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CYBER-SOCIETY-LIVE  December 2007

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Subject:

[CSL] The Filter --> November 2007

From:

Joanne Roberts <[log in to unmask]>

Reply-To:

Interdisciplinary academic study of Cyber Society <[log in to unmask]>

Date:

Thu, 6 Dec 2007 12:43:59 -0000

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text/plain

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From: [log in to unmask]
[mailto:[log in to unmask]] 
Sent: 05 December 2007 19:33
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: [the-filter] The Filter --> November 2007

<-- The Filter --> November 2007

Your regular dose of public-interest Internet news and commentary from
the Berkman Center for Internet & Society at Harvard Law School.

FILTER CONTENTS:
[0] From the Center
[1] Features
[2] Networked: Bookmarks, Webcasts, Podcasts, and Blogposts [3] Berkman
@ 10 [4] Global Voices: Digital Dose of Global Conversations [5]
Community Links [6] Upcoming Conferences [7] Staying Connected [8]
Filter Facts




[0] From the Center
======================================================================

Our interests at the Berkman Center have always been global - mirroring
the Net - including everyone who's online, and just as importantly,
everyone who's not. Our focus on different national contexts,
international policy efforts, comparisons across settings, and
engagement within them has varied naturally, depending on themes,
opportunities to effect change, partners, and more. The international
elements of this month's filter highlight our recent good fortune to
engage on a host of consciously international issues with wonderful
colleagues. Whether it is our transatlantic work on Interoperability and
Innovation with the inimitable Faculty Fellow Urs Gasser and his crew at
St. Gallen, ambitious globally distributed initiatives like the OpenNet
Initiative and Global Voices, the development of Principles on Privacy
and Self-Expression in concert with companies, rights organizations,
investors and academics mostly in Europe and the US (plus Berkman Alum
Rebecca MacKinnon in Hong Kong), or simply the recent visit by our
friend Francois Leveque from Ecole des Mines in Paris, these
interactions have been profoundly valuable. While the challenges of
bridging culture, policy and perspective remain great, they pale in
comparison to the amazing lessons and relationships that have come from
the process. It is our hope -- and suspicion -- that this is just the
beginning, that we will continue to develop the skills and understanding
necessary to make this type of work our second nature.

-- Colin Maclay, Managing Director, Berkman Center --




[1] FEATURES: a bit of what's going on at Berkman and where to read more
======================================================================

Interoperability and eInnovation
by David Russcol

Interoperability is a core aspect of the technological achievements of
the last few decades, yet it has received relatively little academic
attention. Interoperability is (roughly speaking) the ability of
different systems to exchange data with one another to achieve some
useful outcome. Although technical interoperability (having systems that
can talk to one another) is a major part of interoperability, legal,
market, and personal factors are also relevant. Even if one program or
system can talk to another, it will not do so if the two are controlled
by competitors unwilling to cooperate or if doing so would violate
antitrust laws, for instance.

The entire Internet is an example of the enormous potential for
innovation created by interoperability. The Internet, and the Web in
particular, are based on open standards from the Internet Engineering
Task Force and the World Wide Web Consortium, among others. Virtually
everything on the Web communicates through TCP/IP, HTML, HTTP, and other
such open technologies that are available to all developers and
applications. Innovation has been widespread from the invention of the
Web through the advent of e-commerce to the recent development of
mashups, a direct application of the interoperability present on the
Web. It is undeniable that the development of the Internet has coincided
with unprecedented technological and economic growth, but the
relationship between interoperability and this innovation has not been
spelled out to date.

However, the Berkman Center and the Research Center for Information Law
at the University of St. Gallen, Switzerland, have recently completed a
study on the relationship between interoperability and innovation in the
context of information and communications technologies. Following on the
Roadmap for Open ICT Ecosystems, we entered into this project with the
general idea that openness and interoperability are generally "good
things" that facilitate competition, growth, and innovation, although we
retained a healthy skepticism that this was true in all cases. In our
discussions with experts and market actors, we developed more nuanced
views. Different ways of achieving interoperability are better than
others in given situations, due to varying externalities and incentives
for various stakeholders. Interoperability does have potential drawbacks
for many parties, from major corporations seeking to protect copyrighted
music from pirates and hackers by walling it off in incompatible DRM to
suspicious libertarians concerned about a buildup of personal
information in the hands of government or private actors due to seamless
Digital Identity technology. Just as there can be too little
interoperability (such as the communications systems that did not work
together on 9/11), it may be that there can be too much.

