Book Reviews for the week: The Cocktail Waitress by James M. Cain
The Cocktail Waitress
by James M. Cain Jason Bucky Roberts‘s review Apr 23, 13 · edit 4…
Book Reviews for the week: The Cocktail Waitress by James M. Cain
The Cocktail Waitress
by James M. Cain Jason Bucky Roberts‘s review Apr 23, 13 · edit 4…
So I got this email the other day from the Fight for the Future group about SOPA. I myself was rather active and fought against SOPA & CISPA. But most of that ended last year with it being voted down. YAY! But with this email, it got me thinking about and also showed me how things could have been if this had pasted.
***BREAKING NEWS: Those of you who follow us on Twitter may have seen that the Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. video we made was taken down before we could finish sending this email! And remember, if SOPA had passed, entire sites could have been shut down just for *linking* to it. We’re re-uploading and have it back online to watch and share here.***
We can put an end to a shocking assault on our civil liberties:
Last year’s National Defense Authorization Act included language that could allow the military to detain civilian suspects INDEFINITELY without charge or trial.
This year’s NDAA could come up for a vote as soon as next week and we have a prime opportunity to reverse this travesty of justice.
Click here to fight back: Email your member of Congress right away.
Congressmen Adam Smith and Justin Amash will put forth an amendment to make it clear that the military does not have the power to arrest and indefinitely detain civilians without charging or trying them.
Please urge your lawmakers to support their efforts and help us spread word far and wide.
Help us reclaim our civil liberties. The vote could be next week, so please urge your friends to get involved right away. You can forward this email or use these links:
If you’re already on Facebook, click here to share with your friends.
If you’re already on Twitter, click here to tweet about the campaign:

Steve Jobs has been very successful in his professional life, particularly during the last decade with the iPod and iPhone, and finally the iPad but they are the reasons forthese successes? Here are some rules of life that followed Steve Jobs.
Here are ten rules from that which followed Steve Jobs:
1 - To believe staunchly in his motivations and projects
2 - All monitor and control
3 - Override the limits, push the reality
4 - Surround yourself with people skills they lacked
5 - Simplifying to the maximum in the design and use of products
6 - Always innovate, create new things
7 - Working with people with crazy ideas
8 - The vision to see far (icloud took 10 years to materialize)
9 - Go against the codes or the slogan “Think Different”.
10 - Do not stop until we have not reached our goal
And you what do you think of these different rules of life that followed Steve Jobs?

It’s that time of week again when we take a look at the latest social media news, and highlight some of the biggest and most interesting stories.
While Instagram has been everywhere all week long, there’s a few other headlines that caught our attention, including one which reveals what subpoenaed Facebook files look like.
Instagram, Instagram, and a little more Instagram
It’s certainly been Instagram’s week in more way than one. With the long-awaited launch of Instagram for Android, we can all breathe a collective sigh of relief that the question, “When is Instagram coming to Android?” will never, ever, be asked again.
The launch has been met with as much fervour as would have been expected, following the many months of speculation, rumours and expectations. The Android version of the app hit 1 million downloads in under 24 hours, and has received well over 130,000 five star ratings on Google Play.
Instagram shared a little bit of insight into how they handled the sudden influx of users. The post begins:
“The last few weeks (on the infrastructure side) have been all about capacity planning and preparation to get everything in place, but on launch day itself the challenge is to find problems quickly, get to the bottom of them, and roll out fixes ASAP.”
The post goes on to share all of the tools and techniques used to ensure that Instagram was on its toes, and ready to face any issues that arose.
We took a close look at the Android app, and of course there was the inevitable comparison with its iPhone counterpart.
The Next Web’s own Matthew Panzarino wrote:
Fragmentation rears its head once again with Instagram on Android, forcing the company to leave out features it could have otherwise shipped in order to support the wide array of OS versions and hardware out there. I know people like to pretend this isn’t a problem, but it is.
Aside from that, Instagram for Android is a great example of an iOS development house making a good translation of its app that manages to be similar on both platforms, while retaining a singular theme between them. If you’re an Android user that has been waiting, this is a faithful and mostly whole Instagram experience, enjoy.
Since its release, the Android app has seen a few updates, the latest of which allows users to install it on SD Cards, tablets and WiFi only handsets.
The release has been met with its fair share of criticism, the worst of which was seen from a group of iPhone users, who may even be going so far as to look for iPhone-only alternatives.
Alongside the Android release, All Things D reported some additional news on the investment and valuation front:
It looks like Instagram is close to wrapping up a Series B round led by Sequoia Capital, according to several sources close to the situation.
