Welcome to the World of Open Source Domotics
Canonical pulled off something of a coup at the recent Consumer Electronics Show (CES) when it announced its Ubuntu TV – inevitably dubbed "TV for human beings":
On The H Open.
open source, open genomics, open creation
Canonical pulled off something of a coup at the recent Consumer Electronics Show (CES) when it announced its Ubuntu TV – inevitably dubbed "TV for human beings":
Posted by Glyn Moody at 11:16 am 0 comments
Labels: jboss, open domotics, open source, Ubuntu
A couple of months ago, Techdirt wrote about an EU politician's plan to build Internet surveillance into every operating system. As we pointed out then, this could easily be circumvented by using non-Net means for swapping files. It may not be driven by fears about spying, but it seems that communities in Western Africa are using Bluetooth connections between mobile phones to do exactly that:
The role of technology in the wave of protests that swept the world last year is a matter of debate. While some claim that social networks and mobile phones allowed protesters to organize themselves with an unprecedented speed and efficiency, others have seen their role as marginal – or even counterproductive, since these same technologies also allow governments to monitor events with greater ease than in pre-Internet days.
Posted by Glyn Moody at 4:07 pm 0 comments
Labels: social networks, surveillance, techdirt
Among the many high-profile organizations that are joining the SOPA blackout today is Greenpeace. That's great, except that you can't read an important post on the Greenpeace UK web site about why it is opposing SOPA and PIPA (it should be available at 5 pm PST from the home page or here.
Posted by Glyn Moody at 4:01 pm 0 comments
Labels: activism, copyright, greenpeace, techdirt, trademarks
One of the more unfortunate consequences of Moore's Law is that technologies that erode privacy are becoming cheaper every year – and hence more attractive to governments eager to spy on their own populace. The latest to heed the siren call of mass surveillance is Argentina.
Posted by Glyn Moody at 2:23 pm 0 comments
Labels: argentina, moore's law, privacy, surveillance, techdirt
So the long-awaited verdict on the extradition of Richard O’Dwyer has finally arrived, and, as feared, it's ridiculous. There are many others better qualified than I am to comment on the detailed legal issues of the lop-sided extradition treaty that lies at the heart of the case, so I would like to concentrate on two aspects that I feel better able to comment on. Both touch on what I think are fatal errors in the judgment; either is enough undermine its arguments.
Posted by Glyn Moody at 2:21 pm 0 comments
Labels: copyright, extradition, open enterprise, us
A few weeks back, Techdirt reported on an Indian minister asking Internet companies to do the impossible:
Posted by Glyn Moody at 8:47 pm 0 comments
Labels: censorship, facebook, google, india, techdirt
Against a background where some European courts are telling ISPs that they must block access to certain sites (in Finland and the UK, for example), this news from Germany comes as a refreshing change (original German article in Der Spiegel):
Posted by Glyn Moody at 8:40 pm 0 comments
Labels: censorship, der spiegel, germany, techdirt
You don't have to be a marketing genius or industry pundit to foresee that tablets will be an extremely hot sector in 2012. The launch of Apple's iPad in 2010 largely defined the category, just as the launch of the iPhone defined a new kind of smartphone in 2007; in 2012 we will probably begin to see Android tablets start to gain major market share just as Android smartphones have done this year.
Back in September last year, there was a bit of a to-do about Microsoft's UEFI Secure Boot technology in Windows 8, when a Red Hat engineer posted the following:
Posted by Glyn Moody at 1:59 pm 0 comments
Labels: arm, linux, Microsoft, open enterprise, security
If we are to believe the early signs, 2012 may well be the year that British schools finally start to address the continuing shame that is ICT teaching. As I and many others have noted, the current approach essentially consists of sitting people in front of Microsoft Word and Excel and making them learn a couple of commands on the menus. It seems that the message has finally got through to the powers-that-be:
Posted by Glyn Moody at 3:09 pm 0 comments
Labels: education, linux, open enterprise, open source
There's a wonderful line in Fred Brooks' book "The Mythical Man-Month", where he says that when writing a program, plan to throw one way - you will anyway. But that's a bit of a problem for conventional software development, because it's not clear when the best time is to throw that one away.
Posted by Glyn Moody at 4:57 pm 0 comments
Labels: fred brooks, mythical man-month, open enterprise, open source, open source development
A recent Techdirt post reminded us that thanks to its crazy copyright laws, the US won't be seeing anything new in the public domain for many years. But even in those "fortunate" countries that get to use cultural works a mere 70 years after the creator's death, the situation is still pretty absurd.
