Mozilla wants to watch 1% of Firefox users
Obama To Launch Website For Tracking Tax Expenditures
internationalflights tips news that Barack Obama, in his first weekly address as President, has mentioned plans to set up a website for tracking “how and where we spend taxpayer dollars.” Details about the website, Recovery.gov, are available within the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (PDF). The website “shall provide data on relevant economic, financial, grant, and contract information in user-friendly visual presentations to enhance public awareness of the use funds made available in this Act,” and will also “provide a means for the public to give feedback on the performance of contracts awarded for purposes of carrying out this Act.” The site itself currently contains a placeholder until the passage of the Act.
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Crime Stoppers celebrates 21 years in Cochrane District – Timmins Daily Press
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Crime Stoppers celebrates 21 years in Cochrane District
Timmins Daily Press – 24 Jan 2009 Today, Crime Stoppers has helped in the arrest of more than 50000 people in Ontario alone, recovering millions of dollars of stolen property and illegal drugs. WEB EXTRA: Crime Stoppers suspects of the week Penticton Western Tips to Waco Crime Stoppers rise to start 2009 Waco Tribune Herald SUN Weekend – IdahoStatesman.com – TMC Net all 6 news articles |
The Top 15 Countries by Internet Population
Mozilla Labs Wants To Monitor (Volunteers’) Firefox Use
Howardd21 writes “PC World reports that Mozilla Labs wants 1% of its Firefox users to voluntarily provide information about how they use the browser, and their web browsing habits. This would be done through an add-on named “Test Pilot” that collects the information and associates it with some demographic information that the user has provided. Unlike other data collection utilities that software developers may include to provide usage information, the add-on will follow the same open source concept that Firefox adheres to, allowing the market to better understand what is being collected. Mozilla Labs stresses privacy when discussing how they will collect, store and use the data, including publishing it for other researchers to to analyze.”
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Making recycling easy – Toronto Star
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Making recycling easy
Toronto Star – 23 Jan 2009 People are always happy to buy a new battery-operated gadget or brighten up a dark room with a wonderful shade of paint. But then what? Province wants retailers to collect hazardous waste Sudbury Star Provincial, retail partnership makes waste disposal easier Sault Star Mississauga News – CNW Telbec (Communiqué de presse) – CNW Telbec (Communiqué de presse) – CNW Telbec (Communiqué de presse) all 9 news articles |
Twitter to hit the big time with explosion in microblogging – Times Online
Times Online |
Twitter to hit the big time with explosion in microblogging
Times Online – 22 Jan 2009 The service where users post short updates about what they are doing has received an explosion in visitors, both in the UK and the US. Inauguration 2.0: Citizen Networking ZDNet Obama inauguration has Internet all a-Twitter Computerworld Eye Weekly – VentureBeat – Farmington Independent – Appscout all 14 news articles |
Comcast’s Congestion Catch-22
An anonymous reader sends us to Telephony Online for a story about Comcast’s second attempt at traffic management (free registration may be required). After the heavy criticism they received from customers and the FCC about their first system, they’ve adopted a more even-handed “protocol agnostic” approach. Nevertheless, they’re once again under scrutiny from the FCC, this time for the way their system interacts with VOIP traffic. By ignoring specific protocols, the occasional bandwidth limits on high-usage customers interferes with those customers’ VOIP, yet Comcast’s own Digital Voice is unaffected. Quoting: “The shocking thing is just how big a Pandora’s box the FCC has appeared to open — and it just keeps getting bigger. When the FCC first started addressing bandwidth usage and DPI issues, it quickly found itself up to its knees in network management minutia. Not long after that, it followed another logical path of the DPI question and asked service providers and Web companies about their use of DPI for behavioral targeting. Now it seemingly has opened up huge questions about what it means to be a voice carrier in the age of IP. It’s not hard to imagine the next step: What about video? Telco IPTV services are delivered in roughly the same way as carrier VoIP services — via packets running on the same physical network but a prioritized logical signaling stream. Is that fair to over-the-top video service providers?”
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