What the hell is Jeff Barson doing?

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This is the blog of Jeff Barson. I'm currently running HireVue Labs, former Director at Sendside, founder of Surface Medical, Nimble, Medspa MD, Freelance MD, Frontdesk, Uncommon, and Wild Blue... angel investor and startup advisor. Oh, and I'm a artist. More >>

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    "Everyone wants to kill the king. But the prince, he just sails along telling all the ladies, 'One day I'm gonna be king.'" ~
    Vince Chase, Entourage

    Entries by Jeff Barson (389)

    Sunday
    Mar302008

    Horses

    Moon%20Free%20Jumps.jpg

    It's not often that I speak kindly of our horses. The car my wife drives around in smells like horse, my house sometimes smells like horse, even my daughter often smells like horse.

    But they're not all terrible.

    This is my daughters horse Moon and even I'm impressed with this photo of him jumping.

    Of course, he smells like horse too. 

    Sunday
    Feb102008

    The power of inspiration

    Tuesday
    Feb052008

    Silicon Slopes: A tech community site from Omniture

    overheard_in_utahI tumbled to Omnitures tech community site Silicon Slopes when they delivered the 2008 poster to me.

    It was an instant love-hate relationship.

    I give Omniture high marks for intent. Silicon Slopes looks to create a community site and resource for Utahs high tech companies. (Silicon Slopes lists that number at 3500 which seems astronomically high to me but what do I know?) Omnitures taking the lead with this site in not only promoting the site to build a tech community (and position Omniture as leading the discussion) but promoting Utah, presumably with the intent of positioning Utah as a winter wonderland of technology to balance Silicon Valleys fog. High marks there as well.

    But the execution is somewhat problematic. First, the site is so slow that I think that they must be running it on a Comodore 64. I mean it is PAINFUL. If I weren't really interested I would shoot the site in the head just to get if off of my foot. (It looks as if it's built on a wiki platform.)

    There are some unexpected behaviors as well. It seems that you can just create and edit a company without even logging in. I created Sendside's profile easily enough but it surprised me when I updated the logo with a message telling me that it would have to approve before going live. Either the creation landed just as the admin was looking to OK new pages, or the logics odd. As a secondary bonus it seems that someone added Vspring as an investor in Sendside.... not only has Vspring not invested, but there's no way to edit or delete that information. (Someone's messing with our cap table.)

    Something's amiss. I'm a fan of Omniture and I'd like to be a fan of Silicon Slopes. I'll give it a week.  

    Wednesday
    Jan162008

    CyberSLAPP Suits & Your Blog

    a94_w10.jpgThis is just one of my blogs. I have others.

     
    One of them is Medical Spa MD, a blog for physicians in medspas and cosmetic medicine where there's a pretty active community. Medspa MD has around 50,000 unique visitors a month, mostly doctors, who are interested in both the business and treatment aspects of cosmetic medicine.

    Medspa MD's become the defacto leader for docs in that field and as such it's become both an aggregator and a target. Loved by it's members and hated by those who have a less than pristine reputation. This has led to the following confrontation.

    Dermacare and it's CEO Carl Mudd want to sue eveyone on Medical Spa MD.

     
    A few of the posts on Medspa MD is a bout a medspa franchise called Dermacare and it's CEO, Carl Mudd. 

    Together, these three posts have mucho comments. The middle one is gong to break 700 shortly.

    Evidently, Dermacare and it's CEO Carl Mudd are not pleased since they sent me this email and letter threatening me with some sort of action if I didn't hand over all of the IP addresses of everyone who's commented.

    This sort of action is both extremely cynical and growing in popularity. It's called a CyberSLAPP Suit and it works like this: If you don't like what someone is saying about you on the web you file a suit. This allows you to issue subpoenas to whoever you like. So now you can find out who these individuals are and threaten to haul them into court. It uses a lawful procedure to effectively intimidate dissent and free speach, both of which are protected after all.

    If you've never run into this, count yourself lucky, but don't think it couldn't happen to you. It's a dragnet. 

    Here are some links about these kinds of CyberSlapp suits and where the law comes down on free speech and other issues around this:

    Chilling Effects Clearinghouse: A joint project of the Electronic Frontier Foundation and Harvard, Stanford, Berkeley, University of San Francisco, University of Maine, George Washington School of Law, and Santa Clara University School of Law clinics.

    Do you know your online rights? Have you received a letter asking you to remove information from a Web site or to stop engaging in an activity? Are you concerned about liability for information that someone else posted to your online forum? If so, this site is for you.

    Defamation
    The law of defamation balances two important, and sometimes competing, rights: the right to engage in free speech and the right to be free from untrue attacks on reputation. In practice, the filing or even the threat to file a lawsuit for defamation has sometimes been used as a tool to shut down legitimate comments on the Internet.

    John Doe Anonymity
    Do you post to a public message boards or discussion areas on websites such as Yahoo, AOL or Raging Bull? Do you use a pseudonym, fake name or a "handle"? Has someone asked the host of the discussion or your ISP to turn over information about you or your identity? If so, then the John Doe/Anonymity section may answer some of your questions.
    Topic maintained by Stanford Center for Internet & Society

    Protest, Parody and Criticism Sites
    The Internet, which offers inexpensive access to a worldwide audience, provides an unparalleled opportunity for individuals to criticize, protest and parody.

    Thursday
    Dec202007

    Digital IQ story on Sendside: Building a better email.

    nospam2Digital IQ ran this story on Sendside: Building a better email.

     
    We are in our new office space and it's quite a step up.

    "Down a meandering hallway diffused with fluorescent lighting, in a squat two-story 1980s office complex like the one where your dentist works, is the door to Sendside Networks, Inc. Through that door you won’t find a sleek reception desk, a backlit logo, modern art, or anything else that says, “Welcome to a cutting-edge corporation, to the offices of a company that is changing the way you do business!” Rather, guests are greeted by…The Wall of Shame. Not papered with finger-pointing posters nagging you to quit smoking or gambling or visiting certain unsavory Websites – no – the red-faced source of this wall is mail. Ordinary U.S. mail and envelopes from FedEx and the like. From ceiling to baseboard, a crate’s worth of catalogs and cardboard dangles from tacks like scarlet letters.

    “Our wall of shame is merely a two-week example of mail we’ve received here in the office,” says William Borghetti, CEO of Sendside. It is all mail that the company wants to be sent via the Internet and the “channel” Sendside is creating, a new category of electronic communication that promises to be highly secure, interactive and productive.

    Imagine a week (or month) of your mail or, to save time, let’s talk about mine: Numerous statements from credit cards and banks. Reports and updates from my financial advisor and mutual funds. A delightful, lengthy exchange with the Veterans’ Administration over a relative’s benefits, requiring copiers and additional machinery. Queries from an insurance company that demand written responses.

    Now picture all of this happening online, safely, without a hitch, knowing you received, they received – done and done. Envision a secure portal to interact and transact with all of these individuals and institutions – folks of your choosing whom you know and trust – through which you can accept, sign and return large documents. View statements and make payments without additional passwords and the click-click-click of following link after link or logging in to other Websites. Attach e-signed power of attorney papers and shoot them to the federal government and know they were recieved without interception. This is what Sendside Networks is creating – a gigantic, secure pneumatic tube from you to your sources and back.

    Sendside’s network isn’t designed for all mail, but for the “layers that matter,” says Geoff Kahler, the company’s VP of marketing and sales. It’s not for protecting pictures of your pet fish and sharing with everyone on your mailing list. “Will the network entirely replace traditional email?” Kahler asks. “Not in the short term. It’s more likely to become an immediate replacement for paper-based communication,” a way to avoid the mailbox and the FedEx guy, saving billions in paper and mailing costs, including losses due to fraud, scams and lost productivity.

    The idea for Sendside Networks, Inc. was hatched a couple of years ago, when, Borghetti says, “the light bulb came on for us” while going through mail and paying bills. “You may log onto your bank…so the bank has that going for it, in that you will initiate the self-service mode, but no one wants to log into the County of Salt Lake. No one wants to log into their accountant’s Web service, or lawyer’s.”

