Error 451: How to tell when websites have been censored

I like an open Internet. So I like it when the censors are exposed, and we can tell when a website has been deliberately blocked. This new error code — 451, as in Fahrenheit 451 — is meant to do just that. As a bonus, notice the subversive nature in the example in the picture.

A new online error code tells users when a site is unavailable for legal, rather than technical, reasons. Error 451, a nod to Ray Bradbury’s novel ‘Fahrenheit 451,’ indicates that a site has been censored by a government.

Source: Error 451: How to tell when websites have been censored – CSMonitor.com

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Michael D Kern Photography

mdkern

Michael Kern displays his photography on his website, The Gardens of Eden. His day job is head of photography and advanced visual technologies for Essex Property Trust in Palo Alto, California. So by day he works for a real estate company, but on his own time he takes gorgeous pictures. You can have a look at his work on his website, complete with slideshows. I can only assume that he offers his pictures for sale, too. I even saw a link for a “cart,” which usually means commercial offerings. But that’s as far as I got because further exploration required signing up for an account. Even though the account is advertized as “free,” that was enough of a speedbump to deter me. I was able to grab some screenshots, though.

Kern has categorized his photos into six areas.

Abstract reality.

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Amphibians.

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Avian.

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Creative.

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Invertebrates.

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Reptiles.

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Visit The Gardens of Eden for the full menu.

All photos credit Michael D Kern.

rjb

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Profoundly Shallow Cosmic Debris

There are a few telling things people who see profundity in nonsense tend to have in common.

Source: Why people think total nonsense is really deep – The Washington Post

I have wondered how people could continue to believe unlikely things, even after they’ve been clearly demonstrated to be false. There must be something about the believer’s mind that makes it, first, susceptible to deception and, second, prone to self-deception. This study, as unflinchingly cruel as it appears, seems to offer at least the beginning of an answer.

Words can be inspiring, even when they’re arranged into vague, fancy-sounding sequences that seem deep but say nothing.

You can try this out for yourself at the New Age Bullshit Generator. Simply click the “Reionize Electrons” button and you will be given a page of computer-generated, but inspiring, bullshit. I tried it and got this headline: “You and I are entities of the multiverse.” The sub-head said: “Potentiality requires exploration. Inspiration is the driver of being.” Then comes the instruction and enlightenment: “Although you may not realize it, you are karmic. Child, look within and awaken yourself. It can be difficult to know where to begin.”

There appear to be a few traits that the credulous have in common.

Those more receptive to bullshit are less reflective, lower in cognitive ability (i.e., verbal and fluid intelligence, numeracy), are more prone to ontological confusions [beliefs in things for which there is no empirical evidence (i.e. that prayers have the ability to heal)] and conspiratorial ideation, are more likely to hold religious and paranormal beliefs, and are more likely to endorse complementary and alternative medicine.

Ouch. Sorry.

Go read the Washington Post article. Try out the Bullshit Generator. And don’t be too hard on those believers. We probably all have something that we’re a little too ready to believe.

rjb

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