Choose Privacy Week May 1-7 #chooseprivacy

This week is Choose Privacy Week, where the Ursula C. Schwerin Library is encouraging the City Tech community to protect their online identity and personal information. View the documentary below if you’d like to know more about protecting your identity. There are other resources you can consult.
 

Vanishing Liberties: The Rise of State Surveillance in the Digital Age from 20K Films on Vimeo.
 
What’s Not To Like? Protecting Your Privacy on Social Media
ID Theft and Account Fraud
San Jose Public Library Virtual Privacy Lab

Important ruling affecting the future of the Internet

Have you been following the debate on net neutrality? Providers like Verizon the Internet to be a two-lane highway with a fast lane for those who can pay and a slow lane for the rest of us.
Read more about this week’s important ruling from the Federal Communications Commission in the New York Times. There’s also a video you can watch as well. This ruling keeps the Internet as is, a “core of free expression and democratic principles.”
 

Who’s Archiving the Internet?

This week’s New Yorker had a great article about the Internet Archive. Jill Lepore, the author, leads this piece with the story of  last year’s downing of the Malaysia Airlines plane over eastern Ukraine. A Russian-backed separatist gloated via social media about downing the plane but once the news hit that the plane was not a military aircraft, the separatist deleted his post to hide the evidence. However, the Internet Archive captured the separatist’s tweet, providing that libraries and archives, whether digital or analog, play a critical role not only in preserving history but also in current events.
The article also raises many fascinating questions about how copyright affects the Internet. Lastly, check out Memento, an initiative lead by Herbert Van de Sompel–it is a Chrome extension that lets you see a website at a specific date.