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LimeWire loses everything in infringement battle with RIAA - 0 views

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    The Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA), organization that supports and promotes the creative and financial vitality of the major music companies has won over a lawsuit against Limewire (a free peer-to-peer file sharing that shares almost everything;Mp3,Videos,Ebooks, softwares etc). This case was first brought up to the court in 2006
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Mark Zuckerberg - From Facebook, answering privacy concerns with new settings - 3 views

  • From Facebook, answering privacy concerns with new settings
  • The challenge is how a network like ours facilitates sharing and innovation, offers control and choice, and makes this experience easy for everyone
  • - You have control over how your information is shared.
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  • - We do not give advertisers access to your personal information.
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    Privacy addressed by Zukerberg. Shall we believe him? Article goes hand in hand with this week's readings. 
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Making Public Records Public: Why open formats are essential for sharing and preserving... - 0 views

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    To achieve accesibility to open data it is necessary to overcome political and technical barriers
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Has online piracy reached a tipping point? | Digital Media - CNET News - 1 views

  • There might be just a point here where the culture is changing on what's legitimate behavior online
  • free hasn't turned out to be a very profitable business model.
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    Is the Internet free? Certainly not, just the fix pricing gives the virtual buffet of digital content that seemly and resonablly free to us, but is it really? Files sharing has reached the point that entertainment workers saying, enough is enough and they will do whatever it takes to ease this trend. Is our free culture of the Internet about to over though? Not quite, after years of habits enjoying content freely, it's not a over night change for people to accept to be charged.
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Is online piracy a good thing? - CNN.com - 0 views

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    Lessig talk about the internet being a innovative commons where allow creation to be made. There might be a new business model that online file sharing will eventually benefit than causing profit loss.
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Facebook, you've been sent a message . . . Angry users quit over privacy fears | The Au... - 2 views

  • The Wall Street Journal claiming Facebook and other social networking sites had been surreptitiously sharing users' personal data with advertisers. "Facebook has violated its duty of care," Pesce says. "They are a bad parent and I'm like DOCS. I'm taking the child out of the situation."
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    People are taking actions to express their feeling about Facebook privacy issue.
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Facebook tightens privacy controls after global outrage | The Australian - 1 views

  • option of applying the same preferences to all their content, so that with one click you can decide whether to share things with just "friends" or with everyone.
  • ettings so often that keeping up with them became too much. Before the announcement, Craig Mather, a 28-year-old graduate student in Portland, Oregon, was already complaining of having to adjust his privacy settings every time Facebook comes up with a new plan.
  • It's a reflection of who you are online.
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  • lifeblood is advertising.
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    Under sever fire of privacy, Facebook is now tighten their privay policy to ease the fire. The thing is, when it comes to people, it's not that easy to solve. It's no longer a website that JUST allowing users exchage their status and connected to each other, but with more and more apps, people have the feeling that they are being spied on whenever wherever.
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BBC News - Yahoo criticised by Alibaba for 'reckless' China stance - 0 views

  • Yahoo criticised by Alibaba for 'reckless' China stance Yahoo is reported to have been targeted by hackers in China Yahoo's partner in China has called the US internet giant "reckless" for supporting Google in its stand-off with Beijing over alleged cyber-attacks.Yahoo said it was "aligned" with Google's position that the violati
  • Yahoo said it was "aligned" with Google's position that the violation of internet privacy was deeply disturbing and something that had to be opposed. But an Alibaba Group spokesman said on Saturday it did not "share this view".
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    Google speaks out on censorship and the violation of user privacy in China. Yahoo in the US agrees but its Chinese partner Alibaba Group does not. Are they afraid of a backlash from Beijing and fear for their ungoing business success? Makes me wonder how bad the quagmire in China really is...
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BBC News - World wakes up to digital divide - 1 views

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    There is a widening gap in the digital divide, especially in minority communities in the developed world.
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    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.
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    A BBC article that provides us with international data and figures about the digital divide.
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Google, Viacom Sling Mud in YouTube Court Fight - 0 views

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    Article from PC World dated 19/3/2010 Talks about the the enduring legal battle between Viacom and Google over intellectual property rights which have been (arguably) 'violated' by the Video sharing website, Youtube. This is another prime example of the indefinable nature of the digital medium and the problems inherent in resolving issues of ownership and distribution of information in the context of the internet. The inability to fully implement control in free flowing information forums again raises the question who can really be made responsible for copyright infringements?
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Google's retreat from China a "moral" decision - 0 views

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    Some western companies (Yahoo, Cisco) operating in China have handed over information leading to the arrest of dissidents. Others have happily ignored the censorship and oppression in an attempt to garner market share. Google is the first and only western company operating in China to make a stand against the Chinese regime, even if this has only happened after operating in China for four years. The author argues that two things will need to happen to end internet censorship: other companies need to follow suit and a social movement from the society of internet users needs to gather force.
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The dark side of the internet - 1 views

