Showing posts with label Internet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Internet. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 19, 2014

Web pioneer: Can the 'Net's 'original sin' be undone?

As the Internet as we know it turns 20, one of the Internet's pioneers (and inventor of hated pop-up ads) hopes it's not too late to build a different kind of Web, one not built on ad revenue:

I have come to believe that advertising is the original sin of the web. The fallen state of our Internet is a direct, if unintentional, consequence of choosing advertising as the default model to support online content and services. Through successive rounds of innovation and investor storytime, we’ve trained Internet users to expect that everything they say and do online will be aggregated into profiles (which they cannot review, challenge, or change) that shape both what ads and what content they see. 

Building the Web on ads leads directly to the thing we like the least about it: lack of data privacy:

Once we’ve assumed that advertising is the default model to support the Internet, the next step is obvious: We need more data so we can make our targeted ads appear to be more effective. CegÅ‚owski explains, “We’re addicted to ‘big data’ not because it’s effective now, but because we need it to tell better stories.” So we build businesses that promise investors that advertising will be more invasive, ubiquitous, and targeted and that we will collect more data about our users and their behavior.

Even so, Zuckerman admits that our ad-supported Web has made it "flat" and accessible:

The great benefit of an ad supported web is that it’s a web open to everyone. It supports free riders well, which has been key in opening the web to young people and those in the developing world. Ad support makes it very easy for users to “try before they buy,” eliminating the hard parts of the sales cycle, and allowing services like Twitter, Facebook, and Weibo to scale to hundreds of millions of users at an unprecedented rate.

Zuckerman argues that there are four main downsides to an ad-supported Web:

  • First, [...] it’s hard to imagine online advertising without surveillance. 
  • Second, [...] it creates incentives to produce and share content that generates pageviews and mouse clicks, but little thoughtful engagement.
  • Third, the advertising model tends to centralize the web. [...] Companies like Facebook want get as much of that money as possible, which means chasing users and reach. Using cash from investors and ad sales, they can acquire smaller companies that are starting to build rival networks. 
  • Finally, [...] personalization [of the Web] means that two readers of The New York Times may seen a very different picture of the world, and that two users of Facebook certainly do, shaped both by our choice of friends and by Facebook’s algorithms. [T]hese personalized sites may lead us into echo chambers, filter bubbles, or other forms of ideological isolation that divide us into rival camps that cannot agree on anything, including a set of common facts on which we could build a debate.
So on what business model would a different Internet run? Perhaps pay-forward schemes such Pinboard.in, and two-tiered, pay-for-Premium services, says Zuckerman. Meanwhile, online payment systems must be revamped to lower transaction costs, perhaps by switching to digital currencies. 

It doesn't sound too likely -- and Zuckerman sounds more apologetic about his role in creating this mess than hopeful it can be changed -- yet it's important to stop and realize that our young Internet didn't really have to turn out this way.


By Ethan Zuckerman
August 14, 2014 | The Atlantic

Thursday, July 31, 2014

Globalization is over; or, Tom Friedman is a dope

Yes indeed, the Tom Friedman conception of globalization (The Lexus and the Olive Tree; The World Is Flat).was always too glib, optimistic and it cherry-picked success stories to paint a rosy picture.

Now we see how useless was Tom Friedman's "Golden Arches theory of conflict prevention," with Russia attacking its neighbors and fellow McDonald's countries Ukraine and Georgia, and threatening to further destabilize or attack a third McDonald's country, Moldova. 

And several more "McDonald's conflicts" -- Vietnam-China, Japan-China, EU-Russia, and US-Russia -- are starting or now underway.

Leonard's article is worth reading in full, wherein he describes how the globe is moving:
  • From free trade to economic warfare
  • From global governance to competitive multilateralism
  • From one Internet to many.
Leonard redeems the post-Cold War analysis of military strategist Edward Luttwak, who predicted that "as in earlier generations, the driving force of international relations would be conflict rather than trade. As he put it, we would have 'the grammar of commerce but the logic of war.'"

