Sunday, January 31, 2010

China supports Iran

This article is an interview by “globalvoicesonline” that states that “Chinese netizens” support Iranians via the “Twitter community”. They intend to learn from the Iranian people and both groups strive for “liberty and democracy”.The struggle among the people of Iran of recent news is the reason for demonstration. There is no “organizational support”. A handful of volunteers and people who know how to use the web as well as the creator “CaoTaMaDe (nickname)” are the biggest supporters and organizers.


The Chinese have friendly “tweets” with other Chinese, as well as worldwide web cyberactivists and interested parties. Translation to English is done to inform others of the “reaction in China”.

The censorship of Iran is much the same as in China. Keyword filtering is done with a system of censoring known as the “Great Firewall (GFW)”. The censorship stories are continuous and the support against censorship is becoming greater. The interviewer was told that they have received some support and they will continue to encourage people to talk about the subject. They ask for people from different fields to be “noisy” so as to be heard. They request contributions towards making the reality of the situation changed sooner rather than later. People have helped and twitter.com keeps “tweeting”.


Thursday, January 28, 2010

Online petition drives

Until I read "China's 'netizens' hold authorities to new standard" from The Washington Post at the link above I forgot about another wonderful way that the Internet makes things possible. Online campaigns are possible via the Internet. Campaigns to free an innocent person from prison, raising money for breast cancer victims and drives for fundraisers to raise money to do more research for HIV/AIDS victims are only a few places where the Internet has made the impossible possible.

The article talks about how the protests are continuing in China. Supposedly they are concerned about what they citizens need and they are watching and learning. ""Now senior officials go to the Internet to find out what crimes are being committed by local officials," said Mo Shaoping, a prominent Beijing lawyer who specializes in human rights and press freedom." Well it seems that the sites related to just those issues are blocked from other countries. They have their own way of using the Internet, with many many restrictions. People are arrested who blog negative things that are being done by the Communist Party. When they feel heat they just shut sites down. People have learned how to get around some of the restrictions.

I think things will change in China.

China to take time to cut Internet censorship: web founder

China to take time to cut Internet censorship: web founder

Tuesday, January 26, 2010

Democracy & Burma

The democracy reference as part of the assignment is the most important part of the issues in "cyberspace" that we have discussed so far. It's great that shelf space and inventory are not an issue when selling some products on the Internet and it's wonderful that we can get most any product we desire. Democracy is where the Long Tail provides the ultimate benefit to Netizens. In non-democratic nations, including Burma, China and Iran (and even in U.S.)freedom to have conversations ultimately without censorship is the desire. At what cost? Is there a cost?

Bill Gates on ABC's Good Morning America said censorship happens around the world at different levels but the Internet "has proved a consistent success at promoting openness and the exchange of ideas." We knew that.
I have to think about the tools that "Netizens" are using to combat limits on free speech. Cell phone comes to mind. Reporting events by cell phone camera when your own camera is stolen away from you.

I have some articles to read and will be back to blog later.

Monday, January 25, 2010

Saturday, January 23, 2010

The Long Tail encompasses many

The story of “The Long Tail” is something that I haven’t given a lot of thought to up until I decided to take this class. Chris Anderson tells us a lot of things I just didn’t look at in the same way as I do now, after reading some of “The Long Tail”. It has already caused me to look at many other things, in where The Long Tail goes. Quoting Chris Anderson “And the more they find, the more they like. As they wander further from the beaten path” they (we) go deeper and search for that alternative that has yet to be found.


Online purchasing has been around now for a while. Netflix is the latest new site for me where I can go for films. I purchase books from Amazon, sell items on Amazon and can find just about anything else I may want to buy there. Rhapsody is available for music and is talked a lot about as well as a great online service.


These sell the most sought after products (hits) but it is the products that are available on the referenced Long Tail that make the impossible to find found. This route is where the companies are selling larger numbers of different products in smaller quantities in comparison to companies that are selling fewer numbers of hits in a huge quantities.


