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yunju wang

China's propaganda machine busy as media indulge in Google-bashing | The Australian - 0 views

  • under the heading "News Section"
    • yunju wang
       
      this is democracy!!!
Tamsin Lloyd

Worldchanging: Bright Green: Walkshed Technologies and the Smart City - 2 views

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    I found this article and its links really interesting - it discusses the fusion of the city and technology, and uses the concept of ubiquitous technology/urban informatics to explain and describe 'smart cities'. Also, it raises the idea of the 'searchable city' and that cities need to be considered on earily they are searchable. This raises the issue of reputation - which is referred to here: not only consumable items being reviewed by the citizenry and available on iphone apps, but also traffic routes, places to live etc.
César Albarrán Torres

Warner Bros. Looks for Anti-Piracy Interns - 0 views

  • The UK arm of Warner Bros Entertainment is looking for students to spy on digital pirates.It seems logical: Students know about piracy, many of them have committed acts that would be considered digital piracy, so why not hire them as counterintelligence?
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    Anyone interested?
renae englert

Australian Government takes direct attack on Google in internet filtering spat - 0 views

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    Minister Stephen Conroy challenges Google's credibility in response to the search engine giant's criticism of Australia's looming mandatory filtering. Interestingly he also says he is unaware of complaints from Hilary Clinton - which his department responded to in the previous article I posted. Interesting...
César Albarrán Torres

Kremlin accused of honey-trap campaign against opposition - Telegraph - 0 views

  • The Kremlin has been accused of sanctioning a Soviet-style dirty tricks campaign against opposition politicians using vintage KGB entrapment techniques of money, drugs and glamorous women.
  • The allegations follow the release of a string of videos on the internet purporting to show an opposition politician, a political analyst, and the editor of the Russian edition of Newsweek magazine in compromising situations.
  • Hidden cameras in police cars show the trio apparently offering to bribe their way out of traffic offences, while another video appears to show one of the three, Mikhail Fishman, the editor of Russian Newsweek, snorting cocaine in the company of a semi-naked glamour model.
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • He said he grew suspicious when a girl offering to sleep with him offered him cocaine "to relax" minutes after she and a "girlfriend" had foisted a number of bizarre sex toys upon him.
  • The editors-in-chief of a number of leading publications have come out in Mr Fishman's defence. They say they are concerned about "the organised campaign" against him and "the journalistic community as a whole."
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    A politician, a political analyst and the editor of the Russian edition of Newsweek have been, supposedly, framed by the Kremlin in order to discredit them. Videos of them in compromising positions have been distributed in the Internet: the web as a channel through which public opinion can be molded by totalitarian states. Political campaigns could "learn" a lot from the Kremlin's actions... 
Sandra Rivera

open code / open source: Open source as a positive externality for Internet - 2 views

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    Firts post of my internet governance blog. Open source can be considered a positive externality, impacting on the spread of internet
renae englert

US State Department concerned about Australia's internet filter proposition - 0 views

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    Hilary Clinton, Secretary of State for the US has 'raised concerns' with Australian officials as part of the ongoing relationship between the countries on the plan to implement mandatory filtering. If the government succeeds, Australia will join the likes of Saudi Arabia, Burma, China, North Korea, Egypt, Iran and other countries often less than co-operative in foreign affairs.
Qi Li

Congress Approves Final Changes to Health Reform - 0 views

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    This is a blog on Obama's campaign website"www.mybarackobama.com". It is celebrating the passage of the new health-care bill as well as stressing the significant meaning of this new act.
Eliza Hansell

MediaGuardian Innovation Awards: Austin Heap v Iran's censors - 0 views

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    This article discusses Austin Heap, a US citizen being awarded for his innovative program Haystack, which sidesteps Iran's heavy internet filtering through servers located elsewhere in the world. This article is important in today's internet censorship debate, as it promotes the awarding of individual's who openly seek ways around censorship.
Gina Spithakis

Watch out for domain name scams - 0 views

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    Some examples of domain name scams that seem to crop up from time to time. This blog shows examples of the Chinese domain name scam doing the rounds
Bec Crew

