Climate policy: lessons from tobacco control

December 20th, 2009

The Lancet has an important article on comparing the current efforts to implement a climate policy, with tobacco control.

While tobacco smoking has been scientifically shown to cause illnesses, it took a substantial amount of time of fifty years to implement a tobacco control policy. Still, nowdays smoking kills over 5 million people each year, with an estimated overall death of more than 100 million people.

The tobacco industry, through an effective campaign, managed to avoid control by undermining the scientific results and injecting doubt in the science.

Though it was shown that smoking causes health problems in the 1950s, only in 2005 did the World Health Organisation (WHO) bring into force the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control.

We covered recently the book Doubt is their product on the efforts of the tobacco and other industries to delay regulations for products that are harmful to the health and the environment.

Read the full article Climate policy: lessons from tobacco control (requires free registration to TheLancet).

Reference: The Lancet, Volume 374, Issue 9706, Pages 1955 – 1956, 12 December 2009 – doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(09)61959-0

climate, global warming, health , , , , , , ,

Daily Mail, Daily Fail

December 14th, 2009

If you google for “daily mail rubbish”, you are guaranteed to find quite a lot of hits.

The Daily Mail is a peculiar UK tabloid; it either has a dirty hidden agenda, or the journalists they employ do not have any journalistic qualifications, or both.

In SPECIAL INVESTIGATION: Climate change emails row deepens as Russians admit they DID come from their Siberian server, the Daily Mail journalist David Rose messes up big time with the headline, and grossly misleads the audience. The word they (what came from their Siberian server?) in the headline, where does it refer to?

  1. the Russians?
  2. the climate change emails row?

One has to assume they probably refer to “climate change e-mails”. If it is the “climate change e-mails” that the Russians admit they came from their Siberian server, then this is something that was known from the first day the computer crime incident was made known. The files were first made publicly available on a server at a Russian University.

The fact that the first publicly known source of the stolen e-mails was a Russian University server does not necessarily mean that the perpetrator was either Russian or a student at the specific University.  What is known is that those people that committed the computer crime against the East Anglia University used that specific Russian University to disseminate the e-mails. Anything else is conjecture, and it is up to the Russians to provide more information (if they can obtain) as to who placed those e-mails at the university server.

In the side column “CRU ‘can’t be trusted’ says MP” we read about an MP (whose father founded the Climate Research Unit (CRU) at East Anglia University) and his comments on the e-mail computer crime incident. The Daily Mail journalist quotes the MP as saying the CRU “can’t be trusted”. There is no reference to the quote “can’t be trusted” in the side column. Reading the side column, we see that the MP does not say that the CRU “can’t be trusted”. Let’s read it,

The MP whose father founded the Climatic Research Unit at the University of East Anglia says it is important that trust in the unit’s work is restored.
Liberal Democrat frontbencher Norman Lamb is the son of Professor Hubert Lamb, who was the first director of the CRU in 1971.
Under his leadership, it gained an international reputation for authoritative and ground-breaking research.http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2009/12/13/article-1235395-03D819AA0000044D-106_87x84.jpg
Last night, Norman Lamb, MP for North Norfolk, said: ‘My father was always very concerned that the highest possible standards were met.
‘The university has done the right thing in calling for an independent investigation.
‘It is of critical importance that trust is re-established. We want truth and accuracy, both in small detail and the bigger picture.’
Prof Lamb died in 1997, aged 84.

Apart from the headlines, the article content follows the same pattern of deception. We do not analyse in the blog post. For a better update on what exactly is happening, see Greenfyre’s Youtube videos on debunking the myths on climate change.

climate, global warming , , , ,

Climate change e-mails: What is a leak or a hack?

December 8th, 2009

The climate denier group tries to portray the hack of the e-mails of the Climate Research Unit (East Anglia University) as a leak. Presenting the hack as a leak would bring more credibility to their efforts.

