EBay bans the sale of metaphysical items

There has always been a long list of items that aren’t allowed to be sold on the auction website eBay. These items span everything from hazardous materials to medical devices requiring a prescription. EBay has announced that it is adding more items to the list of products that can’t be sold on the auction site. The products include anything classed as metaphysical.

Metaphysical covers many items and basically includes anything such as advice, spells, curses, magic, blessing services, healing sessions, work from home businesses, and a number of informational lists. The items will be banned starting on August 30 of this year. The ban will affect people who sell services and items that have to do with psychics such as tarot cards and other items.

Some people are unhappy about the new rules that seek to ban intangible items and items of an occult nature. Some believe that eBay is banning items based on witchcraft or pagan beliefs. These people point out that eBay is still allowing products such as rosaries, crucifixes, and religious medals to be sold along with items like crystals and magnetic therapy jewelry.

Some users who don’t agree with eBay’s new bans have started a petition called “Don’t ban our psychics on eBay.” So far, the petition has 1009 signatures and seeks to challenge eBay’s perceptions of what makes an item intangible. What do you think about this ban?

[via Wired]


EBay bans the sale of metaphysical items is written by Shane McGlaun & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Peter Thiel sells 20.1M shares of Facebook stock


Peter Thiel was one of the earliest investors and Facebook and owned a huge amount of stock in the company when Facebook made its IPO. Thiel’s venture capital firm Founders Fund sold 20.1 million shares last Thursday and Friday in Facebook. The billionaire was one of Facebook’s early investors and is a board member of the social networking company.

Word of the massive stock sale came from financial documents filed yesterday with the Securities and Exchange Commission. The sell off of 20.1 million shares represented 72% of the shares voted by Thiel. The massive sell off of Facebook stock by Thiel and his Founders Fund has to make other investors worry about the future of their investment.

Facebook stock has continued to decline after selling for $38 per share during its IPO. Yesterday shares fell below $19 during trading, but closed at $20 for an increase of around 5% before the 20.1 million share sale was disclosed by the SEC. Speculation surfaced last week that Thiel would shed stock in the social network after the expiration of the lockup agreement. That agreement prevented 271 million shares held by early investors and employees from being sold.

Thiel still owns shares personally and has voting control over shares owned by Founders Fund. Forbes reports that Thiel personally grabbed about $285 million after taxes by selling off stock in Facebook. Thiel has been an investor in Facebook since 2004, when he offered $500,000 for over 10% of Facebook, still known as Thefacebook at the time.

[via Forbes]


Peter Thiel sells 20.1M shares of Facebook stock is written by Shane McGlaun & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Twitter API update places limits on third-party applications

Twitter has gone official with changes that will land in version 1.1 of its API. Some of the changes will help twitter to reduce the number of spam accounts and bots that use the service, but the changes will also restrict third-party applications. Specifically, the changes to the new version of the API will place a limit on how often third-party twitter clients and other services are able to access information on twitter.

One key feature of the updated API that will affect third-party applications is the migration of twitter’s former Display Guidelines to Display Requirements. The change will enforce some design requirements on how third party applications present tweets. These changes will make it harder for third-party twitter applications to set themselves apart from each other and from the official twitter service.

That seems like a move by twitter to help push some users back to its official application. If all third-party apps look pretty much the same as the official twitter app, some people may opt to use the official app. One thing that carries over from previous versions of the twitter API is the request twitter places on developers to not mimic or reproduce the twitter consumer client experience. Twitter offered up two examples of applications that mimic its own application to closely including Tweetbot and Echofon.

One of the biggest changes is that twitter now requires all third-party applications that are preinstalled on a device to be certified. It’s unclear exactly what the certification process will entail at this point. All we do know is that any developers who have their app preinstalled on a device without having it certified could have their application keep revoked leaving their application useless. Another major change is that any application or service that accesses twitter data now has to authenticate via OAuth. This particular change will be enforced for all applications starting in March 2013.

[via ArsTechnica]


Twitter API update places limits on third-party applications is written by Shane McGlaun & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Yahoo on the hunt for a new COO

Now that Yahoo has its new CEO Marissa Mayer, the company is kicking off the search for a new COO. Yahoo isn’t looking for any old chief operating officer; the company is on the lookout for someone with skills in turning around ailing companies. According to AllThingsD, recruiting firm Spencer Stewart has been reaching out to executives on Yahoo’s behalf.

