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Virtual worlds with real purposes



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Virtual worlds with real purposes


The idea of having a virtual you following the real you around may seem rather strange - for those of us used to having our feet firmly on the ground.

But the creation of a virtual Berlin lets people be in two places at the same time - as 20km of the city has been faithfully replicated into an online world.

By the end of 2008, 50,000 buildings in the German capital are expected to have been copied into the virtual world.

"While Second Life and others worlds offer some stylised versions of cities - Twinity uses the 3D mapping data currently used for things like satnav and Google Earth," said Jochen Hummel, the chief executive of Metaversum - owner of Twinity.

"One by one each building is then made to look as it would in the real world," he said.




Twinity hopes to offer a space for "virtual tourism"
Twinity's Berlin, which it calls a "metaverse" has been created by taking pictures of the city and using them to build 3D facades.

Volunteer developers may soon be encouraged to add their own or adapt existing ones, like users updating and adding entries in Wikipedia.



Emphasis on realism

While many online worlds are put to frivolous uses, Metaversum sees Twinity as a step beyond gaming.

"It's a space for virtual tourism," said Mr von Hardenberg. "The realism of this platform could help you plan a trip here, or just help you get your bearings before you arrive."

So far the closest many come to wandering around the globe is through 3D-mapping applications such as Google Earth that provide a snapshot of places.

Twinity emphasises realism, but the mantra for the virtual world is "be nice".

Mr Hardenberg hopes the platform will gain an audience beyond the core male gamers and attract more women.

"It's a social environment for meeting people, visiting galleries, or online shopping. Users are encouraged to create avatars that look just like them so they'll be recognised and to use their real names," he said.

Twinity has one advantage over reality when it comes to transport because there are no cars and visitors simply teleport to key locations.






Near Global are launching their virtual London next year
Virtual Yellow Pages

Joining Berlin soon is London where another company is re-creating the city not just based on reality, but mapping it by inch-for-inch.

Near Global is launching in 2009 with the promise to offer the most accurate 3D version of a city ever produced as a virtual world.

While Twinity allows any company to buy its shops other than landmark stores, Near Global will offer a faithful copy of what users would find in reality.

GPS phones could be used to map actual movements to this virtual space, or phones could be used to go online into the virtual London to see what's ahead before getting there.

Londoners will also be able to know where to find anything they want by travelling there virtually - if it were to become popular, it might work as a Yellow Pages of its day.

"We don't search for stuff on a day-to-day level, we discover things," said Alex Wrottesley, the founder of Near Global. "Yes some people go out to buy a pair of socks but lots of people go out to look and see what's available.

"Information is not organised like that online and there's nowhere where that's all put together, and certainly not on an interface that's so intuitive to explore," he said.

At the moment only a few streets of the city are rendered.

But he firm hopes once the virtual London is complete real companies will get involved and offer services through "channels" on its website.

These could be free or require subscription, for instance, for entertainment companies offering live coverage of events or London's tourist board offering a Victorian experience of the capital.

Money maker




User will be able to visit galleries in the online London
All users will access virtual London and have the option to visit galleries or clubs like in real life, by paying to get access to the extra layers or "channels".

Companies might then be able to commercialise the opportunities offered by such a detailed virtual world.

Rather than using avatars, virtual London is turning to shards of coloured light.

"If you give people a physical presence in a world, you are asking them to make some very big statements on day one. I don't really want to do that. I don't really want to dress up to go to the shops.

"I want to feel I'm there, not that's I'm creating an alternative persona to inhabit there," said Mr Wrottesley.

Like Twinity where there are no cars and users can teleport to key locations.

Breaking away from reality further, there is no litter on the London streets, although there are litter bins, and again no weapons or traffic - beyond the occasional red bus.

Mr Wrottesley said it took around six months to properly re-create a city centre, and his company's next target was likely to be Moscow.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/programmes/click_online/7754038.stm

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Digital Entertainment: Virtual Worlds

Avatars a go-go

Do you ever feel like there is something you are missing out on? You know you have those little pangs of anxiety that make you feel like you are on the outside looking in?

Well that's kind of how I have been feeling the last 24 hours when I consider the world of virtual reality. It seems everybody is having a whoop-de-do party and I haven't been invited.

Everyone from Google to IBM has just jumped on the virtual bandwagon in the last day with offerings to unshackle ourselves from the humdrum life we have here on planet earth.

And if you don't believe me that it seems like everyone is starting their own virtual world, then take the word of Virtual Worlds Management. In a new report it says that in the second quarter of this year, $161m has been put into 14 virtual world investments. Add in the first quarter investment and we hit more than £345m. That's a lot of moolah.

Google, who seem to be taking over the world, unveiled Lively, a three dimensional application which lets you enter virtual rooms. The industry watchers suggest that Google's entry into the market place will take the world of virtual reality into the mainstream.