In order to analyze the relationship between interoperability and
innovation, we mainly focused on three in-depth case studies: 
DRM-protected music, Digital ID, and Mashups/Web services. In each case,
we explore several possible paths to sustained interoperability and
assess the potential of each to spur innovation. There are many possible
ways to achieve interoperability, ranging from voluntary (using or
creating open standards) to involuntary (reverse engineering by
competitors) to coerced (mandates by government actors). They vary on
numerous dimensions, including level of government involvement,
responsiveness to changing market factors, cost-effectiveness, and the
amount of private coordination necessary to achieve interoperability.

In general, we conclude that there is no "silver bullet" for
interoperability - no one approach that is suitable for all
circumstances. Instead, we advocate a rigorous case-by-case analysis to
determine the most appropriate course, focusing on the market structure
and economic incentives in light of the goal of innovation or whatever
other policy goals are desired. We tend to prefer open standards
processes, but in some cases unilateral action (as with Apple virtually
creating the online music market with iTunes and its DRM, or Facebook
opening an API to developers) is easier and more effective in spurring
innovation. While we are generally wary of government intervention, we
recognize that there are situations where market failures make state
action appropriate, usually intervention after the fact to break up
monopoly or oligopoly situations that stifle innovation.

About David Russcol:
<http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/home/bio_david_russcol>
Breaking Down Digital Barriers:
<http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/interop/>
Roadmap to Open ICT Ecosystems:
<http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/epolicy/>


Reflections on the IGF
by Robert Faris

Just weeks ago in Rio de Janeiro, the second Internet Governance Forum
effectively came to an end after the penultimate session. With the
closing remarks still to be delivered, most of the remaining attendees
mingled in conversation at the back of the plenary hall, ignoring the
pleas of the chairman to come to order. The next couple of speakers went
forward with their comments without the full attention of the plenary,
while the many participants that were weary of the structure pursued
their own agendas.

Close to fourteen hundred people came together for this
multi-stakeholder event representing more than one hundred countries. 
Given the flagrant lack of real power placed in the hands of the IGF, it
is laudable that so many people came to share what should be done-in
full knowledge that this body could not make it happen. On the other
hand, many of us don't need much urging to visit Rio.

The choice of venue was risky with the beach less than 100 meters from
the podium. It fortunately rained for most of the forum; had it been
sunny, attendance on days three and four might have been left only to
the virtual and virtuous. I find fresh coconut milk the perfect fuel for
digesting the enormity of Internet governance, particularly in
combination with the sonorous lapping of waves. When that isn't enough,
a caipirinha can help with one's courage of conviction.

A few of the speakers at the forum resorted to impassioned arm-waving,
but most of the proceedings were carried out in the subdued tones of
civil discourse on matters of critical import. The mode of the
proceedings was the panel, which is great at giving as many attendees as
possible a moment of discursive glory. The downside is that it is nearly
impossible to deliver a coherent message in less than 10 minutes, except
to those singing to the choir. This most often leaves us with little
more than a chance to state priorities and identify important facets of
a puzzle to be solved at a later point in time. Like the others, I
dutifully recited the table of contents of what I would have gladly
expounded upon for a full hour or two.

If the diversity of attendees or the number and range of opinions
expressed is the gauge of success, then the 2007 IGF was a huge success.

Perhaps this indeed should be the best measure of accomplishment for a
multi-stakeholder initiative, with apologies to those that cringe and
run for the door when that phrase in mentioned. Everyone who wished to
briefly share their thoughts had an opportunity to do so. The problem
was getting people to listen. I, for one, left Rio with all my
preconceptions, biases and dogmas unscathed. I suspect that most
participants were similarly immune to the words of their counterparts.

