Just a guy in Vermont trying to connect all the dots...
Author's posts
Mar 16
Watch Live – Thursday, March 17 – Sally Wentworth Testifying at US Congressional Hearing on Privatizing IANA
On Thursday, March 17, 2016, our VP of Global Policy Development, Sally Shipman Wentworth, will be testifying before the U.S. Congress on the topic of "Privatizing the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority" (IANA) starting at 10:15am US EDT (UTC-4). You can learn about the hearing at:
and watch live at:
Sally's written testimony is available in advance from our site at:
Mar 16
Instagram Embraces The Algorithm – Switches From Showing Newest First
Some big news in the social media world this morning was that Instagram is embracing the algorithm. Instead of seeing posts from Instagram accounts you follow in "reverse chronological order" (newest updates first) you now will see them in an order determined by Instagram. As the company wrote in a blog post today (my emphasis added):
You may be surprised to learn that people miss on average 70 percent of their feeds. As Instagram has grown, it’s become harder to keep up with all the photos and videos people share. This means you often don’t see the posts you might care about the most.To improve your experience, your feed will soon be ordered to show the moments we believe you will care about the most.
The order of photos and videos in your feed will be based on the likelihood you’ll be interested in the content, your relationship with the person posting and the timeliness of the post. As we begin, we’re focusing on optimizing the order — all the posts will still be there, just in a different order.
Note that important part:
To improve your experience, your feed will soon be ordered to show the moments we believe you will care about the most.
Your feed will "show the moments WE believe".
Instagram decides.
You have no say in the matter.
Now, of course, Instagram's parent Facebook has been doing this for years now. Twitter, too, has recently embraced the algorithm saying in February that users would start seeing "the Tweets you’re most likely to care about" at the top of your timeline..
Algorithms are not necessarily bad.
I wrote about this topic over on Ello a month ago in a post "Sometimes Algorithms Help Us" [1].
The reality is that algorithms can help us sort through the deluge of content that is exploding on all the social services. As I wrote in that Ello post referencing first blogging and then Twitter:
The deluge of content became too hard for one person to handle
Algorithms can help us sort through the deluge and try to bring to the surface the most interesting and useful items.
The big question is - who is in control of the algorithm?
Is it ME, the user?
Or is it the service/platform?
And in that case how will they potentially manipulate the algorithm toward their own ends?
The problem is that there is a great potential for abuse on the part of the service/platform. As I noted in my recent post about Facebook Reactions, Facebook manipulated users newsfeeds back in 2012 as part of an experiment about moods.
Beyond that, I know many folks, myself included, who just assume that Facebook and now Twitter (and now Instagram) will use the algorithm to manipulate our feeds to show us more advertising and sponsored posts.
They have to, really, in order to pay their investors given that advertising is really their only revenue source.
And this is the problem - the algorithm is a "black box". We, the users, have no idea what is inside of it or how it works.
The corporation is entirely in control.
They are the gatekeeper of the content we see.
Ideally we would have some degree of transparency and control. We would at least know how the algorithm is affecting what we see. But we don't for most of these services.
In their blog post today, the folks at Instagram write:
We’re going to take time to get this right and listen to your feedback along the way. You’ll see this new experience in the coming months.
I hope they do listen - and I hope they do help us at least understand how the algorithm will shape what we see.
Perhaps they'll take some inspiration from Facebook that still provides (at least for the moment) the option to change to see the most recent updates:
Although I thought I saw somewhere some stat that only a very few people actually use that option.
Meanwhile, all we can do is embrace the algorithm ourselves... we have no control over the Instagram platform. That is entirely in the hands of the corporation (Facebook) behind it. If we are to continue using it, we are subject to their whims and desires.
Welcome to our brave new world where the corporations are the gatekeepers of what we see.
And, in truth, the algorithm just may help us find more interesting and relevant images within the deluge of Instagram photos.
What do you think? Will embracing the algorithm help make Instagram more interesting and useful? Or do you see this as a cynical attempt to merely get more advertising visible to us?
P.S. Many more stories about this change are appearing on Techmeme.
[1] Note to self: need to pull that post out of Ello's walls and publish it here on the open web.
Mar 08
DNSSEC Workshop Streaming Live from ICANN 55 in Marrakech on Wednesday, March 9, 2016 (Featured Blog)
Mar 08
TDYR 296 – Can You #ShineTheLight On Great Women Using The Internet? #IWD2016
Mar 06
WATCH LIVE Today – DNSSEC For Everybody: A Beginner’s Guide, from ICANN 55
Want to learn about DNSSEC and how it helps add a layer of trust to DNS? Puzzled by how this all works? If so, please join us today from 16:45 to 18:15 UTC for “DNSSEC for Everybody: A Beginner’s Guide” streaming live out of Marrakech, Morocco, in both audio and video on links found off of this page:
https://meetings.icann.org/en/marrakech55/schedule/sun-dnssec-everybody
(The video and slides are provided via the “Virtual Meeting Room Stream Live” link.)
