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  • Facebook CEO Says Privacy Is No Longer a Concern

    Shrugging off his company’s long bouts with privacy concerns, Facebook founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg said during the weekend that sharing information online is the new “social norm.”

    “When we first started Facebook in my dorm room in Harvard [in 2004], people asked me why would I want to have any information at all on the Internet,” the 25-year-old Zuckerberg said at the annual Crunchies awards ceremony sponsored by TechCrunch. “But the social norm has evolved over time.”

    Clad in jeans, sneakers and a hooded sweatshirt, Zuckerberg told TechCrunch’s Mike Arrington that “People have really gotten comfortable not only sharing more information and different kinds, but more openly and with more people … We view it as our role in the system to constantly be innovating and be updating what our system is to reflect what the current social norms are.”

    Push Back Against Critics

    The comments raised some eyebrows, given substantial indications of concerns lately about privacy and Facebook.

    “I’m not sure I understand where that comment came from,” said Interpret Vice President Michael Gartenberg. “In particular, it seems that Facebook users are taking privacy as an issue and given the response to updated privacy settings recently, it would seem consumers do care quite a bit what they share and who they share it with.”

    Zuckerberg’s comments come just a month after the latest user information flap for the social-network giant, which says it has 350 million users. Last month the company responded to concerns that information — such as friend lists, geography, networks and fan pages — could be easily accessed via searches. Users may now make them private.

    In 2008, the company settled a class-action lawsuit alleging that its Beacon program, integrating the web site with those of retailers like Blockbuster, Overstock.com, Fandango and Zappos, made users’ activity outside Facebook public without adequately warning…

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  • Ellen Reacts To Simon Cowell’s Departure From “American Idol”

    First Oprah, now Simon! Sharp-tongued British mogul Simon Cowell is leaving American Idol – marking the end of an era for throngs of TV talent show fans. But none more than Idol newcomer Ellen DeGeneres. The Emmy-winning daytime host-turned-A.I. -judge began filming scenes for American Idol Monday — the same day Simon announced he’s leaving the show!

    “He announced he’s leaving on my first day. I’m trying not to take it personally. But seriously, I am going to be very, very sad to see him go, because I think he’s made the show what it is,” DeGeneres told her studio audience on The Ellen DeGeneres Show today. “He’s a huge part of that show but he wanted a change. I wish him all the luck in the world hosting ‘The Tonight Show,’” she joked.


  • Honda’s CR-Z hot production hybrid takes a bow

    Honda’s CR-Z 2010 hybrid

    Honda made the first commercial hybrid and cut the path for the rest of the world’s auto makers more than a decade ago. Now it is in the process of trailblazing the path for desirable hybrids with the release of its all-new CR-Z which made its world premiere at the North American International Auto Show in Detroit today. The ingredients are all top shelf: a six speed manual gearbox, a 1.5 litre i-VTEC engine coupled to Honda’s IMA hybrid system, a flexible 2+2 seating arrangement, 3-mode drive system, 56.4 mpg from a sports car, light good handling chassis … but the package is integrated and that’s what makes the Honda CR-Z hot, hot, hot! We are very impressed!..

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  • Colorado Energy Efficiency Education Outreach

    Colorado State offers educational seminars to the public at local events. On Saturday, January 16, energy efficiency will be the topic. …

    … “Rusty Collins, Jefferson County Extension director, hosting a program titled, Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy presented by CSU Extension, and featuring keynote speaker Colorado Commissioner of Agriculture, John Stulp. There will also be two speakers discussing energy efficiency and solar power. ” …

    Via Colorado State University: Seminars

  • A water perspective on Copenhagen and beyond

    by Daniel Moss

    How does improved water stewardship fit into cooling our
    planet? How well were the water-climate connections made at the recent Copenhagen climate
    deliberations?

    If you’re like me, you only have a lay person’s
    understanding of ecology—and global politics for that matter. But I do know
    that the CO2 reduction and carbon sequestration strategies that were batted
    around in Denmark—caring for our tropical forests and fighting desertification, for example—will require copious amounts of clean water.