Chris Sherman of Virtual Worlds Management maintains "With a player like Google jumping into this, you're going to see a lot more peole understand this space and pay attention to it."

Second Life, which was out of the gate first, isn't resting on its laurels. It has teamed up with IBM to teleport avatars from one virtual world to another. It's history, not as we know it, but as the world of virtual reality knows it.

In its blog, Second Life owners Linden Lab says "This is a historic day for Second Life and other virtual worlds in general. It marks the first time an avatar has moved from one virtual world to another, an event with implications for the entire virtual world industry."

Am I missing out on something here? That's a lot of hyperbole. They didn't come up with a cure for cancer did they?

Another company that has also just opened its virtual doors in the last 24 hours is Vivaty which is offering users a 3D chat room that runs on Facebook.

Hell's bells, even Britney Spears is getting in on the virtual act with plans to make a virtual appearance on Madonna's upcoming tour. The fact that these two gals are still trading on the "open mouth" kiss they made during an awards ceremony five years ago seems pretty desperate to me. But hey, what do I know? I am just a real life gal trying to get by in the real life world.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/technology/2008/07/avatars_a_go_go.html

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Social Networking: Chat Rooms

Scottish sex predator student faces prison

A student described by prosecutors as one of Scotland's most dangerous sexual predators has admitted 32 charges related to the abuse of children.
Andrew Byrne, 20, used the internet to groom and abuse 19 children, aged between eight and 15, a court heard.
He sexually assaulted some victims and subjected others to indecent behaviour between September 2007 and July 2009. He was caught during a police operation to snare internet paedophiles. Sentence on Byrne was deferred until next month.
The High Court in Glasgow heard how the microbiology student from Glasgow University abused 11 girls and eight boys from across the UK who were aged between eight and 15 at the time.
Byrne, who lived in Glasgow's Byres Road, met the first girl in September 2007 through the MSN messenger service.



Andrew Byrne has been convicted of some of the most damaging and disturbing crimes that prosecutors ever encounter


Michelle Macleod
Procurator fiscal

He eventually got her to carry out sex acts via a webcam as the youngster thought they were in a "special relationship".
A 13-year-old girl from Manchester then met Byrne through another chat service.
Byrne travelled down twice to meet her in 2008 and 2009 and recorded them being involved in "explicit sexual activity". He later forwarded the images on to nine other people.
Byrne then had sex with two underage girls, aged 13 and 15, in 2008 at a flat in the Glasgow's Bridge Street. He had sex with another 13-year-old girl after meeting her around Christmas 2008 in Fife. Around the same time, he met a third 13-year-old on MSN and they had "heavy sexualised chat".
Sexual clip

Byrne later had intercourse with the teenager at his flat in Bridge Street.

During March last year, Byrne got in touch with a boy and girl, both aged 11, who came from Yorkshire.
He was eventually found with a sexual clip of the friends on his laptop.

Byrne then tried to get a 15-year-old girl to meet him for sex, but she repeatedly refused. Last Easter, he got in touch with a 12-year-old girl on the Bebo social networking site.


He offered her £60 in exchange for sexual intercourse which she declined.

In May, Byrne chatted to a 14-year-old boy from Glasgow about having sex with him.

Soon after he was in regular contact with a 15-year-old who has since been convicted of abusing an eight-year-old boy.
The court heard how Byrne would ask this boy, via webcam, to perform sex acts on the eight-year-old and record it. Byrne and the 15-year-old also had discussions about the possibility of raping the teenager's former girlfriend.
Indecent images

In June, he arranged to meet a 13-year-old boy from Edinburgh for sex, but the teenager did not appear.


He then had lurid conversations with two young girls on Bebo and MSN. He had similar contact with three boys, aged 13 and 14, about the same time.
Byrne was arrested in July last year during the UK-wide "Operation Defender" led by Central Scotland Police to snare internet paedophiles.
A total of 591 indecent images were discovered, about 60 of which were classified at the worst end of the scale used by the authorities. Byrne told police that he chatted and arranged to meet children for the purposes of sex.
He admitted downloading "weird stuff" from the internet adding: "I don't know why I keep doing it."
Speaking after Byrne's conviction, Michelle Macleod, area procurator fiscal for Central Scotland, said: "Andrew Byrne has been convicted of some of the most damaging and disturbing crimes that prosecutors ever encountered."
Det Insp Charlie Mitchell, of Central Scotland Police, said: "Andrew Byrne was a prolific offender against young teens and children who he met on the internet using chat rooms.
"Byrne's victims were traced in Scotland, throughout the rest of the UK and abroad. This shows that the reach of the internet can easily be exploited, but also indicates that we are committed to dealing with this issue wherever it happens."

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/scotland/glasgow_and_west/8511173.stm

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Social Networking: Chat Rooms

Police to patrol net chat rooms

Police around the world plan to patrol internet chat rooms to stop paedophiles grooming victims over the web.

