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''This is serious''

From arstecnica: Tim Berners-Lee on Net Neutrality: “This is serious.”:

“The inventor of the WWW has a short, to-the-point post that explains exactly why supporting real, bona fide net neutrality is the Right Thing to Do. I absolutely encourage you to read the entire post, but really he sums up the whole argument for net neutrality in his opening sentence:

“When I invented the Web, I didn’t have to ask anyone’s permission.”


Net Neutrality: This is serious | Decentralized Information Group (DIG) Breadcrumbs: Submitted by timbl on Wed, 2006-06-21 16:35. :: Public Policy and the Web

“When I invented the Web, I didn’t have to ask anyone’s permission. Now, hundreds of millions of people are using it freely. I am worried that that is going end in the USA.
I blogged on net neutrality before, and so did a lot of other people. (see e.g. Danny Weitzner, SaveTheInternet.com, etc.) Since then, some telecommunications companies spent a lot of money on public relations and TV ads, and the US House seems to have wavered from the path of preserving net neutrality. There has been some misinformation spread about. So here are some clarifications.
Net neutrality is this: […]”


Imported from MozDawg without title

*Reposted from my MozDawg on DAV and Docs*

I was enthralled earlier today by a general meeting run using FlashMeeting, produced by The Center for New Media, part of Knowledge Media Institute at the Open University. Looking through their list of projects and other documents eventually lead me to a fabulous proposal.

The Open University; Open Content Initiative – The OCI Proposal

“The University has an extensive reservoir of high-quality learning materials available in a variety of formats. It proposes to explore how best to make some of these freely accessible in an international web-based open content environment and, in so doing, to advance open content delivery methods and technologies”

Hear, hear!


Also of note:

  • Rostra – Intelligent News Agency Technologies
  • eXtrem Webcasting
  • XO – the automatic presentation creator and XO backlot
  • From the Compendium group: Mimetic – Meeting Memory Technology Informing Collaboration; Compendium for indexing online meetings
  • On a different beat:

  • AccessGrid3
  • CoAKTinG (Collaborative Advanced Knowledge Technologies in the Grid), from AKT (Advanced Knowledge Technologies)
  • “Information is all around us. Never has it been so easy to collect. Never has it been so easy to store. Never has there been such easy access to it. And yet this info-bonanza is seen all too frequently not as a boon, but as a burden. The information you actually need is often concealed by information that you don’t need; it is covered by a blanket of info-smog. To realise the opportunity of our information-rich environment, you need to extract knowledge from information, value from the info-smog. New resources, such as the semantic web, are the key to extracting the value from your informational assets.

    Let us define knowledge as usable information. What does “usable” mean here? …”

  • Co-OPR: Collaborative Operations for Personnel Recovery, from AIAI, School of Informatics at the University of Edinburgh
  • From JISC (Joint Information Systems Committee)Virtual Research Environments Programme

  • "Users", "readers", "participants" … what's in a word?

    I just posted a long item in ”Beyond Greed”. Here’s part of it:


    In the first post to the blog for the new “Democratic Strategist“, Scott Winship (the Managing Editor) included this invitation:

    “you (dear reader) can help make this a better blog by passing along links to articles or studies that I can deconstruct. I know that sounds like I’m pushing my work off on you, but hey”

    My reply was this:

    Passing along links and articles you can deconstruct? Ok!

    FWIW the phrase I have been using to describe my project is “participatory deliberation”. Can we deliberate interactively? It seems, from a decades-long survey of web activity, that we can either interact or deliberate in a manner that is more or less traditional, i.e. on our own, publishing the products of that deliberation.

    Perhaps the best we can do is to feed a few with grist for their mills. I think not. And if so? Then I wish you and your group the most wholesome success.”

    Coincidentally, Jon Udell’s latest was on a related subject:

    “For an internal IDG newsletter I was asked to pick the industry buzzword that most annoys me and write a brief essay explaining why. I chose user-generated content and wrote the following:

    “Everything about this buzzphrase annoys me.
    […]
    IT has customers and clients, not users. IT-oriented publishers have readers, not users.

    Second, “content” is a word that reminds me more of sausage than of storytelling. As writers and editors we don’t “generate” “content,” we tell stories that inform, educate, and entertain — or should.

    Now that the original vision of a two-way web is finally made real, we can distinguish between amateur storytellers (in the best and highest sense of amateur) and professional storytellers. Thanks to the contributions of the amateurs — who are of course professional practitioners of the disciplines that we “cover” — we can tell deeper, richer, more well-informed stories about the products and services they create, and the work they do. Those stories are valuable, and the business I want to be in is based on that value, not on the ”monetization” of ”user-generated content”.

