Tuesday, April 28, 2015

Test III Grades are Up!

Nicely done! Class average was a 79 percent. Highest raw score was a 96, leaving a 4 percent curve added to every score. The posted grades also include any extra credit you received. 

Tuesday, April 21, 2015

Sunday, April 19, 2015

FCC Media Ownership Policy

Struggling with the term paper? Check out this 2014 Congressional hearing on the subject, including expert testimony from groups on both sides of the issue. 

Monday, April 13, 2015

Interested in learning more about FOIA?


Click here to access "A Citizen's Guide on Using the Freedom of Information Act." I strongly encourage folks to submit a FOIA request on a matter of public concern, perhaps in connection to a research project you are working on.

Also check out this group, called OpenTheGovernment.org, which is fighting to keep governments accountable. 

Access to Information Prezi


Thursday, April 9, 2015

Want Privacy? It will cost you!

AT&T's Gigabit level internet service now will charge customers who decide to keep their web-browsing private. From Ars Technica
AT&T is boosting profits by rerouting all your Web browsing to an in-house traffic scanning platform, analyzing your Internet habits, then using the results to deliver personalized ads to the websites you visit, e-mail to your inbox, and junk mail to your front door....AT&T charges at least another $29 a month ($99 total) to provide standalone Internet service that doesn’t perform this extra scanning of your Web traffic. The privacy fee can balloon to more than $60 for bundles including TV or phone service. Certain modem rental and installation fees also apply only to service plans without Internet Preferences.
Importantly, Google's Fiber service doesn't monitor your browsing (unless you are using Google services, which it does monitor). 



Book Launch for The Real Cyber War, April 18, 5-8 PM


Folks: Consider joining me at a book-launch event for The Real Cyber War @ Ebrik April 18. Come anytime between 5-8 PM and to learn about the project, ask questions, or just enjoy a delicious cup of coffee (or tea). We'll also be selling discounted books and signing, of course. No pressure at all, of course, but in case you are interested, you can learn more here

Wednesday, April 8, 2015

Facebook's Auto-tagging Features May Violate Illinois Law


Interesting new law suit filed against Facebook, connected to this week's discussion of privacy: 
A Chicago man has filed a proposed class-action lawsuit against Facebook, alleging that the social networking giant is in violation of an Illinois state law that requires users to expressly consent to instances where their biometric information being used. 
Plaintiff Carlo Licata argues that he and countless other Illinois residents have had their rights violated under the Illinois Biometric Information Privacy Act (BIPA) by Facebook's "Tag Suggestions" feature. That feature is powered by facial recognition technology, and operates without the consent of those being tagged. 
Licata wants the Cook County court to declare that Facebook is in violation of BIPA, ordering it to halt its practice, and to award statutory damages to the class, which has yet to be certified.
What do you think? What is the significant difference between opt-in and opt-out clauses? Does Facebook's terms of service agreement shield it from this and similar lawsuits?

Tuesday, April 7, 2015

Minor Rights Prezi



Download the PDF here

Surveillance & MLK


Folks: as promised, I wanted to share the uncensored FBI letter sent to MLK that clearly outlines the risks of domestic surveillance. From the NYT's article about the letter: 
The unnamed author suggests intimate knowledge of his correspondent’s sex life, identifying one possible lover by name and claiming to have specific evidence about others. Another passage hints of an audiotape accompanying the letter, apparently a recording of “immoral conduct” in action. “Lend your sexually psychotic ear to the enclosure,” the letter demands. It concludes with a deadline of 34 days “before your filthy, abnormal fraudulent self is bared to the nation.” 
“There is only one thing left for you to do,” the author warns vaguely in the final paragraph. “You know what it is.” 
When the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. received this letter, nearly 50 years ago, he quietly informed friends that someone wanted him to kill himself — and he thought he knew who that someone was. Despite its half-baked prose, self-conscious amateurism and other attempts at misdirection, King was certain the letter had come from the F.B.I. Its infamous director, J. Edgar Hoover, made no secret of his desire to see King discredited. A little more than a decade later, the Senate’s Church Committee on intelligence overreach confirmed King’s suspicion.
Something to chew on this week while we discuss privacy rights and surveillance.