Monday, February 23, 2004
Alarming Google Results
Ok. Google is becoming our chief source for reference. But if you enter "siva" into a Google web search, you get these results:
Searched the web for siva. Results 1 - 10 of about 388,000. Search took 0.16 seconds.
Siva - The Smashing Pumpkins Website Siva is known for this Huge Image Archive on 800+ images, including NEW video stills of Perfect and Ava Adore. ... Have new information not on Siva? ... blamo.org/ - 24k - Feb 21, 2004 - Cached - Similar pages
SIVACRACY.NET: Siva Vaidhyanathan' Weblog SIVACRACY.NET: Siva Vaidhyanathan' Weblog ... if Siva ruled the world ... Wednesday, February 18, 2004 Why would America vote for Bush? ... posted by Siva | 13:52 ... www.nyu.edu/classes/siva/ - 21k - Feb 21, 2004 - Cached - Similar pages
Pagina Principale SIVA | Servizio Informazioni e Valutazione ... - [ Translate this page ] ... disabilità. HomePage Portale SIVA - Versione Italiana. ... Portale SIVA - Il Portale Internet Italiano sulle Tecnologie per l'Autonomia. Il ... www.siva.it/ - 13k - Feb 21, 2004 - Cached - Similar pages
Sri Siva Vishnu Temple Sri Siva Vishnu Temple 6905 Cipriano Road, Lanham MD-20706 Phone: (301) 552 3335 Fax: (301) 552 1204 Email: ssvt@ssvt.org. Temple Timings. Directions. Newsletter. ... Description: The history, deities and activities of the temple. Category: Society > Religion and Spirituality > ... > Temples > United States www.ssvt.org/ - 8k - Feb 21, 2004 - Cached - Similar pages
Velkommen til SIVA Nettleseren din støtter ikke frames;. Du kan henter en nettleser som støtter frames fra Netscape eller Microsoft. www.siva.no/ - 2k - Cached - Similar pages
There are several problems here. Why should I be behind Smashing Pumpkins! They are has beens! They were overrated when they made music!
But more importantly, shouldn't the Hindu god after whom I am named get higher billing than either me OR Smashing Pumpkins? Come one people, really.
posted by Siva |
18:58
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Gitlin on Nader: From tragedy to farce
Is Karl Rove funding Ralph Nader's rants and delusions?
Click for this Link
posted by Siva |
14:48
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E-Voting in Austin
Its code is not open. It does not produce a verifiable paper trail. But it's not as bad as all the other E-voting systems.
Lee Nichols describes the costs and benefits of Travis County adopting Hart Intercivic e-voting machines.
As this article makes clear, you can make a machine more secure from outside corruption without making it any safer from an inside job.
Click for this Link
posted by Siva |
08:18
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| bio and contact |
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Siva Vaidhyanathan, a cultural historian and media scholar, is the author of Copyrights and Copywrongs: The Rise of Intellectual Property and How it Threatens Creativity (New York University Press, 2001) and The Anarchist in the Library (Basic Books, 2004).
Vaidhyanathan has written for many periodicals, including The Chronicle of Higher Education, The New York Times Magazine, MSNBC.COM, Salon.com, openDemocracy.net, and The Nation.
After five years as a professional journalist, Vaidhyanathan earned a Ph.D. in American Studies from the University of Texas at Austin.
He has taught at Wesleyan University and the University of Wisconsin at Madison and is currently an assistant professor of Culture and Communication at New York University.
He lives in Greenwich Village, USA.
You may reach him via: sivav at pobox dot com.
Read Siva's regular column, Remote Control: Life in America, at www.opendemocracy.net.
The Anarchist in the Library (Basic Books, April 2004)
Read an FAQ file about The Anarchist in the Library.
Check out a video clip of Siva presenting the introduction to The Anarchist in the Library.
Read an excerpt from Anarchist in the Library on Salon.com.
Praise for The Anarchist in the Library:
"What a thrilling discovery this book is: erudite, eloquent imaginative and personable all at once, The Anarchist in the Library will become not only the ur-text in an increasingly important field, but also the one that is certainly the most fun to read."
