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Posts tagged New Zealand

Redesign Auckland Central MP Nikki Kaye’s website
"The Cre8d design team were very professional. Rachel was always accessible, reliable, and easy to work with, providing excellent support. Stephen was exceptional at understanding my needs and objectives for the site and was very helpful in terms of programming."

Over the past week, New Zealanders have been protesting against the introduction of a new law which was set to come into immediate effect on February 28th. Section 92A, an amendment to the copyright act, saw internet disconnection based on accusations of copyright infringement without a trial and without any evidence held up to court scrutiny.

The “blackout” campaign saw Twitter and Facebook users turn their avatars to black, not just those in New Zealand, but Twitter heavyweights such as Stephen Fry, Leo Laporte, Howard Rheingold, Cory Doctorow, Xeni Jardin and Neil Gaiman.  Websites all ran ads about the blackout campaign.

stephenfry

banner-blackout3

In fact, #blackout was the top term on Twitter during the week.

The campaign wasn’t merely an online one – a protest was held outside parliament with plain black placards, with wide media coverage. A petition with more than 10,000 signatures was presented to politician Peter Dunne.

The blackout protest culminated today with “thousands” of sites — including our own — taking all their content offline and displaying the following message (click to enlarge):

blackout-day7

Merely hours later, the politicians caved and delayed the law coming into effect, a possible scrapping of the law altogether if agreement can’t be met between major stakeholders and promising a review after six months.

breakingnews

Today I felt like democracy really meant something. People were listened to. We changed the course of history.

As br3nda on Twitter put it, “Power to the Tweeple”.

Aside from the immense joy of knowing that the government responded to our concerns, I will always remember back to a session at Kiwi Foo Camp just over a week ago. It was an electric defining moment where a small group of people led by Matthew Holloway of the Creative Freedom Foundation got together with a plan to stop the law coming into effect. In merely one hour, ideas and plans flowed for how to stage the protests. Time before the law came into effect was short but so much was accomplished in the week which was to follow. I’m so proud to have been in that room and to have seen and experienced what has been done in the last nine days. To see the story grab the world’s attention was inspiring.

This will be seen as a case study for the whole world on what can be done online through tools such as Twitter and Facebook and cooperation between people and websites which would normally not work together.

This may be the first time in the world that the use of Twitter delayed (or possibly stopped) a law coming into effect.

Thanks to Regan for compiling this list of links about the story, before today’s breakthrough news:

Text

http://www.geekzone.co.nz/juha/6247
http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=40731948387
http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=50627039924
http://twitter.com/stephenfry
http://www.nbr.co.nz/article/foes-copyright-act-call-photo-black-out-53600
http://www.nme.com/news/various-artists/42806
http://idealog.co.nz/blog/david-macgregor/a-black-day-for-new-zealand
http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/nz_internet_blackout.php
http://radar.oreilly.com/2009/02/new-zealand-goes-black.html
http://publicaddress.net/5693
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2009/02/17/new_zealand_copyright/
http://www.nbr.co.nz/article/isps-new-copyright-law-puts-business-gun-scrap-it-39710
http://blog.darkmere.gen.nz/2009/02/strike-1-against-arpa/
http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/PO0902/S00209.htm
http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/BU0902/S00303.htm
http://www.michaelgeist.ca/content/view/3682/196/
http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/HL0902/S00342.htm
http://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2009/02/new-zealand-goes-all-black-against-three-strikes
http://www.nzherald.co.nz/technology/news/article.cfm?c_id=5&objectid=10557699&ref=rss
http://news.zdnet.com/2100-9595_22-270800.html
http://nz.news.yahoo.com/a/-/top-stories/5330826
http://www.infonews.co.nz/news.cfm?l=1&t=0&id=32562
http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/news/2009/02/kiwi-three-strikes-law-countered-with-internet-blackout.ars
http://www.greens.org.nz/node/20605
http://blog.greens.org.nz/2009/02/19/labour-needs-to-front-up-on-s92a/
http://creativefreedom.org.nz/library/comic/s92cartoon-bw.png
http://computerworld.co.nz/news.nsf/news/3DFA797D6D7326CACC2575630071617A
http://www.kiwiblog.co.nz/2009/02/why_is_national_taking_the_heat_for_a_problem_they_did_not_cause.html
http://www.jackyan.com/blog/2009/02/copyright-act-amendments-sign-of.html
http://www.lessig.org/blog/2009/02/activism_down_under.html
http://digg.com/world_news/New_Zealand_Internet_blackout_protest
http://theg33kshow.posterous.com/untitled-24090
http://nathan.torkington.com/blog/2008/12/21/s92a-interim-repeat-infringer-termination-policy/
http://www.opdiner.com/2009/02/won-you-cleanse-my-soul-put-my-feet-on.html

Video/Audio

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WpbadsgW4Qg
http://cdn4.libsyn.com/wammo/Wammo_and_The_G33kshow.com_18_2_09.mp3?nvb=20090221050751&nva=20090222051751&t=036411b3aa508895d36f8
http://podcast.radionz.co.nz/aft/aft-20090218-1510-The_Virtual_World_with_Helen_and_Chelfyn_Baxter-048.mp3
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KY_ExvX6OPU
http://podcast.radionz.co.nz/aft/aft-20090218-1510-The_Virtual_World_with_Helen_and_Chelfyn_Baxter-048.mp3
http://www.3news.co.nz/News/Blackout-protest-over-controversial-copyright-law-reaches-Parliament/tabid/311/articleID/91933/cat/185/Default.aspx
http://twit.cachefly.net/odtv/0219-nzblackout.mp4
http://95bfm.co.nz/default,190399.sm

If your link is missing, please add it in the comments section.

