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Info/Contact for David Akin
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Who pays for this blog? I receive no fees, considerations, etc. etc. for the posts on this blog nor do I have any plans to accept any. My salary is paid by Canwest Global Communications Corp. I work for that company as the Ottawa-based National Affairs Correspondent for Canwest News Service. The blog publishing platform used here is called Blogware and it's developed by Tucows Inc. of Toronto, Ontario, Canada. My use of Blogware should not be taken as an endorsement of that company. Like all Blogware users, I do not pay any fees for the use of this service. I participate in program. Google pays me some money and, for that, I give Google some space on this site to display ads. Google sells those ads and Google, not me, decides what advertising content you are seeing. I do not filter these ads and take no responsibility for them. Readers should not assume I endorse any of the products or services advertised here. If you think other disclosures are appropriate in this space, I'd like to hear from you. All of my contact details are always at www.davidakin.com You can read more about this section |
Wednesday, May 14
by
DavidAkin
on Wed 14 May 2008 09:25 PM EDT
Feenberg was then a philosophy professor at San Diego State University but I'm pleased to see that he's been lured up to the Great White North and holds a Canada Research Chair in the Philosophy of Technology in the School of Communication at Simon Fraser University.... However, all agreed that technology was an autonomous force separate from society, a kind of second nature impinging on social life from the alien realm of reason in which science too find its source.... Insofar as we continue to see the technical and the social as separate domains, important aspects of these dimensions of our existence will remain beyond our reach as a democratic society... more »
by
DavidAkin
on Wed 14 May 2008 06:38 PM EDT
Unable to afford to produce a music video to promote themselves, UK band Get Out Clause came up with an ingenious plan. They set up and performed their music in front of 80 of the 1,300 closed-circuit television cameras used by British state security. One of those cameras was even on a bus. Then they used the British equivalent of access to information laws, known as the Data Protection Act, to request all the footage the state "collected" of them. They pumped the video into some cheap off-the-shelf digital video editing software (iMovie on the Mac, for example) and - presto! - Get Out Clause has their first video.
by
DavidAkin
on Wed 14 May 2008 06:31 AM EDT
This project brings together a distinguished collection of Internet observers, scholars, innovators, entrepreneurs, activists, technologists and still other experts, to write short essays, to foster an on-going public dialogue, and to create a durable record of how the rules of cyberspace are being formed, potentially impacting their future incarnation.... But it will not seem like governance until someone nests boxes in an “inappropriate” way, and someone else draws a box around them all and says, “Dude, stop inserting your spammy boxes in the middle of our conversation.” more »
by
DavidAkin
on Wed 14 May 2008 06:10 AM EDT
Joseph Stalin, despite being one of the most vicious tyrants of the 20th century (and an ethnic Georgian), makes it on to the initial long list of 500 names, and is expected to garner a fair few votes.... But while the German broadcaster ZDF has said that Adolf Hitler and all other Nazi leaders will be barred from running in the "Our Best" series due to start soon, the Russian version includes Stalin and several other Bolsheviks involved in the Great Terror in its long list . more » |
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This project brings together a distinguished collection of Internet observers, scholars, innovators, entrepreneurs, activists, technologists and still other experts, to write short essays, to foster an on-going public dialogue, and to create a durable record of how the rules of cyberspace are being formed, potentially impacting their future incarnation.... But it will not seem like governance until someone nests boxes in an “inappropriate” way, and someone else draws a box around them all and says, “Dude, stop inserting your spammy boxes in the middle of our conversation.” 