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    I first read this article months ago and it has stuck with me in my mind since then. Most of us would have no idea about the secret "nooks and crannies" of the web, but this article sheds some light on them and details software called "Freenet" which is used to anonymously surf the web and share files. It's a UK article however it's directly relevant to the current Australian internet censorship date because it is these areas of the internet that the filter will have no ability to block.
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Web must support IPv6 by 2012, expert warns - Jan 2010 - 0 views

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    The internet is running out of web addresses. And here another article: http://news.techworld.com/networking/3218712/google-microsoft-and-yahoo-talk-about-ipv6-whitelist/ Google, Microsoft and Yahoo talk about IPv6 whitelist and plan to create a shared list of customers who can access their websites via IPv6
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Microsoft weighs in on the Flash issue - 1 views

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    Microsoft shares the same point of view on the limitations of the Flash product as Apple. Again, reliability, security and performance were identified as impediments of supporting the flawed software. Speaking about the mobile era Steve Jobs of Apple says 'low power devices, touch interfaces and open web standards...' are areas where Flash is not currently accommodating. It's most interesting to watch powerful market players create pressure for change in the internet space. Adobe can ill afford to ignore these criticisms yet it's now taking opportunity to discredit the motives of the multinationals: "Apple's moves to block Flash and other technologies are designed to protect a business model that locks developers and consumers into a single, proprietary stack," Adobe spokeswoman Holly Campbell said.
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Facebook unveils new 'Like' button - 0 views

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    Looks like Facebook has figured out a way to tell other companies more about us at the click of a 'Like' button. On the one hand, it's personalisation at its best, having content served up to a user based on what they like on the sites they visit. But on the other hand, users are unknowingly sharing a lot of personal information about themselves to their networks on Facebook and, inadvertently, the company they just visited via a website.
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Coles closes stores due to McAfee bug - 1 views

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    This is a story not so much about hackers bringing down an organisation's network, but about a virus software breaking down and attacking its own operating system. Just thought it would be interesting to share a story about what could go wrong even when you're trying to protect yourself against viruses. In this case, Coles was affected, with point of sale terminals shutting down as a result of the software bug.
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Microsoft general manager Dean Hachamovitch, responsible for Internet Explorer, comment... - 0 views

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    He admits that "Flash does have some issues, particularly around reliability, security, and performance. But MS works closely with engineers at Adobe, sharing information about the issues in ongoing technical discussions. Despite these issues, Flash remains an important part of delivering a good consumer experience on today's web."
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Facebook blocked in Pakistan - protests over caricatures of Prophet Mohammed - 0 views

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    Following a Facebook user's invitation for people to submit drawings of Prophet Mohammed and the ensuing condemnation from individual Muslim's and Muslim groups, The Pakistan Telecommunications Authority (PTA) has extended a ban on Facebook until May 31, and has also applied the ban to popular video sharing website YouTube and restricted Wikipedia. Depicting the prophet in a perceived blasphemous manner is considered sacrilegious. Over 100,000 people had become fans of the page on Facebook. Thousands of protesters have held multiple public rallies against Facebook, with anti-America and anti-European sentiment high.
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Cybersecurity experts share their 'nightmares' - Yahoo! News - 0 views

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    The conference on cybersecurity in Dallas, Texas has brought forward the fears of cybersecurity experts in which they still recognize the potential for "nightmare" scenarios. All the experts at this conference agree that the only way to protect against the "nightmare scenario" is for global cooperation.
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Firefox, Chrome, Safari have finally killed Internet Explorer - 0 views

  • IE dropped below 60% — 59.79% to be precise. 59.79% sounds like a lot, but you need to remember that IE comes pre-installed on most computers sold in the world.
  • So, a great percentage of that 40.21% who doesn’t use explorer are people who had to actively do something (see: download another browser and install it) to give IE the boot.
  • It will be hard for IE to get that market share back. The trend is not looking good. Even if the other browsers magically started declining, IE has another problem: the mobile world.
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  • I have only ever met one person in my life with a Windows Mobile phone, and they hated using it.
  • We did it for the browser, and it was quite a challenge. We did it with hard work, advocacy, sweat. We did it for the browser… and we can do the same for the desktop world as a whole.
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    No, I don't agree that Internet Explorer is dead. However, there has been a significant progress in the adoption of alternative browsers, which is a healthy way to avoid a monopoly in browsers, which are the gate to internet for end users.  The decline in the use of IE thanks to the participation of open source browsers is acknowledged here. 
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