All those topics that i wish i had time to pursue more earnestly.
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Category — Cool Stuff

I drank Google’s beer, then left

It was the only right (ethical) choice that I had. You see I went down to google’s new york office tonight to see a colleague of mine speak on the future of the internet. I thought it was an open invite without any specific rules as to what I could do with the knowledge that I found there. I registered and attended until Google asserted the rules.

Sometimes… Google gets it wrong. You see I did not have any prior ruleset to know that they do not allow people to blog or otherwise publish their visit to such talks. They did not send one, it was not in any announcement that I received, and I’ve otherwise not seen one. However, there is a set of rules that prohibit blogging or publishing that they announced before the talk. Google said that if i wanted to blog or publicly discuss the event, I had to get their permission. If I’d have known, I would not have attended or been affiliated with the event in any way. I am a professor, was and still am, and by the very nature of my job, i cannot guarantee that I will follow their rules about publication or blogging. I couldn’t consent to them, so I had to leave. I don’t want to have to ask google for permission to speak about something that I already know a good deal about and am perfectly happy dashing an email off to colleagues to learn more. I don’t want to be obliged to them for any intellectual content or public knowledge at all beyond the general service they provide.

The rational that google said justified this request for secrecy and the privatization of knowledge was one of collegiality. I found that justification to be ironic. Colleagues share within the limits of their judgment. Collegiality is broken as soon as the judgment is turned into a ruleset, as soon as trust becomes moot and i no longer have to trust you, instead i just have to trust that you are following the pre-ordained rules. At that point in time of the announcement of rules, anyone in the room could be called colleagues, afterwards we were all subjects to Google and any collegiality was limited by Google’s rules. We were all constructed as lesser beings, less equal, more likely to damage others. We were ‘other’, and untrustworthy, which is the implication of the ‘no blogging’. If you want people to be friends, to become a community, you have to let them communicate, you have to let them establish the common ground by consent.

Thus I had to leave, as I was not going to be subject of Google beyond what I’ve already contracted. I could not consent to silence. I am surprised that the speaker in question would allow this rule, but not that surprised in the end.

Please if you have a talk where people who take ethics seriously are present, never change the rules after the fact, make them public beforehand.

Now I know 2 things,
1. Google changes the rules of public engagement to suit it’s own interpretations
2. Before I attend any future Google event, I should ask for clearly defined rules to be made public and distributed, so that I can decide to either be complicit or not beforehand.

June 7, 2007   2 Comments

Onslaught

Onslaught:

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onslaught is an evil tower defense game.

June 6, 2007   No Comments

Atheist Nation | Atheist Videos | Ricky Gervais on Religion | Video 00035

May 26, 2007   No Comments

Welcome to Pyongyang | Gallery | Guardian Unlimited

Welcome to Pyongyang | Gallery | Guardian Unlimited:

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interesing photos from north korea…

May 25, 2007   No Comments

creativity/machine » i’ve always said that old people rock

creativity/machine » i’ve always said that old people rock:
i’ve always said that old people rock

Doc Jean makes a good point about amateur participation in this post… which also has a rockin video.

May 24, 2007   No Comments

chicken, chicken, chicken


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hehehehe

and

chicken

May 23, 2007   No Comments

International Prize of Digital Literature

International Prize of Digital Literature:
Submissions are now open for the annual Ciutat de Vinaros International Prize of Digital Literature, with a deadline of 14th September 2007. Works may be submitted in French, Spanish or Catalan, Italian or Portuguese, as well as in English. The two main prizes are in “Digital Narrative” and “Digital Poetry”, each offering a large purse of 2,500 euros to the winner (about £1,700). Works must be unpublished, have a high quality as interactive design and as literature, and should “explore and use the possibilities of the computer as a space for creation”.

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great.. we need more of these.

May 23, 2007   No Comments

Hobo Signs & Symbols

Hobo Signs & Symbols:
Hobo Signs & Symbols

Some hobos now communicate via cellular phones and e-mail. But the classic American hobo of early this century communicated through a much more basic system of marks–a code through which they gave information and warnings to their fellow Knights of the Road. Usually, these signs would be written in chalk or coal on a trestle, fence, building or sidewalk, letting others know what they could expect in the area of the symbol.

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for the perpetually lost….

May 22, 2007   1 Comment

Fair(y)_Use_Tale_Stanford_Cut-stream.mp4 (video/quicktime Object)

May 20, 2007   No Comments

YouTube – Contest Fiddle Round

YouTube – Contest Fiddle Round:
Contest Fiddle Round

Ken Knabb sent this great fiddle player video via his list:)

May 19, 2007   No Comments