19

Apr

Lucy McRae: How can technology transform the human body

11

Feb

Social Media Week 2012 - Real Time Infographics
…And if you’re going to Social Media Week NYC, be sure to come to our event, Web Chix Connected, on Friday Feb. 17th at Hyper Island.

Social Media Week 2012 - Real Time Infographics

…And if you’re going to Social Media Week NYC, be sure to come to our event, Web Chix Connected, on Friday Feb. 17th at Hyper Island.

Attract guys to hackathons by offering money and bragging rights. Attract girls by asking them to build something meaningful.
@ebboyd 

(Source: Fast Company)

10

Feb

What Are SOPA and PIPA All About, and Why Should I Care?

The Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA) and the Protect IP Act (PIPA) are two bills that have the potential to change the internet as we know it. SOPA (introduced in the House of Representatives), and PIPA (a Senate Bill) have caused an uproar on the net this past month with internet giants such as Google, Ebay, and Wikipedia leading the protests, with action from sending written testimony to the House and Senate, to going to the extreme of staging a “black out” their websites. Both bills claim to give copyright holders the power to put a lid on foreign websites that are engaging in “infringing behaviors.” How? By requiring DNS blocking, forcing search engines to disable any hyperlinks, and enforce legal action against advertisers and any third party businesses supporting the offending site. This extreme bill was proposed as a follow up to the current anti-piracy and copyright protection bill DMCA, which passed in 1998, which copyright holders say does not go far enough to protect their content. While both bills have been shelved for the time being, the issue of online piracy must be dealt with eventually.

 

SOPA and PIPA differ from the current DMCA laws by seeking to expedite the process of removing sites that are infringing on copyright. Currently it can take months or years to go through the legal motions of shutting down an infringing website. In the online space, speed in shutting down a site is crucial. However in this rush, the right to due process is skimmed over. This has the potential to invite large companies and their representative organizations (for example the MPAA and RIAA) to, without substantiating evidence, shut down websites they feel are infringing. Civil liberties experts are also concerned about the constitutionality of SOPA/PIPA, given that they can violate due process and limit free speech.

 

Without due process, websites can be shut down even if they are not violating copyright of any kind. Sites that simply link to suspected content would be seen as “enabling or facilitating” piracy. Being an accessory to the crime of internet piracy is also defined as doing business with pirating sites, and providing information on how to access blocked sites. While combating internet piracy is the cause of money and jobs lost, shutting down websites that are not engaged in piracy is too heavy-handed of an answer.

 

Furthermore, the costs of enforcing these bills are astronomical, estimated at $12 million a year by the Congressional Budget Office, and there is no assurance that they will actually meet their intended goal. While it will restrict access and cause major annoyance to everyday internet users, dedicated users with strong internet knowledge will easily find a way around the imposed restrictions on alleged infringing sites, and could easily create a virtual black market to help normal users access blocked sites. Just in case you forgot what generally happens when you restrict access to something strongly desired by a huge chunk of the population, feel free to Google “back-alley abortion” or “organized crime and Prohibition.”

 

SOPA and PIPA contain loose wording that leaves too much up to interpretation by companies eager to bring down competitors. It punishes certain parties for their innovation, and provides a cushion for those who have failed to keep pace. While the voting on these bills has been postponed for now, they both need to either be completely scrapped or revised, so that ordinary citizens sharing non-copyrighted content and websites unknowingly linking to pirating sites don’t get caught in the dragnet.  


What are your thoughts about SOPA/PIPA?

By Lauren W. and Malikah Kelly

08

Feb

Going to Social Media Week NY?

Going to Social Media Week New York? Check out Web Chix Connected and say hi to the DGC crew. Get your tickets here.

