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There's going to be a major executive announcement coming from +Fisker Automotive…

There's going to be a major executive announcement coming from +Fisker Automotive at 9:55am PST today. Considering the problems the company has had recently this could be huge (or it could be much ado about nothing). Is it possible that the venture capital investors have run out of patience with founder and CEO Henrik Fisker? We'll be watching.

#fiskerautomotive

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If it ain't broke, don't try to fix it

If it ain't broke, don't try to fix it

Reshared post from +Jeff Jarvis

*Leave Our Net Alone*"

The internet’s not broken.

So then why are there so many attempts to regulate it? Under the guises of piracy, privacy, pornography, predators, indecency, and security, not to mention censorship, tyranny, and civilization, governments from the U.S. to France to Germany to China to Iran to Canada — as well as the European Union and the United Nations — are trying to exert control over the internet.

Why? Is it not working? Is it presenting some new danger to society? Is it fundamentally operating any differently today than it was five or ten years ago? No, no, and no.

So why are governments so eager to claim authority over it? Why would legacy corporations, industries, and institutions egg them on? Because the net is working better than ever. Because they finally recognize how powerful it is and how disruptive it is to their power.

And that is precisely why we must fight against their attempts to regulate it, to change it, to throttle it, to oversee it, to insert controls into it, to grant them sovereignty over it. We also must resist the temptation to compromise, to accept the lesser of evils. Last week, Federal Communications Commissioner Robert McDowell warned of the danger of the U.N. asserting governance over the net, but then he turned around and argued that “merely saying ‘no’ to any changes to the current structure of Internet governance is likely to be a losing proposition.”

Why? I repeat: It’s not broken. This is why I urged French President Nicolas Sarkozy to take a Hippocratic oath for the net. This is why I have come to side with Sen. Al Franken on at least this: Net neutrality is not regulation; it is protecting the net from companies trying to change it. This is why the Reddit community is writing the Free Internet Act.

This is why I argued in Public Parts that we must have a discussion of the principles of an open society and the tools of publicness that enable it. This is why I wrote Public Parts. And that is why I’m posting the last chapter of the book, which argues that governments and companies are not protectors of the net and that we must be.

It’s not broken. Don’t fix it. Leave our net alone.

********

Post with many embedded links here: http://www.buzzmachine.com/2012/02/27/leave-our-net-alone/

Last chapter of Public Parts here: http://www.buzzmachine.com/publicpartsconclusion/

* Sung to the tune of: Pink Floyd – Another Brick In The Wall (HQ)

We don’t need no regulation.
We dont need no thought control
No dark sarcasm in the network
Government: Leave our net alone
Hey! Government! Leave our net alone!
All in all it’s just another brick in the wall.
All in all you’re just another brick in the wall.

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Reddit was among the leaders in the protest movement brought the SOPA/PIPA fast-track…

Reddit was among the leaders in the protest movement brought the SOPA/PIPA fast-track to a grinding halt recently and for that they deserve tremendous praise.

While complaining about bad stuff is easy to do, at least with the internet as it's constituted today, coming up with real positive alternative ideas is a lot harder.

Thankfully Reddit has stepped up to the plate with a proposal for the Free Internet Act. Unlike SOPA and PIPA which were largely written in secret by lobbyists for the old-school content industry, FIA is an open-source at attempt at writing legislation. As it stands today, it contains some real common sense ideas for true copyright reform that would enable and encourage creativity rather than stifling it in the name of preserving entrenched business models.

Of course since it's not coming from lobbyists that are proving huge quantities of campaign donations and junkets and it includes common sense ideas, it has absolutely no chance of passage. On the other hand, since the legislators took notice when hundreds of thousands of actual voters stood up and said no, anything is possible.

Go over and take a look at the FIA in progress and then content your senators and representatives and demand that they introduce this bill and vote for it.

#sopa #pipa #freespeech #fia #reddit #congress #freeinternet

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The Free Internet Act is Reddit's crowdsourced SOPA alternative
If you’re fed up with the way the debate about online piracy is going, perhaps you should draft your own legislation like the folks at Reddit. The Free Internet Act is currently open and freely-editable over at Google Docs, and focuses on preventing censorship of nearly any kind. Rather than put the rights of content owners first, the FIA aims to "promote prosperity, creativity, entrepreneurship and innovation by preventing the restriction of liberty and preventing the means of censorship." T…

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GM's EN-V concepts are one look at a possible future for personal urban mobility…

GM's EN-V concepts are one look at a possible future for personal urban mobility that encompasses electric drive, autonomous capabilities and vehicle-to-vehicle communications.

#cars #autonomousdriving #en-v

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Heading into the next decade as the world gets more urbanized, the two biggest problems… 2

Heading into the next decade as the world gets more urbanized, the two biggest problems we're going to have deal with in transportation are energy use and congestion. Some of the smartest people in the business are already thinking of solutions today, but it seems clear that smaller physical footprints that take up less space on the road and smarter vehicles that can talk to each other and drive themselves to avoid congestion will almost certainly be part of the solution.

#cars #congestion #energyuse

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Bill Ford Jr. says plan now for future traffic jams
Dearborn— His family made its fortune selling cars to the masses, but now Bill Ford Jr. is fretting about selling too many.

