Aug 23

Dealing with disagreements: Back when I posted the BBC URL, someone dashed off a comment criticizing my journalistic responsibility. I disagreed on that point and responded as follows: “I appreciate your concern, but in my experience merely posting something like this doesn’t get a block in place. Moreover, on the journalistic responsibility point, this post doesn’t put anyone in jeopardy, and most Internet users around here know how to get to what they need anyway. Guides on higher-profile sites than mine telling users how to access censored sites haven’t led to simple blocks of several proxies. I think this URL an easy and valuable thing for some readers, and I know I’d appreciate seeing it in my RSS.”

I’d love to hear from others on this issue. Please comment here or e-mail me directly at sinobyte /[at]/ gwbstr.com.

For: under the heading “Seek Truth and Report it,” the code asks us to:
– Support the open exchange of views, even views they find repugnant.
–Give voice to the voiceless; official and unofficial sources of information can be equally valid.
Against: meanwhile, under “Minimize Harm,” we see:
–Show compassion for those who may be affected adversely by news coverage. Use special sensitivity when dealing with children and inexperienced sources or subjects.
–Recognize that gathering and reporting information may cause harm or discomfort. Pursuit of the news is not a license for arrogance.

The Internet blocking regime in China, in my experience, is full of holes. It’s popular to speculate that authorities know they cannot affect a total block but are working instead to deter users not committed to accessing restricted information and perhaps to encourage self-censorship. Especially in English, vocal critics of internet censorship remain unblocked. Rebecca MacKinnon, a former reporter who teaches at Hong Kong University, blogs vocally about freedom issues. Ted Chien, who asked me to take down the URL, a decision I’m taking under consideration now, blogs about some of the same issues in English and Chinese on Blogspot, which is now unblocked.

My argument for posting: As I’ve mentioned above, I tend to lean toward publishing workarounds. It’s not only because I tend to believe making this information more widespread is good for free information; it’s because I see the potential harm as minimal. In the BBC example, far from causing an overall block, having the workaround posted happened to precede the full unblocking of BBC News’ English site (and in one city, the Chinese version). Likewise, with the recent question of whether to keep the Wikipedia workaround online, this comes at a time when the English version is already available and the Chinese one still subject to a block. Celebrate as I may that I can read two major sites without a proxy, the censorship (the “harm,” if you like) is still in place for Chinese users unable to read English well.

Indeed, especially on the journalistic ethics argument, I feel a particularly strong inclination to post the information. I was educated (or was it indoctrinated?) in a particular U.S. sense of proper press behavior. The main document of journalistic ethics in the United States is the Society of Professional Journalists’ Code of Ethics. It’s a long list of “don’ts” phrased as “dos.” In my reading, the code gives arguments both for and against posting.

SPJ’s code is by no means my personal code, but it is a useful starting point from a perspective of professionalism. In essence, this 20th century formulation of journalistic ethics asks us to weigh the value of free information with any harm that information may have.

The argument against posting: People who argue against posting workarounds hold that publicizing circumvention increases the likelihood of detection, and following that, more thorough blocks. It’s a simple and persuasive point. If the authorities responsible for implementing blocks want something inaccessible, they might keep track of how people are beating their blocks and try to fight back.

Even before a recent opening that may be connected to the Olympics in August, government blocks were far from complete. Determined individuals can get through the blocks, and the government does little to eliminate proxies, even as it blocks a large amount of information through site-wide blocks or keyword filtering. And when one workaround fails, another inevitably arises. Though I haven’t actually had any of my several free proxies blocked while working from Beijing over the last nine months or so, friends who have seen theirs go have simply switched. My ultimate question, then, is what’s the value of a workaround if we don’t tell people about it?

The argument for posting: I tend to believe it would be selfish to keep circumvention methods to myself when others who are less habitually engaged with technology news would also appreciate a way around the blocks. For instance, before the BBC News site was unblocked, I posted information on a URL that would let users through because of a quirk in the addressing on the BBC site–namely, the newsvote.bbc.co.uk mirror of news.bbc.co.uk was not blocked. I believed readers of Sinobyte would like to be able to use BBC News, and I got positive feedback in private.

This blog is often faced with the question of whether to post methods of accessing sites that are inaccessible from China because of government controls. I want to turn the question to readers, who I hope will have some opinions. Help me decide whether to reinstate a workaround for Chinese Wikipedia.

