CNET Story Visualizations

CNET News.com has two interesting types of visualization available alongside their stories.

The Big Picture is bubble graph that shows links out from the story you are looking at.

What’s Hot shows the hot stories in coloured boxes where size shows popularity and colour shows how recent the story is.

It’s not clear how they measure “hot”. Is a cool story hot?

Canadian Music Creators Coalition

The National Post has published an opinion piece by Steven Page of the Barenaked Ladies about the state of Canadian copyright law. He and othes have formed the Canadian Music Creators Coalition. See A Barenaked guide to music copyright reform. In the opinion Page lists three principles for copyright reform:

  1. First, we believe that suing our fans is destructive and hypocritical. We do not want to sue music fans, and we do not want to distort the law to coerce fans into conforming to a rigid digital market artificially constructed by the major labels.
  2. Second, we believe that the use of digital locks, frequently referred to as technological protection measures, are risky and counterproductive. We do not support using digital locks to increase the labels’ control over the distribution, use and enjoyment of music, nor do we support laws that prohibit circumvention of such technological measures, including Canadian accession to the World Intellectual Property Organization’s Internet Treaties. These treaties are designed to give control to major labels and take choices away from artists and consumers. Laws should protect artists and consumers, not restrictive technologies.
  3. Third, we strongly believe that cultural policy should support actual Canadian artists. We call on the Canadian government to firmly commit to programs that support Canadian music talent. The government should make a long-term commitment to grow support mechanisms such as the Canada Music Fund and FACTOR, invest in music training and education, create limited tax shelters for copyright royalties, protect artists from inequalities in bargaining power and make collecting societies more transparent.

Good to see such a new voice.

Narus: Data-Mining IP

Who creates the software for real-time IP traffic monitoring? Narus is a company named in a Wired story about Whistle-Blower Outs NSA Spy Room. The page about NarusInsight says they provide,

CALEA- and ETSI-compliant modules for lawful intercept featuring a robust warrant management system. Capabilities include playback of streaming media (for example, VoIP), rendering of Web pages, examination of e-mails and the ability to analyze the payload/attachments of e-mail or file transfer protocols.

The Wired story is about an EFF Class-Action Lawsuit Against AT&T that accuses “the telecom giant of violating the law and the privacy of its customers by collaborating with the National Security Agency (NSA) in its massive and illegal program to wiretap and data-mine Americans’ communications.”

Quaero: French Google Challenger

According to Guardian Unlimited story, Does France really need its own search engine?, by Bobbie Johnson (April 27, 2006), France is backing a Franco-German challenger to Google called Quaero. If they build it will users switch? How could Quaero duplicate the success of Baidu.com in challenging Google in China? I’m guessing that if Google’s search techniques is based on features of English, Quaero could compete by handling French searches better. The Wikipedia article on Quaero says they will focus on multimedia search.

Dick Hardt on Identity 2.0

What is identity? The OSCON 2005 Keynote – Identity 2.0 by Dick Hardt of Sxip Identity is a neat and short presentation on identity on the web. The presentation is obviously aimed at promoting SXIP (Simple eXtensible Identity Protocol) technologies, but still is an amusing and short intro to identity 2.0 (online identity for the web 2.0). The presentation is interesting in a number of ways:

  • The presentation style and use of lots of simple slides that flip rapidly is engaging. I’m not sure I could perform the way Dick Hardt does without losing the synchronization of slides and text.
  • It presents a clear case for how identity should work online – how it should work like using a driver’s license to prove age at a liquor store. At the moment each site from Amazon to iTunes has its own identity directory. I have to get an account on each one. Identity 2.0 should allow me to get identities from different providers and use them for different services. Thus I could get one from a bank that covers my financial identity and then use it for buying things. (I think that’s the idea.)
  • The presentation also presents a pragmatic view of what identity is in general – who you think you are, what others think of you, and what you can prove using trusted identity providers like the government.

Thanks to Shawn for this.