However, the e-mails do not change the evidence that climate change is taking place, and the climate change is anthropogenic. It would not make sense for someone in the CRU to leak the e-mails, because there is no such uncertainty in the science on climate change.

See greenman3610’s Youtube video for some background in the denier efforts on the climate change hack.

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Book: Doubt is their product

December 8th, 2009

David Michaels wrote Doubt is their product, a book about incidents where corporations institutionalize uncertainty and doubt, and influence public opinion so that their profits are maximised while public safety is blatantly ignored.

The book is highly topical for the current case of climate change deniers.

Read parts of the book at Doubt is their product at Google Books.

David Michaels gave a talk at Google for Doubt is their product.

Buy Doubt is their product from Amazon!

climate, global warming , , , , , , , , , ,

Climate change: Fourteen days to seal history’s judgment on this generation

December 6th, 2009

http://static.guim.co.uk/sys-images/Guardian/Pix/pictures/2009/12/6/1260124503563/Editorial-logo-001.jpg

Today, 56 newspapers in 45 countries take the unprecedented step of speaking with one voice through a common editorial on climate change. The text was drafted by a Guardian team during more than a month of consultations with editors from more than 20 of the papers involved.

Climate change is a critical issue for world stability.

Is your newspaper concerned for the environment? Check your news stand for the front-page editorial.

Update (2009-12-9): The editorial,

Today 56 newspapers in 45 countries take the unprecedented step of speaking with one voice through a common editorial. We do so because humanity faces a profound emergency.

Unless we combine to take decisive action, climate change will ravage our planet, and with it our prosperity and security. The dangers have been becoming apparent for a generation. Now the facts have started to speak: 11 of the past 14 years have been the warmest on record, the Arctic ice-cap is melting and last year’s inflamed oil and food prices provide a foretaste of future havoc. In scientific journals the question is no longer whether humans are to blame, but how little time we have got left to limit the damage. Yet so far the world’s response has been feeble and half-hearted.

Climate change has been caused over centuries, has consequences that will endure for all time and our prospects of taming it will be determined in the next 14 days. We call on the representatives of the 192 countries gathered in Copenhagen not to hesitate, not to fall into dispute, not to blame each other but to seize opportunity from the greatest modern failure of politics. This should not be a fight between the rich world and the poor world, or between east and west. Climate change affects everyone, and must be solved by everyone.

The science is complex but the facts are clear. The world needs to take steps to limit temperature rises to 2C, an aim that will require global emissions to peak and begin falling within the next 5-10 years. A bigger rise of 3-4C — the smallest increase we can prudently expect to follow inaction — would parch continents, turning farmland into desert. Half of all species could become extinct, untold millions of people would be displaced, whole nations drowned by the sea. The controversy over emails by British researchers that suggest they tried to suppress inconvenient data has muddied the waters but failed to dent the mass of evidence on which these predictions are based.

Few believe that Copenhagen can any longer produce a fully polished treaty; real progress towards one could only begin with the arrival of President Obama in the White House and the reversal of years of US obstructionism. Even now the world finds itself at the mercy of American domestic politics, for the president cannot fully commit to the action required until the US Congress has done so.

But the politicians in Copenhagen can and must agree the essential elements of a fair and effective deal and, crucially, a firm timetable for turning it into a treaty. Next June’s UN climate meeting in Bonn should be their deadline. As one negotiator put it: “We can go into extra time but we can’t afford a replay.”

At the deal’s heart must be a settlement between the rich world and the developing world covering how the burden of fighting climate change will be divided — and how we will share a newly precious resource: the trillion or so tonnes of carbon that we can emit before the mercury rises to dangerous levels.

Rich nations like to point to the arithmetic truth that there can be no solution until developing giants such as China take more radical steps than they have so far. But the rich world is responsible for most of the accumulated carbon in the atmosphere – three-quarters of all carbon dioxide emitted since 1850. It must now take a lead, and every developed country must commit to deep cuts which will reduce their emissions within a decade to very substantially less than their 1990 level.

