Susan Crawford: High-speed Internet’s Elizabeth Warren | New Republic, 30 April 2013

Telecom regulators don’t usually have public followings, except perhaps among other telecom regulators. But as soon as rumors began circulating that Julius Genachowski planned to resign as chairman of the Federal Communications Commission FCC, petitions appeared on sites like BoingBoing, Reddit, and Daily Kos calling on President Barack Obama to appoint a 50-year-old law professor and former administration official named Susan Crawford as Genachowski’s successor. It’s not hard to see why she has acquired an enthusiastic fan base in these precincts of the Internet. With an appealing blend of earnestness and feistiness, Crawford is set on turning the sorry state of broadband and wireless services in the United States into the biggest populist outrage since Elizabeth Warren went after the banks.

via Susan Crawford: High-speed Internet’s Elizabeth Warren | New Republic.

Opinion: Why bogus AP tweet tricked us – CNN.com, 25 April 2013

When The Associated Press appeared to tweet Tuesday that there were two explosions in the White House, we were right to believe the news, even though it turns out that the AP Twitter account had been hacked. There were no explosions; the tweet was false. But believing the AP is not where we went wrong. Our occasional believing false reports should awaken us to the dangers of literalism.

via Opinion: Why bogus AP tweet tricked us – CNN.com.

3D printing chocolate is a cool idea, and someone is trying to patent it – Quartz, 24 April 2013

Kit Walsh, a lawyer at the Cyberlaw Clinic, says that challenging that particular patent is not really about chocolate, but about the idea that chocolate is just another material that can be melted and later solidified into new shapes. “If you let people get patents on every material that has those properties, you’re going to occupy 3D printing,” he said over the phone from Cambridge, MA.

via 3D printing chocolate is a cool idea, and someone is trying to patent it – Quartz.

EFF and Partners Challenge Six 3D Printing Patent Applications | Electronic Frontier Foundation, 12 April 2013

But, here’s the rub: it’s hard to identify those dangerous applications. And, once you do, it’s even harder to find the right information to challenge those applications during the window that the law allows. So we partnered with the Cyberlaw Clinic at Harvard’s Berkman Center for Internet and Society and Ask Patents and—most importantly—you.

via EFF and Partners Challenge Six 3D Printing Patent Applications | Electronic Frontier Foundation.

MOOCs: The future of education or mere marketing? – Future Tense – ABC Radio National Australian Broadcasting Corporation, 8 April 2013

‘They need not be seen as competitors to them traditional lectures unless the classes are truly of a nature—because of the topic, because of the methodology—that they really don’t need in-person gatherings to do anything,’ says Professor Zittrain. ‘I would think studying for the American bar exam where you’re just trying to figure out a bunch of multiple choice questions, that’s the kind of thing that might well suit itself to a MOOC and there shouldn’t be any in-person classes. But a standard law school class bears very little relation to preparing for that exam, and instead is kind of having the students apprenticed to a set of skills. So for the humanities and for law, it may be harder to do a MOOC that is self-contained.’

via MOOCs: The future of education or mere marketing? – Future Tense – ABC Radio National Australian Broadcasting Corporation.