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Home/ ARIN6902 Internet Cultures and Governance/ Contents contributed and discussions participated by Amit Kelkar

Contents contributed and discussions participated by Amit Kelkar

Amit Kelkar

The government will talk back to the public - 0 views

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    SMH article about the Australian government's "Gov2.0" initiative which encourages government employees to use social media more.  
Amit Kelkar

Preparing for a mobile phone uprising in Africa - 0 views

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    A short review on the book "SMS Uprising: Mobile activism in Africa" which is series of essays about the usage of SMS for citizen activism in Africa including in Zimbabwe.
Amit Kelkar

Will New Law Block Many Slash, Anime, Manga Sites in Australia? - 0 views

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    Guest blog on Jenkins' MIT site about internet filtering in Australia by Mark McLelland from University of Wollongong.
Amit Kelkar

Mandatory internet service provider (ISP) filtering: Measures to increase accountabilit... - 1 views

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    Call for consultation regarding Australian government's mandatory internet filtering scheme. 
Amit Kelkar

Privacy in the digital world: towards international legislation - 1 views

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    Abstract In today's digital world, personal privacy has become the number one issue for consumers [9]. Consumers' confidence in personal privacy is directly affecting and limiting the growth of the Internet commercial development. Therefore, it has become a necessity to address the consumers privacy concerns for the interests of the parties involved.
Amit Kelkar

China Blocks Micro-Messaging Site Plurk. Is Twitter Next? - 0 views

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    Plurk, a micro-messaging service that competes with Twitter, discovered that it is being blocked in China.
Amit Kelkar

Will Congress Take Sides on Net Neutrality? | Project for Excellence in Journalism (PEJ) - 1 views

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    A fair amount has been written about the politics of net neutrality, but its technical aspects have generally pushed the debate to the fringes of the mainstream press.
Amit Kelkar

China's censorship 2.0: How companies censor bloggers - 2 views

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    This study explores an under-studied layer of Chinese Internet censorship: how Chinese Internet companies censor user-generated content, usually by deleting it or preventing its publication. Systematic testing of Chinese blog service providers reveals that domestic censorship is very decentralized with wide variation from company to company. Test results also showed that a great deal of politically sensitive material survives in the Chinese blogosphere, and that chances for its survival can likely be improved with knowledge and strategy. The study concludes that choices and actions by private individuals and companies can have a significant impact on the overall balance of freedom and control in the Chinese blogosphere.
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