Archive for the ‘tech’ Category

Google and the Right to Be Forgotten

Friday, October 24th, 2014

The Solace of Oblivion http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2014/09/29/solace-oblivion In Europe, the right to be forgotten trumps #Google. In the US copyright is effective for this

QT:{{
In the effort to escape unwanted attention on the Internet,
individuals and companies have had success with one weapon: copyright
law. It is unlawful to post photographs or other copyrighted material
without the permission of the copyright holder. “I needed to get
ownership of the photos,” Bremer, the Catsouras family’s lawyer, told
me. So he began a lengthy negotiation with the California Highway
Patrol to persuade it to surrender copyright on the photographs. In
the end, though, the C.H.P. would not make the deal.

Other victims of viral Internet trauma have fared better with the
copyright approach. In August, racy private photographs of Jennifer
Lawrence, Kate Upton, and other celebrities were leaked to several Web
sites. (The source of the leaks has not been identified.) Google has
long had a system in place to block copyrighted material from turning
up in its searches. Motion-picture companies, among others, regularly
complain about copyright infringement on YouTube, which Google owns,
and Google has a process for identifying and removing these links.
Several of the leaked photographs were selfies, so the women
themselves owned the copyrights; friends had taken the other pictures.
Lawyers for one of the women established copyrights for all the
photographs they could, and then went to sites that had posted the
pictures, and to Google, and insisted that the material be removed.
Google complied, as did many of the sites, and now the photographs are
difficult to find on the Internet, though they have not disappeared.
“For the most part, the world goes through search engines,” one lawyer
involved in the effort to limit the distribution of the photographs
told me. “Now it’s like a tree falling in the forest. There may be
links out there, but if you can’t find them through a search engine
they might as well not exist.”

The job had two parts. The first was technical—that is, creating a
software infrastructure so that links could be removed. This was not
especially difficult, since Google could apply the system already in
place for copyrighted and trademarked works. Similarly, Google had
already blocked links that might have led to certain dangerous or
unlawful activity, like malware or child pornography.

}}

Delving into Deep Learning » American Scientist

Thursday, October 16th, 2014

Delving into Deep Learning http://www.americanscientist.org/issues/pub/2014/3/delving-into-deep-learning History of #NeuralNets from perceptrons to today’s complex nets with many hidden layers

Mercedes Is Making a Self-Driving Semi to Change the Future of Shipping | WIRED

Monday, October 13th, 2014

Mercedes Is Making a Self-#Driving Semi to Change the Future of
Shipping http://www.wired.com/2014/10/mercedes-making-self-driving-semi-change-future-shipping Autopilots will be safer truck drivers!

Yahoo To Shut Down Qwiki, Yahoo Education And The Yahoo Directory | TechCrunch

Friday, October 3rd, 2014

Yahoo To Shut Down…Directory
http://techcrunch.com/2014/09/26/yahoo-to-shut-down-qwiki-yahoo-education-and-the-yahoo-directory Total victory for #textmining (ie Google) over manual #ontologies for web organization

Equil Smartpen 2 captures notes, sketches with a real pen – TUAW

Friday, October 3rd, 2014

http://m.tuaw.com/2014/10/01/equil-smartpen-2-captures-notes-sketches-with-a-real-pen

For Big-Data Scientists, ‘Janitor Work’ Is Key Hurdle to Insights

Monday, September 29th, 2014

For #BigData Scientists, Janitor Work Is Key http://www.nytimes.com/2014/08/18/technology/for-big-data-scientists-hurdle-to-insights-is-janitor-work.html Is a #datascientist a digital maid or a data priest? Perhaps a hybrid.

O’Neil talk

Alone in the Virtual Museum – The New Yorker

Sunday, September 28th, 2014

With #Google’s Cultural Inst., you can walk
“Alone in the Virtual #Museum”
http://www.newyorker.com/culture/cultural-comment/alone-virtual-museum Yet real visits rising (>6M to Met in ’13)

https://www.google.com/culturalinstitute/home

QT:{{”

…gazing at our laptops, will discourage people from actually going to these institutions. This is flatly untrue. Museum attendance is on the rise, dramatically so. The Louvre, the most visited museum in the world, currently hosts 9.3 million visitors annually, and, as the Art Newspaper reported in July, it expects a thirty-per-cent increase, to twelve million a year, by 2025. In second and third place are the British Museum, with 6.7 million visitors a year, and the Met, with 6.2, and the rest of the globe is catching up fast.

“}}

Alone in the Virtual Museum – The New Yorker

Monday, September 22nd, 2014

With #Google’s Cultural Inst., can walk
“Alone in the Virtual #Museum”
http://www.newyorker.com/culture/cultural-comment/alone-virtual-museum Yet real visits on rising (>6M to Met last yr)

QT:{{”

…gazing at our laptops, will discourage people from actually going to these institutions. This is flatly untrue. Museum attendance is on the rise, dramatically so. The Louvre, the most visited museum in the world, currently hosts 9.3 million visitors annually, and, as the Art Newspaper reported in July, it expects a thirty-per-cent increase, to twelve million a year, by 2025. In second and third place are the British Museum, with 6.7 million visitors a year, and the Met, with 6.2, and the rest of the globe is catching up fast.

“}}

They’re Watching You at Work

Sunday, September 21st, 2014

They’re Watching You at Work http://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2013/12/theyre-watching-you-at-work/354681 Will HR analytics be a corporate big brother or personal coach? #Datamining & #Privacy

DrinkMate Is A Tiny, Plug-In Breathalyzer For Android Devices | TechCrunch

Saturday, September 20th, 2014

DrinkMate Is A Tiny, Plug-In #Breathalyzer For Android Devices http://techcrunch.com/2014/08/30/drinkmate What’s next: metabolomics for the iphone?