That same recruiting firm is also working with Yahoo to find a number of other executives that the ailing search company needs. On the COO front, Spencer Stewart is said to be not only reaching out to Silicon Valley executives; it’s also said to be reaching out to executives who aren’t in the technology industry right now. According to reports, the candidates who have been contacted have been told the company is looking for a top executive that has a focus on restructuring and finance, presumably for the COO spot.

It’s unclear if the recruiting firm is specifically saying Yahoo is looking for a new COO or if the assumption is simply that the new top executive would be number two at the company. Yahoo continues to be under scrutiny from investors and Wall Street as Mayer changes things up at the technology firm in an attempt to turn the company around. The hiring of a new COO would presumably allow Mayer to focus on products at Yahoo while the COO focuses more on the business side of the company.

Will The consensus on the future fate of Yahoo is cloudy at best. Mayer and others at Yahoo may be able to turn the ailing search company around, but most expect the turnaround to come at the price of massive layoffs. AllThingsD reports that Mayer has also reached out personally to former colleagues at Google and elsewhere in the search for talent to help turn Yahoo around.

[via AllThingsD]


Yahoo on the hunt for a new COO is written by Shane McGlaun & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Gogo offers free eBay access on Delta and Virgin America flights

Years ago, before in-flight Wi-Fi company Gogo hit the market and took many commercial airlines operating within the United States and internationally online, flights could be really boring. With many commercial aircraft now wired for Wi-Fi during flights, people can now work and play while cruising at 30,000 feet. The downside is many people are now expected to work while on long business flight.

If you’re planning a trip on Delta or Virgin American airlines this summer and happen to be on a Wi-Fi equipped plane, you’ll be able to access online auctions free. As of yesterday, passengers on Delta or Virgin American flights now get free access to eBay during their flight. EBay joins previously available free access websites Zappos.com, StubHub, OpenTable, and Hotel Tonight.

Gogo in-flight Internet access is available on more than 1500 commercial aircraft operating within the US and internationally. All domestic AirTran Airways and Virgin America flights have Gogo access. All domestic mainline Delta flights and select Air Canada, Alaska Airlines, American Airlines, Frontier Airlines, United Airlines, and US Airways flights are Gogo equipped.

I’m not sure people really need access to eBay during flights, but I know from experience that you can kill some time on eBay if you’re bored. It would also be a nice way to keep track of any auctions you may have running during a long flight. I wonder if free access would include any of the streaming video content, that eBay has on eBay Motors and elsewhere.

[via TheNextWeb]


Gogo offers free eBay access on Delta and Virgin America flights is written by Shane McGlaun & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Universal Studios Hollywood Terror Tram gets invaded by The Walking Dead

I am a huge fan of The Walking Dead on AMC. I think this is one of the best shows on TV and Universal Studios Hollywood has just announced an epic new Halloween adventure that will kick off in late September. Universal Studios Hollywood has announced the “Terror Tram Invaded by The Walking Dead.” Passengers aboard the tram will get to scoot around the famous Universal Studios back lot as Walkers wander around.

The Terror Tram isn’t the only attraction besieged by Walkers. Universal Studios will also unveil an immersive maze called “The Walking Dead: Dead Inside.” The maze is based on the series and presumably, there will be Walkers rambling about inside a maze as visitor’s attempts to get out. This sounds so much better than a haunted house.

The back lot scene for Terror Tram is a rural setting with a small town that has been devastated by a horrific plane crash. The maze for the Dead Inside attraction are described as movie quality. There are other mazes include “Welcome to Silent Hill” based on the popular video game franchise and a maze by rock star Alice Cooper called “Alice Cooper Goes to Hell 3D.”

The event will also have a maze based on a Latin American legend called “La Llorona: Cazadora de Ninos.” Halloween Horror Nights starts on Friday, September 21 and goes on during select nights through Halloween. If you’re a fan of The Walking Dead, the season premiere is set for Sunday, October 14.


Universal Studios Hollywood Terror Tram gets invaded by The Walking Dead is written by Shane McGlaun & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Chinese orb of salvation adds +100 constitution

Natural disasters are scary. No one wants to be crushed, burned, sunk, or eaten by zombies. That means that wealthy people who worry about this sort of thing often spend huge sums of money on things to help them survive natural disasters and other untoward apocalypses. This is a case of a man from China only identified as Yang, who created a giant survival sphere.

Apparently, the man conducted numerous research experiments after purchasing an anti-disaster yellow spherical rescue capsule. The rescue capsule the man came up with can withstand heat up to 1700°C, 350 tons of collision impact, a magnitude 10 earthquake, and tidal waves. It’s not good enough to simply survive these disasters. Yang also wanted to survive the indignity of puking inside his fancy sphere.