Corporate Media Exploits Teen Idol to Push Cyberbullying Bill - 0 views

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    Talks about the proposed Megan Meier Cyberbullying Prevention Act which, if passed, would outlaw speech meant to "coerce, intimidate, harass, or cause substantial emotional distress to a person." Critics see it as a form of censorship.
Amit Kelkar

Research Online - M. J. McLelland: Australia's proposed internet filtering system : its... - 4 views

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    A new paper on Australia's proposed mandatory filtering plan in context of Australia's broader stance on child pornography. It uses the example the consumption of "Japanese Boys Love" manga by people (mainly girls) underage to explore issues around censorship and governance
Claudine Pache

You Can Check Out of Google Any Time You Like, But You Can Never Leave - Google - Gizmodo - 1 views

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    Google to launch a new advertising product called 're-marketing' allowing google to follow you around the web, serving you up content based on what you've been doing on the internet.
César Albarrán Torres

Analysis: Google-China flap déjà vu for Microsoft - CNN.com - 0 views

  • A fight between a technology titan and the world's fastest-growing economy. Trade war tensions rising between Beijing and Washington, as U.S. legislators howl about unfair Chinese business practices and the Chinese media assail American arrogance. No, it's not the current battle between Google and China -- but the fight between Microsoft and Beijing in March 1994.
  • "They [Microsoft] need to get on the right side of human rights rather than enabling tyranny, which they're doing right now," said Rep. Chris Smith, a Republican from New Jersey, in a congressional hearing on Wednesday. Microsoft issued a statement, saying it would work with the Chinese government to foster a more open Internet -- but it would not leave. Perhaps because of its own thorny fight with China more than a decade ago.
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    Interesting comparison between Microsoft and Google experiences in China. 
David Sams

Lurching in protest at gaming classifications - 1 views

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    Sydney gamers protest the lack of an R18+ classification in the city centre on Saturday, dressed as Zombies from the controversial game Left 4 Dead 2, which has been censored for release here.
César Albarrán Torres

BBC News - Peers warn of backlash fears over digital radio - 0 views

  • The government could face a public backlash over its plans to switch national radio stations over to digital transmission, peers have warned.
  • public confusion and industry uncertainty". It said people wer
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    It said people were still buying analogue radios which will be out of date in a few years' time.
Tamsin Lloyd

Where does privacy fit in the online video revolution? | Victor Keegan | Technology | g... - 1 views

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    We all know video content is one of the most popular types of content on the web, driving some of the most innovative and popular web based applications (for example Skype, ChatRoulette, YouTube). However, new video-centric applications, which combine real-time, social networking and broadcasting are putting an even more intense spotlight on questions of privacy than ever before. This particular article profiles examples that are surely just web minutes away from the tipping point, giving users the chance to broadcast their lives in ways Twitter can only dream of. Surprisingly, the article only touches on privacy issues, suggesting that we are too willing to post personal information about ourselves. Reader comments rightly point out we are moving into very murky territory where the attitude seems to be that anything posted on the web is fair game and can be used against the person who posted it.
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    What does it mean for both your privacy and personal reputation if you are putting everything online? If governments/corporations/employers etc can access so much personal information about you, how will this affect your life and the 'control' that such organisations have?
Claudine Pache

Football dominated cybersquatting complaints in 2009: WIPO - 1 views

  • Intellectual Property
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    Cybersquatting complaints dropped 9.5% from 2008 when a record complaints were logded. WIPO head mentions drop may just be due to economic climate, and companies limited budget to start litigations. This article mentions even the fifa world cup site lodged a cybersquatting complaint.
Elizabeth Gan

Cyberwar Hype Intended to Destroy the Open Internet - 0 views

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    This article discusses how Michael McConnell (former director of national intelligence), has suggessted that "we need to re-engineer the Internet to make attribution, geo-location, intelligence analysis and impact assessment - who did it, from where, why and what was the result - more manageable." Under the guise of protecting the state, it deems the "netizens," as possible enemies of the state.
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