Saturday, March 27, 2010

Daylight saving time

Now that spring finally is here you can enjoy the outdoors again. Due to daylight saving time you have one more hour left for walks, grillparty, fishing and such things on working days

This weekend we here in Germany change to daylight saving time. Many people complain about it because they in fact have to get up one hour earlier. Some people get confused because they dont know what to do with their clocks and watches. And some just love it like I do.

Daylight saving time means that dusk comes one hour later and naturally that there is one more hour of daylight left after work. If you love the outdoors that is quite a fine thing: One mor hour for going on a walk, gardening, fishing and all the nice things we love to do during summertime. For many people things like hunting or fishing trips, boating or going for a swim are made possible even on working day evenings. I consider daylight saving time  to be a nice plus to life quality, isn'nt it?

Daylight saving time just means hat you get up an hour earlier and so get one more hour of daylight. Specially when you are working this is a fine thing because one more hour to the three or four hours daylight after work is really a plus. 

I love the daylight savin time!

Saturday, March 13, 2010

Cold Weather, Phariseans and Dead Aunts

Actually it has been cold for over a week again instead of spring coming. If you have been out for a while under this circumstances and come in again you might like a hot drink, maybe with some kind of fire in it. That was what I met yesterday and so I made up my mind to make what people in the north of Germany call a "Tote Tante" and what I got to know when I was sailing the Baltic Sea in winter. The word means "dead aunt" and it seems nobody really knows where it comes from. However, it is'nt disputed what a Tote Tante is: It´s much like a Pharisäer (pharisean), another hot alcoholic drink from Northern Germany which means a cup of coffee with an ample shot of rum, topped with a nice dollop of whipped cream.

If you want to mix a Tote Tante instead of a Pharisäer, you just have to replace the coffee by hot chocolate. If you want you can decorate the whipped cream with some  chocolate sprinkles. So basically a Tote Tante is nothing else than a hot Lumumba too.

I can tell you it tastes really great, especially when coming in from the cold. But be careful: Like sweet alcoholic drinks generally do, Tote Tante tends to make you drink much and fast and than finally knock you to your knees! And dont drink it or any other alcohol if you still have to stay in the cold! The warmth of alcohol is deceiving. It just makes you not notice that you chill out much more than you do without alcohol.    

Wednesday, March 3, 2010

Internet Censorship in Germany

Last tuesday the new german internet censorship came into force because it than was undersigned by our bundespraesident, which is the last step in the procedure to make a new law effective. The new CDU-FDP-government swears that it was not intended to make use of it and that it was only a kind of bad legacy of the old CDU-SPD-government. However the law does exist although the general public did not really notice.   

Last summer the net community in Germany was quite upset about a new law practically enabling internet censorship via DNS entries. It was planned to engage access providers to refuse connections to certain domains which are on a secret list and showing a stop sign instead of the content of these domains. Alledgedly this was aimed against child pornography, a very threadbare justification for people who know something about the net and the existing of independent sites where you can get unfiltered and uncenmsorerd information. However, a very good justification for the rank and file because most people in Germany, even if on line, dont know much about independent media and as with newspapers, radio and tv they only consume stuff from mainstream media when on the net. They believed the government's statement that the domain blocking system was the only way to keep child porn out of the german net because it frequently would not be possible to shut down the servers for they are situated in foreign countries where authorithies dont care much about what people put on the net.    

This was a very clever move: Obviously it was intended to have people being against internet censorship appear as paedophiliacs and discredit them. The worst of all: Doing so German government in fact did not shrink back from connecting a clean and honest demand like the one for freedom of information to such a dirty and criminal thing as child porn is. 

However, quite a lot of people protested and tried to show and explain the facts: With a system to block every designated domain the state would be able to easily keep people away not only from child pornography but from anything they should not know too. It was only a minority who yelled a lot and depicted the dangers of such a law and especially the fact that the list  of bad domains should be conducted by the BKA (Bundeskriminalamt, something like the FBI in the US) and so would be out of any democratic control.

To people who know a bit about computer and networks the design of the German domain blocking system itself reveals its true intentions: It can be very easily be worked around by just directing the internet connetion to a DNS server which does not filter domains what can be done on every windows, mac or linux sytem by just a few mouseclicks and hacking in a couple of numbers. So it neither can stop people who really want to visit child porn sites nor can it keep really informed and politically interested people away from the sites they want to see. What it can do is to keep the lazy and uninformed general public away from sites with independend information and opinions they heard or red about and just want to have a look at without being too eager to get there.  In a nutshell: the German domain blocking system only works very well as a tool to avoid undesired sources of information becoming common.         

The protest of bloggers and other people understanding the meaning of free information finally lead to a petition. Beacuse more than 100,000 people signed it, the German Bundestag (our ferderal parliament)  had to deal with it in a hearing. However, politicians did not really respond to the objections of the criticians and the law unobstructedly passed the parliament. Firstly Bundespraesident Koehler refused to undersign the new law and demandes more information about the case, which gave some hope to the net community.

Last fall there than was an election and government changed. The new CDU-FDP-government seemed to be not so happy with the censorship law but did not really do anything against it. Now it came into power quite secretly and almost nobody seemed to take notice. Still there is some talk in Berlin about how to get rid of the censorship but I doubt that this is to be taken serious. I guess politicíans just bank on the forgetfulness of the general public and will start to use the censorship law sequretly when nobody will think of it at all.