BERKMAN BUZZ: A look at the past week's online Berkman conversations. If you'd like to receive this by email, just sign up here. The Berkman Center for Internet & Society at Harvard University
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*On Jonathan Zittrain's Future of the Internet blog, we are encouraged to join the Herd(ict)
*Wendy Seltzer thinks Hasbro would have been better off had it played nice with Scrabulous
*The Internet & Democracy Project looks at the division of the South African blogosphere
*David Ardia helps us understand the legal risks associated with publishing online
*Digital Natives Reporters in the Field: "The Ballad of Zack McCune, Part 3"
*Weekly
Global Voices: "Georgia: South Ossetia Update"
*Weekly Publius Essay: "John Clippinger: On Technology, Security, Personhood and Privacy: An Appeal"
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The full buzz.
"This fall the Berkman Center
for Internet and Society (and JZ’s new home) will unveil Herdict, a
suite of programs that gathers data from users around the world about
their PCs’ performance and ability to access websites. Herdict
aggregates this information and aims to provide a real time picture of
users’ PC health and web accessibility. If you read The Future of the
Internet or saw some of the interviews, or came to Berkman@10, Herdict
is the “take away.” For the Internet we know and love is under
attack..."
From Elfine Peterson's blogpost for Johnathan Zittrain's Future of the
Internet blog, "Protect your PC, Protect our Network, Protect the
Internet: JOIN Herdict"
"Hasbro should have settled with the Scrabulous developers, not sued.
While Hasbro was scrapping with Mattel over rights to develop an
official online Scrabble (the two split geographic ownership of the
Scrabble trademark), the Agarwalla brothers were building one. Their
Facebook app, launched a year ago, won a loyal following among Scrabble
fans who appreciated a chance to play the word game online, with
friends in their social networks. Scrabulous listened to user
suggestions, enhancing the online version to the point where it could
boast 1.3 million monthly users and a 4.2 star rating, (as compared to
235k users giving Hasbro’s recently launched “beta” 1.2 stars)..."
From Wendy Seltzer's blogpost, "Follow the Lead-Users, Not with Cease-and-Desists"
"In his article “The Daily We”, Cass Sunstein proposed a theory of
Internet polarization that has sparked interesting dialogue among cyber
philosophers. Essentially, Sunstein argues that while the web has
demonstrated its potential to democratize public discourse, the habits
of its users also feeds a kind of balkanization. Empirically, research
has shown how individuals tend to navigate toward online content that
fits within their own spheres of interest and opinion, creating a
fragmented and polarized net..."
From the Internet & Democracy Project blogpost, "Balkanization in the South African Blogosphere"
"Over the next few weeks I'll be posting about various topics we cover
in the CMLP's Citizen Media Legal Guide. If you would like to read any
of the previous "highlights" from the guide, you can find them here.
Today, I'll start with the risks associated with publishing online (for
information on the legal risks associated with gathering, as opposed to
publishing, information, see the Newsgathering section of the CMLP's
legal guide)..."
From David Ardia's blogpost, "Understanding Your Legal Risks When You Blog or Publish Online"
"If you need a
refresher, watch Part I and Part II. In April of last year, Zack
McCune was sued by the RIAA. He ended up $3,000 lighter (he settled),
but with a much richer understanding of the contemporary debate
surrounding music, copyright law, and file sharing. Part I gives an
intro to his story, while Part II explores the disconnect between young
downloaders and the recording industry. Part III, presented here,
concludes Zack’s misadventure and examines where it led him: to the
Free Culture Movement, which advocates more flexible intellectual
property law..."
From the Digital Natives Project blogpost, "The Ballad of Zack McCune, Part 3"
"With local and international media outlets reporting that fighting is
spilling over into Georgia proper, the latest military confrontation
with Russia over the breakaway region of South Ossetia looks
increasingly like war. Wu Wei reports from Tbilisi that the Vaziani
military base just outside the Georgian capital has been bombed. The
signs look very ominous indeed...'"
From Onnik Krikorian's blogpost for Global Voices,
"Georgia: South Ossetia Update"
"American democracy has weathered many storms in its 239 years. Its
survival and prosperity are consequences of both good fortune as well
as the remarkable foresight and common sense of its Founders. However,
a new kind of challenge looms on the horizon, unanticipated by even the
most prophetic of the Founding Fathers. It is Technology, more
specifically, digital technology, which both offers the promise of
unfettered communication, learning, and global commerce, and the
prospect of a Panopticon-like State. Two extremes, two doors; each with
radically different outcomes..."
From the Publius essay by John Clippinger, "On Technology, Security, Personhood and Privacy: An Appeal"
Last updated October 23, 2008