Terms of Service

I can’t even guess how many times I’ve either explicitly agreed to the terms of an End User License Agreement (EULA) or offered tacit approval of a website’s Terms of Service (TOS) by using the site.  It has to be in the thousands.  But I can count the number of times I’ve read a TOS start to finish – one.

Last weekend I was wondering if my web host (Dreamhost) allows users to install WordPressMU. The answer is yes, so long as you have a Virtual Private Server account.  But what really surprised me was the only other bit of software singled out in the Dreamhost TOS – All In One SEO Pack.

Customer agrees to not engage in activities pertaining to Black Hat SEO, Spamdexing, and so-called “Scraper sites.” These can all have a severely detrimental effect on server performance and are not permitted. Pursuant to this policy, the poorly-written WordPress plugin “All in One SEO Pack” is expressly prohibited on DreamHost shared hosting servers and may only be installed on DreamHost Private Servers (VPS).

I have no idea if AIO-SEO-P is in fact poorly written, and it doesn’t really matter to me – it’s Dreamhost’s sandbox and they make the rules.  I found it a bit unfortunate because that plug-in seemed to be doing the job of several other plug-ins, and was quite easy to install and configure.  Regardless, I uninstalled it from the 9 WordPress installations I have.

I read the Yoast.com article on WordPress SEO and I’ve since installed a few other plug-ins to make up for it.   I lost a little bit of time, but it was worth is because of what I learned along away. And now I’m practically 100% in compliance with the Terms of Service.

But the real lesson here is about these agreements we’re making all the time.  They’re typically written in a way that makes them almost impossible to read (not true of the Dreamhost TOS), and we’ve been conditioned to blast past them.  A while back everyone was up in arms about the Facebook TOS, but how many people actually read the whole thing?

Maybe I’ll start reading them.

Technology Overload

I found this in an old notebook.  I’m not sure why I wrote it. It’s a like a blog entry from before I had a blog.

About a month ago I retired the SideKick II and replaced it with the Tmobile Wing.  After almost 2 years I knew the SKII inside-out.  I knew all the short cuts and even the easter eggs.  Granted, it offered  limited functionality compared to today’s smartphones, but it was a great messaging device.   I’m still not aware of a better device for email and instant messaging on the go.   The keypad alone out the SKII in a class of its own.  Even the SK-III doesn’t have as good a keypad.  The IM application was stable, reliable, and in theory it allowed you to join chat rooms.

But perhaps the best thing about the SideKick was its method of storing data online.  The SKII is truly an internet device.  It’s unhappy when it can’t find the network, but all your information is still accessible.  Anything you type in the SK (except SMS messages) automatically syncs with the Tmobile website.  There’s no need for cables to connect with your PC (it doesn’t even come with any).  All your emails, contacts, appointments, notes, and the pictures you take with the lame-ass camera are instantly available on the Tmobile website (Desktop Interface).  Off-network everything is available because it’s stored in the SKs tiny, non-expandable memory.

Eventually I decided the SKs limitations were holding me back.  I needed to be able to do more from my phone.  I need more applications, more memory, a faster processor, a better camera, a faster internet connection.  Enter the Wing.  the Wing is T-Mo’s rebranding of an HTC phone that other carriers have been offering for a while.  They made a few changes, including a  rubberized blue finish, “improved” keypad layout, a new stylus that doesn’t telescope.

Improvements over the SideKick?  Well, it has more apps, more memory, a faster processor, and a better camera.  In theory it’s a step up.  In practice – well, I’m writing this with a pen…

Ultimately I decided the Wing wasn’t going to cut it.  The Windows Mobile OS is garbage, the phone couldn’t maintain a network connection for more than a couple of hours, and the instant messaging was a joke.  It’s been replaced with a Blackberry.

Dr. Sylvia Earle

I’m going to recommend a book I haven’t even read yet.

The World Is Blue: How Our Fate and the Ocean’s Are One

I came across this on Science Friday last week.

I’m not sure I’ve ever been so affect by a book I haven’t read.  To be clear, I do plan on reading it.  I’ve already downloaded the sample chapter to my Kindle.   I’m not going to get into what she says because she says it better than I could, and I think it’s worth taking a few minutes to listen to her.

You can listen to the Sci Fri interview in your browser or watch her cover some of the same material talking to Steven Colbert below.

The Colbert Report Mon – Thurs 11:30pm / 10:30c
Sylvia Earle
www.colbertnation.com
Colbert Report Full Episodes Political Humor U.S. Speedskating

She also gave a TED talk: