Skip to main content

The Internet's Precarious Health

fake news and personal data collection threaten internet health says mozilla report 

Mozilla earlier this week launched the first full edition of its Internet Health Report.
The report is "an open source effort to explore the state of human life on the Internet," wrote Mozilla Executive Director Mark Surman in an online post.
It consists of research and analysis about the Internet compiled by researchers, engineers, data scientists, policy analysts and artists in Mozilla's extended community.
The digital rights, open source, and Internet freedom movements stand for the idea that it is possible to build a digital world that is open, accessible and welcoming to all, according to Mozilla.
The Internet Health Report is based on the principles of the recently expanded Mozilla Manifesto.
"The optimist in me sincerely hopes this will be successful," said Charles King, principal analyst at Pund-IT.
That said, "you also have to ask how many outside the Mozilla community are paying attention," he told LinuxInsider.
Mozilla "is seeking to see the moral high ground as governments explore regulating the Internet by jumping on the ethics bandwagon early and often," suggested Michael Jude, research manager at Stratecast/Frost & Sullivan.

Fake News, Fuzzy Facts

In this first issue of the Internet Health Report, fake news and misinformation are in the spotlight.
The topic engendered considerable interest, Surman said, and data collection became the central focus. The discussion encompassed several issues:
  • Precision-targeted ads;
  • Bots and fake accounts;
  • Facebook's domination of news distribution; and
  • Insufficient Web literacy among the general public.
  •  Taken together, these activities and circumstances provide the fuel for fraud and abuse, along with very bad real world outcomes, Surman said.
    "Mozilla is trying to stand out as an organization with the user's best interests at heart," said Rob Enderle, principal analyst at the Enderle Group.
    "This is well-timed, given that the issues Facebook has with data collection -- and Cambridge Analytical-- likely have people concerned about all tech firms at the moment," he told Linux Insider.
    Also included in the report:
    • A piece on engineers in Brazil building an open source bot that automatically inspects politicians' expenses and discloses officials' use of public money for private purchases; and
    • A story about FIRST, a global network of volunteer cybersecurity experts.
    • Borders and Battles

      There has long been speculation that governments, companies and organizations would carve up the Internet, and that it would end up reflecting the real world -- with territories, borders, and battles between different groups.
      "Absolutely," Frost's Jude told LinuxInsider. "Look at China's attempts to close off their Internet from the rest of the world, and the EU attempting to impose privacy rights on the entire Web, regardless of where a company's based."
      Meanwhile, the United States and its allies, also known as the "Five Eyes," have been spying on one another's citizens online, and sharing information to get around domestic restrictions.
      In the business world, "companies always try to game the regulatory process," Jude remarked.
      Although some large players dominate the space, the Internet "is still very much of a free-for-all," said Dan Gold stein, president of Page 1 Solutions.
      The Internet Health Report is "an attempt to get people to think about what they're doing and what tools they're using with the subtext that we all need to be safer," Enderle remarked.
      "Unfortunately, Mozilla doesn't have much reach on a good day," he pointed out, "and with Trump and Facebook news chewing up all available bandwidth, much more powerful entities are having trouble getting attention at the moment."
      The collection of consumer data by Internet companies is a concern, but "It would be a significant mistake to eliminate free services like Facebook and Google Search," Page 1's Gold stein told Linux Insider.
      That's not likely to happen in our capitalistic economy, he said, but "it's important that we encourage all consumers to protect their private information both online and offline."


       

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Size matters: New data reveals cell size sparks genome awakening in embryos

Transitions are a hallmark of life. When dormant plants flower in the spring or when a young adult strikes out on their own, there is a shift in control. Similarly, there is a transition during early development when an embryo undergoes biochemical changes, switching from being controlled by maternal molecules to being governed by its own genome. For the first time, a team from the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania found in an embryo that activation of its genome does not happen all at once, instead it follows a specific pattern controlled primarily by the various sizes of its cells. The researchers published their results this week as the cover story in  Developmental Cell . In an early embryo undergoing cell division, maternally loaded RNA and proteins regulate the cell cycle. The genomes of the zygote -- a term for the fertilized egg -- are initially in sleep mode. However, at a point in the early life of the embryo, these zygotic nuclei "wake...

Home births as safe as hospital births: International study suggests

A large international study led by McMaster University shows that low risk pregnant women who intend to give birth at home have no increased chance of the baby's perinatal or neonatal death compared to other low risk women who intend to give birth in a hospital. The results have been published by  The Lancet 's  EClinicalMedicine  journal. "More women in well-resourced countries are choosing birth at home, but concerns have persisted about their safety," said Eileen Hutton, professor emeritus of obstetrics and gynecology at McMaster, founding director of the McMaster Midwifery Research Centre and first author of the paper. "This research clearly demonstrates the risk is no different when the birth is intended to be at home or in hospital." The study examined the safety of place of birth by reporting on the risk of death at the time of birth or within the first four weeks, and found no clinically important or statistically different risk between home...

Molecular adlayer produced by dissolving water-insoluble nanographene in water

Molecular adlayer produced by dissolving water-insoluble nanographene in water : "Nanographene incorporated micelle capsules" can be prepared by simply pulverizing and mixing nanographene with amphiphilic V-shaped anthracene molecules in water at room temperature. Even though nanographene is insoluble in water and organic solvents, Kumamoto University (KU) and Tokyo Institute of Technology (Tokyo Tech) researchers have found a way to dissolve it in water. Using "molecular containers" that encapsulate water-insoluble molecules, the researchers developed a formation procedure for a nanographene adlayer, a layer that chemically interacts with the underlying substance, by just mixing the molecular containers and nanographene together in water. The method is expected to be useful for the fabrication and analysis of next-generation functional nanomaterials. Graphene is a single layer of carbon atoms arranged in sheet form. It is lighter than metal wit...