Auteur/autrice : noflux (Page 564 of 633)

« People in the western U.S. tend to have Facebook friends all over the country; people in the southern U.S. tend to mostly be friends with people who have remained in the same area ». (via The Man Who Looked Into Facebook’s Soul)

The problem — or at least the change — is that we humans cannot understand systems even as complex as that of a simple cell. It’s not that were awaiting some elegant theory that will snap all the details into place. The theory is well established already: Cellular systems consist of a set of detailed interactions that can be thought of as signals and responses. But those interactions surpass in quantity and complexity the human brains ability to comprehend them. The science of such systems requires computers to store all the details and to see how they interact.

In short, piracy is certainly one problem in a world filled with problems. But politicians and journalists seem to have been persuaded to take it largely on faith that it’s a uniquely dire and pressing problem that demands dramatic remedies with little time for deliberation. On the data available so far, though, reports of the death of the industry seem much exaggerated.

For rogue site operators, the trick is to find a country with great Internet infrastructure, weak IP enforcement, and little censorship. But finding all three is tricky, as shown by the fact that Megaupload actually leased hundreds of servers within the US to provide a good experience to US residents despite the obvious risks this posed.

The Law Factory / La Fabrique de la Loi – Are MPs making the law? Les parlementaires font-ils la loi ? (via Conference / Conférence | The Law Factory / La Fabrique de la Loi)

« Parmi les informations qui ont fuité du traité ACTA – toujours en négociation -, on trouve aussi la possibilité pour les ayants droits d’accéder aux informations personnelles d’un internaute, suspecté d’avoir téléchargé un contenu copyrighté, sans avoir besoin de recourir à un juge. En bref, Hadopi, à coté, ce n’est pas grand chose, mais c’est un bon début. Les négociations autour du traité ACTA se font en dehors de tout cadre, aucune organisation internationale comme l’OMC ne les supervise. Elles ont commencé en 2006 entre les USA, la Commission Européenne, la Suisse et le Japon. Depuis, l’Australie, le Canada, l’Union Européenne, la Jordanie, le Mexique, le Maroc, la Nouvelle Zélande, la Corée, Singapour et les Emirats Arabes Unis se sont joints aux négociations ». (via ACTA : le traité secret qui pourrait changer la face d’internet | ReadWriteWeb French edition)

« Older posts Newer posts »

© 2026 no-Flux

Theme by Anders NorenUp ↑