Grassroots organizing against Facebook TOS?

Facebook is running into some trouble over their handling of post settings for some anti-corporate leaning grassroots groups.

As the number of Facebook members signed up for the “Boycott Target Until They Cease Funding Anti-Gay Politics” page neared 78,000 in recent days, Facebook personnel locked down portions of the page — banning new discussion threads, preventing members from posting videos and standard Web links to other sites and barring the page’s administrator from sending updates to those who signed up for the boycott. (via Activists upset with Facebook – Josh Gerstein – POLITICO.com)

As Facebook has built up their network, they’ve become the defacto place for sharing information and informally organizing into groups of similar interests. I wonder, if the telephone company could get away with taking similar advantage of their network-effect-built userbase, and censored political speech. The answer, of course, is that they could not, due to the regulations governing the industry.

While actions like this bring critical folks like me ever closer to quitting Facebook, the thought of so many lost connections is what keeps us from doing it. It’s as though one must choose between their principals and their social network — and that’s a position I believe no one should be placed in.

As face-to-face meeting places have become privatized (think public square vs. malls and coffee shops), being able to connect freely online is becoming increasingly vital to social life.  We shouldn’t let these spaces similarly fall into private hands, where we are subject to one entity’s terms of service.

This is why projects like Diaspora and StatusNet are so important.

I didn’t quit Facebook over this, but I did donate to the EFF.  It was far, far overdue.

Edit: Here is a good post from Ars about a similar issue with ISP TOS agreements.

They will discriminate

Ars Technica posts an excellent examples of network discrimination, and claims these are one of many (RCN P2P settlement: ISP can throttle away starting November 1).

Many of those involved in the debate over network neutrality appear to believe that ISPs simply don’t engage in widespread traffic discrimination, and that the only possible example net neutrality supporters can dredge up involve Comcast and Madison River. …

In fact, numerous class action lawsuits over traffic management have been filed against American ISPs over the last several years.

Class action suits fly a bit more under the radar than debates in the FCC, so it’s important that this piece of the story get some recognition.

The Economist’s guide to Net Neutrality

The future of the internet: A virtual counter-revolution | The Economist.

This issue of The Economist contains an excellent overview of the Net Neutrality issue.  It would be a great resource for anyone who wants to get up to speed on the issue (or to pass along to friends).  They address it primarily from the standpoint of the fragmentation of the Internet, and give current examples like international domain names and closed applications to support their point. They back it up with an oft-forgotten historical point:

Devotees of a unified cyberspace are worried that the online world will soon start looking as it did before the internet took over: a collection of more or less connected proprietary islands reminiscent of AOL and CompuServe.

International examples also show how we approach the issue much differently than the rest of the world.

It is telling that net neutrality has become far more politically controversial in America than it has elsewhere. This is a reflection of the relative lack of competition in America’s broadband market. In Europe and Japan, “open access” rules require network operators to lease parts of their networks to other firms on a wholesale basis, thus boosting competition.

Things close with Zittrain’s argument that a more closed internet might harm innovation.

Should the network become a collection of proprietary islands accessed by devices controlled remotely by their vendors, the internet would lose much of its “generativity”, warns Harvard’s Mr Zittrain.

Props to the Economist for such a clearly written, accessible piece on this important issue.

Tweaking the D2L v9 Saved Successfully alert

In my day job as an instructional technology support guy I hear (and make) the occasional complaint about the technologies we use at our institution. Lately we’ve been hearing a lot about the new “Saved Successfully” alert banner that appears in Desire2Learn (D2L) version 9.  Since it’s slowing people down (myself included), I thought it was worth putting together a user stylesheet to alter its display.

Note: this is a bit of a geeky hack.  It looks right on my screen but might not on yours. You’ve been warned!

Firefox or Chrome

Go to http://userstyles.org/ and install the extension for the browser you use most (you will need to restart your browser). You can then visit this page http://userstyles.org/styles/36309 and Install with Stylish. You will then need to edit the style to include your institutions address. On Firefox, this means making sure your status bar is displayed, clicking the icon to manage styles, and change “Your Domain” to be the right “d2l.address.edu” for your institution (this can also be done on install with the “Switch to edit” button. Chrome users can edit the domain under Window > Extensions > Stylish > Edit by adding the address under “Applies to.”

You may also alter the numbers here to fit your institutions Navigation better.

Safari

Go to http://code.grid.in.th/ to Download and Install the extension. You can then add the userstyle by right-clicking on any page and and selecting “Manage user CSS.” Enter your institution’s D2L address, being sure to include /* at the end. Add this bit under Styles and save.

.d_ma_s {width: 30% !important;margin:25px 0px 0px 400px !important;}

Internet Explorer

IE 7 Pro users may have some luck installing a user script from http://userstyles.org/styles/36309 (I couldn’t test this). Most IE users need to use a single custom stylesheet, which can be activated by using these directions.

I’m interested in feedback!

If there are tweaks that would make this more generalizable, please let me know in the comments.