somehow
Runescape stuff - Group | Diigo - 0 views
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The Future of the Internet-And How to Stop It » Chapter 2: Battle of the Netw... - 1 views
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one another.
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connect to it.
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networking
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Hush-A-Phone, which was invented in 1921 as a way to have a conversation without others nearby overhearing it
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were sold.
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The court drolly noted, “[AT&T does] not challenge the subscriber’s right to seek privacy. They say only that he should achieve it by cupping his hand between the transmitter and his mouth and speaking in a low voice into this makeshift muffler
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small ways.
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phone network.
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The physical layer had become generative, and this generativity meant that additional types of activity in higher layers were made possible.
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services business
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themselves
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unchanged
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tinkering
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Why would the proprietary services not harness the potential generativity of their offerings by making their own servers more open to third-party coding?
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model prevailed.
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shopping
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free-for-all
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who built them.
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possible.
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Jennings’s work
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annoyed person.
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the world
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FIDOnet
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services
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message
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points
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billion
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from them.
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network work.
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controlling it.
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tryout period
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access
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code for it.
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harmful code.
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rust that at least some third-party software writers will write good and useful code, and trust that users of the device will be able to access and sort out the good and useful code from the bad
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approach
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requirements
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Its origins can be found in a 1984 paper by Internet architects David Clark, David Reed, and Jerry Saltzer.
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The people using this network of networks and configuring its endpoints had to be trusted to be more or less competent and pure enough at heart that they would not intentionally or negligently disrupt the network.
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persists today.
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Yet the assumption that network participants can be trusted, and indeed that they will be participants rather than customers, infuses the Internet’s design at nearly every level.
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an outsider.
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the IDs.
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contents
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User identification is left to individual Internet users and servers to sort out if they wish to demand credentials of some kind from those with whom they communicate.
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regulation
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The person at the endpoint must instead rely on falling dominos of trust. The Internet is thus known as a “best efforts” network, sometimes rephrased as “Send it and pray” or “Every packet an adventure.”
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chapter
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environment
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dead end.
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ignore
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what cheap processors would small firms and mainstream consumers be using today? One possibility is a set of information appliances.
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I'm not convinced of the direction here -- the Brother or Smith-Corona appliance typewriter was supplanted not by a generative product, per se, but by Word Perfect, WordStar, Microsoft Word, and other competitors. No open-system revolution brought this about, only high-stakes competitive market cannibalism. It was not the open programmability of the PC and Mac that inaugurated the market, but the plug-and-play capability of the new product, coupled with the price point.
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dial-up modem
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minicomputer
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The Future of the Internet-And How to Stop It » Chapter 1: Battle of the Boxes - 0 views
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went wrong.
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from scratch
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purposes
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Cutting and pasting different pieces of Flexowriter tape together allowed the user to do mail merges about as easily as one can do them today with Microsoft Word or its rivals.
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reprogram them.
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problems
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tabulators
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revolution
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a university
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no more.
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opponent
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or the Web.
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PCs can run.
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installed
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themselves
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parties’ code
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by others
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supremacy there.
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invent entirely new appliances from scratch as long as they had the ideas and the patience to attach lots of wires to springy posts.
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Actually, this product rarely encouraged developing new products from scratch. While it was possible to do with difficulty, by that skill level it would be much easier to use a protoboard and discrete components. Any level of structural control will limit the user to some degree from the freedom to create. This is actually a very good example, and a survey of the various products and their creative possibilities would make for an interesting way to explore this question of flexibility and generativity.
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Radio Shack’s “75-in-1 Electronic Project Kit,”
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But PCs were still firmly grounded in the realm of hobbyists, alongside 75-in-1 Project Kit designs.
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The fundamental threshold difference was the ease of transporting functionality with the floppy drive. This gave the Apple II a first opportunity to allow this kind of conspiring. Other platforms (Imsai, Altair, Compucolor, etc.) all had, or eventually supported, floppy drives, and there was some conspiracy, but the Apple's was the most plug-and-play of them all.
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The Future of the Internet-And How to Stop It » Chapter 5: Tethered Appliance... - 0 views
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even the safest Volvo can be driven into a wall.
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the appliances.
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a network.
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A change in technology can change the power dynamic between those who promulgate the law and those who are subject to it.
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normal surfing.
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Comprehensive regulatory crackdowns require a non-generative endpoint or influence over the individual using it to ensure that the endpoint is not repurposed.
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The Future of the Internet-And How to Stop It » Chapter 7: Stopping the Futur... - 0 views
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bad code
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generative system.
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The Future of the Internet-And How to Stop It » Chapter 4: The Generative Pat... - 1 views
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three layers.
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hierarchies
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principle at work
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Generativity is a system’s capacity to produce unanticipated change through unfiltered contributions from broad and varied audiences.
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consumers
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f code.
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specialized
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training
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accessible
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generative
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frequently generativity at one layer is the best recipe for generativity at the layer above.
