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Category Archives: Free Speech

14.313 Antics with Karol Madera and more – Video

Posted: January 2, 2014 at 8:40 am


14.313 Antics with Karol Madera and more
VE7KFM and the boys, having fun on 14.313 - renegade free speech on HF. Receiver is a FT-950 with a G5RV Jr. mounted in an Inverted V configuration. Receiver...

By: VA3JPX

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14.313 Antics with Karol Madera and more - Video

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2013: The Best Long Reads of the Year

Posted: December 31, 2013 at 6:43 am

By The Editors

As the United States geared up for an overhaul of its health-care system, we asked the provocative question: just why are new drugs so expensive? In our November cover story, A Tale of Two Drugs, veteran journalist Barry Werth took an in-depth look at how pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies determine the price of drugs, examining a life-saving treatment for cystic fibrosis and a cancer drug with marginal benefits. His insightful analysis suggests that putting a value on new drugs will only get more complicated and fraught with ethical challenges as treatments become more effective but often targeted at relatively small patient populations.

In another probing look at a current controversy, The Real Privacy Problem presented a novel and nuanced argument about the danger of increased information gathering by governments and Web companies. Written by Evgeny Morozov, one of todays most thoughtful essayists on the implications of advanced digital technology, the essay will give you newand smarterreasons to fret over infringements on our privacy. Likewise, you will want to read the essay by MIT Technology Reviews editor-in-chief, Jason Pontin, on how the Internet is raising complex dilemmas around free speech.

Advanced digital technologies are also changing employment opportunities. Indeed, there is growingalbeit still controversialevidence that automation, artificial intelligence, and advanced software could be destroying more jobs than they are creating. In How Technology Is Destroying Jobs, MIT Technology Reviews editor, David Rotman, explained how economists and technologists are thinking about the future of work.

In a series of other features, we brought you to the forefront of some of todays most exciting research. In Repairing Bad Memories, noted science journalist Stephen Hall profiled one neuroscientist who is working toward the creation of treatments that might help to erase traumatic memories. In Driverless Cars Are Further Away Than You Think, news and analysis editor Will Knight went to the test tracks of the leading German auto manufacturers to see just what is the likely future of driverless cars. And in Thinking in Silicon, our San Francisco-based senior IT editor, Tom Simonite, explained how several leading research groups are reinventing the computer chip, creating powerful new ways to overcome many of todays most difficult problems. Elsewhere, Simonite went inside the efforts to save one of the Webs most cherished projects in The Decline of Wikipedia.

There are few technologies more fundamental to our lives and well-being than the ones used to grow our food. Thats why few technologies are as controversial as genetically modified foods. In our latest cover story, Why We Will Need Genetically Modified Foods, we argue that a growing human population and the increasing impacts of climate change will make it critical that we use genetic engineering as a tool to develop more productive crops.

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2013: The Best Long Reads of the Year

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Guns To Fire – Free Speech (12/28/2013) – Video

Posted: December 30, 2013 at 1:44 pm


Guns To Fire - Free Speech (12/28/2013)
Live at The Handlebar in Pensacola, FL.

By: Beav Kenoyer

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Guns To Fire - Free Speech (12/28/2013) - Video

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Free speech should have a dialogue – Video

Posted: December 29, 2013 at 9:40 pm


Free speech should have a dialogue
Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist Clarence Page discusses the recent controversy around Duck Dynasty patriarch, Phil Robertson and how we should approach obje...

By: Chicago Tribune

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Free speech should have a dialogue - Video

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Guest commentary: A year-end review of First Amendment status

Posted: at 9:40 pm

By JEFFREY M. McCALL

Americans know the First Amendment guarantees free expression through speech, press, religion and assembly. It is harder, however, to know how that noble concept gets operationalized in the real world. Public pressure and courts together work to make sense of free expression, but it is a never-ending challenge.

We know free speech lands somewhere between an expression free-for-all and absolute government oppression. Within those parameters, however, First Amendment confusion reigns. A review of free speech wrestling matches in 2013 demonstrates this confusing state of affairs.

The New York Court of Appeals ruled Fox News reporter Jana Winter does not have to return to Colorado to explain how she acquired confidential information regarding the Aurora movie shooter. Any non-reporter would have been forced to go. It's also not clear how New York courts can rule about news gathering done in another state.

Colleges are supposed to be places for open discourse. But at Modesto Junior College, a student was stopped from distributing copies of the Constitution on Constitution Day. The reason? He wasn't in a designated area, and he hadn't registered in advance. At Central Michigan University, a pro-life display was torn down. At University of California, Berkeley, the student government voted to ban the term "illegal immigrant" from campus discussions. And at Brown University, NYC's police commissioner Ray Kelly was shouted off the stage by protesters.

"Duck Dynasty" star Phil Robertson was sanctioned by A&E for his social commentary in a magazine interview. The Robertson clan makes money for A&E by being authentic, unscripted people, but A&E punished Phil for articulating his authentic opinions.

A Utah woman was assessed a $3,500 fee by an online company when she posted an Internet critique of the company for not delivering a product she ordered. The company says the charge is part of the "non-disparagement clause" online customers agree to when placing an order. The woman hasn't paid the fee, and now her credit is wrecked.

