Internet


Mashable contributor Doriano ‘Paisano’ Carta recently posted a “list of the best tools for researchers today” –

In addition to being able to saves text, audio, video and links during your research online you’ll also be able to share these collections of notes with colleagues, students or anyone else. You can also keep things private for your own research projects. Here are just some of the tools every modern researcher needs ….

- Doriano “Paisano” Carta @ Mashable



National Public Radio“Local stations are wary of NPR’s embrace of podcasts and other new ways to deliver its news programs.”
- The Christian Science Monitor

Public radio stations make millions from pledge drives that intersperse the two hit news shows [”Fresh Air with Terri Gross” and “All Things Considered”], and NPR hasn’t wanted to undercut local stations’ fundraising by giving fans another way to hear the programs. But that could change, as NPR considers whether to fully embrace “new media” technology at the risk of bypassing some public-radio stations.

“The fear in its raw form is that NPR will market itself directly to consumers and … and completely eclipse their local stations,” says media consultant Michael Marcotte, a former San Diego public-radio news director.

The debate within NPR became public last week after the network’s board fired CEO Ken Stern. Mr. Stern, who’d been in charge for 18 months, had pushed NPR to offer its news through mediums other than terrestrial radio.

News reports blamed the firing on Stern’s embrace of technology initiatives, but NPR officials deny that. A larger factor, says Mr. Marcotte, may have been Stern’s inability to persuade member stations to trust his plans for delivering programming via technology other than old-fashioned radio.

- Randy Dotinga, The Christian Science Monitor: March 14, 2008: Link.

Disclosure: I work for Minnesota Public Radio (MPR) as a software guy. The events at NPR don’t directly affect me or MPR; but MPR is in a similar market niche, so I’ll be following this issue closely.



RSS IconDavid Moldawer reports on Jasper’s Google Reader Subscribe:

My favorite Google Reader tool is a script for Firefox called Jasper’s Google Reader Subscribe. Installing it is easy, and it makes subscribing to new blogs absolutely effortless (and also saves time by letting you know right away if you’ve already subscribed to something.)

1. If you haven’t already, switch to Firefox. (It’s free and it’s much better than Internet Explorer.)
2. Install the free Greasemonkey extension here. It lets you install scripts like Jasper’s. (Firefox will ask you to restart, so make sure to do that before the next step.)
3. Install Jasper Google Reader Subscribe here.

[Rule the Web: Link]

“Once the script is installed, you’ll notice a small orange icon in the upper right corner of your window whenever you’re on a page that features RSS. If you’ve already subscribed to that feed with Google Reader, a checkmark will indicate that. If not, just mouse-over the icon and select which RSS feed you want, and click.”



“Curse Expands With $5 Million in Funding From AGF Private Equity”

Curse Inc., the premier gaming portal dedicated to massively multiplayer online games (MMOGs) and their fan communities, announced today that it has received $5 million in Series-A funding from leading French venture capital firm AGF Private Equity and angel investors. The deal helps to further secure Curse’s position as the leading MMOG destination, giving advertisers access to an in-demand and difficult to target demographic.

Prior to the Series-A funding, Curse raised more than $800,000 through an angel round of funding in December 2006.

Curse recently launched its newest version, V4 …. From image and video uploading, to blogging and social bookmarking, V4 brings Web 2.0 to the MMOG space in an unparalleled way. For more details, and to experience V4, visit www.curse.com.

[Link]

“The funding will be used … with a particular focus on advertising initiatives.”

Via paidContent.org.



Over at Boing Boing, Cory Doctorow observes how ICANN policy initiatives would require “… that some perfectly infallible institution be set up to rake in gigantic profits from the sex industry while accurately dividing all material on the web into ‘porn’ and ‘not-porn.’ “

Wendy Seltzer has a great essay up today about the process by which ICANN is allocating new top-level domains (TLDs, like .com, .net, .org, and so forth). Wendy is the copyfighting civil liberties cyberlawyer who founded Chilling Effects and previously worked with me at the Electronic Frontier Foundation. She’s served on the ICANN board for years — this is the US-chartered corporation that oversees the domain name system, the only really centrally governed piece of the entire Internet.

ICANN has been thrashing for years over the creation of more TLDs, like “.sex” — the idea is to recapture the edenic glory days when all .COMs were companies, all .ORGs were educational institutions and all .WS sites were in Western Samoa. A .sex TLD would be overseen so that only porn sites got .sex domains, and so that porn sites would be forced out of the .com/net/org spaces. This merely requires that some perfectly infallible institution be set up to rake in gigantic profits from the sex industry while accurately dividing all material on the web into “porn” and “not-porn.” Simple.

[Boing Boing]

One more time, with feeling:

This merely requires that some perfectly infallible institution be set up to rake in gigantic profits from the sex industry while accurately dividing all material on the web into “porn” and “not-porn.” Simple.

The good news: “Another faction has bigger ideas: they want to blow the lid off of DNS, to allow for the creation of an infinite number of TLDs. Wendy is in this faction and in “Aging the Internet Prematurely,” she sets out a stirring call-to-arms for the TLD multiverse.”

See Aging the Internet Prematurely, One PDP at a Time by Wendy Seltzer



“… Despite strict rules against the practice in the most popular online games, there have always been players willing to sell.”

… At his workstation in a small, fluorescent-lighted office space in Nanjing, China, Li Qiwen sat shirtless and chain-smoking, gazing purposefully at the online computer game in front of him. The screen showed a lightly wooded mountain terrain, studded with castle ruins and grazing deer, in which warrior monks milled about. Li, or rather his staff-wielding wizard character, had been slaying the enemy monks since 8 p.m., mouse-clicking on one corpse after another, each time gathering a few dozen virtual coins — and maybe a magic weapon or two — into an increasingly laden backpack.

Twelve hours a night, seven nights a week, with only two or three nights off per month, this is what Li does — for a living. On this summer night in 2006, the game on his screen was, as always, World of Warcraft, an online fantasy title in which players, in the guise of self-created avatars — night-elf wizards, warrior orcs and other Tolkienesque characters — battle their way through the mythical realm of Azeroth, earning points for every monster slain and rising, over many months, from the game’s lowest level of death-dealing power (1) to the highest (70).

… At the end of each shift, Li reports the night’s haul to his supervisor, and at the end of the week, he, like his nine co-workers, will be paid in full. For every 100 gold coins he gathers, Li makes 10 yuan, or about $1.25, earning an effective wage of 30 cents an hour, more or less. The boss, in turn, receives $3 or more when he sells those same coins to an online retailer, who will sell them to the final customer (an American or European player) for as much as $20. The small commercial space Li and his colleagues work in — two rooms, one for the workers and another for the supervisor — along with a rudimentary workers’ dorm, a half-hour’s bus ride away, are the entire physical plant of this modest $80,000-a-year business. It is estimated that there are thousands of businesses like it all over China, neither owned nor operated by the game companies from which they make their money. Collectively they employ an estimated 100,000 workers, who produce the bulk of all the goods in what has become a $1.8 billion worldwide trade in virtual items. The polite name for these operations is youxi gongzuoshi, or gaming workshops, but to gamers throughout the world, they are better known as gold farms. While the Internet has produced some strange new job descriptions over the years, it is hard to think of any more surreal than that of the Chinese gold farmer.

The market for massively multiplayer online role-playing games, known as M.M.O.’s, is a fast-growing one, with no fewer than 80 current titles and many more under development, all targeted at a player population that totals around 30 million worldwide. World of Warcraft, produced in Irvine, Calif., by Blizzard Entertainment, is one of the most profitable computer games in history, earning close to $1 billion a year in monthly subscriptions and other revenue.

By Julian Dibbell: June 17, 2007: New York Times]

Via SlashDot.

See Also

Documentary film: Chinese Gold Farmers Preview



Recent developments in wiretapping cable broadband:

Cable Television Laboratories (CableLabs), the cable industries research and development consortium, has released the specifications needed for the minions of law and order to “wiretap” cable broadband user’s activities on the web.

[Kevin D. Murray: Link]



Apple picks a fight it can’t win: Why Safari for Windows will leave Apple bruised and bloodied”

Apple ComputerThe insular Apple universe is a relatively gentle place, an Athenian utopia where Apple’s occasional missteps are forgiven, all partake of the many blessings of citizenship, and everyone feels like they’re part of an Apple-created golden age of lofty ideas and superior design.

Windows VistaBut the Windows world isn’t like that. It’s a cold, unforgiving place where nothing is sacred, users turn like rabid wolves on any company that makes even the smallest error, and no prisoners are taken. Especially the Windows browser market.

Acropolis, AthensThis is no Athens.

Spartan HopliteThis is Sparta.


[Mike Elgan: ComputerWorld]

Via SlashDot.

Which reminds me of this classic essay:

Umberto Eco on Mac versus DOS [circa 1994]:
“I am firmly of the opinion that the Macintosh is Catholic and that DOS is Protestant.”

Excerpts from an English translation of Umberto Eco’s back-page column, La bustina di Minerva, in the Italian news weekly Espresso, September 30, 1994.

Insufficient consideration has been given to the new underground religious war which is modifying the modern world. It’s an old idea of mine, but I find that whenever I tell people about it they immediately agree with me.

