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As long-suffering readers of this column will know, I've been
following for a while the winding road leading to the European
Commission's proposals regarding net neutrality in Europe. Along the
way, there have been many twists and turns, with hints of first one
direction, then another. But today, the Commission has finally released
its plans - not just for this area, but for the whole telecoms market in Europe:
On
Open Enterprise blog.
One of the recurrent themes on this blog has been the UK government's
use - or failure to use - open source and open data. To be fair, on
the open data side, things are going pretty well. Open source was
previously conspicuous by its absence, and that is finally changing,
albeit rather slower than many of us would wish.
On
Open Enterprise blog.
When Stephen Elop moved from Microsoft to run Nokia, many saw this as
part of a cunning plan to prepare the latter for purchase by the
former. There's no real evidence for that, although soon after joining,
Nokia did place the Windows Phone platform at the heart of its future
strategy, despite the many drawbacks of doing so, effectively betting
the company on the success of Windows as the third mobile platform
alongside Android and Apple.
On
Open Enterprise blog.
As I've pointed out many times in previous posts, one of the key
benefits of mandating network neutrality is that it promotes innovation
by creating a level playing field. Such statements are all very well,
but where's the evidence? An important new study entitled "The
innovation-enhancing effects of network neutrality" [.pdf], commissioned by the Dutch Ministry of Economic Affairs from the independent SEO Economic Research unit provides perhaps the best survey and analysis of why indeed network neutrality is so beneficial:
On
Open Enterprise blog.
Back in April, I wrote
about in interesting new venture from the Linux Foundation called the
OpenDaylight Project. As I pointed out then, what made this significant
was that it showed how the Linux Foundation was beginning to move
beyond its historical origins of supporting the Linux ecosystem, towards
the broader application of the important lessons it has learnt about
open source collaboration in the process. Following that step, we now
have this:
On
Open Enterprise blog.
Last year, I wrote
about some serious issues with Microsoft's Secure Boot Technology in
Windows 8. It seems that the German government has started to wake up
to problems with Windows 8, as this headline in Die Zeit attests:
On
Open Enterprise blog.
If you follow me on Twitter or elsewhere, you'll have noticed that I've been tweeting rather extensively about the NSA's spying, the most recent attacks on Glenn Greenwald and now the Guardian. If you were still wondering what any of this has to do with open source, this latest news might clarify things a little:
On
Open Enterprise blog.
As even a cursory glance at articles on Open Enterprise over the last
few years will indicate, open source is a massive success in
practically every market. Except, unfortunately, on the desktop
(famously) and more, generally, for consumers. And as Aral Balkan
points out in an important post from a few weeks ago, that's a real problem:
On
Open Enterprise blog.
As I noted in my first TTIP Update
about the current negotiations between the EU and US over a massive
trade agreement that is far from being only about trade, it is probably
true that it will not include many of the more outrageous ideas found in
ACTA last year. But that is not to say that TTIP does not threaten many key aspects of the Internet - just that the attack is much more subtle.
On
Open Enterprise blog.
A couple of weeks ago I wrote about the incredible spectacle of the European arm of the Interactive Advertising Bureau (IAB) attacking Mozilla
on the grounds that the latter had "lost its values" because it
insisted on defending the users' rights to control how cookies were used
on their systems.
On
Open Enterprise blog.
Back in the mists of time - I'm talking about 2000 here - when free
software was still viewed by many as a rather exotic idea, I published a
book
detailing its history up to that point. Naturally, I wrote about
Apache (the Web server, not the foundation) there, since even in those
early days it was already the sectoral leader. As I pointed out:
On
Open Enterprise blog.
One of the long-running jokes in the free software world is that this
year will finally be the year of open source on the desktop - just like
it was last year, and the year before that. Thanks to the astounding
rise of Android, people now realise that the desktop is last decade's
platform, and that mobile - smartphones and tablets - are the future.
But I'd argue that there is something even more important these, and
that is the widespread deployment of open source in China.
On
Open Enterprise blog.
As Techdirt has reported, the attempts to extradite Kim Dotcom from New
Zealand to the US have turned into one of the most catastrophically
bungled legal cases in a long while. One of the biggest scandals to
emerge was that New Zealand citizens had been wiretapped
in an effort to gain evidence against Dotcom, since domestic spying was
forbidden there just as it is in the US (oh, wait...). Unfortunately,
rather than rapping knuckles and telling the local spooks not to do it
again, the New Zealand government has instead just brought in new legislation to make it legal in the future.
On
Techdirt.
As more and more countries start introducing Web blocks, some people
console themselves with the "at least there's always Tor" argument.
Politicians may be slow, but they are not all completely stupid, and
they are beginning to get the message that Tor and other anonymous
services potentially render their Web blocks moot. It's then not a huge
leap for them to move on to the next stage -- banning or blocking Tor
-- as Russia now seems to be contemplating, according to this article on Russia Today:
On
Techdirt.
When Techdirt wrote recently about yet another secure email provider opting to close down
its service rather than acquiesce in some future US government demand
to spy on its users, we noted that Cryptocloud has promised something
similar for a while -- what it terms "corporate seppuku":
On
Techdirt.
Two years ago, Techdirt reported on a very troubling ruling
in the UK courts that BT had to block access to the Usenet service
provider Newzbin2. At the time, many feared that this would be the thin
end of the wedge, giving copyright companies an easy way to shut down
other sites. And with that power, of course, would come the inevitable
errors, blocking completely unrelated sites. Just how seriously those
mistakes could be is shown by this recent case of massive overblocking, reported here on PC Pro:
On
Techdirt.
Techdirt has published a number of posts that explore the issue of whether art organizations
can stop people sharing images of works in their collections when the
latter are indisputably in the public domain. Even if museums might be
able to claim copyright in their "official" photographic images, the
more important question is whether they ought to. The good news is that
some institutions are beginning to realize that using copyright
monopolies in this way contradicts their basic reason for existing -- to
share the joy of art. Here, for example, is a wonderful statement of
that principle from the Getty Museum entitled "Open Content, An Idea Whose Time Has Come":
On
Techdirt.