By Jason Cheung on January 29, 2019 | Tagged with Government Surveillance, In the News, IoT
The Japanese government amended a law [1] on January 25, 2019 that would allow internet-connected devices to be tested in a trial by fire, or in this case, trial by hacking. Specifically, they want to test the robustness of the default passwords and security set by various Internet-of-Things (IoT) devices, including smart doorbells, locks, lights, […]
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By Monique Rodrigues on January 24, 2019 | Tagged with Academic publishing, documentary, Elsevier, Jason Schmitt, movie review, open access, paywall, Review, scholarly publishing
Paywall: The Business of Scholarship Digital Tattoo Rating: 3/5 1 2 3 4 5 It doesn’t worth the time The trailer is enough An informative movie Would give it to a friend A must see! Summary As a student, I would expect that you have been stopped by a paywall at least once while trying […]
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By Monique Rodrigues on January 22, 2019 | Tagged with blockchain, consumer behaviour, digital diploma, Digital identity, Digital Identity Digest, education, facebook, geolocation, Geotagging, privacy, technology
Do the benefits of having a Facebook account outweigh the risks? In December, Facebook hit the headlines once again for a privacy scandal. This time, they revealed that a Photo API bug gave some third-party apps too much access to the photos of up to 6.8 million users. According to their statement, developers might have […]
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By Jason Cheung on January 15, 2019 | Tagged with google, In the News, misinformation
Have you used Google to answer a question, to find that the answer appears in a big box on the right hand side of the search results? This is Google’s Knowledge Graph technology, which stores the ‘answers’ to common questions within a structured database that organizes information on websites in a standardized way [1]. It […]
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