First POST: Health of Networks
BY Miranda Neubauer | Friday, July 20 2012
When the state can't or won't ...
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During protests in China's Shifang province, analysts say microbloggers provided coverage of the dissent even as it was ignored by state media.
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Russian state media are downplaying the impact of flooding in Russia, but volunteers on social media are coordinating a response just the same.
Obama: Time to get serious about cybersecurity
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In a Wall Street Journal op-ed, President Barack Obama writes about the importance of taking the threat of cyber-attacks seriously.
We need to make it easier for the government to share threat information so critical-infrastructure companies are better prepared. We need to make it easier for these companies — with reasonable liability protection — to share data and information with government when they're attacked. And we need to make it easier for government, if asked, to help these companies prevent and recover from attacks ... For the sake of our national and economic security, I urge the Senate to pass the Cybersecurity Act of 2012 and Congress to send me comprehensive legislation so I can sign it into law.
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Senator Joe Lieberman (Ind.-Conn) and four co-sponsors released their revised Cybersecurity Act legislation yesterday, and at first glance, Mike Masnick says it may take privacy concerns seriously.
The messages of the day
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Both Bristol Palin and the Romney campaign are encouraging supporters to submit photos and stories about how they built their businesses. Meanwhile, comments made by Ann Romney that the campaign had given "you people" enough tax information went viral.
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Dave Weigel explored in a piece for Slate why there was a delay in Obama's comments becoming a political issue.
:It was on July 13, late evening, the president gave an unusually unteleprompted speech at Fire Station No. 1 in Roanoke, Va. and riffed that “if you’ve been successful, you didn’t get there on your own.” No news outlet led with that part of his speech. ... On July 14, a conservative North Carolina activist named Erik Soderstrom put up a 12-second clip that made it sound like Obama gave business owners no credit for building anything. On July 15, a Sunday, the video-aggregating blog the Right Scoop put up a long video of the key Obama lines. On July 16, the RNC’s “rapid response” team finally released a clip of the Obama riff, and Fox News started running stories. And that evening, 72 hours after the speech, the Romney campaign alerted reporters to the fact that Fox News commentator Brit Hume found the Obama speech revealing ...
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The Obama campaign released a video message featuring Michelle Obama launching an It Takes One initiative, encouraging supporters to bring family and friends with them if they're volunteering for the campaign, registering to vote or or going to vote.
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The companies that have backed efforts allowing donations by text message are urging the FCC to respond quickly to concerns expressed by wireless carriers, Reuters reported.
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ICYMI: Sasha Issenberg wrote that part of the Romney campaign's strategy is to use data to better understand the reasoning of Obama's campaign staffers, and then emulate it.
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Capital New York profiled The Message, a very partisan left-wing effort that seeks to promote viral content critical of Romney.
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The Romney campaign promised the president of Morality of Media, who is very concerned about online pornography, that he would take a hard-line effort against pornography, the Daily Caller reported.
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YouTube has restored both a Romney ad featuring Obama singing Al Green, and the original videos of the event, after they were taken down because of copyright claims.
Around the web
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Twitter says it will fight back against a court order requiring it to turn over messages sent by an Occupy Wall Street protester in New York City last fall.
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Following reports about Washington state's Facebook online registration effort, WNYC wonders when such a project could be implemented in New York, and notes the Voter Empowerment Act of New York sponsored by State Senator Michael Gianaris and Assemblymember Brian Kavanagh.
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New York City Council Speaker Christine Quinn helped launch two programs to teach technical and computer skills to New Yorkers in response to the city's growing tech sector.
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Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) introduced a bill asking the Obama administration resist international control of the Internet.
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According to a study, people found tweets less credible than news articles, even when they were both attributed to the New York Times.
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The FCC reports that many Internet service providers are not offering the high speeds that they promise.
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At a House hearing, lawmakers expressed concerns about the privacy implications of drones operating domestically, and suggested Congressional action was necessary to protect privacy.
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The State Department recently held a Wiki.Gov Conference on public sector use of wiki technology, including the agency's internal Diplopedia.
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Sprint says it will be offering tracking technology that will allow auto insurers to monitor their customers' driving.
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Buzzfeed referral data suggests continued increase in sharing from Facebook, but a decrease from Pinterest.
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The Center for Public Integrity explained how it used data analysis for a story about the trade in human body parts.
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A freelance journalist from Kalamazoo is funding a reporting trip through swing states via Kickstarter.
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ABC News reported on a man who is trying to live without Internet for a year.
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The New York Times has updated its Campaign Finance API to better track super PACS and 48-hour reports in congressional races.
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Security experts told British lawmakers that a proposed surveillance law would create a giant database of all citizens' activities on the web, the BBC reported.
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The e-mails Wikileaks is publishing that are allegedly from Syrian President Bashar Assad include sexist jokes and a joke about George W. Bush and Obama.
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More Chinese Internet users are now accessing the web from mobile phones than PCs, according to a report.
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A website called Solvish launched by designers from Hamburg, Germany, wants to offer a way for people to broadcast problems they see, whether locally or worldwide, and find ways to get offers of assistance.
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The London Olympic organizing committee may ask a website of the party mail order company associated with Prince William's in-laws "to make a tiny tweak to the copy" to comply with the Olympics copyright regulations, Reuters reported.
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The Welsh government has agreed to a deal with BT to upgrade the broadband network for 96 percent of properties by 2015.