A London summit of the International Virtual Global Taskforce also formed plans to work with credit card firms to tackle pay-per-view child pornography.

The Taskforce of international law enforcement agencies aims to make the internet safer for children.

National Crime Squad (NCS) Assistant Chief Constable Jim Gamble said the aim was "reassurance through visibility".

The Taskforce's different agencies will also work together to seize the assets of people profiting from child pornography websites.

Visible presence

The NCS in the UK and the US's FBI are heading the effort, which will utilise different time zones to monitor the web 24 hours a day.






If a paedophile is grooming someone online and this icon appears, how comfortable do you think they are going to feel?


Assistant Chief Constable Jim Gamble



US Customs, the Canadian Mounted Police, Australian Federal Police and Interpol are also involved.

Officers entering chat rooms will use an icon to alert other users to their presence.

Mr Gamble said the aim was a visible police presence, similar to officers patrolling the streets, to reassure the public and deter paedophiles.

"The police are going to be there overtly - there is nothing covert about this," he said.

"If a paedophile is grooming someone online and this icon appears, how comfortable do you think they are going to feel? Are they going to continue talking to that child, in case that child says to the police officer: 'This guy that is talking to me is behaving in a very unusual way'?

"There is no 'big brother' initiative here, this is about reassurance through visibility."

People using the chat room would be able to ask the police officer for advice, and efforts would be made to capture the details of anyone acting suspiciously to enable further investigation, Mr Gamble said.

Police sting

Tink Palmer, policy officer at the children's charity Barnardo's, said if paedophiles knew their internet conversation was being observed by a police officer it could stop them "in their tracks".

"If we can get to people who are starting off along this road, then we can work with them before it becomes an ingrained pattern of behaviour.

"People say, 'what about civil liberties?' but you have a virtual world out there - we have to police that to make it as safe as we can," she said.

The NSPCC's internet safety advisor Christine Atkinson said the project was an "important step forward in protecting children".

The National Crime Squad has worked in partnership with overseas agencies to combat paedophilia before, most notably on Operation Ore.

The operation has identified over 7,000 suspects and led to more than 1,200 convictions in the UK alone.

It also led to the development last year of the international police sting known as Operation Pin.

Forces set up sites appearing to offer child pornography.

Users are told they could face 10 years in jail and may have their details circulated to 180 countries.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/3789279.stm

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Social Networking: Chat Rooms

'Ban teens from chatrooms'

Children should be kept out of chat rooms, argues technology analyst Bill Thompson.




Do you know who your child is talking to on the net?
It was, it seems, the internet's fault. Young and foolish, 12-year old Shevaun Pennington found a friend online and decided that what he had to offer was more exciting than the boys in school.

She joins a long line of other children who have met people in chat rooms or over e-mail and been persuaded to turn an online friendship into a real-world one, with consequences that will terrify any parent.








The experiences of Shevaun and other children like her have only confirmed my view that kids do not need to use chatrooms to talk to strangers


Bill Thompson



It is traditional for those of us who have been online for many years to leap to the net's defence at times like this, arguing that parental ignorance is to blame and that anyway the net brings benefits which far outweigh any risks it may pose to children.

I don't propose to do this.

Shevaun's disappearance was the net's fault and we have to accept this.

She would not have had any contact with her 31-year old ex-Marine if it had not been for the easy access to e-mail and chat that today's children seem to demand as a right, and we should not pretend otherwise or blame inadequate supervision.



New understanding

Certainly, parents need to be aware of what their children are doing online, but none of us is perfect and always alert to danger.

We can restrict their access, or install safety software, but our kids also need space to grow up, privacy from even their parents, and a sense that they are trusted.

Monitoring every e-mail, sitting in on every chat and checking web access logs is not the way, certainly for the over-10s.

While there are significant benefits to being online and to using the resources available on the net, the balance between these benefits and the dangers needs to be better understood, and a new understanding is required.

Part of the problem is that we tend to treat the net as if it is one thing, but of course it is many. The web, e-mail and chat are vastly different tools, used in vastly different ways, and presenting different risks and benefits.

After all, we use radio waves to transmit BBC1 and Radio 4, for mobile phones and walkie-talkies and even for x-rays, and we do not expect one set of rules to apply to them all. So we should not automatically let problems with chat and e-mail change the way we let children use the web.




CHAT ROOMS AND CHILDREN



One in five children aged nine to 16 regularly use chatrooms

More than half have engaged in sex chat

A quarter have received requests to meet face-to-face

One in 10 had met face-to-face

Source: Cyberspace Research Centre
The major problem is chat, and as far back as February I argued that the prevalence of predatory adult males in online chat rooms had been demonstrated so clearly that it was time to exclude kids from chat rooms where adults might be present.

