Clearing the Cache: Nobel Prize for Fake Medals
BY Nancy Scola | Friday, October 9 2009
- Twenty four hours ago, this would have been just funny.
- Google News bases its new "blog" label on whether the site uses blogging software, which is weird.
- An SEIU video celebrates breaking up with the U.S. Chamber of Commerce.
- In the wake of a similar call by AT&T, members of Congress want Julius Genachowski to investigate whether Google Voice should have to play by the same rules as traditional telephone services.
- Live from the Left Coast did a show Wednesday night on where technology meets political protests these days. Ignore that Scola punk, but the Center for Democracy and Technology's John Morris makes the fascinating argument that China and other governments use events like the G20 Twitter crackdown to justify their own digital restrictions.
- God hates shrimp. As well as figs.
- The FTC tries to ease worries that new rules put bloggers at real risk of $11,000-a-pop fines, but the Washington Post's Cecilia Kang says she's "still not convinced."
- And the Electronic Frontier Foundation thinks that the FTC's endorsement rules for bloggers are "full of ambiguities and double-standards."
- An event for you New Yorkers: Twitter and Iran, at the Forest Hills Library.
- A peace group launches a flame vigil on the White House Facebook page.
- A review of HUD's new media efforts.
- And a new Oklahoma law would, reports the Atlantic, require online disclosure of abortions preformed in the state.
(With Micah Sifry)
