Thursday, August 19, 2010

PTCL Strike - MAXCOM Sellout - Problems Galore!!

It was by chance that I discovered that one of the largest service providers (because it has a monopoly) had actually decided to go on strike leaving all it's customers (basically all of Pakistan) in limbo. It all started when my telephone line went dead killing my internet connection with MAXCOM. When I tried to call MAXCOM to lodge a complaint, it was quite swiftly done so and similarly PTCL complaint numbers also attended my call quite efficiently. It was the next day that revelations of the strike appeared.
The next day when I discovered that no progress had been made in regards to repairing my internet or telephone line, I began calling PTCL and MAXCOM complaint numbers again only to find that both numbers had a recording which stated "All representatives are busy at the moment...". After waiting for over 15 minutes hoping that the representatives can attend my call, I gave up and called one of the MAXCOM technical employee directly. When I asked him about the delay in complaint handling, he narrated the following:

PTCL took over MAXCOM approx a month and half ago and recently PTCL announced that they will be going on strike due to insufficient salary increase. They had come over to MAXCOM's office and forced them to also shut down the office. Hence, all complaints will only be handled after they reopen.

What is surprising is how this has not been highlighted in the news, nor has our justice bench been able to intervene to amend this critical issue pertaining to the only service provider of telephone service. It seems wrong that the complaint numbers are playing recordings that deceive the customer into thinking that all representatives are busy when actually they are not busy attending customer complaints but rather attending rally's and sit-ins.
I am afraid that the good service provided by MAXCOM will now suffer and sadly one of the best DSL internet providers will begin to lose customers just because of an association with PTCL. I myself have begun to look around for alternatives because at the end of the day, us customers demand service.

I wonder, would PTCL or MAXCOM wait for an extended period of time before I pay my bills?? After all, I was on strike and did not get paid this month......so would they be as forgiving as they expect their customers to be??

References:

PTCL Workers Website
PTCL Strike - Interview Video

Tuesday, August 3, 2010

"No. 1 Nation in Sexy Web Searches? Call it Pornistan" - Call it irresponsible reporting!!

It seems the ratings of Fox News have been dropping for them to start publishing articles to discredit entire countries without any concrete evidence. Why else would they want to hand over a topic for investigating and published to an intern still wet behind the ears in the industry?
This piece of trash writing first came across when a post was displayed on my Facebook feed by a friend. This lead me to a page on Facebook that showcased a strong answer to such distasteful writing. Please find below the entire response as it was published:



‘Pornistan?’ only if you believe one foxy intern from the United States of erotica
By S Kamal

A couple of weeks ago, Fox News published an article on their ‘World’ section titled ‘No 1 Nation in Sexy Web Searches? Call it Pornistan’. The article has subsequently been the source of much discussion online, and has been published and circulated to a fairly wide audience. While the point of the article was unclear, the article called Pakistan the ‘world’s leader in online searches for pornographic material’ and stated that “Google ranks Pakistan No 1 in the world in searches for pornographic terms.”

My reaction to reading the article, particularly some of the lewd terms for which Pakistan ranked #1 in, was bewilderment. Perhaps this was why Pakistan’s economy is in such poor shape? It appeared that that everyone was seeking the wrong type of stimulus.

That is, until I started checking a few facts. Reader comments on the article on the Fox News website were promptly disabled, so I couldn’t voice my thoughts there. Finally, I contacted the author of the article – who, as I discovered, was an intern at Fox with quite a vivid imagination.

Some facts: None of the rankings in the article were published by Google. Rather, every single absurd term reported in the article (‘donkey sex’, ‘horse sex’, etc.) was manually typed into two Google tools called ‘Google Insights’ and ‘Google Trends’ that gives statistics for where in the world certain searches originate. In other words, every single term reported in the article was a term that the Fox News intern who wrote the piece CHOSE to search for.

Now, if I were writing an article on the irony of a government that is passing laws against online blasphemy while its citizens engage in watching porn online (presumably the point of the story – although this hardly seems like a dramatic, newsworthy phenomenon), searching for ‘donkey sex’ would certainly not pop into my mind first. So, I posed this question to the author on her blog, for which her response was: “I did not think up the searches on my own. They were brought to my attention from an outside individual. I am going to respectfully end my engagement in the discussion.” Ah. So her “source,” if you can call it that, is an “outside individual.” Must be quite the colourful character.