Developing countries can point out they did not cause the bulk of the problem, and also that the poorest regions of the world will be hardest hit. But they will increasingly contribute to warming, and must thus pledge meaningful and quantifiable action of their own. Though both fell short of what some had hoped for, the recent commitments to emissions targets by the world’s biggest polluters, the United States and China, were important steps in the right direction.

Social justice demands that the industrialised world digs deep into its pockets and pledges cash to help poorer countries adapt to climate change, and clean technologies to enable them to grow economically without growing their emissions. The architecture of a future treaty must also be pinned down – with rigorous multilateral monitoring, fair rewards for protecting forests, and the credible assessment of “exported emissions” so that the burden can eventually be more equitably shared between those who produce polluting products and those who consume them. And fairness requires that the burden placed on individual developed countries should take into account their ability to bear it; for instance newer EU members, often much poorer than “old Europe”, must not suffer more than their richer partners.

The transformation will be costly, but many times less than the bill for bailing out global finance — and far less costly than the consequences of doing nothing.

Many of us, particularly in the developed world, will have to change our lifestyles. The era of flights that cost less than the taxi ride to the airport is drawing to a close. We will have to shop, eat and travel more intelligently. We will have to pay more for our energy, and use less of it.

But the shift to a low-carbon society holds out the prospect of more opportunity than sacrifice. Already some countries have recognized that embracing the transformation can bring growth, jobs and better quality lives. The flow of capital tells its own story: last year for the first time more was invested in renewable forms of energy than producing electricity from fossil fuels.

Kicking our carbon habit within a few short decades will require a feat of engineering and innovation to match anything in our history. But whereas putting a man on the moon or splitting the atom were born of conflict and competition, the coming carbon race must be driven by a collaborative effort to achieve collective salvation.

Overcoming climate change will take a triumph of optimism over pessimism, of vision over short-sightedness, of what Abraham Lincoln called “the better angels of our nature”.

It is in that spirit that 56 newspapers from around the world have united behind this editorial. If we, with such different national and political perspectives, can agree on what must be done then surely our leaders can too.

The politicians in Copenhagen have the power to shape history’s judgment on this generation: one that saw a challenge and rose to it, or one so stupid that we saw calamity coming but did nothing to avert it. We implore them to make the right choice.

climate, global warming , , , ,

Climate change tragedy

December 5th, 2009

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) is a scientific intergovernmental body tasked to evaluate the risk of climate change caused by human activity. It was established in 1988 by two United Nation organisations, and produces special assessment reports every six years, based on the latest peer reviewed and published scientific literature on climate change.http://www.copenhagendiagnosis.com/images/REPORT2.JPG

The last assessment report (the fourth) was published in 2007 and the next is scheduled for 2013. This month, a special interim report, the The Copenhagen Diagnosis: Climate Science Report, was published by the University of New South Wales (Australia) Climate Change Research Centre, ahead of the United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP15) in Copenhagen (Denmark) that takes place in December 2009.

This special report took a year to make and was authored by 26 researchers, most of whom are authors of published IPCC reports. This report is an update to new scientific results from research since the 2007 assessment.

You can download the full report (high resolution PDF 23.3MB, low resolution PDF 3.3 MB) or read it online. You can also read the executive summary in 11 languages (executive summary in English, 166KB).

