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Thursday, 21 August 2003
legal - blog hyperlinks

http://www.nwfusion.com/compendium/archive/002923.html

http://www.technobiblio.com/archives/cat_legal.html

http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/palfrey/discuss/msgReader$19

Posted by blog/dipeshkpatel at 7:57 AM BST
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legal issues blogging - corporate information policy making inthe light of social software
Many people publish as if they were untouchable, assuming that because what they write appears in a virtual world, it won't come back to burn them in the "real" world. Many overlook the fact that their rants can potentially reach millions of people when posted on the Internet.

The same law that relates to publishing in the offline world, generally speaking, applies to material posted publicly on a Web log, legal and human resources experts said. Posting information or opinions on the Internet is not much different from publishing in a newspaper, and if the information is defamatory, compromises trade secrets, or violates copyright or trademark regulations, the publisher could face legal claims and monetary damages.

Authors generally are obligated to publish as facts only what they believe to be true. But stating opinions can be tricky, especially when those views relate to workplace issues, said Bret Fausett, a Los Angeles-based lawyer.

Fausett keeps a Web log that chronicles the goings-on at the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers, the nonprofit organization in charge of managing the system of Internet addresses. It's one thing for people to use their personal Web sites to write reviews of, say, the hit TV show "The Sopranos," he said. "As long as you don't work for HBO, that's great."

But "it's another thing to say, 'Our server crashed today, and the idiot IT person at our company couldn't get the thing running.' "

Evan Williams, co-founder of Pyra Labs, the San Francisco company behind the Blogger.com publishing software, said the people at Pyra do not monitor content, though they do investigate complaints.

"If something is clearly illegal, we will remove it. But that's pretty rare," Williams wrote in response to an e-mail query.

More common, Williams said, is that an "employee/blogger will contact us (in a panic) when he or she has gotten in trouble for blogging and needs to know how to take something down before they get sued."

Experts on Web publishing warned that anyone digging for details about a person or company via Google or other search engines can unearth reams of archived Web log material.

The most flippant of remarks published two years ago could broadcast something a company doesn't want competitors or potential clients to know.

Even with supposedly anonymous Web logs, clues can tip off readers to people's identities, whether it's jargon the writers use, references to conversations between cubicle-mates or stories about personal experiences.

"The Internet creates a veil of separation between you and other people," said Gregory Alan Rutchik, managing partner at the Arts and Technology Group, a San Francisco firm specializing in copyright and publishing law. "Don't be misled by the fact that you're sitting in a room, behind a locked door, at your computer. There's ways to find out who you are."

For instance, those aggrieved by a posting have occasionally gone to court to force Internet service providers to identify customers or cut off access to offending sites.

One woman, a Web designer who asked that her name not be used, said she lost her job because of what she wrote on her Web log.

She was summoned to her supervisor's office to discuss the narratives -- often derogatory -- that she'd written about her company and co-workers. Although it doesn't say so on her Web site, the blog is mostly fiction, consisting of veiled references and often composites of people, she said.

After the meeting, she thought she'd succeeded in escaping with merely a slap on the wrist. "We talked about it and resolved things, and I was never going to talk about work on my Web site again," she said. "I was under the impression everything was okay."

Two days later, she was fired. "I was shocked that they would take it seriously," she said, "and that little old me with this little old Web site would cause such a stir."

Pam Farr, president of Cabot Advisory Group LLC, a human resources consulting firm in New Jersey, said such a scenario is not unusual. "Many a career has been ruined by blasting off an angry diatribe whether in person or in cyberspace," she said.

Many large companies have a policy that says only authorized workers, such as those in the public relations department, are allowed to reveal certain types of information, Farr said. Employees may assert that they have a right to express their opinions. But even then, she said, there needs to be a statement clearly marked on the Web site saying "this in no way represents a position of my company."

"With the advent of cyberspace, we've had to evolve these policies," Farr said. "Somewhere between First Amendment rights and total repression there is a practical middle ground."

She advises companies to craft an "information policy" that defines what is considered proprietary information, describes where that information resides and details who owns it.


