Archive for November 30th, 2007


CIA anti-Venezeula “pincers” memo bogus?

This from Larry Johnson, ex-CIA, terrorism expert, and political progressive (check his blogroll)

As the official bubble burster let me state for the record, this is patent nonsense. State Department officers do not write memos to Hayden. Particularly mid-level Foreign Service Officers. A CIA officer under diplomatic cover sends his communications to headquarters via an encoded message. We call these messages cables, harkening back to the days of telegraphs and telegrams.

This, in my judgment, is the work–very clumsy work at that–of the Venezuelan intelligence service eager to build on the truth that the United States has sought to oust Chavez. All of this is quite convenient with Venezuelan elections on the horizon. It may be hamhanded, but for internal Venezuelan consumption, this is brilliant psyops and should help Chavez further demonize the equally clumsy Americans.

Indeed, why would CIA leave a document like that lying around and not send it encrypted? Or even write it down at all? Sounds like a battle between dumb and dumber here.

Tip: Russell King.

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The US could learn from Uganda

The Uganda counter-insurgency effort in Mogadishu has been effective despite their ancient low-tech equipment. Why? They have the locals on their side.

Work those social networks. Add “credible” firepower to that, and it doesn’t matter if your tanks were built in 1960 and you’ve never so much as seen a drone.

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Jahongir Sidikov’s deportation postponed

So now there’s still some time to fight it, even as the British government makes clear their policy of deporting dissidents to Uzbekistan if they don’t qualify for asylum - knowing full well they will be tortured upon their return.

The process was fast-tracked, which means evidence was ignored and defense had but a week to prepare. Was that a kangaroo I saw jumping by?

The judge’s behaviour was a disgrace, and let me be plain I do have contempt of her court, deep contempt. But she was merely indicative of the general mindset of the “Fast-track”, a disgraceful device by which the government seeks to curry favour with the tabloids by increasing deportation numbers.

Boosting New Labour with focus groups infinitely outweighs the torture to death of the odd dissident.

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Headzup interview

Headzup logo

Headzup creates short (25 seconds or so) zany political humor video cartoons designed to be shared via cell phone, iPod, or even (how old school is this) viewed online.

This interview with John Shay, Headzup co-founder, was done by phone and email.

I met John at Gnomedex 2005 as Headzup was just getting started. He wasn’t sure if it would have legs or not. Now it’s getting mentioned in CNN, NPR, the Wall Street Journal, is linked to from zillions of blogs, and growing fast with multiple distribution networks. Most excellent!

Q. What is headzup?

A. Headzup is the world’s first daily political cartoon for video-enabled cell phones. Seven days a week, Headzup publishes short (25 second) video clips that fans can watch over the Internet or on mobile devices. Using their cell phones, fans can share the tiny video clips with others the same as they would a picture message. Headzup represents a uniquely viral form of free speech with clips traversing the globe several times within minutes of publication.

Q. What’s your inspiration?

A. Headzup was created on the notion that an inspired combination of political satire and mobile peer-to-peer file sharing would result in the creation of a new form of free speech and entertainment. Headzup is pioneering a new form of mobile entertainment that we call “Catch & Release Comedy”. Fans interact with the content using multimedia cell phones to first catch the comedy and then release it back into the wild by forwarding it to others. There’s no limit to the number of people sharing a Headzup.

Q. How do you make the clips?

A. Headzup is produced and directed by comedian and cartoonist Matthew Filipowicz. The majority of the the animation is done using Adobe Flash software. The clips are rendered to uncompressed AVI video format and than transcoded to 3GP format for mobile distribution.

Q. Explain to non-techies how the cell phone distribution works

A. The two key elements to producing Catch & Release Comedy clips are 1) create clips that are small enough to be shared across cellular networks as picture messages, and 2) encode the clips for mobile playback.

Although the size of video clip that can be shared between cell phones can vary from network to network, the lowest common denominator for all cellular networks is 100K. With fairly intense digital compression, a 100K mobile video clips equates to approximately 25 seconds of video. Generally speaking, videos longer than 25 seconds (larger than 100K) have difficultly passing across network boundaries.

Encoding for mobile playback is fairly straight forward and is supported by most video encoding software tools. Interested readers can download multiple versions of each Headzup clip from our website to see how mobile image quality varies from Internet encoded videos. Formats available for download include Windows Media, Mpeg4, iPod ready 3GP, and mobile ready 3GP. For the bleeding edge readers, mobile versions can be download directly to a cell phone by pointing their cell phone browser at www.headzup.tv

Q. What kinds of distribution deals do you have. Do you make different clips for different partners?

Headzup is distributed through a variety of partner relationships and, of course, we’re always looking for new avenues for collaboration.

With over 200 cartoons in circulation we’re starting to see fairly rapid growth on our YouTube director channel. Six months ago Headzup was lost in the persistent baseline video noise that is much of YouTube. Today we enjoy a rapidly growing fan base of politically savvy viewers who understand and enjoy political satire. Our breakout moment on YouTube came during the Democratic CNN-YouTube Debate this fall when the Headzup contribution to the debate was featured in a CNN promotional piece prior to the debate. Although our clip was too controversial to be selected for airing during the debate, someone at CNN thought the animation was slick enough to use it for promoting the event. The same clip also made it onto some mainstream media sites in Europe, including Der Spiegel in Germany and The Times Online in London.

In terms of political impact, perhaps our most exciting partnership is the one we have with GoLeft.tv. As your readers are probably aware, GoLeft.tv is the new progressive television site launched by Mike Papantanio and Bobby Kennedy Jr. from Air America Radio Network. The success of that partnership can readily be seen in the thousands of Internet users who have watched Headzup while browsing the GoLeft.tv site.

Headzup is also distributed by iTunes, Brave New Films, Revver, Blinkx, ShortBrain.tv, and Treemo. Each of these partnerships are designed to target a unique market segment which helps broaden our overall exposure.

In terms of content preparation, we’re still in the process of tuning our production line to funnel clips to each of these channel partners quickly and efficiently. Although we’ve pretty much figured out all of the format issues, we’re still working out pipeline automation that will encode and push clips to each partner quickly and efficiently.- what’s coming next?

Now that our fans are helping grow awareness by word-of-mouth and sharing clips between their cell phones, we starting to have time to think about what to do next. We’ve bounced around a lot of ideas on how to broaden our offerings but we keep coming back to political satire. It’s what we love and with the elections coming we’ve got plenty of political high jinks from which to draw inspiration.

Q. Is the universe inherently absurd?

A. Absolutely! Seven years of George Bush tells us so.

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