New formula shows who’s really top of the tweeters (via @dubber)

How would one compute the severity of an actual virus? Isn’t this similar?

Amplify’d from www.newscientist.com

The most influential Twitter feeds don’t necessarily have the most followers. That’s the insight given by a new technique for ranking twitterers, which has been used to create a chart of the top 100 news-media Twitter feeds.

The new system is different from conventional web page rankings, which rely on the PageRank algorithm developed by Larry Page at Google. This judges that a page is important if other important pages link to it, so a website’s rank mostly comes from analysis of the pattern of links to and from other websites.

The new method of ranking throws up some surprises. For example, the team found that the most popular twitterers are not necessarily the most influential. Popular feeds may reach many followers, but if tweets are rarely passed on they do not spread. The most influential Twitter feeds, on the other hand, are the ones with followers who retweet the messages and persuade passive followers to become active.

Read more at www.newscientist.com

 

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Culture is more important than Copyright

the issue is, it’s happening, and the internet’s ability to reward sharing has reignited this concept that the public domain has cultural value.

“Like it or not, downloading is here. Torrents and filesharing are here. That’s not going away. I’m not here to attack it or defend it–I’m not going to change anyone’s mind either way, and everyone in America at this point has anecdotal evidence “proving” how it hurts or helps the medium–but I am here to say it isn’t going away–and fear of it, fear of filesharing, fear of illegal downloading, fear of how the internet changes publishing in the 21st century, that’s a legitimate fear, because we’re all worried about putting food on the table and leaving a legacy for our children, but we’re using our energy on something we can’t stop, because filesharing is not going away.

And I’ll tell you why. It’s not because people “like stealing.” It’s because the greatest societal change in the last five years is that we are entering an era of sharing. Twitter and YouTube and Facebook–they’re all about sharing. Sharing links, sharing photographs, sending some video of some cat doing something stupid–that’s the era we’re entering. And whether or not you’re sharing things that technically aren’t yours to share, whether or not you’re angry because you see this as a “generation of entitlement,” that’s not the issue–the issue is, it’s happening, and the internet’s ability to reward sharing has reignited this concept that the public domain has cultural value. And I understand if you are morally outraged about it and you believe to your core that an entire generation is criminal and they’re taking food off your table, I respect that.

Read more at www.hypebot.com

 

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Matt Mason on the impact of ACTA

What impact will the ACTA treaty have on piracy? If Internet Service Providers (ISP’s) have to filter content, what will be the impact on piracy?
“The impact on piracy will be negligible but the impact on our ideas about free speech and privacy will be very negative. You don’t win wars against piracy with new laws alone; you win them with market-based solutions. You win by finding a legal and beneficial way for society to permit that activity. But ACTA is happening whether we like it or not. No one who should be listening to these ideas is listening.”Read more at eerstehulpbijplaatopnamen.blogspot.com
 

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