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John Rich

Tech Giants Make Net Neutrality Case As Deadline Nears : All Tech Considered : NPR - 0 views

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    Todays the last day to comment on the current Net Neutrality proposal: http://apps.fcc.gov/ecfs/upload/display?z=ynot4
Emily Knab

New Tool Reveals Internet Passwords | SecurityWeek - Information Security News - 0 views

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    said to be for gov. authorities, but its only $50... makes me scared for my outlook acct... used in daily 7.1
Emily Knab

The Government's New Right to Track Your Every Move With GPS - Yahoo! News - 0 views

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    the gov can attach gps to your car w.o you knowing for real though
Simeon Spearman

High-tech helps revive low-tech habits | JWT Intelligence - 3 views

  • Good old-fashioned reading is on the rise thanks to the booming popularity of e-readers. In 2007, a study by the National Endowment for the Arts found that half of 18-24-year-old Americans read no books for pleasure. The e-book era may be changing that. A Sony-commissioned survey conducted in May found that 40 percent of e-reader owners report reading more than they did with print books. Amazon says its customers buy roughly three times as many books after getting a Kindle. And finally, smartphone apps have re-popularized classic games and toys. The much-anticipated Scrabble iPad app hit the market this fall after the wide adoption of Newtoy’s Scrabble knockoff, Words With Friends. Electronic Arts has turned the classic Lite Brite into a digital experience.
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    gonna blog this mofo
Ivy Chang

Send Hugs Over The Internet With This Interactive Pillow - 0 views

  • a battery powered, internet-enabled pillow that allows users to send virtual hugs to each other. In the recently filed patent, Microsoft said it could be used to simulate a variety of interactions, stating: hugs, hand-shakes, grabbing documents, writing on a whiteboard, and the like can be detected so a specific feedback force response is implemented.
Emily Knab

NYT Suggests Government Regulation of Search Results, Google and Others Question This |... - 0 views

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    talks about if gov should regulate search results, google pushing back
Emily Knab

UK's Girl Scouts Cry For New Photoshopped-Images Law for Airbrushed Celebrities - 0 views

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    UK girl scout association is lobbying the UK gov to have all photoshoped images clearly marked daily 8.4
Greg Steen

Why the Internet Freaked Out When Fox Pulled House from Hulu - 0 views

  • Many observers immediately labeled Fox's block a violation of the principle of "network neutrality"—the idea that Internet service providers should allow subscribers to access all legal content online. Neutrality rules have been the subject of fierce debate in Washington, and activists are constantly on the lookout for perceived anti-neutrality maneuvering.

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    If Fox's move violated "neutrality," though, it wasn't in the way we've long defined that term. Advocates for net neutrality rules have mainly been concerned about the power that cable and phone companies can exert on the Internet. The theory is that in most local areas, broadband companies exist as monopolies or duopolies—you can get the Internet from your phone company or your cable company—and, therefore, are in a position to influence online content. What if, for instance, AT&T demanded that YouTube pay a surcharge every time a customer watches a video? To prevent such abuses, the Federal Communications Commission imposed Internet "openness" guidelines (PDF) in 2005, and since then regulators and lawmakers have been arguing about how to make those guidelines both permanent and enforceable.

    But this Fox-Cablevision-Hulu scenario turns the neutrality debate on its head. Here, it wasn't the broadband company—Cablevision—that blocked customers' access to content. Instead, it was the content company, Fox, that imposed the ban. Why is that distinction important? Because while it's easy to think of justifications for imposing neutrality regulations on broadband companies, it's less clear how we should feel about imposing rules on content providers. Telecom companies are regulated by the FCC, and there's a long history of the government forcing "openness" rules on public communications infrastructure. If the government can prohibit phone companies from deciding whom you can and can't call, shouldn't we have a similar rule preventing ISPs from deciding what you can get on the Web?

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    B/c House is awesome, obviously!  I bet it's lupus!  Srsly though, article talks about how internet content is beginning to be subject to the same bullshit as TV and other traditional media.  And net neutrality comes into play of course.
John Rich

NASA Ames Reproduces the Building Blocks of Life in Laboratory | NASA - 0 views

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    So much for intelligent design
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