By threatening journalists, trying to sabotage the competition, and even by naming the system “God View,” Uber has created a trust issue by demonstrating such a startlingly cavalier approach to its business.
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« Fit out your work space with open furniture » (via OpenDesk – Design for Open Making)
A senior executive at Uber suggested that the company should consider hiring a team of opposition researchers to dig up dirt on its critics in the media — and specifically to spread details of the personal life of a female journalist who has criticized the company… “Nobody would know it was us”.
Ad Hoc Telecom members argued that Internet providers have “terminating access monopolies.” That bit of telecom jargon means that a company trying to reach a customer has to go through the Internet providers first.
Bloggers with more than 3,000 daily readers must register with the mass media regulator.
I don’t know exactly when you passed from being cool to being weird, but the transition is complete.
I can’t believe someone is still writing “the Web is dying” in 2014. Users love apps, developers love apps — the only people who don’t love apps are pundits who don’t understand that apps aren’t really in opposition to the open Internet.
A l’avenir, les Glass pourraient bien devenir un produit de niche, utilisé par des entreprises ayant besoin d’applications spécifiques à leur activité.
« By replacing the aging network of public pay telephones with state-of-the-art Links, the City aims to transform the physical streetscape—and New Yorkers’ access to information » (via CityBridge | LinkNYC)
A law firm in Calgary is working on the first known personal injury case that will use activity data from a Fitbit to help show the effects of an accident on their client.