The results of the report include

  1. Greenhouse gases (such as carbon dioxide and methane) in the atmosphere have been increasing. The current concentration of CO2 is the highest in, at least, the last 800.000 years (currently oldest ice cores from Antarctica, expecting to find even older ice cores soon). The current concentration of CO2 is 385 parts per million (ppm), which is 105 ppm above the natural pre-industrial level. The rate of increase also went up; we put CO2 in the atmosphere faster than we did in the 1990s.
  2. Every year this century (2001-2008) has been among the top 10 warmest years since instrumental records began, despite solar irradiance being relatively weak over the past few years.
  3. It has been reaffirmed that the human influence with increase greenhouse gases is the source of the global warming.
  4. Global warming brings on more extreme weather events.
  5. There is a large potential source of CO2 and CH4 (methane) in the Northern Hemisphere permafrost (permanently frozen ground). If the permafrost gets warmer, even more of these two greenhouse gases will be release to the atmosphere.
  6. Glaciers and ice-caps (does not include Greenland, Antarctica, etc) are melting fast, currently at 1.2mm per year, and have the capacity to raise global sea-level by 70cm.
  7. Greenland has enough ice that if completely melted, can raise global sea level to 6.6 meters. Currently, Greenland contributes 0.7mm per year in the increase of global sea level rise. The melting is accelerating.
  8. Antarctica has enough ice that if completely melted, can raise global sea level to 52.8 meters. Currently, Antarctica contributes about 0.7mm per year in the global sea level rise. The melting is accelerating.
  9. The oceans are warming; the global ocean surface temperature reached the warmest ever recorded for each month of the summer of 2009.
  10. Satellite measurements show sea-level is rising in total at 3.4 mm per year since these records began in 1993. The current estimates show that we could expect up to 2 metres global sea-level rise by 2100.
  11. There exist global amplifying feedbacks, where the change of the climate in a part of the world can change the climate even further. For example, the loss of the permafrost in Siberia can release the carbon from the ground (estimated to 500Gt), which can further contribute to global warming.

Unless drastic measures are taken to limit greenhouse gases, global warming will be the cause for the rise of the global sea-level and the change of the climate in parts of the world.

Drastic measures must be taken, such as limiting the use of fossil fuels in favour of alternative energy sources, so that greenhouse gases stop increasing.

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Swine flu party

June 17th, 2009

A pox party is a party held by parents for the purpose of infecting their children with childhood diseases, most commonly chicken pox, thus acquiring some immunity to the disease. (source: Wikipedia)

It might make sense to some to inoculate in this natural way instead of providing vaccinations. Several childhood diseases are less severe when one is a child.

However, should swine flu parties be held?

Acting CDC Director Richard Besser M.D.

Acting CDC Director Richard Besser M.D.

Apparently, this has been such a big issue in the US that acting CDC Director Richard Besser, M.D. had to intervene with a press conference.

“This is a new, emerging infection, and we’re learning more about it each day,” Besser said.

“But how an individual person will be impacted by the infection is not something that we know,” Besser said Thursday.

“It’s a big mistake putting individuals and children at risk, and the CDC does not recommend that people follow that course,” he said.

Is swine flu similar to childhood diseases that have few side-effects and it is generally known that a child will recover? Most probably not; as the acting CDC Director said, swine flu is not well understood yet.

Is there really a chance that one who gets swine flu now may become immune to a future deadly mutation of the virus? It appears there might be a case if the new deadly virus mutation does not also alter the way it is currently identified by our immune system.

Swine flu appears to be in a process where it mutates fast, and the more people that are infected, the more chances exist to mutate to a different, deadly variant. Being the organiser of the only swine flu party might be an acceptable risk that one would force on their children. However, if swine flu parties were to become widespread, it would provide more chances for the virus to infect and mutate, because the virus is in a fast mutation mode.

In addition, there are issues relating to the law when one infects on purpose others.

health , ,

Film: An Independent Mind (2008), by Rex Bloomstein

December 9th, 2008

An Independent Mind is a film by Rex Bloomstein that showcases 7+1 people that fight for freedom or liberty around the world. His IMDB profile has not been updated yet with this film, however you can read the details of the eight people at the English Pen.

While watching the film, I tried to make a mental route throught the countries when these people come from. In addition to this, I tried to find similarities between the cases.