    I’m beginning to understand that the role of water in
    climate change is not just about adapting to accelerating droughts and floods. Michal
    Kravcik, a Slovakian hydrologist
    , said in advance of the Copenhagen talks,
    “My expectations are simple: to incorporate in the Copenhagen Protocol a
    mechanism of using water for recovery of the climate … Until now, all
    initiatives for solution of climatic changes addressed only CO2 reduction.”

    Kravcik’s research suggests that
    climate stabilization requires ensuring that water is absorbed into the earth. That
    absorption and the subsequent recharging of groundwater reserves prevent
    landscapes from drying and allows water to play its essential temperature
    regulating role.

    What’s becoming clearer is that getting
    to 350 parts per million of CO2 isn’t a goal that can be separated from careful
    and massive restoration of the earth’s ailing watersheds. And that means
    grappling with thorny questions of who owns and manages the water commons we all share—a
    conversation unfortunately not had in Copenhagen.

    That’s not a complaint; it makes a lot of sense that
    emissions reduction was the principal focus at the climate talks—and truly tragic
    that nations didn’t take the necessary bold steps in that area. But water can’t
    remain at the edges of the climate change conversation for very long. It’s too
    important in bringing the earth’s climate back into balance.

    Our well-intentioned attempts at climate correction are hurt
    by not looking at the full picture. Salvation is much more likely when our
    remedial steps are based on basic principles of ecology—inter-relationship—not
    of a separate air or water or forest program.

    What steps can we take towards this kind of holistic climate
    stabilization strategy that revives water’s critical role in cooling our planet?
    Here are a few ideas:

    Build
    on Michal Kravcik’s research. It makes
    intuitive sense that water facilitates cooling—just think about how you pour
    it into your car’s radiators. But let’s nail down water’s specific contribution
    to global cooling and come up with a specific goal for hydrological health akin
    to the very tangible and campaignable 350 parts per million for the atmosphere.
    This
    hydrological health relies on health watersheds. Maude
    Barlow proposes
    declaring not only water, but watersheds themselves, as a
    commons so that property rights don’t disrupt ecosystem health and a
    water-cooled planet.
    We
    must push back on climate change mitigation strategies that don’t depart from a
    holistic understanding of the planet’s interdependent ecosystems. For example,
    it makes little sense to have a forest-based, carbon sequestration strategy
    unless the water necessary for forest life is safeguarded.
    Ensuring
    that adequate water is available to cool the earth means to take a hard look at
    current water use and abuse. We must hold industry, agriculture, and sprawling
    municipalities to sustainable water use and non-contamination standards—which
    in many cases simply means implementing existing water and public health
    regulations.
    Our
    actions ought to be informed by a worldview that holds that water is a commons
    shared equally by all of humanity and all of nature. That means proposing
    models of water ownership and management compatible with a commons concept
    —heavy on citizen engagement and light on privatization.

    Water activists like Anil Naidoo of the Blue Planet Project were vocal in Copenhagen to make the
    climate-water link. The Copenhagen Water and Climate Justice Statement’s call
    to action begins, “Whereas the abuse, over extraction and displacement of water
    to promote a global economy based on unlimited growth and corporate power is a
    major cause of climate change … “

    There’s clearly much to be learned from the Copenhagen experience. It’s a good time to step
    back and hammer out new strategies. Managing water as a commons is one important
    step towards a healthy climate. It not only makes a lot of ecologic sense, but
    may make good movement-building sense as well. Imagine the power of the climate
    change movement when it includes not only associations of water engineers—but
    6 billion water consumers worldwide.

    Related Links:

    ‘Water’ author Stephen Solomon talks resource intelligence

    Everyone Poops – – and a few spin gold

    Chicken or Egg – – Health Care or Climate Change?






