RT @tomstandage: RT @jeffjarvis Social naysayers won’t like this: The Economist on how Luther went viral: http://t.co/0QtOFInT << …
Monthly Archives: December 2011
2011-12-23 11:32:27 +0000
Get Your War On comic is back! Why the world is doomed if Hollywood controlled the web (#SOPA passed). http://t.co/Rc1Rzr2F
2011-12-23 11:20:38 +0000
How SOPA’s ‘circumvention’ ban could put a target on Tor and even affect VPNs http://t.co/Qlz83eiM
2011-12-22 05:30:06 +0000
Solstice.
2011-12-21 15:01:06 +0000
The word ÛÏaudacityÛ is usually used to describe lies, so a new reading of Audacity of Hope: lies and hope… http://t.co/PpTGkJtP
The word “audacity” is usually used to describe lies, so a new reading of Audacity of Hope: lies and hope are interchangeable. In a sense, we were already warned what Obama would deliver.
2011-12-21 12:16:02 +0000
Even better! RT @your_paintings: @haelox There’ll be 200k on the site by the end of the #YourPaintings project!
2011-12-21 11:58:09 +0000
A recent paper written by Daniel Castro of the Information Technology & Innovation Foundation and promoted… http://t.co/HXI5ZMZr
A recent paper written by Daniel Castro of the Information Technology & Innovation Foundation and promoted by the MPAA on Capitol Hill argues in favor of DNS filtering to block access to copyright-infringing sites. In an effort to argue the effectiveness of DNS filtering, Castro cites research from Harvard’s Berkman Center for Internet & Society that suggests that “no more than 3 percent of Internet users in countries that engage in substantial filtering use circumvention tools.”
What is worth noting here is that the countries cited in the Berkman Center paper—China, Iran, the UAE, Armenia, Ethiopia, Saudi Arabia, Yemen, Bahrain, Burma, Syria, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, and Vietnam— are all countries that engage in pervasive censorship of the Internet. Therefore, Castro is basically saying that since DNS filtering works for repressive regimes, it can work in the United States too!
It is also worth noting that the US Department of State has put significant resources into more than a dozen circumvention tools over the past few years. In other words, those same tools that Castro hopes American citizens won’t use to access pirated content are in fact funded by the US government.
Source: December 19, 2011, This Week in Internet Censorship: DRC, Kazakhstan, and pro-SOPA ‘research,‘ eff.org
2011-12-21 11:13:36 +0000
I found a great collection of UbuWeb Sound recordings of Kathy Acker reading. http://t.co/jphPmaLk