Garbage Survellience

Hugh Muir:

Though he foresaw many ways in which Big Brother might watch us, even George Orwell never imagined that the authorities would keep a keen eye on
your bin.

Residents of Croydon, south London, have been told that the microchips
being inserted into their new wheely bins may well be adapted so that the
council can judge whether they are producing too much rubbish.

If the technology suggests that they are, errant residents may be visited
by officials bearing advice on how they might “manage their rubbish more
effectively”.

I wonder if Madison’s forthcoming trash bins include this “feature”?

Horace & Selling Out

Dave published an essay today, let’s call it an essay “mini” in keeping with the times, on product development & selling out. Well worth reading.

Dave’s words remind me of past experiences in the large, corporate world. Product A is created or acquired. Over time, the things that made Product A useful, interesting and marketable are slowly taken away (juice content (Pepsi Slice), flavors, quantity) while prices go up. We might refer to this as an MBA approach to product development, though that is too harsh. Perhaps it is more of a corporate vs entrepreneur approach.

In any event, it happens all too often.

Consumer Database Giant Gives Personal Information to Fake Firms

Bob Sullivan:

Criminals posing as legitimate businesses have accessed critical personal data stored by ChoicePoint Inc., a firm that maintains databases of background information on virtually every U.S. citizen, MSNBC.com has learned.
The incident involves a wide swath of consumer data, including names, addresses, Social Security numbers, credit reports and other information. ChoicePoint aggregates and sells such personal information to government agencies and private companies.

California is the only state that requires these personal data mining firms to notify people who have had their information compromised. I wonder where our political leaders stand on this?

The Culture of Spending

Alex Tabarrok:

The political scientist James Payne argued that there is a culture of spending in Congress.  Even people elected on a platform of cutting government become enured to higher spending as week after week they hear witnesses saying how much more money is needed and how many more problems could be solved if only you, the great Congressperson, would use your power to spend.