  • Reducing Allergens in Your Home

    Allergies always really seem to flare up with all the spring pollen. People with allergies to dust mites and other things we find in the house usually have worse allergy symptoms all round once pollen begins filling the air. If you are one of the people who suffer from year round allergies and have even worse allergies in the spring, why not make your home as allergy free as possible to give yourself some relief?protect-a-bed

    • If you have pets, contain them to a specific room, preferably one with a floor you can mop down on a daily basis. This helps you keep all that dander and slobber off your furniture, rugs and curtains.
    • Consider switching out rugs for hardwoods or laminate flooring.
    • Use pillow and mattress protectors on your beds to keep dust mites down and to help you avoid mold problems. You should also wash your bedding frequently in hot water.
    • Have your furnace filter changed and ask about getting your ducts cleaned to get all the pet dander and pollen out of the house.
    • If you are a flower lover like me and bring in bouquets of tulips or lilies to enjoy, snip the stamens out of the centers of the flowers. Otherwise, that yellow pollen will create a mess and make your allergies worse.

    Photo via protectabed.com

    Post from: Blisstree

    Reducing Allergens in Your Home

  • Paul Samuelson and the Obscure Origins of the Financial Crisis

    Jeremy Bernstein

    Paul Samuelson at MIT, 1950 (Yale Joel/Time & Life Pictures/Getty Images)

    Some time in the early 1950’s the late Paul Samuelson received a post card from L.J. “Jimmie” Savage, a noted mathematical statistician. It was one of several he had sent out at about the same time. Savage’s post card to Samuelson, and probably the others, said that it was essential that Samuelson read Théorie de la Spéculation, the Ph.D. thesis of the French mathematician Louis Jean Baptiste Alphonse Bachelier. Samuelson had never heard of Bachelier so he did not know that the thesis had first been published in 1900. Reading the thesis changed the course of Samuelson’s work. He improved Bachelier’s mathematics and used it to study the prices of warrants—options to buy, at a future date, stock issued by a company. These methods were passed on to his students. But for some of them, Bachelier’s ideas provided inspiration for a theory of financial engineering—the use of complex mathematical models to make risky investments that, taken to extremes (which Samuelson himself never did), nearly caused the collapse of our financial system in the fall of 2008.

    Bachelier was born in Le Havre on the March 11, 1870. His father was a wine merchant and his mother was the daughter of a banker. Bachelier was surely headed for one of those careers in France that start with attending one of the grandes écoles—until both his parents died in 1889. Bachelier became the head of the family business but soon left to complete his compulsory military service. It was not until 1892 that he could begin his studies at the Sorbonne. One of the lecturers was Henri Poincaré, one of the greatest mathematicians of his time who later became Bachelier’s thesis advisor. Bachelier was not an outstanding student; he had had no practice taking examinations. He worked at the Paris Bourse, the stock exchange, during this time, which presumably gave him the idea for his thesis.

    Among the commodities sold on the bourse were various government bonds called rentes. But one could also buy options on these rentes—a form of “derivative.” You bought the right to purchase such a bond at a later time at the price for which it sold at the time you bought the option. Until then you did not own the bond but just the option to buy it at a later time. If the price had gone up you would be in the money and if it went down you lost whatever it had cost you to buy the option. Unless you were a clairvoyant you would have to guess at the future price of the bond.

    What Bachelier wanted to do was to replace clairvoyance by mathematics. To do this he needed to make some assumption of how stock prices evolve. He decided that at any given time it was as likely for a stock to go up as down. You might at first think that this means that a stock price would never get anywhere. But after a first up, say, the stock has a fifty-fifty chance of going up as down and thus moving further away from its starting point. In short the price of the stock, Bachelier decided, takes a “random walk.”

    In his thesis Bachelier presents mathematics of this, along with examples. One of the things he shows is that the price evolves away from its initial price as the square root of the time elapsed (days, say)—not an obvious result. It is like the random walk of a drunk whose distance from his starting point increases with the square root of the time elapsed except here the object taking the random walk is the stock price.

    What he did not know was that he had solved an outstanding physics problem. Early in the nineteenth century a Scottish botanist named Robert Brown had observed that microscopic particles suspended in liquids had a jiggling movement which we now call Brownian motion. It was Einstein in one of his great 1905 papers who presented the theory of this movement as a random walk induced by the bombardment of the suspended particles by the molecules of the liquid. The equations Einstein arrived at are identical to the ones in Bachelier’s thesis, which he had never heard of.