Here is Leonard's conclusion [emphasis mine]:

Interdependence, formerly an economic boon, has now become a threat as well. No one is willing to lose out on the benefits of a global economy, but all great powers are thinking about how to protect themselves from its risks, military and otherwise. China is moving toward domestic consumption after the threat of the U.S. financial crisis. America is moving toward energy independence after the Iraq War. Russia is trying to build a Eurasian Union after the euro crisis. And even internationalist Germany is trying to change the EU so that its fellow member states are bound into German-style policies.

In the years after the Cold War, interdependence was a force for ending conflict.  But in 2014, it is creating it. After 25 years of being bound together ever more tightly, the world seems intent on resegregating itself. 

To be fair, Leonard's conclusion might also be too glib; one could argue that globalization was never happening to the extent that it was hyped. A lot of economic globalization -- more than 1/3 of economic activity -- has been intra-company and inter-company trade, i.e. companies trading with themselves across borders to access cheaper labor markets and other cost efficiencies, tax preferences and laxer regulation. 

Meanwhile, rival countries have not forgotten their historical and geopolitical grudges in the name of "free trade;" they have simply adopted new strategies of conflict management.

UPDATE (09.08.2014): Here's Anne Applebaum in the Washington Post a couple weeks later cribbing Mark Leonard's column, complete with the same McDonald's analysis: "Russia's blow to globalization." 


By Mark Leonard
July 30, 2014 | Reuters

Tuesday, July 22, 2014

Thursday, May 8, 2014

Putin's blogger law to fight 'CIA project' known as 'the Internet'

Mr. Putin, calm down: everybody knows Al Gore invented the Internet, not the CIA!

Seriously though, the widely-made prediction is coming true that Russian militarism abroad will be accompanied by even more draconian, oppressive rule at home in the Motherland.

Viktor V. Yerofeyev, a Russian writer, told the New York Times, "On the one hand, the Russian government says the Russian people are the best. On the other hand, it doesn’t trust the people."


I can clarify. There's no contradiction. Putin trusts Russians in the abstract, collectively; he just doesn't trust them as individuals. Understand?  Similarly, Putin trusts Ukrainians, er, Novorrossiyans, but he's got 40,000 Russian troops on the border just to make sure no jackrabbits from Pravy Sector or Svoboda try to cross over and rape, pillage and burn their way to Moscow.


Seriously, it makes me sick that Putin is a guy many on the knee-jerk Left in the U.S. and Europe admire, simply because he stands up to Western "imperialism." If these outspoken lefties lived in Russia, Putin would have them breaking rocks and eating snow in Magadan.

P.S. -- My readership in Russia is second only to that in the U.S.  Does that mean I should register with the Russian gov't.?  Nah, I'm gonna stay anonymous.


By Taylor Berman
May 7, 2014 | Gawker

First curse words, now bloggers: On Monday, Russian President Vladimir Putin signed a new law—referred to as the "blogger's law"—that will require online writers with more than 3,000 daily readers to register with the Roskomnadzor, Russia's media oversight agency.

Under the new law, which also affects microblogs and social networks, popular bloggers will no longer be able to remain anonymous and will be required to publish their names and email addresses.


[Bloggers] will be required to confirm the accuracy of the information they post, to respect the electoral law and to refrain from using swearwords. Using blogs and social networks to "hide or falsify information of general interest" or bring a citizen or group into disrepute will be forbidden. Such vaguely-worded bans are open to every kind of interpretation.

"This law will cut the number of critical voices and opposition voices on the Internet," Galina Arapova, director of the Mass Media Defense Center and an expert on Russian media law, told the New York Times. "The whole package seems quite restrictive and might affect harshly those who disseminate critical information about the state, about authorities, about public figures."

Putin signed the new law just weeks after denouncing the internet as a "CIA project."

