1. Twitter account suspended

    Aw man. I got hacked (or something) and an obviously spam message got posted in my twitter feed. Of course, I’ve had my account suspended, pending investigation. I should be back up within a month, according to twitter. I don’t know whether the error is twitter’s or mine, but needless to say every place where I used the same password as for twitter has been changed, just in case. All in all, not as painful as it might have been, I guess!

  2. How to securely connect to BT OpenZone using VPN without installing the Cisco VPN software, on a Mac

    Well, I figured it out, so I thought I'd post it. More after the fold.

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  3. How to remove "+1" icons from Google search results

    Having apparently abandoned former principles of simplicity and unintrusiveness, Google now punishes account holders by sticking coloured icons next to every Google search result and, worse, animating them on a mouse-over of the result. Obnoxious! There currently seems to be no setting to remove these that I could find, but I figured a way to use AdBlock to hide them away.

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  4. Facebook atheists steal my poster :(

    This

    Logo for Facebook Atheists page]

    …looks a little familiar

    The same image

    Everything on this site is copyrighted, so permission or even attribution would have been nice. While the source images for my design are all pubic domain, what I did is clearly parody and thus is protected. Don’t suppose there’s much I can do about this since it’s no specific person doing this.

    I guess now I have to go through and watermark every image on here? Thanks a lot, internet.

    Thanks to Will Wybrow for pointing this out.

  5. Academic site

    I now have a home page over at the University of Bath, where I’m doing my PhD. It’s just for academic things and lists of publications. Find it here: cs.bath.ac.uk/~cajw20.

  6. Goods and services

    Read this old, unsurprising report in New Scientist. From the article:

    Automated trading …has come to account for more than half of trades in many markets around the globe. …Because of the finite speed of light, trading speed depends on where you are sitting. …“The basic insight,” says Wissner-Gross, “is that the optimal location lets the trader exploit fluctuations equally on both exchanges.” …“This shows that the technological arms race to extract every penny from high-frequency mechanical arbitrage will soon reach its ultimate limits,” says physicist and hedge-fund manager Jean-Philippe Bouchaud

    If this is how money and the free markets work now, I’m pretty sure we no longer know what words mean.