ORLY O'REILLY?
Well that was unexpected. O'Reilly has a little blurb about the Craigslist Experiment lawsuit:
Official Video FoxNews.com
http://www.foxnews.com/oreilly/. Click on the "is it legal?" link, then "sex ad shocker." Our segment is at 2:34.
[ craigslist published on 2008-08-12 | Comments (2) | Permalink (762) ]
Don't Click The Last Link: Response to the NYT
The NY Times published its article, The Trolls Among Us, which delves into the internet subculture of trolling. Author Mattathias Schwartz talked to me, LiveJournal user Weev, and Encyclopedia Dramatica on why trolls do what they do, how they think, and what it means to the Internet. He even covered the irascible 4chan /b/ which is home to Scientology's biggest threat: Anonymous.
Since the article came out Thursday, it's already generated a fair amount of reaction. But on Friday, Mattathias, Weev, and I all had updates and responses to the piece, that changes the game somewhat. More after the cut.
Excerpt:
"I typically am cautious of the press. Every time the press and I cross paths, it simply causes trouble for me or those around me. I while ago I met with Matt Schwartz from the New York Times Magazine, under the explicit condition that I would be covering philosophy and history and not my personal business. I feel I didn't really get what I want out of this exchange, as the important philosophy I conveyed to him was only conveyed in short bits that I think were taken out of context."
Excerpt:
"Trolls have a parasitic relationship with their targets - that is to say, a relationship of dependence. As much as trolls like to abuse their targets, they need them to stick around and stay angry. A homogeneous community of trolls is like the 4chan random bulletin board, /b/, meaningless noise. So in a sense, a bit of trolling can be taken as a sign of a healthy community, because it needs a backdrop of sincere users and shared norms to feed on."
As you can see, the views are diverging dramatically already. But that's the reality of magazine stories. We would all like to have our personal views espoused and glorified in a mainstream media piece; even me. What greater validation can one receive than to have his views endorsed by one of the world's largest rags? And what greater betrayal is there than to discover your views have been condensed and marginalized in favor of someone else's agenda? I admit: I was a little disappointed that many of the finer points of trolling that Matt and I talked about didn't make in to the article. But, like I said before: that's life.
"You know how on your favorite basic cable reality shows the camera captures some crazy person's meltdown? Same thing here. Trolls love a good online meltdown."
We all need to remember that Mattathias answers to an Editor, and that Editor has to balance the sincerity of the piece with the practical needs of the readers. As intelligent as NY Times readers are, this trolling thing is relatively new to them. The facts and opinions that Weev and I put forward have to be distilled down into something manageable and accessible to the general public.
That's why I'm actually glad to see Mattathias and Weev follow up they way they have. This is one of the rare times you'll see two-way journalism. How often do reporters take responsibility for their pieces by addressing subjects' concerns? This is rare and extraordinary. Most people read an article, and that's the end of the perspective. Now they get to actually interact with the people they're reading about. The internet is simply marvelous this way.
I, too, have responded to the piece. However, I put my responses in the comments sections of The Medium articles, where they were quickly drowned out by dozens of other responses. I'm reposting my thoughts here (with a couple of editing tweaks) so they're easier to find and link to.
In Response to Trolling for Ethics
From The Medium: Trolling For Ethics on 7/31/2008:
"Don't reply. Don't privately address him. Don't acknowledge his comments. Just pretend the troll doesn't exist. This gets rid of 90% of the trolls out there."
I've read this article three times now, and I'm still absorbing it. I think it's an amazing piece of reporting. It was accessible and painted a good generalized picture of the online trolling universe. It earns tremendous merit as a piece that showcases what balanced, ethical reporting should look like, as well as a piece that forces the reader to engage in critical thought.
Trolling has a spectrum of personalities, and I think they're faithfully represented here. When it comes to trolling, it's true that there's nothing funnier than watching an emotionally or intellectually unstable person have a dramatic, public meltdown to a few pokes & prods. It only gets better when the target escalates the situation with even more drama.
You know how on your favorite basic cable reality shows the camera captures some crazy person's meltdown? You squeal with delight at the sheer entertainment value of it. Same thing here. Trolls love a good online meltdown. It brings the lulz. (And just like how The Soup on E! documents all the best TV drama of the week, so EncyclopediaDramatica.com documents all the best drama of the Internet.)
