The Anonymous Widower

The Police Workload Due To Social Media

According to this article on the BBC, social media crimes are at least half of all frontline Police work. Here’s the first two paragraphs.

Complaints originating from social media make up “at least half” of a front-line police officer’s work, a senior officer has told the BBC.

Chief Constable Alex Marshall, head of the College of Policing, said the number of crimes arising from social media represented “a real problem”.

I’m not against reporting these crimes to the Police in any way, but I do think that this is a rather large load on the Police.

As a programmer, who has worked in data analysis for many years and as I feel I understand the Internet very well, I do not feel it is beyond the wit of programmers and companies to create a robust and trusted Internet-based system to deal with all the annoyances of the modern age.

Obviously, you could still go to the Police directly, but if say forwarding an offensive message to a semi-automated system had a sensible outcome, you might find this less trouble.

There are very few things that because of my physical and mental make-up that can be said to me as abuse. Although, I do get fed-up with some spam messages that seem to come to me every day. But I can understand how some people  get offended and need their tormentors stopped.

I believe that a well-programmed system could handle much of the abuse and unwanted messages we get. If it became trusted and the sanctions it had taken against persistent nuisances were respected, people would think twice before sending offensive messages.

It might even stop crime and disrupt terrorist networks. As I write this, it has been said on the BBC, that you can follow what is going on with ISIS in Iraq through Twitter.

But then politicians don’t understand the power of technology and especially don’t like being bypassed by it. So we are more likely to see draconian laws on social media.

June 24, 2014 Posted by | Computing, World | , , , | Leave a comment

A Worry For Scottish Fund Managers

I had lunch with an intelligent lady yesterday and the subject of Scottish devolution came up.

She said that she had money invested with Scottish Funds and would be moving the money to London before the devolution referendum.

So how much sensible money will be removed from North of the Border?

I certainly wouldn’t allow any of my money to be managed outside of the country in which I live. I moved my pension away from a company controlled by the Bank of Santander for just that reason.

Several of my friends have lost savings and their pension over the last few years. I wouldn’t put all or any part of my money in an overseas basket!

June 15, 2014 Posted by | Finance & Investment, World | , | Leave a comment

Are Politicians Stupid?

This report on the BBC web site, shows how the three major party leaders were photographed with a special World Cup promotion edition of The Sun.

The Sun is noted for various things, but faithful support for politicians isn’t probably one of them.

So why did the npoliticians ever let the photos be published?

Clegg and Cameron’s supporters didn’t seem to mind too much, but Labour Party supporters and especially those from Liverpool, are giving Milliband a hard time.

June 14, 2014 Posted by | World | , , , , | 3 Comments

BBC Breakfast’s Pointless Move To Manchester

It may be a day of a minor political tremor, but today is illustrating how pointless it was to move BBC Breakfast and probably many other programs to Manchester.

All of the major politicians are of course in Westminster, so Bill Turnbull is in London with Louise Minchin sitting almost by herself in the North, with a few lightweight guests. It is showing, it is a bad recipe for a good programme.

The sooner the BBC does the right thing and moves BBC Breakfast back to London the better.

May 26, 2014 Posted by | News | , , , | Leave a comment

The Consequences Of A Yes Vote For Scottish Independence

I don’t care one way or another, if Scotland votes for independence or not, as I don’t think it would affect me much at all, if the decision was made for all time. Nothing would be worse than continuous referenda every two years or so.

But I’ve just read an article in Modern Railways, by their respected columnist; Alan Williams, in which he details some of the problems we might see in the event of Scotland voting for independence.

He suggests that after Sottish Independence, England and Wales might decide to adopt Central European Time, as most of the opposition is in Scotland. So if Scotland was to stay on the current time, we’d have the problem of running connected businesses like trains and power networks.  I know we do it successfully with the French, but we’ve not changed our time relationship with the French for some decades.

Now this is just one of several problems he flags up with the railway industry.

How many other problems will arise in splitting other industries and utilities?

It’s not my set of problems, but it would be a rich vein for critics and comedians.

May 23, 2014 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , | Leave a comment

May Puts The Boot In

One of the lead stories on the BBC is about Theresa May’s speech to the Police Federation. This is the first paragraph.

Theresa May has urged the Police Federation of England and Wales to reform, or she will enforce change.

But the extraordinary thing about the report in The Times, is not the report itself, but the number of comments entered by readers.

