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Submission Summary: 0 pending, 2 declined, 3 accepted (5 total, 60.00% accepted)

Privacy

Submission + - UK Has Become a "Surveillance Society"

cultrhetor writes: "In a story released by the BBC, Richard Thomas, the information commissioner for Great Britain, says that fears of the nation's "sleep-walk into a surveillance society" have become reality. Surveillance ranges from data monitoring (credit cards, mobiles, and loyalty card information), US security agencies monitoring telecommunications traffic, to key stroke logging at work.

From the article, the report "predicts that by 2016 shoppers could be scanned as they enter stores, schools could bring in cards allowing parents to monitor what their children eat, and jobs may be refused to applicants who are seen as a health risk." The report's co-author, Dr. David Murakami-Wood, told BBC News that, compared to other Western nations, Britain was the "most surveilled country." He goes on to note: "We really do have a society which is premised both on state secrecy and the state not giving up its supposed right to keep information under control while, at the same time, wanting to know as much as it can about us.""
Media

Submission + - The Web as Political Weapon

cultrhetor writes: "In a rare nod from the MSM, John Harris of the Washington Post has noticed that the three largest recent political controversies have stemmed from work done by digital inhabitants. In the article, New Media a Weapon in the New World of Politics, he notes the connections between the recent scandals involving Mark Foley, George Allen, and Bill Clinton were representative of the new, web-driven age of American politics. From the article:

Each originally percolated in the world of new media — Web sites and news outlets that did not exist a generation ago — before charging into the traditional world of newspapers and television networks. In each case, the accusations quickly pivoted into a debate about the motivations and alleged biases of the accusers. Cumulatively, the stories highlight a new brand of politics in which nearly any revelation in the news becomes a weapon or shield in the daily partisan wars, and the aim of candidates and their operatives is not so much to win an argument as to brand opponents as fundamentally unfit.
Is the greatest danger in this that pols are finally recognizing the threat posed by the web? What might this do to future legislation surrounding the web?"
Microsoft

Submission + - Indian State Considers Microsoft Ban

cultrhetor writes: "The New York Times reports that the communist government in the Indian state of Kerala is trying to remove Microsoft from its public institutions, as part of a campaign against monopolistic corporations. From the article:
"schools and public offices across the state are being encouraged to install free software systems instead of purchasing Microsoft's Windows programs.
"It is well-known that Microsoft wants to have a monopoly in the field of computer technology. Naturally, being a democratic and progressive government, we want to encourage the spread of free software," M. A. Baby, the state's education minister, said by telephone."
The government is not banning Microsoft, but it is actively encouraging all 12,500 public schools in the state to install Linux."

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