Of course, there's the extreme edge of all that trolling, like with the Hendersons and Megan Meier. That's probably more like a premium cable show. The morality is ambiguous. There are no clear good guy or bad guy characters. The lulz are less obvious. But you tune in anyway because it's captivating and challenging.
The only thing that I'm sad wasn't covered is the one troll ethic: you'll never see us go after someone who has their act together. If they say or do intelligent, clever, witty, insightful things, we'll be the first to cheer and shower them with praise. We love smart people.
But God help you if you're a drama queen who complains about having a broken back that's prevented you from seeing the world in one blog post and the next day posts an ugly naked arched-back-on-a-jungle-gym photo talking about how worldly you are. You are batshit crazy, and we're going to troll you until you break.
(Edit: That's not to say telephone harassment is just playful trolling. That's the realm of /b/ and Anonymous who readily proclaim themselves far more than just garden variety trolls. I address this distinction in my next response further down.)
All that having been said, there are only two ways to deal with a troll:
"If I want to know what you really think, all I have to do is troll you for a bit, and your true colors will light up like a Vegas billboard."
1. Don't reply. Don't privately address him. Don't acknowledge his comments. Don't even make a "he who shall not be named" style reference in another blog post. Just pretend the troll doesn't exist. This gets rid of 90% of the trolls out there instantly. Then, if you're smart, shut up and quit blogging for a few days and logically re-evaluate the post that set the troll off. Chances are, there is a glaring flaw in your post that makes you look like an idiot or a nutjob, and that's why you got trolled. Don't post again until you're ready to amend it or defend it with better logic.
2. With the other 10% of trolls, you have to play the game. For every insult you receive from a troll, play along and join in the joke. If someone tells you're fat (because you probably are), don't get offended and rant. Just reply with a photo of a whale and say, "You damn skippy I'm fat! I would say this photo is me, but that wouldn't be fair. The whale isn't that big." If you can successfully take yourself and the insults less seriously, you will win the good graces of the troll and he'll either go away, or he'll chill out, knock off the insults, engage you in surprisingly intelligent and witty conversation, and you'll have made a new online friend. And trust me, it's good to have a troll for a friend.
Of course, now that I've revealed this, no troll is going to let up because you've all been warned and can no longer claim ignorance as an excuse. So, your only recourse is to just not be stupid and/or batshit crazy on the Internets. If you can do that, everything will be just fine. However, just so I can be absolutely clear about this: if you escalate a war of words with a troll, you WILL lose. We know all the tricks. We have access to all the resources. We know all the laws. We're all friends with each other. We have done this thousands of times.
Yeah, we're total assholes. And we don't care.
In Response to Mattathias Responds
From The Medium: Guest Post: Matthias Schwartz Responds on 8/1/2008:
So, it's the second day of this article's life, and I still regard it as an exemplary piece of journalism. Mattathias should be proud of his work, and people should really take time to reflect on his message.
However, I think if there is a weak point in the article, it is that /b/ gets painted with the same brush stroke that Weev and I do. Let's be clear: there are distinct differences among us.
/b/ members who engage in harassment are quick to point out that they aren't merely trolls. They acknowledge the nature and seriousness of their actions, and the impunity with which they carry out their deeds. They know who and what they are and they don't pretend to be innocuous. I won't cast a moral judgment on them simply because their value system is so vastly different from anything the rest of us know that criticism is nearly meaningless.
Weev is someone to be feared for obvious reasons. I know a lot of people have tried to argue that he trolled the NYT with his outrageous statements. There's no way he is all he says he is. All I have to say is: are you sure? Let's assume Weev rented that Rolls Royce Phantom. He would have had to have it come down from L.A. and be around for two days for $395/hr. How many trolls do you know are willing to spend that kind of money just to get their kicks messing with a bright young reporter from New York?
And then there's me. I make no excuses for me: I troll every once in a while, and I'm not nice about it. Even though I don't phone harass or do anything that crosses into /b/ territory, I know I'm a jerk. Years ago, I trolled indiscriminately for kicks & giggles without realizing what a fantastic and informing tool trolling can be. These days I troll when I want answers about human behavior. Even though it didn't make it into the article, Mattathias and I talked about this extensively.