Obviously being thrown upside down by an attacking zombie horde could upset the digestive tract so Yang designed his capsule to use gyroscopic principles. That means that there is an outer sphere that allows an inner sphere to remain upright. No matter what happens, be it Godzilla playing Hacky sack with the survival sphere or plummeting through a giant crevice that opens in the Earth during a quake, the people inside will always remain upright.

Naturally, Yang couldn’t simply trust engineers with his life in the event of a disaster. He had to test the sphere out as well. The test process involved climbing inside the survival sphere, as it rested on a slope about 50 m tall leading into water. He then did what any person with a modicum of self-preservation would do; he had assistants roll him down the hill in the sphere.

The sphere is made from four layers of steel plate, vibration dampers, 300 high-intensity shock-absorbing springs, 75 airbags, and a thin layer of rotating liquid. The inner most orb in the safety sphere can accommodate 4 to 20 adults. It is fitted with seats, seat belts, food, water, and medical supplies. There is no air supply and since the capsule is airtight, three people only have enough air to survive for 15 to 16 days. It does have ports that can open to let in more fresh air. The sphere cost around $242,000 and took two years to build.

[via Micgadget]


Chinese orb of salvation adds +100 constitution is written by Shane McGlaun & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


ThinkGeek IdeaFactory can turn your geeky dreams into reality

If you have the world’s most awesome idea for a geeky product that would be perfect on ThinkGeek, the company’s new IdeaFactory will blow your mind. ThinkGeek has announced that it is launching a new program with the goal of allowing geeks to submit ideas for products with a chance of getting the product made and making some money. This may be the perfect chance for me to get my genius idea on the market- two words: bacon bra.

The way IdeaFactory works is that you submit your idea via a written description and an image. The image can be a rendering or a detailed engineering style drawing. ThinkGeek then reviews the ideas and ensures that it passes a few unknown caveats and will then respond to you within 60 days. If the product is deemed worthy, you make some money.

ThinkGeek will pay you in advance of $1000 if your idea is selected for production. That thousand dollars isn’t all you get, you also earn 10% of all retail sales the life of the product up to $1 million. If the product should reach that $1 million mark, the royalty rate drops to 5%. Royalties are paid out quarterly, and ThinkGeek will sell you all of the product that you want to buy for slightly more the cost plus shipping.

You can sell the product on your own website or at public appearances. Unlike some other sites on the web, there is no submission fee and no development costs. That means all you have to do is submit a decent idea to make some money.


ThinkGeek IdeaFactory can turn your geeky dreams into reality is written by Shane McGlaun & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Stop Whining and Subscribe to HBO

I love the show Game of Thrones on HBO. The show is fantastic. It’s one of the best shows to come along in a while. It’s exciting, sexy, complicated, and it has just a touch of fantasy thrown in, mainly to keep you guessing about the possibilities of what’s to come. In the first episodes of the first season, did you really expect to see dragons? But then that platinum blond Khaleesi woman steps out of the fire completely naked with a dragon on her shoulder and it was the probably the coolest thing I have ever seen on television. Wait, have you seen Game of Thrones? If you haven’t, you should subscribe to HBO right now so you can start watching.

That’s right, I said it. Subscribe to HBO. Buy a TV to go with your fancy MacBook (disclosure: by day I work for Samsung, but I’m typing this on a fancy MacBook Pro). Subscribe to a preposterously expensive cable service. Add HBO for an extra $15 per month. Then, start watching. See? That was easy.

Whenever people get all huffy about the problems with content distribution, Game of Thrones is usually the prime culprit. This was made famous in a Web comic by The Oatmeal. The dude tries to watch the show on Netflix. Then he tries to buy it on iTunes. Then Amazon. And so on, until he ends up pirating the show.

First of all, good luck with that. I stopped downloading any pirated content about 5 years ago, when I was caught and sent a nastygram by my cable company. But it wasn’t really the cable company who caught me. It was HBO. I was trying to download The Wire. The warning I received said they were not pressing charges immediately, but they wanted me to stop and destroy my copies. They also reserved the right to sue me at any point in the future. I’m probably in the clear, but hopefully this screed will go some way to convincing HBO that I’m completely on their side. I have seen the error in my ways.

See, when you buy a CD, for instance, you probably thought you were buying the music. But actually, you were buying the plastic, and a license to play the music at certain times, and for certain audiences. Want to play the CD in your car? No problem. Want to play the CD in your bar? Now you have to pay up. There are certain allowances that the courts have approved to bend the rules. You can make one backup copy of your purchased media. You can make mix tapes with songs. You can rip music you purchased to your computer.

