Slate
Maybe Fitness Tracking Shouldn’t Be Social After All (Slate)
Submitted by Robbie McBeath on Tue, 07/24/2018 - 13:54Podcast: Why is FCC Chairman Ajit Pai blocking Sinclair? (Slate)
Submitted by benton on Thu, 07/19/2018 - 06:23Op-ed: Brett Kavanaugh Has Some Alarmingly Outdated Views on Privacy (Slate)
Submitted by benton on Thu, 07/12/2018 - 13:25Facebook is retreating from the news business. It’s been a painful transition for publications that had come to depend on it (Slate)
Submitted by benton on Thu, 06/28/2018 - 08:48The Federal Policy Loophole Supporting the Hacking-for-Hire Market (Slate)
Submitted by Robbie McBeath on Sun, 06/24/2018 - 22:25FCC Chairman Ajit Pai Is Twisting the Meaning of the “Open Internet” (Slate)
Submitted by benton on Tue, 06/12/2018 - 06:12Net neutrality is officially dead. Here’s how you’ll notice it’s gone.
The internet is already massively concentrated, with just a few platforms commanding the majority of people’s time online. Once those entrenched powers can start to set the price for priority service, they stand to become even more powerful. Those smaller websites that are taking longer to load may slowly start to disappear too, and the great promise of the internet—that there’s no telling what someone might create next—may become an even more distant dream. So be on the lookout over the next few weeks for notices from your internet service provider with changes to your terms of service.
There Are Two Big Reasons Robocalls Are Getting Worse (and the FCC is only trying to fix one) (Slate)
Submitted by benton on Wed, 05/16/2018 - 10:45Klout Is Shutting Down Just In Time to Not Reveal How Much It Knew About Us
Klout, the service which measured online influence and assigned people a zero-to-100 score based on their social media followings, will shut down on May 25. Everyone’s Klout scores will go away, and with them, any remaining chance that businesses will treat us better or worse based on those scores. But the data Klout gathered from people presumably lives on. Lithium Technologies, the social-media marketing company that bought Klout in 2014, implied in its announcement that it has integrated Klout’s software and data into its own products.