Andrew Keen did not convince me to shut down the cacophony of opinions
coming through my ethernet cable and spend more of my time with the BBC
and CNN. He is right that I should become a more discerning and
perspicacious consumer of online media. I continue to search the web for
guidance on that. Neither was Vint Cerf convinced by Keen's remarks: 
Cerf's response was that Keen's "diatribe" was a lot of "crap." (Wow,
how many of us are envious that he can get away with that in such an
august public forum.) Yet, I have little faith that Keen has now
realized the error in his ways having been chastised by one of the
godfathers of the Internet. I do agree with Keen regarding the value of
the The New York Times. Perhaps we could join forces to get the paper to
the next 6.5 billion readers who don't read the New York Times. If only
there were a low cost way to duplicate and distribute information around
the world we might have a chance.

The IGF included almost one hundred different sessions, each with a
finely targeted topic, except that upon closer inspection, these turned
out to be the same ten or so topics. Expanding access to the Internet
was properly placed at the top of the list of priorities for most. If
innovative approaches to this issue were broached I missed it while
sitting in on a parallel panel. A session that discussed ICANN without
advertising the fact seemed to upset everyone, those who attended that
didn't want to hear any more about it, and those that missed it who
wanted to hear more on the topic, if only they had known it would be
aired out again. In another egregious error in the program, all the
panelists that spoke at the human rights and net neutrality session
agreed that net neutrality should be protected. (I believe that there
was also broad consensus that human rights are good.) Internet security
was presented by dozens of experts in twenty minutes or less, with the
number of definitions for security far outnumbering the presenters. 
Others discussed how open source and proprietary approaches could be
utilized to protect intellectual property online. Other panels confirmed
that cybercrime should be addressed and that children should be
protected. More on that next year.

I regrettably missed the sessions on 'critical internet resources'. This
euphemism seems to intentionally lend itself to an infinitely wide
spectrum of interpretation, though most often seems to correspond to an
attack on the conspiracy to keep control of the Internet out of the
hands of the international community, who would otherwise bring order to
the chaos, and deliberate the Internet into submission. As far as I can
tell, the ICANN board did not grasp the logical justice for
democratizing the network and failed to immediately turn over the keys
to the Internet. The search for a governance body capable of restoring
civility, security and accuracy to the medium continues. If confused by
this, tell me how you feel about international hegemony and democratic
accountability in international institutions, and I'll tell you which
side to line up on. I can also give you a few key talking points that
will induce the other side to cower and seek cover, at least for a while
anyway before they come up again firing.

Another key question of conscience discussed during the IGF is whether
technology companies should: a) govern themselves; b) follow local law;
c) be subject to binding international law; d) none of the above; e) all
of the above. By the way, the second choice is not allowed.

The intrepid Google representatives were inescapable, sitting on
innumerable panels to respond to those that question their lack of evil.

They talked about privacy, market power and their choices to compromise
with governments that would otherwise block their services. At times
they resorted to describing the numerous services that users around the
world voluntarily use for free-raising further suspicion. All agreed
before ripping into them that it was great for Google to come and take
the heat. Others were of course conspicuous in their absence.

With so many diverse and interesting opinions expressed-all uttered by
experts-it seems a shame to not aggregate these into something that one
can take to the policy-makers and international negotiators. One
possible savior from the randomness of it all, Jimmy Wales, did not beam
into the freedom of expression panel as expected. We still don't know
whether to lay the blame on Skype, the poorly managed Internet, or Rio. 
I looked to Wikipedia to make sense of the noise, and found neither a
concise treatment of the proceedings nor the full breadth of vision
found at the conference. (There is a link to the full text of the
plenary proceedings on the IGF website, though one must provide their
own tropical drink.) Perhaps Wikipedia has finally met its match. As for
me, I guess I can't have my complexity and simplify it too.

Removing tongue from cheek for a moment, this clearly was not a forum
for making major decisions or generating new strategies for tackling
profound questions that involved multiple trade-offs between privacy,
security and freedom of expression, or for finding the best way to
reward innovative thinkers while continuing to promote innovation. There
is inestimable value in the conversations and connections made off the
official record and unknown benefits to be reaped by the potential
future collaborations. For those who attended with the hope of moving
from talk to action, the forum may have provided a unique opportunity to
meet and converse with others who are similarly inclined.