The trolling that keeps my attention is the stuff that reveals human nature. Yes, I can have a civilized conversation with you, and take what you say at face value. However, as we all know, people are too often wrapped up in their own politically correct notions to say what they really think and feel. If I want to know what you really think, all I have to do is troll you for a bit, and your true colors will light up like a Vegas billboard. That's something you can't get by harassing someone over the phone.
Does the thought of a troll prying into your head make you uncomfortable? It should. Nobody wants to have their secret thoughts and feelings known, much less exposed, especially online. But I will share with you one observation I've had over the years: the more you try to hide who you really are, the more miserable you'll be whether you're talking to me or not. Take what you will from that.
Again, this is a good article with questions about morality that readers should contemplate carefully. Mattathias has taken the time to craft a masterpiece that encourages you to look inside yourself as much as you look outward. That's a gift you don't run across everyday.
Update (8/4): Correction
I just read a comment somewhere that said, "If Mr. Fortuny truly wants to 'save' his victims, he should somehow make his purpose known to them."
This commenter is absolutely correct, and I feel foolish for not thinking of it myself. I absolutely have a duty to inform people of why I do what I do. But, how should I go about doing it? Oh, if only I had a way to communicate my message on a massive scale to millions of people. Perhaps I should talk to a reporter for a mainstream media publication and discuss my views on this subject. That might do the trick. I'll keep everyone posted on how that goes.
Related Links
[ trolling published on 2008-08-02 | Comments (10) | Permalink (3,577) ]
Verizon FIOS: Support Still Sucks
It's been 15 months, and this is the first time I've had to call Verizon FIOS tech support (for my actual connection). Yes, they still suck.
Up until now, my connection has been perfect. It rarely goes down, and that's only around midnight every six weeks or so for just a couple of minutes.
This time, however, my connection spontaneously died at 7pm, came back a few minutes later, and missed me off to no end as only half of the web destinations I tried actually worked. I could get to Google, but not Microsoft. This site, but not gmail.
My own standard troubleshooting didn't fix the problem, so I let the connection sit overnight and called tech support in the morning. It roughly went like this:
Phone guy: WelcometofiossupporthisisJustinhowcanIhelpyou?
Me: Hi there, my connection died for a few minutes last night. When it came back, I could only reach about half of my web destinations. For example, I could get to Google, but not Microsoft. I did some basic troubleshooting and didn't have any luck.
Justin: mmhmm. Hang on a second while I check your area ...
waiting for about two minutes listening to each other breathe ...
Justin: alright, it looks like there's an outage in your area that should be fixed by 3:23pm.
Me: An outage that only affects my ability to get to certain sites? That seems kind of weird.
Justin: I don't have any further information, except that you should expect resolution at 3:23pm.
Me: Alright. Is that central or pacific time?
Justin: It doesn't say, so I don't know.
Me: Wow. Okay then. So there's no troubleshooting steps we should go through? You don't want to check my router?
Justin: No that's alright. 3:23pm. Today.
Me: Okay then. Thanks for your ... help.
Justin: Thanks for calling. *click*
Wow. Way to make me feel completely unimportant there, Justin. But, to Justin's credit, not more than 30 seconds after I hung up the phone my connection started working properly! Outage, huh? That's what I thought.
I didn't believe Justin's outage claim, and for good reason. I've done a lot of tech support in my time and claiming an "outage" is standard procedure when you're not supposed to admit something ... like your company fucked something up.
Oh well. My connection is good as new and running smoothly, so I guess this isn't so bad.
Related Links
[ fios published on 2008-07-11 | Comments (0) | Permalink (296) ]
Stepping Up The Action: When DMCA Isn't Enough
I take it back: you might get sued if you do a Craigslist Experiment. And watch out, DMCA is just the beginning. The complaint against me follows up on the classic tactic originated by DMCA: chill free speech by claiming copyright infringement.
A Little Bit of History Before We Begin
You hit ball to my side of table! Now I hit back! That's the way DMCA goes, jive sucka.
However, additionally under DMCA procedure I have the opportunity to refute his DMCA claims by filing a counter notification. After that, the complainant has 14 days to file for an injunction to keep the allegedly offending material down. If he doesn't, I am free to resume my use of the material. Obviously, I never heard back from the complainant after 14 days, so I resumed my use of the photo.
Fast forward to 18 months later when I get an anonymous tip that I'm being sued for $75,000 in copyright infringement and unspecified damages for invasion of privacy. Interesting. Then I checked out the details of the case, and it got just plain bizarre.