Unfortunately, by the time digital video went mainstream, the entertainment industry had learned its lesson. There’s gold in them thar hills. The more you restrict the license for content, the more money you can make as people are forced to sign up for more services, or buy more copies of a video.

It sucks. I won’t dispute that. I’d like to see much more free and open licensing, if not complete freedom to do with my digital purchases as I wish. If I bought Star Wars on VHS tape, I should be able to pay a small fee, for manufacturing and distribution and such, to get that movie again on DVD. Then pay a little more for Blu Ray. I paid for it once, now I should only have to pay for the plastic. And if I want a digital copy, I should pay only for the bandwidth. That would be awesome.

“Waaaaahhhh, HBO is evil for not giving me what I want”

But that’s not the way it works, and the arguments I have heard are stupid. Waaaaaahhhh, I can’t get the show I want, so I have to break the law. Waaaahhhh, the awesome show isn’t available on one of the four services I use, so I have to steal it. Waaaaahhhh, HBO is evil for not giving me exactly what I want, how I want it, when I want to see it.

Shut up. Grow up. Stop acting so entitled.

I would love to see Roger Waters perform “The Wall,” but the tour doesn’t come within 5 hours of my house. So, should I have someone bootleg it for me? An actor friend is in a movie that’s only showing now in New York and Los Angeles. Do I pay for a copy off the street? Do I cry because the only place to see the Mona Lisa is The Louvre?

This is how art works. Art is not just a finished product. It’s also a moment in time, and a reflection of that moment. Sometimes, you have to be there. Art also has to make money. We don’t have huge patron families like the De Medici’s funding massive cathedrals anymore. Government arts funding is not enough, especially not in the U.S. So, sometimes the best shows need to be exclusive, if they are going to be created at all. When you steal those shows, you’re slimming the chances of ever seeing content so fantastic ever again.

The best way to see Game of Thrones? Subscribe to HBO, like the rest of us. Maybe you don’t think the price of the show is worth the subscription. But there’s also a ton of other great content on that channel, and on other cable channels. I really wanted to watch the show Homeland when everyone was talking about it, but I didn’t subscribe to Showtime. So, one long weekend while I was home visiting my parents, I hunkered down in their basement and watched every show on demand. It was pretty good, though not as great as everyone says. Then I started catching up with Dexter on Netflix, and hit a wall when Netflix didn’t have the newest episodes. So, the next time I moved and started service with a new cable provider, I subscribed to HBO and Showtime. If they stop showing content I like, or if it’s too few and far between to be worthwhile, I’ll stop.

But let’s not pretend we don’t understand the game. My response is exactly what HBO wants, nothing more and nothing less. They have crunched the numbers, I’m sure. Game of Thrones is driving subscriptions. A lineup of great original content makes people want to subscribe. I have yet to hear a convincing economic argument that says they should break away from this model. If they could make more money offering the show on one of YOUR favorite services, they would do that.

Pay for the art you want to see. Don’t expect sympathy when you whine and complain that you can’t get what you want. Art is special. Art is worthwhile. But as long as artists have to make a living off of their work, art cannot be free.


Stop Whining and Subscribe to HBO is written by Philip Berne & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Grammar Police, Arrest This Man

There is an alternate universe somewhere in which I am a lexicographer. I write dictionaries for a living. This is not the pipe dream of a grammar-obsessed former English teacher. Right out of grad school (Master’s in English), I turned down an opportunity to work for the Oxford English Dictionary. The job was for a specialist in Caribbean dialects of English. It sounded fantastic. The OED recruiters made clear this was not a stepping stone job for editors and writers. Being a lexicographer leads only to being a better, more experienced lexicographer. Instead, I took a job that involved writing and technology and pop culture, and my life was set on its course. But in an alternate world, I made a different choice and took the dictionary job, and now I sit in a dark apartment in Manhattan mumbling to myself about the horror of language on the Internet.

I’m not talking about the commenters. I’m not talking about laypeople. I’m talking about professionals who are paid to write for a living. Especially technology journalists. There are many, many excellent writers out there who work in technology. I hope they do very well, and I hope you read them thoroughly. But there are also many, perhaps a slim majority of writers, who write with prose that is simply messy, imprecise, and overwrought. I think it is a problem endemic to more than just their technology stories. The problem, at its core, is a way of thinking about how to publish on the Internet.

On the Web, you need to publish quickly if you want to succeed. This isn’t because readers remember who broke a story. Ask the average reader who got the scoop on the latest piece of iPhone jetsam to emerge from the Chinese black markets, and you’re likely to be met with a blank stare.