The question I am left to ponder is how the exchanges of opinions can be
aggregated and channeled into something genuinely useful. Many of the
sessions consisted of people talking past one another, all of us on
separate trajectories with no notion or appreciation of where the others
were heading. Some in pursuit of greater protection of children online,
others in search of greater internet security, others urging for greater
social responsibility and freedom from cyber crime. It is hard to argue
with any of this, until you start to consider how to get there from
here. A lingering disappointment in the IGF, and life in general, is
that so many bright, well-meaning people can not cleanly reach consensus
on how to govern the Internet. I haven't figured out yet whether this is
an indication of too much or too little coconut milk. In the meantime, I
will be embracing the chaos and looking forward to New Delhi.

About Robert Faris:
<http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/home/bio_rfaris>
About the OpenNet Initiative:
<http://opennet.net/>
About the Internet Governance Forum:
<http://www.intgovforum.org/>


Using Tech to Improve Political Debates
by Dan Gillmor

Recently, presidential candidates from both parties participated in the
latest of this election cycle's "debates." The quotes around that word
are deliberate, because political debates are stuck in a world of
television sound bites, after-the-fact spin, and almost blatant contempt
for voters.

Mass media, the communications technology that became supreme in the
20th century, has ruined debates. The Lincoln-Douglas confrontations in
1858 and other verbal contests were once among the deepest and most
revelatory of conversations. They revealed intellect and passion, and
illuminated the issues of their day. Today's mass media, reflecting a
cultural short attention span, elevates shallowness.

This year's endless series of events, with so many candidates aiming for
the nominations, have been especially puerile, little more than
mini-press conferences and spin sessions. Even when the questions are
serious, the time limitations on answers puts a premium on regurgitating
canned, semi-clever lines that entertain instead of illuminate. These
things are to real debating what motel room art is to Picasso.

But technology can also help restore the debate. The Internet and
digital tools - search, blogging, online video, wikis, interactive
games, and virtual worlds - are made to order for serious conversations.

The collision of technology with media offers an unparalleled chance to
hold debates that would illuminate our problems and opportunities and
give us true insight into the people who want us to elect them.

The role of technology in politics has always been prominent, notably in
communications. The pamphleteers of America's Revolutionary era, and
newspaper people later on, knew how powerful the printing press could
be. The telegraph sped the news. Telephones, a one-to-one device,
transformed personal communications. Radio and then, even more,
television became the ultimate tools: one-to-many megaphones of
unparalleled power.

The Internet subsumes all that came before, and adds a many-to-many
capability. The democratization of media means that anyone can publish;
that what we publish is available to a potentially global community; and
that creation naturally leads to conversation and collaboration.

The Net has, of course, already made itself felt on the campaign trail. 
Howard Dean's 2004 team innovated with blogging and online fund-raising
ideas. Former senator George Allen lost his 2006 reelection race in part
because of an unflattering video posted on YouTube. In this cycle, the
presidential candidates are all over the Internet map, and so are their
supporters - witness the now-famous "I've got a crush on Obama" video
and Mitt Romney's invitation to his supporters to create advertisements,
among countless other efforts.

We've seen some modest attempts to make the Internet part of the debate
process. The CNN-YouTube Democratic event during the summer (a
Republican version was held on Nov. 28), demonstrated at least one thing
of value: Regular folks can ask questions that are at least as
penetrating, or vapid, as the ones posed by journalists in more typical
settings. But post-event chatter focused, to a major extent, on what
questioners looked like - and whether CNN and YouTube should have let
the audience, not just the journalists, select the questions posed to
candidates (the answer is obviously yes). Still, this was a sideshow. We
learned almost nothing useful about the candidates or their views.

Meanwhile, Slate and Yahoo joined forces a few weeks ago to offer a
slightly more innovative, roll-your-own version. Voters could select
specific questions and issues, and get a brief video lineup of
candidates' views. Yahoo says visitors to the site stuck around for an
average of seven minutes, a long time on the Web but a pathetic span for
serious voters. Perhaps they'd have delved more deeply had the site
included more truly interactive features.