Aug 23

Throw in a tiny USB receiver that works with other Logitech products, Logitech’s innovative variable-speed scroll wheel, and a host of useful buttons placed around the comfortable design, and the result is an Editor’s Choice-winning product that we’d recommend to anyone who takes his or her desktop input devices seriously.

Logitech was also able to handle all of the new surfaces Microsoft’s BlueTrack blazed when it surpassed the traditional laser sensor at the end of 2008. And while Microsoft is right to point out that its BlueTrack mice are available for less, Logitech’s $99 Performance Mouse MX not only gets you the best mouse sensor on the market, it also happily marries its wireless and rechargeable battery technologies into a seamless whole.

Read our review of the Logitech Performance Mouse MX.

The results were conclusive in our mouse head-to-head. Logitech’s Performance Mouse MX and its new Darkfield sensor boldly went where Microsoft’s Explorer Mouse and its BlueTrack sensor could not. We tried two different glass tabletops and Logitech’s new mouse tech had no trouble maintaining signal integrity. Microsoft’s mouse stopped dead.

Aug 23

The deal comes at a rough time for the New York-headquartered parent companies as both attempt to invigorate their focus on ad revenues. The struggling AOL may be split into two businesses to separate its once-ubiquitous Internet access service from its ad-supported media properties. IAC, meanwhile, is spinning off its retail-oriented brands and keeping its digital media properties intact. Citysearch, along with properties like Ask.com, Evite, and Match.com, will be part of the “new IAC.”

Citysearch content, including reviews, photos, editorial content, and videos, will be featured on a number of AOL sites like AOL CityGuide, AOL Local Search, and MapQuest. In return, AOL will display Citysearch’s “paid listing” advertisements on those sites as well.

InterActiveCorp chair Barry Diller recently went on the record saying that he wouldn’t buy AOL unless somebody handed it to him for free. But that doesn’t rule out content partnerships: AOL announced Thursday that it has formed a partnership with Citysearch, the IAC-owned business directory.

This post was updated at 11:24 AM on Friday, Feb. 15 to clarify AOL’s use of Citysearch ad listings.

Aug 23

While Barton was not available to meet with Yang on this trip, the senator indicated he would be available next week. And also on the meet-and-greet trip was Rep. Edward Markey, chair of the Telecommunications and the Internet subcommittee for the House Committee on Energy & Commerce.

Google’s slice of the U.S. search market reached 68.29 percent in May, according to Hitwise. Yahoo’s share of the market declined to 19.95 percent from 20.28 percent in the at same time.

Yahoo, however, has previously said its arrangement is non-exclusive and does not require Yahoo to use any certain number of Google ads on Yahoo’s search results page, nor does it require to give Google’s ads preferential treatment on where they appear on the right-side column of Yahoo’s search results page, where the sponsored links appear.

Yahoo is giving the U.S. Department of Justice three-and-half months to review its Google partnership, before it implements the search advertising partnership. Regulators, however, may find it more useful to evaluate the partnership after it’s been implemented when they can assess the before and after effect.

Yahoo’s CEO Jerry Yang made the rounds on Capital Hill on Wednesday, in an effort to dispel antitrust concerns surrounding its search advertising deal with Google.

Yahoo, meanwhile, also addressed privacy concerns raised by the legislators.

Yahoo is hoping to benefit from serving up advertisements on its search results pages where there are few advertising links that appear on the right-side column with relevant ads. For example, conduct a search for Fresno and spa and eight advertisements show up on Yahoo, but only two are actually for spas in Fresno. Yahoo gets its advertising dollars only if a user clicks on an actual ad, so the more relevant ads it can post on its search results page, the better its revenues.

Yahoo is hoping to use Google’s ads to populate those search results where it tends to have fewer ads. Should Yahoo have a competing ad or ads on the same search page, may the most relevant ad that can entice a user to click on it win.

Sen. Joe Barton of the U.S. House Energy & Commerce Committee also weighed in on the issue Wednesday, issuing a statement (PDF) that expressed concern about the deal’s effect on competition in search advertising.

“Yahoo is deeply committed to building on our established trust with users by continuing to provide clear, comprehensive privacy policies. We structured the agreement with Google so that Yahoo will not transfer any personally identifiable information to Google without user consent,” Yahoo said in a statement. “We have also designed this agreement so that both companies have stayed within each of their existing privacy and data policies, such as Yahoo’s policy regarding logs anonymization after 13 months.”

