Miscellaneous

http://prospect.org/article/want-predict-future-surveillance-ask-poor-communities

http://prospect.org/article/want-predict-future-surveillance-ask-poor-communities

A wonderful article from colleague Virginia Eubanks. She points out that this is not an individual concern, but a community concern. It is not a privacy issue but a civil rights issue. We need to move from a fixation on privacy towards a future based on digital human rights. The alarm is raised when it stops being strategies used to keep in check the unruly people not like us – the immigrants, the welfare recipients, the radicals in foreign countries – and starts being a strategy to keep an eye on us middle and upper middle class. But instead of us decrying the breach of our privacy, we need to come to see how human rights have been violated throughout, not just ours but those on whom these techniques have been used for decades.

Thanks, Virginia, for a wonderfully thoughtful piece!

Community Informatics · Technology Reviews

Why Linux and not Microsoft

Here’s an interesting thread that just came across the Digital Inclusion Network mailing list, and my response to a question posed in the thread: On Jan 17, 2014 2:13 PM, “Phil Shapiro” <pshapiro@his.com> wrote: This is quite some story. http://www.pennmanor.net/techblog/?cat=69 phil — Phil Shapiro, pshapiro@his.com Sent: Saturday, January 18, 2014 8:47 AM To: inclusion@forums.e-democracy.org Subject:… Continue reading Why Linux and not Microsoft

Civics · Community Informatics · Social Justice

The Hoopla Over the DC Court’s Ruling and Net Neutrality

There are several good articles quickly appearing regarding the DC Court’s rulings in favor of Verizon’s case against the FCC. I encourage readers to take a look at Sam Gusten’s Time Business and Money article, Dian Schaffhauser’s Campus Technology article, and Barbara Stripling’s Wired article for impacts related to business, education, and libraries, for instance.… Continue reading The Hoopla Over the DC Court’s Ruling and Net Neutrality