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    Written by Kevin Arthur in San Jose, CA. Contents copyright 2005-2009.

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    « Understanding Web 2.0 | Main | Google Privacy Math »

    Monday, June 23, 2008

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    Seth Finkelstein

    Somebody read me!

    Regarding: "His worry is that techies won't listen to people who sound old or cranky. That may be true but the answer isn't to water down criticism." - the point there is that I wish the answer was more support for criticism which doesn't sound old and cranky (not the same at all as "water down"). It's a rare person who spends a lot of time plowing through lots of culturally-derisive verbiage to get to find a few gems. Finger-wagging on this point is useless in practice, and unsatisfying to me.

    Kevin Arthur

    I'm not sure there really isn't support for quality, non-hyperbolic criticism... I usually assume the over-the-top titles and rhetoric come from marketing people or editors looking to spice things up.

    That said, I guess I am one of those rare people who reads the old and cranky so long as there is some logic at the heart of what they're saying.

    John McFetridge

    For the past couple weeks, since Bill C-61, usually referred to as the copyright law, was tabled in Canada, I've been following much of the online chatter, and this sums it up perfectly;

    "Part of growing up is learning to listen to people unlike yourself -- even people you disagree with. A technology background does not teach you to think critically about technology and society; if anything it leaves you with a deficit (yes, I speak from experience)."

    It's too bad, because like in all things we need some real critical thinking and open discussion on this one.


    Kevin Arthur

    John, thanks for the comment. I haven't been following the Canadian copyright debate but probably should (I'm from Canada so I try to keep up a little on news there). It's a difficult issue that deserves serious thinking.

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