    Borghetti continues, “Overall, [Sendside] is a way of restoring a two-way balance to communication in many respects. The organizations we’re talking to – not just banks, but credit card companies, insurance companies, law firms – they want to be able to send confidential information quickly, easily, cost-effectively. And the only way to do that is FedEx, U.S. Mail or the online ‘come and get it’ method, meaning there’s something important for you but you’ve got to log in and get it.”

    The “come and get it” method of delivery of information – an email from your bank notifying you that your new statement is available when you click your mouse twice and type the magic words – is where a lot of time on the Web is wasted. Yes, the fact that we can pay bills online, securely, is more than we could do a decade ago, but has email and secure communication really come that far? Borghetti says no. “The world today, electronically, is a frenetic work-around to email’s shortcomings. Email encryption is a classic example of bolting on something that should be scrambled and non-viewable in transit anyways.” 

    Email, or really the Internet, promised a lot of things in the beginning. Weren’t we going to save billions of trees back then because we wouldn’t be needing pesky old printers anymore, or moth-eaten books? It’s more likely (hasn’t someone out there done a study?) that we’re now able to work and produce and waste paper more rapidly than ever. Who doesn’t still subscribe to the Sunday paper, just because it feels good to open and flip and fold up each section when finished? But no one enjoys reading a financial statement (maybe some people do) or legal contracts over a cup of coffee. These are items we want to deal with as quickly, securely and professionally as possible and this is what Sendside is all about.

    “We’re often misunderstood,” says Borghetti. “Is this a security thing? Is this an encryption company? What is Sendside Networks? It’s really none of those things. The heart of Sendside is being a trusted network providing the technology to allow organizations to connect to each other but also to connect to individuals. It’s not just secure email. There are a lot of secure email solutions out there, but they’re a pain in the butt for the consumer. We are creating a multi-faceted way of presenting information that is unique and novel and had never been done before.”

    As founder of other technology-based companies including Campus Pipeline, a Web platform for universities that Borghetti started in his garage, the man is no stranger to new territory or the state’s start-up scene.

    Jeff Barson, founder of Surface Medical, entrepreneur, networker of CEOs, blogger and “Chief Evangelist” for Sendside (according to his LinkedIn profile) writes, “William seems to be the group’s entrepreneur in residence and I find myself agreeing with him completely regarding his views with the state of startups in Utah. While it takes only a small amount of wine [to] get William’s views of the Utah capital markets and the way they work, I couldn’t agree more…William’s also philosophically inclined to give back, which I find refreshing. He’s got some good policies including buy-me-lunch-and-I’ll-tell-you-stuff, and no-need-to-call-in-on-powder-days.”

    Still in the audit phase, Sendside Networks is up and running today and offering three products or levels of service. The first is Sendside.com, designed for individuals and available free of charge but by invitation only. Sendside Professional was developed for small- and medium-sized businesses, and for large organizations with millions of customers, there is Sendside Enterprise.

    And while pricing for the professional versions is yet to be determined, Kahler says it will be a “no-brainer, approachable” alternative to the costs of regular mail and courier/shipping services. “We have an organization in California that needs to distribute quarterly updates to contracts to 850 providers at a cost of probably $25 per FedEx and usually the guy on the other side is sending a FedEx back with the signed contract, so they have a paper copy that they can shove in a file,” he says. “Why not give that organization a license, if you will, to send as much information as they want to that organization, quarterly updates, etc. for $25 a year, per customer? We’ve reduced their costs by 75 percent.”

    Now, that would inspire a significant clearing of anyone’s wall of shame. In Sendside’s case, their wall may be disappearing altogether, unless someone plans to reinstall it in the company’s new modern office space in the East Cottonwood area of Salt Lake City."

    Tuesday
    Dec182007

    Our Christmas Video

    Shelly, my wife, made our Christmas card as a video this year. Merry Christmas. 

