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Voices

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Thursday, July 2, 2009

Life at Parc: Organic Food, Unix Parties, Coyotes and Geeks

Lisa Katayama

What’s everyday life like at Silicon Valley’s most famous research center? To find out, I talked to YF Juan, a director of business develpment at PARC, and communications manager Linda Jacobson.

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Tuesday, September 30, 2008

Bail In or Bail Out?

Douglas Rushkoff

As I write this, the DowJones is down 600 points, largely in reaction to the House defeating the federal bailout of the credit industry. What should we think and do about this?

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Wednesday, July 30, 2008

Illegal Filesharing: A Suicide Note From the Music Industry

Cory Doctorow

This month’s announcement of a backroom deal between internet service providers and the big record companies to spy on suspected copyright infringers and reduce the quality of their Internet connections is just the latest paragraph in the record industry’s long, self-pitying suicide note, and it’s left me wishing they’d just pull the trigger already and [...]

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Wednesday, June 18, 2008

Surveillance: You Can Know Too Much

Cory Doctorow

The Singularity is a conceit of modern science fiction: a place inside vast computers where whole universes are simulated whose reality is every bit as sharp and instantaneous as the physical world we inhabit. Books like Charlie Stross’s “Singularity Sky” and the Matrix movie trilogy have done a great job of representing such alternative, computer-calculated realities.

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Friday, April 11, 2008

Wal-Mart Corporate Archivist Selling Access to Recordings of Exec Meetings to Plaintiff-Side Lawyers

Cory Doctorow

Flagler Productions, a video production company in Kansas that spent years as Wal-Mart’s corporate archivist, is now selling access to thousands of hours of candid footage of Wal-Mart execs talking about the business’s dirty secrets. Wal-Mart fired Flagler, and gave them a lowball offer of $500,000 (7,33€) for the archive. Instead, Flagler is now selling access to the archive to researchers (mostly union organizers and plaintiff-side lawyers suing Wal-Mart) for $250/hour.

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About Voices

This is a section of the All Things Digital Web site featuring posts from around the Web, from other Dow Jones properties and also original pieces we solicit. The section is now explicitly labeled that it comes "from other Web sites."

We are fully aware of the controversies around how linking and aggregating is done on the Web and we, in no way, are attempting to "scrape" original content created by others. Instead, regarding third-party posts, we are trying to point readers of this site to other posts from around the Web that we admire and are trying to do so in the quickest manner possible.

The Internet is full of terrific content that is not ours and we want to help our readers find it by making editorial suggestions--Look, Mom, no algorithm!--of posts we think are worth their time.

That is why we have made even more changes to Voices to ensure we do this in the most transparent and timely way. While we don't expect that everyone will agree with our policies, we have made changes that reflect our intent in pointing to content outside our site.

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