Tuesday, December 29, 2009

Canadian PM Harper's minions shut down 'Yes Men' satirical website + 4,500 others

PM Harper shuts down satirical 'Yes Men' #cop15 website
http://ow.ly/QXL8
4,500
other Web sites also blocked #rights #censorship

[excerpt]

Stung by a satire at the Copenhagen climate conference, Canada's
government has shut down two parody Web sites criticizing the Great White
North's glacial policy on global warming.

In the process, however, it has taken down 4,500 other Web sites that had
nothing to do with the prank played two weeks ago at the global climate
summit.

The two "offending" sites, developed by "Yes Men" pranksters, announced
that Canada would reduce greenhouse gas emissions in 2020 40 percent from
1990 levels, and 80 percent by the year 2050.

The "announcement" came as Prime Minister Stephen Harper's government was
privately circulating a plan to permit a 165 percent INCREASE in emissions
from Alberta's huge, dirty oil sands project.

The two Web sites, "enviro-canada.ca" and "ec-gc.ca" are "directly
connected to a hoax which misleads people into believing that the
Government of Canada will take certain actions in relation to
environmental matters," Mike Landreville from Environment Canada wrote in
an e-mail to the German Internet Service Provider (ISP) Serveloft.


The Great White North carries weight with ISP.

Serverloft immediately turned off a wide block of provider addresses,
knocking out 4,500 websites that had nothing to do with "Yes Men" or the
parody that raises such hackles among Harper's minions.

"We are sorry to see that the Canadian government will not 'take certain
actions' that could help stave off catastrophic climate change," said Mike
Bonanno of "Yes Men," "and we are sorry to see that they don't care so
much for free speech."

Google is sued by Chinese author Mian Mian over online library

Google is sued by Chinese author Mian Mian over online library
http://ow.ly/QU1f

[excerpt]

After a two-hour hearing, the court ordered both sides to talk but did not
set a deadline for reporting back, according to the author's lawyer.

She is seeking damages of 61,000 yuan ($8,950; £5,576) and a public apology.

The lawsuit was filed in October after Google scanned one of Mian Mian's
books, Acid House, into its library.

Google said it had removed the book as soon as it learned of the lawsuit,
but had no further comment on the case.

Monday, December 28, 2009

Canada’s free speech ruling brightens dark year, edito r says

RT @utknightcenter: Canada's free speech ruling brightens dark year,
editor says: http://bit.ly/6qoruA #journalism

[more links via URL http://bit.ly/6qoruA ]

New rulings by the Supreme Court allow news organizations to defend
themselves against defamation charges if they can prove they acted in the
public interest. "This means stories that have stayed under wraps because
of 'libel chill' will emerge into the light," writes columnist Dan Leger,
director of news content for The Chronicle Herald of Halifax, Nova Scotia.
"It means powerful and well-financed individuals won't so easily avoid
public scrutiny just because they have pit-bull lawyers."

RT @michaelgeist: The year in Canuk technology law & policy

RT @michaelgeist: The year in Canuk technology law & policy: Annual A
(ACTA) to Z (Zoocasa) review. http://bit.ly/4GtiLr

Saturday, December 26, 2009

Free speech activist Liu Xiaobo's eleven-year jail sentence court sneakily issued verdict Dec 24th

RT @RSF_RWB: China - Free speech activist Liu Xiaobo's eleven-year jail
sentence court sneakily issued verdict Dec 25th
http://bit.ly/8U1nxG

[excerpt]

Eleven-year jail sentence for free speech activist Liu Xiaobo, court
sneakily issues verdict on Christmas Day

"It is a disgrace that Liu Xiaobo is going to spend the next eleven years
in prison when all he did was defend free expression and participate in a
debate about his country's future with many other Chinese intellectuals,"
Reporters Without Borders said. "It is also disgraceful that such a
sentence was announced on Christmas Day."

The press freedom organisation added: "Where are the universal values of
freedom of expression that China is supposed to represent in Shanghai in
2010? The national and international pressure for this famous dissident's
release must be redoubled. The international community must not be
manipulated by the Chinese authorities, who are trying to minimise
reaction by concluding this case during the end-of-year holidays."

[...]

