Late Breaking Geekery: Net Freedom and The British PM is A Moron

Yes, in case you hadn't heard, British PM David Cameron apparently wants to ban people from social media if they might be plotting violence, among other things.  GigaOm has a roundup of some reactions and further thoughts.

So a few progeek thoughts:

  1. Cameron is a complete dunce to even consider this.  Secondly, though I credit him for going public with his insane thoughts and not plotting in private, he's now only convinced more people he's a potential dictator as opposed to thinking "man, I have some stupid ideas."  He has just invited comparisons to Egypt and Syria, and *HE* gets to be Hosni Mubarak in people's minds.
  2. If this was even attempted, it would A) fail, and B) turn into something FAR more deadly and serious because Cameron would look like a dictator to many.  If he thinks he has problems now, he should ask what happens when people think he's playing internet cop or worse.
  3. Be warned if stories of this get out – and perhaps get amplified by fear, loathing and, ironically, social media – there will be worse violence in Britain.
  4. We're fortunate that companies like Twitter put the smack down on this, though I hear mixed reports as to what RIM is doing.
  5. This is a serious progeek issue (as well as a human issue) – net freedom, real net freedom, is one of the most important issues of our time.
  6. This could screw with the British economy if it gets bad, further complicating world economic issues.

Cameron hasn't been handling things too well – this doesn't help and it's very troubling.

Steven Savage

 

News Of The Day 8/9/2011

The economy isn't as bad as we thought? The Smurfs return. Publishing gets a big lawsuit. What a day! What a pile of news!

Economics/Geekonomics:
And stocks bounce back up?. I'm pretty much getting the idea that no one listened to the S&P that much, and that this was due to the EuroCrisis.

Film:
Smurfs gets a sequel. Well there's a successful remake, and who wants to be a revival of the TV series?

Music:
OK, maybe I am wrong about a Walmart ecosystem. Walmart is shutting down it's MP3 music store.

Publishing:
A lawsuit against Apple and several publishers over e-book price fixing is out there. This is one to follow since it's big, public, names a lot of people, is on a hot subject, and it touches lots of industries near and dear to we progeeks.

Security:
Anyonymous to take on Facebook in November? I dunno, but their statement does mention political issues which fits some current trends.

Social Media:
GroupOn-like Bloomspot gets $40 million in VC. $40 million for an imitation in an unsure market? Not sure here, that is a lot of money, but i'm not sure on the business model. Take this more as a reason to keep an eye on the GroupOn-like enthusiasm – it's not gone away.

Technology:
Apple close to being the most valuable public company in the world. Just included because it's noteworthy.

Television:

Syfy, who's goal for years has been to confuse viewers, cancels Eurkea quite quickly and without much chance of resolution. Could this signal another change in their plans? An opening for a new show? Hell if I know, they're confusing me as usual.

Video Games:
Disney is strong, but its Interactive division lags. That division seems to always have trouble, but at least they have a lot of support.  I consider them quite viable as an employer, but would watch the Interactive division.

Uh-oh. THQ closed an Australian studio and eliminated a dev team in Phoenix. May want to be careful applying there for awhile.

QUESTION OF THE DAY: So what the hell is SyFy up to?

Steven Savage