Zeroed out: Five steps toward restoring inbox sanity

Overwhelmed by the amount of email sitting in your inbox? Here’s one man’s helpful guide.

Enlarge (credit: Jesper Sehested / Flickr)

Welcome to 2018, filled with new newsletters, new launches, and new resolutions. In case "decluttering your digital life" sits among your goals in 2018, we're surfacing a classic Ars guide to achieving inbox zero. This piece originally run on December 14, 2008, and it appears unchanged below.

Last week, I posted a message on Facebook about having successfully emptied my inbox. I was surprised by the number of comments I got in return. One friend said that she had "no words to describe the level of my admiration and jealousy." Another bemoaned his inbox tally of 10,545 messages.

Back in the day, I used to be fairly diligent about sorting email. After writing for Ars for a while, the volume of email made that a much tougher task. Fortunately for me (and others in my boat), Apple got serious about indexing in 2005 with the inclusion of Spotlight in Mac OS X 10.4 (Tiger). With all the contents of Mail.app indexed and readily available with a search, keeping things sorted didn't seem all that urgent. Relying on Spotlight to keep track of one's mail can become inefficient, however, and I recently got disgusted with my inbox and decided to get organized. It took a couple of hours to get from 2,500 to 50, where I happily resided for awhile. Going down to zero took another 15 minutes or so.

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Smarte Lautsprecher: 6,5 Millionen Google-Home-Geräte in 2,5 Monaten verkauft

Google hat erstmals halbwegs konkrete Verkaufszahlen zu smarten Lautsprechern genannt. In 2,5 Monaten wurden etwa 6,5 Millionen Home-Lautsprecher an Kunden ausgeliefert. Amazon gibt sich bei Verkaufszahlen weiterhin sehr zugeknöpft. (Google Home Mini, …

Google hat erstmals halbwegs konkrete Verkaufszahlen zu smarten Lautsprechern genannt. In 2,5 Monaten wurden etwa 6,5 Millionen Home-Lautsprecher an Kunden ausgeliefert. Amazon gibt sich bei Verkaufszahlen weiterhin sehr zugeknöpft. (Google Home Mini, Google)

Amazon: Alexa kommt auf Backöfen, Uhren, Kopfhörer und Brillen

Amazons digitaler Assistent Alexa soll auf immer mehr Geräte kommen. So sind Alexa-fähige Smartwatches, Kopfhörer, Fitnessarmbänder und eine Brille geplant. Aber auch vor der Sprachsteuerung von Mikrowellen und Backöfen macht Amazon nicht halt. Von Ing…

Amazons digitaler Assistent Alexa soll auf immer mehr Geräte kommen. So sind Alexa-fähige Smartwatches, Kopfhörer, Fitnessarmbänder und eine Brille geplant. Aber auch vor der Sprachsteuerung von Mikrowellen und Backöfen macht Amazon nicht halt. Von Ingo Pakalski (Amazon Alexa, Amazon)

No Level of Copyright Enforcement Will Ever Be Enough For Big Media

On an almost continual basis rightsholders are calling for tougher anti-piracy measures on top of more restrictive and punitive copyright law. It’s undoubtedly a threat to current Internet freedoms as we know them. But really, is anyone truly surprised that entertainment companies still hate their content being shared for free?

Source: TF, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing, torrent sites and more. We also have VPN discounts, offers and coupons

For more than ten years TorrentFreak has documented a continuous stream of piracy battles so it’s natural that, every now and then, we pause to consider when this war might stop. The answer is always “no time soon” and certainly not in 2018.

When swapping files over the Internet first began it wasn’t a particularly widespread activity. A reasonable amount of content was available, but it was relatively inaccessible. Then peer-to-peer came along and it sparked a revolution.

From the beginning, copyright holders felt that the law would answer their problems, whether that was by suing Napster, Kazaa, or even end users. Some industry players genuinely believed this strategy was just a few steps away from achieving its goals. Just a little bit more pressure and all would be under control.

