interesting project:
Internet pioneers. Scott Griffin's masters project features enjoyable bios of internet pioneers.
[Seb's Open Research]
October 8, 2003 No Comments
Wed, 08 Oct 2003 17:07:28 GMT
le petit mort. Weblogging, the fad most poplular amongst teenage girls, is dying. The “blogosphere” will number ten million souls by the end of 2004, but almost all of them will be dead. [MetaFilter]
October 8, 2003 No Comments
global internet statistics
maybe not the best internet statistics out there, but interesting enough.
October 8, 2003 No Comments
Wed, 08 Oct 2003 15:59:33 GMT
Thomas Roessler asks a question
in his blog – “What kind of innovation should be encouraged (or dicouraged)“?
Let me answer that by citing my First Law of the Internet:
(See my blog entry at
http://www.cavebear.com/cbblog-archives/000059.html)
The First Law of the Internet
Every person shall be free to
use the Internet in any way that is privately beneficial without being publicly
detrimental.
-
The burden of demonstrating
public detriment shall be on those who wish to prevent the private use.-
Such a demonstration shall
require clear and convincing evidence of public detriment.
-
-
The public detriment must be of
such degree and extent as to justify the suppression of the private activity.
I believe that there is massive evidence, evidence that is both
clear and convincing, proving that Sitefinder creates not only present damage to
the internet but also substantially compromises the future development of the
internet. That, to me, is a public harm that is of such a degree and
extent as to justify the suppression of Sitefinder.
——-
innovation should be encouraged if and only if it does not directly harm others or disempower them in significant ways.
October 8, 2003 No Comments