The movie starts with Mali and the Ivory Coast (Côte d’Ivoire). In 1999 there was a coup in the Ivory Coast, and a new ruler comes in power promising change. Soon enough, he does not deliver and appears to be transformed to a dictator. The critics are silenced by death squads and Tiken Jah Fakoly, singer and songwriter flees the country to Mali to save himself. From there, he writes songs against corruption and he appears to be very popular in West Africa and Europe. Several of the West African countries used to be colonies of France, and French is spoken throughout this segment of the film. It would be interesting to investigate if there is any involvment of France in the coup in Ivory Coast, or whether the current situation is self-inflicted.

Then, the film jumps to Burma (Myanmar) and the Moustache Brothers. They are a comedic trio from Mandalay, north of Burma, who have been for many years under house arrest by the military regime. Similarly to Tiken Jah Fakoly, they are criticizing the regime in their comedy acts and are forbidden to perform. In practice, they perform illegally to tourists in their house and we are shown such a performance in the film. Two of the brothers served in a labour camp for almost six years because they performed for the political leader Aung San Suu Kyi where they criticised the government. Aung San Suu Kyi is in house arrest in the old capital of Burma since many years ago. Currently, only two of the brothers maintain a moustache.

Continuing east, we move to China and Mu Zimei, a female blogger who maintained an online diary of her sexual encounters. In the conservative Chinese society, her blog had been extremely popular. The Chinese government felt that she was corrupting the morality of the people and took actions to silence her. She was forbidden from writing, was not allowed to publish a book with her blog material, and lost her job as a journalist. The living standards in China have improved tremendously and families have a single child which would get the full attention and possibly get spoilt. Although not mentioned specifically in the film, it appears that the new generation in China is very open to sexual encounters while just the previous generation was too conservative. In the film, Mu Zimei mentions that some women and girls would use her name as an excuse to their multiple sexual encounters. I feel that the silencing of Mu Zimei did not contribute to a change in attitude in China. Instead of dealing with the issue, the Chinese government appears to try to postpone the inevitable.

Back to Africa and Algeria, where Ali Dilem, a political cartoonist is being persecuted for criticising the government. He currently is about to stand trial for 10 cartoons that could potentially send him to jail for 20 years. The type of criticism he does cannot be categorised as extreme, compared to what you in Western Europe and the US. Ali Dilem mentions sarcastically some French cartoons of the French political leaders that where much controversial than his work. The Algerian government appears to be unable to accept political criticism.

From Algeria, we cross the Mediterrenean Sea and move to the north of Spain and to the Basque country. The heavy metal music band Soziedad Alkoholika has songs in their repertoire that appear to incite violence against the Spanish government. At the Basque country, many of the people have their own national identity. During the dictatorship of the Fransisco Franco, the Basques were severely persecuted. The early democratic governments appear to continue the harsh attitude against the Basque activists. The Basque activists would bomb or assasinate, and the government would persecute and put to jail. In some of the songs of Soziedad Alkoholika we see references to the fascists, the Franco era, which appear to imply to the Spanish government at the time they were written. Soziedad Alkoholika has been through a national tribunal normally used for terrorism cases and currently awaits for a court case that could potentially put them in jail for two years.

We cross the Atlantic to Guatemala, and Marielos Monzón, a human-rights activist. Guatemala has had a terrible modern history, in cases influenced by foreign governments. Marielos Monzón’s father was assasinated by the military regime when she was a child. Her house was invaded three times by the security forces, apparently in a process to intimidate her. Many groups in Guatemala have been persecuted by the military government, among which are indigenous groups. Marielos is currently working on a book documenting the killing of indigenous people that took place years ago by the military regime.

Back to Europe and to Sweden. This is not a person that is persecuted by the Swedish governemnt but rather a poet and journalist (was member of the Syrian Communist party) from Syria that is currently a political refugee in Sweden. Faraj Bayrakdar, was detained in 1987 and was held in prison for seven years, enduring torture and having no communication at all with his family. At one point in the interview, he mentions that about five years in jail, he was given a photograph of his daughter. He was put in jail while his daughter was 3 and he could not recognise her in the photograph.

