Posts tagged Stop

Privacy Group Sues FTC to Stop New Google Privacy Policy

The Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC) is suing the U.S. Federal Trade Commission in the hopes of stopping the new Google privacy policy, which is set to become effective March 1. The complaint was filed today in federal district court.

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Steve Jobs Email to Google: Stop Recruiting Apple Employees

Former Apple CEO Steve Jobs emailed Google to ask the firm to stop trying to recruit its staff, according to court documents made public in an investigation into the hiring policies in place at several major technology companies.

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Matt Cutts Convinces Some South Korean Govt. Websites To Stop Blocking Googlebot

Matt Cutts, international diplomat? That might be the more appropriate title for Google’s chief spam cop. According to the Wall Street Journal, Cutts is in South Korea this week and, in a presentation Monday night for about 80 government officials, webmasters, lawyers and journalists, managed…



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Amateur Food Porn Has Got To Stop

foodporn4.jpg“We eat with our eyes,” Iliana Regan told me, “and then it travels to our brain, and we love the sensation of the taste and the hot. I think it does a lot for the senses.” Pretty steamy, right? Food is sexy. There can be no doubt. But just like sex, it’s not always pretty. And in food and sex alike, humans love to take pictures.

There are laws about the sex part, but food is not censored in our society. The temptation is strong in the smartphone age to share our daily deeds with the world. It makes them less mundane. Meals are miraculous, really. Food is sacred. It gives life. But the rest of us on the Internet aren’t at the table with you. We can’t taste how good it is. Sometimes, if the light’s not quite right, or you’re too close up, what feels really good to you might look really gross to us.

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RWW’s Curt Hopkins: “Good lord, man. That’s the slop pail from a Burmese hospital.”
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This is just intended as a friendly tip. We would never presume to dictate what kinds of fun are or are not allowed. We just have some… let’s call them aesthetic concerns about the lack of aesthetic concern sometimes sorely needed before posting a photo of food. It’s food, remember? It’s supposed to look delicious. It may taste delicious, but your Instagram followers, who don’t get to taste it, might lose their appetites if you’re not careful.

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Food porn can be exceedingly pleasant. Professional photographers with solid equipment can make even everyday meals look irresistible. The website FoodPornDaily features one new shot every day, and they’re invariably good enough to make you say “MMMMMMmmmmmmm.” Iliana Regan has talented photographers capture the food she creates, and her images are lovely.

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But a smartphone sensor won’t always do it justice, and Instagram filters tend to turn things very brown. Just something to keep in mind.

“All pictures of food on social media look like the street next to a major university on Sunday morning.”
 - Curt Hopkins

“The key is good post-processing,” says ReadWriteWeb webmaster Jared Smith, “and not just slapping an Instagram filter on. This digs to a deeper issue. Instagram has introduced a lot of people to photography that otherwise probably wouldn’t participate. They get into the filters and the like.”

“Punk as fuck,” replies production editor Curt Hopkins. “And I like that. EXCEPT FOR FOOD.”

“There have been amateur photos of everything from crimes being committed to mountains to ladies to flowers that have been lovely, arresting, striking,” Hopkins says. “But there has not been one single amateur picture of food on a social media site that does not look like a pile of grey-beige recycled meatloaf. This includes lobster and cake.”

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Joe ‘Zonker’ Brockmeier has an important counterpoint. “You put them in your feed,” he reminds us. “You followed them.”

“I unfollow people for this all the time,” I reply, “but there are some people whose tastes I mostly like, or who are my friends, and I don’t want to miss out on their lives.”

“It’s like getting gross-rolled.”
 - John Paul Titlow

“You have to take the good and bad, then,” Brockmeier says. “Just saying – if a friend of mine is like ‘I don’t like cat pictures, stop posting them to Facebook,’ my response is, ‘You can unfriend me if you want. This is my feed. I’ll post whatever makes me happy.’ Now, if the cat pic is my cat licking herself, you might have a more valid criticism.”

What we are responding to here is the photo-culinary equivalent of cats licking their butts. The Web is a wonderful place to share photos. Lord knows there are enough ways to do it. But before you tweet your breakfast, take a look at the photo. Savor it. Then ask yourself, “Does this look good enough to eat?”

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Feel free to agree or disagree in the comments.

Disclosure: Iliana Regan is the creator of the Chicago underground supper club One Sister, for which ReadWriteWeb’s Alicia Eler has done some social media consulting in the past.