The experiences of Shevaun and other children like her have only confirmed my view that kids do not need to use chat rooms to talk to strangers.



Political issue

In the last couple of months my 12-year-old daughter has started chatting to her friends online, and she enjoys the experience greatly. One feature which appeals to her greatly is that she can have a private conversation with her school mates even if I'm sitting in the same room, something that she can't do on her phone.

However we have a deal. She has let me set up her chat service so that only people on her contact list can see she is online or send her messages, and I get to look through her contact list to check that they are all friends I know.

And she doesn't go to public chat rooms.

This is a political, not a technical issue. Whatever age verification schemes we might come up with, a determined adult will find a way around them - or just find a way to steal a child's online identity and strike up conversation in an apparently trustworthy space.

In many ways this would be worse than the present situation, where we can at least ask kids to be vigilant about everyone they meet online.

The only answer is to keep kids out of these spaces - to make them adult-only and require age verification by those hosting them.

If that is inconvenient, then let it be. This is too important. Doing this would at least reduce the number of kids exposed to the danger, and it would not deprive of them of any useful or valuable experience.

Looking after our kids means setting limits on their behaviour to keep them safe. We should not let the net advocates try to persuade us to expose our children to the dangers of public chat rooms.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/3077003.stm

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Social Networking: Messaging

Texts used in anti drink campaign

Text messages are being used for the first time as part of Surrey Police's campaign to combat drink-driving.
Calls to 118 118 to request telephone numbers for restaurants, pubs and clubs in Surrey will receive a drink-drive warning message with the reply text.

An image of a car crashed into a tree with the warning "He should have crashed at yours" is also being used by the force to get the message across.

It is being projected on to the outside of the Friary Centre in Guildford.
Bluetooth messages

An image with the message "What's under your tree this Christmas?" is also being used in cinemas and on the social networking site, Facebook.


Pub and bar washrooms across Surrey are also being targeted in the campaign.

The images and messages will also be appearing on bus shelters, the Surrey Police and Surrey County Council websites and on posters and credit card-sized advice leaflets.


Bluetooth messaging at pubs and clubs across the county is also being used as part of the campaign.
The force said on average nearly four people a month were killed or seriously injured on the county's roads as a result of impaired drivers, mainly through drink but also through drugs.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/england/surrey/8394983.stm



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Social Networking: Messaging

China allows texting in Xinjiang six months after riots

Text messaging services have resumed in the Chinese region of Xinjiang, six months after deadly ethnic unrest that left nearly 200 people dead.
Services were being restored gradually, according to an official quoted by China's state-run Xinhua news agency.

People were stopped from sending text messages last July following riots and demonstrations in Xinjiang.


The authorities said this was done to maintain social order between ethnic Uighurs and Han Chinese people.
The BBC confirmed that services have restarted by texting a Xinjiang resident.
Internet access restored

An official with Xinjiang's regional government acknowledged the texting ban inconvenience people, but was necessary for security.


"The move proved to be effective in dealing with the riot and maintaining stability of the region," Xinhua quoted the unnamed official as saying.
The services was being being "gradually" restored beginning Sunday, he added.

The ban on sending text messages was introduced shortly after riots and protests in the regional capital, Urumqi, that left nearly 200 people dead, most of them Han Chinese.


Officials have said the unrest was orchestrated by Uighur separatists using the internet and text messaging.
The unrest revealed deep-seated antagonism between the mainly-Muslim Uighurs, the region's original inhabitants, and Han Chinese, most of whom have moved into Xinjiang over the last five decades.
Internet access, which was also cut off, is also being gradually resumed.

At the end of December the government began to restore access to some officially sanctioned sites, such as Xinhua, and allowed a number of other online services.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/8464881.stm

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Social Networking: Blogging

What is blogging?




Blogging is a way of collecting links to webpages and sharing thoughts and ideas with people online.

Blogs (or Weblogs) are basically online journals or diaries which are great for sharing information and ideas.



Blogger.com says:

"A blog is a personal diary. A daily pulpit. A collaborative space. A political soapbox. A breaking-news outlet. A collection of links. Your own private thoughts. Memos to the world."

As well as text, blogs often contain audio, music, images and video.

They're also really easy to make, so you can have one even if you aren't very technical.

Anything can be posted instantly to a blog.



Why Blog


Surfing's no fun if you can't tell people what you've found.

How many times have you sent e-mails to your mates with the address of a particularly interesting web page, annotated with your own hilarious comments?

Wouldn't it be good to get your own web page where you could publish these comments, plus the links you find, turn it into a daily journal of thoughts and ideas and make the whole thing available to the world?

Well now you can, and if you do, you'll be joining the phenomenon that has become 'blogging'.



The history of blogs


Blogging has become something of a big thing in the last few years, and some of the biggest and best known weblogs attract the kind of traffic that even big name e-commerce sites would be jealous of.