Then, when the landmark MGM Studios v. Grokster decision was handed down in the studios’ favor during 2005, the excitement online was palpable. As copyright holders rejoiced in this body blow for the pirating masses, file-sharing communities literally shook under the weight of the ruling. For a day, maybe two.

For the majority of file-sharers, the ruling meant absolutely nothing. So what if some company could be held responsible for other people’s infringements? Another will come along, outside of the US if need be, people said. They were right not to be concerned – that’s exactly what happened.

Ever since, this cycle has continued. Eager to stem the tide of content being shared without their permission, rightsholders have advocated stronger anti-piracy enforcement and lobbied for more restrictive interpretations of copyright law. Thus far, however, literally nothing has provided a solution.

One would have thought that given the military-style raid on Kim Dotcom’s Megaupload, a huge void would’ve appeared in the sharing landscape. Instead, the file-locker business took itself apart and reinvented itself in jurisdictions outside the United States. Meanwhile, the BitTorrent scene continued in the background, somewhat obliviously.

With the SOPA debacle still fresh in relatively recent memory, copyright holders are still doggedly pursuing their aims. Site-blocking is rampant, advertisers are being pressured into compliance, and ISPs like Cox Communications now find themselves responsible for the infringements of their users. But has any of this caused any fatal damage to the sharing landscape? Not really.

Instead, we’re seeing a rise in the use of streaming sites, each far more accessible to the newcomer than their predecessors and vastly more difficult for copyright holders to police.

Systems built into Kodi are transforming these platforms into a plug-and-play piracy playground, one in which sites skirt US law and users can consume both at will and in complete privacy. Meanwhile, commercial and unauthorized IPTV offerings are gathering momentum, even as rightsholders try to pull them back.

Faced with problems like these we are now seeing calls for even tougher legislation. While groups like the RIAA dream of filtering the Internet, over in the UK a 2017 consultation had copyright holders excited that end users could be criminalized for simply consuming infringing content, let alone distributing it.

While the introduction of both or either of these measures would cause uproar (and rightly so), history tells us that each would fail in its stated aim of stopping piracy. With that eventuality all but guaranteed, calls for even tougher legislation are being readied for later down the line.

In short, there is no law that can stop piracy and therefore no law that will stop the entertainment industries coming back for harsher measures, pursuing the dream. This much we’ve established from close to two decades of litigation and little to no progress.

But really, is anyone genuinely surprised that they’re still taking this route? Draconian efforts to maintain control over the distribution of content predate the file-sharing wars by a couple of hundred years, at the very least. Why would rightsholders stop now, when the prize is even more valuable?

No one wants a minefield of copyright law. No one wants a restricted Internet. No one wants extended liability for innovators, service providers, or the public. But this is what we’ll get if this problem isn’t solved soon. Something drastic needs to happen, but who will be brave enough to admit it, let alone do something about it?

During a discussion about piracy last year on the BBC, the interviewer challenged a caller who freely admitted to pirating sports content online. The caller’s response was clear:

For far too long, broadcasters and rightsholders have abused their monopoly position, charging ever-increasing amounts for popular content, even while making billions. Piracy is a natural response to that, and effectively a chance for the little guy to get back some control, he argued.

Exactly the same happened in the music market during the late 1990s and 2000s. In response to artificial restriction of the market and the unrealistic hiking of prices, people turned to peer-to-peer networks for their fix. Thanks to this pressure but after years of turmoil, services like Spotify emerged, converting millions of former pirates in the process. Netflix, it appears, is attempting to do the same thing with video.

When people feel that they aren’t getting ripped off and that they have no further use for sub-standard piracy services in the face of stunning legal alternatives, things will change. But be under no illusion, people won’t be bullied there.

If we end up with an Internet stifled in favor of rightsholders, one in which service providers are too scared to innovate, the next generation of consumers will never forget. This will be a major problem for two key reasons. Not only will consumers become enemies but piracy will still exist. We will have come full circle, fueled only by division and hatred.