Better still is 10Questions.com, created by the TechPresident site
working with The New York Times and MSNBC, a site that lets regular
folks ask video questions and vote on the ones that get posed to
candidates. Then the candidates answer, and the regular folks vote on
whether the candidates actually answered.

But we can do even better, using a variety of media and techniques. 
Consider two approaches, different in character but both aimed at
greater understanding.

First, the candidates should agree to hold lengthy, one-on-one debates
and then put the results online for the public to slice and dice. Rather
than having journalists and/or YouTubers ask the questions, we should
leave the questioning to the candidates themselves. Give the candidates
time to provide substantial responses, and give them full freedom to
follow up on their opponents' remarks. Moderators could help keep the
debate on track and civil.

The videos should be posted online and made freely available. Media
organizations, party organizations, interest groups, and private
citizens could use increasingly inexpensive digital editing tools to
help us sort through the mass of video; for example, someone who cares
about healthcare could create a comparison of what each candidate said
about the topic.

Then let voters decide what they want to watch. A few will watch
everything. Many more will watch several debates, or parts of many.

Certainly this system would ask a great deal of the candidates,
including perhaps more of their time than they might wish to spend. It
would also demonstrate the utter shallowness of the so-called debates
that broadcasters and interest groups sponsor today.

A second approach would be even more ambitious: A debate that would
unfold online over the course of days, or even weeks and months. Imagine
that one candidate takes a position and poses a question. The opponent
would answer with a written response of some predetermined length, but
with the help of staff, experts, and the general public. Then the first
candidate, again with the help of anyone who wants to join the process,
would dissect the response and reply with (we'd hope) a truly nuanced
update. Continue this process at length - and repeat it with many other
topics.

What would the site look like? What technologies would we use? I have my
own ideas, and have posted them on my blog, but I'm just one person; we
need a collective effort to figure this out, using much the same
iterative process. The specific tools are less important than the
willingness to deploy them.

Indeed, we'd start with an inventory of what people are already doing. 
Nonpolitical online conversations are already achieving remarkable depth
and breadth using a variety of methods.

But before we finish yet another campaign cycle in the traditional way,
let's resolve to bring debating into the new century. We have the
ability to turn top-down, sell-the-candidate methods of electioneering
into edge-in conversations among candidates and the electorate. It'll
happen eventually. Why not this time?

More on Dan's Gillmor's theory on the future of political debates:
<http://citmedia.org/blog/2007/11/11/more-about-new-kinds-of-online-deba
tes/>
About Dan Gillmor:
<http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/home/oliver_goodenough>
Dan Gillmor's Latest Endeavor:
<http://cronkite.asu.edu/news/gillmor-110607.php>




[2] NETWORKED: PAPERS, BOOKMARKS, WEBCASTS, PODCASTS, TAGS, AND
BLOGPOSTS Links to Berkman conversations happening online
======================================================================

Privacy and Social Networking:

[JOURNAL] Social Network Sites: Definition, History, and Scholarship.
*<http://jcmc.indiana.edu/vol13/issue1/boyd.ellison.html>

[ARTICLE] David Weinberger: Facebook's Privacy Default.
*<http://www.huffingtonpost.com/david-weinberger/facebooks-privacy-defau
l_b_72687.html>

[BLOGPOST] Ethan Zuckerman on the changes to Facebook.
*<http://www.ethanzuckerman.com/blog/2007/11/15/facebook-changes-the-nor
ms-for-web-purchasing-and-privacy/>

[PRESENTATION] Jonathan Zittrain on the "Future of the Net."
*<http://www.news.com/8301-10784_3-9825477-7.html?tag=head>


Internet Politics, Governance, and Regulation:

[ARTICLE] Congress looks to colleges to police copyright.
*<http://www.news.com/Democrats-Colleges-must-police-copyright%2C-or-els
e/2100-1028_3-6217943.html?tag=nefd.pop>

[WEBSITE] Vote Gopher: Presidential Election forum.
*<http://votegopher.com/>

[VIDEO] Urs Gasser and John Palfrey present "Breaking Down Digital
Barriers."
*<http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/mediaberkman/2007/11/16/breaking-down-dig
ital-barriers-john-palfrey-and-urs-gasser-present-new-research-on-intero
perability/>