Weblogs are more than pages of links - they tend to reflect the personalities of their owners. They are personal web pages, updated very often.

They are the product of their owners' imaginations, interests and wit, and it's probably this personal touch which has made them so popular, especially for political issues.

The word 'weblog' was coined by Jorn Barger, owner of the long-established and extremely popular Robot Wisdom weblog. You can get a lot more about the history of weblogs from his site at robotwisdom.com

Also try del.icio.us if you want to make sharable lists of websites.


http://www.bbc.co.uk/webwise/askbruce/articles/browse/blogging_1.shtml

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Social Networking: File Sharing

How do I share music and files?

You can share your music and other files with other people online by installing a P2P program on your internet-connected computer.

Doing this lets other people get files from your PC - and you can get their stuff too.

So if you want other people to listen to the recordings you've made of your kids playing the violin, or have an easy way to get the latest music, P2P is the way to go.



What's P2P?


P2P is short for 'peer to peer'. It's a bit different from the web. When you look at a web page then the program you use, or browser, gets it from a web server.

Whatever browser you use - Netscape, Internet Explorer or Opera - just asks for the page it wants and shows it on your screen.

If you want to have your own web pages then you've got to get a server of your own, or pay someone else to let you use theirs.

With a peer to peer program your computer can get stuff from other places, but it can also hand over files that it is asked for, acting like a server too.



How to choose?


There are lots of different P2P programs out there. Each works in a slightly different way, but they all do roughly the same thing.

They make your computer part of a worldwide collection of computers which are sharing files.



Name

Website

Cost

What it's like

Morpheus

Morpheus website

free - but you get ads

Easy to use, fast and attractive

24/7 Download

24/7 website

membership charge

Big selection of files

Bearshare

Bearshare website

free or pay for no ad version

Sometimes fails to make a connection but can be fast

KaZaA

KaZaA website

free - lots of ads

Lots of useful features

Limewire

Limewire website

very simple to use

File sharing for Mac and

http://www.bbc.co.uk/webwise/askbruce/articles/video/sharemusic_1.shtml

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Social Networking: File Sharing

Q&A: Internet piracy plans

The UK government has said it will introduce legislation to allow persistent illegal file-sharers to be disconnected from the net.

Haven't we heard this before?

The government has previously said that it had backed plans to curb piracy.


Earlier this year, Business Secretary Peter Mandelson said he backed a so-called "three strikes" rule that would mean persistent pirates would be sent two warning letters before facing disconnection from the network.
Mr Mandelson has now confirmed that the government will introduce legislation to allow this to happen by the summer of 2011.
The decision is an apparent U-turn for the government. The Digital Britain report, published in June, originally gave Ofcom until 2012 to consider whether technical measures to catch pirates were necessary.
What are the principal issues?

The creative industries estimate that six million people in the UK regularly file-share copyright content without permission, costing the industries revenue that they cannot recoup.


In 2007, an estimated one billion music tracks and 98 million movies were shared illegally. A report by analyst firm Forrester recently reported that 10% of all internet users in the UK share files illegally. The figure for Europe is 14%.
Pressure from the rights owners has been met with resistance from the ISPs and there is no sign of reduction in the amount of file-sharing.
What do the Internet Service Providers say?

ISPs have long said they do not want to become the internet police, and have also pointed out that under the law as it stands they are mere conduits of the traffic on the net.


Many ISPs have signed up to a voluntary agreement that sees them send letters to users they suspect of sharing content illegally.
However, the ISPs also do not want to be seen as disconnecting their own users.

Mr Mandelson has said that the cost of tracking down file-sharers be evenly split between the ISPs and the rights owners.


How would ISPs detect illegal file-sharers?

ISPs routinely monitor traffic sent over their network, for maintenance and security purposes.


While it is relatively simple to monitor traffic sent using file-sharing programs, it is technically more challenging to know what exactly is being shared.
At present, content rights owners tend to monitor websites which offer links to copyright content and then obtain the Internet Protocol (IP) address of the online computer being used to share that data.
ISPs tend to own blocks of IP addresses, so it is relatively simple to identify the broadband account holder that is tied to a particular IP address at a particular time.

But this is a slow, and time-consuming procedure. One solution is to employ deep packet inspection (DPI) to look at the content of the "packets" of data being sent over the net.


The ISP can employ DPI to examine the contents of shared data and then using digital fingerprinting technology to see if the file is being exchanged with consent or not.
Will banning persistent file-sharers work?

The creative industries believe illegal file-sharing is almost endemic while the government has set a target of reducing the problem by at least 70% in the next two or three years.