- Eric Alterman, MSNBC blogger, Nation columnist, and author of What Liberal Media?
"This beautifully written and widely informed work weaves together a thousand threads into a rich and convincing story about just what's at stake in the digital age. As Vaidhyanathan powerfully shows, what's at stake has ultimately little to do with things digital. We face a fundamental choice about the nature of cultural freedom. The Internet presents this choice. Against the background of the tapestry that this rising star of culture has crafted, the right choice seems clear."
- Lawrence Lessig, author of Free Culture and The Future of Ideas
"Siva Vaidhyanathan has done that rare thing--induced me to rethink my position, revise my conclusions, and enjoy doing it. (And he quotes me accurately.)"
- Randy Cohen, author of the New York Times Magazine column "The Ethicist"
"As the world cascades towards the internet and the entropic culture that it represents, you'll see the ideas that he's given us in this timely
meditation become more than just truisms, but ways of living life in the information age. "Anarchist in the Library" is a signpost on a road that is getting more complex, and uncontrollable every day. People should take a look and understand which direction the traffic
is flowing. Marshall Mcluhan meets the Sex Pistols anyone?"
- Paul D. Miller, AKA DJ Spooky
"Vaidhyanathan refrains from offering any quick-fix solutions, instead arguing that the friction between
anarchy and the desire for control now highlighted by technology is an essential element in the creation of culture.
Vaidhyanathan is a brilliant thinker and an energetic writer."
- Publishers' Weekly
"The technical, social, legal and cultural aspects of downloading music may not sound like a compelling read. But in the skilled hands of Siva Vaidhyanathan, these issues take on life and historical importance."
- The Minneapolis Star-Tribune
"Vaidhyanathan's book is loftier; the author intends not just to untangle the current debates on media
but also to examine how these debates might affect other fights over information control
-- the debate over secrecy and privacy in the war on terrorism,
say, or questions of intellectual property surrounding biotechnology.
It is an ambitious effort, and mostly engaging."
- Farhad Manjoo, in Salon.com
And:
Copyrights and Copywrongs: The Rise of Intellectual Property and How it Threatens Creativity (New York University Press, 2001)
"...this well-crafted and important book shows that there are graver concerns for the public in the entertainment industry's effort to tighten its grip on intellectual property. ... This book is simply the best on the subject to date, ..."
- Publishers' Weekly
"Siva Vaidhyanathan has done a big favor for the academic and library communities. In this book, he has spelled out in clear, understandable language what's at stake in the battles over the nation's intellectual property. The issues brought forward are critical to the future of scholarship and creativity. Librarians and academics are wise to purchase this book and add it to their 'must read' lists.' "
- Nancy Kranich, President, American Library Association, 2000-2001
"It has taken lawyers 200-plus years to morph copyright law from the balanced compromise that our framers struck to the extraordinary system of control that it has become. In this beautifully written book, a nonlawyer has uncovered much of the damage done. Copyrights and Copywrongs is a rich and compelling account of the bending of American copyright law, and a promise of the balance that we could once again make the law become. "
- Lawrence Lessig, Stanford Law School and author of Code and Other Laws of Cyberspace
"Copyrights and Copywrongs is an urgent information-age wake-up call to a public cocooned in belief that 'copyright' is a seal and safeguard for consumers and producers of culture-ware. This book guides us into the legal labyrinth of a new world of so-called intellectual property, in which 'fair use' isn't fair, where rights are waived and free speech -- when we can get it -- costs a great deal of money. From print books to video games, Copyrights and Copywrongs shows free expression in a legalistic chokehold. Clearly written, meticulously argued, this book is a must."
- Cecelia Tichi, author of Embodiment of a Nation: Human Form in American Spaces
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Jay Rosen: PressThink
LawMeme
Freedom to Tinker: Edward Felten on tech
Copyfight: The Politics of IP
Scripting News: Dave Winer on blogs, etc.
Blue Ear: Global Journalism Worth Reading
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Connected: Sarah Lai Stirland
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