[DATABASE] Citizen Media Law Project: Database of Legal Threats.
*<http://www.citmedialaw.org/database>


Security, Filtering, and Digital Identity:

[BLOGPOST] Wendy Seltzer: Stop Congress From Breaking Higher Education
Networks.
*<http://wendy.seltzer.org/blog/archives/2007/11/13/new-bill-would-break
-higher-education-networks.html>

[REPORT] OpenNet Initiative: Nigerian 2007 Presidential Election.
*<http://opennet.net/research/bulletins/014>

[ARTICLE] "10 Tips for Smart Holiday Shopping Online."
*<http://www.staysafeonline.info/basics/shoppingTips.html>

[CASE STUDY] Breaking Down Digital Barriers: Digital Identity
Interoperability and eInnovation.
*<http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/interop/downloads.html>




[3] Berkman @ 10:
Celebrating 10 years of exploring cyberspace, sharing in its study, and 
pioneering its development
======================================================================

MacArthur Award, Kicking Off Berkman @ 10
by John Palfrey

This year, the Berkman Center is celebrating its tenth anniversary. 
We're spending the year, in part, reflecting on what we've learned in 
our first decade, where things stand now in our field, and where we 
ought to focus for our second decade. We'll have a series of special 
events throughout the year, as well as a gala event from May 14 - 16, 
2008. We hope very much to see lots of friends, old and new, over the 
course of the year.

We've also undertaken an effort this year to raise endowment-style funds

for the Center to support our next ten years of operations. We've been 
very generously supported over the years, by the Berkman family and many

others. Our mode has been not to have a permanent endowment, and we are 
not changing course in this regard, but rather we seek to raise funds on

an entrepreneurial basis as we go along. We're taking this tenth 
anniversary celebration as a time to achieve a bit more stability in our

funding structure by raising funds to cover our core costs for our 
second decade.

We could not be happier that the MacArthur Foundation has decided to 
give us a $4 million award, our largest ever gift outside of the ongoing

generosity of the Berkman family. This award from the MacArthur 
Foundation is the anchor to what we intend to make a successful effort 
to ensure that we have the resources to do our work even better in our 
second decade than we have in our first. I'm confident that the 
importance of the issues of Internet and society only grow more 
important and central to the lives of people around the world with each 
passing year.

The MacArthur Foundation has been exceptionally helpful to us on many 
levels as we go about our public-spirited work. The foundation's 
president, Jonathan Fanton, the vice-president Elspeth Revere, and 
program officer John Bracken have contributed to our work in so many 
substantive and philanthropic ways. We're extremely grateful.

About John Palfrey:
<http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/home/john_palfrey>
To comment, please visit:
<http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/palfrey/2007/11/15/macarthur-award-kicking
-off-berkman10/>
For more on Berkman @ 10:
<http://www.berkmanat10.org/>


Berkman @ 10: Our Year-Long Look at the Future of the Net

The future of citizen media.
[BLOGPOST] Center for Citizen Media explains business models.
*<http://citmedia.org/blog/category/business-models/>

The future of television.
[APPLICATION] Free and Open-Source Internet TV from our friends at 
Participatory Culture Foundation.
*<http://www.getmiro.com/>

The future of education.
[TECH] OLPC extends their Get One Give One program.
*<http://www.laptopgiving.org/en/index.php>




[4] Global Voices:
Digital Dose of Global Conversations
======================================================================

David Sasaki, Global Voices Director of Outreach, put together the 
monthly digest below, a collection of links to the most interesting 
conversations happening in the global blogosphere. Please check out 
Global Voices here: <http://www.globalvoicesonline.org>

In light of the state of emergency declared in Pakistan on November 3, 
2007, Global Voices has set up a Special Coverage Page where we shall be

aggregating our own coverage of the events plus regular updates from 
selected English-language blogs and other relevant information.
<http://www.globalvoicesonline.org/specialcoverage/pakistan-emergency-20
07/>

Bangladeshi bloggers are imploring their readers to set political 
differences aside and unite to care for the tens of thousands affected 
by Cyclone Sidr. They also explain how an innovative fundraising 
campaign allows those within Bangladesh to donate to the humanitarian 
effort via SMS.
<http://www.globalvoicesonline.org/2007/11/20/bangla-blogs-seek-aid-for-
cyclone-sidr-victims/>

Just before the U.S. stock market took one of its largest tumbles in 
recent history, PetroChina, the self-titled "most profitable enterprise 
in Asia," returned to the Chinese stock market after seven years abroad.

