Daily Archive for May 26th, 2004

C.R.U.D.E.

A Charlotte, NC, lawyer purchased a box of very rare and expensive cigars then insured them against fire among other things. Within a month having smoked his entire stock pile of these great cigars and without yet having made even his first premium payment on the policy, the lawyer filed a claim against the insurance company. In his claim, the lawyer stated the cigars were lost ‘in a series of small fires.’

The insurance company refused to pay, citing the obvious reason: that the man had consumed the cigars in the normal fashion. The lawyer sued… and won! In delivering the ruling the judge agreed with company that the claim was frivolous. The Judge stated nevertheless, that the lawyer held a policy from the company in which it had warranted that the cigars were insurable and also guaranteed that it would insure them against fire, without defining what is considered to be unacceptable fire, and was obligated to pay the claim. Rather than endure lengthy and costly appeal process, the insurance company accepted the ruling and paid $15,000 to the lawyer for his loss of the rare cigars lost in the ‘fires’.

After the lawyer cashed the check, the insurance company had him arrested on 24 counts of ARSON!!!! With his own insurance claim and testimony from the previous case being used against him, the lawyer was convicted of intentionally burning his insured property and was sentenced to 24 months in jail and a $24,000 fine.

This is a true story and was the 1st place winner in the recent Criminal Lawyers Award Contest.

MyLifeBits Project

MyLifeBits Project is an initiative currently underway at Microsoft’s Media Presence Research Group, and is directed by Gordon Bell, who was instrumental in creating the first commercial minicomputers in the 1960s.

According to Microsoft - MyLifeBits is a lifetime store of everything. When you are dead and gone maybe your descendants will be able to go thorough minute details of your life, your conversations, e-mail exchanges and the pictures and video highlights of your existence. That’s the idea behind MyLifeBits, which aims to record the essence of a person’s life on computer disks. Every photograph snapped, home movie filmed, Web page browsed, e-mail scribbled, phone call made or bill paid would be there in the storage space.

There are two main parts to MyLifeBits: an experiment in lifetime storage, and a software research effort. Both of them seem to be the most challenging. Because, firstly, searching this huge chunk of information would be a very task-intensive procedure. However, future technologies might make this possible. Secondly, documenting such a huge information base is a very tedious affair. Our lives maybe on the digital road but there is no way to organise all the pictures, e-mails and documents that form everything about our existence.

Still the project is being pursued with full enthusiasm. Cheers to Bell and his team.