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Martin Paul Eve

Martin Paul Eve
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Published

With less than a week until my Ph.D. viva, I've been taking everyone's advice to heart and not going completely nuts on the revision. After all, I do know this stuff pretty damn well. Anyway, just so I remember what I did this week, I wanted to make a public note of it (probably of more use if, after the event itself, I can say it worked...) My thesis is broken down into three distinct themes, or sections.

Published

In a recent piece for the LRB, Mattathias Schwartz gives an inside look at the truly scary world of carding, the practice of stealing credit card information, through a review of Mischa Glenny's new book DataMarket: How Hackers Became the New Mafia . The point that I want to quibble about (although perhaps it's not a quibble; language is important) is the use of the term "hacker" throughout.

Published

'Whose line is it anyway?: enlightenment, revolution, and ipseic ethics in the works of Thomas Pynchon', Textual Practice, 26, 5, pp. 921-939 Publication: 'Whose line is it anyway?: enlightenment, revolution, and ipseic ethics in the works of Thomas Pynchon', Textual Practice, 26, 5 was originally published by Martin Paul Eve at Martin Paul Eve on September 02, 2012.

Published

In the wake of the Finch report, one of the most frequent cries from academics, particularly at the early career phase, was one of despair. The endorsement of Gold OA meant, mostly to them, that they would have to budget for publication funds in their applications. In short, Gold meant gold; currency. This is, of course, not what the terminology means in the traditional Budapest initiative model.

Published

Although I'm not universally convinced by claims of grade inflation (and have written about the examination system over at the Guardian ), I do welcome some attempt to differentiate examination grades. There is no point in having an examination system that yields a homogeneous result, or has boundaries that are overly broad. That said, the manner in which Gove has set about regulating this is abhorrent, for several reasons.

Published

I've been mightily impressed by the role of crowdfunding solutions in recent days. I think it's great that these projects allow initiatives to get off the ground via people who like what's being proposed. I was particularly interested, though, in app.net's approach. App.net, for those who don't know, is an attempt to re-make Twitter, but with open API access and no advertising.