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Sensing Technology As Open Source's New Frontier 51

destinyland writes "Christine Peterson coined the term 'open source.' Now she's proposing the same collaborative sharing approach to sensing technology 'to improve both security and the environment, while preserving — even strengthening — privacy, freedom, and civil liberties...' The Open Source Sensing initiative welcomes individuals and organizations, and warns that 'We have a short window of opportunity for guiding this technology to protect both our security *and* our privacy.' Peterson says that in the long term, 'open source defensive technologies will likely be the only ones capable of keeping up with rapidly-advancing offensive technologies, just as open source software is faster at addressing computer viruses today.' And the EFF's Brad Templeton warns that 'Cheap, ubiquitous sensing has the potential to turn the worlds of privacy and civil rights upside-down... It's not enough for governments to watch people; people have to watch governments.' His solution? 'Learning from the bottom-up approaches of the open source community.'

Comment Re:None (Score 1) 79

Let me just start by saying, I'm no expert on web statistics. But, i am a web developer.

Assuming that I:

* Only care about PEOPLE (not robots) visiting my site
* Use a javascript tracker
* Account for a margin of error (Only 99% of traffic to my sites use JS)


How can my statistics be scewed by cacheing, as the individual people will still report statistics by JS regardless of the cache. Plus you can get a good measure of stat scewedness by comparing JS tracking with log analyzing.

Anyways, I'm of the camp that stats may not be fully accurate but they're very usefull.

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