    Only Poincaré, his thesis advisor, understood what Bachelier had done and was not put off by his humble educational background, although he graded the thesis as honorable rather than trés honorable. The only job that Bachelier could get was as an unpaid lecturer at the Sorbonne. He may have gone back to work at the bourse. He served in the French army from 1914 until 1918 and then got a few minor university positions. Poincaré died in 1912 so he could not help him. It was not until 1927 that Bachelier got a permanent position at the University of Besançon, where he remained until his retirement ten years later. He died on April 28, 1946. By this time the mathematical community understood the value of what he had done and his work was widely recognized by mathematicians. It was Samuelson who introduced it to economists.

    Bachelier’s thesis had a profound influence on Samuelson’s work. The idea of using “stochastic” methods—of which the random walk is an example—to analyze things in economics like the movement of the stock market was novel.

    Not only did this become part of his own work but he transmitted it to the brilliant young students and associates who had come to MIT to work with him. Among them were Robert Merton and Myron Scholes. Merton on his own and Scholes in collaboration with Fischer Black, who was working in Cambridge, extended Bachelier’s work on options to include “hedging.” You borrow just enough money to make your options investment less risky. Providing the foundations of modern financial engineering were the Black-Scholes and Merton equations, used by many hedge funds and investment houses to make the highly leveraged bets that precipitated the financial crisis.

    Samuelson had a different background from these young people. He had been born in 1915 and attended the University of Chicago at the height of the Great Depression, the experience of which never left him. He became a convinced Keynesian and I think had a more detached view of the efficacy of mathematical models than his students. He understood that they were models and that things could go wrong. Keynes once noted that the market could remain irrational longer than you can remain solvent. I never had a chance to meet Samuelson but in a way I almost felt that I had. In 1948 as a Harvard sophomore I decided to take the beginning course in economics. I have no idea why. Our text was Samuelson’s Economics: An Introductory Analysis, which had just been published. It is a marvelous book which in its many editions and forty translations has sold over four million copies. In 1970 he became the first American to win the Nobel Prize for economics. A number of his students and associates, such as Merton and Scholes, later won theirs. (Black had died by the time Scholes and Merton won, in 1997—a year before the spectacular collapse of the hedge fund Long Term Capital Management, on whose board both men sat.) From time to time there were pictures of Samuelson in his eighties playing tennis and even in his nineties his interviews were always lucid and relevant. He had a full and long life. He died on December 13, 2009 at the age of ninety-four.

  • Android Scam App Will be Phishing You

    Found under: Android, App, Phishing, ,

    Unfortunately for Googles Android Market there are some bad news which are going to affect its image. It looks like Google was fooled by some sneaky developers into allowing a free banking app into the app store. The application will steal your personal banking details and youre credit cards will certainly get pawned. Thanks to Googles fast approval rate and its desire to increase the numbers of apps in the Android Market a certain official First Tech Credit Union banking app g

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  • Venice by way of HUP

    Intro_image_mcgregor

    Whenever isobars descend from Greenland
    (damn you, high pressure!), we
    indulge in two forms of escapist Internet window shopping: first for summer clothing,
    and second for airline tickets to someplace far away, and warmer. Thanks to a stripy-gondolier-shirt revival*
    ,
    a Venn diagram charting both of our guilty habits would show a single point of
    convergence: Venice.Venn_diagram

    It turns out that the Queen of the Adriatic
    is an incomparable destination for armchair travel, regardless of which
    Internet vices brought you there. Perhaps in recognition of this quality, we at
    HUP have published a number of books on Venice,
    most recently Iain Fenlon’s
    Piazza San
    Marco
    and the third and final volume of Bembo’s iconic History of Venice in its first English
    translation
    .

    FENSAI  In his study of St. Mark’s Square, Fenlon shows that the evolution
    of the space Napoleon is supposed to have called “the finest drawing-room in
    Europe”
    from marketplace to parade ground to tourist haven has been a
    barometer for Venice’s fortunes. Like the other books in the Wonders of the World series,
    Piazza San
    Marco
    peels back the varnish
    conferred by landmark status to reveal the complex, colorful, and noisy
    evolution of an iconic place.

