On paper, the program looked fantastic. But in practice, it was a disaster.
A must read for +Maxwell Wessel's anecdote about computer flagging of patients who were "switchers" (get prescriptions from more than one pharmacy chains). Another reminder that other actors also have expectations, needs, habits. Design or upgrade of interpersonal systems must take them into account.
"On ferme ! La guerre imminente contre nos libertés d’utilisateurs"
version française de la conférence "Lockdown – The coming war on general-purpose computing" que Cory Doctorow a donnée au Chaos Computer Congress de Berlin, en décembre 2011.
via +Martin Lessard
"Six Provocations for Big Data" by +danah boyd & Kate Crawford*
Abstract:
"The era of Big Data has begun." (…) Many "are clamoring for access to the massive quantities of information produced by and about people, things, and their interactions." (…) "Significant questions emerge. Will large-scale analysis of DNA help cure diseases? Or will it usher in a new wave of medical inequality? Will data analytics help make people’s access to information more efficient and effective? Or will it be used to track protesters in the streets of major cities? Will it transform how we study human communication and culture, or narrow the palette of research options and alter what ‘research’ means? Some or all of the above?"
British Columbia paves way for all-in-one identity card starting out as secure medicare card
"The new government cards will have embedded security chips, similar to certain credit cards that allow customers to wirelessly make purchases by touching or waving their credit card in front of a terminal" !!
The Ecommerce Revolution Is All About You, i.e.: profiling + data mining = personalization
"There’s implicit data (which is gained from your everyday actions on a retailer’s site) and explicit data (which you offer to sites via surveys or quizzes). While retailers are doing more with the implicit data (i.e. reminding you when you left items in your shopping cart); no one has yet mastered the art of capturing that precious explicit data."
"The challenge for the data mining community is actually figuring out the intent in much of the unstructured data that is posted about retail products and brands on Facebook. And it’s important to keep in mind that some of this data from Facebook users is private."
Open science : scientists now in open rebellion against the “closed” journal-publication system
"refusing to publish in its journals, referee its papers, or do the editorial work that researchers have been supplying to journals without charge for decades"
via +Pierre Lévy
Increasing surprising number of consumers ditch websites with poor personal data handling policies
The research questioned 37,000 North American consumers.
via @PrivacyPrivee
Exchanges with the Chambre des notaires
Following article on management of digital identities and assets in case of death or incapacity.
Correspondance échangée avec la Chambre des notaires
Suite à article précédent sur la gestion des actifs et identités numériques en cas de décès ou d'incapacité
Worth reading: Adam Thierer's review of 'Consent of the Networked: The Worldwide Struggle for Internet Freedom'
Not only because of the growing power struggles over networks and contents, but also because of the crucial political debate about which strategies to maintain and expand freedom and democracy.
Thierer does nail some good critics, such as his section arguing that to treat Google and Facebook as "sovereign" (kind of Googledom, Facebookistan) is a self-fulfilling prophecy. But sometimes his critics of MacKinnon may read as weak as his presentation of her own case. His definition of "sovereign" reads a bit too classical XIXth century for contemporary realities. I also find his quest for a Net free from State intervention as naive as the quest for enlighten State regulation. The very protection of 47 U.S.C. § 230 he applauds because it shields online operators from liability for information posted or published on their systems by users actually is a State intervention that, not only has permitted the Yelp, Twitter, eBay to flourish, but also permitted them to become sort of public services.
Thierer recommends reading this book: I will certainly follow it. And I definitely recommend reading his take on it. I will certainly re-read it, and study both.
How to jump whole Google's ship…
or archive, manage your various Google services accounts
http://ow.ly/8Hvv3
via @EPICprivacy
Visualizing conversations on social media:
Here, most active Twitter users referencing #SOPA
http://ow.ly/8Htbz
A simple reminder about to how to understand our world:
We are living in a increasingly bureaucratic organisation of organisations
"There are three main frames people use to understand why the world is the way it is. (…)
The first frame is economics. (…)
Another frame concerns ideas and ideology. (…)
A third sees the contemporary world as shaped by histories of imperialism and the division of the world between the West and the rest. (…)
The fourth way of seeing the modern world rarely appears as the central reason why things happen, as the big explanation. But it pervades our everyday conversation: (…) bureaucratic organisation. Everywhere, in public and private life, we encounter a chaotic medley of organisations."
US Supreme Court unanimously holds that warrantless GPS tracking is unconstitutional
Living Between the Lines
Self-managing our digital identity, digital assets and intellectual property in case of death or incapacity
http://ow.ly/8CcKP
Living Between the Lines
Self-managing our digital identity, digital assets and intellectual property in case of death or incapacity
http://ow.ly/8CcKP
Vivre entre les ligne:
Autogérer son identité numérique, ses actifs numériques et ses biens intellectuels en cas de décès ou d’inaptitude
http://ow.ly/8CcCK
Vivre entre les ligne:
Autogérer son identité numérique, ses actifs numériques et ses biens intellectuels en cas de décès ou d’inaptitude
http://ow.ly/8CcCK
Shoveling show and pruning apple trees while listening to
Clay Shirky (@cshirky) on "Cognitive Surplus"
on @TVOsBIGIDEAS http://ow.ly/8BDbJ
Digital death and afterlife: list of online services
The Digital Beyond maintains this list of online services that are designed to help plan for digital death and afterlife or memorialize loved ones.
These services come in all flavors including digital estate services, posthumous email services and online memorials.