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Fuming S. Korea looking for way to punish Google | ZDNet Government | ZDNet.com
Funny. Good for Google. I live in Korea, and their govt web policies are whacked in a million discriminatory and privacy-invasive ways.
At the same time, their netizens are so venomous, they've caused the suicides of several thin-skinned celebrities in recent months.
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After Google issued an official raspberry to South Korea - by sidestepping its “real name” law by simply disabling comments and uploads - the Korean government has taken to pounding the table and turning beet red.
Truthdig - E-Speech: The (Uncertain) Future of Free Expression
A wake-up call to web 2.0 types who ignore political engagement.
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Although no one is slowing down or opening your posted letters, spying on your face-to-face conversations or restricting your physical ability to make music, all of these barriers to free speech—and more—are becoming increasingly prevalent in the world of digital communications. And as tools like the Web, e-mail, voice over IP, Internet video, mobile phones and peer-to-peer file sharing become increasingly vital to our relationships with family, friends, colleagues, businesses and government institutions, these limitations on speech and threats to our privacy are becoming increasingly important civil rights issues.
When we talk about unequal access to computers and other digital communication technologies, we speak about the “digital divide.” When we talk about the concentrated ownership of the Internet access business, we can point to a simple, powerful statistic: Four companies control nearly 60 percent of the American ISP market, and four companies control nearly 90 percent of the American mobile phone market. But there’s no simple way to talk about the interrelated issues of electronic surveillance, network neutrality, asymmetry and “walled garden” technologies that collectively threaten free expression in the digital world.
Without a name for the big picture, it’s difficult to do anything about it. Imagine trying to reverse global warming, reduce pollution and save species from extinction without the umbrella of the word environmentalism connecting the issues. Therefore, we propose the term e-speech as a concept to unite these issues, and to discuss potential solutions to the problem they collectively pose. First, however, we should briefly discuss the issues themselves.
Leslie Harris: If It Ain't Broke, Don't Try To Fix It
Webheads and techies who think politics are unimportant should read this series.
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[The Internet is at a crossroads. Down one path lies a future where digital technology enhances constitutional freedoms; spurs innovations in expression and entrepreneurship; and fulfills its ultimate promise of connecting and empowering the world. Down the other? A future where the Internet is turned against users; where government spying runs unchecked, and where innovation is stifled by a closed and locked system, controlled by a handful of entrenched players. The next president will play a key role in determining which path we take. This is the fourth in a series of entries over the next couple weeks about the critical technology and civil liberties choices facing the next president of the United States. You can read more on our complete transition guide for next president.]
MIT Press Journals - The John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation Series on Digital Media and Learning
Free ebook from MIT: Youth, Identity, and Digital Media h/t judy o'connell
Should Facebook be banned from Educational Institutes?
Good argument for allowing Facebook in schools.
Blogging:Blogger's Code of Conduct - Blogging Wikia
Via Scott Schwister of Higher Edison blog.
Minimizing Classroom Disruptions: EXCELLENT LInks
From eSchoolNews. Links to articles on AUPs, filtering, research, remote desktop monitoring, etc. Outstanding.
Police find students are incriminating themselves online
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great article on police using facebook to bust college students.
- cburell on 2007-12-21
Greenwich Public Schools: Computer Acceptable Use Policy
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From Jeff Wasserman's school. Well-done, forward-thinking. Parents opt OUT, not IN, to web 2.0.
- cburell on 2007-11-14
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It is assumed that parents grant their child
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Any exceptions to this guideline, available in grades 9-12 only, will be communicated and signed-off by individual parents through Greenwich High School personnel.
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Hawaii professor pleads guilty to luring minor online - The Honolulu Advertiser - Hawaii's Newspaper
One-third of teens claim to experience "cyberbullying"
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This study is contradicted by another study this year. Where's the truth?
- cburell on 2007-11-13
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Roughly a third of all teenagers who use the Internet have been subject to some form of cyberbullying, according to a new report by Pew Internet. The telephone survey was conducted on a representative sample of 935 teens in the US between the ages of 12 and 17 and revealed a number of observations about manipulative and bullying activity online. However, despite the fact that so many teens had experienced some level of cyberbullying, two-thirds of the group said that they believed more bullying occurred offline than on.
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The level to which teens have been bullied online varies from "slightly annoying" to death threats. One in six (about 15 percent) told Pew that private communications—IM logs, e-mails, or text messages—had been posted publicly by someone else or forwarded around. One middle-schooler told a story about how an IM conversation she had participated in got changed in her disfavor, printed out, and passed around at school so that she "looked like a terrible person." Apparently this kind of online/offline bullying mix is preferred by ego-starved bullies everywhere.
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