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Depression motivates comment spam too, not just profit-lust and worthlessness

Photo by Flickr user picsonthefritzRich over at Basement.org has posted some sample comment spam he's been seeing lately that's all about the commenters being depressed.  There aren't even links to spam sites in many of the comments.  He says there needs to be a Cry for Help comment spam plug-in.  Make sense to me.  Anyone else see the recent spate of magical-gibberish comments without links? 

This might sound like a silly thing to post here about, but mark my words - this is going to get a write up in Wired by the end of this year ("Millions of depressed young people send anonymous messages into the conversation that is the blogosphere with a nihilistic apathy about context or purpose").  Or at least some print publication.  I think it warrants a Wired vocab-term...but what will it be called?  Sobspamming, emospamming, whinebots, poutposting? Poutposting.

Comment cries for help - could they be coming from distressed spam-bots who've grown human posting billions of comments that reference human emotion?  Or implant-laden marketers from the future sending us pleas for help in the only way they know how?  Or is it real spammers, sighing after work and no longer able to communicate in any other way?  Mysterious.

Second Life Thriller mashup

I have been totally digging on the spate of MMO-themed mashups I've been finding lately that animate in-game characters and avatars to act out music videos or DIY scripts. Here's a nice one that mashes up Second Life with Michael Jackson's Thriller:


Some other faves are the World of Warcraft "Internet is for porn" mashup and the WoW Gaybar video. Anybody have any others to add to the meta-list?

YouTube and ______, sitting in a tree

So rumour has it that YouTube has just been acquired. Place your bets, ladies and gents -- who's the lucky suitor? My money's on Yahoo.

[warning: rumour, speculation, disclaim disclaim yadda yadda]

MySpace blocking YouTube?

Just caught wind of this as I was guffawing over this World of Warcraft mashup video -- it appears that MySpace is blocking YouTube, not just embedded videos but all YouTube URLs and even any references to the YouTube service. Apparently MySpace hasn't responded to any inquiries from YouTube staff or MySpace users who also use YouTube. Considering the overwhelming amount of strange and random multimedia crap I have seen embedded into MySpace profiles, I find this a little odd. Anybody know what's up?

TiVo adds Rocketboom, vlogs

Rocketboom
TiVo

Just saw that TiVo is now offering Rocketboom broadcast downloads. This is part of a larger project to offer videoblog content, and as such they're also soliciting your videoblog content. Cool — now it's not just the Akimbo folks getting fresh vlog content delivered to their TVs. Of course, many folks these days are forgoing the DVR altogether and hooking up computers to their TVs to function as media centers (raises hand). Out of curiosity — how many of you get your vlog content a) on your laptop or desktop, b) on your TV via attached computer, c) via DVR like Akimbo or TiVo? I suppose the related question is really "how many of you watch vlogs"?

[Via Dave Zatz]

SoundTransit is social audio tripping

soundtransit

SoundTransit takes you travelling like Wayfaring, but the journey is for your ears. SoundTransit is a collaborative community dedicated to sharing field recordings and phonography from around the world — folks who've recorded ambient sound from their environments in different locations across the globe upload their often wonderfully unintentional soundscapes for others to share. On the site you can book audio "journeys" by selecting a start point, end point and how many "stopovers" you'd like. The result is a mashed up MP3 file you can download or play in your browser which contains sounds from points along the path, each with an attendant description and artist information. Everything is Creative Commons Attribution licensed, so remixing and reuse is encouraged with attribution to the contributing phonographer. This site is a very well done execution of a great idea, and will end up having an appeal beyond the already active global phonography community.

[Via LiveWeb]

Wayfaring is social tripping

Wayfaring
Wayfaring is a service that allows you to create your own customized and annotated Google Map and share it. Or, just browse the maps others have created — from the Philadelphia Marathon route to LA gay bars to best places to snorkel on Maui. You can leave comments on each map or contact the mapmaker directly with questions. This is cool on a large scale to share points of interest with a wide audience, or on a small scale to set up a map of your family's recent road trip to share with your friends, e.g. — I like that it works on both levels. The keys will be getting people to come contribute to another data silo, and making sure folks can easily find something interesting when they're browsing/searching.

[Hat tip to Marshall Kirkpatrick and Narendra Rocherolle for the heads up!]

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