| 2nd September |
Up Against the Facebook Wall... |
|
| |
Philippines president takes a hammering on Facebook
Permalink |
Based on
article
from mb.com.ph
|
A
hostage drama in the Philippines on August 23, 2010 tested the patience
and tolerance of the Philippine government, particularly newly installed
President Benigno Noynoy Aquino III.
The hostage crisis and the alleged mishandling of the entire situation
was seen by almost everyone which illicited various reactions. The
question is, where will they air their grievances and disappointments?
Where else but to use the world's most popular social networking site to
date - Facebook.
President Aquino created his Facebook page to promote transparency, but
now angry netizens and President Aquino detractors are flooding the page
with negative comments, strong language and insults.
And because of the barrage of negative posts, President Benigno Aquino
or whoever is in-charge of this page censored his Facebook page after
users ignored an appeal to stop bashing the Philippine government.
His Facebook account is followed by 1.9 million readers.
|
| 27th August |
Constitutional Challenge... |
|
| |
Wikileaks may cause US to reassess balance between free speech and security
Permalink full story: Wikileaks Censorship...Wikileaks domain challenged by lawyers |
Based on
article
from guardian.co.uk
See also Julian
Assange Gets The Bog Standard Smear Technique
from craigmurray.org.uk
|
US
supreme court justice Sonia Sotomayor has said the court is likely to have to
rule on the issue of balancing national security and freedom of speech due to
WikiLeaks posting a cache of US military records about the Afghan war.
Sotomayor said the incident, which has been condemned by the
Pentagon, was likely to provoke legislation in Congress that would
require judicial scrutiny.
Her comments came in response to a question about security and free
speech by a student at Denver university. The judge said she could not
answer because that question is very likely to come before me.
She said the incident, and others, are going to provoke legislation
that's already being discussed in Congress, and so some of it is going
to come up before [the supreme court].
Sotomayor said the balance between national security and free speech
is a constant struggle in this society, between our security needs
and our first amendment rights, and one that has existed throughout our
history.
|
| 27th August |
Just Say Now... |
|
| |
Face book bans marijuana leaf from political campaign advert
Permalink |
Based on
article
from thecaucus.blogs.nytimes.com
See also
Facebook Should Stop Censoring Marijuana Legalization Campaign Ads
from eff.org
See also
Censorship of Pro-Pot Group Campaign Leads to Free Ads
from clickz.com
|
An
ad, which depicted a marijuana leaf, began running on Aug. 7. Just over
a week later, Facebook pulled it, saying the image violated its policy
against promoting smoking.
Organizers at Just Say Now, a bipartisan coalition fighting to
legalize and regulate marijuana just like alcohol, said they spent
roughly $5,000 on the ads, which received about 38 million views in the
week they ran.
Michael Whitney, the group's online campaign director, said
Facebook's move is akin to striking a candidate's face from his posters
while he's running for office. Marijuana legalization is on the ballot
this November in Arizona, California, Colorado, Oregon and South Dakota.
We are talking about free political speech, Whitney said.
We aren't encouraging people to do anything illegal.
Facebook said they have no problem with Just Say Now advertising on
its pages as long as it uses a different image, Andrew Noyes, the
manager of Facebook's public policy communications, said in an e-mail to
The New York Times.
The image of a marijuana leaf is classified with all smoking
products and therefore is not acceptable under our policies, he
said, adding that Facebook does not permit images of drugs, drug
paraphernalia or tobacco in any advertisements.
Just Say Now began its campaign earlier this month, arguing that
legalizing marijuana would reduce crime at the border and could yield an
additional $40 billion in revenue annually.
|
| 25th August |
Name and Shame... |
|
| |
Software that recognises and names photos posted on the internet
Permalink |
Based on
article from
dailymail.co.uk
|
A
software company is developing revolutionary software which provides the
ability to identify people from photographs posted on the internet.
Face.com has produced technology that can identify individuals on
social networking sites and online galleries by comparing their image
against a known picture of them.
It means detailed profiles of individuals can be built up purely from
online photographs and critics have said it could lead to exploitation
by employers.
The software works be creating an algorithim of the face - a
measurement of the arrangement of features including the eyes, nose and
mouth.
The company says it is 90 per cent accurate when scanning typical
images which appear on social networking sites.
Face.com has previously limited the availability of the software over
concerns about invasion of privacy. But it has now released the Photo
Finder software to developers building applications allowing people to
search for anyone on the internet.
Gil Hirsch, chief executive of Face.com, told The Sunday Times: We
have launched a service that allows developers to take our facial
recognition technology and apply it immediately to their own
applications. The technology is already being used by 5,000 developers.
You can basically search for people in any photo. You could search for
family members on Flickr, in newspapers, or in videos on YouTube - but
it would take a lot of processing power.
|
| 20th August |
Intrigue... |
|
| |
Wikileaks publishes encrypted file for insurance against prosecution
Permalink full story: Wikileaks Censorship...Wikileaks domain challenged by lawyers |
Based on
article
from bbc.co.uk
|
A
novel use of encryption by whistle-blowing website Wikileaks could challenge
the legal system for years to come, according to an influential observer of
the hacking community.
Emmanuel Goldstein, editor of 2600 The Hacker Quarterly magazine,
made his comments in reference to an encrypted file recently posted on
the Wikileaks site.
