Community Page
- techliberation.com/ Jump to website »
-
Subscribe -
Community
-
Top Commenters
-
Popular Threads
-
Recent Comments
- There seems to be a cottage industry dedicated to papering-over the negative effects that Internet piracy has on creative artists and others who toil to produce content. We devalue creative work by...
- My off the cuff response is that it doesn't make sense to compare the costs for a website of this size to a state website which serves 1/50th of the users. if it includes database support,...
- Regardless of what may or may not be happening with robots.txt files (a subject about which I have no data,) the fact remains that Google doesn't pay for content and doesn't produce...
- Thanks to our old friend, the DMCA, such devices such as the ones Chadlee mentioned, are illegal. Macrovision corporation is even succeeding in making plain old CGMS/Macro removal boxes disappear...
- Who records off an HDMI output anyway? All HDCP does is to create a slew of devices that dont work, especially Blu-ray players that enforce HDCP and off brand tv's that have non HDCP compliant...
The Technology Liberation Front
The Technology Liberation Front is the tech policy blog dedicated to keeping politicians' hands off the 'net and everything else related to technology.
This essay by Josh Chasin over at the MediaPost’s Metrics Insider Blog is the best piece I’ve read on behavioral marketing & privacy in a long time. I like this analogy, in particular:
Let’s say you are a tall, dashing, smartly dressed Chief Rese ... Continue reading »
Let’s say you are a tall, dashing, smartly dressed Chief Rese ... Continue reading »
1 year ago
Not unlike third-party cookies which, in my browser, result mostly in new AdBlock rules with liberal use of '*' in the regular expressions, like '*.googlesyndication.com/*'.
BTW, what happened to comments the preview button?
1 year ago
I don't think its fair to say "let's not confuse the two."
Search engines have a legitimate interest in collecting data to provide good customer service. Most people understand this. What they really fear is that companies are amassing huge databases of personal information (taken without adequate permission or explanation) which could fall into the hands of the government. This is the crux of the privacy debate in the EU. Let's not forget how Yahoo! helped the Chinese government arrest a political dissident.
1 year ago
Nordstrom.com can memorize millions of people's buying habits in an entirely reliable manner. Those buying habits can be turned over to big brother without my knowledge (hi AT&T!). They can be subpoenaed in a legal case to indicate my moral character. Most importantly, digital buying habits can be sold, and indeed must be sold if the business possessing them dissolves with outstanding debt.
The ethics of salespeople (while questionable) are human. their ability to withhold or forget information is vast. The ethics of corporations are purely profit driven. They do not forget, and they are rarely incentivised to withhold.