Even Techmeme gets it wrong, often. Techmeme republishes the most popular technology stories on the Web. Ideally, the writer who reported the story first will show up as the top link. All the Web sites who sourced that story get pushed beneath. That’s how it should be. But Techmeme often puts third-hand stories above first- and second-hand reporting. Techmeme offers a ton of traffic, especially for the top links in each topic. But publishing first does not guarantee those clicks.

“Why publish so quickly? Google knows”

So why publish so quickly? Why rush the story out the door without a proper copy edit? One word: Google. Even when Techmeme doesn’t know where a story came from, Google knows. Google search results tend to prioritize stories that came out first. Even better, Google takes into account how many other stories are linking back to the original. So, if you report on something first, even a minute earlier than the competition, you might get better Google placement.

If you want to make a living running a technology blog, you need to appear on the first page of Google search results. Return readership and feed subscribers certainly matter. But to many sites, especially smaller, up-and-coming sites, the search results will pay the bills for years while the site builds a following.

Speed is therefore of the essence. This comes at the cost of copy editing. Copy editors make everything better. They polish the prose to make it shine, without losing the author’s voice. They write headlines that are engaging and accurate. If you read a story about a gadget that is based entirely on a leak or rumor, and the headline says “Confirmed,” you can guarantee no copy editor wrote that. That was written by an editor focused more on clicks and dollars, not words and meaning.

For a very, very brief time I was a copy editor for a Web site run by the editors of PC Magazine. This was at the height of the dotcom crash. I was told that our unique project was funded for at least a year. Then I saw copy editors in other departments getting laid off. Some were rehired part time, on an hourly scale and without benefits. Finally, on a Friday afternoon, a payday in fact, I was called into a meeting with the boss. Friday afternoon meetings are always bad news. When they happen on a payday, you should probably pack up your desk before the meeting starts, just to save time. Trust me, I know from repeat experience.

The real problem is that many sites care much more about clicks than content. There are some sites I read that are simply wrong. They get everything wrong. They report rumors, then “confirm” those rumors, and by the time those rumors have been revealed as false, they have already moved on to the next big thing. I see these sites quoted and sourced over and over again, even though their accuracy percentage hovers in the low single digits.

Why are they still thriving? Speed. Clicks. Why bother asking a company for a response to a query? You usually know what they will say, especially when it has to do with unannounced devices. (Disclosure: In my day job I work in PR for Samsung Mobile). Wait for a response and you’ll be passed by all of the sites that didn’t bother. Take the time for accuracy and you’ll be out of business, while smaller sites report whatever they like with impunity.

If accuracy is a casualty of the need for fast posting, then grammar, usage, and spelling concerns are barely an afterthought. I know quite a few writers who complain frequently that their warnings about proper English and good writing go completely unheeded. Heck, I was one of those writers. I wrote for a site run by a very intelligent Norwegian who spoke a confused and somewhat garbled English as his second language. We never edited copy, I just did my best to get it right the first time. But management explicitly placed no value at all in proper English. Now the site is gone, vanished into the ether. Old stories don’t even show up in Google search results. There’s irony for you.

“Poor writing will fall heavy on your ears if you cherish the language”

How do we fix the problem? Easy. Avoid the worst offenders. Hopefully your instincts have already pushed you away from them. Even if you aren’t a grammar professional, poor writing will fall heavy on your ears if you enjoy and cherish the language.

Point out mistakes. Always. As a writer, I hate it when readers point out grammar errors in comments. But I’m mostly angry with myself for letting a mistake slip through. Harp on poor grammar on your favorite sites long enough, and they will start to take the problem seriously on an institutional level.

Most of all, though, reward good writing. Read the longer stories. You probably read 3-4 stories about the same topic, anyway. Instead, find the Web site that writes the longer version, and stick to that one. Tell them you appreciate their command of the language. Everybody reads comments. Writers, editors, bosses.

Finally, if you’re a writer, reread your own work. You would be amazed how many writers ignore this. When seconds matter, and delays cost money, it seems a waste of time to proofread. Here’s how I motivate myself to reread. I tell myself that if I can’t bear to read this story again, a story I wrote, how could I expect a stranger to read it even once? I cannot.

We all make mistakes. I’ve made plenty. English is a malleable and forgiving language. I’m not asking for perfection, I just think our profession would be a better place, with more accuracy and less nonsense, if we took the language as seriously as we take the topic.


Grammar Police, Arrest This Man is written by Philip Berne & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.