Facebook: Locking down, leaving, or ?

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lockedFacebook_thumb[5] As most readers know, Facebook has adopted a strategy of aggressively exposing – and marketing – its users’ information. Rather than seeking users’ permission to share their information, FB has generally assumed permission and left users who wish to protect their privacy to find their way through FB’s labyrinth of menus and options. The path through this byzantine maze inspired one commentator to label FB’s privacy settings an “evil interface”.

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This is Ada Lovelace Day…

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Ada Lovelace … a day to celebrate and encourage women in technology.  Augusta Ada King, Countess of Lovelace (10 December 1815 – 27 November 1852), born Augusta Ada Byron, was an English writer chiefly known for her work on Charles Babbage’s early mechanical general-purpose computer, the analytical engine. Her notes on the engine include what is recognized as the first algorithm intended to be processed by a machine; as such she is often regarded as the world’s first computer programmer.

She was the only legitimate child of the poet Lord Byron and Anne Isabella Milbanke, but had no relationship with her father, who died when she was nine. As a young adult she took an interest in mathematics, and in particular Babbage’s work on the analytical engine. Between 1842 and 1843 she translated an article by Italian mathematician Luigi Menabrea on the engine, which she supplemented with a set of notes of her own. These notes contain what is considered the first computer program, that is, an algorithm encoded for processing by a machine. Though Babbage’s engine was never built, Lovelace’s notes are important in the early history of computers. She also foresaw the capability of computers to go beyond mere calculating or number-crunching while others, including Babbage himself, focused only on these capabilities. (Wikipedia)