The difficulty is that the problem is a moving target. More persistent illegal file-sharers are already beginning to use software which masks their IP address while online, and the files being exchanged are encrypted, so it is harder for ISPs to use DPI technology.
However, the music and film industries are more likely attempting to target the "soft, underbelly" of file-sharing: the teenagers who are doing it because they are either apathetic or believe they can get away with it.
That raises another difficult issue in the debate about disconnecting file-sharers: they may be sharing their internet connection. Teenagers are likely to be using a connection at their parents' homes, and shared housing may see a number of independent users with just one file-sharer in their midst.
How have other countries dealt with the problem?

Countries around the world are grappling with how to control internet piracy.

In August 2009, US student Joel Tenebaum was ordered to pay $675,000 (£412,000) to various record labels after being found guilty on 31 charges of sharing music online.
The French government has also approved a "three strikes" plan that would see pirates removed from the net for up to a year.
There have been protests against similar proposed legislation in Australia and New Zealand.
In response to the French legislation, European politicians ruled that cutting off someone's internet connection could be a breach of their human rights.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/8329710.stm



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Social Networking: Blogging

Blogging loses appeal for US teenagers, says survey

A US study has indicated that younger internet users are losing interest in blogging and switching to shorter and more mobile forms of communication.
The number of 12 to 17-year-olds in the US who blog has halved to 14% since 2006, according to a survey for the Pew Internet and American Life Project.

It suggests they prefer making short postings on social networking sites, and going online on mobile phones.


But the study also found a modest rise in blogging by those aged 30 and older.

The increase from 7% in 2007 to 11% in 2009 is believed to be responsible for the prevalence of blogging within the overall adult internet population remaining steady at roughly 10%.


Micro-blogging

The study released on Wednesday found that blogging had steadily declined in popularity among both teens and young adults to 14%.


As the tools and technology embedded in social networking sites changed, and use of the sites continued to grow, young people appeared to be exchanging "macro-blogging" for "micro-blogging" with status updates, it concluded.
Amanda Lenhart, a senior researcher for Pew and the lead author of the study, told the Associated Press that the ability to do status updates had "kind of sucked the life out of long-form blogging".
More young people - 55% of 18-29 year-olds and 27% of 12-17 year-olds - were also accessing the internet from their mobile phones, increasing the need for brevity.

One student said teenagers had lost interest in blogging because they needed to type quickly and "people don't find reading that fun".


But teens are not using Twitter in large numbers. While teens were bigger users of almost all other online applications, Twitter was an exception, the study found.

Ms Lenhart doubts that blogging will disappear. She believes those who blog for personal reasons will instead focus more often on important events such as a wedding, a trip or the birth of baby.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/8497427.stm

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Social Networking: File Sharing

Warning letters to 'file-sharers'

Virgin Media has sent about 800 letters to customers warning them that they should not be downloading illegal music files via file-sharing sites.
It is part of a 10-week campaign it is running in conjunction with the BPI to "educate" users about downloads.
The BPI, the body which represents the UK record industry, told the BBC that "thousands more letters" would be sent.
Its stricter stance on illegal downloaders might result in some ISPs being taken to court, it told BBC News.
Refuseniks

The BPI wants all UK ISPs to sign up to a so-called three strikes policy - where users of file sharing networks get two warnings and are then disconnected if they are sharing copyright files.


So far only Virgin Media has officially signed up and it is keen to stress that currently it is running an education-only campaign and that no-one has been thrown off the network.


Virgin said the wording on the envelope which contains the warning letter sent to 800 customers - which threatens consumers with disconnection - was a "mistake".

This would be reviewed in mid-August, said a Virgin Media spokesman.


BPI chief executive Geoff Taylor told BBC News that the body was prepared to back up the education campaign with legal action, including taking ISPs to court.
"If we have to go to court, we will go to court and we will win," he said.

One customer who received a letter told BBC Radio 1's Newsbeat programme that he was unhappy with Virgin Media.





It is doomed to fail


Virgin customer Will McGree



Newsbeat talks to Virgin customers
Will McGree received a letter in June, warning him that legal action could be taken against him.
He said: "It's doomed to fail. Virgin Media will lose a lot of customers over this because people don't like to be accused of stealing music over their morning coffee.
"It made me feel betrayed. I was under the impression that I paid Virgin Media money to keep my internet connection protected and safe."

He said no-one in his flat had been file-sharing and that it was possible someone had accessed his wireless network from outside the building.


Becky Hogge, executive director of the Open Rights Group, said the letters were a disproportionate response from the music industry.
"We need to protect users from punitive measures," she said.

She said the music industry had to be in a position of offering a viable alternative before it clamped down on the activities of some users.


"Stopping illicit file-sharing might not be as effective a measure as trying to monetise it," she said.
Some ISPs such as Carphone Warehouse, have refused to participate and the BPI did not rule out the possibility of taking such refuseniks to court.
Others, such as BT, have sent letters to subscribers threatening them with disconnection although it said this is not a new policy.
"We have not joined any "crusades", the telco said in a statement.
"We do work with various bodies to help them protect their copyright material and will sometimes pass on warning notices to customers on their behalf where we feel this is appropriate.
If a customer continues to be in breach of our terms and conditions then BT has the right to suspend or terminate that customer's account, though we work closely with customers to avoid this where possible," the statement read.
The industry has been given until spring of next year to find a solution to illegal downloaders or face legislation.

