Software as Governance
General January 25th, 2008
Too bad I have class then.
Center for Global Studies: Prisms of Globalization Series
and
Engineering, Technology, & Culture Lecture Series
(Engineering and Technology Studies at Illinois)TITLE: “Software as Governance”
SPEAKER: Jay P. Kesan
UI College of LawDATE: Wednesday, January 30, 2008, 4:00-5:00 p.m.
LOCATION: 2405 Siebel Center
ABSTRACT:
Regulation through “code,” i.e., the hardware and software of
communication technologies, is growing in importance. Software
programmers and policymakers are addressing individual issues and
societal concerns, such as privacy, security, freedom of speech, and
intellectual property protection with code-based solutions. While
scholars have noted the role of code in regulating choices/preferences,
there is little analysis of the various features or characteristics of
code that have significance in regulating behavior. This talk examines
two or three universal governance characteristics that policymakers may
use to design code that comports with societal concerns. These
characteristics include defaults, standards, transparency, and the
like. For each characteristic, Kesan will discuss the salient
regulatory issues for manipulating code. He will also present proposals
for modifying some characteristics, such as how to set software
defaults. This analysis should aid policymakers seeking to manipulate
code to vindicate societal values and concerns.BIO:
Jay P. Kesan is Professor of Law, Director of the Program in
Intellectual Property & Technology Law, and Mildred Van Voorhis Jones
Faculty Scholar at the University of Illinois. His academic interests
are focused in the areas of intellectual property and law and
technology. He has written extensively in the areas of law and
regulation of cyberspace, intellectual property, and law and economics.
He received his J.D. summa cum laude from Georgetown University. Prior
to attending law school, Professor Kesan earned a Ph.D. in electrical
and computer engineering from the University of Texas at Austin, and he
worked as a research scientist at the IBM T.J. Watson Research Center in
New York.
Postal mail arrives before email
General January 25th, 2008
It’s ironic that the week I’m reading about 18th century postal system history and significance, I received my new Netflix discs the evening before the emails arrived telling me the ones I’d returned were received. Score one for the USPS!
I watched two movies over the 3-day weekend, and dropped them in the mail Tuesday morning. Normally, I would expect that sometime Wednesday I’d get an email Netflix had received them, and later on Wednesday, get the your-next-movies-are-on-their-way emails. Wednesday came and went with no notifications. When I checked my mailbox Thursday evening, I had two new discs. Later that night, closer to 9pm, I got the “For Thu:” emails. When I woke up Friday morning, I had three emails from Netflix (the two “We’ve received” messages and a “Has Weeds arrived?” survey.)
So the timing was off and the email was out of order. Weird, huh? I didn’t dig into the headers too much, but it looks like the delays were before the emails arrived at my provider (meaning it’s Netflix or the Internet’s fault.) If I had to pick between the disc delivery or email delivery being slow, I’m perfectly fine with the emails lagging. It’s just out of character for Netflix to be anything less than right on time.
Tags: Netflix
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