Monthly Archives: May 2020

Zoom Acquires Keybase

Source: Hacker News

Article note: Huh, I've stayed away because they still seemed a little too flighty, but Keybase was working on actual problems of distrubuted security/identity, and building neat things like kbfs that looked like plausible solutions to real problems. Hopefully Zoom doesn't completely ruin them in their rush to use keybase to security-wash their own product.
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Ask HN: How to self-host comments on your otherwise static blog?

Source: Hacker News

Article note: I'm still dealing with WordPress largely because I wanted to keep comments and most other systems are too shit for that. Holy shit does this situation make me wish for the now-dead dream of the actually-distributed Web, with something like the Microformats XFN stuff so everyone can converse from their own system and still tie it together, instead of even the technical folk saying "Just give it to the big ~~land~~ platform owners."
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i think the worst moment of teaching while under quarantine was when one of my students apologized to me for submitting his weekly essays late and then went on to explain how he and his younger siblings share a single laptop and he only uses it after they’ve fallen asleep https://twitter.com/k8bushofficial/status/1257724084487479296 …

Source: Twitter / swiftonsecurity

Article note: I was working with University students in CS/EE/CpE programs and had some of the same story. Also Students with day jobs in essential industries. Students with kids of their own. Students out in the hills with unreliable internet access or power. Students in different time zones. Students with computers sent off for repair. Students working primarily off tablets. Etc. For the courses I was working on, we tried our best to have wide availability (both in time and medium; forum-type tools for async plus many hours scattered through the week where someone was on Teams or Zoom for video) to seek help, at least a week of lead time on all assignments, and wide submission windows for the few assignments that we did need to put time limits on to be fair assessments eg. our final was 90m to do a dozen questions, each automatically randomized from a bank of similar questions, starting when you open it, any time between 2:00-10:30p the day of the exam. I was actually impressed with how little obvious cheating, bullshit, and advantage-taking there was. And yet, when talking to students in help times, piles of stories about other instructors being unreasonable. Attendance-required synchronous lectures, narrow deadlines, motherfuckers trying to call roll aloud in a Zoom room, and other bullshit. Right now, the one and only grading criteria standing is "can you certify that they've learned enough to continue in their program of study without being a menace to themselves or others?" - Yes? Done. Pass.

i think the worst moment of teaching while under quarantine was when one of my students apologized to me for submitting his weekly essays late and then went on to explain how he and his younger siblings share a single laptop and he only uses it after they've fallen asleep https://twitter.com/k8bushofficial/status/1257724084487479296 …

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Cengage and McGraw-Hill cancel merger plans

Source: Inside Higher Ed (news)

Article note: Good. Ed-tech carpetbaggers can get fucked.

Cengage and McGraw-Hill Education’s goal of creating one giant educational publisher has been abandoned, the publishers announced yesterday.

The planned "merger of equals," announced in May 2019, was supposed to be completed by March this year. But the process did not go as planned.

The U.S. Department of Justice took almost a year to review the merger and asked the publishers to sell off so many assets that the financial return on the deal diminished, said Michael Hansen, Cengage CEO, in a call to investors yesterday.

“We are disappointed by this outcome. A lot of people across both of our organizations dedicated a lot of time in the past year to try and make this happen,” Hansen said in the investor call.

The DOJ was rumored to have asked the publisher to divest assets worth around $175 million -- right at the upper limit of what the companies said they were prepared to do in their merger agreement, reported Inside Higher Ed in February.

The merger faced regulatory challenges outside of the U.S., too.

In Britain, an initial investigation into the planned merger by the Competition and Markets Authority concluded in March that the deal raised competition concerns and could “lead to students paying more for essential textbooks and educational materials.”

A second, more detailed investigation by the authority was postponed at the request of the publishers in late March. The publishers were considering their next steps, they said. The Competition and Markets Authority agreed to postpone its investigation in early April, stating “that the arrangements in question might be abandoned.”

Competition agencies in Australia and New Zealand also raised concern about the merger. All four countries' agencies are said to have worked closely together to scrutinize the deal.

“Because the required divestitures would have made the merger uneconomical, McGraw-Hill and Cengage have decided to terminate the merger agreement,” said Simon Allen, CEO of McGraw-Hill, in a statement. “This will allow each of us to focus on our respective stand-alone strategies for the benefit of our owners, employees, customers and other stakeholders.”

Neither party will pay a breakup fee as a result of the merger termination. Hansen, who had been pegged to lead the merged publisher -- which was planned to be called McGraw Hill -- will remain at Cengage. Allen, who was interim CEO at McGraw-Hill Education, was promoted to CEO yesterday.

Several consumer advocacy groups celebrated news of the deal’s demise yesterday. Many had voiced concerns that the merger would result in higher prices and less choice for students -- a claim the publishers always denied.

“Defeating this merger is a win for students, faculty and preserving competition in the textbook marketplace,” said Nicole Allen, director of open education for SPARC, in a statement. “In an industry already rife with anticompetitive practices, preventing this merger averts dire harms that could have caused textbook prices to rise, innovation to dwindle, and student data to be exploited.”

