BBC News - Can living without the web increase the social divide? - 0 views
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The web is often regarded as the big "democratiser" because of the huge amount of information and access that it provides to everyone with a computer and an internet connection.
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But what happens to those who do not have that access?
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The job-search world has moved online and he had no idea how to navigate it.
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Addicted! Scientists show how internet dependency alters the human brain - Science - Ne... - 0 views
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Internet addiction
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changes in the brain similar to those seen in people addicted to alcohol, cocaine and cannabis.
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We are doing it because modern life requires us to link up over the net in regard to jobs, professional and social connections – but not in an obsessive way.
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How Much YouTube Do Employees Really Watch at Work? - Alexis C. Madrigal - The Atlantic - 0 views
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J.C. Penney employees are reported to have watched five million YouTube videos from the office during the month of January.
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the number of YouTube videos watched on the clock is astronomical, belonging to the category of numbers so large that you should write them like this: 107.
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YouTube says it streams more than 4 billion videos per day, with about 40 percent coming from the US, so 1.6 billion American streams each day. Let's assume there are 300 million Americans who all watch exactly the same amount of videos each day.
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Digital rights advocates wary of new 'six strikes' initiative for online piracy | Techn... - 0 views
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The Copyright Alert System (CAS) was devised by a coalition of internet service providers (ISPs), content owners and the US government to curb illegal downloading by alerting "casual infringers" when illegal filesharing is detected on their IP address
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Initially, the alerts are intended to be educational. They tell the customer what happened and how they can prevent it from happening again. If pirating continues to happen through the IP address, users will receive the message again, followed by messages that ask them to confirm they have seen the alerts. The fifth and sixth alert are called mitigation alerts and will temporarily slow users' internet speeds, depending on the ISP.
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CAS has also been criticized because the person who audited the MarkMonitor software to ensure that it fairly identifies copyright violations is a former lobbyist for the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA), one of the industry groups fronting money for system.
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Internet pornography: safety plans do not go far enough - charities - Telegraph - 0 views
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The Government yesterday launched a consultation on a possible change in the law to give parents more control over the material their children are viewing online.
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Internet service providers have been in talks with the Government about ways of enabling parents to block sites containing sexually or gambling as well as forums glorify suicide and self-harm.
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a report by MPs who called for a full “opt-in” which would automatically block adult material unless the user chose to deactivate it. Google has argued that an automatic block as a “mistake”, while Virgin Media, BT, TalkTalk and Sky have developed versions of the “active choice” system which makes users chose whether they want parental controls when they sign up, rather than imposing them automatically.
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Smartphone operating systems: Bright-eyed and bushy-tailed | The Economist - 0 views
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IF YOU have a new smartphone, it is almost certainly either an Apple iPhone or one of the many devices that runs on Google’s Android operating system. According to IDC, a research firm, more than 90% of the 228m smartphones shipped in the last quarter of 2012 belonged to one of the two dominant species. Android is the bigger bea
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st. Its share has grown as the smartphone market has boomed, to about 70%.
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Mozilla, a non-profit organisation best known for Firefox, a web browser, unveiled plans to bring a smartphone operating system to market. Called Firefox OS, it has the backing of 18 mobile operators based in countries from Asia to Latin America.
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Cyber-security: To the barricades | The Economist - 0 views
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European Commission and the White House have set out a series of new rules designed to stem the rising tide of cyber-attacks against public and private victims.
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Alongside his state-of-the-union message on February 11th, Barack Obama released an executive order intended to plug the gap left by the failure of Congress to pass cyber-security legislation that matches the growing threat.
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By contrast, the European Commission’s cyber-security strategy is at an earlier stage. It wants member countries to introduce laws compelling important firms in industries such as transport, telecoms, finance and online infrastructure to disclose details of any attack they suffer to a national authority, known as a CERT (Computer Emergency Response Team). Each CERT will be responsible for defending vital infrastructure-providers against online attacks and sharing information with its counterparts, law-enforcement agencies and data-protection bodies.
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The Enduring Myth of the 'Free' Internet - Peter Osnos - The Atlantic - 3 views
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The Enduring Myth of the 'Free' Internet
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The mantra of a "free" Internet has shaped the prevailing view of how we access information and entertainment in the digital age.
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the devices that connect us to search engines, countless websites, social media, and e-mail bring us vast amounts of content for which we do not pay separately.
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BBC News - Court orders UK ISPs to block more piracy sites - 0 views
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Opponents have argued that blocking sites in this way was ineffective.
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Data seen by the BBC suggested that the blocking of The Pirate Bay had only had a short-term effect on the level of pirate activity online
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there had been a large reduction in the number of users illegally downloading music
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What Does Google Do If the Government Comes Looking for Your Emails? - Rebecca J. Rosen... - 0 views
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Every single day, dozens of requests from law-enforcement officials, courts, and other government agencies pour into Google's offices, requesting that Google hand over different pieces of information its users have amassed
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many of these requests are legitimate
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It's important for law enforcement agencies to pursue illegal activity and keep the public safe.
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BBC News - Viewpoint: The universal web must be adaptive - 0 views
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Access all areas
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Along came search technologies
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Viewpoint: The universal web must be adaptive
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On Facebook, Sharing Can Come at a Cost - NYTimes.com - 0 views
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Facebook said in a statement that “the median amount of feedback on posts (likes, comments, shares) from people who have more than 10,000 subscribers is up 34 percent from a year ago.”
Quitters Never Win: The Costs of Leaving Social Media - Woodrow Hartzog and Evan Seling... - 0 views
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social web
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Facebook
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privacy settings
Facebook Workers Try to Spend Less Than 1 Second Determining Whether Content Is 'Approp... - 0 views
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Facebook
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safer
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Woodrow Wilson
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Machine-Made News | The Nation - 0 views
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Understanding Media
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Media
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networks
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Google's Monopoly on the News | The Nation - 0 views
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Federal Trade Commission
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Monopoly
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Google
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