The fact is that the world is divided between users of the Macintosh computer and users of MS-DOS compatible computers. I am firmly of the opinion that the Macintosh is Catholic and that DOS is Protestant. Indeed, the Macintosh is counter-reformist and has been influenced by the ratio studiorum of the Jesuits. Apple ComputerIt is cheerful, friendly, conciliatory; it tells the faithful how they must proceed step by step to reach — if not the kingdom of Heaven — the moment in which their document is printed. It is catechistic: The essence of revelation is dealt with via simple formulae and sumptuous icons. Everyone has a right to salvation.

MS-DOSDOS is Protestant, or even Calvinistic. It allows free interpretation of scripture, demands difficult personal decisions, imposes a subtle hermeneutics upon the user, and takes for granted the idea that not all can achieve salvation. To make the system work you need to interpret the program yourself: Far away from the baroque community of revelers, the user is closed within the loneliness of his own inner torment.

You may object that, with the passage to Windows, the DOS universe has come to resemble more closely the counter-reformist tolerance of the Macintosh. It’s true: Windows represents an Anglican-style schism, big ceremonies in the cathedral, but there is always the possibility of a return to DOS to change things in accordance with bizarre decisions: When it comes down to it, you can decide to ordain women and gays if you want to.

Naturally, the Catholicism and Protestantism of the two systems have nothing to do with the cultural and religious positions of their users. One may wonder whether, as time goes by, the use of one system rather than another leads to profound inner changes. Can you use DOS and be a Vande supporter? And more: Would Celine have written using Word, WordPerfect, or Wordstar? Would Descartes have programmed in Pascal?

And machine code, which lies beneath and decides the destiny of both systems (or environments, if you prefer)? Ah, that belongs to the Old Testament, and is talmudic and cabalistic.

[Umberto Eco: The Modern Word]



Whistleblower Declaration and Other Key Documents Released to Public

More documents detailing secret government surveillance of AT&T’s Internet traffic have been released to the public as part of the Electronic Frontier Foundation’s (EFF’s) class-action lawsuit against the telecom giant.

Some of the unsealed information was previously made public in redacted form. But after negotiations with AT&T, EFF has filed newly unredacted documents describing a secret, secure room in AT&T’s facilities that gave the National Security Agency (NSA) direct access to customers’ emails and other Internet communications. These include several internal AT&T documents that have long been available on media websites, EFF’s legal arguments to the 9th Circuit, and the full declarations of whistleblower Mark Klein and of J. Scott Marcus, the former Senior Advisor for Internet Technology to the Federal Communications Commission, who bolsters and explains EFF’s evidence.

“This is critical evidence supporting our claim that AT&T is cooperating with the NSA in the illegal dragnet surveillance of millions of ordinary Americans,” said EFF Legal Director Cindy Cohn. “This surveillance is under debate in Congress and across the nation, as well as in the courts. The public has a right to see these important documents, the declarations from our witnesses, and our legal arguments, and we are very pleased to release them.”

[EFF]

“You’ve Already Seen Them”

There are no surprises in the AT&T documentation published Tuesday, which consist of a subset of the pages already published by Wired News. They include AT&T wiring diagrams, equipment lists and task orders that appear to show the company tapping into fiber-optic cables at the point where its backbone network connects to other ISPs at a San Francisco switching office. The documents appear to show the company siphoning off the traffic to a room packed with internet-monitoring gear.

Released along with the AT&T documents is a formerly sealed signed declaration from Klein, and a written analysis of the documents penned by internet expert J. Scott Marcus, which have been kept mostly under wraps by a court order that applied to the parties in the case.

The interpretation of Klein’s documents by Marcus, a former CTO for GTE and a former adviser to the FCC, are the most interesting documents released Tuesday.

“This configuration appears to have the capability to enable surveillance and analysis of internet content on a massive scale, including both overseas and purely domestic traffic,” Marcus wrote.

AT&T likely has 15 to 20 of these rooms around the country, and shipped data out of the rooms via a separate network to another location, Marcus concluded. Collectively, he estimated that the rooms were able to keep tabs on some 10 percent of the nation’s purely domestic internet traffic.

[Wired.com]



Mark Hurst reports on morgueFile: public image reference archive

morgueFile: public image reference archive
… If you aren’t the copyright holder of a particular image you want to use in you blog, you need to get permission from the copyright holder first.

However, you are free to download and use photos from Morguefile.com, a large searchable archive of beautiful, high-resolution photos (like the one shown here). You can even use them for commercial purposes.

[Mark Hurst: Rule the Web]

See Also:

How To Find Great Free Photos for Your Blog by Andrew Ferguson