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Bribery Allegations Surfaced Against WSJ in China | 170 comments | Create New Account
Comments belong to whoever posts them. Please notify us of inappropriate comments.
Feedly adds 500,000 new users in 48 hours after Google announces Reader shut down
Authored by: SilverWave on Sunday, March 17 2013 @ 10:19 AM EDT
Feedly adds 500,000 new users in 48 hours after Google announces Reader shut down

Here is my contribution to the cause:

Feedly in 5 minutes – a quick introduction and How To.

Updated with lots more hidden features and tips and tricks, since yesterday.
e.g. Keyboard Shortcuts are great, especially gg.

---
RMS: The 4 Freedoms
0 run the program for any purpose
1 study the source code and change it
2 make copies and distribute them
3 publish modified versions

[ Reply to This | Parent | # ]

Mass. U.S. Attorney Won’t Appeal Tewksbury Motel Ruling
Authored by: Anonymous on Sunday, March 17 2013 @ 12:27 PM EDT
I sure hope that the costs made are to be paid by the attorneys & friends
(like Ortiz and collegues) personally.

Just like their victim would have had to pay personally if
the government would have "won".

[ Reply to This | Parent | # ]

Lifehacker - Five Best Google Reader Alternatives - Feedly Leading tghe poll at 72% ATM
Authored by: SilverWave on Sunday, March 17 2013 @ 12:41 PM EDT
Five Best Google Reader Alternatives 72% 962/1334

---
RMS: The 4 Freedoms
0 run the program for any purpose
1 study the source code and change it
2 make copies and distribute them
3 publish modified versions

[ Reply to This | Parent | # ]

The Internet is a surveillance state
Authored by: Anonymous on Sunday, March 17 2013 @ 07:55 PM EDT
Newspick

MIT Technology Review has the same author,
Danger Lurks in Growing New Internet Nationalism

And on a related subject, SSRN has Mark Fenster
The Implausibility of Secrecy

[ Reply to This | Parent | # ]

Google killing rss-subscription-extension as well?
Authored by: SilverWave on Sunday, March 17 2013 @ 09:49 PM EDT
https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/rss-subscription-
extensio/nlbjncdgjeocebhnmkbbbdekmmmcbfjd?hl=en

https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/nlbjncdgjeocebhnmk
bbbdekmmmcbfjd

RSS Subscription Extension (by Google) 2.2.0
Adds one-click subscription to your toolbar. Visit website
ID: nlbjncdgjeocebhnmkbbbdekmmmcbfjd

Quote:Browser add-ons
Chrome does not natively support RSS feed discovery the way
that every other major browser does, and the extension that
Google built to give it that feature has been removed from
the Chrome Web Store.
http://reviews.cnet.com/8301-10088_7-57574462/8-google-
reader-alternatives-for-your-pc/?
part=rss&subj=news&tag=title

---
RMS: The 4 Freedoms
0 run the program for any purpose
1 study the source code and change it
2 make copies and distribute them
3 publish modified versions

[ Reply to This | Parent | # ]

Hacker Case Leads to Calls for Better Law
Authored by: Anonymous on Monday, March 18 2013 @ 03:20 AM EDT
quoting:

"There are three categories of hackers:"
Russian, Chinese, pranksters

Please add a fourth one:

The USA/Israel designing and releasing the stux-virus to
target an 'undesired' industrial installation using intimate
knowledge of the target hardware/software.

ref: the off-topic thread 'below'.

Now, what should be done about that?

[ Reply to This | Parent | # ]

One year on OSI’s board (aka one year in OSI’s licensing)
Authored by: JimDiGriz on Monday, March 18 2013 @ 07:13 AM EDT
One year on OSI’s board (aka one year in OSI’s licensing)
Since it has been roughly one year since Mozilla nominated me to sit on the OSI board, I thought I’d recap what I’ve done over the course of the year. It hasn’t been a perfect year by any stretch, but I’m pretty happy with what we’ve done and I think we’re pointed in the right direction. Because my primary public responsibility on the board has been chairing the license committee, this can also sort of double as a review of the last year in license-discuss/license-review (though there is lots of stuff done by other members of the community that doesn’t show up here yet).

Outside of licensing, my work has consisted mostly of cheerleading the hard work of others on the board (like Deb’s hard work on our upcoming DC meeting and the work of many people on our membership initiative) – I haven’t listed each instance of that here.

Wikimedia Deutschland offices in Berlin, during the tour at the Chapters Meeting 2011“, by Mike Peel, under CC-BY-SA 2.5. (Mind you, CC is not actually OSI-certified ;)

Some things that got done:

  • Drafted and published a beta Code of Conduct for license-discuss/license-review. This was drafted with the intent that it will eventually be a CoC for all of OSI, but we’re still formally beta-testing it in the license committee community.
  • Revised the opensource.org/licenses landing page to make it more useful to visitors who are not familiar with open source. Also poked and prodded others to do various improvements to the FAQ, which now has categories and a few improved questions.
  • Revised OSI’s history page. The main changes were to update it to reflect the past  5-6 years, but also to make it more readable and more positive.
  • Oversaw a number of license submissions. I can’t take much credit for these- the community does most of the heavy lifting. But the group submitted in the past year include AROS, MOSL, “No Nonsense“, and CeCILL. The new EUPL is in the pipeline as well.
  • Engaged Greenberg Traurig as outside counsel to OSI, and organized and hosted a board face-to-face meeting at Greenberg’s San Francisco office space.
  • Helped keep lines of communication open (and hopefully improving!) with SPDX and OKFN.

Some projects are important, but incomplete:

Some projects never really got off  the ground:

  • I wanted to get GNOME to join OSI as an affiliate. This, very indirectly, spurred the history page revision mentioned above, but otherwise never really got anywhere.
  • I wanted to have OSI reach out to the authors of the CPOL and push them to improve it or adopt an existing license. That never happened.
  • I wanted to figure out how to encourage github to require a license for new projects, but got no traction.

I hope that this sounds like a pretty good year- it isn’t perfect but it felt like a good start to me, giving us some things we can build on for future years.

That said, it shouldn’t be up to just me – if you think this kind of thing sounds useful  for the broader open source community, you can help :)

  • Join l icense-discuss, or, if you’re more sensitive to mail traffic, but still want to help with the committee’s most important work, join li cense-review, which focuses on approving/rejecting proposed new licenses.
  • Become a member! Easier than joining license-discuss  ;) and provides both fiscal and moral support to the organization.

JdG

[ Reply to This | Parent | # ]

Bribery Allegations Surfaced Against WSJ in China
Authored by: rsteinmetz70112 on Monday, March 18 2013 @ 11:40 AM EDT
In the article the Wall Street Journal denies it did what it was accused of and
further states the DoJ may have closed the investigation.

I also wonder why there is a US law governing activities in another country.

---
Rsteinmetz - IANAL therefore my opinions are illegal.

"I could be wrong now, but I don't think so."
Randy Newman - The Title Theme from Monk

[ Reply to This | Parent | # ]

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