Posted by blog/dipeshkpatel at 7:43 AM BST
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Wednesday, 20 August 2003
american generosity or corporate control
Bush understands that to be prosperous as a world economy, we Americans must embrace free trade. So he would fight to tear down the international barriers to innovation that have already been raised and work to ensure that new ones are not erected. Among other things, Bush would:

* Make the Internet a duty-free and tariff-free zone worldwide.

* Fight to tear down nontariff barriers to trade in information technology.

* Step up efforts to combat piracy of American ideas and intellectual property.

* Promote the development of internationally compatible standards for e-commerce.

In all these things, Bush is committed to encouraging and supporting solutions conceived, developed and led by industry itself, wherever possible. He also plans to establish a stable environment that encourages research and innovation without attempting to direct them. One key way to spur creativity is enacting a permanent tax credit for research and development. The R&D Experimentation Tax Credit would encourage long-term investment in research by high-technology companies and thereby strengthen America?s technological leadership. It is time to get rid of the temporary on-again, off-again nature of this credit, which confuses and disrupts corporate planning. As president, Bush would lead Congress toward making the tax credit permanent. He has also proposed doubling the research budget of the National Institutes of Health.

Posted by blog/dipeshkpatel at 7:55 AM BST
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http://www1.soc.american.edu/students/ij/co_3/digitaldivide/definingarticle.htm

Posted by blog/dipeshkpatel at 7:41 AM BST
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The digital divide is a social issue referring to the differing amount of information between those who have access to the Internet and those who do not. The term became popular among concerned parties, such as scholars, policy makers, and advocacy groups, in the late 1990s.

Broadly speaking, the difference is not necessarily determined by the access to the Internet, but any ICTs (Information and Communications Technologies) and media that different segments of society can use. With regards to the Internet, the access is only one aspect, but the quality of connection and auxiliary services, processing speed and other capabilities of the computer used, and other factors could also be part of the issue. (Davison and Cotten; 2003).

Posted by blog/dipeshkpatel at 7:38 AM BST
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Sunday, 17 August 2003
time wasting
without precise goal and time span - its all to easy to get distratced with other comments and hyperlinks, take you away from what you went out to search for in the first place.

Need to be more selective and more ruthless with time mangement - yes easy to waste time - I seem to have no spare time as it is.

Posted by blog/dipeshkpatel at 12:38 PM BST
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Useful tool
Like the idea that we can customise the blog homepage. A truly connected document with lots of resources that can be interconnected.

New template in the future will help.Hopefully tools can be provided to help develop the community.Good place to start on the web.I've started to use it as my homepage easy place to start on the web.

As you change , evolve and adapt the blog can be altered to suit you unique circumstances.The thoughts are not necessarily there to be shared with everyone , but they are transparent, recorded , retreivable, and comments can be made, wrong or right that is for your own cognitive editor to monitor and as your skills develop - I feel a useful tool to help with connectivity.

Posted by blog/dipeshkpatel at 12:33 PM BST
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Sunday, 10 August 2003

Weblogs, once again on the cutting edge of the internet, are starting to move in this direction, with the recent launch of two major advertising services, Google Ad-Sense and BlogAds.

Posted by blog/dipeshkpatel at 5:02 PM BST
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Free forum
The ProjectForum software runs as a server application on a central server or your own computer, and you and others use your web browser to connect to the software, the same as you would any other web site. All regular use by you or your users therefore is done via any standard web browser (IE, Netscape, Safari, Opera, etc.) running on any platform.

The software is designed to be able to run on your normal desktop computer if you want; you do not need to have special "server" hardware (though you can certainly put it on a server if you have one available), existing web server software, etc.

The computer you run the software on should be regularly connected to the network (e.g. have a static IP address/name), be able to listen on port 3455 or another port such as 80, and at least 5mb of free disk space (though you'll want more as your groups use ProjectForum).

The server software will run on any machine running Windows 98/ME/NT/2000/XP, Mac OS X 10.1 or higher, Linux (kernel 2.2 or higher), or FreeBSD 4.5 or higher.

Posted by blog/dipeshkpatel at 10:18 AM BST
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free forum tools
http://www.courseforum.com/projectforum/

Posted by blog/dipeshkpatel at 10:16 AM BST
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