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Comments: 241 +-   Net Neutrality Seen Through the Telegraph on Thursday December 03, @02:57AM

Posted by samzenpus on Thursday December 03, @02:57AM
from the doomed-to-repeat-it dept.
internet
James McP writes "Ars Technica has a write-up on the unregulated telegraph of the 19th century, which gives a view into what could happen to an internet lacking any regulation mandating neutrality. The owners of the 'Victorian internet' used their control of the telegraph to prop up monopolies, manipulate elections, facilitate insider trading, and censor criticism."
Read More... 241 comments story

Comments: 161 +-   Craigslist Blocks Yahoo Pipes on Tuesday December 01, @09:32PM

Posted by kdawson on Tuesday December 01, @09:32PM
from the nose-meet-knife dept.
censorship
Romy Maxwell posted a blog piece on Craigslist apparently shutting off access to Yahoo Pipes. Maxwell was working on a project, one of 2,111 using Craigslist as a data source, for a (non-commercial) Pipes-based mashup. He sent Craig Newmark an invitation to the alpha test, after a few rounds of friendly communication — "...as a rule of thumb, okay to use RSS feeds for noncommercial purposes." The apparent response, 4 days later, was for Craigslist to redirect any request with an HTTP referrer of pipes.yahoo.com to the Craigslist home page. Maxwell writes: "It's a sad day for me. I'm not too upset about my own project, as Flippity was already removing Craigslist as a data source. With the likes of eBay and Oodle not only providing open APIs but encouraging and rewarding developers, spending my time wrestling with Craigslist is just plain stupid and exhausting. I'm sure I'm not the only person to have come to that conclusion, and I wish it were different. ... If Craigslist wants to keep its doors shut to the world, so be it."
Read More... 161 comments story

Comments: 794 +-   Scientology Charged With Slavery, Human Trafficking on Tuesday December 01, @04:29PM

Posted by kdawson on Tuesday December 01, @04:29PM
from the to-name-but-a-few dept.
censorship
eldavojohn writes "A formal complaint was filed in California (caged PDF) last week by John Lindstein naming David Miscavige and the Church of Scientology International as defendants. Lindstein claims that for sixteen years (from age 8) he was forced to work as a slave at Gold Base, a secret CoS site run by Golden Era Productions with 'razor wire, security guard patrols, surveillance posts, and three roll calls each day.' The pay was $50 a week. The allegations include 'Violations of wage and hour laws as well as unfair/illegal business practices actionable under California B&P 17200 Et. Seq.' and a complaint under the 13th Amendment of the US Constitution, which abolished slavery. Members of the group Anonymous praised the summons."
Read More... 794 comments story

Comments: 558 +-   Verizon Changes FiOS AUP, -1, Offtopic on Tuesday December 01, @01:26PM

Posted by timothy on Tuesday December 01, @01:26PM
from the get-ready-for-municipal-broadband dept.
internet
RasputinAXP writes "Verizon has changed their FiOS AUP effective yesterday, and added an interesting new clause to their specific examples that we're all familiar with: 'it is a violation of the Agreement and this AUP to ... post off-topic information on message boards, chat rooms or social networking sites.' At this point, every FiOS-based Slashdot user is breaking the new AUP."
Read More... 558 comments story

Comments: 305 +-   The Cloud Ate My Homework on Tuesday December 01, @09:46AM

Posted by timothy on Tuesday December 01, @09:46AM
from the low-hanging-clouds-are-fog dept.
google
theodp writes "Over at CNET, James Urquhart sings the praises of cloud computing, encouraging folks to 'really listen to what is being said, understand how the cloud is being used, and seriously evaluate how this disruptive model will change your projects, your organization, and even your career.' Fair enough. Over at the Google Docs Help Forum, some perplexed cloud computing users spent the month of November unsuccessfully trying to figure out why they've been zinged for inappropriate content. Among the items deemed inappropriate and unshareable include notes on Henry David Thoreau ('the published version of this item cannot be shared until a Google review finds that the content is appropriate'), homework assignments, high school yearbook plans, wishlists, documents containing botanical names for plants, a list of websites for an ecommerce class, and a list of companies that rent motorcycles in Canada. When it comes to support in the cloud, it kind of looks like you might get what you pay for."
Read More... 305 comments story

Comments: 310 +-   US Congressman Announces Plans To Probe Wikileaks on Tuesday December 01, @08:19AM

Posted by kdawson on Tuesday December 01, @08:19AM
from the good-luck-with-that dept.
censorship
eldavojohn writes "Congressman Peter King (R-NY) is calling for a probe into Wikileaks with regard to the recent publication of half a million 9/11 pager messages. He has announced that he plans to have his Washington staff begin a preliminary investigation because Wikileaks' action 'raises security issues.' A word of caution: Congressman King has been known to make inflammatory and unpopular statements."
Read More... 310 comments story

Comments: 271 +-   German President Refuses To Sign Censorship Law on Sunday November 29, @02:46PM

Posted by kdawson on Sunday November 29, @02:46PM
from the german-for-hot-potato dept.
censorship
thetinytoon writes "German federal president Horst Köhler has refused to sign a law to block child pornography that passed Parliament earlier this year, stating that he 'needs more information.' In Germany, the federal president has the right to reject a law only if its passage violated the order mandated by the constitution, or if it is obviously unconstitutional — he can't veto a law simply because he disagrees with it. The law was passed under a coalition government, but a different coalition took power before the law reached the president's desk. Political observers guess that the political parties would like to get rid of the law without losing face, but since it has already passed the Parliament, they can't simply abandon it."
Read More... 271 comments story

Comments: 783 +-   Google Apologizes For "Michelle Obama" Results on Thursday November 26, @04:00AM

Posted by samzenpus on Thursday November 26, @04:00AM
from the was-that-wrong? dept.
google
theodp writes "CNN reports that for most of the past week, when someone did a Google image search for 'Michelle Obama,' one of the first images that came up was a picture of the First Lady altered to resemble a monkey. After being hit with a firestorm of criticism over the episode, Google first banned the site that posted the photo, saying it could spread malware. Then, when the image appeared on another site, Google displayed the photo in its search results, but displayed an apologetic Google ad above it. On Wednesday morning, the racially offensive image appeared to have been removed from any Google Image searches for 'Michelle Obama.' Google officials could not immediately be reached for comment." Update — 15:38 GMT by SS: A reader pointed out that this article from the Guardian says the image was de-listed simply because it was removed from the blog where it was hosted rather than by any "deliberate" action from Google.
Read More... 783 comments story

Comments: 433 +-   Australian Govt. Proposes Internet "Panic Button" For Kids on Wednesday November 25, @01:22PM

Posted by timothy on Wednesday November 25, @01:22PM
from the panic-panic-panic dept.
internet
CuteSteveJobs writes "Children who feel they are being bullied, harassed or groomed online could call for help instantly using a 'panic button' on their PCs under a plan by the Australian Government's cyber-safety working group. The button shall look like a 'friendly dolphin,' who will connect the child victim instantly to police or child protection groups. Australian Internet Censorship Advocate Hetty 'Save the Children' Johnson says the Internet needs something like 000 or 911. Will this be another scheme wasting taxpayer dollars in lieu of parental supervison, or could it actually work? Are 1 in 4 children really sexually abused by the Internet? Can flaming and trolling be classified as bullying?"
Read More... 433 comments story

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