     Venice from the Ground Up (no,
    you’re not the first to think it MCGVEN
    should be  …from
    the Water Up) offers another close-up view of the city. An installment in
    our  From the Ground Up series,
    it guides readers through the history of the city by way of its canals and
    landmarks.

    In a literary vein, Tony Tanner’s
    gorgeous
    Venice Desired 
    charts the encounters of writers including Ruskin, Byron, Henry James, Proust,
    and Pound with what Ruskin called “this amphibious city
    this Phocaea, or
    sea-dog of towns,
    looking with soft human eyes at you from the sand, Proteus
    himself latent in the salt-smelling skin of her.” If the striped shirts didn’t
    seduce you, surely Ruskin will. (Note that Tanner’s similarly warm, elegant,
    and fascinating
    Prefaces to Shakespeare
    including of course, reflections on The
    Merchant of Venice
    will be out this spring.) 

    “Whatever roughness rage, some
    exquisite sea-thing/ Will surely rise to save.” That’s Byron, in Don Juan. And Tanner
    says: “The lines suit equally well whether you believe in Venus, or Venice. Or, of course,
    both.”

    Third_McGregor

    There are worse places to daydream
    about on a winter’s day.  

    * Here at HUP, we get all our fashion news from the Wall
    Street Journal.

    Photos from Venice from the Ground Up

                                                                                                       

  • LG’s UHD TV: 3840×2160 pixels of goodness

    uhd  002
    Gigantic TVs aren’t really my area of expertise, but this one was so big and beautiful that I couldn’t help snapping a few shots as I drifted by it on my way to who knows where. This thing, if production is even planned, will likely cost somewhere around… oh, your first-born child. It might be worth it, too.

    Click for full size, and here’s the little boast that was displayed alongside it. I’ll get more info if I can find it.


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  • webOS 1.3.5.2 Lands In Europe

    update Hooray for us, GSM Pre owners: webOS 1.3.5.2 has hit our myriad shores, packing its various tasty new bugfixes and sparkling SDL support – meaning we can finally join our CDMA-totin’ brethren in getting our Doom on.

    You know the drill, folks: remove all homebrew patches before upgrading, lest you find yourself breaking something you shouldn’t have. (Exact upgrade instructions, via WebOS Internals, are after the break.) We’ll post the full changelog as soon as it goes up on Palm’s site. In the meantime, happy downloading – be prepared for a long wait. (Mine is taking forever.)






  • Promising Renewable Energy Technologies Abound in 2010, But Remain Too … – Forbes

    BusinessWire – Plunkett Research, Ltd. has released their newest market research and competitive analysis report, Plunkett’s Renewable, Alternative & Hydrogen Energy Industry Almanac, 2010 edition. This carefully-researched book is a complete …


  • Darksiders Review

    Let’s get this out of the way right now: Darksiders could be the most derivative game I’ve played in years. There’s a fine line between inspiration and grand theft game design, and developer Vigil Games’ debut comes dangerously close to stepping over it. What starts off as a simple action romp in the vein of Devil May Cry quickly morphs into a sprawling, Zelda-style dungeon crawl, featuring gameplay nods to everything from Dark Sector to Prince of Persia — there’s even a fairly blatant homage to Portal.

    I’m not going to put the developers on trial or anything, because a) that’s not my job, b) this isn’t the appropriate venue for that, and c) everyone in this industry borrows ideas from one another at some point. Besides, I actually enjoyed the game quite a bit. While Darksiders might tread familiar territory a little too often, it more than makes up for any lack of originality with a lengthy, well-paced adventure and fun combat.

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  • Mighty Mango Prevents Breast Cancer in Lab

    The ancient and lovely mango just got a big public relations boost. The fruit has been found to prevent or stop certain breast cancer and colon cancer cells in the lab.

    mang-fights-cancer

    Texas AgriLife Research food scientists studied five varieties of mangoes that are more common in the US: Kent, Francine, Ataulfo, Tommy/Atkins and Haden. Dr. Susanne Talcott and her husband, Dr. Steve Talcott, conducted the study, one of several commissioned by the National Mango Board to better determine the fruit’s nutritional value.

