Category «Internet»

Study – comprehensive overview of Google’s collection methods and exactly what information it collects on you

“In light of recently turning 20 years old, Google reigns as one of today’s tech giants. The company has two main ways of collecting user data: active and passive. Active tracking is usually consciously understood by the user, such as signing into a range of accounts (YouTube, Google Search, Gmail, etc.). Passive data collection, however, …

Subjects: Financial System, Internet, Privacy, Search Engines, Social Media

New on LLRX – Three TextExpander Snippets You Should Be Using to Save Time Immediately

Via LLRX.com – Three TextExpander Snippets You Should Be Using to Save Time Immediately: Brett Burney recommends and demonstrates an application from which we can all benefit: Text Expander – its saves you time immediately because it can type for you. And not only does TextExpander save you time, but it’ll also make you a …

Subjects: E-Mail, Internet, Knowledge Management, Legal Research

Who controls your data?

Engadget – We requested our personal information from dozens of companies. Here’s what they gave us — and what they didn’t: “The average American, one study tell us, touches their phone 2,600 times per day. By the end of a given year, that’s nearly a million touches, rising to two million if you’re a power …

Subjects: Civil Liberties, Financial System, Freedom of Information, Government Documents, Health Care, Internet, Knowledge Management, Privacy, Social Media

Amazon global headquarters competition yields huge cache of economic data

Axios: “When Amazon invited cities to compete for its second global headquarters a year ago today, it got reams of data from the 238 entrants — enough to learn details of the cities’ future plans that a lot of their residents don’t even know about, Axios’ Erica Pandey reports. Why it matters: The information effectively …

Subjects: E-Commerce, Economy, Financial System, Internet, Knowledge Management, Marketing, Privacy

NYT Op-Ed To Restore Civil Society, Start With the Library

To Restore Civil Society, Start With the Library. This crucial institution is being neglected just when we need it the most. By Eric Klinenberg (@EricKlinenberg), a professor of sociology and the director of the Institute for Public Knowledge at New York University “…But the problem that libraries face today isn’t irrelevance. Indeed, in New York …

Subjects: Economy, Education, Financial System, Freedom of Information, Internet, Knowledge Management, Libraries

What if technologies had their own ethical standards?

European Parliament – What if technologies had their own ethical standards? “Technologies are often seen either as objects of ethical scrutiny or as challenging traditional ethical norms. The advent of autonomous machines, deep learning and big data techniques, blockchain applications and ‘smart’ technological products raises the need to introduce ethical norms into these devices. The very …

Subjects: AI, Government Documents, Internet, Knowledge Management, Legal Research

What if technologies challenged our ethical norms?

European Parliament Think Tank – What if technologies challenged our ethical norms? “Exploring the relationship between ethics and technological innovation has always been a challenging task for policy-makers. Ethical considerations concerning the impact of research and innovation (R&I) are increasingly important owing to the quickening pace of technological innovation and the transformative potential and complexity …

Subjects: Internet, Knowledge Management

Chegg’s CEO says higher ed isn’t set up for today’s students

MarketPlace: “The cost of the learning content was designed so that everybody could take a 30 percent margin three times — the distributor, the wholesaler, the bookstore. What gets taught is based on the curriculum that a school can do based on the professors they have, which is very different than what you want to …

Subjects: Economy, Education, Internet, Knowledge Management, Libraries

Study documents growing wave of online antisemitism

A Quantitative Approach to Understanding Online Antisemitism. Joel Finkelstein, Savvas Zannettou, Barry Bradlyn, Jeremy Blackburn. arXiv:1809.01644v1 [cs.CY] for this version) “In this paper, we present a large-scale, quantitative study of online antisemitism. We collect hundreds of million comments and images from alt-right Web communities like 4chan’s Politically Incorrect board (/pol/) and the Twitter clone, Gab. …

Subjects: Civil Liberties, Internet, Legal Research, Social Media