The Internet is changing our worldview ...

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bojourvous5094
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The Internet is changing our worldview ...




by bojourvous5094 » 12/03/06, 21:14

Historically, the information has been unidirectional. Often censorship has damaged the evolution of our humanity. There were the holders of the truth and the others ... : Evil:
Radio and TV accelerated the speed of information, but they remained unidirectional and monopolized by power. :frown:

THE REVOLUTION OF THE INTERNET: : Idea:

1) Has opened the possibility to all those who have access to the Network to exchange a volume of information always increasing and impossible to control to date ... It is the democracy of the information. : Lol:

2) The Network makes it possible to communicate bi-directional information in real time anywhere on the planet ...

3) Distance is not important anymore, information spreads at high speed ...

4) We are still so far from other countries, but we feel closer, more accessible than ever ...

5) The Internet has changed the way of spreading knowledge ... : Idea:
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neant
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by neant » 14/03/06, 20:31

And rightly, look what is preparing, and there is more than serious, must circulate the info, serious, it's scary.
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After the P2P, citizen journalism in the sights of the minister?
By Guillaume Champeau (agoravox)

This article was written by a reporter from AgoraVox, the citizen media newspaper that gives you the floor.


This Tuesday at 15h will resume at the National Assembly the discussion on the draft law on copyright in the information society (DADVSI). While the maneuvers of the Minister of Culture have been condemned to the ranks of the UMP, a statement by Renaud Donnedieu de Vabres makes us fear much worse for our future, including that of AgoraVox.


We are all deeply concerned by the copyright bill in the information society. Because beyond copyright, it is all freedom of expression that is threatened in the long run, and our freedom to support traditional media.

We have often repeated it on Ratiatum, peer-to-peer and citizen journalism are two topics extremely close in their causes and their consequences. Citizen journalism, dominated in France by the online newspaper Agoravox.fr, is a movement that makes thousands of Internet users the first event reporters and often the best commentators. As Dan Gillmor, a guru of citizen journalism in the United States, explains, when an editor writes an article on the Internet, he is always certain that readers will be better informed than he is. The journalist, expert in everything but expert in anything, is confronted with the immediate answers of thousands of experts in the subjects they treat. Traditional journalists are used to one-way information from them to the reader. Citizen journalists, on the other hand, want to engage in conversations and expect their readers to educate them more. The relationship between the editor and the author, and the way of approaching journalism, are totally disrupted.

Above all, we said it, citizen journalism and P2P have the same causes and the same consequences. Through the network, Internet users themselves become producers and distributors (of content or information) and traditional producers and distributors lose the concentration that ensured their monopoly.

Where a dozen newspapers at most broadcast all the information, the blogosphere is made up of millions of Internet users who testify, inform, and analyze. The monopoly of major newspapers, radio and television is threatened by this deconcentration of information supply.

No doubt it is for the better, and where record companies and distributors can hide behind copyright to refuse to evolve, newspapers have no property rights over information. Traditional media will be forced to reform if they want to survive the Internet, and many have already begun this transition.

Warning, this train can hide another

But Renaud Donnedieu de Vabres, already very unpopular for DADVSI, seems to still want to protect the mainstream media. "This text for me is just the first in a long series of adaptations of our right to the digital age and I intend, for example, to tackle one day the problem of the press and of the Internet, "warns the minister in an interview with Libération. "This is another important topic because there will be no quality information on the Internet without real signatures, real actors that it is the job.The Internet is a great chance, but I do not want to idealize it, and without a clear framework, many of these chances could be ruined, "explains RDDV.

Who does not jump when reading that the DADVSI bill is, for RDDV, "the first in a long series"?

Tuesday morning, RDDV met Patrick Le Lay, President and CEO of TF1. As the DADVSI debates resume in the afternoon, the two men probably agreed to avoid echoing it in 20h's diary. At the edge of the precipice after repeated mistakes and repeated caricatures, RDDV wants to avoid anything that could push him, especially since the bill seems to have become hostage to the CPE, by decision of the Prime Minister.