Kohl has previously expressed concerns that the deal between two technology search rivals could affect competition and have ramifications for advertisers and consumers. He noted the antitrust subcommittee plans to investigate the competitive and privacy implications of the deal.

Whereas Yahoo is looking to bolster its advertising inventory by allowing Google to post its ads on its search page, Google is going in the opposite direction by scaling back on the number of irrelevant ads it has on its search results page–adopting the view that less is more. The search giant on Wednesday also said it is rewarding advertisers with fast-loading advertisements.

During his one-day visit, Yang met with Sen. Herb Kohl, D-Wisc., who chairs the Senate Antitrust Subcommittee.

Aug 23

STEC issued a formal response Tuesday to a patent infringement lawsuit filed by rival storage maker Seagate Technology and its subsidiaries.

“STEC believes it held such technology including prior patents, dating more than a decade prior to any of Seagate’s patents,” STEC said in its response.

Seagate is alleging STEC violated four of its patents relating to its SSDs, memory-backup systems, and self-testing systems for devices, according to a report in MarketWatch.com.

STEC, which responded to the lawsuit Seagate filed Monday in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California, says it will “aggressively” defend itself against Seagate’s four patent infringement claims and contends it was one of the first companies to develop, manufacture, and ship high-performance solid-state drives (SSDs), predating the patents cited in Seagate’s complaint.

STEC alleges the Seagate lawsuits take aim at its Zeus-IOPS technology, a new line of SSDs targeted toward the enterprise storage market. SSDs competes against hard disk drive technology. Some storage makers like Samsung are looking to straddle both worlds. Samsung has said it has no plans to pit mechanical hard drives against solid-state flash drives.

STEC, which said it has been shipping SSDs as early as 1994, said it plans to review the patents cited in Seagate’s claims to determine whether any of its patents had been violated.

Aug 23

$16 pens at Osaka's Shinsaibashi branch of Loft.

I was wandering the Loft department store at Shinsaibashi in Osaka, Japan, last week when I found a display surrounding this video. Give it a watch and see if you can tell what it’s advertising…

Well, did you get it? From the Pen Spinning Association Japan comes the Penz’Gear line of sticks to spin artfully in your fingers, complete with an instructional DVD to teach you techniques for the following techniques: Normal, Reverse, FingerPass, BackAround, Harmonic, and Tornado.

I can only hope that this post brings out a subculture of people who are better at playing with pens than I am to explain to me how a properly weighted pen is essential to the art. As for me, I’m back to doodling.

(Credit:
Sinobyte)

You’re not going to catch me saying that this proves “the Japanese” are weird. On the contrary, I was the only one paying attention to this display in a very busy store. It is fun, however, to think about the folks who made the video and whatever process of retail selection (or payoffs) that might have given it this prominence.

Aug 23

Update at 8:35 a.m. PDT: More details have been added throughout.

For some reason, this hasn’t drawn a ton of attention. But AT&T is edging closer to completing a 3G upgrade just in time in for the rumored release of a 3G
iPhone next month.

On Wednesday, the company announced that it is only six cities away from reaching its goal of faster 3G uploads in 275 cities. AT&T has already deployed faster 3G download technology in these cities, and by the end of June, these markets will also have the faster upload speeds using a technology called HSUPA, or High Speed Uplink Packet Access. This means that AT&T wireless data subscribers will be able to get downloads of 1.4 megabits per second and uploads of between 500 kilobits per second and 800 kilobits per second.

AT&T has been adding new 3G handsets to its retail lineup to take advantage of the new supercharged network. The company, which is Apple’s U.S. mobile carrier, had this to say:

But AT&T isn’t stopping with 275 markets. By year’s end, it expects to reach 350 cities with these faster upload and download speeds. And as future releases of the HSPA (High Speed Packet Access) 3G wireless technology become available, even faster speeds are expected in 2009.

CNET News.com’s Marguerite Reardon contributed to this report.

“Equally as important as the network is the device through which a customer experiences it. AT&T’s handset portfolio in company-owned stores is more than 75 percent 3G-capable–and will be even more enticing with the addition of more 3G-enabled smartphones in the summer and fall of 2008. Additionally, AT&T also has the most compelling set of 3G services, such as AT&T Video ShareSM, which allows users to share live video over wireless phones while on a voice call.”

No mention of the iPhone in AT&T’s press release, but that’s going to be Steve Jobs’ task at the company’s Worldwide Developers Conference in a few weeks–or at least that’s the rumor.

Aug 23

Facebook’s 200-plus million members will be able to customize the URLs to their profiles starting at midnight Eastern on Saturday, according to a post on the Facebook blog. Currently, users’ profile URLs have been structured as a string of numbers. At least for now, it doesn’t look like the switch is mandatory.

(Credit:
Facebook)

Also: “We expect to offer even more ways to use your Facebook user name in the future,” DiPersia wrote. Presumably, this means that you’ll be able to use it for Facebook Connect log-ins on external sites, rather than your e-mail address.

But there’s fine print! “Think carefully about the user name you choose. Once it’s been selected, you won’t be able to change or transfer it,” the post by Facebook’s Blaise DiPersia read. “If you signed up for a Facebook Page after May 31 or a user profile after today at 3 p.m. EDT, you may not be able to sign up for a user name immediately because of steps we’ve taken to prevent abuse or ’squatting’ on names.”

This is a move that will help Facebook profiles get better traction in search engines, potentially upping traffic–and give people-search sites a run for their money in the process. For brands whose “fan pages” are a crucial part of Facebook’s marketing and advertising strategy, it’ll make their pages easier for people to access without needing to click around much.

There’s something significant here: not being able to change or transfer your Facebook name means that it’s less likely there will be a big market for them on eBay, Craigslist, or elsewhere, something that could easily get out of hand otherwise.

Aug 23

Siebel told the Associated Press that he hopes that the public apology will teach attorneys not to fabricate claims in hopes of extracting a large settlement.

Siebel founded business software maker Siebel Systems in the early 1990s. He was chairman of Siebel Systems until Oracle bought the company for $5.8 billion in 2006. Siebel is now chairman of First Virtual Group, a diversified holding company based in Palo Alto, Calif.

San Mateo Superior Court Judge Carol Mittlesteadt issued a letter of apology to Tom Siebel on Thursday to express her “sincere regret for pursuing claims against you that were determined to be without merit.” She also acknowledged that she “may have caused substantial expense and inconvenience, and damage to your reputation and good name.”

Siebel plans to donate the money to Stanford’s law school for the study of legal ethics.

Mittlesteadt, who became a judge 10 years ago, issued the unusual apology to fulfill the requirements of a settlement that wraps up a legal saga that began 12 years ago when Siebel Systems fired its top sales representative. Mittlesteadt, who represented the employee, filed a wrongful-termination and sex discrimination suit against Siebel and his company. A court later ruled that the claims against him were unfounded.

A California judge has issued a public apology and agreed to pay $100,000 to the founder of Siebel Systems for damaging his reputation in a lawsuit she filed as a lawyer in the mid-1990s.

“This was a single person’s effort at tort reform,” he said. Siebel added that he is surprised Mittlesteadt is a judge. “I am not sure who is watching the hen house here,” he said.

Aug 23

(Via SmartPlanet)

According to Pedalite, “The Anklelite’s robust design and versatility enables it to be also used as an arm light on the upper or lower arm–perfect for jogging, cycling or riding.” It can be used as a strobe or a solid light. Also, says the company, it’s weather- and impact-resistant, so it should survive the occasional fall or rain shower.

This Anklelite is a solar-powered floodlight. According to Pedalite, users can expect at least three hours of use from the light in strobe mode; however, it doesn’t say how often it will last when not being used as a strobe.

The Pedalite Anklelite is a solar-powered floodlight that can help keep you safe when cycling after dark.

No word yet on when the product will be available from Pedalite North America, but it’s going on sale in the U.K. for ?10 (about $18) in December.

(Credit: SmartPlanet)

As a child, if I rode my bike after dark, I’d have to rely on my bike’s reflectors and, occasionally, a flashlight to keep me visible. However, today’s cyclists have gadgets like the Pedalite Anklelite to help keep them safe.

I think the real benefit from this, other than safety, is that you never have to buy or replace batteries. Just keep the Anklelite near your bike gear, and in the sun, and it’s ready to go when you are.

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