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Monday, April 18, 2005

Article from Hamodia 4/12/05

The following article appeared in Hamodia (the kosher newspaper which is 'trayfe' on the net) on 4/12/05.

A Modest Proposal
By C. Aronowitz


I once, years ago, worked for a skilled nursing facility which ‘factored’ its receivables. The owner got three weeks of additional cash flow by selling his Medicaid receivables, in advance of payment, to a firm in the factoring, (money lending) business at a discount.

The factor was concerned that everyone involved in collecting these receivables be aware that the receivables were pre-sold in advance of collection and did not belong to the nursing facility. Since the receivables were billed and collected via computer, he insisted that the ‘splash’, or opening screen when the computer booted, state “All receivables at XYZ Care Center belong to ABC Financial”. This ‘splash’ screen could not be changed or bypassed.

* * *
Recently, as has been publicized in this newspaper and elsewhere, cellular telephones in Eretz Yisroel have been the recipients of the crudest forms of marketing and solicitation, both graphically and text based. (Let us hope that the American aversion to solicitation and the American fetish for privacy will prevent this plague from reaching our shores. The ring tones we unfortunately hear during mincha and maariv are bad enough.)
Gedolei Yisroel acted to stop access of this filth to our community by orchestrating a ‘kosher’ phone which is incapable of receiving these services, or where they are blocked by the telephone company.
The requirements the gedolim set down for the phones are:
> No SMS text messaging (mass broadcasts)
> No Internet access
> No Video
The approved phones have a prominent ‘hashgocho’ seal on their outside to indicate to all onlookers that the phone is ‘kosher’.
Since the above solution has already passed muster by the gedolim I am respectfully proposing the necessary next step needed by our community here and now.

* * *
All of us are aware that computer based communications and networking have reached a point where the fact is that almost everyone either uses computers to access the world, or employs the services of a shabbos goy (generally a chareideishe yid) to do it for him.

The chareidi newspapers, to use one example, could practically not exist without this access.
It is high time for us to take the bull by the horns and do what was done and what was endorsed by the gedolim for cell phones in Israel. Moreover, for a number of reasons, this is a job which can be better handled in America than in Israel.
Gedolim can set standards, and computers adhering to those standards will be clearly and indelibly labeled both externally and more importantly in the software or browser. Tampering will trigger alarms, and therefore be obvious. Software already exists to disable the computer or its communication capacity in the event of tampering. Reporting of tampering can also be built in.
Standards can vary if necessary, or a minimum standard can be set and options for additional monitoring provided.
You can imagine the positive possibilities.
And for those who oppose this because they claim that it can’t be done, or the familiar refrain that it can be gotten around, if properly designed this is simply not true. There are technical means to provide access, yet limit it, and do it right. For those who will say that there are already filtered ISP’s making a valiant effort to protect us, this is true, and those ISP’s should be supported. However, this will not solve the problem of an employee who cannot choose his employer’s ISP, or those needing a high speed connection at home at a reasonable price. Moreover, filtered providers do not have the critical mass of customers necessary to do all that can be done.
The facts are, right now we are not even trying. As long as we do not even try, our korbonos are not the fault of technical advances, they are our own fault for doing nothing.
And prohibiting devices and activities that many of us are using regardless leaves all of us open to the worst possible outcomes.

We can do better.

Tuesday, April 12, 2005

Flash

Today (Tues) Hamodia has an article (Page 20) by our own C. Aronowitz on the raison d'etre of our blog.

Sunday, April 10, 2005

Funeral

I guess one can learn from everything.


Yes, pomp and ceremony in the Popes’ funeral are strange and foreign, but the services are also impressive in their scope to many around the world and the to millions physically present. Our own takanos of simplicity in burial are from R' Yochanan ben Zakai not for essential kovod ha niftar but rather for social equity reasons.

That being said, the ceremony seemed to me to be a 'chizuk ha daas' and a positive influence for the participants, and that is something that is significant in a time in history when physical self aggrandizement is the order of the day . The ceremonies commemorated an individual whose values for broader society frequently coincided with our own, and one who left in his will "no earthly possessions" ( and I have not heard of any personal scandals to date). He also may have a zchus for saving at least two Jewish lives.


It also may also work out to be a good thing over the course time that President Katzav made the acquaintance of Bashar Assad and President Khatami at the funeral.

Is it possible that this chasid omos haolom can actually be part of an antidote to the Clinton social legacy of satisfaction of self at every turn?

orthodox jews and the internet.