It should be no surprise that libraries and bookstores—the places where you can go pick up a copy of 1984 or Darkness at Noon—are privacy hipsters. They’ve been fighting overbroad government surveillance since before it was cool.
Category Archives: Did you Know?
10,000 zines and counting: a library’s quest to save the history of fandomÂ
The University of Iowa’s fanzine collection is going digital before it falls apart.
Source: 10,000 zines and counting: a library’s quest to save the history of fandom | The Verge
How The Archive Corps Is Saving Documents Before They Disappear
A new volunteer effort to save documents and other artifacts before they disappear…
Source: How The Archive Corps Is Saving Documents Before They Disappear – The Atlantic
The Covert World of People Trying to Edit Wikipedia—for Pay
Can the site’s dwindling ranks of volunteer editors protect its articles from the influence of money?
Source: The Covert World of People Trying to Edit Wikipedia—for Pay
When Maps Lie
A map is not just a picture—it’s also the data behind the map, the methodology used to collect and parse that data, the people doing that work, the choices made in terms of visualization and the software used to make them. A map is also a representation of the world, which in some ways must always be a little inaccurate—most maps, after all, show the roughly spherical world on a flat surface. Certain things are always left off or highlighted while others are altered, as no map can show everything at once. All of those choices and biases, conscious or not, can have important effects on the map itself. We may be looking at something inaccurate, misleading, or incorrect without realizing it.
Source: When Maps Lie