The session consists of an introduction and then a skit where a group of us act out DNS operations – and then add DNSSEC into the picture.
Yes… you heard that right… a bunch of engineers acting out a skit about DNS!
Hey… you might as well have a bit of fun with it, eh? And our history has told us that this skit has helped people tremendously in understanding DNS and DNSSEC. We also have some other technical information and usually spend about half the session answering questions from participants.
Please do join us!
This tutorial today is part of a larger set of DNSSEC activities planned for this week. As the session abstract says:
DNSSEC continues to be deployed around the world at an ever accelerating pace. From the Root, to both Generic Top Level Domains (gTLDs) and Country Code Top Level Domains (ccTLDs), the push is on to deploy DNSSEC to every corner of the internet. Businesses and ISPs are building their deployment plans too and interesting opportunities are opening up for all as the rollout continues.
Worried that you’re getting left behind? Don’t really understand DNSSEC? Then why not come along to the second ‘DNSSEC for Beginners’ session where we hope to demystify DNSSEC and show how you can easily and quickly deploy DNSSEC into your business. Come and find out how it all works, what tools you can use to help and meet the community that can help you plan and implement DNSSEC.
The session is aimed at everyone, so no technical knowledge is required. Come and find out what it’s all about…!
If you can’t view it live the session will be recorded for later viewing. And if you want to get started today with DNSSEC, please see our Start Here page to begin!
Mar 04
TDYR 295 – On The Road To Marrakech
Mar 03
Heading to Marrakech for ICANN 55 and Africa DNS Forum 2016
At about noon today I'll head out of Keene, NH, towards Boston's Logan airport to start what will be about 23 hours of travel bringing me to Marrakech, Morocco. I land tomorrow (Friday, 4 March) around 4:00pm local time and then after getting settled in that evening will dive directly into the Africa DNS Forum at 8:30am Saturday morning.
It's going to be a crazy week!
I wrote about all the activities I'll be part of in this post:
I will be giving five different presentations during the week, all of which will be live streamed and recorded. Naturally I'll be participating in a good number of other sessions.
These are all part of a larger set of meetings that we at the Internet Society will be engaged in during the week at both ICANN 55 and the Africa DNS Forum. There are some very large "Internet governance" issues that will be at play this week, as my colleague Konstantinos Komaitis wrote about:
Tuesday, March 8th, is also International Women’s Day, and we’ll be publishing content around the excellent work of women in the world of technology.
We have a significant amount of communication being planned around all of these different events, sessions and announcements.
Being part of the Internet Society Communications team, I will be heavily involved in creating a good bit of our content and distributing it out over our social channels. All of that will be visible publicly here:
- Internet Society blog posts related to ICANN 55 on the main ISOC blog and on the Deploy360 blog.
- Twitter: @InternetSociety, @ISOCPolicy and @Deploy360
- Facebook: Internet Society Page
- Google+: Internet Society Page
and of course on my own personal social network channels.
It’s going to be a busy time. One question people have asked me is:
Will you get to see anything of Marrakech?
The answer, sadly, is... probably NOT.
As typically happens at events like this, I'm going to land at the airport in Marrakech and be transported by a driver to a "hotel compound" outside of Marrakech. The Palmeraie Conference Center is a big place with multiple hotels and all sorts of restaurants... a golf course, pools, etc.
The sad reality is that I will probably spend my entire week there within the compound in the conference rooms until I leave for my flight home on the afternoon of Thursday, March 10. I understand there is some kind of "gala" social event.. but again it may be in the same compound.
We'll see... some of the photos online seem amazing... hopefully I'll get a chance somewhere in there.
I'm excited about the events that will be happening at the meetings at Marrakech and looking forward to meeting many of the people there.
If you are going to be there in Marrakech for either ICANN 55 or the Africa DNS Forum, please do say hello!
And if you are not, but are interested in what is going on at the events, please see our event pages to find the live streams to participate remotely:
So here I go... on the road to Marrakech....
Image credit: Sofiane BELGHALI on Flickr CC BY NC
Mar 02
Next Monthly DNSSEC Coordination Call On March 24, 2016
For those who participate in the monthly “DNSSEC Coordination” calls where we discuss activities around accelerating the deployment of DNSSEC, there will NOT be a call tomorrow, March 3, as there would normally be (the first Thursday of the month).
On our last call in February we noted that:
- on March 3rd, many of us will be in transit to Marrakech for ICANN 55; and
- on April 7th, many of us will be in Buenos Aires for IETF 95.
We therefore decided to:
- Cancel the monthly call on March 3.
- Cancel the monthly call on April 7.
- Hold instead a call on Thursday, March 24, at the usual time of 11:00 US Eastern which will be 15:00 UTC.
Details for the conference call will be sent out as we get closer to March 24.
Note: if you would like to participate in these monthly calls, please join the dnssec-coord mailing list. All who want to accelerate the deployment of DNSSEC and DANE are welcome to join.
Mar 02