Lawrence Lessig is the originator of Creative Commons and the author of Free Culture, Code 2.0 and the The Future of Ideas. An online campaign has been setup to encourage him to run for the congressional seat vacated by Rep. Tom Lantos (who recently passed away) in California. Having a ...
From the wired interview:
Wired: Kids sit on the steps of the Brooklyn library trying to get Wi-Fi. Why can't we solve the problem that roughly half the people in this city don't have broadband?
Bloomberg: We will. That's what capitalism is all about. As there's demand, the private sector will come ...
Read about this while in boston this weekend. From the boston globe:
Boston police are launching a program that will call upon parents in high-crime neighborhoods to allow detectives into their homes, without a warrant, to search for guns in their children's bedrooms...
Apparently, in order to save the children we must ...
I was just reading through the Wired article on Facebook's role in the Burma protests.
The marches, organized at a lightning pace by volunteers using Facebook, show the increasing power and reach of a social-networking site originally designed to help college students find drinking buddies.
An interesting theme which runs through the ...
According to the U.S. State Department, democracies can be organized under two general categories, direct and representative. In both forms the public participates in governance yet in a representative democracy elected or appointed officials mediate this participation, whereas in a direct democracy this participation occurs "without the intermediary of elected ...
Embracing the so called 'cybercity' as a specific unit of analysis, my second doctoral exam reading list will explore how processes of education and citizen participation are transmuted by the cybercity and how these transmuted processes in turn produce and reproduce the cybercity. In order for this exploration to begin ...