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Daily Archives: August 24, 2014

US Wi-Fi Report – July 2014

OpenSignal: “Public Wi-Fi has transformed the way we stay connected, enabling a whole generation of start-ups to be created in cafes and other ad-hoc workspaces. Cafes are now seem almost as likely to publicly advertise their Wi-Fi network as they are the quality of their coffee. As we grow more demanding of Wi-Fi, expecting to be able to watch television or skype friends on publicly accessible connections, knowing that a certain location offers Wi-Fi is no longer enough. We know which cafes have Wi-Fi, we know which stores have Wi-Fi, and we know that the hotels we visit have Wi-Fi; what we don’t know is how fast that Wi-Fi will be.”

National Breast and Cervical Cancer Early Detection Program: Two Decades of Service to Underserved Women

Wiley Online Library – Cancer, Vol 120 – Sponsored by the CDC – Open Access – Supplement: National Breast and Cervical Cancer Early Detection Program: Two Decades of Service to Underserved Women. August 15, 2014. Volume 120, Issue S16, Pages i–vii, 2537–2624. “The National Breast and Cervical Cancer Early Detection Program is the only nationally organized cancer screening program for underserved women in the… Continue Reading

The 1,000-robot swarm – Harvard Gazette

Caroline Perry, SEAS Communications: “The first 1,000-robot flash mob has assembled at Harvard University. “Form a sea-star shape,” directs a computer scientist, sending the command to 1,024 little ’bots simultaneously via an infrared light. The robots begin to blink at one another, and then gradually arrange themselves into a five-pointed star. “Now form the letter K.” The “K”… Continue Reading

The transfer of personal data to third countries and international organisations by EU institutions and bodies

European Data Protection Supervisor – The transfer of personal data to third countries and international organisations by EU institutions and bodies. Position paper. Brussels, 14 July 2014. “This paper provides guidance to EU institutions and bodies on how to interpret and apply the rules laid down in Regulation (EC) No 45/2001 in the context of international transfers of personal… Continue Reading

Regulatory Process, Regulatory Reform, and the Quality of Regulatory Impact Analysis

Ellig, Jerry and Fike, Rosemarie, Regulatory Process, Regulatory Reform, and the Quality of Regulatory Impact Analysis (July 4, 2013). Mercatus Center at George Mason University Working Paper No. 13-13. Available for download at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=2485610 “Numerous regulatory reform proposals would require federal agencies to conduct more thorough analysis of proposed regulations or expand the resources and… Continue Reading

Reading Statutes in the Common Law Tradition

Pojanowski, Jeffrey A., Reading Statutes in the Common Law Tradition (August 22, 2014). Virginia Law Review, Forthcoming. Available for download at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=2485599 “There is wide agreement in American law and scholarship about the role the common law tradition plays in statutory interpretation. Jurists and scholars of various stripes concur that the common law points away… Continue Reading

The new digital ecosystem reality: Innovation’s next frontier is in customer service

PWC: “In their quest to improve the customer experience, many organizations have overlooked a key element: customer support. Traditional support is episodic and event-driven, with the onus on customers to initiate and maintain contact. Customers, however, have come to expect much more. The next-generation customer experience requires innovation in service and support across all access channels—contact… Continue Reading

New on LLRX – Four Part Series on Privacy and Data Security Violations

Via LLRX.com – fours new articles by law professor Daniel J. Solove on privacy, data protection and the harm caused by breaches. Privacy and Data Security Violations: What’s the Harm? – Daniel J. Solove is a Law professor at George Washington University Law School, an expert in information privacy law, and founder of TeachPrivacy, a privacy and security… Continue Reading

Readers absorb less on Kindles than on paper, study finds

Research suggests that recall of plot after using an e-reader is poorer than with traditional book, Alison Flood – The Guardian “A new study which found that readers using a Kindle were “significantly” worse than paperback readers at recalling when events occurred in a mystery story is part of major new Europe-wide research looking at the impact of digitisation… Continue Reading