Some suspect the file - as yet unopened - contains further sensitive
material. It has been reposted around the web and is available for
anyone to download.
Wikileaks recently published 76,000 secret US military logs detailing
military actions in Afghanistan; an act the US authorities described as
highly irresponsible. The website now says it will release 15,000
further sensitive documents, once it has completed a review aimed at
minimising the risk that the release could put people's lives in danger.
The release of the logs has led many to wonder what action the US
might take against Wikileaks. Now it seems the site may be using
encryption as insurance against legal and other threats to the
information it holds.
The insurance.aes256 file has been posted alongside the already
published leaked war logs and can be downloaded by anyone. Leaked video
of July 2007 helicopter attack in Baghdad Some have speculated that the
insurance file is another video
From the file name, it is believed that it has been encrypted using
the AES256 algorithm - described as extremely strong by Professor
Whitfield Diffie, of the Information Security Group at Royal Holloway
University, London. Prof Diffie believes that AES256, which he says has
been extensively studied could prove too tough even for US
intelligence agencies to break.
While no-one knows what the insurance file contains, this has not
prevented the contents becoming a matter of considerable speculation.
Some suspect that the file contains a further leaked US military video,
others that it is another tranche of US military logs - perhaps this
time from Iraq. Or it could just be an imaginative bluff.
|
| 20th August |
On by Default... |
|
| |
Facebook kindly adds a facility to relay your location to busy bodies, stalkers, burglars and state snoopers
Permalink |
Based on
article
from guardian.co.uk
|
Facebook
Places, which will launch in the US only at first, will allow
users to check in at a location
Facebook app Facebook Places is a location based service allowing
users to share their location. The new tool is bound to spark criticism
from data privacy campaigners.
The feature allows users to check in at locations which will
then be shared with their friends and Facebook network but it is likely
to raise concerns over safety. Users will also be able to browse shops,
clubs and nearby venues to see which friends are nearby, leading to
concerns it could put individual's security at risk.
What we see with Facebook is a massive learning curve. Every time
they make a change, consumers scramble to figure out the privacy
settings, said Rainey Reitman, spokeswoman for Privacy Rights
Clearinghouse in the US. Location data is tied to people's safety
if people know where you are, they know where you're not. Your location
data is some of the most sensitive data we have. I expect we'll see from
the get-go people who don't understand how to control the privacy
settings.
The service will launch in the US only at first. Reitman said users
should be particularly judicious about who they accept as friends, and
be aware that even information shared with an intimate network could be
copied and pasted elsewhere. Don't post anything online you wouldn't
want to get out publicly to anyone.
Yang said protections include notifying a user as soon as they are
tagged at a place, and offering a complete opt-out of places
tags. Users under 18 can only share location with their immediate
friends network and their real-time location will only be seen by
friends at the same location.
Critics will note that once a user decides to check in at a location,
the primary location setting is switched on by default, which means any
places tags automatically being shared with immediate friends.
But the service does offer a range of protections and controls including
the option to detag locations, notifications if friends add your
location and the option to disable Places entirely.
Widespread smartphone take-up has allowed location services such as
Foursquare and Gowalla to flourish. Facebook has been watching the
development of these services, which are setting up a steady stream of
promotions and prizes with venues and retailers to reward loyal
customers who check in regularly.
Initially available as an update to Facebook's app for Apple iPhone,
updated apps for BlackBerry, Android and other handsets are expected in
the next few months. A version will also launch for the UK.
|
| 14th August |
Troll Abuse... |
|
| |
Facebook to automatically reject messages identified as trolling
Permalink |
Based on
article
from telegraph.co.uk
|
Facebook,
the social networking site, has pledged to develop new security measures
to combat a growing surge in cyber bullying and abuse by strangers.
Engineers at Facebook are reportedly working on new systems to fight
the trend of trolling, where anonymous online users bombard
victims with offensive messages or abuse.
Reports have claimed a growing number of tribute pages had
been targeted including those in memory of the Cumbria shootings victims
and soldiers who died in Afghanistan.
At present users can only manually delete abusive messages. But in
efforts to combat the growing trend, Facebook officials said they were
working on new systems that automatically delete abuse.
Administrators of such sites will also be given new advice on how to
cope with trolls and be given access to the new tools.
A Facebook spokesman said that: Users who send
lots of messages to non-friends, for example, or whose friend requests
are rejected at a high rate, are marked as suspect. We've built
extensive grey lists that prevent users from signing up with names
commonly associated with fake accounts.
Through the reporting process our team is also
able to identify additional accounts using the same IP address so it is
possible in certain situations to proactively remove multiple fake
accounts.
|
| 11th August |
No Liberty at Facebook... |
|
| |
Facebook takes down topless Statue of Liberty picture
Permalink full story: Facebook Tits...Facebook ban pictures of breastfeeding |
Based on
article from
gotopless.org
|
GoTopLess.org
is calling for a public protest after an image at the organization's
Facebook page depicting the Statue of Liberty with bare breasts was
removed by Facebook staff. The disputed image was a photo of a painting
by GoTopless member Donna Grabow.
The incident began when GoTopLess president Nadine Gary received an
e-mail from Facebook staff on July 18 explaining the reason for the
photo's removal. It read, in part:
You uploaded a picture to 'NEW YORK
National Go Topless Day: A March for Women's Equal Rights! AUG 22
that violates our Terms of Use, and this picture has been removed.
