I specialize in CakePHP and Django web development, but I'm always interested in branching out. I have a B.S. in Computer Science from the University of Arkansas at Little Rock. I like having a challenging side-project going at all times, currently http://redreader.co.
The problem with pains and solving them is that if you know how to solve them, then you do so and they're no longer pains. This happens quite often and we likely forget that they were pains to begin with and thus don't value the solution as a potentially commercial product. If you don't know how to solve them, then you have no product either.
I guess the real advice would be to pay attention to the pains you have solved.
I feel like the more we talk about it, the more everyone becomes desensitized to the U.S. surveillance problem. Then we get the public at large just rolling their eyes and saying "Oh, another paranoid lunatic wants to take over the government".
I want to do more than just like stuff on facebook... hopefully this will present something more tangible. I signed up for the "Add a banner to your site" list. I can tell ~15k visitors about this over the next month at least.
As long as people are willing to pretend that the problem is only the US and not the entire West colluding then the easier it is for these governments to continue.
Case in point, the Canadian government is currently building "the most expensive government building ever constructed in Canada" for CSEC (our version of the NSA) and vastly expanding their headcount:
I feel like the cost is always overblown about this building if you consider the fact that they are currently housed in a building originally designed for the CBC in the '60s and not for actual security work. Given the expansion of their operations and personnel, it only makes sense to create a new building (not coincidentally beside CSIS). And generally speaking, it's going to cost what it's going to cost. Yes it's a government building. Yes they've spent money on particular luxury items (identified as being used to increase social interaction). But if you want people working more effectively and efficiently, you're going to spend money to increase morale (just look at all the lavish spending at startups or ones that are even IPOing, they're all expenses that, at the end of the day, may not be good in the eyes of the shareholders. But they help employee morale).
> As long as people are willing to pretend that the problem is only the US and not the entire West colluding then the easier it is for these governments to continue.
This may be true to some extent. But let me provide an anti-thesis to the statement.
For nearly a century (or more) everyone has looked at the US to lead in reforms and at times reversing reforms. What happens in the US is often used as a model by world governments as a blueprint.
If the US citizens, corporations and the tech community in general could get the US to positively change the distopian outlook/direction we (the world) seems to be heading in, this change would trickle down to the other countries beginning with the Western countries that you aptly state are colluding together.
> For nearly a century (or more) everyone has looked at the US to lead in reforms and at times reversing reforms. What happens in the US is often used as a model by world governments as a blueprint.
In what respects? I can think of far more cases over the last century of the US lagging behind in reforms than taking the lead. In European politics, the US is more often channelled as the big regressive bogeyman (e.g. "we don't want US conditions, do we?") than somewhere to look to for reforms.
To the extent governments looks to the US, it is more often out of necessity due to the balance of power.
It's be fantastic if that changed and the US became a beacon of progress, but that will still take a lot.
In terms of surveillance, though, just getting the US pressure lifted would make local progress vastly easier.
You're defining the "last century" pretty narrowly. There have been a number of times when Europe has looked to the U.S. The U.S. rendered aid and assistance during its post-WWII reconstruction. It served as the sword and shield of NATO against the Soviet Union. U.S. economic liberalization and deregulation in the 1970's and 1980's was a model that Europe followed in the 1980's and 1990's.
I for one would like to include the other players,Corporate & private industry, with their collusion/lobbying/takeover of lawmaking added to the discussion. Don't forget, when the [Pick-An-Acronym &/or Pick-A-Branch] wasn't doing their own spying, [MaBell, AT&T, Axciom, MS, Dunn&B, Google, etc] were selling the data to them.
More relevant today than when it aired almost a decade ago...
Previous backup method:
1. Back up working dir (~1.5 GB) daily with rsync to Raspberry Pi.
2. Back up encrypted archives of photos/videos monthly to mega.co.nz and external drive, and back up new photos/videos during month with #1 above.
New back up method:
1. Back up everything with Deja Dup to $25/year, 50GB VPS daily - I don't have a lot of data.
2. Back up everything with Deja Dup to external drive monthly (maybe going to weekly).
Edit:
All photos are resized monthly with a script to create a ~100KB copy that lives on my laptop and phone. I can see all photos I've ever taken on my phone, but still have the full-res copy backed up.
Remote: Yes
Willing to relocate: No
Technologies: Django, PostgreSQL, PHP, MySQL, Nginx, Linux, and anything I need/want to learn
Résumé/CV: http://treddell.com, http://treddell.com/travisreddell-resume.pdf
Email: travis@treddell.com
I specialize in CakePHP and Django web development, but I'm always interested in branching out. I have a B.S. in Computer Science from the University of Arkansas at Little Rock. I like having a challenging side-project going at all times, currently http://redreader.co.