The US just lifted a crushing burden on prison inmates and their families – Quartz

Well done, FCC! Making changes that will positively affect the lives of those still incarcerated and their families, while punishing greedy businesses.

Currently, phone calls often cost more than $1 per minute including surcharges—creating outsize profits for the $1.2 billion prison phone industry. Prisons … sign exclusive contracts with companies like Global Tel-Link, and receive a cut of the proceeds from each call, creating an incentive to raise rates as much as possible.
FCC commissioner Mignon Clyburn called the current system—which drains the resources of the United States’ 2.4 million mostly poor inmates and their families—”untenable, egregious and unconscionable.”

Source: The US just lifted a crushing burden on prison inmates and their families – Quartz

The Donut Hustle | The Players’ Tribune

This piece has an approachable voice and an inspirational message—Hustle.

“There was only one problem: If I wanted to get four dozen donuts, that was going to be an upfront cost of $25. That was my first economics lesson. I needed liquidity, man. I needed $25 to make $25, and I didn’t have that kind of money. I was 13.
So I had to convince all the kids to give me cash for their donut a day ahead of time. So right before lunch, when everybody was hungry, I’d walk around with a sheet of paper taking orders for the next day. The deal was you had to pay me then, and the next morning you’d have a fresh donut waiting for you when you got to school. Who’s gonna turn that down?
Remember, though — this is Compton in the early 2000s. I’m walking around asking people to give me money. I’m asking people to trust me. I learned that I could get people from all walks of life — gang members, nerds, jocks, teachers, lunch ladies — to trust me with their dollar. It was a really valuable lesson that I’ve carried with me my whole life: If you’re a man of your word and people can count on you, it cuts across all lines.”

Source: The Donut Hustle | The Players’ Tribune

OS X El Capitan License: in Plain English | The Robb Report

Read this attorney’s summary of the new OS X EULA, because you’re definitely not going to read the whole thing yourself.

I decided to upgrade my Mac to El Capitan, but my computer said, on one condition: I must “carefully” read and agree with something. It even provided a tiny cozy display window for viewing it.
And so I did what anyone else would: I cleared my afternoon schedule and got right down to business; reading, carefully, the entire document. It turns out that I was much too pessimistic! I needed only 33 minutes.

Source: OS X El Capitan License: in Plain English | The Robb Report

Havana’s Hotspots | The Verge

TL;DR: Cuba has more Internet infrastructure than you may think, and the rest is getting built by Chinese companies… probably to aid censorship.

If Chinese companies continue to be Cuba’s internet provider of choice, it’s easy to imagine a criollo rendition of Beijing’s “Great Firewall,” with all the censorship, limited access, and surveillance that implies.
“Cuba wants to go from a model that basically doesn’t need censorship on the internet because there practically is no internet” to using the web as an instrument of control, Henken, the sociologist at Baruch College in New York, told me. “We tend to erroneously think of the internet in the West as having automatic tendencies in terms of freedom … [but] instead of having the internet change China, China changed the internet.”

Source: Havana’s Hotspots | The Verge

Don’t Feed the Beast – the Great Tech Recruiter Infestation | mockyblog

I’ve been fortunate to have mostly-positive interactions with recruiters, but I can totally understand how they could cross lines and get super-annoying… especially if one is hard up for work.

To my fellow IT workers – don’t fall for the idea that recruiters are a necessary evil.  Block their emails.  Block their calls.  Stay in touch with old colleagues.  Learn to network.  Join groups, boards and mailing lists for your field and remember to post on them when trying to hire.  Every time you fill a job through your social network a recruiter goes hungry.  Remember, the more money you suck out of the recruitment ecosystem the fewer Shitheads it can support.


Source: Don’t Feed the Beast – the Great Tech Recruiter Infestation | mockyblog

Page Weight Matters – Chris Zacharias

TL;DR: “Many of us are fortunate to live in high bandwidth regions, but there are still large portions of the world that do not. By keeping your client side code small and lightweight, you can literally open your product up to new markets.”

I was just about to give up on the project, with my world view completely shattered, when my colleague discovered the answer: geography.
When we plotted the data geographically and compared it to our total numbers broken out by region, there was a disproportionate increase in traffic from places like Southeast Asia, South America, Africa, and even remote regions of Siberia. Further investigation revealed that, in these places, the average page load time under Feather was over TWO MINUTES! This meant that a regular video page, at over a megabyte, was taking more than TWENTY MINUTES to load!

Source: Page Weight Matters

Federal Whistleblower Investigator Fired After Blowing the Whistle on His Own Agency | NBC Bay Area

This is some seriously Orwell/Kafka shit right here… guy who works at whistleblower agency fired for blowing whistle on agency.

“I was going to report what I thought to be violations of law and policy,” Whitman said. “They were going to have to answer to those reports and they didn’t like that.”
In an interview with NBC Bay Area earlier this year, Whitman said he tried to warn OSHA leaders that his managers pressured investigators to close complaints without proper review to clear a backlog of cases. He also said his supervisor altered his reports by changing his conclusions and dismissed cases even when Whitman found they had merit.

Source: Federal Whistleblower Investigator Fired After Blowing the Whistle on His Own Agency | NBC Bay Area

Auto-Generating Clickbait With Recurrent Neural Networks | Lars Eidnes’ blog

TL;DR: the author set up neural networks to auto-generate clickbait headlines. View the output at http://clickotron.com/ or click through to read about the system.

In total, this gives us an infinite source of useless journalism, available at no cost. If I remember correctly from economics class, this should drive the market value of useless journalism down to zero, forcing other producers of useless journalism to produce something else.

Source: Auto-Generating Clickbait With Recurrent Neural Networks | Lars Eidnes’ blog

America’s Child-Marriage Problem – The New York Times

Wow… I had no idea this was still happening here in the US! I support the author’s suggestion to eliminate these “exceptions” that enable underage marriage.

Of course, one person’s “parental consent” can be another’s “parental coercion,” but state laws typically do not call for anyone to investigate whether a child is marrying willingly. Even in the case of a girl’s sobbing openly while her parents sign the application and force her into marriage, the clerk usually has no authority to intervene. In fact, in most states there are no laws that specifically forbid forced marriage.

Source: America’s Child-Marriage Problem – The New York Times