curmudgeon blog post
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title: CLRG Results Analysis
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date: 2022-10-10T10:13:00-06:00
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Hello there.
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# I don't have rights to copy any of the data :(
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*.xml
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title: CLRG Results Analysis
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date: 2022-10-28T10:45:00-0600
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---
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# Our Findings
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Here's a summary of what the team I've been working with has found:
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## It's clearly widespread throughout the organization
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It's more than 12 people.
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It's more than 24 people.
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It's probably more than 48 people.
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Every data set we found had some pretty clear weirdness,
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and that was before we looked at the judges we were finding weirdness with.
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Once we tied names back in,
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we were like, "oh, yeah, that's what we thought all along."
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So unless there are some *major* changes made,
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we're still going to have corruption in CLRG.
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That's just the world you're in.
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I hope any new families getting involved understand this.
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In order to get into the upper tiers,
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the way you compete becomes more about politics than dancing.
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And by "politics" I mean Machiavellian politics.
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# Why I'm Not Publishing Any More Tools
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I started writing a thing to highlight weirdness in CLRG rankings.
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You'd give it a ranking sheet,
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and it would highlight what weirdness it found,
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with an explanation about why it looks weird and what it might mean.
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But I gave up after a day's work.
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Here's why:
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## I don't have the right to copy data
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The results of competitions is owned by various companies. It seems to be a
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different company depending on who gets the contract to provide the scoring
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software for a particular event. In any case, none of them provide a license
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that allows me to redistribute their data. That means I can't host any scores on
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this web site: you have to get it from the company that owns it.
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## The data is distributed as PDF files
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Adobe Acrobat (or whatever they call it now) actually has an "export as XML"
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function that does a good job turning PDF files back into something like a
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spreadsheet.
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In order for any tool I make to be generally useful, I would also need to
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provide instructions on doing that Acrobat export, probably with an accompanying
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video and multiple screen shots. I don't even run Windows or Mac OS, to say
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nothing of being notoriously bad at this sort of instructional page / video.
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## It's not clear anybody really cares
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Reading the "voy forums", it's clear that the main thing people are getting out
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of this is righteous indignation. I don't think a post full of math would really
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appeal to the people there.
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I'm in touch with a couple of reporters covering this story, but I don't think
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the math angle is going to be very interesting to their readership either.
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That means I'd need to go and try to figure out who *does* care. I found a small
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group of people who care, and this group has already loaded some data into a
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spreadsheet and done a manual analysis.
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After finding mathematical evidence supporting what we already knew (this whole
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process is corrupt), what then? I guess I just go on with my life.
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I can already just go on with my life, I don't have to put in a bunch of work first.
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# Do you care?
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Are you a regular reader of my blog? (HA HA HA) Do you care about mathematical
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analysis of this stuff? Are you willing to jump through some technical hoops in
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order to look at things without running afoul of copyright law? Get in touch
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with me and let me know there's actually an audience!
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All of the code I wrote is checked in to git for this blog page.
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So you don't even need to contact me,
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you can just take the scraping code and go nuts.
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It uses a standard API for scraped data from two different sources,
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does some smarts to determine missing data,
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and should be pretty simple to interface with.
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If you need help getting the XML data into it,
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I'd be glad to help you with that.
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Here are the files:
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* [feisworx.mjs](Feisworx report scraping code)
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* [feisresults.mjs](Feis Results report scraping code)
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* [awardpoints.mjs](Code to guess placing given award points, used by feisresults.mjs)
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* [types.mjs](JSDoc documentation of some global data structures)
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* [dataset.mjs](Some stub code to populate an HTML page with data)
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---
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title: My technological flag in the sand
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date: 2022-10-28T14:59:00-0600
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---
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Elon Musk just bought Twitter. It got me thinking about Twitter, something that
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comes up a lot, because a lot happens there in 2022, and some of that filters
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through to me.
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I've long known that the day would come when I would just not be willing to
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accept some sort of societal change, and this would be what defined me as an old
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person. This isn't some unique thing I'd be doing: this is a time-honored human
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trait. Previous generations have put their flags in the sand by rejecting polyphonic
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sacred music, rejecting automobiles, rejecting email, and rejecting smartphones.
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Today I realized what my flag in the sand is going to be. I am not going to
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become active on Twitter, or Instagram, or Facebook, or Myspace, or LiveJournal.
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I see no personal benefit to adopting the newer technologies, and I see a lot of
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personal benefits to avoiding them.
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I'm not doing this because I think it's just a fad that humanity will move past.
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No: now that we have it, and are beginning to realize how it actually works,
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we're having to figure out how to use it responsibly as a species. This is a
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pretty familiar story for any new technology. I'm just deciding I'm not
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interested in being a part of that process.
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At some point, some related technology will come along and sweep me up with it.
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It will be awkward for me, and young people will recognize that I'm just no good
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at it. They'll wonder how any human being could be so inept at something so
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obvious. It will become a mental shortcut for the elderly that they are awkward
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or near-inept at this technology, and people who can't get it will band together
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and discuss how pointless it is and how they just can't understand why anyone
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needs it. We'll watch with some degree of sadness as our way of life dies with
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us.
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When you hear writers and philosophers talking about how limited lifespans are a
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gift to humanity, they're talking about this sort of thing.
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