Though the state-owned oil giant now claims the world's greatest market 
value (surpassing Exxon-Mobil and General Electric), Chinese business 
bloggers are concerned about what the future holds.
<http://www.globalvoicesonline.org/2007/11/10/chinathe-return-of-petroch
ina/>

Ten day to go before the Russian Duma election, Dmitri Minaev reports on

the "dirty tricks" used in this year's campaign, and LJ user 'drugoi' 
conducts an online opinion poll, whose results, among other things, show

that the new parliament is likely to be elected by the grandmothers of 
Russian bloggers.
<http://www.globalvoicesonline.org/2007/11/22/russia-dirty-tricks-and-op
inion-polls/>

A recent bribery scandal at Samsung involving prosecutors and government

officials has become a litmus test for presidential candidates in the 
upcoming South Korean election. Some wonder whether it's Samsung or the 
government that holds the greatest power.
<http://www.globalvoicesonline.org/2007/11/17/korea-samsung-scandal/>

Tanzania's Richard Bezuidenhout was declared the winner of the $100,000 
prize in the second season of Big Brother Africa. Richard, a 24 year-old

film student, survived five nominations to be forced out, fell in love 
with a fellow housemate from Angola, and was involved in an alleged 
sexual assault in the house. He was also newly married at the start of 
the show. Is Bezuidenhout's win a reflection of African values or just 
another example of irresistibly bad reality TV?
<http://www.globalvoicesonline.org/2007/11/15/big-brother-africa-ii-did-
immorality-triumph/>

It took no time at all for five words said by the King of Spain to 
Venezuelan president Hugo Chavez at a summit in Chile to become slogans 
for the opposition, the subject of parodies, and even ringtones for cell

phones. "Por que no te callas?" or "Why don't you shut up?" continues to

be written about in the press and especially in blogs on both sides of 
the Atlantic, writes Luis Carlos Diaz from Caracas.
<http://www.globalvoicesonline.org/2007/11/14/venezuela-why-dont-you-shu
t-up/>

Shedding light on the battle between state censorship and 
anti-censorship groups, Sami Ben Gharbia has developed the Access Denied

Map, an interactive Google Maps mashup that provides information about 
the censorship efforts targeting various online social networking 
communities and web-based applications.
<http://www.globalvoicesonline.org/2007/11/12/access-denied-map-mapping-
web-20-censorship/>




[5] COMMUNITY LINKS:
Featuring our friends and affiliates
======================================================================

10 Questions: "the first truly people-powered online presidential forum"
<http://www.10questions.com/>

NewsTrust (Beta): Your Guide to Good Journalism
<http://beta.newstrust.net/>

Pew Internet Report: Why We Don't Know Enough About Broadband in the
U.S.
<http://www.pewinternet.org/PPF/r/226/report_display.asp>

John Tehranian: Infringement Nation: Copyright Reform and the Law/Norm
Gap
<http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1029151>




[6] UPCOMING CONFERENCES
======================================================================

*December 3-6: Social Media for Government - Washington, DC:
<http://www.aliconferences.com/conf/social_media_govt1207/index.htm>

*December 6: How is the Internet Changing the NH Primary? - Manchester,
NH:
<http://www.newenglandnews.org/?q=unpress>

*December 6-9: Indigenous Peoples Knowledge Society: Transformations and

Challenges - Vienna, Austria:
<http://www.inst.at/kctos/sektionen_a-f/fiser_budka.htm>

*December 7-8: Creativity, Entrepreneurship, and Organizations of the 
Future at Harvard Business School - Allston, MA:
<http://www.hbs.edu/entrepreneurship/conference/>