Suing You King George Style
King George commands you to appear before the Royal Court, 5,000 miles away, by tomorrow morning. Good luck with that.
Maybe, maybe not. Civil procedure on jurisdiction is usually clear, but there are exceptions to the rules. In this case, Doe argues that since I attended Lulzcon, and alleges that I spoke specifically about him, that I have availed myself to the jurisdiction of the court there. We'll see about that.
Suing someone in a distant court is what's called doing a "King George," named for King George III of England who would charge his subjects with a crime and require them to make appearance before him in his court. Usually, these subjects would be in distant lands and had no opportunity to defend themselves against the King's frivolous and usually fraudulent charges. However, the King would summarily find his subjects guilty because they did not appear before him as required.
Looks like John Doe is running the same tactic here.
The Standard Copyright Whining
There's no surprise here, so I won't go into many details: Doe has a copyright on his personal photo. Yes, he does. It's federally registered. You can look it up. He's arguing that his copyright gives him unilateral power to control how that photo is used. Hmm, where have we heard this argument before?
Fair use is a slam dunk in this case.
EFF Up Your Chances of Getting Good Representation
The EFF: standing up for your rights. As long as we're all friends.
Seriously?
The EFF, guardians of civil liberties and individual rights in the Internet age, are working with a law firm that is trying to chill my free speech using tactics worthy of the RIAA? Are you fucking kidding me?
I like the EFF. No, actually, I fucking love them. Everywhere you go online, the EFF stands up against legal pitbulls trying to intimidate individuals from standing up for their rights. They fight for anonymity, whistleblowers, protection against censorship and a lot more. Why, why, why would they choose to work with a firm that uses the very tactics and philosophies they fight?
I think this is a mis-step for the EFF. I donate to them. I will continue to donate to them. But I'm shaking my head at this one.
Tort and Re-tort Sitting on a Fence: Are They Private?
Lastly, the privacy complaint is an interesting one, even though I don't think it holds up. Privacy laws have a lot of tort reference to them. That is, there aren't a lot of specific civil codes. You just have to sort of figure it out, or cite a helluva lot of precedent.
I'll be curious to see where this part of the complaint goes, if it goes anywhere.
Let Me Introduce You To My Amazing Lawyer
I'm not only the President, I'm also a client! (That's a joke, moron.)
You do have the various branches of the ACLU who are too busy handling life & death crusades to think about my first world problems. That's ok. I don't know if I want to turn to their Chicago office who said that handling e-mail was "too complicated, could you please send us a fax."
The groups who are versed in what to do, like the Stanford Fair Use Center, and the ACLU of Northern California are overwhelmed handling these kinds of cases. Now you're beginning to understand the scope of this issue. This isn't a couple of guys having a pissing match in court. This is a broad method of attack adopted by those who seek to permanently silence or stop anyone they perceive as even the slightest threat. And they get away with it because defense is costly and/or time-consuming. Most people simply give up and roll over. Except me. I absolutely will not allow another copyright abusing precedent to happen here.
So here I am, going Pro Se on this. This is going to be fun.
The Conclusion
Defend yourself or GTFO!
Anyway. I know a lot of other people will look at this issue and have a fair amount of anger at how civil law works. Lack of personal jurisdiction? Frivolous copyright complaints? A John Doe accuser? No lawyer to take the case? Shouldn't the judge toss this one out? Not until both sides have made their arguments. Cvil law differs from criminal law. In Criminal law, the system ensures fairness by giving maximum protections to those accused against the maximum power of government. Civil law, on the other hand, has a more caveat emptor flavor: if you can't fight off the sharks, don't go swimming in the water. And I think that's exactly the way it should be.
But, this is a clear cut example of the floodgate copyright law abuse has opened. Saying or displaying anything about someone? Watch out first for your DMCA threat, then your lawsuit. But, whatever you do, don't roll over and take it. These are your rights at stake. It's up to you to defend them.
That having been said, unless you're an actual lawyer, you most likely don't have a clue what you're talking about. So shut the hell up. I've had all the casual (and utterly wrong) advice/toldyaso's I can stand.