Earlier this year I discovered a handy site called TagCrowd which can turn any text into tag clouds.

With the election campaigns formally underway here in New Zealand, here’s what the two main leaders have been talking about:

Helen Clark’s Opening Speech

created at TagCrowd.com

John Key’s Opening Speech

created at TagCrowd.com

Slingshot caching private pages!

August 13 2008
by Rachel

Tagged

,

Update: Our ISP Slingshot is caching private Gmail, Trademe, Facebook and Digg pages!!! I – and others on Slingshot – can see other people’s account info! We have had caching issues with them before, but never on private pages and this is RIDICULOUS! We rang Slingshot this afternoon and they admitted the problem!!!

Click to enlarge screenshots (blurred partially to protect privacy of other people’s accounts):

Three different Gmail accounts:

Three different Facebook accounts:

Trademe account:

Posted earlier:

This afternoon I tried logging into Gmail as I usually do to check my email and discovered that I was logged into someone else’s account! I got a real shock and tried a few more times, the same thing happened again.

I then tried using a different browser (IE7 instead of Firefox 2) and this time when I logged in I saw a different person’s Gmail account! In both cases I get a pop-up window appearing saying the following:

You have been signed out of this account.

This may have happened automatically because another user signed in from the same browser. To continue using this account, you will need to sign in again. This is done to protect your account and to ensure the privacy of your information.

What was interesting is that the email accounts all look to be those of other New Zealanders as there are TradeMe emails in both (New Zealand’s version of Ebay).

As of now I still can’t access my Gmail account and am seriously concerned about what is going on.

TVNZ ondemand sneak peek

March 4 2007
by Rachel

One of the most loyal early-adopters on our TV community website Throng is a 14 year old guy called “Tui” from Taranaki. Over the weekend, he discovered the “secret” URL for the new TVNZ digital delivery TV service called ondemand, set to launch later this month. While no media had been granted access to the site, Tui got in and wrote an incredible review of TVNZ’s ondemand and got the scoop on how it all works.

Needless to say, the lack of password or other such protection of the service was fixed this morning and the opportunity for anyone to check out the site was lost. Actually, he just messaged me before to say he’d found parts of it still weren’t protected.

He did a great job, so if you’re interested in finding out more about TVNZ’s ondemand, check out his review and possibly digg it.

Baa Camp

February 2 2007
by Rachel

I’m currently away at Baa Camp, the New Zealand Foo Camp and really enjoying the conversations, discussions and networking here. It’s great to be around other talented and inspiring Kiwis working in the online space, along with people like Lars Rasmussen (Google Maps) and Ben Goodger (Google/Firefox).

The event kicked off last night with a great discussion about the broadband problems (and, more importantly, possible solutions) led by Minister of Communications/Minister for Information Technology David Cunliffe (possibly a distant relative). I came away really impressed by the way he listened to the concerns and ideas the group had and how he has now put the issue of peering on his agenda.

Rod Drury is the only one I’ve discovered so far who is blogging about the event, but I’m sure there will be others here doing the same.

Blogging comes under fire

January 27 2007
by Rachel

It’s been an eventful week in New Zealand with the publishing of an anonymous blog on Blogger about CYFS, our government agency for children and family social services. The blog is highly critical of social workers, naming specific cases and people and has some rather personal comments about some of them. The media has focussed on this side of the story, while the heart-wrenching stories on it, under the hurt and angry tone, are somewhat disturbing. Of course, it’s merely one side of the story and I have no dealings or personal knowledge of CYFS.

The story became big, however, when the head of CYFS said he was doing everything in his power and getting lawyers to work 24/7 to take down the blog. Instead of the blog getting a handful of hits, like many other “watchdog” or “name and shame” sites, it skyrocketed to headline news with the country debating whether or not it should be taken down. Incidentally, a non-scientific TVNZ poll had approximately 80% of respondents not wanting it gone.

In today’s Sunday papers, media personality Kerre Woodham (radio and TV host, newspaper columnist) says she wants all sites which allow anonymous comments or content to be shut down! Rather ironic, given that radio and TV do allow anonymous callers or protect the identity of interviewees when the need arises.

In addition to Kerre Woodham calling for all anonymous blogs to be shut down, today’s Herald on Sunday’s editorial hits out at bloggers:

Operated the right way, blogsites offer and generate intelligent debate and insight. The likes of kiwiblog and publicaddress are worthwhile reads, maintained by a dedicated group of talented writers and thinks. But most bloggers – and we’re talking 95 per cent – are fly-by-night, gutless wonders who prefer to spit inarticulate venom under inarticulate pseudonyms. These bloggers, operating under their own misguided belief of self-freedom rarely research any offerings…

Making up statistics (“95%”) and creating wild claims about bloggers, just because there has been a controversial case in the media this week, is hardly fair. There are plenty of insightful, articulate, intelligent, informative and successful blogs apart from those two which are listed and seem to get almost all the blog press coverage here in New Zealand.

It’s sad that traditional media needs to bash the bloggers when there’s a rich world of blogging out there.

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