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Web 2.0 platforms

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FOI Topics and Links of the Week

March 3rd, 2011  |  by jennifer  |  published in Android, cloud, Facebook, iphone  |  Comments Off on FOI Topics and Links of the Week

Retailer’s Terms and Conditions attempt to restrict negative online reviews. After a consumer posted a negative review of an Internet retailer online, the retailer reached out, not to apologize, but rather to threaten a libel suit. It turns out that the retailer’s Terms and Conditions aim to limit the circumstances under which an unhappy customer […]

FOI Topics and Links of the Week

October 18th, 2010  |  by jennifer  |  published in Android, blackberry, censorship, cybersecurity, Facebook, Future of the Internet, Generativity, iphone  |  1 Comment

T-Mobile gives its G2 Droid amnesia. The G2s appearing on T-Mobile shelves this week come with an extra piece of hardware, and it’s not a free car charger. If G2 owners teach their Droids (either by coding or downloading software) to do something that interferes with T-Mobile’s business model, the company-installed rootkit will induce short-term […]

Has the Future of the Internet come about?

September 7th, 2010  |  by z  |  published in cybersecurity, Facebook, Future of the Internet, Generativity, Web 2.0 platforms, wikipedia  |  2 Comments

This week there’s an online symposium at Concurring Opinions about the Future of the Internet — And How to Stop It. I’ll be blogging there; in the meantime here’s my opening entry.

FOI Topics and Links

June 1st, 2010  |  by jennifer  |  published in Android, censorship, cybersecurity, Facebook, Future of the Internet, Generativity, iphone, kindle, news  |  1 Comment

Google launches Government Requests tool. Google is now making public information on the requests it receives from government agents to remove content from its search results or reveal private user data. The Government Requests tool currently displays the number and type of requests by country for the last six months of 2009. In a bit […]

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

February 16th, 2010  |  by Elisabeth Oppenheimer  |  published in censorship, iphone, Web 2.0 platforms  |  Comments Off on FOI Topics and Links of the Week

AppMakr Transforms App Store Landscape, Enables Anyone To Make Their Own iPhone App. Gagan Biyani raves about AppMakr, a product that allows anyone to make a simple RSS-based iPhone app for $199. The company will even submit the app to the App Store. (So, for instance, Biyani put together an app that aggregates all of […]

The mysterious world of Facebook apps, cont’d

October 4th, 2009  |  by Elisabeth Oppenheimer  |  published in Facebook, Future of the Internet  |  1 Comment

Thanks for all the great comments (here, and in replies directly to JZ on FB and Twitter) on why Facebook apps haven’t taken off the way, say, iPhone apps have. I thought I’d try to summarize some of the dominant themes to think about whether the problem is inherent or created by Facebook itself. 1. […]

The mysterious world of Facebook apps

September 27th, 2009  |  by Elisabeth Oppenheimer  |  published in Facebook  |  9 Comments

CIO.com offers a fascinating article on the Facebook economy and how much app use has plummeted since a Facebook user interface redesign de-emphasized outside apps. I’d noticed that, too, and wondered what Facebook was thinking in stripping the site down so much (or Twitterizing itself, depending on how you look at it). The article does […]

NYT cloud op-ed

July 22nd, 2009  |  by z  |  published in Future of the Internet, Generativity, kindle, Web 2.0 platforms  |  6 Comments

Here’s a copy of Monday’s NYT op-ed about cloud computing.  The Kindle/Orwell incident broke about ten minutes before the piece closed.  (The original new hook, somewhat oddly, was the announcement of the Google Chrome OS — not at all bad in itself, but a milestone on our progression from PC to cloud.)

Shep gets multilingual

March 30th, 2009  |  by Yvette Wohn  |  published in Herdict, Web 2.0 platforms  |  1 Comment

Some Herdict Updates: * Here is a new video with Prof. Z navigating the screen and explaining how to use Herdict. * Helping us get the word of Herdict out to the herd-at-large, Shep has taken on some impressive language skills (and more impressive gender changes) to promote Herdict in a number of different languages […]

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@michaelbd Just going to leave this here (before it vanishes) theatlantic.com/technology/ar…

Yesterday from Jonathan Zittrain's Twitter via Twitter for iPhone

@simonw @BioTurboNick True in both directions! twitter.com/ChrisBettles1/…

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

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

About 5 days 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.

Last week 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?

Last week from Jonathan Zittrain's Twitter via Twitter Web App



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