    So I will instead propose reader-created context. […] Much of own work — in tagging, in intelligent search, in screencasting — aims to empower readers, listeners, and viewers to create context and learn on demand. Enlightened 21st-century publishers will create value from that kind of empowerment too.”

    My point is simple: until we have /more/ we shouldn’t be overly concerned about the terminology and nomenclature.

    Really … who doesn’t say “I use Firefox” (or Opera or whatever) or “I use a Mac” (likewise). But bottom-line: how much real participation is there? How much story-sharing is there, really? Ohhhhh for sure, lots of story-telling … but truly: how much interaction?

    So my reply to Jon was this:

    “If there’s an antidote to the “false consensus effect” it has to be interaction. My thinking about “participatory deliberation” is as informed by tribal memories of camp-fire chats as by liberal notions of group discernment; either way, meaning is a social construct.

    Having said that … what else but “users”? “Participants” is unwieldy, “contributers” likewise, and sounds to one-directional. “Reader-created” … nice, but it won’t displace “user”. 🙂

    BTW: in the late 60s a public education process arose from the actual needs of kidz going to do public service in developing countries; they needed to learn, so it came to be that those returning “taught” as a form of de-compression … debriefing, in effect. The resources they used in their presentations comprised the centers’ libraries. The network of those centers lasted through into the early 90s. (I was on the scene and tried to use the web as a source of energy to give that network a new lease on life … but failed.) My point is this: the entities that arose were referred to as being “learner-centered”, ergo: The Edmonton Cross-cultural Learner Center.

    Old things new again? My “ParDelib” aims at the urge to consume / contribute / participate … like Mozilla, except concentrating on public discourse. heh … try packaging /that/! ;-)”


    Today's Gleanings

  • Three new blogs:
    *Rob Fay
    *Brian Alvey
    *Alex Rudloff
  • An interesting ”Web2.0” app: LinkedIn; “Relationships Matter”
  • Selected reading: “Transforming Your Intranet” (PDF of Chapter 5) –

    “Our chapter is entitled, “Preparing for Intranet 2.0: how to integrate new communication technology into your intranet.” The intranet is changing. New communication technology is making it less a one-way publishing vehicle and more a platform for two-way communication, collaboration and innovation. In this chapter, we discuss these new technologies – from RSS, to wikis to blogs.”

    And just for fun, NetscapeNew! www.beta.netscape.com


  • Sunday's gleanings

  • Three new blogs:
    *Rob Fay
    *Brian Alvey
    *Alex Rudloff
  • An interesting ”Web2.0” app: LinkedIn; “Relationships Matter”
  • Selected reading: “Transforming Your Intranet” (PDF of Chapter 5) –

    “Our chapter is entitled, “Preparing for Intranet 2.0: how to integrate new communication technology into your intranet.” The intranet is changing. New communication technology is making it less a one-way publishing vehicle and more a platform for two-way communication, collaboration and innovation. In this chapter, we discuss these new technologies – from RSS, to wikis to blogs.”

  • And just for fun, NetscapeNew! www.beta.netscape.com


    Fuzzy? Great … but please don't go incoherent on me.

    This post is at http://gnodal.livejournal.com/57614.html … but it can also be reached at http://tinyurl.com/s5pgc … is that a bad thing? Good?

    There is no such space as gnodal.livejournal.com (which, BTW, can also be reached at livejournal.com/~gnodal/); that’s a handy representation that makes a long number human-readable. But what happens when things move?

    In the early days of the web my work creating user docs got me a 1Meg account on our community free net. After years of inactivity a sysop decided to cut that back to 500K. So files that had for years sat in chebucto.ns.ca/~ab006/ had to move. Likewise the is.dal.ca/canid/ account I had used while at Dalhousie University (programming VRML for the ethology lab in the psych department): the box was decomissioned and everything had to move.

    Even when things are done well enough to ensure that nothing gets lost (not the case here) whole sets of documents end up 404. The better and more popular the site, the more profound the ramifications.

    Raising this issue with Alexander Johannesen (Know many folk who would blog “The epistemological implications of Topic Maps for librarians“?) he replied, in part, “one of the policies at the library is that all links are permanent, meaning we get to hold on to all sorts of redundant crap and can’t introduce new paradigms in tools and practices of our content.*sigh*”

    I’m suspicious; when things are persistently wrong I get to feeling that we really don’t know what we’re doing.

    We’ve had DNS a long time … why is it so hard to index entities?


    Imported from MozDawg without title

    Ok, that’s it, I’m going to fix the template on this site … and maybe shift away from the army-surplus colour scheme too.


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