Category Archives: Internet

Google Health Has Only Months to Live

HealthVault to die 1/1/12:

When we launched Google Health, our goal was to create a service that would give people access to their personal health and wellness information. We wanted to translate our successful consumer-centered approach from other domains to healthcare and have a real impact on the day-to-day health experiences of millions of our users.

Now, with a few years of experience, we’ve observed that Google Health is not having the broad impact that we hoped it would. There has been adoption among certain groups of users like tech-savvy patients and their caregivers, and more recently fitness and wellness enthusiasts. But we haven’t found a way to translate that limited usage into widespread adoption in the daily health routines of millions of people. That’s why we’ve made the difficult decision to discontinue the Google Health service. We’ll continue to operate the Google Health site as usual through January 1, 2012, and we’ll provide an ongoing way for people to download their health data for an additional year beyond that, through January 1, 2013. Any data that remains in Google Health after that point will be permanently deleted.

Official Google Blog: An update on Google Health and Google PowerMeter

There were some major privacy issues, although (because?) Google Health navigated around HIPAA effectively. I wonder how many people exactly were using it? The people at Microsoft HealthVault must be very happy today.

Posted in Health Care, ID Cards and Identification, Internet | Comments Off on Google Health Has Only Months to Live

How Not to Market Ethics

Suppose you are EthicsGame, LLC, which bills itself as “the leading provider of topic-based simulations and assessments designed to teach ethical decision-making in everyday life.” And suppose that you want to promote your “Summer Camp for Faculty”.

How do you do it? Wait for it…by spamming!

Yes, that’s right: these folks who want to teach me and my colleagues how to teach our students ethical behavior just spammed me and at least one of my colleagues with their free trial offer. (For some unexplained reason they want a “non-university email address” to give us trial access to their online ethics game. Gotta wonder about that one.)

EthicsGame, LLC appears, from a brief web search, to be a for-profit enterprise. No links for them, why give them the Googlejuice.

Plonk.

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Four Top Cybersecurity Myths

#1:

Cyber terrorism: it does not exist. There are no – repeat, zero – documented incidents of cyber-terrorism. The idea that al-Qaeda will use virtual reality technology to train terrorists here in America (which I heard today) is simply ludicrous. Bin Laden didn’t even use e-mail! And anyone who’s tried streaming Hulu over a wireless connection will appreciate just how hard it is to use high-bandwidth apps even in a broadband environment.

via Info/Law, Cybersecurity Theory and Myths.

Cyber-security purveyors are certainly relying on an over-hyped threat model. That’s how you get funding. But doesn’t the Stuxnet worm suggest that there are other sorts of cyber-terrorism that might be practicable? And if Stuxnet was launched by a government, as some suspect, can we really say there’s never been any cyber-terrorism? Perhaps, because then it counts as an act of war by a nation-state, not terrorism as such.

Go read the rest — the other three top myths seem right on target.

Posted in Internet, National Security | 2 Comments

How to Manage Spam-Like Twitter Followers?

I need advice. I don’t actually Twitter much (except from conferences) although I’ve set up discourse.net to feed a notice to twitter whenever I write something (and also to tweet when something appears on Jotwell). And to be honest I don’t even read the aggregate of other people’s Twitter feeds that often (although I do once in a while), as there’s just too much, and I can’t cope with the firehose.

But I do get emails whenever someone follows me — now running an average of almost two a day it seems. Many are real folks. That’s nice. A few others may be real folks but they seem to be pornographers or the like. I block them. My question is what to do about the followers who while not pornographers seem to be firms with no connection to what I write about, but seem instead to be firms using Twitter to promote themselves (e.g. auto repair, office supplies). Sometimes when I check their feeds they seem to be genuinely interested in, say, privacy issues, most most often every post just promotes their firm.

Should I block them? Report them as spam? Ignore them? I don’t much care about my 580-something Twitter followers; it takes different things to feed or deflate my ego. But there is a different reason why I might care: On the one hand, I don’t like spammers, and if they are getting some benefit from this behavior I’m going to be on board to make the effort, up to some point, to deny them that benefit in service to the commons. On the other hand, it’s one more darn thing to worry about and choosing which people to block is not costless — the process of trying to figure out if they are for real or not does take some amount of effort I’d just as soon not expend if the exercise is pointless.

So, Twitter users, what are the relevant norms? Should I care about this?

Posted in Internet, Personal | 8 Comments

Forms of Systemic Troll Control

I enjoyed (and learned from) this review of forms of online troll control at Coding Horror, Suspension, Ban or Hellban?. I’d actually never heard of hellbans or error bans.

Hellbans are especially cool: L’enfer c’est les autres indeed!

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IPv6 Day Considered Dangerous?

Microsoft gets ready for stuff to break on World IPv6 Day, June 8, 2011.

Note that Microsoft does set to use IPv6 by default; they’re just explaining in advance what to do when something goes wrong….

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