Archive for the 'Software' Category
Mike Deehan - January 30, 2008 @ 3:46 pm
· Berkman Luncheon Series, Beth Kolko, Berkman Center, Software, Internet, Events

QuickTime Video
Download the MP3 (time: 053:22)
Beth Kolko, Berkman Fellow and Associate Professor of Technical Communication at the University of Washington, was the guest speaker this week at the Berkman Center’s Luncheon Series.
Kolko’s presentation was entitled “User, Hacker, Builder, Thief: Creativity and Consumerism in a Digital Age.”
The not very slow but definitely steady flow of computer technology into far corners of everyday life has changed fundamental cultural processes and affected how people work, learn, and play. It’s also provided lots of cool stuff to buy. But by some measures there has also been a somewhat fundamental failure of imagination in envisioning what hardware, software and services can look like which has resulted in users from outside targeted demographics adapting technology in unexpected and creative ways. This talk is about diversity of design, the cult of expertise, why hackers are the good guys and lays out the argument that theories of subjectivity and axe grinders can be part of the same conversation. Encouraging users to become hackers, builders, and thieves may be the best way to ensure creative and diverse design.
Runtime: 53:24, size: 320×240, 144.5MB, .MOV, H.264 codec
mediaberkman - November 30, 2007 @ 4:10 pm
· audio, Citizen Media Law Project, David Ardia, Sam Bayard, Colin Rhinesmith, Citizen Media, Internet, Software, Berkman Center, Law

This week, David Ardia talks about a recent lawsuit against iBrattleboro.com and Colin Rhinesmith speaks with Sam Bayard about an important decision on anonymity.
Download the MP3 (time: 8:20)
Music used in this podcast was sampled and remixed from a track titled “Jazz House” by the Wicked Allstars, available on Magnatune.
To subscribe to the Citizen Media Law Podcast, visit our Subscriptions page or go directly to the podcast feed. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Share Alike 3.0 Unported license.
mediaberkman - November 14, 2007 @ 2:22 pm
· Berkman Center, Citizen Media, Berkman Luncheon Series, Gary Kebbel, video, Software, Education, Law, Internet, Journalism

QuickTime Video
Gary Kebbel, journalism program officer at the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, was the guest speaker this week at the Berkman Center’s Luncheon Series.
Kebbel’s presentation, entitled “The Knight News Challenge and Digital Innovation: Challenges Posed by Intellectual Property, International Giving, and Grant Administration” discussed the foundation’s grant program. Just ending its third year, the Knight News Challenge is a $25 million contest to find digital news innovations that are used to create community in a given geographic area. At Knight Foundation, Kebbel also helped create the Knight Citizen News Network and the Knight Digital Media Center.
The contest was recently revised to meet new and evolving goals, such as making grants to individuals in foreign countries or focusing the wisdom of the crowd on weak applications so that they could be strengthened and resubmitted. Additionally, $500,000 was set aside for the ideas of people 25-years-old and younger. These changes create new problems of grant administration, intellectual property and having a minor win a monetary award.
Runtime: 59:36, size: 320×240, 166MB, .MOV, H.264 codec
mediaberkman - November 13, 2007 @ 5:06 pm
· Citizen Media, Berkman Luncheon Series, audio, Gary Kebbel, Berkman Center, Software, Education, Law, Innovation, Internet, Journalism
Gary Kebbel, journalism program officer at the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, was the guest speaker this week at the Berkman Center’s Luncheon Series.
Download the MP3 (time: 59:36)
Kebbel’s presentation, entitled “The Knight News Challenge and Digital Innovation: Challenges Posed by Intellectual Property, International Giving, and Grant Administration” discussed the foundation’s grant program. Just ending its third year, the Knight News Challenge is a $25 million contest to find digital news innovations that are used to create community in a given geographic area. At Knight Foundation, Kebbel also helped create the Knight Citizen News Network and the Knight Digital Media Center.
The contest was recently revised to meet new and evolving goals, such as making grants to individuals in foreign countries or focusing the wisdom of the crowd on weak applications so that they could be strengthened and resubmitted. Additionally, $500,000 was set aside for the ideas of people 25-years-old and younger. These changes create new problems of grant administration, intellectual property and having a minor win a monetary award.
mediaberkman - November 9, 2007 @ 3:37 pm
· Colin Rhinesmith, Regulation, Citizen Media, audio, Citizen Media Law Project, Sam Bayard, David Ardia, Berkman Center, Human Rights, Education, Journalism, Law, Internet Filtering, Software, Internet, Governance

This week, David Ardia talks about threats to the Internet in Pakistan and Colin Rhinesmith speaks with Sam Bayard about a recent entry in our new legal threats database.
Download the MP3 (time: 7:30)
Music used in this podcast was sampled and remixed from a track titled “Jazz House” by the Wicked Allstars, available on Magnatune.
To subscribe to the Citizen Media Law Podcast, visit our Subscriptions page or go directly to the podcast feed.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Share Alike 3.0 Unported license.
mediaberkman - November 2, 2007 @ 11:50 am
· audio, Colin Rhinesmith, Citizen Media Law Project, David Ardia, Sam Bayard, Citizen Media, Berkman Center, Education, Law, Internet, Software, Journalism

This week, David Ardia previews our legal threats database, Colin Rhinesmith talks about a recent decision on First Amendment protections for anonymous bloggers, and Sam Bayard spotlights a defamation suit involving an Iranian blogger in Canada.
Download the MP3 (time: 9:30)
Music used in this podcast was sampled and remixed from a track titled “Jazz House” by the Wicked Allstars, available on Magnatune.
To subscribe to the Citizen Media Law Podcast, visit our Subscriptions page or go directly to the podcast feed.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Share Alike 3.0 Unported license.
mediaberkman - October 25, 2007 @ 10:18 am
· Berkman Luncheon Series, Digital Libraries, Aaron Swartz, Berkman Center, video, Internet, Software, Education

QuickTime Video
Aaron Swartz, co-founder of Reddit.com and Tech Lead for the Open Library project, spoke at this week’s installment of the Berkman Center’s Luncheon Series.
Aaron spoke about how, thanks to new technology, the grand vision of a library containing every book in the world is now within our grasp. He discussed how the Open Library Project, a loose collection of technologists, publishers, librarians, and book-lovers, has taken up this challenge by trying to create a website collecting everything we know about books — including library records, publishers’ blurbs, full-text and scans, reviews, and more.
Aaron was previously a co-founder of Reddit.com, which was purchased by Condé Nast in late 2006. He was worked on Internet specifications for RSS and RDF and was one of the early team members of the Creative Commons project. He is the author of a number of free software packages and a co-founder of Jottit.com.
+ Open Library demo
+ Open Library vision
+ Aaron Swartz’s website
Berkman Fellow David Weinberger live-blogged the lunch, and you can check out his comments and summary here.
Runtime: 1:03:52, size: 320×240, 178MB, .MOV, H.264 codec
mediaberkman - October 23, 2007 @ 9:54 pm
· audio, Digital Libraries, Aaron Swartz, Berkman Luncheon Series, Berkman Center, Internet, Software, Education
Aaron Swartz, co-founder of Reddit.com and Tech Lead for the Open Library project, spoke at this week’s installment of the Berkman Center’s Luncheon Series.
Download the MP3 (time: 1:03:39)
Aaron spoke about how, thanks to new technology, the grand vision of a library containing every book in the world is now within our grasp. He discussed how the Open Library Project, a loose collection of technologists, publishers, librarians, and book-lovers, has taken up this challenge by trying to create a website collecting everything we know about books — including library records, publishers’ blurbs, full-text and scans, reviews, and more.
Aaron was previously a co-founder of Reddit.com, which was purchased by Condé Nast in late 2006. He was worked on Internet specifications for RSS and RDF and was one of the early team members of the Creative Commons project. He is the author of a number of free software packages and a co-founder of Jottit.com.
+ Open Library demo
+ Open Library vision
+ Aaron Swartz’s website
Berkman Fellow David Weinberger live-blogged the lunch, and you can check out his comments and summary here.
mediaberkman - October 18, 2007 @ 11:16 pm
· Berkman Center, Berkman Luncheon Series, Oliver Goodenough, video, Software, Law, Internet, Education

QuickTime Video
The Berkman Luncheon Series continued yesterday with Oliver Goodenough, who, in addition to being a Berkman fellow, is a Professor of Law at Vermont Law School and an Adjunct Professor at the Thayer School of Engineering at Dartmouth College.
Oliver discussed how the institution of game theory and other economic institutions can take a broad range of forms, such as conventions of property, promise keeping, truth-telling, and submission to authority, and how they can exist in a similarly broad range of milieu. Examples included the internal psychology of values and commitment, informal cultural expectations, formal institutions like law, mechanical devices like a coke machine and computer code.
You can also read David Weinberger’s great play-by-play of the discussion and Q & A.
Please visit the Luncheon Series page to learn about future guests and be sure to RSVP to save your spot at these wonderful weekly gatherings.
Runtime: 1:07:22, size: 320×240, 184MB, .MOV, H.264 codec
mediaberkman - October 17, 2007 @ 5:57 pm
· Berkman Luncheon Series, audio, Oliver Goodenough, Berkman Center, Software, Law, Internet, Education
The Berkman Luncheon Series continued yesterday with Oliver Goodenough, who, in addition to being a Berkman fellow, is a Professor of Law at Vermont Law School and an Adjunct Professor at the Thayer School of Engineering at Dartmouth College.
Download the MP3 (time: 1:07:08)
Oliver discussed how the institution of game theory and other economic institutions can take a broad range of forms, such as conventions of property, promise keeping, truth-telling, and submission to authority, and how they can exist in a similarly broad range of milieu. Examples included the internal psychology of values and commitment, informal cultural expectations, formal institutions like law, mechanical devices like a coke machine and computer code.
You can also read David Weinberger’s great play-by-play of the discussion and Q & A.
Please visit the Luncheon Series page to learn about future guests and be sure to RSVP to save your spot at these wonderful weekly gatherings.