Archive for Internet

Quick book review: Take Control of Screen Sharing in Lion

Take Control of Screen Sharing in LionTake Control of Screen Sharing in Lion by Glenn Fleishman

My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Highly-targeted title; up to the Take Control series’ usual, high standards. Takes a very practical typical-use-case approach.

View all my reviews

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Cory Doctorow on Facebook and Royal Wedding take-downs

Boing Boing’s Cory Doctorow: “Facebook is not suited to the purpose of organizing political causes. It may be an easy place to mobilize people, but between it capricious management and the ease of mining it for social graphs, it is an authoritarian secret policeman’s best friend and a censor’s bosom buddy.”

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Petition against usage-based billing of internet services

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Trailer — yes, trailer — for Robert J. Sawyer’s novel Watch

I’ve read Wake, the first of Sawyer’s WWW (Wake, Watch, Wonder) trilogy, and am nearly finished Watch. They are, as always with Sawyer, excellent.

In the WWW trilogy Sawyer’s exploring the meaning and consequences of several varieties of consciousness — human, primate and artificial. Throw in BlackBerrys, EyePods [not a typo], a LiveJournaling blind-from-birth teenage math-wiz protagonist transplanted from Texas to Kitchener-Waterloo and artistically-inclined webcam-chatting primates, and you’re getting the idea.

It’s a little weird seeing a trailer for a novel that isn’t also the trailer for a movie, but Sawyer’s work is such a natural fit for the screen, that it only makes sense:

Plus it makes it look like the web’s made of electic jellyfish, so how cool is that?

Visit Sawyer’s website: sfwriter.com.

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A collection of recent articles about Facebook and privacy

It might be handy to keep my bookmarked articles about Facebook’s recent troubles regarding the backlash against their heavy-handed and arrogant approach to their members’ privacy. These are roughly in chronological order, starting on May 7th:

Put me down as unimpressed.

It has been suggested that Facebook will be regulated, and that might make everything okay. The oil industry is regulated; how’s that working out?

I don’t actually expect Facebook to make any serious, long-term improvements to privacy. It’s in their members’ interest for them to do so, but it opposes their own financial interests. Guess which will win? I don’t expect many people will abandon their accounts over this, either. It has long been shown that people don’t value their privacy, and Facebook knows this.

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Why I’ve (re)joined the 6,400,000,000 people who aren’t on Facebook

I’ve had it with Facebook.

Seriously. I’m out.

Wired has an article on Facebook privacy that articulates a number of my reasons.

Fundamentally, I think people are missing the big picture with regard to online services such as those offered by companies like Google or Facebook. Yes, they offer services, and those services have value.

And while they might be free, they also have a cost. Whether or not they’re worth the cost is a decision you have to make for yourself.

Facebook, like Google, makes its money selling advertising, and the more they know about the users of their services, the more they can charge for their ads.

The members are the product. (Marshall McLuhan would love it.)

This isn’t my idea (I’ve forgotten where I came across it now), but it’s a powerful one. It explains fully why (Facebook founder) Zuckerberg has zero interest in protecting anyone’s privacy.

His best interests are directly at odds with his site’s members’.

For me, Facebook became more nuisance than it was worth when I started wasting more and more of my time trying to locate settings that would allow me to opt-out of whatever it was that they’d just decided everyone on the planet needed to know about me that they have previously allowed me to share only with Friends.

Enough.

That’s why I’m out.

People talk dismissively about Twitter, about how insignificant it is since it only has an estimated 100 million users* compared to Facebook’s 400 million.

How many hundred million “friends” does any one person need?

The last straw was how Facebook taunted me by telling me that my friends were going to miss me, and how none of them would be able to contact me any more. Unbelievable arrogance.

Count me in with the 6.4 billion people who aren’t on Facebook.

11 pm Update: The New York Times interview with Elliot Schrage, vice president for public policy at Facebook, underscores my reasons: Facebook is opt-in, he claims, because if you’re a member, you’ve opted-in for whatever the hell they decide. No, thanks.

11:07 pm update: NY Times’ Facebook privacy infographic: “A Bewildering Tangle of Options”. Via DaringFireball.net. [Also added "Privacy" tag.]

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