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Friday, April 09, 2004 |
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I continue to track Mark Hurst's thoughts about bit literacy with interest. I came across this originally reading Richard Saul Wurman's Information Anxiety 2, which should definitely be on your reading list if you haven't read it already.
Here's the key graf:
In a world where information is carried in physical containers (e.g., books, reports, papers), the containers set limits for us. With bits, we need to exercise explicit managerial control. |
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Another resource to have for a rainy day
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Another tidbit to keep handy for that not too distant day when I will need it.
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It must be frustrating to be a corporate lawyer with a technological clue. You know that sending a cease and desist letter will immediately trigger the proliferation of copies across the net and around the world, as well as generating all sorts of unwanted publicity. On the other hand, if you don't you violate your responsibilities to your shareholders. I think "bullied" is a bit inflamatory. IANAL, but this strikes me as yet one more piece of evidence that the DMCA is bad law.
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If you've been paying attention, this is in the "well, duh?" category, but it's worth having handy for those who haven't. You might also want to take a look at David Brin's The Transparent Society: Will Technology Force Us to Choose Between Privacy & Freedom? for a longer take on the same question.
Key paragraph:
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I suspect that this has always been the case. What is happening now is a growing appreciation for the truth of this observation and more effort directed toward understanding and shaping the adaptation as it occurs.
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