Hacking Memeorandum 101 - the screencast
I've now created screencast- Hacking Memeorandum 101 trying to explain what is going on with this Hacking Memerorendum business.
Btw, two new posts out there since Tara's and mine. (more updates at the bottom of this post)
The first is from Ben Barren (I call him Ben Barry in the screencast, sorry Ben!):
"If newspapers and blogs can be manipulated, where does this stop... Blogging needs its own Kabbalah Red String bracelet me thinks... maybe to be different it could be on the ankle... unisex that is.."
The other is from my other blog with pics of the hacks end results:
But I do try to make a serious point both in the screencast and echoed in the other post:
"In case you are wondering, I do realise this is all very silly and I hope we don't get 'banned' in the future.
So I say in all seriousness - we should see the constructive side of this: that the algorithms can be easily hacked and than sooner or later the spammers will try this on themselves. So it might as well be us that tests the system before they spoil it all for us."
Update:
"The weblog system can have real effects on writers, and writers can have real effects on the system, and I'm not sure how much of it all we can take at face value anymore.... "
"This recent success in “hacking Memeorandum” confirms to me that we need some kind of human intervention in these systems. The answer may indeed lie with human annotation ala Wink.com, or it may be the case that entirely human systems (Digg, Reddit) are less prone to attack. Perhaps Google could send off its search results to be rated by the human minds at Amazon’s Mechanical Turk .
Either way, I don’t believe that algorithms can survive in their current form. Human judgement isn’t infallible, but it’s the best thing we’ve got."
Comments
Anonymous
November 08, 2005
Scoble pronounces it "meem-orandum". That sounds logical to me.
As for hacking memeorandum - it had to happen, and it's better that you did it than a spammer. Personally, I don't believe in algorithms at all - algorithms are things that get gamed. You need to put a human brain in the loop somewhere. Anyway, I might do a follow up post to explain this better (at the risk of get banned. hehe).Anonymous
November 08, 2005
This is brilliant, Alex.
Will you teach me how to screencast?Anonymous
November 08, 2005
Here's the software I use:
Techsmith's Camatasia Studio 3:
http://www.techsmith.com/products/studio/default.asp
There is a screeast of how to use their screecasting software (!):
http://www.techsmith.com/videos/studio/CS3/CS3ShowMe/showmevideos.html?movie=1
Other software listed at:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ScreencastAnonymous
November 08, 2005
The comment has been removedAnonymous
November 08, 2005
Hey John, I think your last point is big deal - you're spot on. One answer is to allow users to import their OPML. See:
http://blogs.msdn.com/alexbarn/archive/2005/11/02/488364.aspxAnonymous
November 08, 2005
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November 21, 2005
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November 30, 2005
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December 01, 2005
thanks Gabe - my response here:
http://blogs.msdn.com/alexbarn/archive/2005/12/01/498888.aspxAnonymous
June 30, 2006
Oh no, so it's hapenning again...!Anonymous
June 09, 2009
PingBack from http://toenailfungusite.info/story.php?id=477Anonymous
June 17, 2009
PingBack from http://pooltoysite.info/story.php?id=6061