The maker of the fast-growing photo-sharing app, which just made its way to Android, is set to receive $50 million at a $500 million valuation, the sources said. Others joining the round could include DST Global.
Visits to Google+ grew 27% in March
We’ve all heard the reports explaining why Google+ is DOA, citing comScore figures that put average time spent on the site at just 3 minutes.
The most recent statistics from Experian Hitwise may hint otherwise. While Google has been reluctant to share figures about time spent on the social network, it has been more than happy to announce its growing userbase, reaching 90 million in January, and adding another 10 million, having recently reached the 100 million mark. According to Larry Page, that also happens to be 100 million active users.
So how is the social network doing with traffic? According to the latest numbers reported by Mashable, total visits to Google+ grew by 27%, reaching 61 million in March.
The graph below shows the steady growth that traffic on Google+ has enjoyed since its June 2011 launch.
Twitter finally goes after spammers
Mention a brand or product on Twitter and you’re bound to find yourself being spammed. Finally, Twitter is doing something about it – but it’s not what you might expect. In addition to beginning a fight with spammers on the Twitter front, it’s also attacking them on the legal front.
Twitter has decided to take 5 companies in particular to court, for encouraging and facilitating spam on the Twitter platform. The announcement read:
This morning, we filed suit in federal court in San Francisco against five of the most aggressive tool providers and spammers. With this suit, we’re going straight to the source. By shutting down tool providers, we will prevent other spammers from having these services at their disposal. Further, we hope the suit acts as a deterrent to other spammers, demonstrating the strength of our commitment to keep them off Twitter.
In addition to the lawsuit, Twitter is also launching an anti-spam measure, and is using its t.co URL shortener to analyze link traffic, to get a better idea of what kind of content it leads to.
So who are the five companies Twitter is taking to court? The Next Web’s Jon Russell introduced us to the companies earlier this week:
The lawsuit names three firms — TweetAttacks, TweetAdder and TweetBuddy – and individuals from two other organisations — James Lucero (justinlover.info) and Garland Harris (troption.com) — each of whom is charged with violating Twitter’s usage terms by selling software that encourages firms to spam the service .
He goes on to explain:
These services violate Twitter’s regulations by allowing users to spam other users with ease. You could set each system so that every time a user tweets about ‘the Superbowl’, your account follows them and sends them back a message about a company…Toyota, for example.
TweetBuddy and TweetAttacks have already been taken offline since the lawsuit was announced.
This is what Facebook hands over when subpoenaed by the police
It’s no secret that if Facebook is subpoenaed by the police, it has no choice but to hand over the data, but what does that data actually look like? The Boston Phoenix reveals just that.
As the site points out, Facebook has done everything in its power not to let its users know what kind of information is ending up in the authorities hands.
The Boston Police Department released case files relating to the murder of Julissa Brisman, a masseuse from New York City. After his arrest for the murder, Phillip Markoff committed suicide while in jail awaiting trail. Among the files were printouts from Markoff’s Facebook profile.
Carly Carioli of The Boston Phoenix writes:
“While the police were evidently comfortable releasing Markoff’s unredacted Facebook subpoena, we weren’t. Markoff may be dead, but the very-much-alive friends in his friend list were not subpoenaed, and yet their full names and Facebook ID’s were part of the document. So we took the additional step of redacting as much identifying information as we could…”
The redacted print outs have been uploaded to Scribd:
The black and white printouts are a far cry from what you’d expect from a Facebook page, but contains all of Markoff’s activity, wall posts made by his friends, photos he was tagged in, and his complete friends list.
Pinterest is the third most popular social network
It wouldn’t be a social media roundup without some mention of Pinterest these days, now would it? Venture Beat reports that Pinterest is now the third most popular social network, preceded only by Facebook and Twitter.
According to data from Experian Hitwise, it’s not surprising to find that Facebook receives the most monthly traffic in the US, with over 700 million visits, while Twitter trails a distant second, with 182 million.
Venture Beat was able to obtain more detailed figures, showing what it means exactly that Pinterest has snagged the third spot, ahead of LinkedIn and Google+. Pinterest’s achievement comes with over 104 million visits in March. Another interesting fact is that Tagged beat Google+ out, by over 1 million visits, for the number 5 spot.
Pinterest’s figures don’t really come as much of a surprise. The site has seen explosive growth over the past few months, making it into the top 30 most visited sites in the US. Between Pinterest’s traffic, and a survey revealing that 21% of Pinterest users purchased items they saw on the social network, marketeers would do well to get their brands onto the site.