Facebook does not allow photos that attack an individual or group,
or that contain nudity, drug use, violence, or other violations of
the Terms of Use.
Brigitte Boisselier said:
I'm asking all my friends on Facebook and
those who believe in equal rights for men and women to post the
picture that was taken down, Boisselier said. Some frustrated
individuals can't see a nipple without freaking out or feeling
offended, but we've already had enough discrimination against the
female body. I'm asking all women on Facebook to stand for equal
topless rights by posting this photo to their own pages. And I'm
also asking all men who can appreciate a female body without feeling
guilty to do the same.
The female chest is beautiful and children
shouldn't be told it's sinful to look at it. That sort of repression
causes frustration and guilt that they will experience as adults,
which is such a ridiculous waste. Bare female breasts are seen on
all European beaches at this time of year, but as far as I know,
incidence of rape and other sexually violent incidents is lower in
Europe than in America.
Artist Grabow agrees that Facebook's action was discriminatory and
wrong.
Censorship of this painting denies freedom
of speech and expression and reflects American prudishness, she
said. What's funny is that the Statue of Liberty was a gift from the
French government, and all the French people I know smile when they
see this feminized painting. In fact, Europeans just laugh when they
learn that Facebook is censoring innocent images like this one.
After all, images of nude statues are displayed everywhere else
without protest, including in school books.
|
| 11th August |
Dangerous Leaks... |
|
| |
Wikileaks asked to delete civilian names from disclosed Afghanistan war reports
Permalink full story: Wikileaks Censorship...Wikileaks domain challenged by lawyers |
Based on
article
from telegraph.co.uk
|
Wikileaks
has been urged by human rights groups to censor previously secret files on the
Afghanistan war to protect civilians who have worked alongside the US and other
foreign forces from reprisals.
The Afghan Independent Human Rights Commission, Amnesty International
and three other groups have sent a series of emails to Wikileaks founder
Julian Assange calling for the names of Afghan civilians to be removed
from the 77,000 classified military documents published by the online
whistle-blower last month, and from any documents disclosed in the
future.
Nader Nadery, of the commission said: There was no consideration
about civilian lives, noting a rise in assassinations of Afghan
civilians seen as government collaborators.
The Campaign for Innocent Victims in Conflict, the Open Society
Institute and the International Crisis Group have also been involved in
exchanges about the released documents.
A WikiLeaks spokesman said the group had requested help from NATO to
check the files prior to publication to ensure the lives of civilians
were not put at risk: For this reason, we conveyed a request to the
White House prior to the publication, asking that the International
Security Assistance Force provide us with reviewers, he said.
That request remains open. However, the Pentagon has stated that it is
not interested in 'harm minimization' and has not contacted us,
directly, or indirectly to discuss this offer.
|
| 29th July |
List Mania... |
|
| |
Apple occupy 3 places in the top 10 of nutters and censors
Permalink full story: iPhone iCensor...Apple is censorial about apps for iPhone |
Based on
article
from dailymail.co.uk
|
Apple
has been accused of censoring its iBookstore chart after the top ten
list became dominated by pornographic short stories.
One day the best-selling ebook was Blonde and Wet: The Complete
Story, a pornographic novella by author Carl East, whose
downloadable books filled three places in the top ten list.
But the next day the list had suddenly changed and was topped by
The Perfect Murder, a whodunnit novella.
Apple's apparent coyness at the literary tastes of its readership may
be a reflection of sensibilities in the US.
Carl East, a 54-year-old amateur author from Hull, has been shocked
by the success of his pornographic fiction. He has written more than 70
titles, including the Confessions of a Nymphomaniac series, which
sell for as little as 49p each.
Three of his short books were at first, second and seventh in the top
ten before they were apparently pulled by Apple.
'Experts' have said that it is likely that East's books are so
popular on the iPad because people can download them without the
embarrassment of buying a book in a conventional shop.
An Apple spokesperson said the firm had no comment to make.
|
| 20th July |
Obligatory Blogetery Block... |
|
| |
73,000 blogs taken down by US authorities
Permalink |
19th July 2010. Based on
article
from news.cnet.com
|
Blogetery.com,
a little-known WordPress platform used by more than 70,000 blogs, was
shut down by its Web hosting company more than a week ago and nobody
seems willing to say why or who is responsible.
BurstNet, the Web-hosting company, informed Blogetery's operator that
service was terminated at the request of some law enforcement agency but
wouldn't say which one. As for the reason, BurstNet hasn't made that
clear either. In an e-mail to Blogetery's operator, BurstNet managers
did say that they had little choice but to terminate service.
Please note that this was not a typical case in which suspension
and notification would be the norm, BurstNet wrote to Blogetery's
operator. This was a critical matter brought to our attention by law
enforcement officials. We had to immediately remove the server.
Initially commentators suspected that perhaps file sharing issues
were behind the take down but this was denied. In an interview, a
BurstNet spokesman declined to identify the law enforcement agency that
ordered Blogetery shut down or provide the reason but did say that it
had nothing to do with copyright violations.
BurstNet hinted at something more serious in a forum
article from
webhostingtalk.com.
In repose to a refund request and a dump of Blogetery data, BurstNet
wrote: [This] should be the least of his concerns. Simply put: We
cannot give him his data nor can we provide any other details. By
stating this, most would recognize that something serious is afoot.
