facebook founder on privacy, and why I closed my account

350 million people signed up for Facebook under the belief their information could be shared just between trusted friends. Now the company says that's old news, that people are changing. I don't believe it.

I think Facebook is just saying that because that's what it wants to be true.

Whether less privacy is good or bad is another matter, the change of the contract with users based on feigned concern for users' desires is offensive and makes any further moves by Facebook suspect.

facebook founder on privacy

Zuckerberg offered roughly 8 sentences in response to Arrington's question about where privacy was going on Facebook and around the web. The question was referencing the changes Facebook underwent last month. Your name, profile picture, gender, current city, networks, Friends List, and all the pages you subscribe to are now publicly available information on Facebook. This means everyone on the web can see it; it is searchable

BLOGIC or Now What's in a Link? Pat Hayes talks through extending RDF to provide a superset for the Sweb.

Putting logic on the Web has seemed like an intellectual one-way street: the logic was all worked out a century ago or more, the technology is 20 years old, and we are simply dealing with the dirty practical business of putting it into XML and getting it onto the Web. But there needs to be some intellectual traffic in the other direction. When logic meets the Web we have to re-think several of the basic assumptions of logic itself, to the point that it should be seen as a new subject, with a new name: blogic. This talk surveys several foundational issues in blogic that either never arose previously in logic, or have to now be reconsidered, focussing particularly on issues arising from linked data and the need for an 'intimatelyRelatedButMaybeNotActuallySameAs' relation.

PH discusses the weaknesses in RDF and proposes a Peircian approach that could incorporate full FOL - hence making it ISO24707 compliant... could lead to a true shift in the SWEB and release its potential?

SAP Community Network Blogs

Although Foote does not expect hiring to really pick up until the end of 2010, beginning of 2011, several SAP related skills made it to the "2010 IT Skills Hot List". Some of the skills listed include SAP Supplier Relationship Mgmt, SAP Supply Chain Mgmt, SAP ERP, SAP NetWeaver, Business Process Mgmt, and Others.  Not surprisingly, these are also the areas where we have a lot of partner and customer activity, including right here on SCN.  This info might be useful for those of you trying to figure out where to take your career, what fields to get trained in or what path to choose as a new graduate.

 

Feeding the SAP Ecosystem: Reactions to SAP Influencer Summit 2009: Conversation Meets the Bottom Line

and the extension of ByDesign to Microsoft’s development community (a step towards a Platform-as-a-Service) capability.

An interesting overview of the SAP Influencer Summit findings. Quote shows another example of SAP's closer collaborations with MS... expect more rumours about a buy-out developing over the foreseeable future....

Jon Reed on SAP Consulting - Podcast: The ERP Lounge #4: The Impact of "The Cloud" on SAP Consulting

Memorable quote: "Consultants who can add "intelligence" to Business Intelligence are the ones who are going to succeed"

Memorable quote #2 "I've spent 14 of my 35 years in IT as an independent consultant. I've never once been hired for my technical skills." 

Memorable quote #3: "There's enough SAP resource out there that is under-employed at the moment, this is the time for you to dig in."

Memorable quote #4: "Don't just sit in a room and configure. Get out in front of the client and address their issues. You may be wonderful at SAP configuration, but totally lose the client because you haven't addressed their issues."

Some very interesting quotes that confirm what the lecturers on my course pointed out; very little of our future careers will be technical.

This point needs driving home to many students and would-be consultants; some of the best value I got from my MSc was based on the consulting skills we were involved with, the business insight we were provided and the concept of learning beyond the curriculum.

The times ahead are getting tougher and the technical knowledge will not be a 'unique selling point'.

Forget the Web 2.0 Glamour - the Money's in the Enterprise - ReadWriteEnterprise

The Web 2.0 world may seem at times like a glamorous, hip place. Services get wild attention. The names are something out of the space age. The companies work out of coffee shops and lofts.

But the money has a way of running out before the entrepreneur can find a way to make a profit. No wonder the enterprise world can look so enticing to a Web 2.0 company.

So, we thought it might provide some perspective by looking at companies that are showing signs of reaching into the business market or have made the big switch.

tie in with mashups that have moved from web to ent already, eg jackbe

SAP Community Network Wiki - SAP Imagineering - MicroApplications


Examples of Enterprise Micro Application 

Example of a stand alone Google Gadget

Example of the Gadget imbedded in the Google Sites


 

Enterprise Micro Application on Mobile

  • To see an example of Enterprise Micro Applications on all the mobile platforms and how they can be developed on the iPhone, click here


What are Micro Applications?

