Skip to main content

Home/ ARIN6902 Internet Cultures and Governance/ Group items tagged data

Rss Feed Group items tagged

rack bank

Tier 3 Data Center Services - 0 views

  •  
    The Hybrid hosting solutions at the state-of-the-art tier 3 Data center in India, Rackbank let you select the right and ideal balance for your business. Our data center services established by exceptional 24/7/365 support by the team of experts. Rackbank offers nearly all type of server hosting and data center services including dedicated server hosting, colocation services and reseller hosting.
yunju wang

It's All Semantics: Open Data, Linked Data & The Semantic Web - 1 views

  • Open Data
  • data that has been uploaded to the Web and is accessible to all, but isn't necessarily "linked" to other data sets.
  •  
    some explaination about linked data, and semetric web.
César Albarrán Torres

New Google Tool Visualizes Public Data in Animated Charts - 0 views

  • Google Labs tool offers a visual way to look at and analyze large public data sets on a variety of popular search topics.
  • The tool is specifically designed for avid data crunchers like students, journalists, policy maker
  • nterested parties can visually dissect — in time-lapsed animation fashion and in an array of chart types — things like fertility rate by country, employment rates, and the flux of mortality rates in the U.S
  •  
    Wonder what statistics service providers such as Nielsen will think about this...
David Sams

Please explain: why Google wants your Wi-Fi data - 1 views

  •  
    Very timely for our forthcoming privacy class. Google has been wardriving. Which makes perfect sense. Useful for business and so easy to do when they're driving by. Who owns info that we put out on the street?
  •  
    Google Australia will today be sent a "please explain" letter from two local privacy organisations demanding to know why the company has been collecting personal Wi-Fi network data from Australian homes alongside the images it takes with its Street View cameras. Google has taken some heat lately about its commitment to privacy after officials from 10 governments - including New Zealand, Canada and France - wrote a letter to chief executive Eric Schmidt to express their concern over data collection for Street View and the implementation of its Buzz social networking tool.
Rachael Bolton

I-O Data Signs Linux Software Patent Agreement With Microsoft - 1 views

  •  
    Microsoft Corp and I-O Data Device have entered into an agreement that will provide I-O Data's customers with patent coverage for their use of I-O Data's products running Linux and other related open source software.
  •  
    Find the whole idea vaguely repulsive. See Slashdot: "The Japanese computer manuracturer IO Data is the latest in line to license Microsoft's so-called 'Linux patents,' following the likes of Novell, Samsung, and Amazon. Yes, even the press releases use the word 'Linux' to describe these patents. From the press release: 'Specifically, the patent covenants apply to I-O Data's network-attached storage devices and its routers, which run Linux. Although the details of the agreement have not been disclosed, the parties indicated that Microsoft is being compensated by I-O Data.'" http://bit.ly/bmxIO4
César Albarrán Torres

UK parties ignoring social media ahead of poll | EurActiv - 0 views

  • The UK's political parties use social media for "one-off witty campaigns" but they do not engage in US-style outreach to their voters, according to an analysis by a British consultancy published ahead of elections due on 6 May.
  • The UK's political parties have not embraced social media as they were expected to do before the upcoming May elections, concludes research carried out by analysts at Ovum, a consultancy
  • "Politicians should be using chat platforms like the popular Twitter website to drive immediate responses to publicised events like televised political debates."
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • "The UK has its own idiosyncrasies and we must not lose sight [of the fact] that many social media platforms have not been adopted by all ages and classes in society," the analyst added.
  • "The vast majority of MEPs are using the Internet and are certainly being inspired by the success that Barack Obama has had, but too many of them still believe that digital tools are less effective than traditional forms of communication, such as television and newspapers," said James Stevens, senior vice-president for digital services at the consultancy.
  •  
    Interesting data on how and why British politicians are slow in the use of social media for political campaigning. They still trust other more traditional channels. Interesting data: Europeans are lagging behind American policy makers in their use of Twitter and other means of digital communication. Might the higher age average of European citizens have something to do with it?
yunju wang

Google: Oops, we spied on your Wi-Fi | Signal Strength - CNET News - 0 views

  •  
    Google has mistakenly collect private unsecured Wi-Fi payload data from their street view car that was meant to collect mapping data. It may be hard for google to earn back our trust after this event.
Sandra Rivera

Making Public Records Public: Why open formats are essential for sharing and preserving... - 0 views

  •  
    To achieve accesibility to open data it is necessary to overcome political and technical barriers
David Sams

Information Is Beautiful | Ideas, issues, concepts, subjects - visualized! - 1 views

  •  
    Ideas, issues, knowledge, data - visualised. CReator David McCandless is a London-based author, writer and designer who has written for The Guardian, Wired and others. He is interested in "how designed information can help us understand the world, cut through BS and reveal the hidden connections, patterns and stories underneath. Or, failing that, it can just look cool!"
Rachael Bolton

Patriot Act vs. EU Data Protection Directive: regulatory death-match in the Cloud - 1 views

  •  
    Discussion of data housing locations and legal/regulatory implications.
Anne Zozo

Always-on iPhone apps raise new promises, perils for location privacy | VentureBeat - 0 views

  •  
    Apple announced that it will be now possible to run different apps on the iPhone at the same time and keep them constantly running in the background. This means for application providers that they coud now constantly get information on the whereabouts of their users instead of the sporadic data they got so far. Exciting new opportunities for Apple's new "iAd" that offers targeted advertising. At the same time there are privacy concerns on several fronts.
Bujuanes Livermore

Is the second coming of DNS Y2K all over again - 0 views

  •  
    DNSSEC was developed to add security to the Domain Name System . The tool works by adding information on the origin of authentication of DNS data, data integrity and authenticated denial of existence. DNSSEC obviously adds more information to queries and therefore increases the size of those query packets. Where older routers exist the additional information included in the larger data packets may not be recognised and therefore the DNS will not be resolved. The end user, in this instance, would not be able to visit the site they requested. The fear campaigns in the community have been around that very point: that the implementation of DNSSEC will not resolve host names. This article provides some light explanation around the rollout of DNSSEC and lays to rest the fear mongering by stating that there, to date, has been minimum negative effect of the DNSSEC that has been rolled out.
Tamsin Lloyd

The terrors of Twittering: growing up in an unexploded data minefield - 0 views

  •  
    Your actions now may affect your reputation later...
Sandra Rivera

Today Facebook, Tomorrow the World | Epicenter | Wired.com - 0 views

  • With a few deft maneuvers, Facebook is aiming to make itself the center of the internet, the central repository and publisher of what users like and do online.
  • Facebook’s main lever to get all this data funneled to them is a simple “I Like” button, which websites can embed on their pages with very little effort.
  • Facebook built much of this easy-to-use system on “open” standards, as WebMonkey’s Michael Calore reports, even as it sucks the data into a closed community. But those standards are used almost exclusively by Facebook, and ignore the work that’s been done by others to create universally understandable meta-data
  • ...1 more annotation...
  • You can opt out of some of this through Facebook’s increasingly arcane privacy settings, though most won’t do anything to stop Facebook’s relentless push to make people’s profiles public.
  •  
    Are we using facebook or is facebook using us?
Andra Keay

The Data-Driven Life - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  •  
    "I used to track my work hours, and it was a miserable process. With my spreadsheet, I inadvertently transformed myself into the mean-spirited, small-minded boss I imagined I was escaping through self-employment. " This NY Times article (recapped poorly in today's SMH) epitomises Foucault's concept of biopower. It's a great run down of multitude of ways constant self tracking is already part of our lives and the psychological pros and cons. Unfortunately it doesn't give a sociopolitical analysis. This is Weber's iron cage of rationalisation in the age of the self. Self employed, self actualised, self interested man. And typically, the irrationality of rationalism means we spend much of our life recording and measuring ourselves rather than living.
Anne Zozo

Google allows users to view, delete personal information - 1 views

  • "It's a very crafty psychological gamble on Google's part. They're basically assuming that with greater control, people will tolerate greater transparency of their own activity — that being able to see your own shadow, the shadow becomes normal."
  •  
    Big discussion about the permanent storage of personal data in Germany at the moment. Google and its inter-connected services is just one part of it. The government talks about the "Gläserne Bürger" (vitreous citizen) but still they seem to like it somehow - at least they haven't come to an agreement yet. Also see http://www.spiegel.de/netzwelt/netzpolitik/0,1518,682129,00.html @Google street view: The campus of Sydney University cannot be visited via this service. Why?
Katharina Otulak

Taking on the Internet Giants: Germany Applies Brakes to Google & Co. - 0 views

  •  
    Ilse Aigner, Germany's minister of food, agriculture and consumer protection, who usually concentrates on issues over rotten meat, genetically engineered corn and imitation cheese, recently took on a different kind of issue: the Internet and data privacy. Suddenly Aigner finds herself facing online giants Amazon, Facebook and, above all, Google. Soon Google plans to send cars equipped with cameras out onto Germany's roads once again for the company's Street View project. Aigner is now insisting that Google should ask permission before violating the privacy of German citizens. The minister's attack and the following discussions reveal just how divided the German government is when it comes to the online world. The debate revolves around questions of national security and individual self-determination on the Internet. But it also concerns the power of the large giants such as Apple, Microsoft, Amazon and MySpace, as well as the question of what these companies are doing with the records of our everyday data, and how they will be able to obtain information from us, influence us or perhaps even control us in the future. It seem like, once again, a German politician is exploiting the popular issue of internet privacy and censorship in a superficial way in the hope of scoring political points.
marinecf

BBC News - World wakes up to digital divide - 1 views

  •  
    There is a widening gap in the digital divide, especially in minority communities in the developed world.
  •  
    The digital divide is being decreased - but there are still widespread inequalities. Within one continent there are countries with radically different percentages of citizens online. There are great benefits from once isolated communities in terms of sharing their heritage online, as well as accessing healthcare.
  •  
    A BBC article that provides us with international data and figures about the digital divide.
César Albarrán Torres

Google Person Finder: Chile Earthquake - 1 views

  •  
    Google launches an application to find people affected by the Chilean earthquake. Note disclaimer.  "PLEASE NOTE: All data entered will be available to the public and viewable and usable by anyone. Google does not review or verify the accuracy of this data."
1 - 20 of 51 Next › Last »
Showing 20 items per page