Home » 2008 (Page 32)
Yearly Archives: 2008
links for 2008-01-08
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How a well-known military blogger, Major Andrew Olmsted, got the final word after he was killed in Iraq but got a friend to post his pre-prepared goodbye via his blog.
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Can webisodes make money? A Western Australian perspective: “The first point is: People are already making money from creating webisodes.”
links for 2008-01-04
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New report from the Centre for Social Media. Looks at the uses, motivation and challenges in using material currently under copyright in participatory media. US-centric in its looks at fair use, et al, but still an interesting read.
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The companion website for Axel Bruns’ much anticipated Blogs, Wikipedia, Second Life, and Beyond: From Production to Produsage. Already lots of bits worth reading!
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In their worst ever re-writing of their own universe’s history, Spider-Man makes a deal with the Devil and was never married (nor revealed his identity to the world). Seriously: worst retcon ever.
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“Innovation, Industry, Science and Research Minister Kim Carr said the government had cancelled RQF because it was fundamentally flawed. “The RQF is poorly designed, administratively expensive and relies on an impact measure that is unverifiable and ill-d
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A scene by scene remake of Star Wars shot in 1977 on Super8 film!
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“… One of the reasons that Heroes (and other NBC shows) shot to the top of this list is that NBC decided to sever their relationship with iTunes last year, meaning you couldn’t zap these over to your iPod at $1.99 a pop. …”
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“64% of online teenagers ages 12 to 17 engaging in at least one type of content creation, up from 57% of online teens in 2004. Girls continue to dominate most elements of content creation. Some 35% of all teen girls blog…”
links for 2008-01-03
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“An outspoken Saudi blogger is being held for “purposes of interrogation,” the Saudi Interior Ministry confirmed Tuesday. … the blogger, Fouah al-Farhan, was “being questioned about specific violations of nonsecurity laws.””
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Last year, Stacy Snyder, 25, was dismissed from the student teaching program at a nearby high school and denied her teaching credential after the school staff came across her photograph on her MySpace profile.
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Lawrence Lessig corrects some misunderstandings held by ASCAP(American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers ) in their recent stance on CC licenses.
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“Illegal downloads of videos continue to grow, with Australians increasingly pirating new US shows well before they ran downunder. … Television series Heroes was last year’s most popular television program with 2,439,154 downloads”
Australia’s Internet Censorship Regime
The first big concern for 2008 is that the newly-elected Rudd Labor Government in Australia has introduced laws requiring across-the-board filtering of the internet by ISPs. While the plan may have some good intentions behind it, if implemented in the way currently envisaged it will almost certainly make the internet in Australia slower, make internet services more expensive and likely infringe on privacy and civil liberties of Australian net users (seriously, a PIN number of equivalent to log on to the internet – why not have just been honest and kept the Australian ID card?!).
Not good.
For an overview of the changes, see Bookbuster; and for a good wrap-up of the increasingly negative media response, check out Peter Black’s solid overview here. Facebook users might want to join the Australian ISP filtering plan is stupid! or People against mandatory internet filters in Australia groups.
Update: As you might expect, the most sensible response thus far from an Australia politician to Labor’s internet censorship plan has been from Senator Andrew Bartlett:
As with every aspect of the measure, until the full details are known its impossible to judge. However, comments like Conroy’s make it much harder to be confident that the government is doing anything other than populist pandering, putting up a feel-good measure which will have no practical impact but create the illusion of doing something effective.
(My italics.)