technology puts adverts on the web, is against the public interest.
Leader: Google is watching you | Comment is free | The Guardian - 0 views
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It is sad that huge and well-resourced companies are buying up the market share of others instead of building up their own capacity
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Google holds information about the private activities of its users that the intelligence agencies would die for
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North Korea's 3G network won't be censored for foreigners | The Verge - 1 views
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long maintained tight control over the flow of information within its borders
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foreigners
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unfettered mobile access to the web
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China to Web Users: Great Firewall? Just Be Glad We're Not North Korea - David Caraglia... - 1 views
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Last week, Google Executive Chairman Eric Schmidt urged North Korean leaders to embrace the Internet. Only a small proportion of that country's 24 million people can access the World Wide Web, and the majority of the 1.5 million mobile phones there belong to political and military elites.
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Meanwhile, in China, a country that has embraced the Internet to a much greater extent, the big story was about censorship, both online and off.
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For Chinese social media users, the irony here was too perfect to go unnoticed
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Leader: Social Networks | Comment is free | The Guardian - 0 views
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The internet has always revolved around social networking, but the explosion of a fresh generation of communal sites such as MySpace, Bebo and Facebook is taking the phenomenon into new and unchartered territory.
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One of those applications called iLike - pigging-backing on Facebook's global network - has already attracted more than 6 million members, and is growing by 1 million every few days, making it one of the fastest growing companies of any kind ever
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A new generation accustomed to instant networking, and unashamed about living more of their lives online, is bound to change the organisations they work for and maybe the way they are governed, or at least the way their governments communicate with them
Figuring out the future of online privacy - CNN.com - 1 views
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They may not be paying for the services directly, but customers still have a lot of power -- and companies know that they need to listen.
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"We can't just sit back and allow the industry to just continue to ignore a core component of the user experience online," said Alex Fowler, Mozilla's global privacy and public policy leader.
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The more devices that connect to the Internet, from smart cars to home thermostats, the more data there are about a person to collect.
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Better Policy Through Better Information | John O. McGinnis | Cato Unbound - 0 views
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Can Internet activism work?
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is importantly correct that the Internet can help redress the balance between special and more encompassing interests by reducing the cost of accessing information. Such reduction redounds to the advantage of diffuse groups more than concentrated groups because reduced costs can temper the former groups’ larger problems of coordination.
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earing that more information may enable citizens to better organize to attack their privileges, they have tried to restrict emerging technologies of free communication as long as these technologies have been around.
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