     
    Thursday
    Dec132007

    Edgeio sells all assets and goes out of business.

    Here's the email I just got from Edgeio announcing that they're selling all of their assets:

    logoHello-
    You are receiving this email because you have created a Classified Board on edgeio.com.

    On Friday 7 December, due to its inability to fund ongoing operations, the Board of Directors recommended closing down the company and selling its assets. As a result there will be an auction for edgeio's assets, starting Tuesday December 11th 2007, and terminating on Friday December 21rd 2007. The service will remain operational through the auction period and, depending on the winner, may continue to run after the auction closes.

    To learn more about edgeio and the auction process, visit http://wiki.edgeio.com.

    Thank you for using the service-

    The edgeio team

    I've used the Edgeio service and had good results. I can only hope the new owner keeps the site up and running.

    Wednesday
    Dec122007

    Google's indexing public data: Don't taze me bro!

    Here's John Lewis Needham, Manager for Public Sector Content Partnerships at Google, testifies before the Senate Homeland Security and Government Affairs Committee, December 11, 2007 on how Google is indexing all government content of public record.  

    Sunday
    Nov252007

    Join Sendside's Invitation Only Beta

    250sq.beta.gif

    The Sendside Invitation-only Beta is now open.

     
    To submit your name for our Beta, take a second and fill out this 16 second form.

    Due to the number of requests we're receiving, we may have to limit membership for a short time. If you think someone you know would also like to be included, now's the time.

    Welcome to the Sendside.

    What is Sendside?

    Sendside is the world's first secure, private, spam–free communications network. We think it has the potential to fundamentally change the way that people & businesses interact on the web by adding something important to every interaction. Trust.

    With Sendside, there are no anonymous users, and it's unbelievably secure.

    It looks and feels like email (so you already know how to use it), but it's very different since you have total control over what information you send, and what people can send to you.

    Here's some of the cool stuff you can already do on Sendside:

    • Live without spam or phishing. (Zero. Zilch. Nada.)
    • Still send to any email address. (Just like your regular email.)
    • Get important info online instead of by mail. (contracts, medical records, account info. Stuff that can't be sent by email for security reasons.)
    • Store all of your important documents and files online.
    • Access from anywhere there's an internet connection.
    • Send huge file attachments (currently 100MB)
    • Recall a message even after it's been read. (Oops button)
    • Restrict anyone from forwarding a message.
    • See who your message was forwarded to.. and who they sent it to. Forever.
    • Send a self destruct message.
    • Let your kids use it as their email. (It's Family friendly)
    • Did we say there was no spam? There's also no porn, Viagra, or phony messages from eBay.

    Here's what you're going to be able to do pretty soon:

    • Manage every business communication in one place. (Bank accounts, medical records, taxes, insurance...whatever.)
    • Send or receive payments instantly. (PaySide)
    • Pay every bill online. (Even a one-time bill like a $5 doctor's co-pay.)
    • Accept signatures for simple approvals or legally binding contracts.

    So, let the revolution begin.

    Sunday
    Nov042007

    Spam Justice: Spammer gets 2 years for AOL scam

    A spammer from New Jersey who sent spam to 1.27 million AOL email addresses was sentenced to two years.

     
    Isn't there something better than an AOL email account? Just another example of what happens in an unregulated, unsupervised, and unenforceable system.

    Via Cnet:

    blockquote.gif Todd Moeller, 28, was sentenced 27 months in prison in a federal court in New York after he was caught making a deal with a government informant to send junk e-mails advertising a computer security program in return for 50 percent of the profits, the U.S. Attorney's Office in Manhattan said.

    Moeller and Adam Vitale of New York pleaded guilty earlier this year to breaking antispam laws and defeating AOL's filter system by using a variety of computer servers and changing the header information on e-mails to ensure they could not be traced, court papers said.

    Moeller told the informant via instant messaging he could conceal the source of the e-mails through his access to 40 different servers and had profited $40,000 a month from other spam e-mail scams that promoted stocks, prosecutors said.