    The Talcotts studied the effect of mango polyphenol extracts (natural substances in plants that promote better health) in vitro on colon, breast, lung, leukemia and prostate cancers.

    While the mango doesn’t have as much antioxidant power the blueberry or pomegranate, it’s still a contender. “It [the mango] has about four to five times less antioxidant capacity than an average wine grape, and it still holds up fairly well in anticancer activity. If you look at it from the physiological and nutritional standpoint … it would be a high-ranking super food,” Dr. Susanne Talcott said.

    In the lab, mangoes revealed fighting power against lung, leukemia and prostate cancers, but they were found to be the most effective on the most common breast and colon cancers.

    The Talcotts also found that the mango wasn’t harmful to normal cells when a reasonable concentration was used, but it still acted as an anti-cancer agent against some cancer cells. They hope perform a small clinical trial with people at risk for certain cancers, and perhaps move forward with a larger trial in the future to see if the mango holds clinical relevance. Meanwhile, the mango may indeed have earned the right to be called a super fruit!

    (USDA-Agriculture Research Service photo by Wilhelmina Wasik)

    Post from: Blisstree

    Mighty Mango Prevents Breast Cancer in Lab

  • Official: Simon Cowell Leaving “American Idol”

    It’s official — Simon Cowell is leaving American Idol. The judge has confirmed this will be his final season on Idol.

    Simon announced the news himself at FOX’s Television Critics Association panel in Pasadena, California, on Monday afternoon. The acid-tongued Brit reached a deal early Monday afternoon to bring The X Factor, the British reality competition which launched the career of Leona Lewis and Alexandra Burke, to FOX.

    Simon signed an agreement on stage, which will not only bring the show to the State, but will also see Simon executive produce and judge the program, according to AOL TV.

    “I’m thrilled that we have put a date on the launch of the U.S. version of ‘The X Factor,’ and delighted to be continuing to work with FOX,” Simon said in a statement. “We have a fantastic relationship, a great team and are all very excited about this.”

    The X Factor will debut in America in the Fall of 2011. The new season of American Idol begins Tuesday on FOX.

    Will you watch Idol once Simon is gone?


  • Explaining The Copyright Bubble… And Why Big Corporations Want To Keep ACTA Secret

    Shane Chambers was the first of a few of you to send in this fantastic Slashdot comment by someone going by the name girlintraining, that encapsulates very clearly the nature of the copyright “wars” today and why the industry wants to keep ACTA quiet. The whole thing is worth a read, but to get you into it, here’s the beginning:


    I used to read stuff like this and get upset. But then I realized that my entire generation knows it’s baloney. They can’t explain it intellectually. They have no real understanding of the subtleties of the law, or arguments about artists’ rights or any of that. All they really understand is there are large corporations charging private citizens tens, if not hundreds of thousands of dollars, for downloading a few songs here and there. And it’s intuitively obvious that it can’t possibly be worth that.

    An entire generation has disregarded copyright law. It doesn’t matter whether copyright is useful or not anymore. They could release attack dogs and black helicopters and it wouldn’t really change people’s attitudes. It won’t matter how many websites they shut down or how many lives they ruin, they’ve already lost the culture war because they pushed too hard and alienated people wholesale. The only thing these corporations can do now is shift the costs to the government and other corporations under color of law in a desperate bid for relevance. And that’s exactly what they’re doing.

    What does this mean for the average person? It means that we google and float around to an ever-changing landscape of sites. We communicate by word of mouth via e-mail, instant messaging, and social networking sites where the latest fix of free movies, music, and games are. If you don’t make enough money to participate in the artificial marketplace of entertainment goods — you don’t exclude yourself from it, you go to the grey market instead. All the technological, legal, and philosophical barriers in the world amount to nothing. There is a small core of people that understand the implications of what these interests are doing and continually search for ways to liberate their goods and services for “sale” on the grey market. It is (economically and politically) identical to the Prohibition except that instead of smuggling liquor we are smuggling digital files.