Lead photo by Iliana Regan

Photo 2 by Jon Mitchell

Photo 3 by Simon Mayo, found in Twitter’s top image search results for “stroganoff”

Photo 4 (the good one) by Jennifer Moran

Photo 5 by Joel Sierra, found in Twitter’s top image search results for “sushi”

Photo 6 by Nabila Huda

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Stop SOPA + New AdWords Capability Reflects Important 2012 SEO Strategy – Business Insider

Stop SOPA + New AdWords Capability Reflects Important 2012 SEO Strategy
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Targeting mobile users as much as possible is important, and will become even more so as technology advances and mobile SEO becomes even more significant to the advertising and marketing worlds. In a time when many people use their cell phones to find

and more »

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Stop SOPA: What A Blacked Out Internet Looks Like

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The Internet is fighting back.

Today, hundreds of websites including some of the largest and most influential sites in the world are going black to fight the Stop Online Piracy Act and Protect IP Act. The two acts would give unprecedented power to the government of the United States to order blocking and takedown notices of foreign websites found to be infringing on copyrighted material such as movies and music. The drumbeat is loud and most of the U.S. technology industry has come out against SOPA/PIPA.

Today’s blackout is akin to a “sit-in” protest. It is extreme but non-violent or threatening and once the point is made the players will move on to other forms of protest. Google has blacked out its logo on its homepage, Wikipedia is denying (top picture) access to entries and Reddit is giving facts about SOPA and what you can do to stop it. What does a blacked out Internet look like? Take a look at the screenshot below.

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Google

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Google’s top lawyer, David Drummond, explains why the search giant is censoring its homepage and logo in a blog post on the company’s official blog.

Fighting online piracy is extremely important. We are investing a lot of time and money in that fight. Last year alone we acted on copyright takedown notices for more than 5 million webpages and invested more than $60 million in the fight against ads appearing on bad sites. And we think there is more that can be done here–like targeted and focused steps to cut off the money supply to foreign pirate sites. If you cut off the money flow, you cut the incentive to steal.

Because we think there’s a good way forward that doesn’t cause collateral damage to the web, we’re joining Wikipedia, Twitter, Tumblr, Reddit, Mozilla and other Internet companies in speaking out against SOPA and PIPA. And we’re asking you to sign a petition and join the millions who have already reached out to Congress through phone calls, letters and petitions asking them to rethink SOPA and PIPA.

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Reddit

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The community at Reddit has been the driving force behind choosing Jan. 18, 2012 as the day to black out the Internet. The initiative has been a success, dragging many of the top sites on the Web into the protest. Reddit has one of the most informative blackout pages with FAQ, video and calls to action.

Craig’s List

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The original Web classifieds section has joined the protest with a link to an “About SOPA” page that helps educate users and gives easy action items for sending a letter to your Congressperson.

WordPress

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The popular WordPress homepage that would normally show the top trending sites within the company’s domain shows a series of would-be websites that have been censored. When clicking on those sites, users are brought to this page urging users to write Congress top stop SOPA/PIPA.

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Mozilla

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The open source organization and makers of the Firefox browser urge users to “protect the Internet.” The site features a prominent “take action now” button and gives reasons as to why Mozilla opposes SOPA/PIPA.

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MoveOn.Org

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Political activists MoveOn have joined the fray. Its blackout is being paid for by its political action committee and is not endorsed by any party or candidate.

Media Organizations

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Of prominent media members and pundits, few have been as influential or outspoken as Tim O’Reilly, founder of O’Reilly Media. He has written multiple times over the last week about how SOPA/PIPA are dangerous bills and why he opposes them. While many news sites have not taken the extreme measure of actually shutting down today (ReadWriteWeb included), O’Reilly has blacked out his entire site to protest SOPA.

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TechCrunch has edited its masthead to oppose censorship and help educate people on SOPA.

We at ReadWriteWeb are not blacking out today. We feel the community is better served if we report on the activity around the SOPA/PIPA protests and educate our readers about the bills. See our SOPA 2012 topic page for more information.

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It’s time to stop PROTECT IP

A couple months ago, I wrote this about SOPA:

SOPA galvanized the tech community, from start-ups to venture capitalists to the largest web companies. SOPA was an unexpected shock and a wake-up call. Well, guess what? Now the internet is awake. And I don’t think it’s going back to sleep any time soon. We might need to rally again in the near future, but we can do that. The internet learns fast.

Now it’s time to rally and get loud. It’s time to call your Senators. Heck, it’s time to ask your parents to call their Senators. If you think the internet is something different, something special, then take a few minutes to protect it. Groups that support SOPA have contributed nine times more money in Washington D.C. than our side. We need to drown out that money with the sound of our voices. I’d like to flood every Senator’s phone, email, and office with messages right up until January 24th.

If you need a quick refresher about why the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA) and PROTECT IP Act (PIPA) are horrible ideas, Google did a blog post talking about how SOPA and PIPA will censor the web and won’t stop actual pirates. Or read about how capricious takedowns can cause serious collateral damage. Find out how real, legitimate companies can be run out of business.

