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ubicomp

Two ubicomp tales

April 5th, 2010  |  by Elisabeth Oppenheimer  |  published in ubicomp  |  Comments Off on Two ubicomp tales

The NY Times recently published two stories on opposite sides of the ubicomp — distributed human computing — spectrum. On the one hand, there’s the tale of the “human-flesh search engines” in China. The term was apparently meant to refer to the fact that humans are the searchers, but it increasingly means that humans are […]

FOI Topics and Links of the Week

March 8th, 2010  |  by jennifer  |  published in cloud, cybersecurity, Facebook, Future of the Internet, ubicomp  |  3 Comments

A roundup of happenings that bear on the issues in The Future of the Internet — Canadian Android Carrier Forcing Firmware Update. A Canadian carrier wanted users to download a firmware upgrade that fixed a glitch prohibiting users from dialing 911, so it made the upgrade mandatory. Seems reasonable. But it bundled in an update […]

FOI Topics and Links of the Week

January 27th, 2010  |  by Elisabeth Oppenheimer  |  published in censorship, Future of the Internet, Generativity, iphone, kindle, ubicomp  |  3 Comments

The Extraordinaries Haiti Earthquake Support Center. A followup post on the Extraordinaries’ efforts to use ubiquitous human computing to help find missing people after the Haiti earthquake — a positive vision inspired by JZ’s nightmare scenario of crowdsourced secret police work. Did they succeed? “Yes and no”—but, as they detail, there’s obvious potential for future […]

Life in a clickshop

January 17th, 2010  |  by Elisabeth Oppenheimer  |  published in ubicomp  |  7 Comments

In talks about ubicomp, JZ gives an example of a worst-case scenario involving ubicomp platforms. He imagines that the Iranian government could use Amazon Mechanical Turk to identify dissidents, simply by posting pictures of protestors and ID-card pictures of the adults in the country, then asking Turkers to match protestor pictures to ID-card pictures. Voila—and […]

FOI Topics and Links of the Week

December 30th, 2009  |  by Elisabeth Oppenheimer  |  published in Android, cybersecurity, Future of the Internet, iphone, ubicomp  |  1 Comment

Flurry: App Store Sees Record Breaking Christmas. Great article collecting sales and market share numbers for the App Store and Android Market. Quick summary: App Store grew 51% (!) from November to December, Android Market 22%; App Store has 13x as many downloads as Android Market (apparently not everyone is as concerned about openness as […]

Citizens of Farmville, petition your (real) representatives!

December 28th, 2009  |  by Elisabeth Oppenheimer  |  published in iphone, ubicomp  |  10 Comments

Our worries about ubiquitous human computing*—summarized in this earlier post—fall into two broad categories. First, there are potential bad effects on the workers, since traditional labor-law protections may not apply in cyberspace. Second, there are potential bad effects on the world. One example that JZ has given in talks is that lobbyists could pay workers […]

Introduction: Ubiquitous Human Computing

November 10th, 2009  |  by Elisabeth Oppenheimer  |  published in Future of the Internet, ubicomp  |  7 Comments

Those of you who follow Professor Zittrain’s work know that he’s been writing and thinking about ubiquitous human computing for the last several months. Another name for it might be distributed human computing: the phenomenon of disaggregating a task into component pieces and then parceling them out around the world. Perhaps the best-known example is […]

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@simonw @BioTurboNick True in both directions! twitter.com/chrisbettles1/…

About 10 hours ago from Jonathan Zittrain's Twitter via Twitter for iPhone

@PeterContiBrown You have always been, as Yiddish would have it, a mensch. <3

About a day ago from Jonathan Zittrain's Twitter via Twitter for iPhone

@davidfrum The answer to which branch the VP is in (which is probably “yes”) shouldn’t affect former VP Pence’s stance on the subpoena. Any immunities are privileges, not duties. Given what happened (and his affirmation of same), and the importance to country, he should voluntarily testify.

About 4 days ago from Jonathan Zittrain's Twitter via Twitter for iPhone

@paulg Imagine this phenomenon applied to legal reasoning: AI might predict what a judge would say and even write the appellate opinion. But then does the law stop developing in 2023? Do we have a pool of human judges to apply contemporary standards and create new training data?

About 5 days ago from Jonathan Zittrain's Twitter via Twitter Web App

@AlexanderAbdo Seems like we should do a LOCKSS for OLC opinions!

About 5 days ago from Jonathan Zittrain's Twitter via Twitter for iPhone



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