Tuesday, November 24, 2009

Volunteers Log Off as Wikipedia Ages

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB125893981183759969.html

Wikipedia.org is the fifth-most-popular Web site in the world, with roughly 325 million monthly visitors. But unprecedented numbers of the millions of online volunteers who write, edit and police it are quitting.

...

"People generally have this idea that the wisdom of crowds is a pixie dust that you sprinkle on a system and magical things happen," says Aniket Kittur, an assistant professor of human-computer interaction at Carnegie Mellon University who has studied Wikipedia and other large online community projects. "Yet the more people you throw at a problem, the more difficulty you are going to have with coordinating those people. It's too many cooks in the kitchen."


Wednesday, November 18, 2009

Are you becoming the older generation?

"When you start getting friended by your grandmother, I think that's when it starts to lose its cool," said Huw Griffiths, evp and global director of marketing accountability and research.


http://www.adweek.com/aw/content_display/news/media/e3i15e6314384dccfe3fbf6715a445e0e2b

Is Facebook Getting Uncool for 18-24s?

Media agencies debate the consequences as usage among younger consumers appears to slip


On Journalism

YouTube Direct Provides 'Citizen Journalist' Clearinghouse

YouTube Direct provides a forum for budding amateur journalists and broadcast news media to connect. Surrendering news to ‘citizen journalists’ may be expedite the demise of journalism as we know it.

Friday, October 30, 2009

Interesting example of crowdsourcing and government transparency

From today's Huffington Post:
White House Releases Visitors List; Help Us Look Through It

n a Friday afternoon news dump, the Obama administration has released a list of nearly 500 visitors to the White House. Among the names: a host of prominent politicians who swung by to meet with the president and/or his aides....The new data is below. A challenge to the readers: sort through it and tell us what, if anything, is interesting that you find.

We're All Fact-Checkers Now

Interesting post from Esther Dyson,
We're All Fact-Checkers Now

...
As the journalistic priesthood erodes and everyone can become a citizen reporter or commentator, regulating or training all would-be journalists is not the answer. In line with the bottom-up, do-it-yourself ethos of the Internet, where people book their own flights, publish their own photos, and sell their own second-hand goods, it should be the users' responsibility to do their own fact-checking.
...

Read more at: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/esther-dyson/were-all-fact-checkers-no_b_328390.html

Monday, October 26, 2009

Beth Noveck contact info

Beth Simone Noveck
United States Deputy Chief Technology Officer
Director, White House Open Government Initiative
Office of Science and Technology Policy
Executive Office of the President
opengov@ostp.gov

Saturday, October 24, 2009

Privacy in Britain

From today's New York Times:

Constant Surveillance Rankles Britons

...A report in 2007 by the lobbying group Privacy International placed Britain in the bottom five countries for its record on privacy and surveillance, on a par with Singapore.

But the intrusions visited on Jenny Paton, a 40-year-old mother of three, were startling just the same.

Suspecting Ms. Paton of falsifying her address to get her daughter into the neighborhood school, local officials here began a covert surveillance operation. They obtained her telephone billing records. And for more than three weeks in 2008, an officer from the Poole education department secretly followed her around, noting on a secret-agent-style log the movements of the “female and three children” and the “target vehicle” (that would be Ms. Paton, her daughters and their car).

...

Tuesday, October 13, 2009

Internet Backbone for East Africa

In planning for our Spring course on Designing Liberation Technologies I ran across information on a newly built backbone structure for Africa. The description mentions a number of things we talked about in class. See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SEACOM_(cable_system)

File-Seacom_overview-diagram.jpg

Sweden joins the bad luck club

To emphasize the Internet issues we talked about in class yesterday, the following news item appeared this morning:

Sweden’s Internet broken by DNS mistake

Last night, a routine maintenance of Sweden’s top-level domain .se went seriously wrong, introducing an error that made DNS lookups for all .se domain names start failing. The entire Swedish Internet effectively stopped working at this point. Swedish (.se) websites could not be reached, email to Swedish domain names stopped working, and for many these problems persist still.

According to sources we have inside the Swedish web hosting industry, the .se zone, the central record for the .se top-level domain, broke at 21:19 21:45 local time and was not returned to normal until 22:43 local time.

However, since DNS lookups are cached externally by Internet service providers (ISPs) and web hosting companies, the problems remained even after that. It wasn’t until around 23:30 local time last night that the major Swedish ISPs had flushed their own DNS caches, meaning that they cleared away the broken results so that new DNS lookups could start working properly again. If they had not done this the problem would have remained for a full 24 hours.

There are still a large number of smaller ISPs that have not yet fixed the problem. It is also likely that ISPs outside of Sweden is not aware of the incident, so the effects of the problem may remain there as well.

For more detail see http://royal.pingdom.com/2009/10/13/sweden’s-internet-broken-by-dns-mistake/

Saturday, October 10, 2009

Thanks again to Jonathan Zittrain for a great session. You can read the rest of his book at http://futureoftheinternet.org/download and see his blog, at http://futureoftheinternet.org/blog


Tuesday, October 6, 2009

Identity on the Internet

Great discussion yesterday. In the context of anonymous identities on the Internet I mentioned the famous dog:


Also mentioned that Reeves and Nass had done a lot of work on how people respond to computers as though they were responding to people. Their book is The Media Equation



You can Google them to find out more, and also check for the courses they teach in the Communication dept.

Saturday, October 3, 2009

New Speaker

I was at a meeting yesterday and one of the people there was Cory Ondrejka, one of the creators of Second Life. (see profile and you can Google for more). Since we were talking about Second Life this week I thought it would be great to have him in class. He couldn't come Monday so I invited him for Wednesday and we'll shuffle some of the readings around. Like Bing, he's both an entrepreneur and a thoughtful observer of the technology.

Monday, August 10, 2009

This is Terry Winograd's blog for the Stanford Freshman Seminar on the Internet and Open Society, Fall 2009. The students will each have a blog, posting about a topic on which they will be come individual experts. I'm looking forward to seeing what they come up with.