The Art Of “Kicking The Can”—Uncertainty Rules When It Comes To Net Neutrality

This would make Vetinari so very proud. If this were Ankh-Morpork.

Amplify’d from techcrunch.com
. In its rule the FCC has successfully put off almost all of the hard Net Neutrality questions that have been buzzing around since 2000 or so. It is a remarkable feat to write a rule that actually creates more uncertainty than no rule, but by golly, the agency has done it.

If you’re the type that prizes certainty and clarity (i.e., most engineers, business people and investors), then manufacturing confusion may sound like insanity. But welcome to law school: good lawyers know that uncertainty has a power all of its own. So to really understand the Net Neutrality rule is not to bother understanding the rule itself, but rather the effects the uncertainty will create over the next 5 years or so.

The difference between wireless and wireline doesn’t necessarily make technical sense, but it is more about which Internet is a happier home for various business models. Discriminatory platforms favor old-school commercial content, which suggest that the Net Neutrality rule will probably foster a continued migration of commercial services to wireless. Meanwhile, the Internet that arrives on your computer will remain a happier home for social, advertising-based, amateur, and non-profit projects, like Wikipedia or, frankly, Facebook. Whether that was the intent of the rule is, of course, impossible to say. But seen through the mists of uncertainty and vagueness, the message is nonetheless clear: so much for “One Web.”

Read more at techcrunch.com

 

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Grooveshark is the easiest find for music, in Google

Question: how relevant is this? How many people start looking for a service for streaming music, without having been prompted by a blog or a comment from someone else?

Amplify’d from www.hypebot.com

image from blogs.villagevoice.com Google search results define our world. To anyone, looking for anything, the first 3-4 options in a Google Search are the only sites that exist online. We all know about the latest and coolest music sites and services. The average person doesn’t. If a friend doesn’t tell them about Tubeify and they don’t read tech blogs, they’ll never hear about it. Save for a stray alert on Facebook or Twitter, most people won’t hear about these sites unless they’re searching for them on Google. Yes, they might Bing it too, but I refuse to accept that verb.

After a short experiment, the results were rather revealing. Whenever I searched for “music streaming”, “free music”, “listen to music online”,”listen to music”, and even just the term “listen”, the results were almost identical. In these search results, Grooveshark rose to the top of the list. Every single time. Except one.

Read more at www.hypebot.com

 

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The Social Guardian points to the future of real-time news sharing [TNW Media]

Open the gates, let your audience find ways to re-arrange your offerings an behold: beauty emerges. The Guardian managed to properly impress me with this.

Amplify’d from thenextweb.com
The Social Guardian has been built using The Guardian’s API and while it looks quite plain, it’s actually an brilliant idea. Logging in to the site with your Twitter account, you can see what other Twitter users are reading using the service, refreshed in real-time as they load new articles.
The site was built during a Guardian Innovation Day event last week by a team of developers including Guardian.co.uk developer advocate Michael Brunton-Spal. “This does not represent any strategic thinking by The Guardian”, Brunton-Spal tells us. ”The Guardian is not providing any time to work on it at the moment (since I have a mountain of real work to get done), but I’m sure we’ll try a few tweaks in our spare time.”

Read more at thenextweb.com

 

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