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generates
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Free software satisfies Richard Stallman’s benchmark “four freedoms”: freedom to run the program, freedom to study how it works, freedom to change it, and freedom to share the results with the public at large
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generative
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platform
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detail
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Generative systems facilitate change.
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breakthrough
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compete
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market model.
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initial spark
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They represent tinkering done by that one person in a hundred or a thousand who is so immersed in an activity or pursuit that improving it would make a big difference—a person who is prepared to experiment with a level of persistence that calls to mind the Roadrunner’s nemesis, Wile E. Coyote.
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The genius behind such innovations is truly inspiration rather than perspiration, a bit of tinkering with a crazy idea rather than a carefully planned and executed invention responding to clear market demand.
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Web service
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Generativity, then, is a parent of invention, and an open network connecting generative devices makes the fruits of invention easy to share if the inventor is so inclined.
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We are seeing the possibility of an emergence of a new popular culture, produced on the folk-culture model and inhabited actively, rather than passively consumed by the masses.
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makers
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policy issues
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innovation
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contribution
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eccentric
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The divide is not between technology and nontechnology, but between hierarchy and polyarchy.72 In hierarchies, gatekeepers control the allocation of attention and resources to an idea. In polyarchies, many ideas can be pursued independently. Hierarchical systems appear better at nipping dead-end ideas in the bud, but they do so at the expense of crazy ideas that just might work. Polyarchies can result in wasted energy and effort, but they are better at ferreting out and developing obscure, transformative ideas. More importantly, they allow many more people to have a hand at contributing to the system, regardless of the quality of the contribution.
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Internet
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disruption
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economic harm.
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But society has now fairly got the better of individuality; and the danger which threatens human nature is not the excess, but the deficiency, of personal impulses and preferences.
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The generative Internet and PC were at first perhaps more akin to new societies; as people were connected, they may not have had firm expectations about the basics of the interaction. Who pays for what? Who shares what? The time during which the Internet remained an academic backwater, and the PC was a hobbyist’s tool, helped situate each within the norms of Benkler’s parallel economy of sharing nicely, of greater control in the hands of users and commensurate trust that they would not abuse it.
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This is the generative pattern, and we can find examples of it at every layer of the network hourglass: 123 An idea originates in a backwater. It is ambitious but incomplete. It is partially implemented and released anyway, embracing the ethos of the procrastination principle. Contribution is welcomed from all corners, resulting in an influx of usage. Success is achieved beyond any expectation, and a higher profile draws even more usage. Success is cut short: “There goes the neighborhood” as newer users are not conversant with the idea of experimentation and contribution, and other users are prepared to exploit the openness of the system to undesirable ends. There is movement toward enclosure to prevent the problems that arise from the system’s very popularity.
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surfing
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The Future of the Internet-And How to Stop It » Chapter 3: Cybersecurity and ... - 0 views
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computer
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digital nose count.
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from afar.
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and less-skilled users.
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threats
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at MIT
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Internet
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retool them.
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Urging users to patch their systems and asking hackers to behave more maturely might, in retrospect, seem naïve.
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operations
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enforced
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Internet
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the Internet.
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responsibility
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attack
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the Internet.
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considered
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The decentralized, nonproprietary ownership of the Internet and the computers it linked made it difficult to implement any structural revisions to the way it functioned, and, more important, it was simply not clear what curative changes could be made that did not entail drastic, wholesale, purpose-altering changes to the very fabric of the Internet.
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Then it stalls.
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generativity
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password security.
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a set time.
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syndicates
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happening
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money
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orbit
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Internet
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globe
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starts
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compromised
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appliancized
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decisions
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device
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the fore
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gatekeeper
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f the user is allowed to make exceptions, the user can and will make the wrong exceptions, and the security restrictions will too often serve only to limit the deployment of legitimate software that has not been approved by the right gatekeepers.
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The Future of the Internet-And How to Stop It » Introduction - 0 views
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to the Web.
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very fast.
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computer crashes
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permission
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iPhone needs Apple permission before you can tinker; Apple can remote modify it; it is a controlled system.
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ahah ! - sterile the iphone ?... not so... it has now many app. done free, as the next widgetbox web2 ways - and it is a very great inspiration too, an industrial asian has produced a similar product better...and of course as usual, protections attract hackers to modify or to use free: it's done...
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give up that freedom.
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network of control
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of its use.
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things
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discover
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heartbeat
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exported
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or private
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pressure them
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The everlasting battle will be between open, Web 2.0 systems and services and "bottled power" as exemplified by the iPhone.
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- users (vs. consumers?) stay in the generative loop via Web 2.0 applications
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free services and ...ware = battle for money may change to battle for communities influences and direct human exchanges
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Digest updated on oD - 76 views
How you can join in group annotation - 200 views
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The Future of the Internet-And How to Stop It » Part I: The Rise and Stall of... - 0 views
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subscribers
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become
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to win.
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dead ends.
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access it.
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Internet
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stop them