(Source: digitalgirlsclub)

App of the Day: Type n’ Walk

App of the Day: Type n’ Walk

06

Feb

Name: Gina Bianchini
Co-founder, Ning + Founder of Mightybell
What you should know: Gina Bianchini was CEO of Ning, which she co-founded with Marc Andreessen. Since leaving Ning in March 2010, she has been an executive in residence at the Andreesen Horowitz venture firm.
Bianchini re-emerged in September of 2011 as head of a privately-funded Palo Alto start-up called MightyBell, which is offering a social networking app designed for creators of “experiences” to offer step-by-step directions to those who might want to accomplish goals such as running marathons or going on survival expeditions.
Visit her latest venture: http://www.mightybell.com
Credit: Wikipedia
Twitter Handle: @ginab
By: Glory Edim

Name: Gina Bianchini

Co-founder, Ning + Founder of Mightybell

What you should know: Gina Bianchini was CEO of Ning, which she co-founded with Marc Andreessen. Since leaving Ning in March 2010, she has been an executive in residence at the Andreesen Horowitz venture firm.

Bianchini re-emerged in September of 2011 as head of a privately-funded Palo Alto start-up called MightyBell, which is offering a social networking app designed for creators of “experiences” to offer step-by-step directions to those who might want to accomplish goals such as running marathons or going on survival expeditions.

Visit her latest venture: http://www.mightybell.com

Credit: Wikipedia

Twitter Handle: @ginab

By: Glory Edim

04

Feb

Name: Danielle Fong 
Co-Founder & Chief Scientist, LightSail Energy
What you should know: Danielle is the co-founder and Chief Scientist at LightSail Energy, making inexpensive, efficient energy storage systems.
”At age 20, Fong co-founded LightSail Energy, which has invented a compressed air storage technology that is scalable, portable, clean and economical. The idea is to make it possible for intermittent sources of renewable energy like solar and wind to go mainstream, and revolutionize power grid design.”
Twitter Handle: @DanielleFong
Credit: Forbes 30 under 30 feature

Name: Danielle Fong

Co-Founder & Chief Scientist, LightSail Energy

What you should know: Danielle is the co-founder and Chief Scientist at LightSail Energy, making inexpensive, efficient energy storage systems.

”At age 20, Fong co-founded LightSail Energy, which has invented a compressed air storage technology that is scalable, portable, clean and economical. The idea is to make it possible for intermittent sources of renewable energy like solar and wind to go mainstream, and revolutionize power grid design.”

Twitter Handle: @DanielleFong

Credit: Forbes 30 under 30 feature

Digital Girls Club is comprised of bright, savvy internet loving individuals. Naturally, we admire female Internet entrepreneurs. We invite you to follow these impressive DGC-approved twitter handles.  Kicking off the series is the female co-founder of Flicker, Caterina Fake.Name: Caterina Fake
Co-Founder, Flickr & Hunch
What you should know: “Caterina Fake is a co-founder of the photo sharing Web site Flickr, which was sold to Yahoo in early 2005. Since then, Ms. Fake has guided a number of Web products, including Etsy, the online marketplace for crafts and vintage products, Dailybooth, which lets users publish daily  photographs of themselves, and Hunch, which finds products and places that a user’s online friends like  and then predicts what else the user might like.”
Twitter Handle:  @caterina
Read the full NY Times interview by Nick Bilton

Digital Girls Club is comprised of bright, savvy internet loving individuals. Naturally, we admire female Internet entrepreneurs. We invite you to follow these impressive DGC-approved twitter handles.  Kicking off the series is the female co-founder of Flicker, Caterina Fake.

Name: Caterina Fake

Co-Founder, Flickr & Hunch

What you should know: Caterina Fake is a co-founder of the photo sharing Web site Flickr, which was sold to Yahoo in early 2005. Since then, Ms. Fake has guided a number of Web products, including Etsy, the online marketplace for crafts and vintage products, Dailybooth, which lets users publish daily  photographs of themselves, and Hunch, which finds products and places that a user’s online friends like  and then predicts what else the user might like.”

Twitter Handle: @caterina

Read the full NY Times interview by Nick Bilton

Want to help capture #SMW12? Social Media Week NY is looking for committed bloggers! Email newyork@socialmediaweek.org for more info.

Want to help capture #SMW12? Social Media Week NY is looking for committed bloggers! Email newyork@socialmediaweek.org for more info.