Twitter has had all it can take of spammers and it is launching fresh legal action in a bid to cut down on the problem by tackling the root cause of the issue.
Twitter isn’t suing individual spammers themselves — such a move would be hugely inefficient and difficult given the anonymity of many accounts — it is instead aiming to cull the Twitter spam industry by bringing down five companies that enable users to spam the service.
The lawsuit names three firms — TweetAttacks, TweetAdder and TweetBuddy – and individuals from two other organisations — James Lucero (justinlover.info) and Garland Harris (troption.com) — each of whom is charged with violating Twitter’s usage terms by selling software that encourages firms to spam the service .
Within the lawsuit, Twitter explains why it is making the move against these types of service. “Taking legal action sends a clear message to all would-be spammers that there are serious and costly consequences to violating our Rules with their annoying and potentially malicious activity,” it says.
While all five companies provide such software, just two of the websites have anything more than holding pages, TweetAdder and Tweetbuddy. So what of the services, exactly what kind of actions are they allowing?
Tweetadder offers “6 Laser Targeted, GLOBAL Twitter User Search Tools” which automate a range of Twitter functionality, such as searching for specific tweets, retweeting tweets that mention keywords and following Twitter users based on a range of critera.
TweetBuddy is similar and it provides a paid-for Twitter app that it says can “increase sales and save time”. The software includes a number of options for automating actions on the microblogging service, much like Tweetadder.com.
These services violate Twitter’s regulations by allowing users to spam other users with ease. You could set the system so that every time a user tweets about ‘the Superbowl’, your account follows them and sends them back a message about a company…Toyota, for example.
We’ve all had the automated ‘win an iPad’ or ‘earn $$$$ working from home’ tweets and they are no doubt annoying. While this lawsuit is unlikely to extinguish this type of automated software from existing and being used altogether, Twitter is setting a precedent and showing it will shut services like these down as and when it becomes aware of them.
Most of us know that services like this do more harm than good, as the art of growing a following or being responsive on any social network is one without shortcuts. Social media marketing takes time, effort and creativity — just like this Japanese marketer showed earlier this year — and it’s a topic that’s worthy of a dedicated blog post (or three) in itself.

Less than a month after celebrating Internet freedom day, Tunisian authorities have sentenced two young Facebook users to seven years in jail after they published cartoons of the Prophet Mohammad on the social network.
Tunisia’s justice ministry says that the duo posted images showing Mohammad naked which, according to spokesperson Chokri Nefti, saw them punished for “violation of morality, and disturbing public order.”
One of the men, Jabeur Mejri, is already incarcerated while police are actively seeking the other, Ghazi Beji, who was sentenced in absentia.
Local blogger Nebil Zagdoud told Reuters that “the sentences are very heavy and severe, even if these young people were at fault. This decision is aimed at silencing freedom of expression even on the Internet. Prosecutions for offending morals are a proxy for this government to gag everyone.”
Sentencing took place on March 28 but news of them has only just been released, promoting concerns around free speech in Tunisia, which generated headlines as one of the countries which saw the effects of the social media-led ‘Arab Spring’ revolutions in 2010.
In a bid to move on, Tunisia celebrated its first national day for Internet freedom on March 13 but these arrests and other developments, such as the banning of Facebook pages and pornography, show that the Internet and social networks continue to trouble authorities.
Tunisia is still on Reporters without Borders’ (RWB) list of countries ‘under surveillance’ despite attempts by the newly formed government to distance itself from tactics used by its predecessors.
These arrests are the latest in a series of social network-related arrests in countries in the surrounding region.
Just last week, Palestinian officials made two arrests in relation to content posted to Facebook, and Twitter has also been a platform from which authorities have reprimanded citizens across the Middle East.
Last month a man in the UAE was arrested for criticising security forces on Twitter, while Malaysia deported Saudi journalist Hamza Kashgari who arrived in the country fleeing a death penalty charge levied on him in Saudi Arabia due to tweets he sent.
Video game publisher Electronic Arts has not only had to defend itself against ‘worst company in America’ labels, but GamesIndustry International has revealed that EA’s been receiving thousands of letters protesting the inclusion of same-sex relationship content in games like Mass Effect and Star Wars: The Old Republic. The campaign against EA appears to be led by Florida Family Association and the Family Research Council. The letters threaten to boycott purchase of EA games if the company won’t remove the LGBT content, and many allege that EA was pressured by LGBT activists to include the content, which they say is forcing LGBT themes on children playing the games. ‘This isn’t about protecting children, it’s about political harassment,’ said Jeff Brown, VP of corporate communications