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Google to end censorship in China; may pull out

Posted 13/01/2010 under internet in asianews articles

Yesterday, Google released a detailed blog post discussing the decision to review its policy towards China after they uncovered cyber attacks on their corporate infrastructure. The attacks, Google say, were aimed at accessing the accounts of Chinese human rights activists.

Google said, “These attacks and the surveillance they have uncovered—combined with the attempts over the past year to further limit free speech on the web—have led us to conclude that we should review the feasibility of our business operations in China. We have decided we are no longer willing to continue censoring our results on Google.cn, and so over the next few weeks we will be discussing with the Chinese government the basis on which we could operate an unfiltered search engine within the law, if at all. We recognize that this may well mean having to shut down Google.cn, and potentially our offices in China.”

Reportedly, this incident has been “the straw that broke the camel’s back,” as far as Google’s presence in China is concerned. Interestingly, Google has struggled to make a financial success of its Chinese operation and it trails the Chinese search engine Baidu by a significant margin.


Australian IT - Blogging confuses Britain (Correspondents in London, SEPTEMBER 28, 2005)

Posted 29/09/2005 under news articles

Blogging confuses Britain
Correspondents in London
SEPTEMBER 28, 2005

At the risk of being accused of “pommy bashing” I say “so what” to this article. It just doesn’t surprise me that people who know all about networking the news if they find a couple having sex in a park or recording their mates bashing some poor innocent victim wouldn’t have a clue about anything meaningful that is happening in the world let alone know about blogging.

PROPONENTS of the latest web trends were have been warned that the rest of the world may not have a clue what they are talking about.

A survey of British taxi drivers, pub landlords and hairdressers - often seen as barometers of popular trends - found that nearly 90 per cent had no idea what a podcast is and more than 70 per cent had never heard of blogging.

“When I asked the panel whether people were talking about blogging, they thought I meant dogging,” said Sarah Carter, the planning director at ad firm DDB London.

Dogging is the phenomenon of watching couples have sex in semi-secluded places such as out-of-town car parks. News of such events are often spread on web sites or by using mobile phone text messages.

Article

More people (56 per cent) understood the phrase “happy slapping” - a teenage craze that involves assaulting people while capturing it on video with their mobile phones - than podcasting (12 per cent) or blogging (28 per cent).

“Our research not only shows that there is no buzz about blogging and podcasting outside of our media industry bubble, but also that people have no understanding of what the words mean,” Ms Carter said. “It’s a real wake-up call.”

DDB, a unit of New York-based advertising group Omnicom, said the survey results indicate that agencies may be pushing their clients to use new technology - that is, to advertise on the new media formats - too quickly.

“We spend too much time talking to ourselves in this industry, rather than getting out there and finding out what’s really going on in the world,” DDB’s chief strategy officer David Hackworthy said.

Agence France-Presse


Multiblogging

Posted 09/06/2005 under news articles

Back in January 2004, I was wondering whether I had time outside my job as a print journalist to maintain even one blog. With the launch of this blog on technologyreview.com, I now have three.

I know I’m not alone. Technorati tracks just over 11 million blogs worldwide, but the actual number of bloggers is probably much lower, given that many people maintain multiple blogs under a single blog hosting account, or have blogs at several locations such as LiveJournal, TypePad, and Blogger. My blog count of three doesn’t even include the pseudo-blogs that go along with my accounts at places like Bloglines and Wallop.

Why on earth would anyone need three blogs, let alone one? (It’s important to remember that many people, if they know about blogs at all, still see bloggers as suffering from a peculiar blend of folly, arrogance, and narcissism.) I think the logic comes down to this: blogs are inherently personal, and we inhabit more than one persona as we move through our days. To the extent that blogging is becoming an important mode of self-expression and social interaction, therefore, we need a separate blog for each of our personae.

My first blog, Travels with Rhody, started out as a catch-all site where I wrote about “science, technology, the Internet, and life with a dog.” Most of the stuff related to my hobbies and miscellaneous interests, but I also blogged pretty frequently about technology stories that seemed too time-sensitive, too specialized, or too weird to write about in Technology Review.

Once a group technology blog was launched on technologyreview.com, I started doing most of my technology-related blogging there, and reserved Travels with Rhody for non-work stuff. But posting there didn’t feel all that rewarding to me. It’s a group blog, which means it’s rich with variety, but on the other hand it can’t be shaped to anyone’s personality, style, or particular interests.

This spring, my assignments for the magazine brought me to the point where I felt like I needed a one-man blog where I could air a single subject: social computing, the theme of a feature article I’ve written for TR’s August issue. The interface for THIS blog (the one you’re reading right now) wasn’t ready yet, so I launched the social-computing blog as a satellite site, the Continuous Computing Blog, using TypePad as a platform. We decided to use that blog to make the August article into an experiment in participatory journalism. The experiment involved a bit of JavaScripting that would have been difficult using the main TR site, which turned out to be another good reason to start a satellite blog. And if things go right, the August article will grow into a book. So Continuous Computing is a sort of hybrid work/personal blog where discussions on social computing can continue well past August, and where I can organize my thoughts for the bigger project.

And that brings us to this blog, Tech Coast. Here, I’ll blog about all things technological except ideas that relate directly to social computing, which will go to the Continuous Computing blog. I feel like I’ve got all the bases covered (at least for now): my home life, my work-related professional life, and my non-work-related professional life. Each of these personae has different things to say, to different audiences, and there’s no reason the readers of my TR blogs should have to suffer through my musings about macro photography and doggie day care.

