US Supreme Court

CRUSH: The End of Anonymity

by: Nhavey

Mon Apr 26, 2010 at 13:05

CRUSH - Bringing you the latest in social media news in four  minutes or less. And in our own exciting news - we've gone HD, making  our crushing capabilities that much clearer. Enjoy! Don't forget to join  us on  Facebook and  Twitter, and get  your daily crush at  www.commonsensenms.com
 
Facebook took center stage this week with its annual developers  conference, F8. What were the biggest announcements? Although Facebook  founder Marc Zuckerberg displayed a dozen new tools and widgets, the  most significant announcement to prepare for is the "open graph platform". Open Graph plans to connect  all corners in the web in order to "create a Web that's smarter, more  social, more personalized, and more semantically aware". As one element  of this platform, website owners will have a chance to place a "Like"  button on their pages, allowing Facebook to then publish whatever a user  likes directly to their Facebook profile.

Of course the privacy police have already stated concern over the new development, and with  good reason. When does sharing data on what we read, view, listen to,  and interact with on the web become invasive as opposed to interactive?  Stay tuned to CRUSH for latest in what is sure to be an upcoming battle  over personalization versus privacy.

In honor of the recent celebration of Earth Day, we encourage you to  fly on over to the "We Love Birds" community on Ning. Hosted by NRDC  and the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, "We Love Birds" is one of the best  uses of Ning we've seen yet. View some of natures' finest yourself with  the over 7,000 stunning photos.

While social media sites continue to innovate at a crushing speed,  the honorable justices of the US Supreme Court seem to be experiencing technical difficulties. The divide  between "the hip justices and hip-replacement judges" was made painfully  clear during this week's court discussion over sexting and privacy  rights. Embarrassing highlights from the case:

  • Chief Justice Roberts asks what the difference was  between email and a pager
  • Justice Kennedy wondered what would happen if you were sent a text  the same time you were sending one to someone else - "Does it say: 'Your  call is important to us, and we will get back to you?"
  • Justice Scalia's confusion on service providers and  concern of whether they can be shared by printing them - "You mean (the  text) doesn't go right to me?"..."Could Quon print these spicy little  conversations and send them to his buddies?"

In other online sex news, we would like to commend Apple's decision to trash nearly 6,000 sexually  suggestive iPhone apps. Refreshing to see some leadership within  corporate America, and hats off to Steve Jobs for refusing to chose  profits over the objectification of women.

And that brings us to our CRUSH OF THE WEEK - Our story  this week truly reveals the power of social media, as Mayor of East  Haven Connecticut donated a kidney to a Facebook Friend, Carlos  Sanchez, after seeing the status update Sanchez posted saying his  friends and relatives had all been tested but were not a match. Making  the Mayor a hero in our books, and Facebook her loyal sidekick.

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Down for the count: The real fight for 2012

by: Karl Frisch

Mon Mar 02, 2009 at 10:08

The fight for 2012 is here. Beltway media insiders rejoice!

Who's it going to be? Spunky Sarah? Moneyed Mitt? Holy Huckabee? Some dark-horse candidate flying under the radar? One thing is for sure: While the media clamors for every tiny detail in the looming battle for the Republican presidential nomination, the real fight for 2012 is taking place right before their very eyes.

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