    Billions have been spent combating a singularily simple idea that was spawned thirty years ago by a bunch of socially-inept disaffected teenagers working out of their garages: Information wants to be free. Except information has no wants — it’s the people who want to be free. And while we can change attitudes about smoking with aggressive media campaigns, or convince them to cast their votes for a certain candidate, selling people on goods and services they don’t really need, what we cannot change is the foundations upon which a generation has built a new society out of.

    But, still, they will try, and the way they try to do it is in backrooms and convincing governments that they must be right, and increased protectionism really is better for everyone — even though it’s really only better for a select group of middlemen.

    Later on, she discusses how we’ve reached a “copyright bubble”:


    Copyright won’t end anytime soon, but I’m suggesting we look at the fundamentals here: it is an artificial construct within the digital environment. It’s something we built extraneous to it, and in fact, is antagonistic to it. The exchange of information is fundamental to the existence of the internet. Copyright is not. Copyright is an institution, like marriage, the church, the government, etc. Like those things, it has a maintenance cost. It is a coping mechanism. That’s not a judgment on its sustainability nor its justification for existence (or lack thereof).

    Copyright is an institution and like all social institutions remain in existence only for as long as its members continue to support it. There is a substantial and growing number of digital identities (people, organizations, projects, etc.) that exist outside of that institution. Why? Because information is very, very cheap to replicate. Production of that information however can vary in cost. Everybody agrees that there must be some compensatory mechanism, however artificial, to reimburse people for the effort invested in the production of the goods and services that copyright protects. If there is no protection at all, many staples of modern life cease to exist. This is the loci of why copyright exists.

    The cost to society now outweighs the benefits and we exist within a market bubble right now: A copyright bubble. Large corporations and governments alike have bought into it and driven up its cost. Like any market-driven force however, it will eventually return to equilibrium. We had the dot com bubble, and the housing bubble, but that’s nothing compared to what’s going on right now — we lost billions when that one burst. We stand to lose trillions when this one does. And, ironically, it will be burst by the very forces that businesses are embracing right now — labor capital in the third world.

    Well-written and thought-provoking. While not all that different than similar pieces we’ve discussed in the past, it does present it in a very clear manner that makes it worth reading in its entirety.

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  • Detroit 2010: Quote of the day

    Filed under: , ,

    “… a lot of stuff happened.”

    – Mark Reuss, General Motors’ new North American president, on 2009

    [Image by Bill Pugliano/Getty]

    Detroit 2010: Quote of the day originally appeared on Autoblog on Mon, 11 Jan 2010 18:32:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • RICCIONE | Pontile Marino

    Nel nuovo modello del pontile presentato vanno via i piloni sulla battigia che occludevano la visuale di chi passeggiava in spiaggia e al loro posto arriva un grande arco bianco strallato in acciaio, 30 metri di altezza 31 di ampiezza, che reggerà la prima parte del pontile.
    Con questo sistema la passerella sarà sospesa a quattro metri d’altezza senza bisogno di ulteriori sostegni. I primi piloni saranno in acqua a 20 metri dalla battigia. Altra novità, inserita nel progetto, il palco-piazza che si affaccia su piazzale Roma, ai cui margini si trovano i due collegamenti con il pontile, da una parte scale, dall’altra rampa e ascensori. Sarà uno spazio per spettacoli, ma anche un sorta di balcone con visuale su viale Ceccarini. Sul palco ci saranno piloni in acciaio con luci fisse ma anche predisposizione per le americane.
    Quello che non cambia, rispetto al progetto originario, è la lunghezza del pontile: 191 metri dalla battigia, la larghezza: 12 metri e la piazza al largo con 400 mq di commerciale: 300mq di ristorante, 100mq per un bar.
    I materiale prevalenti che dovrebbero essere utilizzati sono il legno e l’acciaio.
    Espletata la gara, in primavera, l’apertura del cantiere è stata annunciata per l’ottobre 2010.