Related Links
[ craigslist, threats, dmca published on 2008-06-01 | Comments (17) | Permalink (4,048) ]
Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull Review
Since the trailer is up at the official site, I took down the bootleg, and I've replaced it with my review: Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal SkullGeorge Lucas Raped my Childhood.
Adventure, 2 hours, PG-13, so unbelievably fucked up I can't grade it.
The problem with this fucking film is that it's really two movies: the first half is by Spielberg, and the second half is by Lucas. It's like going out on a date with the hottest of your old girlfriends you still pine for, only to find out she now has a watersports fetish and she wants to take you back to her place so the two of you can roll around in piss. Fuck you, Lucas. And fuck you, Spielberg, for not warning us. Bastards.
The first thing you notice about this film is that it has a new vibe. And it's good. It sets up a contrast between the Jones you remember and the Jones you're about to meet. Everyone has to grow up, including Indy. He's smarter, a little more grizzly, and a whole lot less fearless. It's all good.
Shia is good. You instantly understand that he's a one trick actor, but fortunyately that trick will take him pretty far. Marion is good and gets more useful time here than she did in Raiders. Kate as Spalko is just ... weird. Winstone as Mac is a total throwaway character. I don't know why he was there. Hurt as Oxley is totally misused as a colleague gone utterly mad.
The first half of the film is fun to witness and get into. I laughed out loud four times. Spielberg and Koepp (screenwriter) maintain the humor. Instead of 1930's exotic locations, you get 1950's americana. You might think this is bad but it fits nicely with the Jones contrast theme. It works.
Spoilers from here on down
The second half of the film happens when Spalko tells Jones WTF is going on: the crystal skull is alien, oh and it has psychic powers that reveal themselves to Indy, who is then psychically linked to Oxley and can translate his mad ravings. You heard me fucking right, ladies and gentlemen. Remember From Dusk Till Dawn when it goes from being a cool crime escape caper to a batshit vampire flick? Same thing here. But less lube.
From there, it gets stupid. Unlike the first three films where you're left to ruminate on clues for a time before you have to solve them (out-of-order plot reveals), clues are revealed and instantly solved here. There's no mystery revealed by reason. It's just a bunch of shit happening.
The jungle chase is the leading example of how stupid it gets. Side by side cars that parallel each other perfectly in a rugged jungle at 30mph so that Shia can have a sword fight with Spalko while straddling the cars. Bull. Shit. Then Shia gets caught up in a vine and is left behind by the cars still going 30mph. Yet, somehow, he manages to become an expert vine swinger who's so good he ends up ahead of the cars and they run back into him. BULL. SHIT. Oh, and the little howler monkeys decide to band together and help him by attacking the russians. BULL. FUCKING. SHIT.
Speaking of bullshit, let's talk about the effects for a moment. The physical effects still hold up nicely. The CGI is shit. Absolutely utter shit. And it clashes horribly. Imagine the CGI from Star Wars being used to supplement Raiders or Last Crusade. Especially for animals and bugs. No. Just no. What the goddamn hell were you thinking, guys? 20 years ago you would have bought 10,000 snakes to get the job done. Now you whip up clipshots from the movie Antz? FUCK YOU.
And, let us not ignore the final epic stroke of bullshit in the film: finding the chamber of 13 alien crystal skeletons (sans one missing skull). Seems pretty far fucking fetched, right? Not when you compare it to the scene where the skull, in range of its body, magnetically flies out of Spalko's hands on the skeleton and IT SITS UP.
Seems pretty far fucking fetched, right? Not when you compare it to the scene where the whole room starts to fall apart and rotate to reveal machinery behind the thousands years old stone covering everything while Oxley mentions that they're trans-dimensional beings while looking up into their space portal that's suddenly appeared above them.
Seems pretty far fucking fetched, right? Not when you compare it to the scene where psychic links are flying from the crystal alien skeletons eyes into Spalko's eyes, and she keeps saying "YES NOW I SEE I SEE EVERYTHING I UNDERSTAND!"
Seems pretty far fucking fetched, right? Not when you compare it to the scene where the 13 skeletons merge to form a living Alien who looks like the gimpy CGI version of the reasonably terrifying aliens in Fire In The Sky. This ET on meth gives the full blast to Spalko who can't handle it and gets vaporized into the portal.