Other way down the line films, music, books and other consumer goods are available and now I am learning may be even more valuable because they are on The Long Tail. Being one of the big hits is not the only place to be anymore, in order to prosper. “A hit and miss are on equal economic footing, both just entries in a database called up on demand, both equally worthy of being carried. Suddenly, popularity no longer has the monopoly on profitability.” Chris Anderson is encouraging in so many ways.

“Making everything available” Rule number one. I couldn’t find ‘Hard Work’ at Blockbuster for sure. Chris Anderson tells us that no video store is the place to go if you like documentaries and I guess I have only recently learned this myself but now that I have Netflix I have found and watched 6 videos about yoga. These were not your normal yoga film. That’s because they are part of the “niche”, the place on The Long Tail where all the really cool stuff is. I’ll never go back – unless I want to watch one of the really raved about “hits” like “Avatar” and I can’t wait until it is way out on The Long Tail, where I know many of the movies of my long ago are sitting now, being picked up occasionally by other “niche embracers”.

Rule number two is all about economics. Put simply Chris says: “Cut the price in half. Now lower it. The way that we receive music and pay for it today “leaves no room for price experimentation by retailers.” The way to get the consumer down The Long Tail, in the niches where all the goods are is by lowering prices. Chris Anderson explains it further by saying that when a product is offered at a fair price and is good stuff on a continual basis that the free competition can be reckoned with.

Getting the help to find what I am looking for is so important to me. I do not know anything at all about MP3 players but Chris Anderson says that “the problem with MP3.com was that it was only Long Tail.” It didn’t have the accurate licensing and agreements to offer “mainstream” music. “No popular commercial music”. Well I like the lead in. I log onto say – Zappos to shop for boots for women with large calves. I get boots at first, I browse, filter, click, search until wha – la I have 167 styles of boots for women with big calves. I place the item in the bag and read the “Customers who bought this also bought…” and hit the button below it.

“The Long Tail" works for me. I am looking forward to reading the rest of this book.
“An example of a power law graph showing popularity ranking. To the right is the long tail; to the left are the few that dominate.” www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/long_tail

Powerlaw” is a distribution method. “The 80/20 rule or Pareto principle, where 20% of the population controls 80% of the wealth.” www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pareto_distribution
Aggregator is “a company or service that collects al huge variety of goods and services and makes them available and easy to find, typically in a single place.” Chris Anderson’s “The Long Tail”
All creative people can produce something of interest and this is the democracy that Chris Anderson speaks about in “The Long Tail”. “Long Tail promises to become the crucible of creativity, a place where ideas form and grow before evolving into commercial form.”

The Long Tail
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Illustration by Kenneth Hung
The options available to us as consumers of The Long Tail are unending. When I search for a film – say like ‘Hard Work’ by Ginny Durrin. I looked and looked for this film for use in a class last semester and couldn’t find it. Netflix didn’t even have it which I am still wondering about. I finally got the film from the star of the film herself, who is living in WA on the other side of the country. I paid $5.00 for it. This film was not found on The Long Tail route, but that is probably due to my lack of even an amateur status as a techie, hip, or economist saavy person. I expect that I could possibly be able to find that same film available on The Long Tail, but until that highly unlikely day I have my own $5.00 copy.

Thursday, January 21, 2010

China and Google

"Clinton Tackles China, Google And Net Censorship" ChannelWeb

Human Rights Activists are targets of spoil. Censorship is on the rise. Google is pissed.

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has made it a priority of U.S. foreign policy to ensure that freedom of distribution of information through the internet as a human right continues. Clinton is working diligently on making sure this right is intact. Her recent speech in Washington, D.C. related the fact that bloggers and activists in Egypt have been detained - for using the internet.

As if general hackers aren't enough of a problem - the entire Chinese government is messing with Google, or at least there have been allegations pointing in that direction. Google threatens to quit its operation in China, after just 4 years of launching the search site. Reviews, investigations, different points of views on the issues are underway.

In order to continue to grow - this intrusion into our internet lifestyle is absurd, or is it?

http://www.crn.com/government/222400147;jsessionid=Z1R30XV5TPFVDQE1GHPSKH4ATMY32JVN