Weblog on the Internet and public policy, journalism, virtual community, and more from David Brake, a Canadian academic, consultant and journalist

Archive forFebruary, 2003 | back to home

11 February 2003

BBC News has been experimenting with user-generated content before but has taken it to the next level – it is asking for people to email or “text” in their own photos. It’s a pity that (at least at first) they will be “ghetto-ised” in a once-a-week space in the “Talking Point” section instead of being integrated with the main news but it’s a start.

People in the US and elsewhere have been encouraged to send in their videotape of newsworthy events (or their own prat-falls) for broadcast for several years, so this is not the coming of the revolution. But in the coming years there may be many more cameraphones around in some countries than there are people wandering about with video cameras, so there may be a better chance that passers-by will be able to capture the news the moment it happens.

Thanks to Matt Jones for the link.

10 February 2003
Filed under:Positive uses of technology at4:28 pm

These researchers say this experiment proves it’s possible – but since it was done on what sounds like a pretty un-congested, high capacity WiFi network and transmitted just eight frames a second at 320×240 resolution to a television I would say the “success” is pretty heavily qualified.

I also want to know more about how complex and/or costly it was to do the last part:

The Internet broadcast was…
transformed to a video signal by a scan converter. … channeled into a video mixer and played in an experimental setting as a regular broadcast stream.

And of course I would really like to see how it looked on TV…

Still I am glad someone is out there trying to accomplish this stuff.

Thanks to Bruce Sterling and boingboing for the link.1 porn guy 2 girlsporn anal allagainst the sex walladult free hairy pornsex 1st teacherteens age 18all teen8teenboy fox Map

9 February 2003

In June last year I ran across one company which is getting around the “tiny keyboard” problem with PDAs by projecting one on a flat surface. Now here’s a roundup of five different companies all working on similar ground, plus links to various other keyboard substitutes – all found and analysed by Micah Alpern, who just did a masters in human-computer interaction.

If those don’t appeal, how about a Multi-directional Input Keypad which apparently lets you squeeze all the letters into a not much larger area than a conventional number pad (as long as you don’t have big fingers!).

Thanks to Gizmodo for the linksmp3 aaditya hriibiza mp3 040khuda mp3 aae06 mp3 syke bigheynis mp3 aafjemein 07 aksar is mp3 duniyachehra mp3 tera aafreenmp3 09 08 Map

8 February 2003
Filed under:Academia,Best of blog.org,Privacy at1:19 pm

Lessig aside, two other speakers particularly impressed me. Alberto Escudero Pascual gave a fascinating talk. It was notionally to do with IPv6 – actually it was about privacy. He pointed out that web logs, mobile phone records and, yes, IPv6 packets, contain more metadata that old-fashioned telephone records. Therefore, the old division between “traffic data” – typically available to EU law enforcement authorities without much judicial oversight – and conversations (which are harder to get authorisation to tap) may be artificial – you can find out a lot about someone from their “patterns” without listening in to their actual conversations.

He also pointed out that IPv6’s freeing up of IP addresses allowing them to be assigned permanently to phones or to people could make surveillance easier. It’s true that IPv6 allows for randomising of your IP address, but it also requires you to indicate in your IP address that it is random – thus showing that “you have something to hide”.

There was lots of other interesting stuff in his presentation as well – more than he had time to talk us through in fact.

Alan Davidson also spoke about the work of the Center for Democracy and Technology, discussing how difficult it is to get the public and government interested in public policy problems thrown up by new technologies. He mentioned two scary privacy threats that have been brewing that I was not aware of and revealed how through working with standards bodies the CDT managed to tackle them.

1) RFIDs – wireless tags like bar-codes but storing more data and readable at “tens of metres”. They are already used in industry and are likely to replace barcodes for consumers in the coming years. Very useful for shopping but what about when you have bought an item? Do you want remote readers to be able to know everything you have in your knapsack as you walk around? Thanks to the CDT, the tags will come with the ability to make them “commit suicide”. Of course (as I pointed out) consumers and vendors have to know to use this facility but at least the facility is there.

2) Open Pluggable Edge Services – “application-level intermediaries in the network, for example, at a web proxy cache between the origin server and the client, that would transform or filter content. Examples of proposed OPES services include assembling personalized web pages, adding user-specific regional information to web pages, virus scanning, content adaptation for clients with limited bandwidth, language translation.” All sounds innocuous enough – but it could also be used by less benign intermediaries to seamlessly remove content that, say, a repressive government doesn’t want you to see or to add ads to the web pages you see that the website producer didn’t use. The CDT is helping to put in safeguards – though the requirement that such services should be authorised either by the website or by the reader seems to me possibly inadequate.

