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arnie Grossblatt

Amazon Escalates Its Battle Against Publishers - NYTimes.com - 2 views

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    Is anyone surprised by these unethical practices by Amazon?  If you love books don't shop at Amazon.
arnie Grossblatt

Google's Cookie Trick in Safari Stirs Debate - 1 views

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    It's difficult to defend snooping on users, especially when your motto is don't be evil.
arnie Grossblatt

St. Martin's Press Rejects Plagiarism Charge Against 'Raven's Bride' - 1 views

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    How much evidence of borrowing is required before charges of plagiarism are reasonable?  
arnie Grossblatt

Google Getting More Requests From Democracies to Censor - 6 views

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    "Google said it was alarmed by the number of government requests to censor political speech, particularly from Western democracies like the United States, Spain and Poland."
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    U.S. censorship piece is not so suprising to me in this post 9/11 and tube car bombing era. It is becoming difficult to site what is hampering my rights a company that wants to Know all(Google) infringing on my privacy, or a government that wants to keep people from knowledge to stamp out terror; and in doing so is impeding my privacy and speech. But what is terrifying to me is that my speech will not be free in a bit, so it seems. Democracy flaw is not the letter of law, but the people that implement it.
Mark Schreiber

In the World of Cars, Lessons About Money - 0 views

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    Disney uses freemium aimed at kids to get parents to pony up $57.95 a year.
Mark Schreiber

Computers at Home: Educational Hope vs. Teenage Reality - 0 views

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    Article looks at three separate studies of the educational benefit of home computers for lower income children. The studies indicate that the educational value of universal broadband access may be minimal, or worse, harmful.
Mark Schreiber

Born to Check Mail - 0 views

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    OK, this is not about ethics, per se, but it is a very interesting article on the effects of being hyper-connected. Maybe we are losing contact with our domestic lives, family and our ability to think. Or, maybe the predictions that our always-connected society is heading for intellectual doom are just natural reactions to new technology. Consider this quote from the article, "Socrates believed that scrolls would erode thought by permitting people to forget what they had learned because they'd be able to look things up, that 'they wouldn't feel the need to remember it from the inside, completely on their own.' Worse, writing wouldn't 'allow ideas to flow freely and change in real time, the way they do in the mind during oral exchange.'"
Mark Schreiber

Consumer Watchdog Group Goes After Google - 0 views

  • “I think the fundamental problem with Google, and by extension Schmidt, is that they are first and foremost computer scientists that work in their own world where more data is better,” he said, discussing Google’s stance on privacy. “They don’t think about the consequences this will have on consumers’ personal privacy.”
arnie Grossblatt

Google's Gatekeepers - 0 views

  • “Right now, we’re trusting Google because it’s good, but of course, we run the risk that the day will come when Google goes bad,” Wu told me. In his view, that day might come when Google allowed its automated Web crawlers, or search bots, to be used for law-enforcement and national-security purposes. “Under pressure to fight terrorism or to pacify repressive governments, Google could track everything we’ve searched for, everything we’re writing on gmail, everything we’re writing on Google docs, to figure out who we are and what we do,” he said. “It would make the Internet a much scarier place for free expression.” The question of free speech online isn’t just about what a company like Google lets us read or see; it’s also about what it does with what we write, search and view.
  • Google, which refused to discuss its data-purging policies on the record, has raised the suspicion of advocacy groups like Privacy International. Google announced in September that it would anonymize all the I.P. addresses on its server logs after nine months. Until that time, however, it will continue to store a wealth of personal information about our search results and viewing habits — in part to improve its targeted advertising and therefore its profits. As Wu suggests, it would be a catastrophe for privacy and free speech if this information fell into the wrong hands.
  • If your whole game is to increase market share, it’s hard to do good, and to gather data in ways that don’t raise privacy concerns or that might help repressive governments to block controversial content.”
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    Can Google continue to "Not be evil" and dominate the global market for search and user-generated content (YouTube, Blogger). Discussed how Google balances among free speech and privacy, the censorship demands of governments and its financial interests.
Colleen Carrigan

With Kindle, the Best Sellers Don't Need to Sell - 0 views

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    this bothers me based on all of the political propoganda that masquerades as literature lately. Sarah Palin and Glenn Beck both attempt to use best-seller lists as a public bellweather of their popularity, but both give away electronic editions of their books to boost their standings. When does literature cross the line into propoganda?
Colleen Carrigan

Amazon Threatens Publishers as Apple Looms - 1 views

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    "But if Amazon tries to enforce its demands by removing "buy" buttons from some pages again, some believe it could harm its reputation in the eyes of customers and the publishing industry." You THINK???? Unfortunately, as long as they keep free shipping, most people probably won't care. I see this as a really serious industry issue.
arnie Grossblatt

For Google, a Risky Ploy by Turning Its Back on China - 1 views

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    Google says no to censored search results in China, and China responds.  "Don't be evil" has costs.
arnie Grossblatt

Emory University Saves Rushdie's Digital Data - 0 views

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    Challenges, as well as opportunities, for curation in the digital age.
arnie Grossblatt

Pakistan Widens Online Ban to Include YouTube - 1 views

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    Censorship of web content broadens in Pakistan.  Maybe they don't know that users can decide not to look at pages with offensive content.
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