The Passion of the Indies « Georgetown University Press Blog - 4 views
A New Form of DRM: A Legal and Pragmatic Solution for Protection of E-Books | Digital B... - 1 views
In E-Book War, the Independent Publishers Strike Back - Yahoo! Finance - 1 views
Plagiarism checking tool - the most accurate! - 2 views
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In this technological age a plagiarism checker is essential for protecting your written work. A plagiarism checker benefits teachers, students, website owners and anyone else interested in protecting their writing. Our service guarantees that anything you write can be thoroughly checked by our plagiarism software to insure that your texts are unique.
Why One Author Abandoned the Traditional Publishing Industry | Digital Book World - 1 views
Updates to Amazon's Book Ranking Algorithms: The Death of 99-Cent Ebooks? An End to KDP... - 0 views
Oxford University Press fined £1.9m over bribery by African subsidiary firms ... - 2 views
Supporting Independent Booksellers :: Angry Robot Books - 0 views
Twitter Blog: Twitter Transparency Report - 1 views
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.
Good Magazine Refugees Crowdfund Dream Project | Digiday - 0 views
Your E-Book Is Reading You - WSJ.com - 0 views
Auletta's New Yorker piece is good orientation for thinking about the DoJ case - - The ... - 1 views
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Interesting piece by one of the speakers at this year's Ethics and Publishing Conference.
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Greed, greed, greed to supersede the voice of the public. There has to be and needs to be and open eformat. Collusion of any kind by any companies to monopolize is wrong. Why be mad at the government actually doing its job by trying to stamp unfairness. Is this not the land of the free and home of the brave where we are afforded the right to compete on fair terms, or are we just capitalist to the harshest degree, with no wiggle room? Uncle Sam will always be the ref in these battles of monopoly. Does Amazon, Apple, and Goggle with there wholesale pillaging scan scam holding the lions share of the ePub tech and licenses make it a safe place for upstart like I would like to have in the future? I say "NO"!!! Change the game Uncle Sam for the consumer, loyalist, and publisher in this ePub wild west.
Author Rebecca MacKinnon Kicks Off ALA With Talk On Digital Privacy - 0 views
Worldreader: An E-Book Revolution for Africa? - WSJ.com - 0 views
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Spotted by Meredith.
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"I would love to go [home] with the Kindle during the holidays." This brings into mind the joy in the winter spent here in the states on Christmas with my family and electronic gizmos. With the day to day hustle we sometimes forget about the "have nots." This young man Eperence Uwera, a 13-year-old student is thankful for what some take for granted as just another toy for fun. The poignant thought of this article is that the digital the divide is hampering growth in poor or remote areas globally. An E-Book Revolution for Africa? duly notes that Amazon is lending a hand to bridge the digital gap in Africa, also prompting technological literacy; if there is such a term. The problem raised in this article is that programs such as Worldreader sometimes get neglected, because of maintenance delays or high overhead cost to keep operations afloat in poverty stricken areas. This program brings hope to the less fortune children of African to see the wealth of knowledge gained from ePub. Quickly disseminated information at 1,000 young minds access gives a decent outlook for Africa's future. Though the program touches a small fraction, the fact is this Kindle program is tripling the libraries of these impoverished provinces; and is a milestone for further development. Hopefully, Worldreader and programs like it can be sustained through the digital era and beyond. Publishing can change the world!!!
Circulation retracts four papers by author who misled on IRB approval « Retra... - 1 views
How Apple is sabotaging an open standard for digital books | ZDNet - 0 views
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Update: This post is part of a series. If you find this topic interesting, I recommend you read the two follow-ups as well: Apple has built its iBooks platform on the back of an open standard. With last week's introduction of iBooks 2.0 and the free iBooks Author software for Mac OS X, Apple is deliberately locking out that popular open standard.
Bridging the digital divide in America's rural schools - U.S. News - 5 views
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From Meredith "Another interesting article to share about the digital divide in America. What I thought was interesting in this wasn't that there was a gap in technology tools but that there is a gap in technology support once those tools/gadgets arrive at the school."
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Very interesting article. Though internet access can be a huge problem in rural areas, this article didn't mention its rather large costs. Often times, rural areas pay significantly more for internet than in a city. For some of these kids the problem is not just having the phone company improve access, but the cost of it, too.
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