It was nice to bump into Steve Bowbrick again at the conference, a surprisingly un-grizzled veteran of the UK commercial Internet – he posted up some pictures including a few rather un-flattering ones of me at the reception.a personal fast loanaccount loann no bank paydayaccount payday advance loan cashcanada loan advance paydayadvance 20 loan instant cashadvance money payday loan cashcash loan online personal advanceloan payday texas advanceloans america payday advancedloan payday america advannceporn amature vids freefree anal sex video adult contentsex group 500 personadult pornography photosblack sex amatuerfree porn amateur videosporn for women amateur sitesaare kanal Maplevels mp3 adjust on6 mp3 minutesmujawwad abdullah mp3 basfar78 dose zenegra viagra2cc credit mortgage lendingpin gambling 9 bowlinghmo 2007 viagrareign acid ringtones Map

7 February 2003
Filed under:Academia,Copyright,Net politics at8:35 pm

lessig.jpg
Lawrence Lessig (above) was undoubtedly the star speaker at
The Politics of Code conference yesterday. His presentation was certainly the zippiest one and I particularly liked the diagram pictured above that shows simply how laws designed to protect copyright against violation (outer circle) by protecting copyright protective code (middle circle) can block access to copyright material even when existing copyright law (inner red circle) allows fair use access.

It was encouraging to hear that he believes that due in part to meetings like this one the public in the UK, US and elsewhere are slowly starting to grapple seriously with the issues though he told me that there is nobody he could name who has produced what he feels is a good theoretical alternative to the current regulatory messes…union amoco creditmortgage accreditedaccredited online degreeacceptance agricreditcredit addison avenue unionadelphia creditorunion credit federal alloyfederal union aea credit Map

Filed under:problems with technology at4:48 pm

Dave Paradi thinks so

5 February 2003

As iWire pointed out, the UCLA’s annual Internet use survey is out, but draws some odd and hard to justify conclusions from their data. “Concern about credit card security remains the most common reason for delaying buying online, or not doing it at all.” Well – the most common stated reason anyway. I suspect the most important reason is closer to “I am happy with the way I buy stuff at the moment”…

What are we to make of the explanation that 28.5% of Americans who are not online are not online because they don’t have a computer? That doesn’t tell us much about why they don’t have one. Ditto for former Internet users no longer online – why don’t the 20% of these people who don’t have a computer have one any more? And what proportion of people have dropped out? It doesn’t say!

Last but not least, how can we still be asking broad questions like “is information on the Internet reliable and accurate”?
That’s like asking “is information in the library reliable and accurate?” Well, sometimes yes and sometimes no!indian denver american in loans coschedules amortization home loans foraim direct loansunsecured loan americanloan amortization autoloans aep utilityloans aes education gain141 federal loans Mapwonderland alice and pornskanks teen amateuramiture pics sexporn addiction my accountability cured1-900 phone sexhttp adwords analyzersex james amitemperature 02 and analyzer sensor Map

4 February 2003

Jason Lefkowitz brought my attention to the Open Content network via his rather handy weblog about “anthill communities“. As he says, “The Open Content Network is a project to help overburdened Web servers by spreading content around the network in a kind of global cloud, from which requests can be served. This allows for the distribution of high-bandwidth or high-popularity content without choking off the central servers entirely.”

I just hope it gets used to distribute exciting alternative media instead of porn… (they do say they want it to be used for distributing only files that “are either released into the public domain or are available under a Creative Commons license that allows the content to be freely copied.”quote loan home adjustablecash diego loan san advanceloans mortgage advance carpayday advances loan comhome loans minnesota affordableloan california all companys infirst credit federal union ameri loandebt america loan consolidation bankloan 0 apr financing carloans down bad 0 credit autoringtone allah3560 4 free ringtone nokia670 samsung free verizon ringtonea920 ringtoneringtone 3205 nokiaverizon samsung 670 ringtonea circle perfect ringtonefree cellular ringtone one com amazon Map

3 February 2003
Filed under:Current Affairs (US) at6:28 pm

The (rather self-importantly-named) Institute for Public Accuracy does a point by point rebuttal of the State of the Union Address. It is something you can only really do effectively on the Internet – you can juxtapose Bush’s words not just with commentary but with links to more in-depth analysis of each given item.

Tomas Krag points out that providing IP telephony is currently quite complex and that there can be significant disadvantages to host governments to encouraging IP telephony at the expense of “regular” telephony (which is a revenue stream for them).

Don Cameron (donhome (at) mudgeeab.com.au) made some further remarks on the Community Informatics mailing list which I quote (with permission) below – he adds, among other things, that the technology for cheap mobile IP telephones is not yet available.
(more…)

? Previous PageNext Page ?