What you can do?
It’s time for action. Call your Senator right now. Spread the word to your friends and family. Promise not to vote for politicians who support SOPA. Print out some PDFs and post them at work or on your campus. There’s also protests and meetups happening today in New York, the Bay Area of California, and Seattle. Don’t live in the United States? You can still petition the State Department at americancensorship.org.

This is it. You want to look back months from now and know that you did everything you could to protect the internet. Call your Senators, educate your friends and family, and please spread the word about PROTECT IP and SOPA as widely as you can.

But if you can only spare five or six minutes, please call both of your senators below:


Thank you!

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The Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA) Stalls In Congress

The U.S. House Judiciary Committee abruptly adjourned today without voting on the Stop Online Privacy Act (SOPA), a controversial measure that would impose radical new requirements on search engines, ISPs, ad networks and other key internet players. The hearings will resume “earliest…



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Stop Online Piracy Act Version 2.0

Today, the House Judiciary Committee is scheduled to vote on the newest version of the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA) bill. The bill, which was introduced in late October, would enable the U.S. government and copyright holders to obtain court orders to shut down websites that are associated with infringing, pirating, or counterfeiting intellectual property. [...]

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EU’s Reding to Cloud Providers: Stop Sheltering Yourself from US Patriot Act

Viviane Reding (150 sq).jpgAs the U.S. Congress stays on track to pass a sixteen-year record low number of bills this year, its counterpart in the European Union continues on nothing less than a data privacy rampage. In a speech this morning at a continent-wide data privacy conference in Brussels, European Commission Vice President Viviane Reding renewed her call for a single data protection authority to oversee privacy policies in all member states – a measure whose main objections now come from member states themselves, rather than Parliament.

But in an effort to keep her end of the bargain, Comm. Reding openly called upon cloud service providers to refrain from a nasty habit that more and more of them have gotten into this year. Apparently referring to this story from IDG’s TechWorld UK, she said CSPs should stop offering themselves to European customers as data shelters from the prying eyes of American lawmakers.

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“I am reading in the press more and more about European internet companies offering a cloud computing service which stays in Europe,” Comm. Reding told attendees. “Just yesterday I read about a Swedish company whose selling point is that they shelter users from the U.S. Patriot Act and other attempts by third countries to access personal data.”

The outfit she was referring to was the recently merged operations of Sweden-based Severalnines with London, U.K.-based City Network. Two weeks ago, the new operation began actively promoting itself as a safe haven from the CIA and FBI.

“E.U. customers can now benefit from the savings and flexibility enabled by cloud-based database services safe in the knowledge that they will not fall under the jurisdiction of the Patriot Act,” reads a joint press release issued November 23. “Under the Patriot Act, data from E.U. users of U.S.-owned cloud-based services can currently be shared with U.S. law enforcement agencies without the need to tell the user.”

This made the plain spoken justice commissioner a bit upset. “Well, I do encourage cloud computing centers in Europe – because we need more innovation, more research and more investment in the ICT [information, communications, and technology, the European term for "IT"] industry. But this cannot be the only solution,” she told the Brussels meeting. “We need free flow of data between our continents. And it doesn’t make much sense for us to retreat from each other.”

Last July, this reporter spoke with several cloud service providers both in the U.S. and abroad, who confirmed that Europe-based customers were more openly seeking public cloud services that could guarantee their data would never be routed to servers in the U.S. The CSPs with whom I spoke said it was not their policy to issue such guarantees, although they mentioned there were competitors who were only too willing to oblige.

One of the multitude of unpassed bills wallowing in the halls of the U.S. Congress this year is the Commercial Privacy Bill of Rights, sponsored by Sens. John Kerry (D – Mass.) and John McCain (R – Ariz.). As originally conceived, the bill would include a provision that would prevent any service provider from disclosing a customer’s personal data with any agency, even under government order, without notification and consent of the customer. E.U. officials have said passage of this bill would bring U.S. law more in line with European law, as well as with the terms of a Safe Harbor treaty between the two governments that guarantees E.U. citizens’ data will not be traversed by U.S. authorities – which would appear to contradict the terms of the Patriot Act.

Up to now, Comm. Reding has supported the concept of the Kerry-McCain bill, but has kept relatively quiet (as best she can) with respect to the process. That changed this morning: “You might remember that last year I welcomed the Democrat-Republican joint initiative on data protection,” she told attendees. “It made headlines. The Senators made clear that a federal law is necessary to ensure the protection of privacy in the United States. They argued that the U.S. government had a substantial interest in creating a level playing field for all collectors of personal data both in the U.S. and abroad. This sounded encouraging indeed! However, I have been told that only voluntary codes of conduct based on multi-stakeholder consultations are envisaged. Well, I hope I got it wrong, because I am worried that U.S. ‘self-regulation’ will not be sufficient to achieve full interoperability between the E.U. and U.S.”

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