Many real-world behaviours have found their way onto the Web. People with various addictive personality traits are being drawn to the Web like moths to a flame. A 15-year-old Swedish boy collapsed with epileptic seizures after a marathon 15-hour World... (Continue reading)
Using public computers or even your friend’s laptop to check your emails can be lethal. Can you really trust them? Your friends might be more interested in knowing your secrets than someone else’s. Are you really sure that they don’t... (Continue reading)
Another creature lurking in the shadows of the Internet ecosystem is Profiling. Profiling can involve expert systems, neural networks, statistical analysis, Fourier Analysis etc. No matter what the sophistication of the underlying approach, profiling software always falls into two separate... (Continue reading)
There are some very dangerous predators prowling around the web. Take for example advance-fee frauds, also known as the Nigerian scam, or the 419 scam, named after Article 419 of the Nigerian Legal Code. Check it out on the web... (Continue reading)
From the best practice entries on this blog you may be getting the impression that I am recommending you stop mass e-mailing. Well not quite! There is one situation that I recommend to all my students: using mass e-mails as... (Continue reading)
How does the idea of marketing on a microblogging platform – Twitter sound? WebCoherence being already present there, we thought of experimenting with it. “But how?” – A discussion sparked between me and another Web Ecologist – Railsbob. We were... (Continue reading)
A couple days ago fellow webcoherence author Ian Angell wrote about the clatter he (and 80 other people in the room) were constantly immersed in during the first day of the Communia conference. Ian closed with ‘at least the twitterers... (Continue reading)
clatter … clatter … clatter … “Good Morning Ladies and Gentlemen” … clatter … clatter … clatter … “Welcome to the London School of Economics” … clatter … clatter … clatter … “and the opening session of the Communia Conference”... (Continue reading)
I’ve just come out of a Internet conference session where most of the delegates were proselytizing the merits of maximizing the amount of public information disseminated for free on the Web. They see a Brave New World, with the Internet... (Continue reading)
I had been asked to give a keynote speech at the prestigious Black Hat Conference in Las Vegas. My topic was uncertainty. I would use an example to show that even if the technology is simple, it becomes highly complex... (Continue reading)