If you have not read an article on what happens to your search history, well you should.
http://www.news.com/FAQ-When-Google-is-not-your-friend/2100-1025_3-6034666.html?tag=nefd.top
is a good site for doing so. After I read it I was terrified but then reflected back to a class discussion about privacy and the digital world. America, along with the rest of the world, is moving to a more digitalized world every moment. Some places you can only buy certain items online, and how do you do that? With a credit card. Every purchase made on a credit card is stored in an information bank. Advertising is trying to work with the information to personally target "you" with advertisements that interest you according to previous purchases. Along with that may be Internet search records. Every item a person types in as a search is stored for unknown amounts of time, except AOL admitted to keeping there's for only 30 days.
I personally think this is all an invasion of privacy. If I had a weird fetish and googled it, there is a record kept on it. If I look up how to make drugs or bombs, there is a record that could potentially be used against me in a court case.
Example: I am in high school doing a report on marijuana for health class. I want to know how it is made and the process of getting weed on the streets. I search "how marijuana is made." I get the information and complete my project. Years later the Supreme Court starts a drug war and wants to know who makes marijuana. They can order a subpoena that then leads the court to my name. Simple search leads invasion of what I do in my personal time and possibly law issues.
Also on the Internet, there is a potential to have a battle over speed through provider. Companies that provide the availability to the Internet are starting to realize they have control. Could Google pay more money to have their site run at a faster rate than any other site to lead people to use Google? Could Google suffer because MSN bought the fastest speed so people are using them? All of this is in the air and could present many problems. For more information read: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/01/21/AR2006012100094.html
The article goes as far to say "Network neutrality is a solution in search of a problem."
Tuesday, November 27, 2007
Wednesday, November 14, 2007
readings week 4
The preposition part made me laugh because I’ve heard it too many times. The story goes a speaker was at a Harvard and was asking a student “Where is the library at?” The student responded “Here at Harvard we don’t end out sentences with prepositions” The speaker said “Let me rephrase. Where is the library at asshole?”
Some of the other tactics reminded me of my mother. Which is quite sad but she used to use many of these. Thankfully she has changed but it still gives me experience with the "conversational terrorism."
The Virtual Education article was interesting. "These kids had maybe never had the feeling of being transported by a good book," but could eventually support themselves by working computer programs. That is my favorite part but by far the saddest yet so true. Children are being taught so much new stuff and being loaded with new technology information but missing simple and basic principles. It even said working with computers helps improve test scores.
In Weeds, when Shane is asked what he learns in school he responds, "How to pass the state tests so our school can get more funding." I agree. Schools focus so much on the curriculum that will be on tests that students do not actually learn. My senior year of high school, my economics teacher handed out the study guide for the final and that was all we worked on all semester. It seems like schools are training robots.
Some of the other tactics reminded me of my mother. Which is quite sad but she used to use many of these. Thankfully she has changed but it still gives me experience with the "conversational terrorism."
The Virtual Education article was interesting. "These kids had maybe never had the feeling of being transported by a good book," but could eventually support themselves by working computer programs. That is my favorite part but by far the saddest yet so true. Children are being taught so much new stuff and being loaded with new technology information but missing simple and basic principles. It even said working with computers helps improve test scores.
In Weeds, when Shane is asked what he learns in school he responds, "How to pass the state tests so our school can get more funding." I agree. Schools focus so much on the curriculum that will be on tests that students do not actually learn. My senior year of high school, my economics teacher handed out the study guide for the final and that was all we worked on all semester. It seems like schools are training robots.
Tuesday, November 6, 2007
answering questions
Sorry Shane. I forgot to address the questions in my other blogs. Aren't our final portfolios online resume(insert accent mark over "e" here)s? so the information would be school, work, volunteer, and overview! Target: future employers.
ps (fine-side note)- how did you know I critiqued the class website?
That covers it so see you in class. candy this time?
ps (fine-side note)- how did you know I critiqued the class website?
That covers it so see you in class. candy this time?
Janel Shackelford
more profiles with weekly reading review
Facebook and families. I would never add my parents to a myspace or facebook profile of mine. It is bad enough having siblings on there, no offense to any of them. Personal profiles are like small communities, parents find out where you are and what you are doing before you get there. My sister found out about my tattoo online from a comment a friend left me. Nothing I posted, just on my profile. I am pleased reading the mom understood that her daughter did not want to "friend" her. My real mother would be hurt and make a huge deal if she got a myspace or facebook and I said stay away.
I eas surprised to read about the Drudge report. It almost made me laugh that a website got clogged because so many readers of the DrudgeReport followed a link on global warming. It made me realize just how many people actually use that site. Very interesting. Interesting indeed!
I eas surprised to read about the Drudge report. It almost made me laugh that a website got clogged because so many readers of the DrudgeReport followed a link on global warming. It made me realize just how many people actually use that site. Very interesting. Interesting indeed!
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