Update:
Inspire
20th July 2010. Based on
article
from news.cnet.com
More
details are surfacing about why Blogetery.com, a blogging platform that
claimed to service more than 70,000 blogs, was mysteriously booted from
the Internet by its Web-hosting company.
The site was shut down after FBI agents informed executives of
Burst.net, Blogetery's Web host, late on July 9 that links to al-Qaeda
materials were found on Blogetery's servers, Joe Marr, chief technology
officer for Burst.net, told CNET. Sources close to the investigation say
that included in those materials were the names of American citizens
targeted for assassination by al-Qaeda. Messages from Osama bin Laden
and other leaders of the terrorist organization, as well as bomb-making
tips, were also allegedly found on the server.
A source with knowledge of the investigation said that the material
allegedly found on Blogetery's server is connected to an online magazine
called Inspire, which debuted recently. Numerous news
outlets reported over the past weekend that Inspire is designed
to help recruit new members to al-Qaeda. According to Fox News, the
title of one article was Make a Bomb in the Kitchen of Your Mom.
Citing intelligence sources, Fox reported that Khan is Web savvy and
his magazine represents al-Qaeda's most ambitious terrorist
recruitment tool to date.
|
| 19th July |
In the Poo... |
|
| |
Coca Cola takedown Facebook campaign over scat reference
Permalink |
Based on
article from
telegraph.co.uk
|
Coca-Cola
has been forced to pull an internet campaign after parents accused the
company of using hardcore pornographic references to target children on
Facebook.
A Facebook promotion for Dr Pepper, part of the Coca-Cola drinks
range, posted a reference to a notorious pornographic film on the
wall of an underage girl.
As part of the promotion, users allowed the company to hijack their
Facebook status box, posting apparently embarrassing messages under
their names.
More than 160,000 people signed up for the hoax statuses, which
included: Lost my special blankie. How will I go sleepies? and
What's wrong with peeing in the shower?
But the marketing drive backfired when a parent complained that her
14-year-old daughter's hijacked status claimed that she had watched a
hardcore pornographic film which is notorious for the obscene practices
it depicts. The status referred to the film by name, and the mother said
she was particularly distressed after finding that her daughter had
subsequently searched for it on the internet.
[The reference is to 'Two Girls One Cup' which is an extreme scat
thing. It seems quite well known in the social networking world, more as
a foil for reaction than any hint of the real thing. Eg there are
YouTube videos of people watching the unseen porn video and reacting
nauseously. This information seems to have been omitted from the
newspaper articles on the story].
Rickman wrote on the parents' networking site Mumsnet: I am
absolutely fizzing with rage and disgust, and want a full apology and
explanation. Other Mumsnet users reacted furiously to news of the
disgusting promotion, and praised Rickman for bringing it to
light.
Coca-Cola has since apologised and announced an investigation into
its promotion procedures. Executives said they had approved the
offending message without realising its true meaning.
|
| 12th July |
Midwest American Puritanism... |
|
| |
Facebook easily offended by porcelain nipples
Permalink |
6th July 2010. Based on
article
from jewellermagazine.com
|
Sydney
jeweller Victoria Buckley has lashed out at Midwest American
puritanism on Facebook after the social networking site threatened
action against her for having pictures of nude porcelain dolls on her
fan page.
The dolls are pictured posing with the jeweller's products and
feature in posters that form part of Buckley's visual merchandising
displays in her George Street store windows.
Buckley was bombarded by warnings from Facebook, which said the
pictures of the dolls constituted inappropriate content and
breached the site's terms of service. The high-end porcelain figures
show little more than nipples.
The frustrated Buckley told Jeweller: It just takes one click from
one Midwest American puritan and the whole [online marketing campaign]
gets taken down. Facebook has removed the offending images from her
fan page, but Buckley has posted them on a new Facebook group called
Save Ophelia - exquisite doll censored by Facebook.
Buckley told Jeweller: I don't care if they close this group down
but I do care if they close my fan page down.
On the Save Ophelia page, she says: I feel I have a right
to photograph my jewellery with Ophelia [the doll] as I see fit.
Facebook disagrees with this, because, even if hundreds of people
appreciate what you do, it only takes ONE complaint to have the whole
thing taken down.
Update:
Facebook Apologies
12th July 2010. Based on
article from
smh.com.au
A
Sydney jeweller has castigated Facebook for its opaque and
arbitrary moderation system after the site apologised for censoring
her images of a nude porcelain doll posing with her works.
The social networking site admitted that it had made a mistake
in removing Victoria Buckley's photos, after last week sending her
several warning notices for publishing inappropriate content and
erasing both censored and uncensored versions of the image from Facebook.
We've investigated this further and determined that we made a
mistake in removing these photos, Facebook said in a statement:
Our User Operations team reviews thousands of
reported photos a day and may occasionally remove something that doesn't
actually violate our policies. This is what happened here. And while we
believe the doll would benefit from clothing to protect her fair skin,
we apologise for the mistake and encourage Victoria Buckley Jewellery to
upload these photos again if they so choose.
|
| 11th July |
Selling Cyber Arms to China... |
|
| |
France and Netherlands question IT equipment sales to internet censors
Permalink full story: France Netherlands Anti-cenorship...Initiative against worldwide internet censorship |
Based on
article
from google.com
|
France
and the Netherlands have called for international guidelines to prevent
private firms from exporting high-tech equipment that could be used for
Internet censorship.
