- Anonymous, hacktivism and the rise of the cyber protester
Simon Cox at BBC News wrote a pretty even handed if shallow consideration of Anonymous. The first quote is from Gabriella Coleman, who I interviewed on the podcast and has a new book out. She?s one of the few folks who has been able to examine Anonymous in any detail without incurring its rather or pranks (for the lulz.) Whether her input kept this piece from trending into the usual panic or not, it is not a bad, if quick, warmup for sustained look in Coding Freedom. - Tiny Swarming Robots Play Beethoven, Gadget Lab at Wired.com
- My open source cure for brain cancer
Writing for CNN.com, Salvatore Iaconesi shares his own open source a life story. In this instance it is particularly bitter sweet as he has been diagnosed with brain cancer. Not surprisingly, was left feeling incomplete in the wake of his encounter with modern healthcare. Rather than just complaining or, worse, litigating he is openly sharing all the relevant information and data in the hopes of making things better. To do so, he had to tackle any number of surprising technical challenges documented in the piece. One of the most compelling examples of someone hacking their world I?ve read in a while. - Codebender: physical programming on the web ? a WebFWD project, Mozilla Hacks
- Netflix open sources Hystrix resilience library, The H Open: News and Features
- Gathering Evidence for a Fact-Based Copyright Policy, Open Enterprise
- Facebook Copyright Statement: Not Entirely Silly, freedom-to-tinker.com
Posted in Links.
? November 27, 2012
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