Some Recent Canadian Tech Links:

Toronto Life: How big wireless companies, the banks, and even the actors’ union are keeping [Canada’s] mobile bills the highest in the world

WordsByNowak: The world’s worst throttler (officially): [Canada’s] Rogers

Michael Geist: RIM’s Woes Partly Based on Canadian Telecom Policy

styckyd: How the Payment Processing Industry in Canada is Halting Innovation

Ars Technica: Law & Disorder: Canadian Supreme Court rules you can’t defame someone with a hyperlink

Mark Evans Tech: Do Canadian Startups Get Enough Attention?

tech vibes: Canada’s Top 100 Startups

Canadian StartUp Blogs:

StartupNorth

tech vibes

Maple Butter

StartupCFO

Photo copyright © 2011 j.r.mchale

11/20/2011: 
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TIFF 2011:

We Need to Talk about Kevin was my favorite film of those I caught at this years’ Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF 2011). Directed by Lynne Ramsay and starring Tilda Swinton, the film is based on the novel by Lionel Shriver.

I also enjoyed Tyrannosaur (the directing debut of actor Paddy Considine), Take Shelter (directed by Jeff Nichols and starring Jessica Chastain and Michael Shannon), The Hunter (directed by Daniel Nettheim and starring Willem Dafoe), and Melancholia (directed by Lars Von Trier and starring Kirsten Dunst, Charlotte Gainsbourg, Kiefer Sutherland and Alexander Skarsgård).

Photo of Tilda Swinton at TIFF copyright © 2011 Kathryn Bailey.

We believe that we’re on the face of the earth to make great products and that’s not changing. We’re constantly focusing on innovating. We believe in the simple, not the complex. We believe that we need to own and control the primary technologies behind the products that we make. And participate only in markets where we can make a significant contribution. We believe in saying no to thousands of projects so that we can really focus on the few that are truly important and meaningful to us. We believe in deep collaboration and cross-pollenization of our groups which allow us to innovate in ways that others cannot. And frankly, we don’t settle for anything less than excellence in every group in the company — and we have the self honesty to admit when we’re wrong and the courage to change.

Tim Cook, 2009 (via petervidani)
08/25/2011: 

Interesting Academic Papers: May, June and July 2011

“Innovation and Job Creation in a Global Economy: The Case of Apple’s iPod” by Greg Linden, Jason Dedrick, and Kenneth L. Kraemer from the Journal of International Commerce and Economics.

“Proceed at Your Peril: Crowdfunding and the Securities Act of 1933” by Joan Heminway and Shelden Hoffman.

“Click Trajectories: End-to-End Analysis of the Spam Value Chain” by fifteen researchers from four institutions—the University of California at Berkeley, University of California at San Diego, the International Computer Science Institute, and Budapest University of Technology and Economics.

My favorite music of the first half of 2011:

Drowning in new music, there’s much from the first half of the year I’ve still to absorb, but the following are nine albums (no specific order), I particularly have enjoyed:

Diana Jones: “High Atmosphere”
The Antlers: “Burst Apart”
My Morning Jacket: “Circuital”
PJ Harvey: “Let England Shake”
The Rural Alberta Advantage: “Departing”
Nicolas Jaar: “Space is Only Noise”
One Hundred Dollars: “Songs of Man”
Woods: “Sun and Shade”
James Blake: “James Blake”

More “Best of 2011 so far”:
Stereogum: Top 20 Albums of 2011 So Far
SPIN
: The 25 Best Albums of 2011 So Far
Toronto Star: The Best Albums of 2011
Drowned in Sound: 11 Favorite Albums of the First Half of 2011
Quietus: 40 Albums of the Year So Far
Bleep: Best of 2011 So Far

06/22/2011: 

Photo by Jeremy Sternberg, “George Saunders” September 29, 2007 via Flickr, Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 2.0 Generic (CC BY-NC 2.0)

At BOMBlog, a two part interview of author George Saunders by Patrick Dacey: Part 1 and Part 2.

Interesting Cyberlaw Papers: April 2011

“The Path of Internet Law: An Annotated Guide to Legal Landmarks” – by Michael L. Rustad and Diane D’Angelo of Suffolk University Law School, forthcoming in the Duke Law and Technology Review.