Dutch Foreign Minister Maxime Verhagen said there must be concrete
measures taken to ensure that the Internet remains a universal forum
and singled out Iran for blocking access to anti-government websites.
We must support cyber-dissidents in the same way that we supported
political dissidents, French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner told
a meeting in Paris attended by some 20 countries including the United
States and Japan.
France and the Netherlands plan to hold a ministerial-level meeting
in October to flesh out the guidelines for firms who sell technology
that could be used to suppress democracy.
Nobel Peace Prize winner Shirin Ebadi has accused German engineering
giant Siemens and Finnish telecoms firm Nokia of supplying Iran with
technology to help it suppress dissent. The firms have denied the
charges.
Jean-Francois Julliard, from the media rights group Reporters Without
Borders (RSF, accused French phone equipment provider Alcatel of selling
bugging equipment to Myanmar. He also singled out networking giant Cisco
for allegedly selling encoders to China.
|
| 8th July |
Spin Wind Up... |
|
| |
SpinProfiles website taken down unduly quickly by hosting company
Permalink |
Based on
article from
guardian.co.uk by Hugh Muir
See A
net loss of freedom
from guardian.co.uk
|
Anyone
looking for the website SpinProfiles uncovering the dark corners of PR
and raising questions about lobbying will have had a harder time
finding it recently. And why? Because it was virtually shut down by its
web firm, 1&1 Internet.
And why did that happen? Because it posted what
has become a controversial profile of Alexander Meleagrou-Hitchens,
rightwing thinktanker and son of the famed journalist Christopher
Hitchens. Hitchens didn't like it. More than that, he didn't like the
location. SpinProfiles and sister site Spinwatch are run by Professor
David Miller, who also has a site called Neocon Europe. Hitchens says
that his profile appeared on that site in pretty unsavoury company, and
thus he didn't want to be featured on any website owned by Prof Miller.
He asked for the profile to be taken down but
here's the thing: he doesn't say anything in it was defamatory, and
furthermore he says he never sought to have the site shut down. 1&1
took it upon themselves to remove the site after Spinwatch refused to
remove my profile, Hitchens told us.
1&1 says it acted within the agreed rules
following complaints to protect its legal position. But the upshot is
that a site came down because someone featured there raised an
objection. Even the complainant didn't ask for that.
So much for the brave new world.
Reply:
Spinwatch must offer right of reply
15th July 2010. See article
from guardian.co.uk
by Alexander Meleagrou-Hitchens
David Miller's Spinwatch websites exploit free speech and those
profiled, as I was, should be able to disassociate themselves
On Cif last week, David Miller wrote a piece complaining that I had
his website, SpinProfiles, shut down. As his article argues, he does
indeed have the right to free speech, but this is not a one-way street,
and the people who his projects target have a right to object to
witch-hunts and harassment.
...Read the full article
|
| 6th July |
Not Worth a Foot... |
|
| |
Lebanon Facebook users arrested over trivial insult of president
Permalink |
Based on
article
from guardian.co.uk
|
Lebanon's
president, Michel Sleiman, may have more than 60,000 Facebook fans, but
it took the opinions of just three people for things to get unfriendly.
The three were arrested for allegedly defaming the president on
the social networking website.
There is currently no specific law governing the publication of
online content in Lebanon. People can and do say what they want
across a variety of networking sites. However, it is a crime to
criticise the president of the republic, as his position supposedly
represents the entire country. Knock Sleiman and you knock Lebanon.
The barbs, some of which were reposted on Sleiman's official page,
were not particularly caustic. You're worth my foot, as one
commenter wrote, is hardly a fierce indictment of Sleiman's presidency.
Similarly, you're like a snake; all you do is from under the table,
should not ruffle a man hardened by a career spent in the Lebanese army.
If these are the worst jibes he has to endure, Sleiman can consider his
political life charmed. The accusation that Sleiman was the king of
racism and sectarianism probably grated harder.
The three young men have now been charged but released on bail.
The arrests are the first to be linked to online comments and while
it was a state prosecutor who initiated the judicial proceedings, the
president has been kept abreast of all developments. Sleiman, who after
all has the power of pardon, said he could not allow such comments to go
unpunished, labelling them an abuse of freedom.
|
| 2nd July |
Arse Licking to Complainants... |
|
| |
Arbitrary censorship on Facebook
Permalink |
Based on
article
from xtra.ca
|
Elaine
Miller says she can't understand how the image of a woman's panty-clad
ass can be considered offensive, but Facebook pulled the photo and sent
her a warning.
I don't think much of censorship, says Miller, a leatherdyke
who hosts a variety of BDSM events for queen women in Vancouver.
Miller says Facebook pulled the photo announcing a Bride of Pride
play party, then sent her an online warning explaining how she had
violated the site's terms of use.
Facebook does not allow photos that attack an individual or group
or that contain nudity, drug use, violence or other violations of terms
of use, the message informed her.
This policy is enforced in order to ensure Facebook remains a
safe, secure and trusted environment for all users, including the many
children who use the site, the message added.
When asked to explain why this particular photo was removed, a
Facebook spokesperson told Xtra: We literally have dozens of content
standards, and respond to user reports of inappropriate content. We have
a policy against nudity and in such cases, have removed photos that have
been flagged to us by Facebook users. The particular photo in question
exposes the naked buttocks of a female and violates our terms for
appropriate content. When flagged, all reports are closely reviewed and
action is taken if photos are deemed offensive.
|
| 18th June |
Bubble Prick... |
|
| |
Chatroulette to be censored?
Permalink full story: Chatroulette...Website providing random webcam link ups |
Based on
article
from mashable.com
|
Chatroulette
has been on the rise since earlier this year, when it suddenly became an
international phenomenon. It has been the source of numerous viral
videos, but it's also been the source of voyeuristic male masturbators.
Currently the company is looking for investors in Russia and the U.S.
However, it looks like the service lost some of its steam in the
month of May. According to web analytics firm comScore, U.S. traffic
dropped nearly 7% from 1.564 million visitors in April to 1.327 million
in May.
While Chatroulette's decline doesn't surprise us, it has to be
troubling to Andrey Ternovskiy, Charoulette's 17-year-old founder. He
seems to be taking action though, reportedly working on software to weed
out the penises that have plagued Chatroulette's reputation.
What is Chatroulette really about, though? Is Chatroulette a social
utility for people to meet each other through video? Is it an
entertainment tool for groups of friends? Or is it just an anonymous
network where anything goes?
These are important questions for Ternovskiy to answer before a
turnaround becomes possible. Legitimizing the service by weeding out the
genitalia may make it more viable to investors, but it could potentially
accelerate its decline, not reverse it. It all depends on how people
want to use the service.
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| 12th June |
Malcontent... |
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Are porn sites dangerous to visit?
Permalink |
See article
from news.bbc.co.uk
|
Visitors to porn sites are at serious risk of
being exploited by cyber criminals, a study has suggested.
It found that many sites harboured malware or
used shady practices to squeeze money out of their visitors.
By creating their own porn sites researchers
found that many consumers were vulnerable to known bugs and
vulnerabilities.
Competition among porn sites makes the online
adult industry ripe for abuse by hi-tech criminals.
They have almost inadvertently created a
whole ecosystem that's easy to abuse for cyber crime on a large scale,
said Dr Gilbert Wondracek, a computer security expert from the
International Secure System Lab, which led the study. Hidden danger
Dr Wondracek said the team embarked on the
study to find out the truth of the widely held view that porn sites are
dangerous to visit
,,,Read the full article
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| 9th June |
Heroes and Villains... |
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ISPA announce nominations for their Internet Awards
Permalink |
See press
release [pdf]
from ispaawards.org.uk
|
ISPA,
the Internet Service Providers Association, has announced the finalists
for the 2010 Internet Hero and Internet Villain awards.
The highly-prized Internet Hero award is bestowed upon an organisation
or individual who has made a significant contribution to the Internet
industry in the past year, whilst the dreaded title of Internet Villain
recognises those that ISPA feels have had a negative impact upon the
sector.
The winners of the two special awards will be selected from the
finalists based on votes by members of the ISPA Council. They will be
announced, along with the winners of the twelve other ISPA awards, at a
glittering awards ceremony hosted at the London Marriott Hotel,
Grosvenor Square on Thursday 8th July.
Internet Hero sponsored by Eclipse Internet
- Bridget Fox - For organising a grass roots challenge to the
Digital Economy Bill
- Data.gov.uk - for showing the value of datasets and how the
public can utilise government information
- Tom Watson MP, and all those who showed up to vote against the
DE Bill, for their informed opposition to the Bill
- Zip It, Block It, Flag It campaign - for focusing on internet
safety for parents and young children
- 38 Degrees Campaign - for mobilising public opposition to the
Digital Economy Bill
Internet Villain
- ACS Law - for their aggressive, heavy-handed approach to
targeting alleged copyright infringement via P2P networks
- The European Commission and the Council of Ministers - for
conducting ACTA negotiations in a secretive manner and for failing
to engage with stakeholders on an issue that is of vital importance
for Europe's digital economy
- Lord Clement-Jones - for introducing amendment 120a to the
Digital Economy Bill without sufficient research or understanding of
the consequences
- Lord Mandelson - for ignoring principles of better regulation to
amend an open consultation following lobbying from an interest group
- UK Parliament - for allowing the Digital Economy Bill to pass
through the Commons without proper debate
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| 6th June |
Skinbook... |
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A stripped down nudist version of Facebook
Permalink |
Based on
article
from timesonline.co.uk
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Karl
Maddocks does not approve of traditional nudists. The 25-year-old from
Manchester believes that they have too many rules.
You shouldn't need to fill out application forms and pay fees to
clubs, he argues. Just go to the beach and get your kit off.
As a reaction, two years ago Maddocks created
Skinbook, a website that claims to be the world's largest nudist
social network. Thousands of people have flocked to the site that has
many of the same features and functions as Facebook except everyone on
it is naked.
Skinbook sees itself as a safe haven for those intrigued about
stripping off in public, but without having to meet the strict
regulations of many nudist clubs. It does have some rules though. Blank
profiles are not accepted, or overtly sexual chatter. The site claims to
have had 150,000 applicants but only 10% make the grade.
The site has quickly gained popularity and is beginning to approach
the same size as the country's largest nudist organisation, British
Naturism, thought to have about 13,000 members.
Now the site is having its own conference on July 19 in Brighton.
Naked spas and beach barbecues will feature along with discussion of the
future of the site.
