Archive for March, 2006

Berkman Tuesday Luncheon with David Weinberger

0

David Weinberger, Berkman fellow, author, and blogger, talks about some of the ideas he’s exploring in the book he’s writing on knowledge. He says, “The comedian Jon Stewart has become a trusted journalist. Wikipedia is in many instances more reliable and up-to-date than traditional encyclopedias. Web sites let social networks put together their own front pages, ignoring the efforts of the highly trained members of newspaper editorial boards. What the heck is up with knowledge?”

“It’s by no means the end of days for knowledge,” he says, “but it’s no longer limited by the physical ways we’ve had to manage it in the past.” Further, he says, as a culture we are hard at work on building an infrastructure of meaning and understanding.

If you’d like to receive weekly email announcements of Berkman Center events and webcasts, please email rsvp@cyber.law.harvard.edu.

Download the MP3 (time: 1:13:45)

Berkman Tuesday Luncheon with Tom Gerace

0

Tom Gerace is Founder and CEO of Gather.com. Gather is a social networking and community blogging site, where members subscribe to, comment on and rate for quality the content posted by fellow members. Members can post articles and images both to their individual blogs and to groups. Tom visited the Berkman Center, part of our Tuesday Luncheon Series, to discuss Gather’s vision for community-created content, and its unique rewards system, compensating members who submit consistent, quality content by sharing its ad revenue.

If you’d like to receive weekly email announcements of Berkman Center events and webcasts, please email rsvp@cyber.law.harvard.edu.

Download the MP3 (time: 1:54:02)

Web of Ideas: The Authority of Wikipedia

0

Earlier this week, Berkman Center fellow, author, and blogger David Weinberger hosted a discussion about “The Authority of Wikipedia” as part of his occasional Web of Ideas series. From David, “An article gains authority just by appearing in the Encyclopedia Britannica. Does it gain authority just by being in Wikipedia? What (if anything) makes a Wikipedia article worthy of belief? How are the sources, criteria and locus of authority changing in the age of the Web?”

Download the MP3 (time: 1:19:06)

Citizen Media Series Part Two: “The Daily Me and We”

0

On Tuesday, March 14 the Berkman Center hosted the second in Dan Gillmor’s Citizens Media events series, Engaging with the News, Part I: The Daily Me and We.”

“In a world of democratized media, we dont have to settle anymore for the newspaper that a carrier drops in the driveway or the 5 oclock news broadcast. Even the traditional media are offering new choices, including podcasts and outbound links, but this is only a starting point. We can, and should, assemble our own news reports from the vast data streams. We can use tools to help navigate our way through the masses of information, but the human component remains crucial. Recommendation systems and other emergent notions can help answer the question of who and what is trustworthy in a world where anyone can publish.”

Dan Gillmor is the founder & director of the Center for Citizen Media, author of We the Media and a Berkman Center fellow.

Download the MP3 (time: 1:32:17)

Berkman Luncheon Series with Roger Dingledine

0

Roger Dingledine visited the Berkman Center this week, part of our Tuesday Luncheon Series to discuss Tor. “Tor aims to defend against traffic analysis, a form of network surveillance that threatens personal anonymity and privacy, confidential business activities and relationships, and state security.” - Tor

Download the MP3 (time: 1:19:06)

Berkman Luncheon Seres with Stefan Bechtold

0

Stefan Bechtold visited the Berkman Center on March 7, 2006 as part of our Tuesday luncheon series to discuss, “Trusted Computing Between Closed and Open Architectures.” Stefan Bechtold is a rising star in cyberlaw research, and a fellow with Stanford Law School’s Center for Internet & Society. Stefan is a Fulbright Scholar and has been a visiting researcher at UC-Berkeley, the Institute for Information Law in Amsterdam, and the Max Planck Institute for Research on Collective Goods in Bonn. You can read more about Stefan and his research here, and more about Stefan’s work in trusted computing here.

Download the MP3 (time: 1:05:33)

Martin Varsavsky on FON

0


Martin Varsavsky, Argentine entrepreneur and philanthropist and the founder and CEO of FON, visited the Berkman Center for an informal discussion about FON on March 3, 2006. FON is a new company aiming to connect a global community of people to share WiFi access. Varsavsky is the founder of several successful companies such as Viatel, Jazztel and Ya.com. He also teaches at the Instituto de Empresa in Madrid, Spain and is President and Founder of The Varsavsky Foundation and the Safe-Democracy Foundation, and was Ambassador-at-Large of Argentina up to 2005.

Download the MP3 (time: 54:40)

Wikipedia, Wikimedia, and the Law

1

On this edition of AudioBerkman, “…The deeper the penetration of the technology, the deeper the penetration of the content, the more we have the ability to improve everyone’s lives.” Brad Patrick, outside counsel to the Wikimedia Foundation, on Wikipedia, Wikimedia, and the Law.

The Wikimedia Foundation asks us to “imagine a world in which every single person is given free access to the sum of all human knowledge.”

To help us imagine this world and its legal implications, well hear from Brad Patrick of the law firm Fowler White Boggs Banker. The following talk was presented on January 31, 2006, part of the Tuesday Luncheon Series at the Berkman Center for Internet & Society at Harvard Law School.

Download the MP3 (time: 28:27).

Produced by Colin Rhinesmith.

Attribution: Music for this edition of AudioBerkman was sampled and remixed by Colin Rhinesmith using a drum loop found in Porch Cats “Till Now (ft Emonic) and ambient sounds sampled from SoLaRis Elysium. Both works are licensed under Creative Commons Licenses and are available for download at ccMixter.org.

Citizen Media Series Part I

0

Listen to “We the Media: The Rise of Grassroots, Open-Source Journalism, and the Coming Era of the Citizen Activist” from February 13, 2006 at The Kennedy School of Government.

A public talk by Dan Gillmor — CitizenMedia.org founder & director, author of “We the Media,” and Berkman fellow — with respondents Alex Jones, Director of the Joan Shorenstein Center, and David Berlind, Executive Editor of ZDNet. This event was co-sponsored by the Shorenstein Center for Press, Politics and Public Policy

“As technology collides with journalism, democratizing the tools of media creation and distribution, news is evolving from a lecture into a conversation. As individuals become more engaged with the news and its creation, they will be taking steps beyond simply being better informed — a journey toward enhanced civic activism as well. This talk, the first in a series of four, explains recent developments in grassroots media and why they are so important to the notion of an informed citizenry.” - Dan Gillmor

Download the MP3 (time: 1:27:31).

Berkman Luncheon Series with Sunlight Foundation

0

“The Sunlight Foundation will help change the culture of Congress by exposing the identity, nature and means of those involved in corruption and by fostering greater transparency and accountability by all its members, in the belief that, as Justice Brandeis said, ‘Sunlight is the best disinfectant.’”- From our Q & A (below) with The Sunlight Foundation.

Yesterday we were visited by the Sunlight Foundation as part of the Berkman Luncheon Series. If you weren’t able to join us via webcast or right here at the Berkman Center, we’ve got a Q&A with the Foundation below and a new AudioBerkman podcast of their talk.

Download the MP3 (time: 1:00:51).

Recorded February 14, 2006

Question 1: You will be launching Sunlight Foundation very shortly. What is the goal of this organization and how did it get its start?

The goal of the Sunlight Foundation is to promote greater examination of the inner workings of Congress through a combination of grant-making and programs that will stimulate more investigative attention to the institution and its members. It will do so by producing analyses, studies, and information about lawmakers, legislation and lobbyists; providing new tools and training to make essential data more easily accessible to reporters and citizen activists; creating an interactive conversation with the public about how Congress does its work using paid advertising, outreach to editorial boards, web and local activism; providing grants to writers, media outlets and bloggers; and establishing awards and incentive grants for investigative reporting on Congress.

Question 2: What’s your timeline? Your plans for the next month? The next six months?

Were still in pre-launch mode, in the sense that we havent formally gone public (though you could say our talk at Berkman is the start of a soft launch), and we arent quite ready to put our website up for public view. But that doesnt mean we arent busy. We have partnered with one public interest organization that is putting together a site that will enable the public to play a big role in collecting data and tracking the statements and actions of all 535 members of Congress, which will launch in mid-to-late March. And we have begun making grants to watchdog groups in the business of making data available to the public on Congresss doings. As a result, some data that is currently disclosed by Congress but only in paper formpersonal financial disclosure statements, travel records, and lobbying recordswill soon be available in digital form.

Question 3: Why is transparency so important?

A recent NBC/Wall Street Journal poll by Peter Hart reported that 79 percent of the American public believes that Congress is broken and that most of its members have been corrupted. Democrats and Republicans are seen as almost equally vulnerable on the issue of corruption. Consequently, many Americans and most of our children see our political system as not being worthy of their attention or engagement. The nations future as a democracy is thus in danger at precisely the point at which we face dramatic new challenges to our prosperity and safety. The core of the corruption problem can be conveyed by this hypothetical story: If tomorrow Congress was called upon to pass a simple bill to confirm what day of the week it was, that bill likely would emerge with three special interest riders. The riders would be there first, because of the insidious power of the influence industry money and lobbyists and second, because the influence industry and the influenced politicians have correctly concluded that their risk of being exposed and paying a price for their conduct is remote. Sunlight was conceived from the belief that corruption cannot stand the light of day, and that greater transparency will foster greater accountability. (One long-time investigative reporter, Elizabeth Drew, remarked to us they do it because they can get away with it.) We need greater transparency to help restore the health of our democracy.

Question 4: What role do you play in changing our political culture? What role do you play in improving transparency?

The Sunlight Foundation will help change the culture of Congress by exposing the identity, nature and means of those involved in corruption and by fostering greater transparency and accountability by all its members, in the belief that, as Justice Brandeis said, Sunlight is the best disinfectant.

Question 5: You describe this in part as a citizen effort. In what ways can people get involved with Sunlight Foundation today?

Well, its a little early to get involved. But in a months time, well be opening our doors (online and on the ground) and there will be plenty of ways to get involved then. We believe that civic engagement is vital to restoring the health of our democracy, and in particular are very excited by the power of citizen networks to tackle distributed projects that old-fashioned media either cant do or no longer seem interested in doing. Stay tuned for details.

Protected by AkismetBlog with WordPress