Category: News

  • Google, the Internet and Civil Disobedience As a Business Strategy

    Everyone, it seemed, had a strong reaction to Google’s decision this week to stop censoring its search results on Google.cn. Some were impressed with its moral stance; some found it to be too little, too late; and still others viewed it as a cynical move.

    Maybe I’ve been writing about the business world for too long, but my first thought was -– hmm, Google has turned civil disobedience into a business strategy.

    To be clear, civil disobedience is substantially different for a company than it is for individual citizens. Google will never face the triumvirate risks that many people who defy oppressive governments do:  jail, torture, death. Instead, Google will likely have to shut down its offices in China, a move that could cost them hundreds of millions of dollars in revenue this year alone.

    But judging from some of the ideas that shaped Thoreau’s use of the term back in the 1840s — the refusal to resign consciences to governments or to become agents of injustice –- Google is in fact acting out of civil disobedience. It’s certainly not the first company to do so; those that voluntarily divested from South Africa and other countries with appalling policies were doing the same. But Google is the first company I can think of to act on such a large scale.

    Does that mean Google is acting from self-interest or altruism? My guess is both, but I’ll let that debate simmer on other web pages. I’m willing to accept that Sergey Brin is doing what he believes is right. But Google is a corporation, not a person, and its interests and motives are by definition much more complex.

    Whether to practice civil disobedience is less and less of a marginal issue for companies in a global economy. The question of whether to practice it is an especially pertinent one for Internet companies to ask now –- if for no other reason than the fact that the Internet is an ideal platform for supporting protests. Back in 1998, Stefan Wray wrote an essay on electronic civil disobedience in which he foresaw how the Internet and civil disobedience would be closely enmeshed, noting that:

    While it may be partially true…that participation in street actions has become increasingly meaningless and futile and that future resistance must become primarily nomadic, electronic, and cyberspacial, it is doubtful that physical street actions, involving real people on the ground, will end any time soon. What is more likely is that we will see electronic civil disobedience continue to be phased in as a component of or as a complement to traditional civil disobedience.

    Call it cynical or practical, but Google, whose business is done entirely on the Internet, recognizes that evolution. Google is forced to choose sides in a battle that has been unfolding for some time – China vs. the Internet – and the side it’s chosen will win in the long run. The risks, though, lie in how long it will take for that victory to arrive, and what it will cost Google in the meantime.

    Related GigaOM Pro Research:

    Is Google’s China Problem a Groundswell of the Closed Internet?

    Photo by Chuck Taylor via Flickr.

  • Twitter Updates for 2010-01-16

  • Apple Eyes The Smart-Home Energy Business (AAPL)

    apple store

    Apple joins Microsoft, Google and Intel as companies eyeing the smart home energy industry, PatentlyApple reports.

    The company has filed a patent application for a system that uses HomePlug Powerline Networking, which makes every power outlet in a building a spout for data, audio and video.

    Apple’s potential device, which is being referred to their “Smart Home Energy Management Dashboard System,” could also be used by small businesses to allocate power more efficiently.

    Patent applications don’t mean a company is getting into any given business. But at least they’re putting some R&D resources there.

    Read the whole thing here >

    Join the conversation about this story »

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  • Times Square’s Newest Video Billboard Stars FBI’s Most Wanted [Billboards]

    Criminals have made it on Broadway thanks to the FBI’s newest video billboard, one which displays their stories-tall mugs alongside Diddy, oversized M&Ms, and other Times Square staples.

    The billboard, which was unveiled yesterday, is part of an agreement with Clear Channel that gives the FBI access to over 400 digital billboards in 33 cities across the country. The Times Square sign rotates through FBI’s Most Wanted criminals that are thought to be in the area but can also be updated with missing persons reports and emergency warnings.

    New York City’s abundance of faces has long provided a kind of shelter for criminals seeking anonymity among the masses. This gigantic digital wanted poster might make them rethink that approach. [The Washington Post]







  • Why we need Google Book scanning – the End of Eternity

    At a small but classic library in West St Paul (which is south of St Paul, but on the “west” side of the Mississippi) I came across a book from my childhood: The End of Eternity by Isaac Asimov (1955). It’s a time travel book, full of cliches.
    Except they weren’t cliches then.
    At the above Amazon link you’ll find “We don’t know when or if this item will be back in stock.” That’s sad. The End of Eternity is not a classic book, but it’s a fun book by a man who wrote a lot, and got good at it.
    Over at Google Books we learn that the End of Eternity was digitized Mar 25, 2008 at the University of Michigan. We can’t read it though. Under current US copyright law it goes into the public domain at about the end of eternity. (You didn’t realize copyright was now effectively eternal? Missed that one eh?)
    Google gets a lot of flack for their book project. I’m sure they’re imperfect, but I think they’re fundamentally right.
    Go Google.
    Update 1/20/10: Ok, so I could have picked a better example. Charlie Stross tells me I should have looked a bit longer (52 reviews, 5 stars). It seemed like such a good example at the time! In my defense the reviews are quite old, and refer to the book as “hard to find” in 2000.
    Update 1/20/10b: Charlie wrote this long post today. Google is not his friend. Mea culpa.

  • Don’t like online ads? Microsoft will let you generate your own

    gorumorsMicrosoft has filed for a patent related to how users can generate their own advertisements on social networks, according to a published report.

    In the patent, the company notes that ads in social networks aren’t that effective because of the low relevance to the users. With this technique, an original, less-effective ad can be supplemented with users reviews, both positive and negative.

    Inventors say that subsequent visitors to the web site are shown reviews based on relevance. In one quoted example, Microsoft says, “Advertisement 400 includes objective information 401 describing a product or service that is the subject of the advertisement 400. The objective information 401 is generally provided by a promoter of the product.”

    “In other information fields 403, 405, and 407, information is presented that was provided by users of the social networking web site. This information can be subjective in nature, such as the accolade provided by “USER1″ in other information field 403.” The user reviews can be presented to other users who are part of the same social network.

    By comparison, Facebook users can choose to “like” an ad, which can help determine what other ads are shown to the same user. Microsoft will measure the level of user engagement and then use that information to determine what ads are shown to the user next.


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  • EC roundup: Quitting your day job and understanding securities laws

    Here’s the latest from VentureBeat’s Entrepreneur Corner:entrepreneur-corner

    Ask the attorney: Securities laws – When friends or family want to invest in your start-up, do you need to comply with sercurities laws? Scott Edward Walker, founder and CEO of Walker Corporate Law Group, looks at what steps you need to take to protect yourself and your wannabe investors.

    Snatching victory from adversity – Sometimes, bad news can actually turn out to be the best thing you can hear.  Serial entrepreneur Steve Blank recounts the time he learned that a potential client had already invented the product his company was working on. What could have been disaster became a great opportunity.

    Is it time to quit your day job? – There are myths and realities to launching your own business – and the myths tend to get the most press. Ali Davar, CEO of Worio, a Vancouver start-up, faced them when deciding whether to leave his comfortable job to build his company. He lists them here in an effort to help you decide if the time is right to take the jump.

    The start-up chronicles: 5 questions for prospective entrepreneurs – Thinking of taking your idea and starting your own business? Author and Yale senior faculty fellow Bruce Judson offers five things you should ask yourself before making the leap.

    Tech changes and the entrepreneur: How to keep up – The saying goes that over the next 20 years, we’ll see as much change in technology as we’ve seen in the past 100. If so, says Draper Fisher Jurvetson managing director Steve Jurvetson, the only good ideas are the ones that seem crazy.


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  • LG releasing Windows Mobile 7 phone in September and Android 2.1 in April?

    First LG flat-out says on public record that Windows Mobile 7 is bound for 2010, and now we’ve gotten apparent word that the company has narrowed said release window to September of this year — at least as far as its own devices are concerned. That comes via high-profile French tech blogger Eric of Presse Citron, who while attending a LG Design Lab tweeted (both in French and immediately after in English) that LG Mobile will release a Windows Mobile 7 device in September and an Android 2.1 device in April, first in the US and then Europe just after. The tweets are now gone, but WMPoweruser managed to catch both via Google cache, while we have corroborated just the French one by similar means. So, misheard claims from the company or accidental slip-up of NDA’d secrets? MWC is starting to look more and more interesting.

    LG releasing Windows Mobile 7 phone in September and Android 2.1 in April? originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 16 Jan 2010 10:48:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Thread propositalmente pesado de Divinópolis- poucas fotos!

    Como são poucas as fotos, conservei-as grandes, para que aficcionados tenham acesso a detalhes interessantes sobre o panorama da cidade!)


    mauricio couto

    bom pastor visto do niterói(GUARDE BEM ISTO: –ESTE BAIRRO VAI BOMBAR! )

    mauricio couto


    marcelo flavio vilela

    avenida rio grande do sul

    jen dutra

    avenida sete de setembro

    jen dutra

    praça dom cristiano

    jen dutra

    catedral- por do sol

    jen dutra

    catedral

    jen dutra

    Divinopolis great city of the Midwest of Minas Gerais State

    rafael denis

    Vista para Santo Antônio dos Campos (Ermida) FOTO GRANDE PARA OS DETALHES DA FERROVIAS E SUAS CURVAS

    thiago festival

    Capelinha e Cruz – em cima do "vulcão" de Ermida

    thiago festival

    jardim da usina gafanhoto

    clebicar

    Entardecer no mirante do Walchir resende – Divinópolis FOTO MARAVILHOSA!

    Foto: Eduardo Laudares

    Vista do Mirante do Walchir Resende

    Foto: EduardoLaudares

    Edifício Liverpool – Vista noturna do Mirante Walchir Resende
    reparem nas igrejas!

    Foto Eduardo Laudares

    Por do sol no Walchir Resende – Foto:Eduardo Laudares

    Foto:Eduardo Laudares

    Nascer do sol – Mirante Walchir R.

    Foto:Eduardo Laudares

    rua no bairro walchir resende

    Foto:Eduardo Laudares

    bairro l.p. pereira

    gmmagela

    bairro lavrado

    gmmagela

  • Coimbatore IT Updates – கோவை ஐடி

    This thread is dedicated for IT/Software/BPO news, parks, projects related news from Coimbatore.

    IT parks in Coimbatore:

    1. KGISL IT park

    2. ELCOT TIDEL Park

    3. KCT IT park

  • Flickr (err, Etsy) Find: Iron Mac

    Filed under: , , , , ,

    Ok, so usually our Flickr Find feature is about photographic stuff, but this was so cool I had to share it anyway. Gizmodo (via SlashFilm) found this awesome MacBook sticker over on Etsy, and I think, though the Newton one is still cool, that we have a new winner for coolest MacBook sticker ever. Unfortunately, it’s sold out, but I just love the way the logo is used in a pretty awesomely defiant B&W portrait of Iron Man.

    In other sticker news, Cult of Mac says the Steve Jobs sticker they found is probably the best one ever, but the funny Carmen Miranda mod on that page is excellent, too. I wouldn’t normally just put stickers on my laptop — it’s too good looking already to muddy up with other graphics. But this Iron Mac sticker would be the sure-fire exception.

    TUAWFlickr (err, Etsy) Find: Iron Mac originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Sat, 16 Jan 2010 10:45:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Perú | IIRSA – Eje Amazonas| Interoceánica del Norte

    Mapa Vial del Peru

    Mapa Vial de Sudamerica

    Ejes IIRSA-UNASUR

    Ejes IIRSA-Peru

  • Sector V January 2010

    Hello guys i am making a new thread of sector v.I have taken pictures of all the major buildings there.I will post pics one by one.Thank you all for your support and i hope some of you can help in identification.
  • Our Families

    Last night I was reflecting on my adventures with diabetes and how lifechanging this has been. But those changes haven’t taken place in a vacuum – my husband, Terry, has participated every step of the way.

    He got me to the hospital when I couldn’t/wouldn’t do it for myself, and was by my side each of the three days I was there. He was my strength in those first few massively confusing weeks when the insulin seemed so overwhelming and I was afraid to eat anything. He gave me the courage to stop what wasn’t working (too much basal, a silly sliding scale for boluses) when my Endo wouldn’t, and got me through my first trials with carb counting. And he has dealt with all my subsequent successes and failures with love, infinite patience, and encouragement.

    But I wonder….what has his support network been? I know during the first weeks of my trek down this path he and my sisters were in constant contact.

    Anyway, I’m curious about your families. While they don’t have to test and medicate, like us they really do have to deal with our condition every day. Where do they turn when they’re concerned about your diabetes? What accomodations have they made? Diabetes can be expensive…how do our families deal with the added financial burden? Do you think they’ve realized any benefits (better food, more exercise, etc.)? Or do they not seem to think about it all too much?

    Sorry for the ramble…you know how those 3:00 a.m. thought jags go!

