Spam spam spam spam. Lovely spam!

I love it when you can determine something about the hidden internals of a system only from superficial behaviour.  For example, the idea of being able to detect the presence of a black hole from it gravitational effect on other visible objects like starts struck me as pretty neat.  Anyway, not quite as stellar, but I’ve noticed a curious Gmail phenomena: if you look into the “spam” folder, then for almost every page load, the advertisement that appears above the mail list is for some type of Spam food product (seriously, try it).

More intriguing than the sheer variety of Spam products advertised is how Google’s contextual placement is deciding to put those advertisements there.  It hasn’t come from the contents of the emails, unless I happen to be the only person on the planet receiving a load of spam mail about Spam (oh, the irony, ah-hem) – so the only possible answers must be that either its been hard-coded in (and the advertisers probably deserve a discount), or Google’s contextual system is not only basing its decisions on the content of the emails but the surrounding page structure.

I’m guessing it must be hard-coded, as I doubt any user would want to see advetisements based on the content of spam email – you really never know what it would generate.  Which means at some point they’ve tweaked those adds only to generate advertisements for products containing Spam…hehe.  Monty Python lives on.

Google first again.

In my recent post I’d wrote about how useful it would be to have the facility in webmail services to check your past login times; well, this morning I signed into my GMail account and was presented with the facility to do just that, nice one (its right at the bottom of the page).  As you might say in Scotland – “oan yersel Google”.  Not only does it provide your current login details, and previous four login times with IP, but it also lets you clear any stale sessions from their authentication database – a very useful feature if you use a choppy internet connection like wireless or mobile broadband where you cannot assure you’ll always be able to “sign out”.

Now… I wonder what happens if I write something else… just kidding ;-)