Cengage and McGraw-Hill said their merger would allow them to offer students more affordable textbooks and course materials. A heavily promoted website touting the benefits of the merger has already been taken down from public view by the publishers.

“We’re glad to see that the U.S. Department of Justice and regulators in other English-speaking countries raised serious questions about the wisdom of allowing this merger to move forward, and that student advocacy, media pressure, and legal action pushed the publishers to abandon their plan to consolidate the college textbook market further,” said Kaitlyn Vitez, director of U.S. PIRG’s higher education campaign.

Both publishers laid off hundreds of staff in anticipation of the merger, raising questions about how the operations of the companies will be affected now that the merger is not going through. In yesterday's investors' call, Hansen acknowledged that Cengage will be limited in how much it can invest in new products and innovation. He painted an optimistic picture about the publisher’s ability to weather the COVID-19 financial crisis, however, noting that many more faculty members may see the advantage of switching to digital courseware.

“Between the beginning of March and the end of March, 18 million students had to move online. The vast majority had faculty who were not prepared at institutions that were not prepared,” Hansen said. “This was actually a pretty miserable experience. You're sitting at home and if you were lucky you got a bunch of Powerpoint slides and maybe a video lecture and that was it. That's a far cry from what digital platforms like MindTap and WebAssign can do.”

The limited availability of used print books is likely to cause a bump in digital textbook sales, provided that students can still afford them, said Alastair Adam, CEO of low-cost textbook publisher FlatWorld. But he questioned whether Cengage and McGraw will gain much market share with a diminished sales force.  

"We're finding that a lot of faculty in this current environment are really open to trying something new," said Adam. "Our field reps are now sitting at home working as inside reps and, fingers crossed will continue to get a lot of traction."  

Publishers, like the higher education institutions they serve, are preparing for significantly lower student numbers in the fall. Cengage has already furloughed staff, trimmed spending and deferred payments to save $200 million and offset potential sales losses.

“The layoffs at both McGraw-Hill and Cengage over the past few months might have improved finances, but there has to be an impact on capacity to further develop platforms and learning analytics capabilities as both companies seek to more fully migrate to digital content,” said Phil Hill, partner at Mindwires Consulting, on his blog Phil on Ed Tech.

Digital courseware may gain popularity in the fall, but if there aren’t students who can pay for those platforms, many publishers may find themselves even further in the red. Consumer advocates, too, are pushing for faculty members to consider free open educational resources.

“Rather than invest time and resources into a partnership with a publisher, colleges should invest in professional development and support for faculty and staff to learn how to use, and then share, open educational resources via permanently free homework platforms instead,” said Vitez, of U.S. PIRG.

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Systemd, ten years later: a historical and technical retrospective

Source: Hacker News

Article note: This is a really good piece, it's thorough, very historically grounded, and makes cautious proposals about how things might improve with new infrastructure and ideas. It takes the same "Systemd does some things well, but it is neither UNIX-y, nor a perfect solution that should be considered permanent" stance I've been on for a decade (and people don't seem as mad about this as when I said it in 2012). The hideously stateful dependency-hell situation (3.5) is a big "Systemd is probably not the right abstraction" tell. As far as the closing, I'm still hopeful that if someone actually solved the problem in a consistent way it might gain traction on technical merit instead of simply as a matter of political circumstance and incremental advantages like systemd did, but I also wouldn't bet on it.
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Kim Stanley Robinson: The Coronavirus Is Rewriting Our Imaginations

Source: Hacker News

Article note: He's been on this soapbox for almost 40 years, being exceptionally well-informed and emitting it as well-written prose. ...with the possible exception of the "Oops, I made people think in terms of backup plan to keeping earth habitable, better discourage that" change some years ago, which then didn't follow through well because the whole point of Aurora was no backup, and the whole plot of Aurora is being able to go back.) Not much new here, but it's a good read.
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ICANN blocks controversial sale of .org domain to a private equity firm

Source: Ars Technica

Article note: Yeah! Some good news.
ICANN blocks controversial sale of .org domain to a private equity firm

Enlarge (credit: dalton00 / Getty)

The Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers, the non-profit organization that oversees the Internet's domain name system, has rejected a controversial proposal to sell the .org domain to a private equity group for more than $1 billion. It's a serious—quite possibly fatal—blow to a proposal that had few supporters besides the organizations that proposed it.

Currently, the .org domain registry is run by the Public Interest Registry, a non-profit subsidiary of another non-profit called the Internet Society. PIR was created in 2002 to run the .org domain and has been doing so ever since. But last fall, the Internet Society stunned the non-profit world by announcing it would sell the PIR—and, effectively, ownership of the .org domain—to a new and secretive private equity firm called Ethos Capital for more than $1 billion.

The announcement created a swift and powerful backlash. In its resolution formally rejecting the transaction, ICANN says it received its first letter opposing the deal just two days after it was announced. The group would eventually receive letters from at least 30 groups opposing the deal, as well as numerous negative comments during public hearings. Meanwhile, ICANN says, the deal has received "virtually no counterbalancing support except from the parties involved in the transaction and their advisors."

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