Year: 2010
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Needle-in-a-Haystack Problems
Sometimes the same idea comes flying at you from several directions at once, and you start seeing that idea everywhere. This has been happening to me lately with needle-in-a-haystack problems, a concept that is useful but often goes unrecognized. A needle-in-a-haystack problem is a problem where the right answer is very difficult to determine in…
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Release Government Data, Early and Often
One of the key axioms of modern open government is that all public data should be published online in a raw but usable form. Usability in this case is aimed at software programmers. By making government datasets more usable, programmers are more likely to innovate in the civic sphere and build technologies, using the raw…
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Google Publishes Data on Government Data and Takedown Requests
Citizens have long wondered how often their governments ask online service providers for data about users, and how often governments ask providers to take down content. Today Google took a significant step on this issue, unveiling a site reporting numbers on a country-by-country basis. It’s important to understand what is and isn’t included in the…
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April 27 Workshop at Princeton CITP: Internet Security, Internet Freedom
On April 27th, the Center for Information Technology Policy is hosting a one-day workshop on campus here at Princeton. We invite you to attend. Here is the summary of the event, called Internet Security, Internet Freedom: The internet is at once a means for great openness and great control — expression and exclusion. These forces…
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Flash, Scratch, Ajax: Apple's War on Programming
Any ambitious regulatory scheme will face pressure to expand, in order to protect the flanks of the main regulation against users’ workarounds. Apple’s strategy of regulating which apps can run on the iPhone and iPod is just such a regulation, and over the last week or so Apple has been giving in to the pressure…
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What Open Data Means to Marginalized Communities
Two symbols of this era of open data are President Obama’s Open Governance Initiative, a directive that has led agencies to post their results online and open up data sets, and Ushahidi, a tool for crowdsourcing crisis information. While these tools are bringing openness to governance and crisis response respectively, I believe we have yet…
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iPad: The Disneyland of Computers
Tech commentators have a love/hate relationship with Apple’s new iPad. Those who try it tend to like it, but many dislike its locked-down App Store which only allows Apple-approved apps. Some people even see the iPad as the dawn of a new relationship between people and computers. To me, the iPad is Disneyland. I like…
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CITP Expands Scope of RECAP
Today, we’re thrilled to announce the next version of our RECAP technology, dramatically expanding the scope of the project. Having had some modest success at providing public access to legal documents, we’re now taking the next logical step, offering easy public access to illegal documents. The Internet Archive, which graciously hosts RECAP’s repository of legal…
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Pseudonyms: The Natural State of Online Identity
I’ve been writing recently about the problems that arise when you try to use cryptography to verify who is at the other end of a network connection. The cryptographic math works, but that doesn’t mean you get the identity part right. You might think, from this discussion, that crypto by itself does nothing — that…
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China, the Internet and Google: what I planned to say
In the run-up to and aftermath of Google’s decision yesterday to remove its Chinese search engine from China, I wrote two posts on my personal blog: Chinese netizens’ open letter to the Chinese government and Google and “One Google, One World; One China, No Google” Today, the Congressional Executive China Commission conducted a hearing titled…