It’s a natural response to reject monopolistic behavior and it’s a natural response, for most, to be fair when treated with fairness. Destroying freedom is far from fair and will not create a better future – for anyone.

Laws have their place, no sane person will argue against that, but when the entertainment industries are making billions yet still want more, they’ll have to decide whether this will go on forever with building resentment, or if making a bit less profit now makes more sense longer term.

Source: TF, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing, torrent sites and more. We also have VPN discounts, offers and coupons

Meltdown und Spectre: NSA will nichts von Prozessor-Schwachstelle gewusst haben

Der US-Geheimdienst NSA versichert, die Prozessor-Sicherheitslücken Meltdown und Spectre nicht zum Ausspähen von Daten genutzt zu haben. In den USA wurden bereits die ersten Sammelklagen gegen Intel eingereicht. (NSA, Google)

Der US-Geheimdienst NSA versichert, die Prozessor-Sicherheitslücken Meltdown und Spectre nicht zum Ausspähen von Daten genutzt zu haben. In den USA wurden bereits die ersten Sammelklagen gegen Intel eingereicht. (NSA, Google)

Meltdown mitigation updates have either very little impact on performance… or a lot, depending on the task

The Meltdown and Spectre vulnerabilities disclosed this week affect millions of PCs, servers, and mobile devices. The good news is that companies have been busy rolling out software updates that should make it less likely that someone will exploit one …

The Meltdown and Spectre vulnerabilities disclosed this week affect millions of PCs, servers, and mobile devices. The good news is that companies have been busy rolling out software updates that should make it less likely that someone will exploit one of these vulnerabilities to steal your personal data. Some of those patches affect your personal […]

Meltdown mitigation updates have either very little impact on performance… or a lot, depending on the task is a post from: Liliputing

Asus XG Station Pro external graphics dock coming soon for $329

Asus is introducing a new Thunderbolt 3 external graphics dock that lets you use a desktop graphics card with your PC when you need it and unplug it when you don’t. It’s a way to turn just about any laptop with a Thunderbolt 3 port into a g…

Asus is introducing a new Thunderbolt 3 external graphics dock that lets you use a desktop graphics card with your PC when you need it and unplug it when you don’t. It’s a way to turn just about any laptop with a Thunderbolt 3 port into a gaming machine or to add big graphics power […]

Asus XG Station Pro external graphics dock coming soon for $329 is a post from: Liliputing

Acer Swift 7 ultrathin notebook gets a 2018 update (with 4G LTE)

Acer is updating its thin and light Swift 7 notebook. The 2018 edition is still a ridiculously slim notebook with an Intel Kaby Lake-Y processor. But the new model has an all-black aluminum unibody chassis, integrated 4G LTE, and a 14 inch touchscreen …

Acer is updating its thin and light Swift 7 notebook. The 2018 edition is still a ridiculously slim notebook with an Intel Kaby Lake-Y processor. But the new model has an all-black aluminum unibody chassis, integrated 4G LTE, and a 14 inch touchscreen display. The Acer Swift 7 SF714-51 should be available in April for […]

Acer Swift 7 ultrathin notebook gets a 2018 update (with 4G LTE) is a post from: Liliputing

Acer Switch 7 Black Edition launches for $1699

The Acer Switch 7 Black Edition is a fanless Windows tablet with a 13.5 inch, 2256 x 1504 pixel display, a built-in kickstand, a detachable keyboard, an Intel Core i7-8550U quad-core processor, and NVIDIA GeForce MX150 graphics. Acer introduced the 2-i…

The Acer Switch 7 Black Edition is a fanless Windows tablet with a 13.5 inch, 2256 x 1504 pixel display, a built-in kickstand, a detachable keyboard, an Intel Core i7-8550U quad-core processor, and NVIDIA GeForce MX150 graphics. Acer introduced the 2-in-1 tablet last year, and now the company is officially launching the Switch 7 Black […]

Acer Switch 7 Black Edition launches for $1699 is a post from: Liliputing