Posted by Glyn Moody at 12:16 pm 0 comments
Labels: copyright, jazz, music, public domain, sharing, techdirt
Just before Christmas I wrote a fairly strongly-worded condemnation of what I saw as the imminent betrayal of open standards by the UK Cabinet Office. This was based on reading between the lines of a new Procurement Policy Note, plus my thirty years' experience of dealing with Microsoft. At the time, I didn't have any specific proof that Microsoft was behind this shameful U-turn, but Mark Ballard has, it seems:
Posted by Glyn Moody at 12:05 pm 0 comments
Labels: Microsoft, open enterprise, open source, open standards
One of the many dangerous aspects of SOPA/PIPA is that its backers seem to have given no thought to what the unintended consequences might be. In particular, there is no awareness that it might wreak serious damage in areas that are very distant from the core concerns of unauthorized copies of music or films – such as scientific publishing.
Posted by Glyn Moody at 10:03 am 0 comments
Labels: copyright, copyright infringement, scientific publishers, techdirt
A fascinating trend in recent years has been the gradual move from a presumption of secrecy to one of openness, transparency and sharing. This began with free software/open source, and has progressively spread to include areas such as open content, open access, open data, open science and open government.
Here's the latest field where people are advocating a more open approach:
Posted by Glyn Moody at 6:54 pm 0 comments
Labels: lobbying, open source food, openness, techdirt, transparency
Against the background of today's war on sharing, exemplified by SOPA and PIPA, traditional libraries underline an inconvenient truth: allowing people to share things – principally books in the case of libraries – does not lead to the collapse of the industry trying to sell those same things. But publishers really don't seem to have learned that lesson, judging by this article in the New York Times about the nonsensical attitude they have to libraries lending out ebooks:
Posted by Glyn Moody at 7:10 pm 0 comments
Labels: copyright, ebooks, libraries, New York Times, publishing, techdirt
One of the central questions the Wikipedia community grapples with is: What exactly is Wikipedia trying to achieve? For example, does it aspire to be a total encyclopedia of everything? What is the appropriate level of detail?
Posted by Glyn Moody at 10:29 am 0 comments
Labels: deletionism, inclusionism, welsh, wikipedia
Perhaps there's something about the German legal system that encourages judges to push their interpretation of the law to the limit, without any concern for whether the results of that logic are absurd. At least that is the impression you might get from two recent cases whose judgments both make use of the internet by ordinary citizens increasing fraught with legal risks.
Posted by Glyn Moody at 9:13 am 0 comments
Labels: copyright, germany, techdirt, three strikes
At the end of last year I reported on the worrying signs of vacillation from the UK government over its support for truly open standards. At least it's relatively straightforward to keep tabs on what's happening in Blighty; Europe is another matter - I find the labyrinthine bureaucracy and its digital shadow pretty hard to navigate. So I was pleased to come across the following page, entitled "Strategy for internal use of OSS at the EC".
Posted by Glyn Moody at 5:08 pm 0 comments
Labels: eif, european commission, Microsoft, open enterprise, open source, open standards
Already it's clear that one of the hot tech topics of 2012 will be "The Internet of Things" – the idea that even the most mundane objects will be hooked up to the Net and communicating over it. So far, pundits have concentrated on trivial applications like being able to check your fridge's contents from a browser, but potentially it could be much more than that if the "things" are groups of sensors whose data can be usefully aggregated.
Posted by Glyn Moody at 5:06 pm 0 comments
Labels: commons, internet, open sensor data, techdirt
In my last column, I suggested that one of the best things that Mozilla could do in order to promote the Open Web and openness in general would be to support the battle for online freedom in more general ways. That's something it has already started doing, notably in trying to halt the passage of the awful Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA) that is currently grinding through the US legislative process.
Posted by Glyn Moody at 1:49 pm 0 comments
Labels: censorship, Firefox, free software, freedom, mozilla, open source, surveillance
By their very nature, drug patents can create monopolies that allow prices to be kept artificially high. In other domains that may be simply an annoyance or inconvenience, but in the world of medicines, it can be a matter of life or death for those unable to afford those inflated prices.
Posted by Glyn Moody at 4:27 pm 0 comments
Labels: drugs, johnson and johnson, patents, pharma, techdirt
One of the striking features of some of the most successful startups over the last ten years – companies like Google, Facebook and Twitter – is that their infrastructure is based almost entirely around open source. Of course, that shouldn't really be surprising: open source allows people to get prototypes up and running for the price of a PC, which is great for trying out ideas with live code. And yet despite these zero-cost origins, open source software scales up to supercomputing levels - the perfect solution for startups that hope to grow.
Posted by Glyn Moody at 3:19 pm 0 comments
Labels: commoditisation, google maps, open source, openstreetmap, techdirt
One of the great tasks facing humanity today is digitizing the world's books and liberating the huge stores of knowledge they contain. The technology is there – scanners are now relatively fast and cheap – but the legal framework is struggling to keep up. That can be seen in the continuing uncertainty hovering over Google's massive book scanning project. It can also be observed in some recent digitization projects like Cambridge University's Digital Library:
Posted by Glyn Moody at 9:27 am 0 comments
Labels: british library, copyright, digitisation, newspapers, techdirt
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