Seems pretty far fucking fetched, right? Not when you compare it to the scene where you see Indy & crew escape from the passage up to about 150 feet higher and two football fields further away than where they were two minutes ago so they have a spectacular view of THE GIANT FUCKING FLYING SAUCER EXITING THE STONE MOUNTAIN OFF TO WHATEVER FUCKING DIMENSION LUCAS OBVIOUSLY WENT TO FIRST AND NEVER FUCKING CAME BACK FROM.
Seems pretty far fucking fetched, right? Not when you compare it to the scene where Indy & Marion get married. And get this, he kisses her just like he kissed Leia at the end of Return of the Jedi. You know that lipless, life-affirming, family-friendly smile-politely-afterward kiss where you kind of wonder if Ford isn't gay? He does it again. To Marion.
End of Spoilers
Lucas' half of the film makes no sense. Not in plot, tone, or message. I understand that Lucas wanted to do something different. But did it have to be with the Indy vehicle? Ugh. I'm so depressed. I want to put on Raiders, but seeing that and reflecting on this film will just make me even more depressed.
Something else I just realized: this film and National Treasure 2 (which I also just saw) draw from some of the same Maya/Inca/Aztec legends, although they approach them somewhat differently. While Indiana Jones had more action, National Treasure had more intelligence. Sad, but true.
Related Links
[ trailers published on 2008-05-02 | Comments (5) | Permalink (857) ]
Verizon FIOS: One Year Later
For the last year, I've been putting my FIOS connection through its paces, systematically testing throughput, lag, reliability, and versatility. Here's what I found out:
What I can tell you right now is that the technology itself is just great. Unlike the myriad of horror tales I've received about Comcast, I have no bad news to report about Verizon.
Of course, avoiding Verizon's customer service at all costs helps. I mean, I'd love to up my speed and give Verizon more money. But, frankly, I'm terrified that Verizon customer service will screw my account up. I don't want them to touch it. At all. Ever. That's how low my regard for Verzion customer service is.
Report: Throughput and Lag (5mbit down / 2mbit up)
The best way I know of to test this is with (legal) P2P file sharing, and test the responsiveness of general web browsing. Now, as you know, Comcast is in hot water for throttling bit-torrent traffic. When I used to be a Comcast customer from 2002 to 2007, all it would take was one or two P2P downloads and my entire connection would choke. No traffic, P2P or otherwise, could get through.
On FIOS, even when I'm P2Ping 600kbit down/200kbit up, I can still check my gmail and use IM just fine. That's right. I can download a 350mb file in under ten minutes, seed it all night, grab four more files, and my internet browsing experience is just fine. In fact, I have yet to find a torrent that fully saturates my line.
Throughput rating: A+
Report: Reliability
Let me put it this way: my Comcast connection was so unreliable that I used to have a ping monitoring service test my IP every hour so that I could clock just how much down time I had: roughly 8%. That number shot up to 30% one week when Comcast was rolling out new equipment and performing the great IP shuffle in my area.
My FIOS connection goes down for up to five minutes around half past midnight every third month or so. That's 0.000003% down time. Over the past year, I can count on my connection to be up and running more than you can count on getting a live person when you call 911.
Reliability rating: A+
Report: Versatility
Well, ok, nobody's perfect. Inbound port 80 is blocked. Fine. I can host a website on Dreamhost with 5TB of transfer for $5.95/mo. Verizon also blocks outbound port 25. Also fine. I host my e-mail on gmail with 25gb of storage per address. If I really wanted to, I could host these things myself with a FIOS business account. But, why bother?
True, Comcast totally left these ports open and I could host whatever I wanted. Of course, the minute you start a blogging shitstorm, and a million users flood your box, you're pretty much screwed.
But, other than that trade-off, I'm very pleased with how I can use my connection. Xbox 360, of course, works great. I streamed a video with VLC player to the public just fine. I can telnet to other boxes, or have other boxes telnet to me on a custom port. So, no real complaints here.
Versatility rating: B+
Report: Overall
While I still harbor an enormous grudge over how my install was handled, and the general state of Verizon's customer service. I'm absolutely thrilled with the performance of the technology itself.
A lot of you have written in with your similar FIOS horror stories, and a few good experiences. From your experiences, I think it's clear that Verizon customer service will continue to be an absolute clusterfuck of the greatest proportion. A few people have reported speed, reliability and other issues. All I can say there is keep troubleshooting and reach out to knowledgable friends for answers.