Wednesday, April 24, 2013

Google's Schmidt the next Steve Jobs? Eh, not likely

I guess today's big technology CEOs are under a lot of pressure to be the next guru like Steve Jobs.  It's not enough to be smart, rich and powerful anymore.  I almost feel sorry for them; but not at all sorry for the fawning journalists who try to help them.




So here comes Google Chairman Eric Schmidt, who, according to CNN, "has been thinking a lot about our digital future."  Oh wow.

But I think Schmidt should stick to helping us search for cat videos and naked people instead, because he's obviously better at that.  Here's what I mean:

1) Online privacy classes will be taught alongside sex education in schools. 

Actually online privacy classes will be taught BEFORE sex education in schools, if we're talking about America or most of the developing world. We'd rather talk to our kids about anything but sex. We'd rather teach girls to shave and boys to braid hair. 

2) The rise of the mobile Web means the entire world will be online by 2020.

This is such a techie-naive, developed-world prediction. This may be hard for Schmidt to fathom, but there are billions of people in the world today who have no use for the Internet, no matter how cheap it gets.  

Only 31 percent of the developing world is online today; and only 16 percent in Africa.  About a billion homes have no Internet access.  And they're perfectly satisfied with their lives; or else, they can't afford, or relate to, anything that's on the Internet. They're barely getting used to sending text messages with their calloused, malnourished thumbs.  And smartphones, tablets?  Forget it!  Hundreds of millions of people alive today will die of natural causes without ever having googled anything and they won't regret it. That's my prediction, Eric Schmidt.

3) News organizations will find themselves out of the breaking-news business, as it becomes impossible to keep up with the real-time nature of information sources like Twitter.

Exactly. Because I trust Kim Kardashian over Wolf Blitzer to give me the latest breaking news. 

Seriously, first they predicted that the Internet would kill print news; now Schmidt is predicting that the Internet will kill Internet news.  Huh-what?

And what about every Republican over the age of 50 who gets most of his information from anonymous chain e-mails originating from 2003?  How is Twitter going to replicate that "real-time" experience for them?  

Here's my prediction: Internet news and journalism in general are going to move more towards the PolitiFact / Snopes model, because there are way too many lies out there nowadays and the fact-checkers can't possibly keep up.  

4) "Since information wants to be free, don't write anything down you don't want read back to you in court or printed on the front page of a newspaper, as the saying goes. In the future, this adage will broaden to include not just what you say and write, but the websites you visit, who you include in your online network, what you 'like,' and what others who are connected to you say and share."

This is a really shitty, self-serving prediction for Schmidt to make. Know why? Because we can regulate this with a so-called right-to-forget law that is coming soon in Europe.  And who stands the most to lose from such laws?  Google, Facebook, etc., because they make money selling our private data and Internet habits to businesses.  The Stanford Law Review estimated that they would stand to lose up to 2 percent of their global income just for refusing to delete our photos that we don't like.

5) As the Web expands, revolutions will begin springing up in nations with oppressive governments "more casually and more often than at any other time in history."

Ah yes, a casual revolution. That's one where an unacquainted group of dark-skinned, downtrodden lads in chinos and ironic plaid cowboy shirts sipping on Frappuccinos blog on their smartphones about their "lame" dictator and how they're "totally going to overthrow him this weekend"... sometime between the gym and Game of Thrones.

That's sarcasm, by the way.  The words "casual" and "revolution" do not belong in the same sentence, unless you also include the word "failed."

6) More people will use technology for terror. But a Web presence will make those terrorists easier to find, too.

I put this one in the category of, "Things will get a lot worse, but they'll get a lot better, too."  

Don't go too far out on a limb there with your prognosticating, Schmiddy!


By Doug Gross
April 24, 2013 | CNN

Sunday, March 31, 2013

Solar 'puts power in the hands of the little guy'

Solar power will soon have "grid parity" with coal and other dirty forms of power production. Germany is at the forefront. Meanwhile, solar panels on every house and in every backyard are making energy production local and distributive, instead of remote and concentrated:

By decentralizing power generation, the renewables boom could do to the power industry what the Internet did to the media: Put power in the hands of the little guy, and force power companies to rethink how they do business.