As these comments do not seem to favour one side or another, surely the large number, indicates that many Times readers are very interested in what happens to the Police Federation.

May 21, 2014 Posted by | News | , | Leave a comment

Rats And Sinking Ships Come To Mind

This story on the BBC today,  that the Labour party is cutting its links with the Co-op Bank made me think of the headline of this post.

On the other hand, perhaps the owners of the other 70% of the bank, that the Co-operative Group doesn’t own, aren’t those who wear red underwear?

On the other hsand moving to a bank controlled by the Trade Unions, might not bode well for those who want the Labour party to think pragmatically and outside the box.

April 24, 2014 Posted by | Finance & Investment, News | , , | Leave a comment

Should Scottish Islands Be Given More Independence?

The BBC this morning is running a report about more independence from Scotland and the rest of the UK.

Scottish Secretary Alistair Carmichael has promised to deliver greater powers for the Northern and Western Isles.

The Orkney and Shetland MP said government from Edinburgh had been “just as bad and just as dangerous” for the islands “as it is from London.”

He hopes to deliver “genuine and long lasting reform,” and said an agreement should be in place by midsummer.

Why not?

It could be argued that a greater degree of independence hasn’t done the Isle of Man and the Channel Islands any harm!

But if we look at giving this independence to any area of the UK, giving them control of their strengths and natural resources and such things as infrastructure, education and planning could only be positive.

I probably know most about infrastructure and especially railways than anything else and if we look at Scotland and London, where transport policy has been partially devolved, we’ll see a lot more rail projects than say in the North East or South West, so I’ll look at one example.

If East Anglia had control of its transport, they would have probably dualled the A47, A11 and A140 by now and would be seriously thinking about improving the London to Norwich and the Peterborough to Ipswich rail lines. The latter is probably needed to be electrified, to enable Felixstowe to compete with the London Gateway.

This type of local control could only be good for an area.

But as I said in this article on Mayors, central government doesn’t like to give up power.

April 16, 2014 Posted by | Transport/Travel, World | , , , | Leave a comment

Mayors Are The Future

This is the theme of an interesting article in The Spectator entitled Governments have failed – mayors are the future. It is a must read.

 

As a Londoner, I always argue, that London’s transport system and especially the Underground, Overground and buses are so good, because they are controlled and often designed by people who answer to the people, business and visitors to London.

I can remember, when I left London in the 1960s and started to use Liverpool buses a lot, how I found the plastic covered seats strange, compared to the cloth ones on the RT buses in London.

Even in those days, London did its own thing, because that is what London Transport, the controlling Greater London Council and electorate wanted. Ken and Boris have raised this local control to a new level. And it’s not just these two, but the next London mayor, whoever he or she is and which party they belong to, will raise the standard higher.

This paragraph is very much to the point.

Londoners (there are more of them than Scots and Welsh put together) can argue that Boris has made more of an impact on their lives than David Cameron. And this is with the Mayor of London having fewer powers than most mayors. He is one of many from around the world — Tony Tan in Singapore, Yury Luzhkov of Moscow and Wolfgang Schuster in Stuttgart — who argue that the city is the optimum government unit.

So when voters outside of London complain that London gets too big a slice of the cake, is the problem not London, but their second-rate politicians, who fight local squabbles, rather than do the best for their electorate?

You also have the problem that central government doesn’t like giving power to elected mayors in cities, as it reduces their own power.

But surely, if say Leeds wants a tram system, then that should be a decision for the people, businesses and local politicians of that city.

April 13, 2014 Posted by | World | , | 1 Comment

Sense On Farage Versus Clegg

I didn’t watch the debate last night, as I was watching the football and trying to make sense of my tiger photos.

This morning, I’ve read the report in The Times and especially the comments from readers. The latter are probably summed up by this one.

Good strategy of Tories and Labour to keep out of this playground spat.

Farage looks like (is) a man offering simple solutions to complex problems, which is appealing in a protest vote like the Euro elections, but he has nothing to say about actually running the country as potential PM, so will not get far in a GE when people really are paying attention and are worried about jobs, health, education, etc.

Clegg used it as an attempt (failed) to look statesman-like, but few have his appetite for more Europe, and even he didn’t seem convinced by his own arguments. He is a man whose time in the limelight has been and gone. Not many people will remember his name in a decade.

 

So it might well be that most people actually saw Farage versus Clegg as entertainment or perhaps a dangerous freak show.

April 3, 2014 Posted by | News | , , | 1 Comment