Tuesday, March 06, 2007

Fake professor in Wikipedia storm






Internet site Wikipedia has been hit by controversy after the disclosure that a prominent editor had assumed a false identity complete with fake PhD.

The editor, known as Essjay, had described himself as a professor of religion at a private university.

But he was in fact Ryan Jordan, 24, a college student from Kentucky who used texts such as Catholicism for Dummies to help him work.

He has retired from the site and his authority to edit has been cancelled.

Wikipedia is a collaborative encyclopaedia open to all, written by volunteers from around the world.



Under the name Essjay, Mr Jordan edited articles and also had the authority to arbitrate disputes between authors and remove site vandalism.

In his user profile, he said he taught both undergraduate and graduate theology, and in an interview with the New Yorker in July 2006, was described as a "tenured professor of religion".

His real identity came to light last week when the magazine added an editorial note to the piece highlighting the deception.

"At the time of publication, neither we nor Wikipedia knew Essjay's real name," the note said.

Essjay told them he hid his identity because "he feared personal retribution from those he had ruled against online", the newspaper's note said.

Wikipedia co-founder Jimmy Wales, writing on the site on 3 March, said that Mr Jordan was apologetic, but that Wikipedia was "based on twin pillars of trust and tolerance".

"Despite my personal forgiveness, I hope that he will accept my resignation request, because forgiveness or not, these positions are not appropriate for him now," he wrote.

And in a post the next day, Mr Jordan announced his retirement from the site.

"I hope others will refocus the energy they have spent the past few days in defending and denouncing me to make something here at Wikipedia better," he said.

{...}

Friday, November 03, 2006


Microsoft restates China policy

Microsoft has restated its position on China following comments by one of its senior legal staff.


Earlier this week, Microsoft senior counsel Fred Tipson said concerns about repression in China might make it reconsider its presence there.
Mr Tipson was speaking at the first Internet Governance Forum held in Athens which debated many issues of internet policy.
But now Microsoft has said it is "committed" to staying in the country.

via : bbcnews


Computer bug study wins top prize


A UK scientist has won one of the largest international prizes in science for his work on the bacterium E.coli.


Dr Dennis Bray from the University of Cambridge was given the European Science Award for his innovative computer simulations of the bacterium.
The 250,000 Euro (£170,000) award recognises research at the interface between computing and the sciences.
Dr Bray's simulations shed light on the molecular systems that allow bacteria to respond to environmental changes.
"The system we have been focusing on is the one that enables bacteria to smell and swim towards sources of food," Dr Bray told the BBC News website.


via : bbcnews

Tuesday, October 31, 2006

Firms defend dealings with China


Microsoft and Cisco Systems have defended their dealings with countries with poor human rights' records.

The work of the firms was the centre of a debate about openness at the Internet Governance Forum in Athens.
Fred Tipson, senior counsel for Microsoft, denied that some big businesses were "colluding" with certain governments.
Art Reilly, senior director at Cisco Systems, said the firm enabled the flow of information, not restricted it.
As the only two representatives of major business sat on the panel, they were the focus of accusations from some delegates that the companies were not doing all they could to enable freedom of expression.


[ ...]

Virus writers target web videos


The growing popularity of online video has caught the attention of

malicious hackers and hi-tech criminals.


Some of the codecs let users play types of net-based video, but also

have spyware and adware wrapped inside.

Others, say experts, are outright fakes that just want to infect

victims with data-stealing programs.

Audience ratings

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Recenetly on myspace.com


It will use a file-filtering application to scan old and new content to weed out any unauthorised material.

Illegal files, the company said, would be removed and persistent offenders would be banned from the site.

Online sites are coming under increasing pressure from the music industry to stop copyright infringment on their pages




via: bbcnews

Thursday, September 14, 2006



Google Adds More Mapping Innovations from PhysOrg.com

(AP) -- Google Inc. has added more video and other bonus features for users of its popular three-dimensional mapping software to unearth even more information about destinations around the world.

[...]



LG Philips develops LCD panel for next-generation mobile phones from PhysOrg.com

LG Philips LCD said Thursday it has developed the industry's first liquid crystal display (LCD) panel for next-generation mobile phones, allowing a clearer playback of video clips.

[...]

Wednesday, September 06, 2006



Google to offer news archive going back 300 years from PhysOrg.com

Internet giant Google Inc., is expected to announce that it will offer a free archive service enabling Internet users to search for printed articles back to the 1700s, US newspapers reported.

[...]

Wednesday, August 30, 2006




AOL challenges iTunes with unlimited songs for monthly fee from PhysOrg.com

America Online (AOL) took aim at Apple Computer's market-ruling iPod-iTunes duo on Tuesday with a music service that lets US users download unlimited songs for a monthly fee rather than a per tune charge.

[...]

Monday, August 28, 2006



Google Releasing Package for the Office from PhysOrg.com

(AP) -- Gmail is headed for the office - officially. Starting Monday, Google will offer Google Apps for Your Domain, a free package of programs for businesses, universities and other organizations.

[...]



Google, EBay Form Advertising Alliance from PhysOrg.com

(AP) -- In a deal between two of the Internet's most prominent properties, Google Inc. will begin selling advertising on Web auction leader eBay and help buyers quickly ring an online merchant to do business.

[...]

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