By Andrew Curry
March 29, 2013 | Slate

Saturday, November 17, 2012

Taibbi's hilarious take on Friedman's latest mangled opus

Bottom line: if any of you still believes that Thomas Friedman is a cogent geopolitical analyst, or even (wince!) a good writer, then please read these two Matt Taibbi posts.  Friedman doesn't just mix metaphors, he holds them in his iron fist as he blows them up and drenches them in acid then midwifes them into a new twisted (non-)meaning.  (No kidding, those are all real Friedman mixed metaphors).  The dude really must be smoking weed.


By Matt Taibbi
November 15, 2012 | Rolling Stone


By Matt Taibbi
November 14, 2012 | Rolling Stone


Taibbi's readers' responses to his challenge to one-up Friedman's nonsense were hilarious.  When random smart people chime in brilliantly it renews my faith in the Internet.  On the other hand, Thomas Friedman still writes for the NYT, he's still all over the Internet, still filthy rich, and still gets listened to by all sorts of influential people, which kind of cancels out my faith in the Internet.  Or just humanity.  I cant decide which.  

Thursday, October 4, 2012

Visionary 'lost' 1983 speech by Steve Jobs

I'm not an Apple guy at all, but I have to admit, Steve Jobs was visionary about the ubiquity of portable computers, Wi-Fi, the Internet and even voice-recognition programs.

What most of us knew in 1983 about personal computers was the Atari 2600, or maybe ColecoVision -- both strictly for gaming.  Jobs was thinking at least 20 years ahead.

You can listen to an audio recording of Jobs' entire presentation at conference entitled, "The Future Isn't What It Used To Be," here.

Steve Jobs IDCA 1983

Talk by Steven Jobs Cassette


By Marcel Brown
October 2, 2012 | Life, Liberty and Technology

Thursday, January 12, 2012

U.S. moving to universal 'Net access too slowly

Obama's FCC is definitely taking steps in the right direction -- toward universal broadband Internet access -- but they are insufficient, especially given: 1) America's great wealth, population, and population dispersion; and 2) our ostensible competitive advantage in high-tech and knowledge-based industries.

A few far-sighted countries like Finland and Estonia, meanwhile, have enshrined the basic right to high-speed Internet access in their law and national constitution, respectively! Other EU countries seem to be headed that way, too....

You can't help but feel we are falling behind, and for no good reason.


By Gerry Smith
January 9, 2012 | Huffington Post

Thursday, August 25, 2011

Nokia Siemens helps Arab regimes catch dissidents

As one expert remarked, "There's very little chance a government is smart enough [to identify dissidents] without this [interception] technology."

That means firms like Nokia Siemens, which has actively sold mobile and Internet spying technology to despotic Arab regimes, are ethically complicit in their arrest and torture of peaceful dissidents.

Think about that the next time you're looking to buy one of their products!


Nokia: Connecting dictators and their victims


By Vernon Silver and Ben Elgin
August 22, 2011 | Bloomberg

Sunday, November 14, 2010

Pope: Internet alienates everybody except pedophile priests

Ah, Benny Boy, what superb timing you have. The day before you issued your warning to today's youth about the alienating effects of technology and the Internet, one of your priests was arrested for having 21,000 child sex abuse images on his computer.

Leave it to Gentle Ben to condemn harmless iPod owners and Internet surfers for the specks in their eyes while ignoring the beam in his Church's eye: ordained sex predators on every continent where the Church operates.

If the Catholic Church had any sense they'd put this mean old fogey of a pope into the old priests' home, before he manages to alienate even more people than the Internet which he despises.