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| 1st June |
Nutter Networking... |
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Euro MP whinges at supposed addiction to social networking websites
Permalink |
Based on
article
from techeye.net
|
An
Irish Labour MEP has called for intervention and regulation by the EU for
websites like Facebook, which she believes are addictive and hazardous to mental
health.
The minister, Nessa Childers, who is also a psychotherapist, said
that since the Lisbon Treaty has been ratified, the EU now has
increased powers to legislate when there is a threat to public health in
Europe.
She claimed that millions of Europeans are at risk of becoming
addicted to these kinds of websites, particularly Facebook, which has
over 400,000 Irish users alone.
Childers said that visiting Facebook causes intermittent
reinforcement, which means that connecting with virtual friends,
receiving notices and messages, etc. gives users an unpredictable high,
similar to gambling and makes them feel the need to expand to fill an
increasingly empty internal world creating a vicious circle. In
other words, people are living virtual lives instead of real ones, using
social networking to escape the pains and struggles of everyday
existence.
Childers said that as a psychotherapist she has seen an increase in
addiction to internet pornography, which has ruined lives, and that
action is needed at international level from the EU to properly take on
the disturbing trend of addiction to sites such as Facebook which are
responsible for all sorts of problematic behaviour.
Childers failed to mention exactly what kind of regulations are
needed though.
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| 28th May |
Taking the Initiative... |
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The Netherlands and France to develop code of conduct for freedom of the internet
Permalink full story: France Netherlands Anti-cenorship...Initiative against worldwide internet censorship |
Based on
article
from news.smh.com.au
|
The Netherlands and France are taking the initiative to develop an
international code of conduct for the freedom of traffic on the
Internet, the Dutch foreign ministry has said in a statement.
The foreign ministers from both countries met in Rotterdam and
expressed concern over a recent rise in Internet censorship.
A pilot group is due to meet in the coming weeks in Paris, and will
bring together governments, rights organisations and web-based
businesses all working to protect freedom on the Internet, the French
foreign ministry said.
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| 28th May |
Dish of the Day... |
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Interview with an internet gore collector
Permalink |
See article
from news.ninemsn.com.au
|
Severed
heads, mangled corpses, aborted babies. It's the kind of content that
would give most people nightmares, but to members of an underground gore
subculture it's a dish suitable for daily consumption.
The websites they frequent feature countless images and videos
depicting real-life stomach-churning violence. Many of the images come
from Mexico, where photos such as these are seen as acceptable
journalistic material and are frequently published in magazines and
newspapers. But while the origins of those photos can be explained
easily, others cannot.
The websites deal in images taken at crime scenes, inside autopsy
rooms, at the wreckage of car accidents and other places only authority
figures are allowed. So who is leaking the images?
To learn more about the trade and the origins of the images, ninemsn
interviewed the editor of the website, a woman who goes by the
screenname JohannaXn
...Read full article
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| 27th May |
God Controls all Creative Thought... |
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Yippy nutters buy out Clusty search engine
Permalink |
Thanks to Mike
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Clusty
used to be a pretty good search engine. Now it has fallen into the hands
of nutters.
How many people will read the small print and realise their searches are
randomly being censored on political / religious / moral grounds? It
doesn't leave much, does it?
About the Buy Out
Based on
article from
pandia.com
The metasearch engines search engines that combine data from several
search engines are not as popular as they used to be in the 1990's. But
they can still add something new to your search experience, especially as
regards user interface and the way they present results.
One of our favorite metasearch engines have been Clusty, owned and
developed by Vivisimo. As the name implies, Clusty has been especially good
at clustering search results in meaningful groups or topics of result
listings. Vivisimo has now sold Clusty to a Florida based company named
Yippy for US$5.6 million. The name change has already taken place. Clusty is
no more. Yippy has taken its place.
Clusty.com attracts approximately 100,000 unique visitors and supports
millions of search queries per month.
About Yippy
Previous Clusty users may be shocked at the new Yippy approach to
searches. Yippy explain their philosphy:
Based on
article from
clusty.com
Censorship
Yippy.com may censor search results, web
domains and IP addresses. That is, Yippy may remove from its output, in
an ad-hoc manner, all but not limited to the following:
- Politically-oriented propaganda or agendas
- Pornographic Material
- Gambling content
- Sexual products or sites that sell same
- Anti-Semitic views or opinions
- Anti-Christian views or opinions
- Anti-Conservative views or opinions
- Anti-Sovereign USA views or opinions
- Sites deemed inappropriate for children
Oh, we should say that we are a very far-out
group of people. Everyone is a certified genius here and we work
together for our goals for the love of it all. Good vs. Don't be Evil
... We are too smart to sell out to Porn, Gambling and other things that
infect our society for profit. Good always wins, and conservative values
will bring us our victory in the market place.
Summing it up !!!
God controls all creative thought it's what you
do with it that defines who you are.
Are you Good or Evil?
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| 24th May |
Safer Searches... |
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| |
Google starts offering searches via SSL
Permalink |
Based on
article
from arstechnica.com
|
Google
has begun rolling out an encrypted version of its search engine in an
effort to protect Internet users from having their searches sniffed by
Governments, ISPs and others on their network. The new version of Google
is SSL encrypted and located at
https://www.google.com.