A former University of Beijing philosophy professor and winner of the
Reporters Without Borders press freedom prize in 2004, Liu is committed to
the idea that the Chinese media will one day be able to operate as a real
fourth estate and stand up to the omnipotent Communist Party. [...]

Tuesday, December 22, 2009

RSF expresses concern over Australian Internet censorship

#RSF expresses concern over Australian #Internet #censorship - IFEX
http://ow.ly/OKT0

http://www.ifex.org/australia/2009/12/22/internet_censorship/

(RSF/IFEX) - In an open letter to the prime minister, RSF expresses
serious concern over the government's plan to introduce a mandatory
Internet filtering system to combat child sex abuse:

Open letter to Australian Prime Minister
The Hon Kevin Michael Rudd MP
Prime Minister
Canberra, Australia
Paris, 18 December 2009

Dear Prime Minister,

Reporters Without Borders, an organisation that defends free expression
worldwide, would like to share with you its concern about your
government's plan to introduce a mandatory Internet filtering system.
While it is essential to combat child sex abuse, pursuing this draconian
filtering project is not the solution. If Australia were to introduce
systematic online content filtering, with a relatively broad definition of
the content targeted, it would be joining an Internet censors club that
includes such countries as China, Iran and Saudi Arabia.

Communications minister Stephen Conroy announced on 15 December that,
after a year of testing in partnership with Australian Internet service
providers (ISPs), your government intended to introduce legislation
imposing mandatory filtering of websites with pornographic, paedophile or
particularly violent content.

Reporters Without Borders would like to draw your attention to the risks
that this plan entails for freedom of expression.

Firstly, the decision to block access to an "inappropriate" website would
be taken not by a judge but by a government agency, the Australian
Communications and Media Authority (ACMA). Such a procedure, without a
court decision, does not satisfy the requirements of the rule of law. The
ACMA classifies content secretly, compiling a website blacklist by means
of unilateral and arbitrary administrative decision-making. Other
procedures are being considered but none of them would involve a judge.

Secondly, the criteria that the proposed law would use are too vague.
Filtering would be applied to all content considered "inappropriate," a
very slippery term that could be interpreted very differently by different
people. In all probability, filtering would target "refused
classification" (RC) sites, a category that is extremely controversial as
it is being applied to content that is completely unrelated to efforts to
combat child sex abuse and sexual violence, representing a dangerous
censorship option. Subjects such as abortion, anorexia, aborigines and
legislation on the sale of marijuana would all risk being filtered, as
would media reports on these subjects.

The choice of filtering techniques has not been clearly defined. Would it
be filtering by key-words, URL text or something else? And what about the
ISPs that are supposed to carry out the filtering at the government's
request? Will they be blamed, will they be accused of complicity in child
sex abuse if the filtering proves to be ineffective, as it almost
certainly will?

Your government claims that the filtering will be 100 per cent effective
but this is clearly impossible. Experts all over the world agree that no
filtering system is effective at combating this kind of content. On the
one hand, such a system filters sites that should not be affected (such as
sites about the psychology of child sexuality or paedophile crime news).
And on the other, it fails to filter targeted sites because their URLs
contain key-words that are completely unrelated to their content, or
because their content (photo and text) is registered under completely
neutral terms. Furthermore, people who are determined to visit such sites
will know how to avoid the filtering by, for example, using proxy servers
or censorship circumvention software or both.

The Wikileaks website highlighted the limitations of such as system when
it revealed that the ACMA blacklist of already banned websites contained
many with nothing reprehensible in their content. According to Wikileaks,
the blacklist included the Abortion TV website, some of the pages of
Wikileaks itself, online poker sites, gay networks, sites dealing with
euthanasia, Christian sites, a tour operator's site and even a Queensland
dentist's site.

The US company Google has also voiced strong reservations. Google
Australia's head of policy, Iarla Flynn, said yesterday: "Moving to a
mandatory ISP filtering regime with a scope that goes well beyond such
material is heavy handed and can raise genuine questions about
restrictions on access to information."

As regards paedophilia, the most dangerous places on the Internet are
websites offering chat and email services. So if this project were taken
to its logical conclusion, access to sites such as Gmail, Yahoo and Skype
would also have to be blocked, which would of course be impossible.