P.S. -- Hey, kids, don't forget to get your daily dose of "disorientation" on the Internet at: http://www.vatican.va/phome_en.htm. They even have a special section: "Abuse of Minors. The Church's Response." As per usual, the Holy See is working overtime issuing speeches, pastoral letters, communiques, and press releases to resolve this grave social ill that it created. (Pssst! Yo, Vatican! You might want to try to do something to stop all your priests screwing little kids though! Just a thought.)

Thursday, April 8, 2010

Snopes founder: 'Truth doesn't stand a chance'

"When you're looking at truth versus gossip, truth doesn't stand a chance," said one of Snopes founders.

Alas, it's true. People want to believe these chain e-mails that support their political point of view. Then they forward them on to others. They spread ignorant lies and half-truths and reinforce like-minded friends' slanted beliefs.

The funny thing is how old some of these "news" items are. Often they are jokes or rumors recycled from 5, even 10, years ago and presented as current events.

And 99 percent of the time these e-mail forwards have an hysterical conservative bias. Actually, I can't really think of one liberally slanted hoax or rumor that I have received, but I won't say they don't exist. I just know I get several hoaxes a week bashing Obama, Democrats, liberals, and progressives.

In your half-hearted defense, I grant you it's harder than ever to be a news consumer. Talk radio, blogs, and paid scammers spend a great deal of their time generating and spreading rumors, hoaxes, lies, an half-truths. You don't know what to believe. And probably most of the people hitting Forward are over the age of 40, and grew up in a time when they could trust basically anything they heard in the news. Maybe they thought the news had a liberal slant, but they never doubted that the story referred to real facts and events.

So, you news consumers of the Information Age, please take the time to check some of this crapolla out before you click the Forward button. If you don't like Snopes, because they are in the tank for lib'ruls (an actual rumor spread in chain e-mails, claiming all sorts of bias in Snopes, but without one solid, verifiable example), then use PolitiFact.org, TruthorFiction.com, or UrbanLegends.com. The older false rumors will often appear on several sites.

Or, even better, if you have the time and want to be absolutely sure, be your own fact-checker. If the chain e-mail doesn't contain 1) the author's name, or 2) the source of the article (web site's name, or URL, and the date), then you must be extremely skeptical and regard it as bogus until proven otherwise. You can do this by googling a few key sentences to see if anything pops up. Google the author's name if one is included. If the story is only re-posted millions of times on blogs, then chances are it is a hoax or a rumor. If you choose to believe it anyway, then... you probably want to be deceived.



Snopes' fact-checking couple try to unravel Web of lies
By Brian Stelter
April 5, 2010 | New York Times

No, Kenya did not erect a sign welcoming people to the "birthplace of Barack Obama." No, Wal-Mart did not authorize raids to find illegal immigrants at its stores. No, Social Security numbers are not assigned by race.

David and Barbara Mikkelson investigate such claims — and hundreds of other rumors and legends — on Snopes, one of the most popular fact-checking destinations on the Web.

As the unassuming California couple know better than most, one of the paradoxes of the Internet is that the world's freest access to knowledge also comes with a staggering amount of untruth — from imagined threats of the health-care overhaul to too-easy-to-be-true ways to earn money by (naturally) forwarding an e-mail to 10 friends. Eric Schmidt, Google's chief executive, once memorably declared that the Web was "a cesspool."

The Mikkelsons for 13 years have acted as arbiters in the Age of Misinformation by answering the central question raised by every chain letter — is this true? — complete with links to further research.

The popularity of Snopes — it attracts 7 million to 8 million unique visitors in an average month — puts the couple in an unusual position to evaluate digital society's attitudes toward accuracy. They have concluded that people are rather cavalier about facts.

"Rumors are a great source of comfort for people," Barbara Mikkelson said.

Snopes is one of a small handful of sites in the fact-checking business. Brooks Jackson, director of one of the others, the politically oriented FactCheck.org, believes news organizations should be doing more of it.

"The 'news' that is not fit to print gets through to people anyway these days, through 24-hour cable gasbags, partisan talk-radio hosts and chain e-mails, blogs and Web sites such as WorldNetDaily or Daily Kos," Jackson said in an e-mail. "What readers need now, we find, are honest referees who can help ordinary readers sort out fact from fiction."