The music industry says new laws could be introduced


Youth-skewed

The current system involves the BPI policing file sharing networks. It looks for illegal traffic and identifies the IP address from which it has come and informs the ISP.


There is no distinction made between someone who has downloaded one illegal track and someone who has downloaded thousands.
A joint letter from Virgin and the BPI is then sent to the individual.
"This is about education. We make no assumptions about who is at fault. It may be someone in the family or someone illegally using their wi-fi connection," said a Virgin Media spokesman.
With conservative estimates suggesting a fifth of Europeans are involved in file sharing, some experts question how much impact such a system can have.

"File sharing is very youth-skewed. The BPI isn't going to close the door on the problem but it can get at the families whose kids are file sharing without their knowledge," said Mark Mulligan, an analyst with Jupiter Research.


Virgin is keen to stress that the 800 or so letters it has so far sent are a drop in the ocean compared to its 3.8m user base.
"In the scheme of things that is a relatively small number," said Ian Fogg, analyst with Jupiter Research.
He said that ISPs faced a difficult balancing act between conforming to the BPI's new rules and pleasing their own customers.
"It is a sensitive issue for providers. File sharers are using up network capacity and therefore pushing up their costs and illegal downloads compete with their own music services," he said.
"They need to be seen to be doing enough so they don't get sued and to control their costs but also need to be careful not to upset their customers."
Three strikes and you're in

The record industry has long grappled with how to wrest back control of digital music.


According to Jupiter Research, a fifth of Europeans use file sharing networks. Paid-for digital music services such as iTunes are used by just 10% and make up just 8% of overall music revenue.
The BPI admitted that the current mechanisms for selling music were "broken".

The new strategy will see it negotiating licensed content deals with ISPs who have pursued file sharers.


"We want people to see this not as three strikes and you're out but three strikes and you're in to legitimate music services," said Frederico Bolza, head of strategy at SonyBMG.
Some DRM-free material may be made available and the new subscription models will allow users to keep some of the tunes they download, he said.

Geoff Taylor, chief executive of the BPI, said the details of the services were yet to be decided but that there are likely to a variety of models on offer that would be "easy and cheap".


The form they take will be crucial, thinks Mr Mulligan.
"Charging a tenner a month hasn't worked. Ideally it needs to be incredibly cheap or free, with a massive catalogue that can be transferrable," he said.

Mr Taylor admitted that the BPI's current campaign was unlikely to stop file sharing completely but he did think the idea that the web was home to free stuff needs to be challenged.


"There is a phenomenal amount of piracy out there and we believe that the idea that 95% of content on the net is free is not sustainable. We don't believe that society can allow the free consumption of content to persist," he said.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/7486743.stm

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Social Networking: Wikis

What are Wikis

A wiki (pronounced /ˈwɪki/ WIK-ee) is a website that allows the easy[1] creation and editing of any number of interlinked web pages via a web browser using a simplified markup language or a WYSIWYG text editor.[2][3] Wikis are typically powered by wiki software and are often used to create collaborative websites, to power community websites, for personal note taking, in corporate intranets, and in knowledge management systems.

Wikis may exist to serve a specific purpose, and in such cases, users use their editorial rights to remove material that is considered "off topic". Such is the case of the collaborative encyclopedia Wikipedia.[3] In contrast, open purpose wikis accept content without firm rules as to how the content should be organized.



http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikis

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Published and broadcast information: Newspapers

Caledonian Mercury: New online rival for Scottish press

Scotland's newspapers have a new competitor, though it is not on the news-stands.
The Caledonian Mercury is published online and is free to read.

Much of it is written by former journalists at The Scotsman.


Including articles about politics, health, entertainment, outdoors, heritage and sport, it takes its name from Mercurius Caledonius, believed to be the country's first newspaper, which was briefly published in 1660 and 1661.
According to editorial director Stewart Kirkpatrick: "There is a substantial gap in the market. There is room - in fact, a desperate need - for an online, heavyweight publication committed to quality journalism.



We want them to tell the stories that the churning maelstrom of the old-fashioned newsroom never allowed

Stewart Kirkpatrick


The Caledonian Mercury
"Scotland needs an intelligent title that uses the internet, not fights against it."
Writing ahead of the launch on the AllmediaScotland website, he said: "We've signed up leading writers, respected authorities in their fields and asked them to let rip.
"We want them to tell the stories that the churning maelstrom of the old-fashioned newsroom never allowed. We're interested in quality, not filling space.
"We're not worried about what's in the other papers this morning, we want to be told something we don't know already."
Falling readership

The Caledonian Mercury only has three people on its core staff: directors for editorial, technology and marketing.


