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"Here you can view over 6500 photos of 462 sites in seventeen countries, with background information and virtual tours." [MetaFilter]
11:36:08 PM comment [] trackback []
My Boston Globe op-ed on net-politics
I've got an op-ed in today's Boston Globe about the relationship between the Internet and poltiics:
"When Trent Lott's revealing faux pas about Strom Thurmond was lightly touched upon by the press, the Internet's howling masses seized on the story, reviving it with a fresh angle -- Lott backhandedly endorses segregation! -- and kept the news cycle going long beyond its expected lifespan, until Lott crashed and burned and lost his post as Senate majority leader.Link Discuss [Boing Boing Blog]Huzzah. Of course, Lott is still a senator. In fact, every scandal exposed by or through the net -- INS witchhunts, stubbornly illusory WMDs, awarding of war-pork to Halliburton -- has yielded a decidedly hollow victory.
Information is power, but it's not enough. Modern emperors have learned the knack of spinning revelations of wrongdoing and bouncing back. Thus far, the Internet has lacked the follow-through necessary to make a lasting difference. That's changing. As the Internet matures as a place for political action, services like the Electronic Frontier Foundation's Action Center (punch in your ZIP and e-mail your lawmaker), MeetUp's coordinated nationwide kaffeeklatsches for every Democratic candidate (but especially Howard Dean) and MoveOn's thronged mailing list millions (who can conjure the budget for a major media-buy on 24 hours' notice) are providing the bodies, budget and means for advancing proposals and seeing them through to their ends."
10:05:25 PM comment [] trackback []
Columbia Newsblaster
...just visited Newsblaster for the first time in a bit. Two new things jump out at me: a search engine, and more significantly, the ability to compare articles about an event written in different countries. [Puzzlepieces]
9:48:12 PM comment [] trackback []
BBC to open up archive
BBC boss Greg Dyke plans to give the public full free online access to the corporation's archives.
[BBC News | Technology | World Edition]
8:39:55 PM comment [] trackback []
Re: WIPO
Slashdot and Canada’s National Post have chimed in on Professor Lessig’s post about the World Intellectual Property Organization… [Lessig News]
4:36:11 AM comment [] trackback []