Ahh Bureaucracy at Big Companies

The Australian newspaper says there’s an internal battle at Telstra Bigpond, to choose the platform and operating system for the much touted $100 million upgrade of the BigPond email service. One guy likes one thing, another likes another thing.

But at least the big boss, CEO Dr Switkowski is being honest now:

“Dr Switkowski admitted the meltdown had taken Telstra by surprise and that the company had not paid enough attention to its email service, which in many businesses rivalled their telephone services for critical importance.”

Charting the Downloads

Well as soon as more than one person starts doing something, someone else wants to turn it into a statistic. The Australian Recording Industry Association is planning to produce a chart of the most popular songs sold by internet retailers.

And Telstra Wonders Why We Complain

If Telstra, and for that matter, other large telcos, ever wonder why they get a bad rap, they should read the results of the recent Australian Broadband Survey. The survey, with 10,335 responses in a 4 week period late in 2003, comprehensively displays the inverse relationship between telco scale and customer satisfaction. Almost exclusively the small niche providers won handsdown in the service stakes, and the large telcos performed worst.

Telsta. Unique?

Telstra as launched a “unique new online music download site, offering an extensive range of tracks for just $1.49 each for BigPond customers and $1.89 for the general public. “

What exactly is ‘unique’ about an online music download site is not exactly clear, perhaps the ability to charge downloads to a Telstra bill.

More bizarre – it’s not compatible with the most popular music player, Apple’s iPod. Apparently Telstra has decided that Microsoft rules the roost in music playback. BigPond managing director Justin Milne says “iPods don’t (work with BigPond Music) – that’s Apple’s device and it’s an Apple ambush, I guess the question is would you be prepared to bet against Microsoft? I wouldn’t”.

Perhaps that’s the ‘unique’ bit – it doesn’t work with iPods?

Bureaucrats Say Reply to Spam!!!!!!

Oh lord, never let a bureaucrat anywhere near the real world. In the UK the Office of the Information Commissioner (you know, the guy who’s supposed to be the expert), has been telling the recipients of spam to reply and opt out.

As any sane person knows this is probably the most stupid thing you can do. All it does is tell the spammer that there is a real live person at the other end, and invites a flood of yet more junk.

More Enemies Than Records

silicon.com is carrying a great article in response to the British music industry story below:

“In the US, the Recording Industry Association of America has made more enemies than it has records in the past 18 months and, worryingly, its UK equivalent, the British Phonographic Industry, seems to think that this is an approach it would be wise to follow. “

“Now behind the times and in a strop, the labels are picking on ‘the smallest bloke in the pub’ by turning on individual consumers unlucky enough to be singled out from the millions using download services. “

British teenagers be afraid, very afraid

It’s the turn of British teenagers to be afraid, very afraid. The British Phonographic Industry, the trade body that represents record labels including EMI, Sony and Warner Music, says:

“Nobody should be in any doubt that such uses of file-sharing networks are illegal and are harming the health of British music. We will take legal action if we are forced to”

Don’t you just love the sweeping, unsubstantiated claim that it’s hurting British music. Says who?

Queensland Labor Online

Queensland Premier Peter Beattie has called a snap state election for February. And has a web site which other politicians should see – http://www.teambeattie.com.

There was a minor hiccup this week when an enterprising activist registered peterbeattie.com and directed it to the rival Liberal web site, but this seems to have been altered and it now goes to the teambeattie, so someone has had a word to someone. Fascinating how the media blew it up as a hack attack. Nothing of the sort of course, just a piece of online activism, and serves Beattie for not spending the few extra bucks to register the domain in the first place.

Bugging the Politicians

Speaking of hiding technology, here’s an issue I’ve only just started to get my head around – radio-frequency identification chips (RFIDS). I know retailers are looking at embedding them in clothes, ostensibly to help with stocktaking and the like (akin to a bar code on each item I suppose), but privacy advocates are very worried.

And in a move which could get some people very worried, organisers of an internet and technology conference in Switzerland in December embedded RFIDS in the delegate badges:

“The badges were handed out to more than 50 prime ministers, presidents and other high-level officials from 174 countries, including the United States. “

One of the big conference agenda issues was, wait for it, privacy!

“The three-day WSIS forum focused on Internet governance and access, security, intellectual-property rights and privacy. The United States and other countries defeated an attempt to place the Internet under supervision of the United Nations. “

One of the key campaigners against RFIDS in the USA has a web site which explains these little critters, and what they could be used for: http://www.spychips.com/. According to reports today, she’s experiencing something of a possible smear campaign, after a company inadvertently sent her a copy of an email she wasn’t supposed to see.

Bugging the Politicians

Speaking of hiding technology, here’s an issue I’ve only just started to get my head around – radio-frequency identification chips (RFIDS). I know retailers are looking at embedding them in clothes, ostensibly to help with stocktaking and the like (akin to a bar code on each item I suppose), but privacy advocates are very worried.

And in a move which could get some people very worried, organisers of an internet and technology conference in Switzerland in December embedded RFIDS in the delegate badges:

“The badges were handed out to more than 50 prime ministers, presidents and other high-level officials from 174 countries, including the United States. “

One of the big conference agenda issues was, wait for it, privacy!

“The three-day WSIS forum focused on Internet governance and access, security, intellectual-property rights and privacy. The United States and other countries defeated an attempt to place the Internet under supervision of the United Nations. “

One of the key campaigners against RFIDS in the USA has a web site which explains these little critters, and what they could be used for: http://www.spychips.com/. According to reports today, she’s experiencing something of a possible smear campaign, after a company inadvertently sent her a copy of an email she wasn’t supposed to see.