danohu: (Default)
danohu ([personal profile] danohu) wrote2010-12-13 04:23 am

loose ends

Alexander Shulgin has had a stroke. Shulgin introduced ecstacy to the world, discovered hundreds of psychedelic and other drugs. i.e. he massively improved the world, but in a way that he couldn't easily monetize without winding up in jail. He's poor, ill and in the US -- thus having trouble paying his medical bill. Donations accepted here, Erowid also has a collection for archiving his papers.

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Fantastic tombstone (warning: may contain communism)

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Vodafone choose the wrong moment to play with twitter. Makes me wonder: what is the sensible thing for an unpopular company to do with an online public? Just hide?

At some level many companies have to make a choice: try to be popular, or just hunker down and rake in the cash. If the rich-but-repulsive strategy now has the added cost of being laughed off the internet, that's probably a good thing. I guess.

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Old, but I missed it first time round: the EU told the Netherlands it had too much public housing, and had to get rid of it.

[identity profile] emarkienna.livejournal.com 2010-12-13 10:50 pm (UTC)(link)
what is the sensible thing for an unpopular company to do with an online public? Just hide?

As much as I agree with protesting against them, are they really unpopular? I imagine hiding their online profile will be far more damaging to their sales. I think they're better off simply not making stupid security mistakes like allowing direct posting to their page via Twitter ;)