Now that blogging tools have become so inexpensive and so easy to use, maintaining multiple blogs is almost as easy as having just one—at least from an administrative point of view. Of course, you still need to have something different to say in each blog. But I think multiblogging will grow in popularity as people realize that blogs are far more than online diaries. They’re channels for one-to-many and many-to-many interactions, on subjects that can be personal, professional, social, political, religious, or what-have-you. If we have 500 channels on our TVs, why not have two or three Internet channels for ourselves?

Article was available here


So what are you reading these days?

Posted 25/01/2005 under news articles

With more and more people blogging and news services offering subscriptions to their RSS feeds there are more RSS feed aggreagotrs appearing every week it seems. Rojo Networks offers to help users find information more efficiently and also to help consumers share dynamic content. This article is from MIT’s Technology Review.

So what are you reading these days?
By Corie Lok Febuary 2005

These days it seems everyone’s blogging. Combine this newest source of information with more traditional online news sources, and you could spend your whole day slogging through lists of bookmarked Web pages just to keep up. Rojo Networks is one of the latest of a bevy of startups trying to help Web users make better sense of this content explosion. The year-and-a-half-old startup’s approach is to help users home in on the most relevant and interesting news and blogs by finding out what others in their online social networks are reading.

in enabling users to draw on the insights of friends, family, colleagues, and others in their social networks, Rojo departs from most of the competition. Rojo users can invite others to sign up for Rojo accounts; those accounts are linked, much like the accounts on the popular website Friendster. Rojo users can see what RSS feeds the members of their networks are reading and which stories they are flagging. Network popularity also affects the ranking of results when the user searches RSS feeds. “We all depend on our community for content discovery,” says Chris Alden, Rojo’s cofounder and CEO. “Any successful media service has to tap into that.”

read article here


Six Apart: LiveJournal Acquisition

Posted 07/01/2005 under news articles

Six Apart buys LiveJournal, the discussion seems centred on the merits (or otherwise) of a business acquiring a community and what implications this will have for the community in question. Shelley Powers had this to say and there is a good discussion in progress at Danah’s site.
press release
mena’s corner
brad’s LJ

Q. Why did Six Apart acquire LiveJournal?

A. We think LiveJournal is a great community and a great company founded and run by a really talented team that is just as fanatical about blogging and online communication as we are. They have done an amazing job growing and supporting their online community and we think there is a lot we can learn from each other.

sixapart.com/faq

 


Wired News: Blogs May Be a Wealth Hazard

Posted 07/12/2004 under news articles

Hmmm, just as well that I don’t say anything about where I work, or do I? I guess in a roundabout way I do mention a few things and I suppose that there has been the odd image showing some of my colleagues. The problem is, do I alert the management hierarchy to my blogging by enquiring whether they have any policy on the issue, or do I keep quiet and hope that I don’t offend anybody?

These two bloggers lost their jobs because of blogging. You can read what they have to say here and here

The rise of blogging over the past few years has, inevitably, given way to another phenomenon, as companies are forced to confront employees’ easy access to ranting and raving about work in public online forums like Blogger and LiveJournal.

While some companies like Sun Microsystems and Microsoft express blog-friendliness, for employees who are unaware of their company’s stance on the practice or working at firms without clear policies, the consequences of posting work-related entries or photos can be sudden and shocking. This issue could be solved, experts say, with some policy tweaking.

Read article here


BBC NEWS | UK | Magazine | The seven-year-old bloggers

Posted 15/06/2004 under news articles

Article from the BBC News -

“Weblogs are sometimes criticised for being the self-obsessed ramblings of people who have little to say and too much time on their hands in which to do it. But there are gems out there - including many sites created by children.”

read article here


TIME.com: Meet Joe Blog—Jun. 21, 2004

Posted 15/06/2004 under news articles

A blogging article from TIME.com. There is nothing overly new here, except the update to articles that individual bloggers have released before the mainstream media, but the article is incisive and well written. OK, the author has linked to several of the usual “a-team” blogs that most of us have blogrolled at one stage or another. But there are links to less salubrious bloggers efforts as well.

I guess you’ll just have to read it for yourself and make up your own minds. Here’s an extract…

Blogs have voice and personality. They’re human. They come to us not from some mediagenic anchorbot on an air-conditioned sound stage, but from an individual. They represent - no, they are - the voice of the little guy.

read the article here


Wired News: Warning: Blogs Can Be Infectious

Posted 11/03/2004 under news articles

Connected people, links, networks - back to the 6 degrees of seperation??? Maybe not.

“There is a lot of speculation that really important people are highly connected, but really, we wonder if the highly connected people just listen to the important people,” said Lada Adamic, one of the four researchers working on the project.

read the article


Guardian Unlimited | British Blog awards 2003

Posted 18/10/2003 under news articles

image Guardian Unlimited is launching a competition to promote and reward the best of British blogging. The panel of 22 judges will pick winners for five different categories: best design, best specialist, best use of photography, best under 18 and best written. You can enter your blog in as many categories as you like. The deadline for entries is November 21. The winners will be announced on December 18. The winner of each category will receive a cheque for ?500.

go to article here


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