Towse: views from the hill

July 2, 2009

McCain And Palin Personally Approved Internal Email Hunt For Leakers, Campaign Manager Says

Filed under: news — Tags: , , — Towse @ 6:13 pm

McCain And Palin Personally Approved Internal Email Hunt For Leakers, Campaign Manager Says

I really don’t get it. All this uproar over whether Schmidt (with or without Palin and McCain’s approval) searched through staff e-mails to find out who was leaking information to the press about Palin’s diva behavior during the lead-up to last November’s election..

If you use a company server to send your e-mails, your e-mails are not private. The company owns the servers and can noddle through your e-mails to their heart’s content. And that’s not counting what anyone in the IT department with admin passwords can do.

A recent survey spilled the beans about what folks in the IT Department do out of boredom, curiosity, or maybe something less benign.

It should not surprise you that IT admins read your e-mails. Yes, they check logs to see what sort of Web surfing employees do. Turns out, yes, they check HR’s folders to see what everyone’s making and sometimes they leave taking data with them as they head out the door. There is no privacy on company computers.

Get over it, as Scott McNealy famously said ten years ago.

April 22, 2009

Haven’t seen "A Gathering Storm"?

Filed under: video — Tags: , , — Towse @ 1:18 am

The National Organization for Marriage’s A Gathering Storm advertisement against gay marriage has triggered yet another parody, this one starring Alicia Silverstone, Lance Bass, George Takei, Sophia Bush, and others.

A Gaythering Storm from Jane Lynch

Oh, please. Hurry with that giant umbrella that will save us from the storm of gay people about to shower down on us opposites.

(The original ad)

September 23, 2008

The Living Room Candidate – Presidential Campaign Commercials 1952-2008

Filed under: history,video — Tags: , , — Towse @ 3:47 pm

The Living Room Candidate – Presidential Campaign Commercials 1952-2008

Amazing dance back in time. 1952. A good year.

[via Andrew Tobias]

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