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Censorship

In the UK, a Few Tweets Restore Freedom of Speech 216

Several readers wrote to us about the situation in the UK that saw the Guardian newspaper forbidden by a judge from reporting a question in UK parliament. The press's freedom to do so has been fought for since at least 1688 and fully acknowledged since the 19th century. At issue was a matter of public record — but the country's libel laws meant that the newspaper could not inform the public of what parliament was up to. The question concerned the oil trading company Trafigura, the toxic waste scandal they are involved in, and their generous use of libel lawyers to silence those who would report on the whole thing. After tweeters and bloggers shouted about Trafigura all over the Internet, the company's lawyers agreed to drop the gag request.
The Internet

Submission + - Steven Colbert Kills Conservapedia (digg.com) 5

mcfarlandwrites writes: On his show The Colbert Report this evening, Steven Colbert reported on Conservapedia.com's efforts to remove, as they put it, liberal media bias from the Bible and also highlight tales that support free market capitalism, something the Bible actually does the opposite of, especially the parts where Jesus is around. He then asked viewers to go to the site, sign up for accounts, and add his name to the edits of the Bible, which is set up like Wikipedia, and ever since, the site has been "down for maintinence." Way to go Steven!

Comment Re:Do we need the anti-smoking jab (Score 1) 479

... Smoking helps me with my anxiety...

The most stressed people I know are smokers! It is such a fallacy that smoking helps with stress. Look at the people on a plane after a long-haul flight. The smokers can't wait to get off and light up.

Giving up smoking may be difficult - but really the withdrawal symptoms are what smokers go through between every cigarette. For me, the only benefit of smoking is the hit you get - and this sensation goes after the first few weeks of smoking... All other benefits are figments of smokers and ex-smokers imaginations.

Debian

Debian Decides To Adopt Time-Based Release Freezes 79

frenchbedroom writes "The ongoing Debconf 9 meeting in Cáceres, Spain has brought a significant change to Debian's project management. The Debian project will now freeze development in December of every odd year, which means we can expect a new Debian release in the spring of every even year, starting with 'Squeeze' in 2010. Until now, development freezing was decided by the Debian release team. From the announcement: 'The project chose December as a suitable freeze date since spring releases proved successful for the releases of Debian GNU/Linux 4.0 (codenamed "Etch") and Debian GNU/Linux 5.0 ("Lenny"). Time-based freezes will allow the Debian Project to blend the predictability of time based releases with its well established policy of feature based releases. The new freeze policy will provide better predictability of releases for users of the Debian distribution, and also allow Debian developers to do better long-term planning. A two-year release cycle will give more time for disruptive changes, reducing inconveniences caused for users. Having predictable freezes should also reduce overall freeze time.' We previously discussed talks between Canonical and the Debian release team about fixed freeze dates."

Comment Re:So what? (Score 2, Insightful) 118

All links on twitter are marked "nofollow" anyway - so I don't think that makes it a problem for search engines...

I think that the problem is related to the weight of validity you associate with what someone says, and how many people are following them. If someone has lots of followers, it seems like a good indication that they are worth listening to - but it doesn't take much reading to work out whether this is the case or not... and I guess usually on twitter it is not!

Comment Re:*now* you pull the trigger on the story.. (Score 1) 387

Well it is interesting - Google certainly thought that I was an automated request when I tried searching for Michael Jackson on my mobile phone via Opera...

The BBC has an interesting blog post essentially dispelling the myth that the internet "broke" when the story first appeared... http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/technology/2009/06/jackson_did_the_internet_buckl.html

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