Let's re-read Dan Gillmor to better understand RDDV

To understand the interaction, much finer and perverse than we think, between copyright, the Internet and journalism, it is sometimes good to return to some reference readings. At random (or almost) a reading of the introduction to the book We the media Dan Gillmor, the reader can be qu'interloqué so much clairvoyance on what Renaud Donnedieu de Vabres (RDDV) promises to implement square.


Dan Gillmor was for more than 25 years journalist, recognized American editorialist of the Mercury News. His book We the media is an absolute reference for those who are interested in the phenomenon of citizen media, of which he is one of the forerunners and one of the best specialists. In the introduction of this flagship book, the author wonders about the consequences of citizen media, which potentially make millions of bloggers new "journalists". While first dismissing the scenario of a total anarchy of information, Gillmor fears the arrival of a second scenario, a world of information muzzling. Page XVII, we can read:


"In this scenario, we could witness a formidable alliance between the entertainment industry - what I call 'the copyright cartel', and the government." Governments are very uncomfortable with the free -circulating information, and allowing it only to a limited extent Restrictive legislative reforms and technical measures to prevent copyright infringement could eventually lead to the need for permission to publish, or that publishing outside the box seems too risky.The cartel has targeted some of the innovations essential for the news of tomorrow, such as file sharing that actually facilitates the violation of copyright but also offers citizen journalists one the only affordable way to distribute what they create.The government insists on the right to trace everything we do, but more and more politicians and office Crates are closing access to what the public needs to know - information that is increasingly being made available through non-traditional media efforts. "


What highlight the recent statements of the Minister of Culture ... and especially what to scare. On the eve of discussions on DADVSI, he would have been paranoid to believe it. Today and after this statement by the Minister of Culture, it would be dangerous not to think about it.


The ramifications of the bill are unknown, but beyond AgoraVox, it is freedom of expression in what is most expensive that is threatened.

Only concrete symbolic actions, which will take Internet users out of the media's invisibility of the Internet, now seem capable of convincing the government to back down. It seems more important than ever to block the DADVSI train that has behind it a number of unknown cars.

AgoraVox readers and editors, weigh all your weight so that the future drawn by Renaud Donnedieu de Vabres does not come true.
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by krissg29 » 14/03/06, 22:41

First thing to do: save anything that you think is interesting on the net! (I do not talk about artist CDs or anything, but information)
it will always be saved somewhere in case of censorship.

I think we had already discussed it on another topic about interesting sites that "disappeared".

a very efficient software for pumping
http://www.httrack.com/
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by Bibiphoque » 15/03/06, 09:40

Hello,
There is also a European bill that would ban "health-friendly" endorsements on food supplements such as vitamins, which would also ban any health information that is not "official", which means that all the information for self-treatment by plants, for example, would be published on all media and on the net. (It would become illegal) : Shock:
It's really making people sheep, forced into the same mold by silly regulations made only for the purpose of favoring the big manufacturers of pharmacy! a real scandal.
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This is not because we always said that it is impossible that we should not try :)
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by neant » 15/03/06, 10:00

If society embarks on these paths, and no one succeeds in changing this uncertain future that we are drawn, the question arises, what good is life? :frown:
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by bojourvous5094 » 15/03/06, 15:48

Paldeolien wrote:If society embarks on these paths, and no one succeeds in changing this uncertain future that we are drawn, the question arises, what good is life? :frown:

____________________________________________________

Find peace in yourself ... 8)
I have a few years of life experience ... According to my perception we live in a time when time is getting faster and more ... People have less and less time to think about the real questions ... The meaning of life and death. Life for me is a school, I have 54 years and I sometimes feel that I have so much to learn ... What gives me confidence is that we can come back to this planet so many times that we want. Yes, we reincarnate several times if necessary ... Without that, life does not make sense ... I learn all my life and when finally I think I understood, I became old and unable to put into practice what I have took so long to integrate ...
I will have the chance to continue my classes in another life and to learn how to become better ... We do not become Mozart, even practicing and playing a lifetime ....
It takes many to achieve such a level of excellence!
We all have a clean way of life and our private lessons ...
As for the present time, we are in the "global turn" if I can say .... It is not easy for everyone ... But we have in us, all the tools to cross all the tests placed on our way ...
_________________________

DURING A DREAM ...... .... 8)