*December 8: Symposium on Reputation Economies in Cyberspace at Yale's 
Information Society Project - New Haven, CT:
<http://isp.law.yale.edu/reputation>

*December 10: Copyright and the University: An Academic Symposium at GWU

- Washington, DC:
<http://www.copyrightalliance.org/content/Copyright-and-the-University-A
n-Academic-Symposium>

*December 11-18: SANS Cyber Defense Initiative 2007 - Washington, DC:
<http://www.sans.org/info/13216>

*December 11-12: Le Web 3 - Paris, FR:
<http://www.leweb3.com/>

*December 11-12: Massachusetts Digital Government Summit - Boston, MA:
<http://www.govtech.com/events/silo.php?id=121949>

*December 11-13: Curating our Digital Scientific Heritage: a Global 
Collaborative Challenge - Washington, DC:
<http://www.dcc.ac.uk/events/dcc-2007/>

*December 14-17: Economics of E-Learning - Paris, FR:
<http://www.elene-ee.net/7._Conference:_Economics_of_E-learning>

*January 12-13: 2008 Boston Digital Media Summit at Boston College - 
Newton, MA:
<http://mediagrid.org/summit/>

*January 14-17: Niseko Conference 2008: Internet law for professionals -

Niseko, Japan:
<http://www.nisekoconference.com/>

*January 14-15: Workshop: Computing in the Cloud at Princeton's Center 
for Information Technology Policy - Princeton, NJ:
<http://citp.princeton.edu/cloud-workshop/>

*January 18-20: International Conference on Technology, Knowledge and 
Society at Northeastern University - Boston, MA:
<http://t08.cgpublisher.com/index.html#who>

*SAVE THE DATE! May 14-16: The Berkman Center's 10th Anniversary 
Conference and Gala at Harvard University - Cambridge, MA:
<http://www.berkmanat10.org>




[7] STAYING CONNECTED:
How to find out about Berkman's weekly events
======================================================================

If you'd like to be notified of Berkman announcements, events, research,

or job opportunities, you can sign up for our mailing lists here: 
<http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/signup>

Every Friday we feature the week's online conversations in the Berkman 
Buzz. If you would like to receive the Buzz via email, please visit the 
Berkman Signup page <http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/signup/signup.pl> to 
register.

We webcast every Tuesday Luncheon Series Speaker. Luncheon Series events

start at 12:30 pm Eastern Time. The webcast link is 
<rtsp://harmony.law.harvard.edu/webcast.sdp>. You can participate live 
in our lunch discussions through our IRC chat channel: 
<irc://irc.freenode.net/Berkman>, or on our island in Second Life: 
<http://tinyurl.com/s6tv4>.

If you are unable to tune in to one of our events, please check out 
MediaBerkman for audio and video of our Event Archive: 
<http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/mediaberkman/>

Subscribe to the Berkman Center's audio and video podcasts through 
iTunes, ODEO, and Podnova.

* iTunes: 
<http://phobos.apple.com/WebObjects/MZStore.woa/wa/viewPodcast?id=135238
584&s=143441>
* ODEO: <http://odeo.com/channel/79770/view>
* Podnova: <http://www.podnova.com/channel/40831/>

You can also join our community by friending us on Facebook. Just search

for "Berkman Center."




[8] FILTER FACTS
======================================================================

* Talk Back
Tell us what you think or send feedback and news announcements to:
<[log in to unmask]>

* Subscription Info
Subscribe or Unsubscribe:
<http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/signup>

* About Us
The Filter is a publication of the Berkman Center for Internet & Society

at Harvard Law School.
Editor: Patrick McKiernan
Contributors: Amar Ashar, Catherine Bracy, Rob Faris, Dan Gillmor, Colin

Maclay, John Palfrey, David Russcol, and David Sasaki

* Not a Copyright
This work is hereby released into the public domain. Please share it.
To read the public domain dedication, visit:
<http://creativecommons.org/licenses/publicdomain>

************************************************************************************
Distributed through Cyber-Society-Live [CSL]: CSL is a moderated discussion
list made up of people who are interested in the interdisciplinary academic
study of Cyber Society in all its manifestations.To join the list please visit:
http://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/lists/cyber-society-live.html
*************************************************************************************

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