Archive for November, 2004
Looking at HTML Source
November 20th, 2004 • Comments Off Technology
You know, it’s amazing what you can find and find out if you look at the source HTML of web pages. Sure, most people won’t look at the comments on a page, but I will. I can’t tell you what page(s) I was looking at just yet but in about a month or so I will. Gotta keep my edge. ;-)
IEEE Spectrum Magazine - The View From the Top
November 14th, 2004 • Comments Off Press Clippings
This year is the 40th anniversary of IEEE (Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers).

I was interviewed for an article in IEEE’s Spectrum magazine discussing the most important technology of the last 40 years as well as important technologies for the coming decade. I believe non-members can read the article online. If you do, you’ll find my picture in the back row on the right between John Chambers (CEO of Cisco and a Senior Member of IEEE) and Tsuneo Nakahara (Advisor to the CEO of Sumitomo and a IEEE Life Fellow).

Outstanding Atlanta
November 11th, 2004 • Comments Off General
Last night I was honored to be inducted with nine other people into Outstanding Atlanta’s class of 2004. Outstanding Atlanta started in 1968 as a way of recognizing ten young people (age 21 to 36) for their contributions to Atlanta in business, civic, and cultural endeavours. Thanks to the folks at Outstanding Atlanta for the great event and honor. Here is the member list to the 36th class of OA.
- Byron Amos, Vine City Civic Association
- Timothy Farmer, Parkside Elementary School
- Arun Mohan, Graduate Student - Goizueta Business School/Emory School of Medicine
- Jovita Moore, WSB-TV - Channel 2
- Sanjay Parekh, Digital Envoy
- Amanda Pauley, Accenture
- Tiaudra R. Riley, Sun Trust Securities
- Terreta A. Scope, Coca-Cola Enterprises Inc.
- John Walker, Edelman
- H. Lamar Willis, Atlanta City Council
New Thunderbird Release
November 7th, 2004 • Comments Off Technology
The Mozilla project just released a new version of their Thunderbird email client. There seem to be a couple of new neat features like search folders and a new method of message grouping. The message grouping thing seems to be something from Outlook and the like (messages grouped by Today, Yesterday, etc.). The search folders feature allows you to set search criteria that is refreshed every time you select the folder in question. More details in the Thunderbird release notes.
Also important to note is that the 1.0 release of Firefox is coming on November 9, 2004. Halo 2 and Firefox released on the same day. Coincidence? I think not!
United States versus Extreme Associates
November 1st, 2004 • Comments Off General, Technology
Today I had the opportunity to testify at the Western District of Pennsylvania Federal Court which is a part of the 3rd Circuit Court System. I was there as an expert witness/subject matter expert for the US Attorney in the case United States versus Extreme Associates (PDF file of the indictment).
The defendants in this case said that they know of no way to know where someone is logged into the Internet and, because of this, they have no way of controlling the geographic distribution of their content on the Internet.
Unfortunately, the claim is pretty absurd in today’s world. My company and I have been working with our clients for over five years to solve these issues. For the Internet to become a more successful medium a lot of things must be automatic or easy for the user. Would you be willing to provide your zip code to your TV just so advertisers could send you the most relevant ads? Some people would, others wouldn’t, and people like me would just get a Replay and avoid the whole issue. The point is, people don’t want to be bothered with providing information just so marketers can do things with the data especially if there isn’t a tangible benefit for the consumer. In the TV example, they just want to watch some television. Providing a zip code doesn’t make the programming any better. When I go to Toys R Us, I never provide my phone number or zip code. What benefit do I get by doing so? None? Then no thanks, I’ll pass. And so, all businesses must resort to other methods to achieve consumer information for analysis and action.
In this particular case though, the defendants didn’t attempt to identify the location of the users. This is amazing since the information was just begging to be used by them. They charge money for access to their site and so they collect credit card information and billing information. By using this information, they could have possibly avoided prosecution if they blocked access based on geography. In fact, the US Attorneys showed that the defendants had a list of zip codes where they used UPS instead of the US Postal Service so as to circumvent US Postal Inspector scrutiny. They seemed to know about the geographic areas that could get them into trouble even though this misguided attempt doesn’t get around the law. Even if they weren’t going to block access based on geographic location, they could have used the data for marketing purposes. One lack of use got them into legal trouble, the other was just bad business/marketing sense.
During my testimony, we went through various techniques to identify the location of users including: user registration, credit card information, calling the user, sending unique passwords in the mail, and IP intelligence/geolocation technology. Clearly, some of these methods are more accurate than others (you wouldn’t believe how many people are rumored to register in 90210 [Beverly Hills, CA] and 12345 [Schenectady, NY] on sites that require free registration). User registrations where the user has no incentive to tell the truth are of even more dubious value because of services like bugmenot.com (which, by the way, I’m a fan of). But looking at the other techniques, or a combination of the other techniques, a site could achieve a very high degree of assurance that a user is where they say they are.
We’ve been doing this for five years now. Heck, we even have a patent on our technology. The fact is, nearly every Internet user somehow interacts with my company’s technology nearly every day. I’m not sure when we’ll turn the corner and people can’t say they’ve never heard of our technology before. I just hope we turn the corner on the education portion of IP intelligence soon because there really is no reason to not know about us now.
Finally, I must say everyone involved in this was, to me, very courteous, helpful, and thoughtful. My thanks go out to Mary Beth Buchanan (US Attorney), Steve Kaufman (Assistant US Attorney), and Judge Lancaster. Heck, I’ll even thank the defendant’s attorney for being courteous even though he immediately objected to me appearing as a witness. No offense taken, I know this is only business and not personal. ;-)
Update: Here is the first news article I can find of today’s hearing.

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