Law Enforcement Loves Your Photos

It is widely known that law-enforcement agencies use social media to identify suspects in crimes. A lot of us are aware of cases where a criminal creates a self-incriminating post, law-enforcement sees it, and shortly afterwards (SURPRISE!) makes an arrest.

Well, there’s an update to how social media is being used. The new development involves a startup by the name of Clearview AI, and their creation of databases filled with images and information scraped (I’ll define this later) from Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and other various websites and platforms.

The future of Internet Explorer is…Google?

If you’re like me, then the idea of using Internet Explorer for everything makes you feel ill. It’s slow, clunky, nothing looks right. Microsoft agreed, and in Windows 10 they threw away all the old code and made a completely new browser named Edge. If you’re using Windows 10, it’s the default (until you install Firefox or Chrome and switch it). IE is still there, but they’ve done everything they can to hide it. Now, Edge is WAY, WAY better than IE. It’s faster, websites look more normal, and it feels like software from this century. Microsoft even promised that it would get plug ins and tracking protection, just like every other modern browser!

Moving Hacks and Regrets

If I could go back in time and read this before we moved into our new home, I would. If you’re looking to move, check out some of these hacks. It’ll save precious time and money (and waste, if you’re into that).

Unpakt
First things first: check out Unpakt. They’ll help compare all movers in your area and find you the lowest cost.

Internet Service Providers

As someone who works with ISPs frequently, I can safely tell you that most of them are marginal at best and a stinking armpit at worst. Residential service tends to be particularly rife with regular outages, support services that seem intentionally obtuse, and universally overprovisioned nodes that result in lower-than-advertised speeds being almost ubiquitous. However, there are a few things that you can do to try to mitigate these problems.

The War on Christmas

I’m about the least political person you can meet. Growing up, my predominant source of information about current events in the United States government was probably Saturday Night Live, and later, the Daily Show. Now it’s predominantly friends and family who already have a pretty solid position as to where they stand on the spectrum of left to right. This may make me a “bad American,” or a cliché disillusioned millennial, but it’s the truth. Despite my general disinterest, there are still issues that occasionally pique my attention, even if only in that some controversies are so ridiculous that I feel compelled to learn how they came to be.

Recently I learned there has been a “War on Christmas” for quite some time. I even saw a commercial on YouTube that warned me of its dangers. I guess in the simplest of terms, it boils down to what you say to people during the December-ish time of year to express merriment. Most of us probably grew up saying “Merry Christmas!” and receiving the same exclamation in return. At least, I did. More recently, it has become commonplace to say, “Happy Holidays!” This difference may seem benign, but apparently replacing the former with the latter is an attack on the foundation of our very country.

The fear is that this shift in seasonal vocabulary is a slippery slope; that it will eventually lead to the removal of Christmas as a national holiday. Left wing pundits will say it’s simply a way of being more inclusive to the many cultures in this great nation. Some on the right may believe it’s a compromise that threatens the very foundation of our country, and a gross over-reach at an attempt to be politically correct. In fact, according to the YouTube guy, Dennis Prager, this attempt at including those that may not celebrate Christmas actually results in the exclusion of those that Americans who do celebrate Christmas.

I grew up in a very Roman Catholic family and have celebrated Christmas my entire life. I’ve never given it a second thought when someone wished me any celebration. And I think everyone could use some time off from the rat race – I’ll take any excuse I can get: Chinese New Year, Boxing Day, Hanukkah, Kwanza. Maybe the rule should be that whatever it is you celebrate, wish it onto others.