“A collaboration between Cambridge and MIT, given £65.1m by the government, has so far underwhelmed academia with its achievements. Where is the money going?” So says a sceptical piece in today’s Guardian. But since the article claims that Dr. Gillian Evans is a member of the University’s Council (elementary schoolboy mistake), one wonders how well-informed it actually is.
Saying the federal government isn’t doing enough to ensure consumer privacy, the Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC) has sent an open letter to the attorneys general in all 50 states to stop what it claims are Microsoft’s unfair and deceptive business practices surrounding the company’s Passport service. Computerworld story here.
This is an experimental posting made from my Psion via a mobile phone! Just pushing the envelope!
“Distance education threatens the privacy of students and professors because online class discussions can be monitored in ways that are impossible in traditional classrooms, argues David Noble, a history professor at York University, in Toronto, and a well known critic of technology. ” From a useful review by Jeffrey R. Young of David Noble’s new book, The Digital Diploma Mill. In the light of the security-panic which has been triggered by September 11 in the US, this is something for anyone interested in academic freedom to worry about.
Well, I’ve made my contribution to the Dave Winer retirement fund and now am a fully paid-up Radio user. First time in ages that I’ve not resented paying for software.
This is a test posting — by email!
Found a good source for general information about the Weblogging phenomenon. [More.]
‘The term “Nasdaq”, it seems, has entered the language as a verb. It means to crash, or slump. “His quarterback rating”, The Denver Post wrote of a footballer recently, “has Nasdaqed”‘. From a Financial Times review of John Cassidy’s book about the Internet bubble — Dot Con: the greatest story ever sold .
There’s a new online publication — The Free Software Magazine. Foreword by You Know Who. The mag is earnest and well-intentioned, but not the world’s slickest read. And there’s a whiff of the collective navel-gazing one often sees in embattled or evangelical groups. But then most mags need time to settle down.
Ever wonder why newspaper reviews of new cars are, well, somewhat tame? Hint: it has something to do with the fact that the local dealers tend to be big advertisers. Any journalist who attempts to do really critical pieces about cars will sooner or later find him- or herself in conflict with the men in suits from the advertising department. That’s where the Web comes in — it provides a medium in which people can actually tell one another the truth about products. And they do. This interesting piece by J.D. Lasica in the Online Journalism Review looks at three sites devoted to telling the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth about industrial products and services. It’s a useful reminder of the Cluetrain Manifesto’s credo that “markets are conversations”. The Net is a powerful enabler of those conversations — which of course is why car dealers and manufacturers loathe and fear it.