OneWebDay

OneWebDay

Today is OneWebDay. It’s a day to think about issues that are important to the future of the Internet. Here is the list of ideas for how you can help with OneWebDay from the organization’s web site.

How can you help the Web on OneWebDay?

1. If you’re a Web user, use a standards-compliant Web browser like Firefox or Opera. They’re free, faster, and more protective of your privacy. And because they conform to Web development standards, they make things easier for people who make Web sites. If you’re a Web developer, test your sites with the w3c’s Markup Validation Service.

2. Edit a Wikipedia article. Teach people what you know, and in so doing, help create free universal knowledge.

3. Learn about an Internet policy issue from the Center for Democracy and Technology, and teach five other people about it. There are real legal threats that could drastically change the way the Internet works. We should all be aware of them.

4. Take steps to ensure that your computer can’t be treated like a zombie. Computer viruses can steal your personal information. They can also cause major network outages on the Web, slowing things down and making sites inaccessible. Vint Cerf estimates that more than 150 million PCs have already been zombified, and are now awaiting their next order. To learn more about the threat of zombie computers, read this article.

5. Join an Internet rights advocacy group:

  • Become a member of the Electronic Frontier Foundation. The EFF has championed the public interest in every critical battle affecting digital rights, from privacy to free speech to Internet service.
  • Join the Internet Society. ISOC is dedicated to ensuring the open development, evolution and use of the Internet for the benefit of people throughout the world, particularly by establishing Internet infrastructure standards.
  • Support Creative Commons by donating and by using their licenses to copyright your work. If you’re outside the U.S., help support their counterpart, iCommons.

6. Help promote public Internet access. If you live in a city, there is likely an organization dedicated to providing free wireless access in public spaces.

7. Donate to the Wikimedia Foundation. The Wikimedia Foundation supports not only Wikipedia, but several other projects to create free knowledge: textbooks, news, learning tools, and more.

8. Donate a computer. You can donate a new $100 laptop to children in impoverished countries, or donate your used computer to Goodwill or a school.

9. Write your OneWebDay story. Talk about what the Internet means to you and why One WebDay matters at http://onewebday.org/stories

10. If your city is hosting a OneWebDay event, show up on September 22 and participate.

I think the concept of net neutrality is the key issue for me. Equal access for all, equal bandwidth for all. A neutral technology that supports a level playing field. Some of what I’ve said before about it is available in the related posts.

Related Posts: The FCC Holds Hearings on the Comcast Strangle Hold on Bandwidth, Technology Blogs in the NewsFCC will investigate Comcast on Net Neutrality, All Buzz

Terms of Service

Remember this terms of service paragraph?

By submitting, posting or displaying the content you give Google a perpetual, irrevocable, worldwide, royalty-free, and non-exclusive license to reproduce, adapt, modify, translate, publish, publicly perform, publicly display and distribute any content which you submit, post or display on or through, the services. This license is for the sole purpose of enabling Google to display, distribute and promote the services and may be revoked for certain services as defined in the additional terms of those services.

That’s the same TOS material that caused so much discussion about the search engine service Lijit in these pages a while back. See comments in A Report from BlogHer08 and Lijit.

But the paragraph quoted above came from Google’s TOS for the new browser beta Google Chrome. All it took for Google to listen and change the TOS was an article in slashdot. Almost overnight, Google changed its TOS and posted an explanation on the Google blog: Google does not want rights to things you do using Chrome.

As for Lijit, we heard from them during the discussion here about their TOS, but if that has changed since then, we haven’t heard about it.

Ubiquity

Yesterday Laura from rarepattern was tweeting about Ubiquity. I hadn’t heard of it, so I was glad to see that she wrote a full blog post about it today in Semantic meaning with Ubiquity. Be sure to watch the video from the developer that explains all about this new Firefox plugin. All the links you need are there in Laura’s article—I say this because once you learn about Ubiquity, you are going to want it.

Summary of eHow articles for August

San Francisco Fountain

Have you seen this fascinating fountain in San Francisco? It’s in the park across the Embarcadero from the Ferry Building. I stopped for a look after BlogHer08 in July. Then I came home and got to work writing for eHow.

Navigating Firefox Tabs

Control-Tab: A New Feature for Firefox from Mozilla was announced a couple of weeks ago. It will work like Alt-Tab (or Cmd-Tab on Mac) works with application switching, except it will switch between Tabs in Firefox. Wish I’d known about this when I wrote How to Work with Tabs in Firefox. Here’s the Ctrl-Tab download page.

Control-Tab without this add-on opens the next tab. If you use that feature of Firefox regularly this would represent a change for you, so don’t download it if you like your current routine.

Summary of eHow articles for July

Cliff Dwelling

Went to Mesa Verde the other day. An inspiring place that remains one of my favorite national treasures.

I’ll be going walkabout for a few days and won’t post for a while. I thought I’d let you know what I’ve done at eHow this month before I go.