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| Piracy and privacy Internet activists flexed some impressive muscle over the last couple of weeks in working to block Congress from enacting the Stop Online Privacy Act (SOPA), which would have put legal restraints and restrictions on search engines, advertising networks, internet service providers, and other online sites and services as a means of stemming the unauthorized trade of copyrighted works and other forms [..] |
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ELSPA Celebrates First Anti-Piracy Raid Of 2009 [Anti-piracy] The Entertainment and Leisure Software Publishers Association rings in the new year with news of their first anti-piracy raid of 2009, in which they seized computers and more than 1,000 illegally copied games. The raid occurred in Staffordshire, England, at a house that was runnin [..] |
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 | Rough Type: Nicholas Carr's Blog | Relevance: |
| Privacy is relative January 17, 2010: "If you have something that you don't want anyone to know, maybe you shouldn't be doing it in the first place." -Eric Schmidt November 10, 2010: "Google CEO Eric Schmidt announced the salary hike in a memo late Tuesday, a copy of which was obtained by Fortune. The memo was also leaked to Business Insider, which broke the news. Within hours, Google notified its staff that it had t [..] |
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 | Rough Type: Nicholas Carr's Blog | Relevance: |
| Other people's privacy In the wake of Google's revelation last week of a concerted, sophisticated cyber attack on many corporate networks, including its own Gmail service, Eric Schmidt's recent comments about privacy become even more troubling. As you'll recall, in a December 3 CNBC interview, Schmidt said, "If you have something that you don't want anyone to know, maybe you shouldn't be doing it in the first place. But [..] |
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 | Rough Type: Nicholas Carr's Blog | Relevance: |
| Privacy matters The Wall Street Journal has been running an important series about the collection and exploitation of personal information on the Net. As part of that series, it is featuring a debate today between me and the Cato Institute's Jim Harper about online privacy - more particularly, the tradeoff between privacy and personalization. My essay begins like this: In a 1963 Supreme Court opinion, Chief Justi [..] |
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 | Silicon Alley Insider | Relevance: |
How To Restore Your Privacy on Facebook Facebook's privacy rollback is especially terrible because it's so hard to reverse. Settings are so bewildering that even CEO Mark Zuckerberg has fiddled his two-to-three times this month. [..] |
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 | Silicon Alley Insider | Relevance: |
Twitter Privacy Breaks Down Twitter allows its users to set their messages as private -- so that only selected contacts can view them. But a Hungarian Web site, Webiszt n, says it figured out away to get past the barriers. Valleywag reports:
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 | Silicon Alley Insider | Relevance: |
| Everything You Need To Know About Facebook And Privacy In Six Minutes For several months earlier this year, the tech media was absolutely dominated by discussion of Facebook's privacy policies. Article after article condemned the company for exposing its users' information, with some even suggesting there was a big opportunity for its competitors.
Eventually, Facebook made some minor concessions, and the media got bored with the story. But the average Face [..] |
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