    In one week in August 2005 Moeller and Vitale sent e-mails on behalf of the informant to more than 1.27 million addresses of subscribers at AOL, the online division of Time Warner.

    Vitale will be sentenced November 13.

    Sunday
    Oct282007

    Entreprenurs & understanding angel investors.

    gobbldygook Utah considers itself an entrepreneurial state. Perhaps so. There seems to be no end of 20-somethings who have fallen in love with the two guys in a garage idea. But before Salt Lake turns into Boulder or Boston or the Bay, we’ll need more entrepreneurs who don’t quit after their first exit, and clean up the investment opportunities.

    Entrepreneurs need to understand the psychology of funding sources. 

    For entrepreneurs this means more than a little self education. Startup entrepreneurs who have been around a while know how this works.

    William Borghetti, the CEO of Sendside Networks, tumbled me to this saying that I use constantly with new entrepreneurs. “This is farming, not hunting.”

    By this he means that in order to gain the trust that’s necessary for an investor to give you money, time is one of the critical components. Unfortunately it’s mostly overlooked by novices who are trying to get the money and everything else done right now. But time’s necessary to understand, not only who you can take money from, but who you don’t want to.

    (Not all money is the same. I actually heard an ‘Angel’ in a group discussion of a company comment about his plan to take advantage of an entrepreneur who he considered unsophisticated. And he’s not alone, there never seems to be a shortage of ‘mentors’ who think that they spew wisdom with every breath and want to be paid. These guys should be avoided like Typhoid Mary. I’ve seen this play out a number of times and it never works out for the entrepreneur. But the mentor’s happy to take credit for everything the company does form now on.)

    More importantly, entrepreneurs need to understand a investors position. As an entrepreneur you’re looking to accumulate wealth. If you’re an investor, the first thing you’re thinking of is protecting the wealth you’ve already got. (Insert a fool and his money are soon parted here.) In addition to keeping wealth you’re looking at a limited amount of funds (all funds are limited) to invest and an unlimited opportunity to put that money to work.

    So every entrepreneur is in the position of not only competing with all the investments open to an investor that are ‘safe’ (stocks, savings accounts) but with every other entrepreneurs deal. The investor is not looking at your deal and determining if it is a good idea to put money in there. An investors’ looking at your deal to determine if there’s any possible better place to put that money. Here’s the disconnect that happens with so many novice entrepreneurs who are thinking that they have a good deal so it’s worthy of investment. Entrepreneurs see this as investors being dismissive, aloof, and slow. But what’s really going on is that the investor is weighing his options and waiting in the hope that the next Google or Sendsides going to come along. Why? Because once that money’s in the company there’s no ability to get it out.

    Another common problem with entrepreneurs who are looking for money is the naiveté they have when they’re obviously thinking that getting the funding is the big exit, the cash-out, the pay off. It’s not.

    Getting funded is remarkably like getting a cash advance from a loan shark.

    Entrepreneurs who think they’re going to take funding and give themselves back pay for sweat equity are not operating in any reality that I’m aware of.

    I’ll insert a note here that Utah’s capital markets leave much to be desired. There are few resources open to entrepreneurs with the existing funding sources although this is changing. The angel groups and other investors are partly to blame for some of this with onerous preferences built into deals that actually work to the determent of both the entrepreneur, company, and investor. There will never be a way to raise additional outside rounds with some of the screwed up cap tables I’ve seen.

    Utah ’s entrepreneurs need to get much smarter about trying to raise money. As an entrepreneur you should be trying to get close to other entrepreneurs who are ‘in the know’ rather than potential investors. Entrepreneurs know who to look to, who’s an ass, what that persons reputation is and where to go. Angels won’t tell you this because they all know each other. It’s the entrepreneurs that you need to look to for the straight talk.

    Remember this; High net worth does not mean they’re actually worth much.

    Read this post in Launch Magazine. 

    Wednesday
    Oct242007

    Googles fear of Facebook's social garden.

