're chumps, right, Osteen? 

In the meantime, I am (as always) grateful to the people who fought for the value of labor in real life-and-death struggles for decades in the 19th and 20th Centuries, and for those who continue that fight in these gig economy times. Mother Jones, Wobblies, resisters and all of you—thank you.