Even the White House now cites fact-checking sites: It has circulated links and explanations by PolitiFact.com, a St. Petersburg Times project that won a Pulitzer Prize last year for national reporting.

The Mikkelsons did not set out to fact-check the Web's political smears and screeds. The site was started in 1996 as an online encyclopedia of myths and urban legends, building off the couple's hobby. They had met years earlier on a discussion board about urban legends.

David Mikkelson was a dogged researcher of folklore. When he needed to mail letters requesting information, he would use the letterhead of the San Fernando Valley Folklore Society, an official-sounding organization he dreamed up. He would investigate origins of classic tall tales, such as the legend of the killer with a prosthetic hook who stalked Lovers' Lane, for a small but devoted online audience.

After the Sept. 11 attacks, users overwhelmed the Mikkelsons with forwarded e-mail claims and editorials about the culprits and the failures of the government to halt the plot, and the couple reluctantly accepted a larger role. They still maintain a thorough list of what they call "Rumors of War."

Snopes became the family's full-time job less than a year later. Advertisements sold by a third-party network cover the $3,000-a-month bandwidth bills, with enough left over for the Mikkelsons to make a living — "despite rumors that we're paid by, depending on your choice, the Democratic National Committee or the Republican National Committee," David Mikkelson said.

Much of the site's resources is spent on investigating political claims, even though the Mikkelsons say politics is the last subject they want to write about. (Barbara cannot even vote in U.S. elections; she is a Canadian citizen.) Claims relating to Obama are the top searches on the site, but "even when there were Republicans in the White House, the mail was still overwhelmingly anti-liberal," David Mikkelson said.

In late August, David Mikkelson studied an e-mail chain letter titled "The Last of the Kennedy Dynasty," purporting to explain why the late Sen. Edward M. Kennedy was unfit for acclaim. Some of its 10 bullet points were true (yes, Kennedy was cited for reckless driving while in college), but others were misleading assumptions (no, his accomplishments were not "scant").

Barbara Mikkelson rolled her eyes at her husband's plans to fact-check the chain letter. "That's ephemera," she said.

He agreed, but the Kennedy report wound up being the Web site's most-searched subject the next weekend.

The Mikkelsons employ two others full time to manage the enormous volume of e-mail to the site. Readers increasingly are sending videos and photos as well as e-mail, requiring even more investigation. On average, one new article is published each day.

The enduring articles are the ones about everyday fears: computer viruses, scams, missing children. Some e-mail chain letters, such as the one offering users $245 for forwarding the message, never fade away.

"People keep falling for the same kind of things over and over again," David Mikkelson said. Some readers always seem to believe, for instance, that the government is trying to poison them: Barbara Mikkelson said rumors about AIDS have been recycled into rumors about swine-flu vaccines.

For the Mikkelsons, the site affirms what cultural critics have bemoaned for years: the rejection of nuance and facts that run contrary to one's point of view.

"Especially in politics," David Mikkelson said, "most everything has infinite shades of gray to it, but people just want things to be true or false. In the larger sense, it's people wanting confirmation of their world view."

The couple say they regularly receive grateful messages from teachers, and an award from a media literacy association sits atop the TV set in David Mikkelson's home office.
It is not just the naiveté of Web users that worries the "Snopesters," a name for the Web site's community of fans and volunteers. It is also what David Mikkelson calls "a trend toward the opposite approach, hyper-skepticism."

"People get an e-mail or a photograph and they spot one little thing that doesn't look right, and they declare the whole thing fake," he said. "That's just as bad as being gullible in a lot of senses."

But even though Snopes pays the bills for the couple now, through advertising revenue, they doubt they are having much of an impact.

"It's not like, 'Well, we have to get out there and defend the truth,' " Barbara Mikkelson said. "When you're looking at truth versus gossip, truth doesn't stand a chance."