amar - July 1, 2008 @ 7:32 am
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s intended to inspire library patrons to stand with librarians as they fight to usher in privacy standards in the digital age
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Other software used at I.B.M. helps me collaborate in various areas: blogs, social bookmarking and tagging, participation in online communities to which I belong, and an alert system for to-do items.
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The Budapest gathering represents one of the major benefits of today’s internet revolution: the radical democratisation of the global flow of ideas
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Global Voices is a super-important part in fixing what I call the “caring problem”.
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The 3rd annual Fair Use Day Is about to start, July 11
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Why not an exchange for the trading of digital bits and bytes?
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a meme-tracker for global news and ideas that would help us break through the echo chamber of news about the iPhone, Barack Obama or the Brangelina twins
amar - June 30, 2008 @ 7:32 am
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Scholar Looks for First Link in E-Mail Chain About Obama
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What Anderson is suggesting is that sometimes enough correlations are sufficient.
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Newsflash: Newsweek still sucks
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But in the 2008 race, the first in which campaigns are feeling the full force of the changes wrought by the Web
amar - June 29, 2008 @ 7:32 am
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amar - June 28, 2008 @ 7:32 am
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and why he believes that just writing blogs won’t change the world.
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Authoritarian governments can lock up bloggers. It is harder to outwit them
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Researchers at the University of California at Santa Cruz have built a test extension called WikiTrust that evaluates every word on Wikipedia and highlights text that was added by authors with a less than stellar reputation.
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Good evening. In my talk tonight, I would like to raise the question, How is the internet changing literary style?
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ot only is a hits-based business more profitable for vendors according to the new research, but the research suggests that consumers also derive more enjoyment from the hits, rather than the tail. In short, the researchers find that ‘the tail is long and
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It was a compelling idea: In the digitized world, there’s more money to be made in niche offerings than in blockbusters. The data tell a different story.
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ICANN is back, with what is probably its most stupid idea yet:
amar - June 27, 2008 @ 7:34 am
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MySpace is taking a much more interesting approach than Google, which controls data sent to third party sites via an iframe.
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She discovered that nearly all the posts on the site that mentioned her or her work had disappeared
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one of his most popular pieces of content on his blog is 14 seconds of former White House aide David Gergen on the dance floor at Davos 2008.
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This week, we’re thrilled to announce the 50 millionth view of a TEDTalks video. To keep up with the growing demand, we’re making a significant expansion of our publishing schedule, with a talk now being released every weekday.
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The organization that oversees Internet addresses on Thursday approved a proposal to create an unlimited number of so-called top-level domains — the familiar suffixes like “.com” at the end of Web addresses.
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The award, made public Wedesday by U.S. District Judge James A. Redden of Oregon, marks the second time that a target of the RIAA who beat a lawsuit was awarded attorney’s fees.
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amar - June 26, 2008 @ 7:32 am
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esearchers Eszter Hargittai and Gina Walejko found that men were much more likely to post their writings, photos, videos, and other creations on the Internet than women, despite the fact that they were equally likely to participate in such activities.
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“There’s the thin nerdy line between us and chaos,” he says. This is Zittrain’s light moment
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By Jonathan Zittrain
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amar - June 25, 2008 @ 7:33 am
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James Grimmelmann has an interesting new essay, “Copyright, Technology, and Access to the Law,” on the challenges of ensuring that the public has effective knowledge of the laws.
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In a policy talk called “Beyond Milk Cartons: Keeping kids safe in a digital world”, Ernie provided an overview of NCMEC’s work and chatted with Googlers about the ever-changing landscape of child protection challenges shared by parents
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Zittrain’s book is a must read for those who care – or who should care – about the Internet’s future. But don’t expect to find a happy end of how to stop it.
amar - June 24, 2008 @ 7:33 am
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Anyone who persists in illicit downloading of music or films will be barred from broadband access under a controversial new law that makes France a pioneer in combating internet piracy.
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Long before Mr. Russert’s death was reported on air, however, it was flashing across the Internet via the text-messaging service Twitter and the online encyclopedia Wikipedia.
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The World Information Access 2008 Report presents important trends in the distribution of information and communication technologies around the world.
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“You have zero privacy anyway… Get over it.”
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And that’s when his home burglar alarm goes off.
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Zhang’s observations come just over a month after China admitted that it doesn’t plan to fully open the Internet during this summer’s Olympic Games as was previously expected.
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Workers need to become savvier, and venture fund officials should convince companies they invest in to stop demanding non-compete agreements, Maeder said, adding that he’s going to do more in this regard himself.
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Now he wants to start a Twitter-driven network for emergency situations such as the one he went through, according to The Industry Standard.
amar - June 23, 2008 @ 7:32 am
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amar - June 21, 2008 @ 7:33 am
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An organisation that finds missing children has found a new weapon in their war against child abductions: Facebook.
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What we need is a foundation that serves as the middle man between government needs and programmers’ abilities.
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Feminist legal writers have explored the personhood metaphor as it is used in copyright.
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Mr. Bessen’s critique of the patent system does not go so far as that of economists like Michele Boldrin and David K. Levine