There are more effective ways to combat child pornography, including
tracking cyber-criminals online (by means of cookies, IP address
comparison, and so on), combined with police investigation into suspects
and their online habits. Why did your government end the programme
launched by the previous government, which made free filtering systems
available to Australian families? This procedure had the merit of being
adapted to individual needs and gave each home the possibility of
shielding its children from porn.

A real national debate is needed on this subject but your communications
minister, Stephen Conroy, made such a debate very difficult by branding
his critics as supporters of child pornography. An opportunity was lost
for stimulating a constructive exchange of ideas.

We also regret the lack of transparency displayed by your government as
regards the tests carried out in recent months using procedures that have
been kept secret. Your government paid some 300,000 Australian dollars to
ISPs to finance the tests. Australian taxpayers have a right to be given
detailed information about the results.

Finally, you must be aware that this initiative is a source of a concern
for your compatriots. In a recent Fairfax Media poll of 20,000 people, 96
per cent were strongly opposed to such a mandatory Internet filtering
system, while around 120,000 Australians have signed a petition against
Internet censorship launched by the online activist group GetUp. The
withdrawal of this proposal would therefore satisfy public opinion as well
as prevent a democratic country from introducing a system that threatens
freedom of expression.

I thank you in advance for the consideration you give to our recommendations.

Sincerely,

Jean-François Julliard
Reporters Without Borders
Secretary-General

Source
http://www.ifex.org/australia/2009/12/22/internet_censorship/
Reporters Without Borders
47, rue Vivienne
75002 Paris
France
rsf (@) rsf.org
Phone: +33 1 44 83 84 84
Fax: +33 1 45 23 11 51

Supreme Court of Canada allows journalists & bloggers to use defence of "responsible communication" against libel suits

Supreme Court of Canada allows #journalists & #bloggers to use defence of
"responsible communication" against #libel suits

http://ow.ly/OGVh

[excerpt]

CBC.ca

New libel defence allowed: Supreme Court
2 publications fighting $1.5M, $100K libel awards

Canada's highest court ruled Tuesday in two decisions that publishers can
escape liability if they can show that they tried to verify the facts and
the published material is a matter of public interest.

The decision was prompted by appeals from two Ontario newspapers — the
Ottawa Citizen and the Toronto Star. On Tuesday, the Supreme Court ordered
new trials for both of them in light of the new defence available to them.

Journalists across Canada, as well as bloggers, can now use the defence of
"responsible communication on matters of public interest" as a defence
against libel.

However, in order for them to do so, a judge must confirm to the jury that
the published material relates to a matter of public interest.

The judge may also rule out the use of the "responsible communication"
defence if the case does not meet the criteria outlined in a checklist
issued as part of the rulings.

China has issued new Internet regulations... appears to be an effort to create a "whitelist"

China To Require Internet Domain Name Registration

China has issued new Internet regulations, including what appears to be an
effort to create a "whitelist" of approved Web sites that could
potentially place much of the Internet off-limits to Chinese readers. The
Ministry of Industry and Information Technology ordered domain management
institutions and Internet service providers to tighten control over domain
name registration, in a three-phase plan laid out on its Web site
(http://www.miit.gov.cn). [Billboard]

http://www.billboard.biz/bbbiz/content_display/industry/e3i1002148bbd34e1b54bbcbd0f257a5f0c

Thursday, December 17, 2009

UPIU - A social media platform project of United Press International

A program by United Press International, Inc. (UPI), UPIU is a social
media platform that aims to bring together the voices of journalists,
academics, human rights reporters, public education professionals, and
bloggers.

http://www.upiu.com/
http://espanol.upiu.com/

Facebook
http://www.facebook.com/pages/UPIUcom/85736340946

Aspiring and Professional Journalists

http://www.upiu.com/contents/about_upiu
[excerpt]

A program by United Press International, Inc. (UPI), UPIU is a social
media platform that aims to bring together the voices of journalists,
academics, human rights reporters, public education professionals, and
bloggers. We want to see and hear your stories, and we want to share them
with the world. Your work can live beyond a professor's desk. Your expert
opinion can reach a mass audience beyond your peers. Coupled with citizen
journalism submissions, your story will include those parts of the story
that mainstream media misses.

More than just another social network, UPIU wants to harness the powers of
both traditional and emerging new media to bring the stories that matter
to the world's attention, beyond just the internet. Our editors constantly
review your submissions, seeking the stories that deserve global
attention. UPI will publish these stories, channeling your images, text,
and videos through print, radio, TV and other multimedia outlets
throughout the world.

