Worth a Look: History of the Internet

Counter-Oppression/Counter-Dictatorship Practices, Cyberscams, malware, spam, InfoOps (IO), Methods & Process, Research resources, Standards, Technologies, Tools, Worth A Look
Berto Jongman Recommends...

A great adjustment in human affairs is underway. Political, commercial and cultural life is changing from the centralized, hierarchical and standardized structures of the industrial age to something radically different: the economy of the emerging digital era.

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A History of the Internet and the Digital Future tells the story of the development of the Internet from the 1950s to the present, and examines how the balance of power has shifted between the individual and the state in the areas of censorship, copyright infringement, intellectual freedom and terrorism and warfare. Johnny Ryan explains how the Internet has revolutionized political campaigns; how the development of the World Wide Web enfranchised a new online population of assertive, niche consumers; and how the dot-com bust taught smarter firms to capitalize on the power of digital artisans.

In the coming years, platforms such as the iPhone and Android rise or fall depending on their treading the line between proprietary control and open innovation. The trends of the past may hold out hope for the record and newspaper industry. From the government-controlled systems of the ColdWar to today’s move towards cloud computing, user-driven content and the new global commons, this book reveals the trends that are shaping the businesses, politics, and media of the digital future.

See Also:

On the Way to the Web: The Secret History of the Internet and Its Founders (2008)

The Internet Revolution: The Not-for-Dummies Guide to the History, Technology, and Use of the Internet (2005)

Inventing the Internet (Inside Technology) (2000)

History of the Internet: A Chronology, 1843 to Present (1999)

Where Wizards Stay Up Late: The Origins Of The Internet (1998)

Worth a Look: Optimistic About America (Slide Show)

Worth A Look
John Gerzema and Michael D'Antonio

Starting with extensive data, which showed that Americans began to change their borrow-and-spend ways long before the start of the crisis, we — as authors of Spend Shift — set off across the country to find people who were reinventing their lives in the wake of the “Great Recession.” The stories we gleaned help us see how the crisis has rearranged our priorities, awakened our creativity, and reconnected us to the people and things that really matter. The faces of the Spend Shift suggest that the consumer is adaptable, business is adaptable, and the future is not as dim as it appears.

15 Slides with Paragraph Stories

Worth a Look: Momentum Crowdsourcing for Open Source Intelligence

About the Idea, Worth A Look
John Robb

MOMENTUM: REAL OPEN SOURCE INTELLIGENCE

Here's a short essay on a new software tool my team built called Momentum. It does something pretty unusual and worthy of note.  It uses crowdsourcing (by leveraging the work of 500 million users on global social networks) to make open source intelligence gathering easy.*

___________________

Here are some real life events:  A YouTube video sparks massive ethnic riots in China.  3 Colombians start a Facebook group that puts 5 million protesters on the streets.  The online manifesto of a disturbed man holding hostages at a US corporation.  The list of keywords that China's great firewall blocks.  A YouTube video showing Iranian militia actually shooting protesters.  The list goes on and on.

These are the kinds of events that should be detected by OSINT analysts.  However, they aren't detecting them.  Why not?  The tools they are using don't make finding this information easy.

Here's why.  A major problem with the tools that automate open source intelligence gathering is that relevance, serendipity (the propensity of making fortunate discoveries while looking for something else), and timeliness (the ability to find content that matters quickly) are considered tradeoffs.  You can't focus on relevance without losing serendipity and you can't focus on serendipity without losing timeliness.

For example:

I am gathering open source intelligence on Iran using the Web.  But I run into the following problems with the tools I normally use:

Continue reading “Worth a Look: Momentum Crowdsourcing for Open Source Intelligence”

Worth a Look: Tomdispatch as Window on Reality

Worth A Look
DefDog Recommends...

Tomdispatch.com is for anyone seeking a deeper understanding of our
post-9/11 world and a clear sense of how our imperial globe actually
works.

The site's founder and editor Tom Engelhardt.

Chalmers Johnson is among the contributors.  Here is a link to an older but still relevant entry by the author of BlowbackSorrows of Empire, and Nemisis.

Portrait of a Sagging Empire

Posted by Chalmers Johnson at 9:29am, August 17, 2010.
Nation Books is an alternative press focused on truth-telling in the public interest, and the sponsor of the Tomdispatch Project.
See Also:

Worth a Look: Chevon Thinks We’re Stupid….

Worth A Look

Funny Or Die: Chevron ‘We Agree' Ad Spoofed For ‘Chevron Thinks We're Stupid' Campaign (VIDEO)

Oil giant Chevron's new ‘We Agree‘ ad campaign recently made unintended headlines when notorious pranksters The Yes Men teamed up with Rainforest Action Network and Amazon Watch to release a simultaneous fake press release and website that mimicked Chevron's new campaign while derailing the company by calling it out for its alleged failures and mistakes.

The group has now launched the Chevron Thinks We're Stupid website, calling on all creative individuals to submit their own spoof Chevron ad, and join in the lambasting of the company for their greenwash.

Funny Or Die has stepped up to the plate with a hilarious rendition that nearly frame-for-frame lampoons one of Chevron's own commercials. The video not only mocks Chevron's useless dropping of key words like “renewable energy,” but also its character's bearded-in-denim imagery to appeal to environmentalists.

“Chevron is spending tens of millions of dollars on this ad campaign because it's easier than just making changes,” the impersonated Chevron employee says, admitting that really they just “think you people are f–king idiots.”

Check out the video below, and visit ChevronThinksWereStupid.org to view other spoof ads and submit your own.

WATCH:

Tip of the Hat to the Huffington Post.

Worth a Look: Assorted Headlines…

Worth A Look
DefDog Recommends...

PAKISTAN: Of Taliban and floods

Russia raises its price to rescue Nato from Afghan quagmire

Your COIN Is No Good Here

China Wrests Supercomputer Title From U.S.

Big ideas are emerging from small countries

Armed with new treaty, Europe amplifies objections to U.S. data-sharing demands

Was Estonian Town The Mother Of All Russian Hacker Networks?

Phi Beta Iota: In our view, cyber-security must be a pervasive endeavor that begins with solid code and goes from there.  That is not how the US is approaching the problem, hence the US will fail, at great expense, to achieve the outcome we all require.  The latter article also highlights Gandhi's observation that idle minds will make mischief.  Full employment for all is a huge part of making security for all achievable.