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Chris Hayes pointed out this morning on +Up with Chris Hayes that the same old gang… 2

Chris Hayes pointed out this morning on +Up with Chris Hayes that the same old gang of idiots that drove us to war in Iraq are the ones making the case for an attack on Iran today with almost the same words.

This drumbeat for war is the real cause of the rise in gas prices. If you want cheaper gas, tell republicans to back off on the war talk.

#politics #iran #war

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Sam's Thoughts
Remember the definition of insanity that we've all heard? Doing the same thing over and over and expecting a different result? Are you concerned about the rising price of gas? Unless you're a …

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Some excellent thoughts on the possible unintended consequences of the recent movement… 1

Some excellent thoughts on the possible unintended consequences of the recent movement to regulate privacy online.

The cost of trying to ensure privacy could be much greater than just educating people about online behavior in some very basic ways. Let's be clear, if there are things about your life that you want to keep private, don't post them online in any way shape or form. Once something gets online, you can never truly erase it or forget.

Since the earliest days of the web, I've always used my own real name rather than pseudonyms. The stuff I don't want people to know about, I don't put online anywhere, period. There are plenty of benefits to sharing and contributing to online discussions. However, just as in the real world, we must all learn that there are consequences to what we say and do. Think before you speak/post.

We also need to expose companies that might be doing things they shouldn't such as Path uploading address books without notifying users. Thankfully, white-hat hackers and researchers are discovering these issues and triggering changes in behavior.

That said, the development of open two-way communications between consumers and companies has created unprecedented transparency in pricing and service. By using social networks like G+, Facebook and Twitter, consumers can call out companies that might have been unresponsive in the past and actually get improved service.

Let's not let a moral panic prematurely pull the plug on these benefits.

#privacy #socialbusiness

Reshared post from +Francine Hardaway

If businesses had already been social in 2008, would the financial crisis have been less severe and crippling? And will looming changes in privacy rules interfere with the changes that might keep that kind of disconnect between businesses and their customers from happening again?

I was starting to write about Obama's Consumer Privacy Bill of Rights when it occurred to me that perhaps it might have the unintended consequence of disconnecting people further from businesses that might want to breakdown barriers.

One of the toxic and unnerving aspects of the recent foreclosure crisis was the impersonality of its customer interactions, From the shredding of mortgages into small sub-atomic particles to the disappearance of bank employees who should have been tasked to help consumers negotiate mortgage modifications and short sales, the entire process of keeping or losing one's home became one in which the customer (the homeowner) lost control, and the resulting anxiety rose to cataclysmic levels. A side effect of the crisis was that thousands of small businesses had credit lines lowered and pulled at the same time, even though their owners were not in default, in trouble, or late in paying them.

One the foreclosures began, one size fits all solutions based on too little personal information shut down the economy across the country and rippled out across the world.

In theory, the concept of social business, in which objectives are more closely aligned with customers and silos give way to transparency, should prevent something like that from ever happening again. As the enterprise slowly transforms itself from a hierarchy to a network,and the customer becomes a node on the network, things should get better, right?

I don't know. In the past few weeks, it seems as if the nascent social business initiative might get snuffed out before it even takes hold.

It's difficult not to ask how all the recent discussions about privacy — spurred by the White House's Consumer Personal Information Act and the EU's new privacy rules–are going to affect the fledgling effort toward making businesses, their vendors and suppliers, and their customers more aligned in objectives and more closely connected. Won't the hesitancy of consumers to have their comings and goings on the internet tracked limit what businesses can do to help customers they're not free to get to know? I know, I know, the act is aimed more at advertisers and marketers, spammers and retargeters. BUT…

To some degree, the discussion is a sign of the maturity and scale of online communities. When early adopters came online, they considered privacy a given, even to the point of adopting handles and avatars rather than real names. How you identified yourself on the internet was a choice, almost from Day One. It was in the hands of the user.

But Google and Facebook changed all that, encouraging millions of people to put their real names and actual personal information online in exchange for "free" services. Business models have been built around the use of consumer personal information: advertising technologies, market research, direct marketing, polling, and political campaigns have all used the information consumers innocently put online.

An entire generation has forgotten or never learned that if you want to keep your information private, you should probably not put it online in the first place.

I just wonder whether the gathering of information, and the resulting insights the could come from mining it, could not also be a help rather than just an annoyance.

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I'm going to be blunt 8

Rick Santorum is either a complete dumbass or an unrepentant liar. His claims about presidents home schooling their kids for the first 150 years of the United States are just plain wrong.

Support for public education goes back to the very beginnings of this country and was espoused by Thomas Jefferson in his 1779 "A Bill for the More General Diffusion of Knowledge" in the Virginia legislature.

whence it becomes expedient for promoting the publick happiness that those person, whom nature hath endowed with genius and virtue, should be rendered by liberal education worthy to receive, and able to guard the sacred deposit of the rights and liberties of their fellow citizens, and that they should be called to that charge without regard to wealth, birth or other accidental condition or circumstance; but the indigence of the greater number disabling them from so educating, at their own expence, those of their children whom nature hath fitly formed and disposed to become useful instruments for the public, it is better that such should be sought for and educated at the common expence of all

http://www.monticello.org/site/research-and-collections/bill-more-general-diffusion-knowledge

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Santorum flunks the history of home-schooling
The poorly educated candidate says U.S. presidents taught their kids at home for 150 years. He's wrong

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