Finally, the film concludes with British writer and historian David Irving. Davind Irving is accused as being anti-semitic, racist, that he follows that holocaust denial movement and many more. It looks strange that Rex Bloomstein would include this profile in the film, as in all other cases there is persecution by governments or types of regimes. One explanation could be that the filmmaker wanted to exploit the reactions against him for publicity purposes.

David Irving’s slot in the film felt it was very short. I am not sure if that was really true or it was because he talked in a fast pace, at times not being clear as to what he was mattering. He mentions that his upbringing was terrible, and at the age of 12 he got hold of a book by Adolf Hitler. He read it and said that the book changed his life. He worked on historic documents of Nazi Germany where he drew the conclusion that the crimes during WWII against the Nazi are either not true or overstated. It was not clear which documents he read, or whether he got hold of sanitised documents only where the full picture of the WWII may be missing.

Has David Irving been persecuted? A few years ago he served eleven months in a prison in Austria, after being convicted of “glorifying and identifying with the German Nazi Party“. During the limited time in the film, he mostly talked about the time he spent in prison, his fellow inmates from Croatia, from Africa.

As moronic as racism or nazism can be, does it make sense to put someone in prison for that? How do we treat people that have a different view than we do? The regimes in Ivory Coast, Burma, Algeria, Guatemala and elsewhere probably feel and are convinced they do the right thing. They feel disrespected when they are mocked and respond with violence, physical and phycological. They probably feel they are doing the right thing because they were provoked.

There are people in Europe that are racists, they are fond of nazism, they believe that even within a race some are somehow genetically inferior. The current trend is to have all these people be quiet. In most cases, they are quiet (unless drinks are involved) or if they are loose canons.

Would it be better to let people speak up and talk without fear of vindication? Do we believe that if nazism is discussed openly, it could bring a new WWII?

censorship, documentary , ,

UK censors websites, blocks access

December 7th, 2008

The blocking access to websites due to their content is something common in developing countries. However, we now see examples in the UK.

Apparently, the Internet Watch Foundation maintains a list of over 1000 URLs with content that it deems is not suitable. They distribute this list to the British Internet Service providers, which (apparently independently) implement blocking techniques to the access of those web resources. For more, see this article or this AP article.

In some cases, the ISP would show an informative page that the web resources is blocked, while in other cases, the page shows misleading content. If you are in the UK, the page that is blocked is this (Wikipedia page on a 1976 Scorpions music album), a page of the Wikipedia online encyclopaedia.

In one example, with the VirginMedia ISP, the blocking facility returns a fake error page,

<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC “-//IETF//DTD HTML 2.0//EN”>
<html><head>
<title>404 Not Found</title>
</head><body>
<h1>Not Found</h1>
<p>The requested URL /wiki/Virgin_Killer was not found on this server.</p>
<p>Additionally, a 404 Not Found
error was encountered while trying to use an ErrorDocument to handle the request.</p>
</body></html>

VirginMedia uses what is called a transparent proxy for those IP addresses that host the questionable URLs. What this means is that when you visit any page that belongs to the affected webserver, all access information goes through a special server that has the ability to keep logs and also make changes in-place. In this specific case of blocking, we know that the transparent proxy server at least fakes the reply of the web server.

The blocking of access often has technical side-effects. The side-effects of the British blocking is that when you access any other page of the affected website, that webserver sees that the computer accessing appears to have the identity of the transparent proxy server. For VirginMedia, the transparent proxy server IP address is 62.30.249.131, so what Wikipedia sees is that the majority of UK visitors appear behind the specific single IP address.

Wikipedia sees vast majority of UK visitors to come from a selected few IP addresses.

Wikipedia sees vast majority of UK visitors to come from a selected few IP addresses.

It is possible to figure out which other websites are blocked. For example, we can search the Web for occurrences of the IP address 62.30.249.131.