The Elmhurst Public Library rebuffed patrons who criticized the library for purchasing video games intended for mature audiences. The director said mature video games were not judged differently than other materials, and content is not a factor in acquisition. Thus, all content is equal in the eyes of this library. Dr. Seuss is the same as a Bulletstorm video game.

Speaking of libraries, the American Library Association continues with its annual Banned Books Week. The ALA is particularly upset with schools that use their own judgment to limit or prevent access to certain materials. Of course, such books aren't really banned since readers can still get the books at a bookstore, online or another library. A banned book would be unavailable in any context. To follow ALA guidelines, every book ever published would have to be in every library.

The National Football League rejected a commercial that gunmaker Daniel Defense wanted to air during the Super Bowl. The ad featured a military veteran talking about the need to keep his family safe, and showed no actual firearms. The NFL is quite OK, however, with commercials for violent movies, alcohol and sexual dysfunction. Halftime shows feature trampy behavior and players uttering f-bombs on live broadcasts, but an ad for a legal product draws a penalty flag.

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Guest commentary: A year-end review of First Amendment status

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WikiLeaks’ Assange: Sysadmins of the World, Unite!

Posted: at 9:40 pm

HAMBURG Faced with increasing encroachments on privacy and free speech, high-tech workers around the world should identify as a class and fight power together, said WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange on Sunday.

In a video speech to the Chaos Communication Congress (CCC) here, Assange drew parallels between the labor movements of the industrial age and the technology workers of today. As workers joined into unions to fight for better working conditions, technology workers should unite to fight government encroachments on Internet and speech freedoms, he said.

We can see that in the case of WikiLeaks, or the Snowden revelations, its possible for even a single system administrator to have very significant constructive effect, he said. This is not merely wrecking or disabling, not going on strikes, but rather shifting information from an information apartheid system from those with extraordinary power to the digital commons.

Joined at this CCC talk by WikiLeaks journalist Sarah Harrison, who helped Edward Snowden in his flight from Hong Kong to Russia earlier this year, and by digital activist Jacob Appelbaum, Assange painted a picture of the coming years in near-apocalyptic colors.

This is the last free generation, he said. The coming together of the systems of government and the information apartheid is such that none of us will be able to escape it in just a decade.

Fighting this system by leaking information, where possible, or otherwise working for the cause of transparency was the only way to shape government systems in a positive way, he said.

We are all becoming part of this state whether we like it or not, he said. Our only hope is to help determine what kind of state we will be a part of.

Connecting to the conference over an often-broken Skype connection, Assange was speaking from the Ecuadorian embassy in London. The WikiLeaks founder has been accused of sexual assault in Sweden, and Britain has approved his extradition. He has been granted political asylum by Ecuador, which cited fears of his otherwise being extradited to the United States, but has not been granted safe passage out of the country by the United Kingdom.

Hackers and technologists should accept jobs at intelligence and other institutions, in order to bring out more documents, Assange said in his video speech.

Go into the CIA, he said. Go into the ball park and bring the ball out.

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WikiLeaks’ Assange: Sysadmins of the World, Unite!

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Greta Van Susteren Tells Sarah Palin Why Duck Dynasty Controversy Has Nothing to Do with Free Speech – Video

Posted: at 4:43 am


Greta Van Susteren Tells Sarah Palin Why Duck Dynasty Controversy Has Nothing to Do with Free Speech
12/23/13 - Sarah Palin was one of the first conservative voices to defend Duck Dynasty patriarch Phil Robertson #39;s controversial comments about homosexual sex...

By: Hanover TV

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Greta Van Susteren Tells Sarah Palin Why Duck Dynasty Controversy Has Nothing to Do with Free Speech - Video

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Free Speech Project – Kleon McPherson- Leggings – Video

Posted: at 4:43 am


Free Speech Project - Kleon McPherson- Leggings
The Free Speech Project airs Monday-Thursday 6:45am, 10:45am, 1:45pm and 4:45pm on 96.1WEFM, STAR947HD 107.7 Music for Life Visit our websites: 96wefm.com ...

By: TTRN -Trinidad and Tobago Radio Network Limited

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Free Speech Project - Kleon McPherson- Leggings - Video

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Free Speech Project – Romero Gowrie- Amy – Video

Posted: at 4:43 am


Free Speech Project - Romero Gowrie- Amy
The Free Speech Project airs Monday-Thursday 6:45am, 10:45am, 1:45pm and 4:45pm on 96.1WEFM, STAR947HD 107.7 Music for Life Visit our websites: 96wefm.com ...

By: TTRN -Trinidad and Tobago Radio Network Limited

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Free Speech Project - Romero Gowrie- Amy - Video

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The "O" The Right to Free Speech – Video

Posted: at 4:43 am


The "O" The Right to Free Speech
DCN #39;s show "The O" is all about opinions! That means everything is on the table as a visiting panel of local pundits and personalities serve up their own can...

By: OCTDC

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The "O" The Right to Free Speech - Video

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