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August 19th, 2010 by Abbie Waller

Are you ashamed of your ‘cyber-self’?

Google CEO Eric Schmidt has been widely quoted in the media for some comments he made during an interview with the Wall Street Journal recently. Talking about the amount of information people freely share about themselves online without a second though, Mr. Schmidt stated that in the future people should be entitled to change their identity in order to escape their misspent youth – often recorded in excruciating detail online on sites such as Facebook.

This got me thinking – just how dangerous could that decade old photo showing me dancing on a table with a bottle of vodka and few inhibitions be to my future self? Will prospective employers overlook me? Will my possible future husband dump me? And if I suddenly become political and decide to run for Mayor, will I be laughed out of the voting booth?!

Image courtesy of nasrulekram

I can’t help thinking that just by taking a few small precautions – ticking the relevant privacy box and not accepting friendship requests from strangers – I’ll actually be alright in another decade’s time. A lot of scare stories are written up in the media at the moment but rather than telling people they should avoid social networks at all costs, shouldn’t we really just be focusing on how to use them sensibly? After all, I’m quite attached to my name and don’t really want to go through the hassle of adopting a whole new identity. If I change my mind though, marriage should allow me to hide a few misdemeanours at least…

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June 7th, 2010 by michael.frier

Daily News – 04/06

The Register – Vince Cable: Feel my mighty SME love

New Coalition government biznovation minister Vince Cable has set out his stall in a speech given yesterday at a business school in London. He pledged to cut the red tape stifling small businesses, and said he would compel banks to lend to SMEs.

SC Magazine - IT security professionals hack their own networks for penetration testing

Half of IT security professionals have admitted that they hack their own networks, with 73 per cent doing so to test the strength of their own network defences.

Computing.co.uk – Broadband customers buy on price, switch on speed

The main reason why consumers switch broadband supplier is because of disappointment with connectivity speed, but when they choose a new provider, they do so based on price, a recent survey has found.

The Daily Telegraph – Microsoft is ‘number five’ in the mobile market

Steve Ballmer, Microsoft’s chief executive, has admitted that the technology giant is losing the battle in the smartphone space with its Windows Phone offering, saying its currently ranked fifth in the market.

IT Pro – BT gets go-ahead for watered down broadband unbundling

The European Commission has said it agrees with regulator Ofcom that BT should be able to offer only virtual unbundling for its fibre broadband networks for the time being.

ComputerWorldUK – PC is not dead, device form is changing

Apple CEO Steve Jobs may believe that the personal computer – Mac and Windows PCs – will diminish in importance in the near future, but Microsoft boss Steve Ballmer sees thing differently. Ballmer, during an interview at the Wall Street Journal’s D8 conference, told the Journal’s Walt Mossberg that PCs will continue to evolve but will remain popular, even in a world where more and more people carry smartphones and tablet devices like the iPad.

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March 26th, 2010 by David Bell

Pay walls: if Rupert, can’t make it work, nobody can

The covers have come off the long-awaited announcement from News International on its plans to charge for access to The Times and Sunday Times. Users will pay £1 for a day’s access and £2 for a week’s subscription. It’s a bold and arguably very risky move. Supporters of the idea will say that payment mechanisms already work for the FT and Wall Street Journal but the audience and content is different. Business high flyers users will pay for exclusive content that they can’t get anywhere else and helps them do their jobs. The Times falls into a much more competitive category where ‘free’ (which really got going with the birth of Metro) has become the norm and a generation has grown up not paying anything for media content – be it news, entertainment or music.

‘Free’ only works where ad revenues provide adequate return, or a compulsory tax is put on users (as Rupert himself might have said re the BBC). And it’s a shame for all of us that the ad numbers haven’t quite stacked up yet (with news media at least).

The advertisers will be crucial to this, as a drop off in page views will likely mean they’ll move on to other outlets, making the need to attract paying subscribers even more pressing. Either way, this will truly be fascinating and its success or failure will probably define the media landscape for the next 20 years. If (arguably) the most successful media figure the world has ever seen can’t make this work then arguably no-one else will be able to.

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