After some investigation, we verified that the IP address 68.180.151.74 is also in the blocking list. When someone visits any web server that is hosted on that IP address, the web server registers that any user from Britain comes from a handful IP addresses.

If the web server offers Internet advertising, then the ad provider will register a huge increase of clicks from a single IP address which may trigger by accident the fraud protection. It is possible to come up with a big range of such scenarions. However, for the IP address 68.180.151.74, is it a big issue? Well, if we read carefully at 68.180.151.74, we notice that the address belongs to Yahoo, and it hosts over 320,000 web servers! Obviously, I have not been able to figure out which URL from 68.180.151.74 is the one that was blocked.

One can find more technical information about the blocked IP addresses. Using the tracert (traceroute) command, we notice difference in the route that our packets take to reach the affected destinations.

Here is a normal packet route when accessing www.google.com,

  Host
  ...........
 5. so-1-1-0.0.mcr-cor-001.bddsl.net
 6. popl-t3core-1a-ge-410-0.network.virginmedia.net
 7. man-bb-a-as0-0.network.virginmedia.net
    pop-bb-a-as2-0.network.virginmedia.net
 8. pop-bb-b-ae0-0.network.virginmedia.net
 9. tele-ic-2-as0-0.network.virginmedia.net
10. 212.250.14.138
11. 209.85.252.76
12. 216.239.43.123
13. 72.14.233.77
    72.14.233.79
14. 209.85.249.129
    209.85.249.133
    216.239.43.30
    216.239.43.34
15. nf-in-f99.google.com

On stage 11, the route changes to a Google server. Up to stage 10, the route goes through VirginMedia servers.

How does this look for Wikipedia?

 Host
 ...........................................................
 5. so-1-1-0.0.mcr-cor-001.bddsl.net
 6. popl-t3core-1a-ge-410-0.network.virginmedia.net
 7. 213.105.175.1
    pop-bb-a-as2-0.network.virginmedia.net
 8. man-bb-b-ae0-0.network.virginmedia.net
    win-bb-b-so-010-0.network.virginmedia.net
 9. bir-bb-a-so-010-0.network.virginmedia.net
    bir-bb-a-so-100-0.network.virginmedia.net
10. florence-pos20.network.virginmedia.net            
11. cancun-pos50.network.virginmedia.net              
12. puebla-pos90.network.virginmedia.net             
13. rabat-pos90.network.virginmedia.net               
14. osr02know-tenge73.network.virginmedia.net         
15. wb7301a.network.virginmedia.net                   
16. osr-hsd-gw3-ge147.network.virginmedia.net        
17. osr-hsd-gw4-tenge82.network.virginmedia.net       
18. XSR03.Asd002A.surf.net
19. AE1.500.JNR01.Asd001A.surf.net
20. KNCSW001-router.Customer.surf.net
21. 4ge-1-16.csw1-knams.wikimedia.org
22. rr.knams.wikimedia.org

The other blocked IP address shows

 Host                                               
.......
 5. so-1-1-0.0.mcr-cor-001.bddsl.net                
 6. popl-t3core-1a-ge-410-0.network.virginmedia.net 
 7. pop-bb-a-as2-0.network.virginmedia.net          
    man-bb-a-as0-0.network.virginmedia.net
 8. win-bb-b-so-010-0.network.virginmedia.net       
    man-bb-b-ae0-0.network.virginmedia.net
 9. bir-bb-a-so-100-0.network.virginmedia.net       
    bir-bb-a-so-010-0.network.virginmedia.net
10. florence-pos20.network.virginmedia.net          
11. cancun-pos50.network.virginmedia.net            
12. puebla-pos90.network.virginmedia.net            
13. rabat-pos90.network.virginmedia.net             
14. osr02know-tenge73.network.virginmedia.net       
15. wb7301a.network.virginmedia.net                 
16. osr-hsd-gw3-ge147.network.virginmedia.net       
17. gsr-hsd-gw1-ge10.network.virginmedia.net        
18. 213.228.222.10                                  
19. ae1-p141.msr1.sp1.yahoo.com                     
20. ge-1-43.bas-b1.sp1.yahoo.com                    
21. p2p.geo.vip.sp1.yahoo.com

In the case of both the blocked IP addresses, we see a set of additional routers.

