adewale / tags / privacy

Tagged with “privacy” (4) activity chart

  1. The Problem of Sock Puppets

    On the Media, a US NPR program, examines what happened when Dilbert creator Scott Adams joined Metafilter to defend himself in a forum criticizing him, but did so using a pseudonym. Scott Adams was outed very quickly by members in the forum, but Metafilter also confirmed it was Scott Adams after he refused to admit it himself.

    A great overview explaining the various cultures and community mores that exist across the internet, just as all communities differ from each other. The best overview how complicated social can be in 6 minutes.

    —Huffduffed by adewale 2 years ago

  2. This Week In Google 21: Love Your Scroll Bar

    Hosts: Leo Laporte, Gina Trapani, Jeff Jarvis, and Kevin Marks

    Android Listen, Huffduffer, a real Google phone, Schmidt and privacy, Yelp, and more.

    http://www.twit.tv/twig21

    —Huffduffed by adewale 3 years ago

  3. Is Privacy Dead or Just Very Confused?

    While many assert that "privacy is dead," the complex ways in which people try to control access and visibility suggest that it’s just very confused. Rather than throwing the baby out with the bath water, let’s discuss people’s understanding and experiences of privacy and find ways to 2.0-ify it.

    danah boyd, Microsoft Research

    Judith Donath, MIT Media Laboratory

    Siva Vaidhyanathan, University of Virginia

    Alice Marwick, New York University

    —Huffduffed by adewale 3 years ago

  4. Evan ‘Rabble’ Henshaw-Plath on Fire Eagle

    "Evan ‘Rabble’ Henshaw-Plath of Yahoo, Brickhouse, gives a brief talk about the very exciting work he is doing on Fire Eagle, a Yahoo! owned service that acts as a store for user location (in real-time!) information. A backbone for other location and geo-aware based services and applications.

    Rabble argues for Fire Eagle, as the coming glue between what services service providers want to provide, what information they have access to about their users. And what services that the users and customers of said service providers ask for. Through Fire Eagle, users can decide, which services, and service providers they want to share their private information with. And how service providers need to give their users tangible, compelling reasons to get access to private information about these users."

    —Huffduffed by adewale 4 years ago