Author Archives: Alison

Bad English Attacks!

Bad English Attacks!

It’s really, really hard to read newspapers and magazines when your eyes are unconsiously, unerringly drawn to bad spelling, grammar, and punctuation.  You’re looking at a whole page of words, hundreds of them at a time, and BANG! the misplaced apostrophe jumps out and whacks you in the face.  I was particularly bothered by one ad I saw in a magazine on Monday, a full page, glossy magazine ad for the Geek Squad at Best Buy, which contained the misspelling “supercede”.  I was in fourth grade when I learned how to spell that.  How can an advertisement for a national corporation, created by a big-name ad firm and printed in a widely circulated magazine owned by a major publishing firm get all the way to press with that error?  How many hundreds of people had to skip fourth grade for that to get printed?  Worse still, when I started writing this, I wanted to find a link to the ad, and googled “geek squad” and “supercede”, and got 44 hits.  There were 298 when I didn’t put quotation marks around “geek squad”.

On a roll now, I wrote down a few examples of the worst offenders, just from today’s newspaper.  First I saw an ad for the opening of a new restaurant, the Riptide Grille.  I don’t know about you, but I don’t think about food when I think of a grille, which is the part of a car in front of the radiator.  Don’t worry, Riptide Grille, you’re far from the only one to think that adding the e looks more fancy than stooooopid.  At least your ad didn’t tell us you were “Dining at it’s best”.  Two errors like that in a teensy little ad would have exploded my brain.  In the food section of the paper, an article was titled “Factors that may altar scale reading”.  That’s for those of you who worship your scale, of course – perhaps you’re also following a fitness regime instead of a fitness regimen, so that makes sense.  Whenever I see the phrase “fitness regime”, I picture a country run entirely by crazed aerobics instructors, and it gives me a chuckle.

Finally, I have a couple of entries for the “You don’t have to be smart to be rich” category.  Premier Estates, a realty firm that sells high-end properties and almost never includes asking prices (yes, THAT high-end. . .if you have to ask, etc.) had an ad for a property in Bay Head that just had me staring and blinking stupidly for several minutes.  The only thing I could think of that would explain it was that it was translated from Japanese.  Check this out:  “UNTHINKABLE good things can happen” and, “Widows walk to capture sights of dolphins off your own beach, plus glance down and you will note something extreme, tulips coming up in the sand.” and then, “Could this possibly be goal #2?  Good things can happen.”  I was poised, waiting for something like “happiness in golden good days are health!”  Once my head was cleared by another cup of coffee, I continued onward, until I was again assaulted by clear evidence of the non-connectedness of wealth and intelligence in the form of a Provident Bank ad.  It read, “Unlike many other banks that offer a free introductory period, and then charge a minimum balance or monthly fee, our checking is really free.”  Give it to me straight, Provident, is it a bank, or is it a checking account.  The subjects are supposed to agree.  I forget how young I was when I learned that.  Perhaps that was fourth grade, too. . .

I’m not sure whether the proliferation of bad English in the media is symptomatic of a deficiency in language education, or a contributing cause of it.  I’m just thinking that there need to be a lot more proofreading jobs, and they definitely need to be higher-paying than they are (merit-based pay would be nice, too.)

A Note About Internet Privacy

A Note About Internet Privacy

Comments I’ve seen here and elsewhere lead me to believe that many people, especially young people, have some misconceptions about Internet Privacy.  Apparently, people seem to believe that all you need is a screen name and you can say or do whatever you want without repercussion.  Clearly, it leads to people saying things that they would never say to another human being face to face and visiting sites with objectionable content. 

Now that schools all over have computer classes and computer labs for their students, with access to the internet that is only moderately restricted by censoring software, I think that part of the computer curriculum should include instruction on how the Internet works, and just what degree of privacy (and accountability) these kids are really going to have.

Students, on a very basic, simplistic level, the Internet is similar to the telephone.  You sign up for service, get a phone number, and your phone is hooked up to a Central Unit which directs your calls over a giant network.  That Central Unit records all the numbers you dial, not just the ones that show up on your bill.  By the same token, it also records all the numbers that called in to you.  Well, when you (or your company or school or parents) sign up for internet service, you get an IP address.  The Internet Service Provider has all the information it needs in order to bill you, and its server (another computer, belonging to the Service Provider usually) records your address as you go out onto the web.  Just like phone service, it needs both the originating and terminating IP address to make that connection.  By the same token, the server for the sites you visit keeps a record of the IP addresses that connected to it.

Now add another level – your PC.  Everything you do is recorded on the hard drive – you hear about this all the time in the news, don’t you, about police and FBI taking people’s computers away?  Your hard drive is a physical record.  You can turn off cookies and popups, regularly erase your temporary internet files, and it’ll still be easy to find out what you’ve been up to.  There are programs that will strip a hard drive so it’s safer to resell to someone else, but not even those completely remove all the data.  You’d have to take the drive out and melt it into a heap of slag.  In fact, if you copied only the files you wanted to save onto floppies or another hard drive, pieces of data from the files you wanted to hide could still be embedded.  The old Dick Tracy detective trick of lightly drawing over the blank sheet of paper that was under the secret note to see what the secret note said is a pretty simple analogy.  The paper looks blank, but a little trick can reveal what was torn off from on top of it.

And still, there’s more.  The server on the receiving end keeps a record of the IP addresses that have visited it.  Sometimes that server belongs to an Internet Service Provider, but many site owners also have their own servers.  In that case, you could be connecting to a computer that some guy has in his house, and he doesn’t have to go through any inquiries or requests through his ISP to find out who visited the site.  If he’s savvy enough, he can find out the personal information of the owner of that IP address, and if you use a unique domain name, one that you had to register, then it’s a very easy task to get your home address and phone from InterNIC.

Now, if you’re using a school or company computer, you might feel safely removed from this, but think about it.  How did you access the Internet?  You have a user name or account and a password, right?  And it was given to you by your teacher or employer, right?  And the computer you’re using has a hard drive, or connects to a common drive, right?  That means that all the activity generated by your account is recorded right there.  If the owner of the drive is contacted about inappropriate activity, all the information he or she needs to find who did it is right there.

I hope this is food for thought for some people.  Clearly, most of the time it’s not worth it to track down who visited a site or said something rude – it’s easier to block addresses or add filters – but sometimes you’re playing with fire.  Seriously abuse site or another user, enough that they want to track you down, and it can be done.  Visit a site the promotes illegal activity, and when the site owner gets caught, you’re on the list of suspicious persons to be arrested and investigated.  Don’t be lulled into a false sense of security that just because you call yourself by another name, you’re completely safe and anonymous.

Scary Scientologists

Scary Scientologists

As I was wandering a bit around the web, I found this video of crazed Scientologists.  Hey, what’s >your< crime?  I’m guessing they must have some special ability to redirect their own guilt after the human rights abuses they inflict on their own members, and dead scientologists around the world.  I’m thinking more and more that one special island for all religious extremists to live on sounds like a grand idea.  Put them all together and let their gods sort them out.