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Missing Attachment Plugin Unleashed for Leopard

mailboxI’ve released a new version of my missing attachment plugin for Apple’s Mail program. This new version works on both Tiger and Leopard, all from a single plugin. It also simiplifies the install process. Now you can just double-click the Install script to copy the plugin to the appropriate folder and enable Mail’s plugin support.

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Paranoia and Proportionality

In life, we must constantly make tradeoffs. In entering into “civilized” society, we sacrifice absolute control over ourselves for security. For example, one cannot kill another in our society. Photo by nolifebeforecoffee on Flickr Should we allow one to kill another, it would become impossible to maintain security. So, we give up the ability to kill those who aggrieve us in order to gain the security it provides.

Of course, not all examples are so exciting as death and murder, and not all tradeoffs are so balanced. In the legal setting, this balance is referred to as proportionality. With respect to privacy, the concept of proportionality addresses the relative intrusion on an individual’s privacy to the advantages gained by such an intrusion. For example, it might be acceptable to allow a surveillance system capable of reading license plates at a customs control checkpoint, but not on normal freeways. At a customs control checkpoint, the intrusion of privacy may be an acceptable cost of ensuring an effective border security and customs operation. Using the very same system on normal freeways to improve traffic flow, by contrast, may be entirely unacceptable. The relative gains of having fewer traffic jams are far outweighed by the same privacy risk. In this way, the same loss of privacy, but in a different context, becomes more or less acceptable.

This is where paranoia comes into play. If you can somehow raise people’s fears so as to make them perceive a greater threat, then the value of an intrusion will be perceived to be greater. When people are afraid, they are more likely to sacrifice their freedoms and their privacy, so long as it can boost their perceived security.

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Back from the Abyss

It’s been over two years since I last updated my weblog (my last update was back in November of 2003!). After getting fed up with all the blog spammers, I’ve finally decided to give it another go.

Why another weblog? I’ve come up with a couple of reasons. For starters, I’ve found that my writing has gotten pretty dreadful over the past few years. My thoughts are no longer as coherent as they used to be, and I hope that getting into the habit of putting them down on paper bits will help.

Additionally, I’ve found that I really don’t have a good place to put my more serious thoughts in public. My LJ is all fine and good, but that’s where I put all of my meaningless drivel and the occasional emotional crap that my friends care about, but no one else does. I hope that this space will, instead, be a useful resource for me to share my perspectives as a human-computer interaction (HCI) practitioner[-in-training]… and, of course, other geeky stuff, too.

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