When trying any other IP address, we do not see those highlighted routers appearing.

The problem with blocking the access to websites is that such measures, apart from causing a series of technical problems, they do not have the desired positive effect. The botched attempt by VirginMedia to show a misleading error page for those blocked addresses is an example of knee-jerk reaction.

Any attempt towards blocking access to webpages or websites should get feedback first from the community. The current incident against Wikipedia puts the IWF in a bad light, and shows limited confidence that they can fulfil their goals.

Update #1: Wikipedia page censored in the UK for ‘child pornography’ (The Guardian)

Update #2: Great Firewall of Britain (The Nock Blog)

Update #3: Interview on BBC Radio with representatives from the IWF and the Open Rights Group.

Update #4: Amazon US under threat as internet watchdog reconsiders Scorpions censorship (The Guardian)

Update #5: Cory Doctorow: How to make child-porn blocks safe for the internet

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Pig Business

November 19th, 2008

The first recorded examples of animal domestication for meat is from about 10000BC, with sheep, goats and pigs.

Since then, animal farming has become more systematic, and now we reached a state of intensive animal farming. The case of poultry and intensive animal farming is quite well-known. What’s happening with intensive hog farming?

Tracy Worcester, an eco-campaigner, spent the last four years investigating the hidden costs of intensive pig farming. The result is a film-documentary called Pig Business, which covers the detrimental effects to humans and the environment. Pig business will be broadcast by More4 (UK) in January 2009, as part of the True Stories strand.

Pig Business covers many issues relating to intensive pig farming. It targets specifically Smithfield Foods Inc., which is the biggest hog producer and processor in the world. This company started massively intensive pig farming in the US in the early 90s, and in 1999 it entered Poland. The film focused on the effects in both the US and Poland.

One important issue with pig farming is what you do with the fecal matter. The cheapest solution is the unprocessed disposal to the environment. The proper solution is to process the fecal matter, and this is what happens in European countries such as Denmark, one of the traditional pork meat producers. What Smithfield Foods does is the cheapest solution. It appears that through lobbying, they manage to avoid legislation that would force them to process the fecal matter.

Unprocessed fecal matter pollutes the environment. In intensive farming, there are huge quantities that is difficult for the environment to One of the side effects is that it produces harmful gases that affects the health of the people that are located near the factory. For pig, the type of fecal matter makes it much more difficult to use as manure.

Sows spent all their life in crates that are small enough just to fit the animal standing. The animals stand on cement instead of hay that one would expect in traditional farming. During the gestation period (almost four months), the sows remain in these crates, unable to move.

Intensive pig farming threatens the traditional farming. In terms of the consumer choice, there is minimal distinction between products that where produced with intensive pig farming and those with traditional. The effect is that traditional farming is dying out. In the case of Poland, where a sizable percentage of the population works in the farming sector, the society is affected severely. Those unemployed farmers will end up in the cities, and many of them will make the emigration to other countries of the European Union.

Why is this happening? How can Smithfield Foods get away with this? It appears that this company, due to the big size, is able to and does indeed drag their heels in attempts to protect the environment, the people and the welfare of the animals. So far attempts to regulate were countered with intensive lobbying.

What actions should be taken?

  • If a company is involved in intensive pig farming, they must treat the fecal matter.
  • The food labeling must include details of the farming process. Considering that there might be little space on the product for concise labeling, it is possible to add an ID that one can look up on the Web and retrieve the full information. Such a measure should give the opportunity to traditional farmers to differentiate their products from those of intensive farming.

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