Catapult your journalistic career. When you post your content, you can get
ratings and feedback to help you improve your writing. With the ability to
respond to content with your own content, you can both contribute and gain
insight. With an audience from all over the world, each member is an
opportunity to build your international professional network. And when UPI
publishes your work, you'll get the byline; you'll keep the copyright.

An Opportunity for Faculty

UPIU strives to help journalism, communications, and otherwise specialized
programs advance their students' and staffs' careers. We are constantly
seeking to feature quality university content, and if you seek increased
exposure and wish to promote your institution's profile, we look forward
to the opportunity to collaborate with you. Please contact the following
representatives to inquire about collaborating with UPIU:

* International, North America: Sonja Eberly, seberly@upi.com
* Asia/Oceania: Harumi Gondo, hgondo@upi.com
* Europe/Africa: Ted Iliff, tiliff@upi.com
* Latin America: Pablo Aguirre, paguirre@upi.com
* North America, Spanish Language: Juan Mata, jmata@upi.com

- - - -

UPI Stylebook

http://www.upiu.com/stylebook

- - - - -

Saturday, December 05, 2009

Survey regarding the Preservation of Photo Metadata by Social Media Websites

"...The real and present danger is that by having your attribution
information removed (such as the creator/author field which indicates who
took the photograph, or the copyright notice field, or provider), the
service is creating potential "orphan works" of your property...."

The Controlled Vocabulary Survey regarding the Preservation of Photo
Metadata by Social Media Websites

Visit
http://www.controlledvocabulary.com/socialmedia/
for survey and other links not embeded in this e-mail

Overview
Do the social media websites or other image sharing services you use
preserve your embedded photo metadata after upload? The answer to that
question isn't clear, so we are conducting a survey of various services to
find out.

Digital images, saved in the JPEG format support the embedding of photo
metadata, and most social media sites support the uploading of JPEG
images. However, many of these social media services do not preserve this
information that you have taken the time to embed in your image files. In
some instances this information is removed on upload; in other cases, it
may preserved in the original uploaded file, but any images derived from
the original may no longer retain that same information.

As a result, anyone downloading an image of yours for reference may not
know where that image came from or who to contact, without at least some
basic information stored within the image file. Based on preliminary
survey data, the amount and type of embedded photo metadata preserved in
an image online varies. Much seems to depends on the type of server side
software they use and the type of image processing they are performing
when resizing, or creating thumbnails.

Some may claim they remove this information to decrease download time for
those viewing the images. Indeed, some social media services automatically
resize your uploaded images to a smaller size, as their primary concern is
to have your images take up less disk space. Since most do not charge any
membership fees, and the service is basically free, many users don't
complain, even if they are aware.This downsizing may make sense for the
service, but not for users of their service that are interested in
protecting their intellectual property. While your images may take up
fractionally less space on their servers by intentionally removing the
embedded photo metadata and/or ICC profile, the space savings is not
justifiable if the pixel dimensions remain the same.

The real and present danger is that by having your attribution information
removed (such as the creator/author field which indicates who took the
photograph, or the copyright notice field, or provider), the service is
creating potential "orphan works" of your property. In some instances the
service may only preserve the older "legacy" form of IPTC metadata, and
thus detailed contact information will be missing in any file that may be
downloaded for later reference.

Friday, December 04, 2009

New Tool for Online comment

Journalists and news outlets are accustomed to offering comments and criticisms about others, but they're not as used to being the subject of public comment themselves. In the online world, where technology can and does upend established relationships, journalists and online news outlets are joining the ranks of the commented-upon.

The shift has taken place due to the increased presence of commenting and feedback features on news websites, and partly thanks to the use of comment-friendly platforms such as WordPress. In these contexts, the news outlets have chosen to accept user comments, and they retain a certain amount of control over which ones appear on their site. Now, a new technology, Google's Sidewiki annotation tool, is poised to present a challenge to website owners, including news outlets, that attempt to control the interface between their site and end users. Suddenly, they won't have as much control over comments related to their content.

And that change in control might lead to some legal tussles down the road.

in reference to: MediaShift . Will Google Sidewiki Shift Control of Online Comments? | PBS (view on Google Sidewiki)