February 14, 2006

needing a sarcasm tag

Found via Kottke, this Wired article covers "The Secret Cause of Flame Wars". Actually, not such a secret -- anyone who deals with email constantly, and in delicate situations, knows that it's much to easy to be misinterpreted.

The researchers took 30 pairs of undergraduate students and gave each one a list of 20 statements about topics like campus food or the weather. Assuming either a serious or sarcastic tone, one member of each pair e-mailed the statements to his or her partner. The partners then guessed the intended tone and indicated how confident they were in their answers.

Those who sent the messages predicted that nearly 80 percent of the time their partners would correctly interpret the tone. In fact the recipients got it right just over 50 percent of the time.

Nice to put some research and numbers behind it. It's interesting that the study focuses on email, and not instant messaging. It's easier, in the fragments of discussion that pass in IM, to get across details of expression...that plus the fact that I'm much more likely to toss in a smiley in IM whereas I won't in email.

Posted by juechi at 10:41 AM


February 13, 2006

E-tracking through your cell phone

watchingyou.jpg

Declan McCullagh on how the U.S. government is again skirting our own laws and crossing the line of individual privacy:

But the FBI and the U.S. Department of Justice have seized on the ability to locate a cellular customer and are using it to track Americans' whereabouts surreptitiously--even when there's no evidence of wrongdoing.

...

This is an unfortunate outcome, not least because it shows that some judges are reluctant to hold federal agents and prosecutors to the letter of the law.

It's also unfortunate because it demonstrates that the FBI swore never to use a 1994 surveillance law to track cellular phones--but then, secretly, went ahead and did it, anyway.

Link to the CNet article.

Update: 3.2.2006: The Justice Department's surveillance requests were denied in both cases (News.com, Declan McCullagh)

Posted by juechi at 3:01 PM