“Web Design as Contract” – a draft article by Woodrow Hartzog, Affiliate Junior Scholar at Stanford’s Center for Internet and Society (CIS), forthcoming in the American University Law Review.

“Mitigating Counterstriking: Self-Defense and Deterrence in Cyberspace” – by Jay P. Kesan and Carol M. Hayes of the University of Illinois.

Image by Kevin Dooley under Creative Commons license (CC BY 2.0).

The 2011 Edgar Award Winners for mysteries.

04/29/2011: 

Photo by Jean-Baptiste Labrune (Creative Commons BY-SA 2.0)

Updated April 25, 2011

On the Potential Prosecution of Wikileaks/Assange:

A Free Irresponsible Press: Wikileaks and the Battle Over the Soul of the Networked Fourth Estate: This draft law review article by Yale law professor Yochai Benkler (forthcoming in Harvard Civil Rights – Civil Liberties Law Review) does a good job in layman’s language of first presenting the facts behind the Wikileaks controversy (separating fact from fiction) and then demonstrating how prosecution of Wikileaks or Assange will almost certainly fail under present first amendment doctrine. Professor Benkler also suggests legal avenues for journalists and news organizations encountering termination of services by private parties (e.g., credit card companies, web hosts, etc.) as a result of controversial publication. The paper concludes with a discussion of where Wikileaks fits within current trends in the news industry. Recommended.

Also by Professor Benkler: downloadable pdf of his 2006 book “The Wealth of Networks: How Social Production Transforms Markets and Freedom”

See also: “WikiLeaks, the First Amendment and the Press” by Jonathan Peters in the Harvard Law and Policy Review (April 18, 2011).

L. Gordon Crovitz argues in the Wall Street Journal (“Wikileaks and the Espionage Act: Why Julian Assange is Different from the New York Times”) for prosecution of Assange under the Espionage Act of 1917. Crovitz categorizes Assange’s motives as political, with intent to harm the United States, in comparison to the motives of the New York Times, which Crovitz deems lacking harmful intent.

Photo by Shreyans Bhansali, “Not Guarding Much” April 21, 2009 via Flickr, Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.0 Generic (CC BY-NC-SA 2.0)

Some links on the recent crackdown by the Chinese Communist Party on dissidents and human rights activists in China, including detained artist Ai Wei Wei:

Updated: April 15, 2011

The Economist: “China’s New Rulers: Princelings and the Goon State”

The Guardian: Crackdown in China Spreads Terror Among Dissidents

James Fallows in The Atlantic: The Chinese Crackdown: Arrogance or Insecurity?

Chris Buckley at Reuters: China Crackdown Driven by Fears of a Broad Conspiracy

The last interview of artist Ai Wei Wei before his detention – at The Guardian:
Ai Wei Wei: ‘China in Many Ways is Just Like the Middle Ages’

The New York Times: An Artist takes on Role of China’s Conscience

The Guardian: China must be held to Account over ‘Disappeared’ Lawyers

More and more, privacy is being used to justify censorship. In a sense, privacy depends on keeping some things private, in other words, hidden, restricted, or deleted. And in a world where ever more content is coming online, and where ever more content is find-able and share-able, it’s also natural that the privacy counter-movement is gathering strength. Privacy is the new black in censorship fashions. It used to be that people would invoke libel or defamation to justify censorship about things that hurt their reputations. But invoking libel or defamation requires that the speech not be true. Privacy is far more elastic, because privacy claims can be made on speech that is true.

Google’s Global Privacy Counsel, Peter Fleischer, in a thoughtful personal (i.e., not official Google) blog post about the “right to be forgotten.”

New York Times: a plan to abate climate change by cloning and mass producing giant redwoods.

Photo copyright © 2011 Kathryn Bailey

04/10/2011: 

The Believer Book Award – Editor’s Short List: The Believer’s annual shortlist of novels and story collections it thought were the strongest and most underappreciated of the year.

03/3/2011: 

Haruki Murakami’s 1Q84, already out in three volumes in Japan, will be released in the United States in English in October in a single, 1,000 page volume.

02/2/2011: