Online date-stamped predictions?
February 13, 2010 11:41 AM
Is there somewhere on the internet to record date-stamped predictions?
In Daniel Dennett's 'Breaking The Spell', there's a bit where he explains that he is anticipating various poorly conceived criticisms about what he has written. As a sortof advance rebuff, he explains he has written down exactly how the critics will misrepresent what he has said, and mailed these arguments to himself in sealed envelopes, so that the postage date on the envelopes will attest to his prescience.
I don't know if this ever worked out for him, but I mention it because I want to do something roughly similar online.
Is there a website where I can record some predictions or text, in such a way that the date-stamp the website gives to my text will be reasonably reliable? (By that I mean, people will be able to generally trust that what I have written has not been backdated with a false date). And then, ideally, have my prediction lurk out of sight until such a time that I send a link to someone?
It doesn't have to stand up in court or anything, its just something that would be useful in certain debating situations...
In Daniel Dennett's 'Breaking The Spell', there's a bit where he explains that he is anticipating various poorly conceived criticisms about what he has written. As a sortof advance rebuff, he explains he has written down exactly how the critics will misrepresent what he has said, and mailed these arguments to himself in sealed envelopes, so that the postage date on the envelopes will attest to his prescience.
I don't know if this ever worked out for him, but I mention it because I want to do something roughly similar online.
Is there a website where I can record some predictions or text, in such a way that the date-stamp the website gives to my text will be reasonably reliable? (By that I mean, people will be able to generally trust that what I have written has not been backdated with a false date). And then, ideally, have my prediction lurk out of sight until such a time that I send a link to someone?
It doesn't have to stand up in court or anything, its just something that would be useful in certain debating situations...
I don't know that this is exactly what you want but Long Bets is pretty cool and along those lines.
posted by ghharr at 11:50 AM on February 13, 2010
posted by ghharr at 11:50 AM on February 13, 2010
delmoi: OK, but _are_ there any blogging platforms that don't let you backdate? Blogger certainly allows it.
ghharr: Yes, longbets is the closest thing I've found so far (and is an awesome site), but I'm looking for something for more trivial, short term sorts of predictions.
posted by memebake at 11:57 AM on February 13, 2010
ghharr: Yes, longbets is the closest thing I've found so far (and is an awesome site), but I'm looking for something for more trivial, short term sorts of predictions.
posted by memebake at 11:57 AM on February 13, 2010
Wait, who's your audience? Who do you want to prove this to?
posted by Jaltcoh at 12:31 PM on February 13, 2010
posted by Jaltcoh at 12:31 PM on February 13, 2010
If you're comfortable with getting into the guts of a CMS you could do up a site for this purpose using Drupal and the Calendar and CCK date field modules. You could have a view of a calendar with posts slated to come true on each day of the month, for example, and a past view colour-coded with predictions that either did or didn't come true.
posted by Space Coyote at 12:47 PM on February 13, 2010
posted by Space Coyote at 12:47 PM on February 13, 2010
Space coyote: If I build the site myself, there's no way to convince people that the predictions are not backdated. And this might only be something I need to do once or twice. I'm not generally in the business of predicting stuff.
Jalycoh: Basically, the audience is individual people, to whom I will eventually reveal myself as an insufferable smartarse when I sent them a link to something I posted a few months previous. Yes, metafilter has reliable date-stamping, but I can't just pepper it with ad-hoc trivial predictions.
posted by memebake at 12:59 PM on February 13, 2010
Jalycoh: Basically, the audience is individual people, to whom I will eventually reveal myself as an insufferable smartarse when I sent them a link to something I posted a few months previous. Yes, metafilter has reliable date-stamping, but I can't just pepper it with ad-hoc trivial predictions.
posted by memebake at 12:59 PM on February 13, 2010
the audience is individual people
Who? Can you email them?
posted by Jaltcoh at 1:01 PM on February 13, 2010
Who? Can you email them?
posted by Jaltcoh at 1:01 PM on February 13, 2010
My first thought is posting to Google Groups (newsgroups), since it is reliable, public, unchangeable, and no one cares if you post junk. The last is important because you can encrypt your prediction so that it can't be read, and provide the decryption key to the person you want to provide proof.
Given that, the hole in this general scheme is that you must give the envelope or whatnot to the person in advance. You can't hold it back until needed, because it would be very easy to make all possible predictions, and only provide the correct one later.
posted by smackfu at 1:03 PM on February 13, 2010
Given that, the hole in this general scheme is that you must give the envelope or whatnot to the person in advance. You can't hold it back until needed, because it would be very easy to make all possible predictions, and only provide the correct one later.
posted by smackfu at 1:03 PM on February 13, 2010
Jaltcoh: Yes, its people I can email.
smackfu: OK, Google Groups sounds workable. The problem of the possibility of me making all possible predictions isn't going to get in the way too much.
posted by memebake at 1:10 PM on February 13, 2010
smackfu: OK, Google Groups sounds workable. The problem of the possibility of me making all possible predictions isn't going to get in the way too much.
posted by memebake at 1:10 PM on February 13, 2010
Yes, its people I can email.
OK, so email them the predictions. Make sure you keep a copy of the emails too (either save them in your "sent" box, or add yourself to the "to" field). When it's time to call attention to the past predictions, you can re-send it to them with the original message and date. They'll be able to check on the accuracy if they still have it in their archives. (Even if they happened to delete it, they'll assume you wouldn't lie about it since you would have no way to know they didn't still have your message). Or, if they're in the same room at the time, you can show your email computer to them in person.
posted by Jaltcoh at 1:16 PM on February 13, 2010
OK, so email them the predictions. Make sure you keep a copy of the emails too (either save them in your "sent" box, or add yourself to the "to" field). When it's time to call attention to the past predictions, you can re-send it to them with the original message and date. They'll be able to check on the accuracy if they still have it in their archives. (Even if they happened to delete it, they'll assume you wouldn't lie about it since you would have no way to know they didn't still have your message). Or, if they're in the same room at the time, you can show your email computer to them in person.
posted by Jaltcoh at 1:16 PM on February 13, 2010
Trusted time-stamping covers exactly this scenario.
posted by jeffburdges at 1:52 PM on February 13, 2010
posted by jeffburdges at 1:52 PM on February 13, 2010
Futureme.org can be re-purposed for this.
posted by war wrath of wraith at 5:08 PM on February 13, 2010
posted by war wrath of wraith at 5:08 PM on February 13, 2010
You can use the Wayback Machine to show that a web-page/blog-post was written before a certain date.
posted by James Scott-Brown at 3:35 AM on February 14, 2010
posted by James Scott-Brown at 3:35 AM on February 14, 2010
This thread is closed to new comments.
posted by delmoi at 11:47 AM on February 13, 2010