Governance in the age of Wikileaks — Part 1

Amplify’d from www.tnl.net

To date, the odd­est thing I have noticed is that Wik­ileaks, the orga­ni­za­tion, has yet to be charged with any crime yet many actors unre­lated to it have taken its cause to per­form crim­i­nal acts. First and fore­most has been the response from oppo­nents of wik­ileaks. To assume that Ama­zon, Visa, Mas­ter­card, Post­Fi­nance, and Dyn­DNS did not receive some level of exter­nal pres­sure is to be fairly naïve: while each com­pany has found, in its own way a jus­ti­fi­ca­tion for its behav­ior but the com­bined action seems to point to pres­sures being applied out­side of legal channels.

So if Wik­ileaks broke some laws, why not indict it in a court of law, allow­ing it the appro­pri­ate due process. And if it didn’t, why were pres­sures applied? The pre­sump­tion of inno­cence is a cher­ished right in the United States and the United States sup­ports the exten­sion of such a right to the inter­net. So let’s let wik­ileak have its day in court or stop its per­se­cu­tion through non-legal means.

Read more at www.tnl.net

 

electro-buyпродвижение сайтов москва тут

Hootsuite gets approved as government social media dashboard

Smart move, what types of user-groups can you discern for your product/service?

Amplify’d from thenextweb.com

First the political news.  On their blog yesterday HootSuite announced that they “are proud to be the first and only social media dashboard in the Apps.Gov catalog and are pleased to announce that HootSuite is officially approved as a web application for United States government agencies.”

Read more at thenextweb.com

 

сайтраскрутка тольятти