A very stormy and wild sea,
with waves as high as
mountains, was shown to me. Can I
I realized that under the surface reigned
a wonderful peace and calm.
I heard these words:

Look deep inside and find this
peace beyond all understanding;
keep it, what's going on outside
does not matter.
_________________________
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by bojourvous5094 » 15/03/06, 16:32

Bibiphoque wrote:Hello,
There is also a European bill that would ban "health-friendly" endorsements on food supplements such as vitamins, which would also ban any health information that is not "official", which means that all the information for self-treatment by plants, for example, would be published on all media and on the net. (It would become illegal) : Shock:
:x @+

_________________________________________________

If you allow me, I will give you some indications on the natural products .... I have to say that I live in Quebec, so our regulations vary from country to country, but there are some things that have to be common in all countries ...
Often, those who promote natural products praise the medicinal qualities of their ingredients ... It's very risky ... The companies here, sell these products as "Dietary supplements"

Why?
The answer is simple ..........
the regulations on dietary supplements is pretty much the same as " Food ". But when you give medical properties to a product, you end up here, in front of the College of Physicians, Health Canada and the pharmaceutical industry ... I do not need to say the legal power of these organizations that pay for batteries. full-time lawyers to keep the monopoly of drugs ... All those who touch their territory with a natural product will go under the steamroller ......... ..

Some companies very interested in selling natural products have circumvented the law in a legal way by selling much less regulated food supplements ...... .. If you look on the tablets of these supplements you will see everything !!!! Others understand the trick that allows the sale of these products ... In Quebec, pharmacies sell a lot of supplements and they are also now defending the marketing ... .. They have several tablets filled with supplements and profits are accordingly ...... This has had the effect of making very difficult the systematic blocking of natural products ...... :P

Also, our government, with health costs exceeding 30% of its budget, is forced to tolerate the practice of alternative doctors and the sale of natural products ... .. It wants to regulate well, but it does not want to pay, it is found in the obligation to "let go" is the force of things that open the doors to changes in our systems ... .. : Lol: @ +

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by Other » 15/03/06, 20:20

Well the Hello you 5094

The cost of health and 44% of the budget Charrette said it last night to the news, and in my opinion it will increase if I rely on statistics that I do on the population of Richelieu, (Sorel) the age group aging the peak of the population has 50 years (940 people) currently and on 43 000 élécteurs it returns with blow of 450 (age of 18ans) while they die of it annually 404 (in 2004)
The average mortality in Oxford and 72,9 years for men and 74,3 for women ..


Andre
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by Misterloxo » 15/03/06, 21:58

In any case, it is true that it is the Internet that we all have to be here and to be able to have as much information and exchanges.

It is the information revolution that precedes the energy revolution that precedes ....?

I see that hello you are quite spiritual (some words are like those of "Kryon").
Finally, for me these developments (Internet, free energy ...) are related to spirituality: no physics without metaphysics (I think it's Einstein)

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To think is to say no. "Alain, philosopher
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Internet of the future ...




by bojourvous5094 » 23/04/06, 05:07

The Internet of the future 8)

The history of the Internet is that of a fabulous collaboration between people from totally different fields who, by combining their efforts, have managed to create what we know today as the World Wide Web. The Internet2 consortium, in turn, is trying to combine the efforts of specialists in various fields to create the Internet of the future, the Abilene network.

Let's start with a quick summary of the history of the current (commercial) Internet network. It was first primarily created in the United States. He is the descendant of the ARPANET network created by the Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA) of the US Department of Defense in 1969. In 1983, the network goes to TCP / IP, the current communication protocol of the Internet. In 1986, the National Science Foundation joins the team creating the vertebral column of the network, the connections between the major universities of the United States. Finally, in August 1991, Tim Berners-Lee announces his project of a global network accessible to all: the World Wide Web, popularized in 1993 by the launch of Mosaic, the first real popular browser of the Web. It is a story of collaboration between the military, academics and computer scientists that gave birth to this incredible tool that is now part of everyday life.

2 Internet

The idea behind the formation of the Internet2 consortium is to recreate the collaborative spirit behind the Internet to create the next generation network. Internet2 is a consortium of which 207 is a member, working in partnership with the IT industry and governments. The consortium aims to create an advanced network for the scientific research community, to develop revolutionary new services for the Internet and to ensure their rapid use in the conventional Internet when they are ready and tested.