Micro Applications are small applications designed to extend a defined set of enterprise application functionality and transactions that is specific to a users role and requirements. Developers of Enterprise Micro Applications leverage SAP NetWeaver enterprise and web services to securely deliver enterprise system functionality on desktops, within browsers,  mobile devices, and within cloud environments using gadgets, widgets, mobile applications, and other. In order to consume Micro Applications, business users simply pick and select Micro Applications from a Micro Application gallery space and add them on any container supported by the IT department. For example, a portal in the browser, a widget engine on the desktop, or a application container on the mobile device. Micro Application gallery spaces are managed by the IT administrator; therefore the permission and usage of Micro Applications is completely under the control of IT department. Micro Applications can be built using any language of choice by any developer, consuming either newly developed backend data services or already existing services, for example, enterprise services registered in SAP Enterprise Service Repository (SAP ESR).

Contact

SAP's take on Mashups. SAP continues to go independent of the Open Mashup Alliance....

UK’s Carbon reduction commitment legislation – the shape of things to come globally! — GreenMonk: the blog

UK’s Carbon reduction commitment legislation – the shape of things to come globally!

by Tom Raftery on December 4, 2009 · 4 comments

in Legislation

Climate change


Screenshot credit Tom Raftery – data from NASA

The world is getting warmer. 2008 was the 9th warmest year on record. 2009, barring a sudden, severe, global cold snap, will end up being the 4th or 5th warmest year on record and with El Niño coming on in the Pacific, 2010 looks likely to set a new temperature record for the hottest year in recorded history.

Climate change is real and it is here, now. So what you say, what does that have to do with me? Or more to the point, what does that have to do with my work?

Well, if you are based in the UK, there is a strong chance that next April, it will have a very direct impact on your job, company, or business. This is because the UK has passed legislation called the Carbon Reduction Committment (CRC).

The CRC is a groundbreaking piece of legislation designed to help the UK meet its carbon reduction targets by 2020. Basically, the CRC scheme will apply to organisations that had a half-hourly metered electricity consumption greater than 6,000 MWh per year in 2008. Organisations qualifying for CRC would have all their energy use covered by the scheme, this includes emissions from direct energy use as well as electricity purchased. Initially, it is estimated, around 5,000 organisations will qualify, including supermarkets, water companies, banks, local authorities and all central Government Departments. Qualifying organisations mostly fall below the threshold for the European Union Emissions Trading Scheme, but account for around 10% of the UK carbon emissions.

The organisations involved will need to register or make an information disclosure by 30 September 2010. A financial penalty (£5,000 plus a per diem charge for each subsequent working day an organisation fails to submit a report) will be imposed on organisations who fail to meet the deadline.

The first year of the scheme (April 2010-2011) is called the footprint year. Companies are required to submit an audited report of their emissions during the footprint year by 29 July 2011. Again financial penalties will be imposed for failing to meet the deadline.

In the second year, (2011-2012) participants will have to purchase emissions allowances to cover their forecast emissions for 2011/12. And in 2013 auctioning of carbon allowances begins, with all the income from the auctions recycled back to participants by the means of an annual payment based on participants’ average annual emissions since the start of the scheme.

There will be a bonus or penalty according to the organisation’s position in a CRC league table. The league table will be made public thereby enhancing the transparency of companies carbon reporting and hopefully shaming any egregious emitters into reducing their carbon footprint.

I have gone in to a bit of detail about the CRC here because it is difficult enough to find out information about the scheme and most UK business appear to be wholly unprepared for its implementation. The UK Department of Climate Change (I think it is interesting that the UK has a government department of climate change in the first place – how many other governments do?) has an easy to follow guide to the CRC [PDF] available for download which will help.

The CRC is going to be closely watched by other countries and you can be sure it will be used as a model by many to reduce their carbon emissions.

As I mentioned at the outset of this piece, climate change is here, it is real. Increasingly we are going to see bills like the CRC enacted so we can try to mitigate its effects.

by-nc-sa

--> If you enjoyed this post, make sure you subscribe to my RSS feed! -->

Tagged as: carbon reduction commitment, climate change, crc, emissions trading

1 Comment 4 Tweets

{ 4 comments… read them below or add one }

1 NaturalStepNews December 4, 2009 at 7:09 pm

GreenMonk: UK’s Carbon reduction commitment legislation http://bit.ly/8HNf6I

This comment was originally posted on Twitter

2 TomRaftery December 4, 2009 at 7:20 pm

UK’s Carbon reduction commitment legislation – the shape of things to come globally? http://j.mp/8iFsGy

This comment was originally posted on Twitter

3 Jon Reed December 5, 2009 at 11:14 am

Tom Raftery (@tomraftery on Twitter) with info on UK legislation on carbon reduction and how this will likely be a global trend.

This comment was originally posted on FriendFeed

4 jonerpnewsfeed December 5, 2009 at 11:24 am

#news UK’s Carbon reduction commitment legislation – the shape of things to come globally! http://bit.ly/6tqVgA (via @jonerp)

This comment was originally posted on Twitter

Leave a Comment

Additional comments powered by BackType

UK legislation to reduce emissions may be a global trendsettter