    I head that during Phil Windley's CTO Breakfast last month some discussion of Sendside came up and was generally blasted as being untenable for the simple fact that it's a walled garden...

    facebook(Fortune Magazine) -- Facebook's got Google running scared

    Google is the elephant in nearly every corner of the Internet, from search and advertising to web-based e-mail, online mapping, and home-brewed video. With its share price setting new highs this fall, its market cap ($188 billion) is now large enough to buy the New York Times, the Washington Post, Gannett, and Time Warner - twice. Or Facebook many, many times over.

    The problem is, Facebook's not for sale. And that's got Google running scared. It's an open secret in Silicon Valley that the company has been shopping around a nondisclosure agreement outlining its plan to create its own massive social network - and asking anyone with a pulse to sign it.

    Google (Charts, Fortune 500) has to do something fast, because some of its best talent is starting to head for the exits. In July, Gideon Yu, finance chief at Google's YouTube, left for Facebook. Now other Google guys, stuck in the Googleplex and smelling a Facebook IPO that could turn early employees into early retirees, are also jumping ship...

    ...Now the social networks are trying to do the opposite - to build what I call the Innernet. It's the place you occupy with family and friends and where you exercise almost absolute control, showing the world only as much of your true self as you care to while protecting you and yours from the evil that lurks on the wider web, from spam artists to identity thieves. Whoever builds that walled garden stands to make the next great Internet fortune.

    Welcome to the Sendside, your own private walled garden


    Saturday
    Oct202007

    Headlines for Sendside: Telling a story.

    headscrewSendside's about to lauch our Beta, If you haven't requested a Sendside membership I'd encourage you to do so since we're limiting the Beta to 10,000. (Request a Sendside Membership here.)

    Before that happens we're  working hammer and tongs to get our sites updated, create Sendside's corporate and Sendside user blog, wiki, forums and such, launch SEO, direct contact, and guerilla campaigns, and keep a number of advertising and development teams on track. It will of course result in the perfect storm in Nov/Dec. (Insert crossed fingers here.)

    We're currently working with an agency on headlines for Sendside.com, the main portal site for users. I the spirit of transparency and disclosure, I publish some of the headlines we're looking at for various purposes. In the spirit of brevity, I've included only 20 or so.

    Sendside Headlines: 

    Email revolutionized communication
    and we revolutionized email.
    Which makes us doubly revolutionary.

    ++

    Email was the first (small?) step.
    Sendside is the giant leap for mankind.

    ++

    Sendside
    e
    email
    evolved
    Sendside
    Sendside, highly evolved communications.

    +++

    When was the last time you wanted to kiss your inbox?

    ++

    Sending that critical report to your client should be a weight off of your shoulders. If not we have an Oops button.

    ++

    Your future email will let you send huge files, control your message even after you send it, come with an Oops button and make martinis. Until then, no martinis. Sendside, highly evolved communications.

    ++

    Sendside; you’ll want to French-kiss your inbox.

    ++

    We’re happy to inform you that everything before us is obsolete.

    ++

    Perfect online communication. This concludes our service menu.

    ++

    Email for control freaks, spam haters, and environmentalists.

    ++

    Sendside. Email walking upright. 

    ++

    Spam? Phishing? Junk mail? Sendside, ignorance is bliss.

    ++

    In the future there will be no spam, phishing, or junk mail. Welcome to the future: Sendside.

    ++

    Give up your spam. Sendside.

    ++

    Sendside users need to know a number of ways to deal with spam, phishing and junk mail. (That number is, of
    course, zero.)

    ++

    You give up things when you switch to Sendside. Things like spam, phishing, and junk mail.

    ++

    Technology that works the way you want. Sendside.

    ++

    Email just went the way of the Dodo bird.

    ++

    We took a long, hard look at email and we didn't like what we saw. So we decided to get rid of it. Sendside.

    ++

    Email was invented in 1982. Today it was perfected.

    ++

    This ain’t your momma’s email.

    ++

    Email for control freaks, spam haters, and environmentalists.

    ++

    Sendside. Email walking upright.

    ++

    The spam stops here.

    So there it is. Part of Sendside's benefit proposition for our end users. If any of these lines tickle your curiosity, make sure you sign up for the Beta. 

    Saturday
    Oct202007

    Is Google pimping your blog... or just pimping you?

    cig36.jpgSInce Google's been on the tear, there's been a discernable backlash that I think will continue to grow. Google's the next Microsoft that will be the business that people love to hate.

    While the much ballyhooed 'do no evil' is touted, Google's detractors are also getting more coherent.

    Here's part of a post from Online Advertising about how Google's pimping out your blog. (And not in a good way.) 

    • They bully you into thinking that you cannot stand up to them and say anything bad about them or your SEO results might drop, or you Google PR might suddenly dip.   Just like real world pimps do to their hookers, they bully them into feeling like they have no choice but to stay with the pimp.

    • Google threatens you if you decide to make some of your own money off selling your own text links on your own site.  Google does not want you to make any side cash that cuts them out of the deal.  If Google finds out that you are cheating on them they will probably also cut your PR ranking down to size.  Almost like real world pimps except they probably beat their hookers if they earn money somewhere else.

    • They will take anything they can get.  Yes, just like hookers who really don’t have any standard as to who they do business with, Google again has absolutely no standards.  They will let any site run Google AdSense, it doesn’t matter if the content is stolen, ripped off, questionable, nonsensical, full of profanity, racist, complete garbage, duplicated, never updated and just plan crap, Google will bang it.

    • Just like real world pimps who already have low ethical standards and don’t usually have any problems promoting and/or making money off other illegal activity, Google too, does not care if companies who are advertising on their network are committing federal offenses.  Selling counterfeits of registered trademarked material is illegal and is actually a federal offense in many countries including the good old US of A, where Google is headquartered.  Does Google care if thousands of companies are selling counterfeits through its advertising service?  Hell no.  Do a quick search on Google for “Louis Vuitton” Probably one of the most ripped off brands in the world.  This search you will not only finds tonnes of companies selling illegal products, try to actually find a legit one.  (Vuitton sued Google successfully in Feb 2005 for this very reason and they still turn a blind eye.)  Does Google refuse this money?  Why would they?
    As for myself, I use Yahoo.

     

    Sunday
    Oct142007

    America is conducting torture by any standard.

    iraq-torture-dogs-thumb-tm.jpgVia the times: The 'Good German' Among Us

    Ten days ago The Times unearthed yet another round of secret Department of Justice memos countenancing torture. President Bush gave his standard response: “This government does not torture people.” Of course, it all depends on what the meaning of “torture” is. The whole point of these memos is to repeatedly recalibrate the definition so Mr. Bush can keep pleading innocent.

    By any legal standards except those rubber-stamped by Alberto Gonzales, we are practicing torture, and we have known we are doing so ever since photographic proof emerged from Abu Ghraib more than three years ago. As Andrew Sullivan, once a Bush cheerleader, observed last weekend in The Sunday Times of London, America’s “enhanced interrogation” techniques have a grotesque provenance: “Verschärfte Vernehmung, enhanced or intensified interrogation, was the exact term innovated by the Gestapo to describe what became known as the ‘third degree.’ It left no marks. It included hypothermia, stress positions and long-time sleep deprivation.”

    In my opinion there's no excuse for this. The common argument that 'torture by the good guys saves lives' is a red herring. It pains me that the United States will never again have the reputation we enjoyed during the cold war.

    John D. Hutson, who served as the Navy’s top lawyer from 1997 to 2000, said he believed that the existence of legal opinions justifying abusive treatment is pernicious, potentially blurring the rules for Americans handling prisoners.

    “I know from the military that if you tell someone they can do a little of this for the country’s good, some people will do a lot of it for the country’s better,” Mr. Hutson said. Like other military lawyers, he also fears that official American acceptance of such treatment could endanger Americans in the future.

    “The problem is, once you’ve got a legal opinion that says such a technique is O.K., what happens when one of our people is captured and they do it to him? How do we protest then?” he asked.