In addition to universities, the Internet2 community includes 70 companies and 40 organizations, including US government research centers. All work in collaboration with more than 30 networks of its kind worldwide including CA * net 4 in Canada. Their efforts focus, among other things, on new network applications allowing interactive access to resources in a way that would be impossible on the traditional Internet. Distance education, access to remote scientific instruments, access to huge databases and very high definition interactive video conferencing are some of the potential uses of the network.

New developments in Internet2 networks will be used in the future on the conventional Internet. One of the major developments that will allow the expansion of the commercial Internet will be the IPv6. This is the 6 version of the Internet Protocol (IP). One of the most well-known applications of the Internet Protocol is the IP address. This is the address of each of the computers and servers connected to the networks, much like home and office addresses. In the case of the traditional Internet, the Ipv4 is currently used. This specifies an address of 4 groups of 3 digits going from 0 to 255. For example, your computer might have the following address: 207.142.131.235.

This type of address only allows 4 billions of IP addresses. This number is sufficient for the moment, but with computer development across Asia and new services requesting their individual addresses, it will become insufficient by 2025. The IPv6 is composed of 8 groups of 4 hexadecimal characters (digits from 0 to 9 and letters from A to F). An IPv6 address could be:
2001: 0db8: 85a3: 08d3: 1319: 8a2e: 0370: 7334; the IPv6 allows the creation of 3,4 x 10 38 addresses (34 followed by 37 zeros). To give an idea of ​​size, one could with this system give 6,7 x 10 17 (670 million billion) IP addresses per square millimeter of the planet. Enough to last for some time, hopefully.

Abilene

The network on which all the Internet technologies of the future are developed by Internet2 is called Abilene. His name comes from a section of railroad that ended in Abilene Kansas in the 1860 years. The ambitious 19th century railway project made the furthest terminus of the eastern coast of the United States the frontier of the growing country. The project's designers believe that just as the railway network has allowed the exploration and development of new technologies and the lifestyle changes of the people of the time, the Abilene network is transforming the work of today's researchers and educators. and the world of tomorrow.

It all began with a ceremony at the White House on 14 April 1998 where the then Vice President, Al Gore, announced the project. The network was fully deployed in 1999 and allowed transfers to 2,5 gigabits per second. If you compare this transfer rate to the speed of Fast Ethernet cards, they are only 100 megabits, about 250 times faster. So we see immediately that with such a speed of data transmission, many things become possible. In 2004, the speed of the Abilene network has increased to 10 gigabits per second, about 1000 times faster than the commercial Internet, making it easy to transmit videoconferences with high definition video.

Participation in the Abilene Network is not free: it will cost 28 500 $ US to universities and large companies to access the network and 11 500 $ US to smaller companies and affiliates. Members must also abide by a code of conduct that does not authorize any commercial activity on the Abilene network. Universities and companies need to make sure that this type of use goes through the conventional Internet and that only use for research uses Abilene broadband. This is a rather difficult monitoring to put in place since, lately, 405 students have been accused by the RIAA (American Industry of the disk) of illegal use of the network Abilene for the exchange of musical files protected by the copyrights, much like on the Internet.

CA * net 4 8)

On the Canadian side, a similar network is also developing. Canaria, a non-profit organization supported by its members, project partners and the federal government, is committed to accelerating the development and use of the advanced Internet in Canada by encouraging the widespread adoption of faster and more efficient networks and by preparing the next generation of advanced products, applications and services. A mission similar to Internet2 with a network similar to Abilene, the CA * net 4 which also rolls at 10 gigabits per second.

One of the direct applications of this network is the development of a high definition videoconferencing network and without delay at McGill University in Montreal: the Ultravideo Conference. This system allows its users to chat in real time from one city to another through 3 giant screens of 64 inches. This system will be tested soon, but a previous system has already shown that it was even possible to play music duet by this system as the sound is clear and the delay barely noticeable. This is one of the many applications of super networks working to forge the Internet of tomorrow.
By Jean-François Gélinas
Source:
http://www.quebecmicro.com/dossier_juillet.php
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