June 11, 2006

Second annual Text Analytics Summit

In Boston, June 22-23. Focused on text mining. VCs should consider going. My readers get a discount on their registration fees. More details here.

June 10, 2006

http://irrepressible.info in practice

Four days ago, I posted advocating putting code from irrepressible.info onto your site. The goal is to fight censorship by spreading censored text across as many web pages as follows. And as you can see from the green/yellow box in the upper left of this page, I followed my own advice.

Well, here’s my very preliminary report:

1. It looks ugly, and has a pair of mandatory outgong links to Amnesty International and irrepressible.info.

2. Since I picked a small size, there isn’t much text, and even so it’s hard to read.

3. Disappointingly, what little text there is doesn’t seem to change very often beyond a fixed rotating set of snippets.

4. I can’t detect a performance impact on my sites.

Well, there’s a lot more to do, but it’s at least a start.

June 9, 2006

Terrorism prevention in practice

The following comes from a family friend, Mike Grant, who happens to work for an IT vendor, Trilogy. He’s your typical white, American-accented, personable, well-mannered, well-organized, highly intelligent, highly articulate mid-20s Johns Hopkins graduate. Read more

June 9, 2006

Qui custodiet ipsos custodes?

I’ve argued long and loud that even the most secret of government probing needs to be done in some sense openly. That’s hardly a new observation with me. For example, David Brin argued the point effectively in The Transparent Society.

Tom Greene, however, makes the case even more effectively, in just one sentence:

It’s ironic that spooks so often remind us that we’ve got nothing to fear from their activities if we’ve got nothing nasty to hide, while they themselves are rarely comfortable without multiple layers of secrecy, anonymity and plausible deniability.

And he backs it up (actually, precedes it) in this excerpt:

The best conversation I had was with Robert van Bosbeek of the Dutch National Police. I asked him if he was tempted to buy anything.

“Not really,” he said with a laugh. “But it’s always good to see what’s on offer. Basically, we’re three or four years ahead of all this.”

He said that in the Netherlands, communications intercept capabilities are advanced and well established, and yet, in practice, less problematic than in many other countries. “Our legal system is more transparent,” he said, “so we can do what we need to do without controversy. Transparency makes law enforcement easier, not more difficult.”

Emphasis mine.

June 7, 2006

Sergei Brin doubts his course in China

From an AP story about a press conference given while he was visiting Capitol Hill for one-on-ones with senators:

Google Inc. co-founder Sergey Brin acknowledged Tuesday the dominant Internet company has compromised its principles by accommodating Chinese censorship demands. He said Google is wrestling to make the deal work before deciding whether to reverse course.

June 6, 2006

Freedom even without data privacy

To reiterate and expand on some points that I keep making:

Read more

June 6, 2006

Fighting internet censorship

As I’ve written previously, fighting web and other internet censorship is getting urgent. Amnesty International* has started a project at irrepressible.info, to take censored web content and spread it around as many different web sites as possible. In principle, this is a great idea, and I’m participating, which is why you will shortly be able to see ugly yellow/green boxes with random article snippets on most of my blog pages.

Edit: When I redesigned my blogs, I gave up on irrepressible.info. I plan to explain why in another post.

What does worry me is the technology. Simply put, it would be very easy for the Chinese to filter out any web pages with that content, both the “framing content” (e.g., the Amnesty International and irrepressible.info links) and the news content itself. Thus, I see the program in its current form as just a transition measure, to buy time until a more sophisticated approach is devloped.

Read more

June 2, 2006

Paul Graham on making more Silicon Valleys

Scoble points out Paul Graham’s essay — turns out there’s more than one — one creating “silicon valleys” elsewhere. Some of the points are downright laughable, such as “it might be a lost cause to try to establish a silicon valley in Israel.” (Hellooo — how many countries in the world enjoy Israel’s per-capital technology startup success?) And despite the two essays’ length, I have trouble finding many specifics I actually agree with.

Even so, if you care about technology industry economic development, the essays are worth skimming.

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June 2, 2006

The US government wants web surfing to be 100% trackable

According to The Register (which on this matter I find credible), the US department of justice wants to be able to track all web surfing. The reason — possibly even sincere — is to fight kiddie porn.

But many other possible uses of that data come to mind. I say again:

We need to strengthen our legal defenses against government (and private sector) use of data. Opposing the collection of data is a worthy tactic, but will only delay the inevitable. The ultimate solution has to be one that works even assuming near-infinite data collection and integration.

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May 23, 2006

Business sector selection for developing countries

One theme at TechLeb was that developing countries need to focus their efforts on particular technology industry subsectors. It’s a lot easier to come up with a government program that’s really effective for a few kinds of businesses than it is to come up with a plan for strengthening “all” kinds of enterprise. And of course it’s crucial to get to a critical mass, so that proven success – and proven successful people — in an area spawns more opportunities in similar ventures. Read more

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