SSL search means that an encrypted connection is created between your
browser and Google's servers. When you perform a search, your search
terms and whatever results come back from them will only be visible to
you. Anyone who might be sniffing packets on your network (such as, say,
Google!) won't be able to see what you're looking up.
Google says it's only in beta for now. The reasoning for the
beta tag is because SSL only covers the core search technology for the
time being, and not for for searches such as Google Maps or Google
Images.
Also, since SSL connections require additional time to set up the
encryption between your browser and the remote web server, your
experience with search over SSL might be slightly slower than your
regular Google search experience, Google wrote in a blog post.
|
| 17th May |
Dangerous Tweets... |
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Bad taste jokes have become a sackable offence
Permalink |
See article
from guardian.co.uk
by Judith Ireland
|
Australia
has been utterly captivated over the past week, but not by the old
motherland's general election or the hoopla over its own federal budget.
The biggest story has concerned nothing but a couple of tweets.
It started with Australia's annual television awards (the
unfortunately named Logies), which inspired comedian and the Age
newspaper columnist, Catherine Deveny, to let fly on Twitter. When Steve
Irwin's 11-year-old daughter hit the red carpet, Deveny observed: I
do so hope Bindi Irwin gets laid. On seeing fellow comedian Rove
McManus, who lost his wife to cancer in 2006, she tweeted: Rove and
[new wife] Tasma look so cute
hope she doesn't die, too.
It took two days of public outrage before the Age sacked Deveny,
setting the Twitter and blogospheres further aflutter. Even a week after
the story broke, Deveny's response on a rival website clocked over 900
comments from crowing anti-Devenyists and aggrieved free speech
supporters.
...Read full article
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| 15th May |
Opting Out of Privacy... |
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Concerns about Facebook and privacy
Permalink |
See article
from pcworld.com
by Dan Tynan
|
In
a misguided effort to manage the roiling discontent about Facebook's
privacy bait and switch tactics, Vice President for Public Policy Elliot
Schrage volunteered to take questions from New York Times readers.
ITworld forbids me from using the words I'd normally employ to
describe what came out of Schrage. Suffice it to say it was the most
egregious display of corporate doublespeak this side of Microsoft.
If you needed another reason not to trust Facebook, Schrage provided
several. Here's bald-faced lie #1. A reader asked why not make
everything on Facebook opt in in other words, it's private
unless the user decides to make it public. Here's Schrage's answer:
Everything is opt-in on Facebook. Participating in the service is
a choice. We want people to continue to choose Facebook every day.
Adding information uploading photos or posting status updates or
like a Page are also all opt-in. Please don't share if you're not
comfortable.
It's true that nobody's putting a gun to your head to join Facebook
or post your naked cell photos pics (not yet, anyway). But once you do,
most of your personal information your biography, interests, posts,
friends, families, relationships, location, education, and more -- are
shared with everyone by default. You have to go in and change the
settings to make them private.
That's not opt-in model, that's an opt-out model. Either Schrage
doesn't understand the difference (which would be bad) or understands it
but hopes you don't (which is worse).
...Read the full article
|
| 13th May |
Encyclopedia of the Politically Correct... |
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Removalists, deletists and censorists get their way over Wikipedia images
Permalink |
9th May 2010. Based on
article
from pcpro.co.uk
|
Founder
Jimmy Wales has poured fuel on the Wikimedia pornography row, by
encouraging admins to delete images that appeal solely to prurient
interests.
The comments come Wikipedia co-founder Larry Sagner reported the
Wikimedia Foundation to the FBI for serving up depictions of child
sexual molestation on its servers.
The report brought a scathing response from the Foundation, which
claimed we don't have material we would deem to be illegal. If we
did, we would remove it. The organisation denied hearing from the
authorities.
However, Wales has now waded into the argument by encouraging
immediate deletion of pornographic content, calling for a large-scale
cleanup project of the site: Wikimedia Commons admins who wish to
remove from the project all images that are of little or no educational
value but which appeal solely to prurient interests have my full support.
I am stating here my public support for admins who are prepared to
enforce quality standards and get rid of a large quantity of what can
only be characterised as 'trolling' images of people's personal
pornography collections..
In a separate post he claimed Wikimedia would be making a formal
statement on the issue in the next few days.
Update:
Jimmy Wales prevented from vandalising his own website
13th May 2010. Based on
article
from news.bbc.co.uk
Wikipedia co-founder, Jimmy Wales, has given up some of his site
privileges following protests by contributors angered that he deleted
images without consultation.
Wales had previously urged the removal of pornographic content
from the user-generated site. This followed a complaint about child
pornography to the FBI from another Wikipedia co-founder and the
subsequent haranguing from the nutters of Fox News.
In early April, the estranged co-founder, Larry Sanger, reported
Wikimedia Commons to the FBI, alleging that the organisation was
knowingly distributing child pornography.
Last week, administrators of Wikimedia Commons, a media file store
widely used for Wikipedia articles, deleted hundreds of images. Some
images deemed by the Wikipedia community to have educational merit have
since been reinstated.
Pressure on the organisation had increased after Fox News reported
the story, contacting a number of high-profile corporate donors to the
Wikimedia Foundation, which owns Wikipedia, Wikimedia Commons and
related sites. Continue reading the main story
Wales has faced criticism from the band of volunteers who help to
maintain the site, some of whom argued that the decision to delete was
undemocratic and taken too quickly. They also expressed concerns that
valid material might be deleted accidentally.
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