Archive for July, 2008

July 28th 2008

Big in Japan

Well, I am in Sapporo, Japan for the iCommons iSummit. I am just rushing out so I’m not going to publish much of a written post. I have started video blogging on Seesmic so here are two short videos on the meantime:

Arrived in Sapporo

Early start to the day

Couple follow ups here. I wound up passing out for another 2 and a half hours after this video (I lay down for 5 minutes and I was gone!). The Non-Commercial issue is going to addressed more fully in a research project planned for the second half of the year. Participants in the Legal Day can just expect an announcement about this as I understand it.

Sapporo Convention Centre

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July 17th 2008

Blogger? Where is your privacy policy?

If you are a blogger, here is something to ponder. If you have comments enabled on your blog or even have people registering on your blog to comment or otherwise interact with your site, you should have a privacy policy in place. Why? Well, because draft privacy legislation doing the rounds in Parliament will require that you publish one on your blog.

The thing is, if you allow people to comment on your blog and, like the majority of blogs these days, your blog contains fields for the commentator’s name, email address and web address, you are collecting personal information which is protected by that draft legislation and which, in turn, requires that you publish a policy that tells visitors to your site the following:

  • what information you are collecting;
  • what you are going to do with that information; and
  • manipulation and disclosure of that personal information.

There is an increasing number of legal pitfalls for publishers which must increasingly be dealt with using website terms of use and privacy policies. It sounds like overkill for your blog about your life which you may contribute to once or twice a week for your family members and three friends but that is simply not the case. Like most contracts and terms and conditions we encounter in our daily lives, these sorts of documents become risk management tools. We use them to guard against an array of risks that usually don’t occur to people, such as intellectual property infringement and privacy concerns. There are also jurisdictional issues, dispute resolution mechanisms and indemnities.

It sounds like something meant to make lawyers even richer but consider the possible consequences of being sued for copyright infringement on your blog or defamation arising out of inflammatory comments your visitors make. What about personal information stored in your admin section being accessed and sold off by unauthorised third parties? There are real risks which should be borne in mind. Social media empowers everyone to become a publisher. With that power comes the responsibility both to yourself and to your readers to put measures in place to minimise risk.

These implications for smaller publishers got me thinking about what bloggers can do to protect themselves. The usual solution is to either rip terms of use from sites on the Web (which are often poorly drafted and have more holes than Oxford Road or which are not really applicable to our legal system) or to have a lawyer prepare these documents (which can be pricey). It is a tough situation and one which probably leaves bloggers thinking that the risks isn’t so formidable given the steps that need to be taken to guard against them. That isn’t terribly helpful either because all you need is someone to take offence and suddenly blogging isn’t such a wonderful idea.

Another solution comes to mind and I am really just mulling over how to implement it. I wonder if a solution wouldn’t be to prepare terms of use and a privacy policy for bloggers and smaller publishers at a reduced cost and which still contains much of what you would need to guard against the bigger risks? I find myself wondering if I couldn’t come up with a workable solution for bloggers. Almost like the way Creative Commons licenses are so readily available and easy to implement … ?

What do you think? I am just causing a ruckus unnecessarily? I’m not sure that I am. Local bloggers have been sued over off the cuff comments which were defamatory. Being sued means you are forced to fork out tens of thousands of rands (at least) to either fight or settle. Not a pleasant thought.

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July 17th 2008

Bittersweet tales of Moo cards

I ordered a new batch of Moo minicards a couple months ago to replace the last of the cards I gave out. I was pretty excited about them because I was using two awesome sunflower photos I found on Robert Scoble’s photostream a while ago. I don’t know where the images are in his photostream but I love them. They are the best images of sunflowers I have come across and since I have adopted the sunflower motif as part of what passes for my corporate identity, they are perfect for me.

Anyway, my minicards still haven’t arrived about 2 or 3 months later, nor has the replacement set Moo kindly sent to me when I reported the absent initial set. I have pretty much given up on them and taken this as confirmation that despite the post office’s assurances that theft has been drastically reduced, they are still a bunch of thieves who are now into identity theft using my cards.

None of this has persuaded me to give up on ever possessing Moo cards again. They are very cool and I quickly decided to order a set of the new business cards Moo prints. This time around I wasn’t going to place my trust in our post office so I decided to go all out and ordered 2 packs of 50 cards to be shipped to me by DHL. I place the order this last Sunday evening and received them today. Here is a crappy photo of a set of very fine cards in an awesome card holder:

Moo business cards

I used a combination of sunflower images I have in iPhoto (including those awesome photos Scoble took - his are the gorgeous ones with the deep blue sky in the background) and photos I took when I was given a tour of the Constitutional Court a while ago. My photo above doesn’t really do the cards much justice but you get the idea. These cards represent a complete set and I have 10 sets in my 2 packs. I am very happy with them and they are well worth the premium I paid to get them here reliably.

I am giving these fine specimens out to my clients as mementos and souvenirs and all you need to do to get one of these gorgeous items is to give me a call and be my client … ;-) Heck, you could just bump into me and ask for one and you can have one too … I just want to hand these babies out now!

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July 16th 2008

Seesmic adds Creative Commons license options

Seesmic founder, Loic le Meur mentioned how keen he and his team are/were on Creative Commons support in Seesmic a short time ago in an update on his blog. This morning I noticed that Seesmic has rolled out support for Creative Commons licenses together with a couple upgrades to the service:

I did have a couple thoughts about Seesmic’s choice of default license (Attribution license) and posted my thoughts about this. You can track the conversation using the thumbnails beneath the main video. I have started the video conversation with the first post in the series for completeness sake:

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July 15th 2008

Thoughts about video blogging

I just recorded two videos which I posted on blip.tv and on Seesmic. I won’t go into much detail because I’d like the videos to speak for themselves. The conversation that sparked these videos is on Sue Rutherford’s blog. Start there and then continue here …

I then went along to Seesmic and posted this video as a comparison of the two services. The process of publishing the first video was considerably more drawn out than posting the Seesmic video. I first recorded the video in iMovie, started to export it as a reasonably big mp4 video file, stopped that and exported it as a smaller video file, re-encoded it as a mp4 file again and then uploaded it to Blip.tv where it now resides (well after two failed attempts to upload the video to Viddler).

The Seesmic video below took about 30 seconds longer than the video duration to record and post and I don’t think the video quality is much worse …

So what are your thoughts about video blogging? If you use Seesmic, why not post a response below (under the text based comments field). Of course text comments are welcome!

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