    Jen

  • Coup de gueule: la communication prétentieuse d’Audi

    Audi continue de dévoiler morceau par morceau sa future citadine, l’A1, à travers de nombreux teasers savamment distillés. Mais quand le responsable marketing de la marque en parle, ça dérape, une fois de plus…

     L’A1 est un programme important pour Audi. Elle succèdera dans quelques mois à l’A2, discontinue, et seul vrai flop de la marque. A Ingolstadt, on a sûrement pas oublié cette gamelle, pourtant prévisible, et la recette a complêtement changé pour la deuxième tentative de l’Audi moderne sous le segment C.

    l’A1 se présente donc comme une citadine chic, à l’image des Mini, MiTo ou autres DS3. Un segment qui a le vente en poupe et qui est appelé à se développer davantage. La voiture n’a rien d’inattendu en matière de design, c’est une Audi, mais ça n’empêche pas la marque de la présenter comme suit: « Contrairement à la majorité des citadines, aux formes très fonctionnelles, l’A1 jouera sur l’émotion et un sentiment de sportivité dans son design », dixit Peter Schwarzenbauer, responsable marketing et ventes, un des pontes d’Audi. Soit, l’A1 a l’air plutôt réussie et chacun peut présenter sa nouveauté comme il l’entend, même si ces mots colleraient mieux à un modèle d’inspiration latine qu’à la très germanique citadine aux anneaux.

    A lire ces propos, on se dit donc que l’A1 est calibrée comme la MiTo. Eh bien que nenni, car le même s’empresse de déclarer que sa nouvelle petite sera « la première vraie citadine premium »…

    Donc les concurrents sont abrutis n’existent pas. Amis propriétaires de Mini, d’Alfa MiTo ou bientôt de citroen DS3, votre monture retournera à sa vulgaire caste dès que viendra l’A1, et n’a de toutes façons rien de « premium ».

    Peter Schwarzenbauer, un homme qui semble bien dans la culture maison d'Ingolstadt

    Peter Schwarzenbauer, un homme qui semble bien dans la culture maison d'Ingolstadt

    C’est ennuyeux cette façon de voir les choses. Ce n’est pas en méprisant ses concurrents, et leurs clients, qu’on avance. Mais Audi a un vrai problème sur ce point. Comment se fait-il que cette marque, méritoire par la qualité de ses produits et la réussite de son modèle industriel, s’échine à afficher une telle prétention? Il ne s’agit pas de dire qu’Audi, ou toute autre, devrait faire amende honorable en s’habillant en toutes circonstances d’un voile politiquement correct de fausse modestie. Ce n’est pas le problème. Mais Audi a par contre une fâcheuse tendance à tomber dans l’excès inverse.

    Cette marque a tout pour elle, tout pour réussir et le mérite, alors pourquoi est-on si prétentieux chez Audi? C’est inutile, et même contre-productif d’un point de vue commercial. Car le problème ne vaut pas que pour les dirigeants du groupe. Ce n’est pas un secret qu’à tous les échelons, depuis Ingolstadt jusqu’au simple vendeur en concession, on a chez Audi un goût prononcé pour l’outrecuidance. Il ne s’agit bien entendu pas de dire que tous les personnels sont hautains, mais c’est malheureusement trop fréquent. Et le pire dans cette histoire, c’est qu’Audi y perd des clients! Outre les réfractaires à la marque qui ne supportent pas son image et cette espèce de prétention affichée en permanence, il y aussi tous ceux bien qui ont une mauvaise expérience d’Audi à ce point de vue et qui sont allés ailleurs…

    Audi mérite sa place au firmament des marques côtées, c’est un fait, mais il faudrait peut-être aussi redescendre sur terre car au cumul, l’adition pourrait bien se payer un jour. Tout ça pour un problème comportemental qui n’a rien à voir avec les qualités intrinsèques des modèles, ce serait tout de même dommage.

    Quant-à la clientèle visée par l’A1, pour revenir à elle, donc les 25/35 ans selon les propos de Mr.Schwarzenbauer, il va peut-être falloir les prendre pour un peu moins bêtes que ce qu’Audi semble croire si ils veulent vraiment en écouler 80 000/an. Ces clients potentiels savent bien que des concurrentes très sérieuses existent et n’ont pas besoin de ce genre de baratin fanfaron pour savoir quoi en penser…

    –> Sur le même sujet ces jours-ci: Audi A1 & Citroen DS3: les petites chics teasent en video

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