It is not using start-up funding, and the plan is to raise revenue by selling advertising space and sponsorship. A periodical printed version is also being planned.
The launch comes as mainstream newspapers continue to face falling readership numbers, and a tough advertising market. Almost all newspapers have had to shed journalists.
There is also a move towards newspapers' online sites to start charging for access to articles.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/scotland/8478062.stm

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Published and broadcast information: Newspapers
Media revolution: stop press?

Over the last decade, the UK's favourite dailies have lost some 2.25 million readers.

Falling circulations mean less money through the till and newspapers' other main source of income - advertising - is also drying up.


In the last 10 years, ad revenues have fallen by about 20%.


In the struggle to stay profitable, newspaper companies are cutting staff, closing offices and, in the case of local papers, ditching titles.

Some within the industry predict that within the next 10 years we could even see one or two of Britain's best loved dailies go to the wall.


These problems are partly caused by the economic downturn.

Advertising is one of the first things companies cut spending on during a recession and cash-strapped consumers may see newspapers as a luxury they can do without when times are tough.


But it is our changing lifestyles that pose the biggest problem for papers.





The world is changing and newspapers have to adapt



Rupert Murdoch, NewsCorp
Digital Difficulties

The internet has made it easier than ever for us to find out the news.


At the click of a button, we can catch up on the latest stories in whatever form we choose - text, audio or video.
Newspaper proprietor Rupert Murdoch, chairman of NewsCorp, owns papers all over the world including The Sun and The Times in Britain and The Wall Street Journal in the US.
He says the internet has given readers much more power,
"Everybody wants choice and thanks to the personal computer, people are taking charge of their own lives and they read what they want to read or what they are interested in and young people today are living on their computers," he says.

"The world is changing and newspapers have to adapt to that."


After a slow start, most newspapers are now embracing the web as a platform for reaching readers, but it seems it is even harder to make profits from online publishing than from old-fashioned newsprint.
With so many free news sites to choose from, no one seems prepared to pay money to read newspapers online.
That means they have to rely on web adverts to generate income for their sites.

But it is not straight forward. Online, advertisers have many more spaces to choose from, making the market much more competitive.


Online opportunities

But it is not all bad news.








I don't think newspapers will die



Sir Martin Sorrell, chief executive, WPP
The web also opens up new opportunities for papers.
On the internet, newspapers are freed from the shackles of print, allowing them to exploit other forms of media, such as audio and video.

Papers such as The Guardian and The Daily Telegraph increasingly see themselves as online news providers first and news papers second.


This means radically new ways of working for journalists, but readers seem to like the results.

The Guardian's website, for example, now attracts more than 20 million users a month.


Surprisingly, two thirds of those hits come from overseas, opening up potentially lucrative opportunities in international advertising.
Guardian Media Group's Editor-in-Chief Alan Rusbridger has a long-term target to triple the Guardian's US-based readership.
"You then start getting on the radar of American advertising agencies, in which case you're into a very big market indeed; the biggest most wealthy market in the world," he says.
And Rupert Murdoch anticipates that new digital devices in the pipeline will provide papers with further opportunities to make money.
"I don't think it's available in England yet, but there's a wonderful new machine called the Kindle," he says.
"You can store six or 10 books in it or you can have a newspaper subscription on it and you get every word of the newspaper for a subscription rate.
"And it's mobile. You don't need to plug it into anything. It all comes over the airwaves."
Evolve and prosper

Newspapers are in a difficult transition.


They have to weather the economic downturn and at the same time find funds to invest in the digital opportunities of the future.
But despite the tough challenges facing the industry, it looks as if newspapers are here to stay.
"Many people say newspapers are going to die. I don't think newspapers will die because they are the best way, or one of the best ways along with TV, of reaching large sections of the population," says Sir Martin Sorrell, chief executive of advertising agency WPP.
"That's not going away."
Those papers that embrace change the fastest will be best placed to survive and prosper.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/7872154.stm
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Published and broadcast information: Digital Radio

What does digital radio offer?

  • More radio stations: national, local and regional catering for all kinds of interests and groups of people

  • LiveText letting you find out what you’re listening to; details of the song/artists along with the latest news/sport and weather headlines

  • Easy to use radios with no need to remember frequencies

  • You can listen to your favourite stations on the move, in the car and at home

  • Better reception: no more hiss and crackle

  • An electronic programme guide so you can record your favourite programme and listen when you want

  • Some radios even let you pause and rewind your listening so you never miss a single word

  • Digital radio is also available via digital television and online
     

What is DAB?

Digital Audio Broadcasting or 'DAB digital radio' has been developed by a consortium of manufacturers and broadcasters. The BBC pioneered DAB digital radio and was the first broadcaster in the UK to build a transmission network and start broadcasting in 1995.


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