The method used to produce these results is obviously flawed. Interestingly (but not surprisingly), minor variations of the search terms on Google Insights yield dramatically different results. So I did a 15 minute exercise on Google Insights. First I looked at slight modifications of the terms in the article, to see how countries rank. As an example, let’s take ‘Donkey sex’, where Pakistan ranked #1, and change the search term to ‘Sex with Donkey’. The US ranked #1 for ‘Sex with Donkey’ for 2006, 2007 and 2010, and #2 in 2008 and 2009, while Pakistan does not appear in the top five countries for this search term in any of these years. Now, if one were to ascribe scientific certainty to such a finding, as the author has done, one could argue that ‘Donkey sex’ (where Pakistan ranks #1) could refer to a search for donkeys reproducing with each other, while ‘Sex with Donkey’ (where the US ranks #1), is, well, less ambiguous.

In this case, it seems that the Islamic Republic of Pornistan has a lot of catching up to do with the United States of Erotica.

Along similar lines, the US has also been ranked #1 or #2, for the period 2004 through 2010, for the following terms that are slight modifications of terms in the original article: ‘Sex with school child’, ‘sex with farm animals’ and ‘sex with camel’. Pakistan was not ranked in the top ten countries for any of these search terms.

To further demonstrate the ridiculousness of this methodology, I’ve documented some results from my own “research”. Let’s just say that an outside source tipped me off that Americans fantasize about having sex with their vegetables. So, I put this to the test. The results, according to Google: The US has ranked #1 for 2004 to 2010 in searches for the following terms: ‘tomato sex’, ‘corn sex’, ‘cabbage sex’, ‘spinach sex’, ‘celery sex’, ‘sex with vegetable’, and even ‘chicken sex’ and ‘tractor sex’. The US also ranks highly in several other searches, “not suitable to publish here.” Surely, these results have deep philosophical implications on the psyche of the average American?

And the gem? The author claims in her blog that: “I contacted the appropriate [embassy] officials and attempted to contact multiple individuals in Pakistan.” Ah. So no one at the embassy responded to her interview request. Yes, we should certainly take our Embassy chaps to task for not paying due attention to this groundbreaking scientific research; and wasting their time instead on trifling issues such as the war on terror, strategic dialogue with India, internal political strife, Pak-US relations, etc. As another commentator pointed out on the author’s blog, a more reliable source for information on Internet use in Pakistan may have been to contact the Internet Service Providers Association of Pakistan. The author may have found them through a simple Google search – if she wasn’t too busy Googling her sex search data.

I could say that this is journalism at its worse. But, to be frank, this is not journalism. This is a dishonest and irresponsible story, written in very poor taste.

As a respectable news source, Fox News needs to publish a retraction of this story, or at the very least, some clarifications on the intent of this article and the methodology employed. I believe this is in order, lest the general public conclude that they are in the business of cheaply seeking attention through controversy.
The author can be reached at sxkamal@gmail.com

Source : Daily Times

I must give credit to Mr Kamal for taking this issue seriously and actually providing quite a satisfactory response to the inaccurate article published by Fox. The article published by Fox can be found here :


In addition to Mr Kamal's findings, I quickly visited some statistics websites and realized another reason why Fox's article is absurd.

How can the intern be correct when :

Pakistan Population : 177,276,594
Internet users: 18,500,00
Hence internet penetration: 10.4%

United States Population : 310,232,863
Internet users: 239,232,863
Hence internet penetration: 77.3%


How can a country, that has a meager 18.5 million internet users manage to beat all the rest of the countries including CHINA on pornographic searches? How can we beat them on any search??

An american just proved once again how dumb they can really be!! By the way, isn't prostitution legal in some parts of America? Doesn't America have a thriving pornographic industry? Or how about the fact that which country has the highest number of cases of child abuse? or how about the divorce rate? or better yet, the average age of an american when he or she first has sex? 

Why can't people simply understand this simple fact:

People who live in glass houses should not throw stones.