Assorted links
1. Interesting study on transparency vs trustworthiness in Wikipedia 2. A cool new site from Erik Hersman: called AfricanSignals, it’s a Wiki, where "people could leave information on the availability, costs and service levels of mobile phone and internet connections in their country" – the focus is on Africa, as the title suggests. 3. ...
1. Interesting study on transparency vs trustworthiness in Wikipedia
1. Interesting study on transparency vs trustworthiness in Wikipedia
2. A cool new site from Erik Hersman: called AfricanSignals, it’s a Wiki, where "people could leave information on the availability, costs and service levels of mobile phone and internet connections in their country" – the focus is on Africa, as the title suggests.
3. Dubai in the news: good part (SMS updates for Dubai court cases now available), and bad part (Dubai Police confirm plans to block internet ‘smut’)
4. The World Bank’s new API exposes data for approximately 200 countries over a time period of more than 50 years.
5. Nart Villeneuve deconstructs WSJ’s "electricity grid" article, fears nothing.
6. Hillarious news from the cyber-attacks department: some angry Russians want to DDOS the site of a reality show they hate, get confused about the channel’s URL, attack the site of an international courier and logistics giant TNT instead (the story is here – in Russian).
7. What do Web2.0 sites have to learn from ant colonies?
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