An amazing thing happened yesterday. I was on my way into Boston to get coffee with Jason Schultz -- from my house, I had ridden my bike the 2 minute ride to the Green Line T, taken it downtown, and had just gotten off at Hynes Convention Center. From there, it was to be about a 10 minute walk to Render, in the South End. No big deal -- a 10 minute walk is fine with me. But just then, I looked up and saw this out of the corner of my eye:

So I swiped my credit card, punched a few buttons, and one minute later I was riding off down Mass Ave. I found Render, and lo and behold, there was another bike share rack on that very corner. So I slid the bike into the rack and that was that. Total cost: $0 (the first 30 minutes is free in Boston's system). Total awesomeness: very high. There are so many great things about this -- the one I like the best, I think, is how spur-of-the-moment it was -- and completely seamless into my trip. Sure; saving eight minutes on a ten minute walk isn't life changing. But this really does have the potential of expanding your access to the city dramatically -- next time, I'll be willing to meet up at a place that would have been a 20 minute walk, but instead is a 5 minute bike ride. Like bike lanes, bike share is infrastructure that falls into the chicken-or-egg category -- you need to have it to get people to bike more, but it's hard to justify building it when there's not demonstrable demand. But yesterday's experience tells me that Boston has done a really good job building dense, convenient, usable bike infrastructure downtown, and I hope it continues. It's really dramatic how it changes the way you use the city.

One of the things I've learned over the past few months is that the fight for the future is being fought on many, many fronts -- and these fights take all shapes and sizes, and are constantly shifting and re-forming. Here are a few that are hot this week -- each of which will be really interesting to follow, to see how the surrounding activism and political maneuvering plays out: 1) Wikipedia Russia is blacked out today, to protest legislation that would increase government control over the Internet.
From the Guardian's coverage:
The bill, due to be considered by parliament on Wednesday, "will lead to the creation of a Russian analogue to China's Great Firewall" the website warned in a statement. The bill calls for the creation of a federal website "no" list and would have to be signed into law by Putin before coming into effect. Internet providers and site owners would be forced to shut down websites put on the list. The bill's backers, from Putin's United Russia party, argue that the amendments to the country's information legislation would target child pornography and sites that promote drug use and teen suicide. But critics, including Russian-language Wikipedia, warned that it could be used to boost government censorship over the internet. The Russian justice ministry already maintains a register of more than 1,000 sites that have been deemed "extremist" and ordered to be shut down. The bill appears to realise opposition activists' biggest fear – that a platform that has remained relatively free has become the target of Kremlin ire.
I have two kids -- a three year old, Theo, and Brieza, who is one. It's been amazing watching both of them grow. What's funny about little kids growing is how it seems to happen in spurts. Everything will be going along, normal day to day, and then all of a sudden you stop and say "holy cow -- I can't believe he can do ___", whatever that is. For instance, the time when Theo, then 18 months, said "too tight" as I strapped him into the car. At the time, that blew me away, as before then he has only been muttering simple half-words. This past week was another watershed moment in growing. It's been hot, and we've naturally spent as much time in the water as possible. We live near a lake, so we went swimming there on Saturday, some friends of ours are part of a pool club, so we spent the 4th of July there, and we spent most of yesterday at a birthday party where there was a pool to swim in. What's amazing is the way Theo -- all of a sudden, over the past few days, really -- loves being in the water more than anything. He can't get enough of it. At the pool party yesterday, he spent at least 2 hours bobbing up and down wrapped in an inflatable yellow duckie. On Wednesday, he went down the kiddie water slide probably 30 times. I can hear you saying -- "and...". The amazing thing is that before the past few days & weeks, Theo was terrified of water. Would scream bloody murder if we tried to bring him into a swimming pool. We were worried that he'd never learn to swim and might not ever even take a shower. Now, he is a water bug. Not afraid, can't get enough, charging ahead, rubber duckie in hand. I guess the point of all of this is to remember that it's possible to push our limits, learn new things, and conquer new territory. Of course, toddlers are specifically engineered for this purpose, so maybe they have it easy. But despite that, they're still great inspiration for the rest of us.
An amazing thing happened yesterday. I was on my way into Boston to get coffee with Jason Schultz -- from my house, I had ridden my bike the 2 minute ride to the Green Line T, taken it downtown, and had just gotten off at Hynes Convention Center. From there, it was to be about a 10 minute walk to Render, in the South End. No big deal -- a 10 minute walk is fine with me. But just then, I looked up and saw this out of the corner of my eye:

So I swiped my credit card, punched a few buttons, and one minute later I was riding off down Mass Ave. I found Render, and lo and behold, there was another bike share rack on that very corner. So I slid the bike into the rack and that was that. Total cost: $0 (the first 30 minutes is free in Boston's system). Total awesomeness: very high. There are so many great things about this -- the one I like the best, I think, is how spur-of-the-moment it was -- and completely seamless into my trip. Sure; saving eight minutes on a ten minute walk isn't life changing. But this really does have the potential of expanding your access to the city dramatically -- next time, I'll be willing to meet up at a place that would have been a 20 minute walk, but instead is a 5 minute bike ride. Like bike lanes, bike share is infrastructure that falls into the chicken-or-egg category -- you need to have it to get people to bike more, but it's hard to justify building it when there's not demonstrable demand. But yesterday's experience tells me that Boston has done a really good job building dense, convenient, usable bike infrastructure downtown, and I hope it continues. It's really dramatic how it changes the way you use the city.

One of the things I've learned over the past few months is that the fight for the future is being fought on many, many fronts -- and these fights take all shapes and sizes, and are constantly shifting and re-forming. Here are a few that are hot this week -- each of which will be really interesting to follow, to see how the surrounding activism and political maneuvering plays out: 1) Wikipedia Russia is blacked out today, to protest legislation that would increase government control over the Internet.
From the Guardian's coverage:
The bill, due to be considered by parliament on Wednesday, "will lead to the creation of a Russian analogue to China's Great Firewall" the website warned in a statement. The bill calls for the creation of a federal website "no" list and would have to be signed into law by Putin before coming into effect. Internet providers and site owners would be forced to shut down websites put on the list. The bill's backers, from Putin's United Russia party, argue that the amendments to the country's information legislation would target child pornography and sites that promote drug use and teen suicide. But critics, including Russian-language Wikipedia, warned that it could be used to boost government censorship over the internet. The Russian justice ministry already maintains a register of more than 1,000 sites that have been deemed "extremist" and ordered to be shut down. The bill appears to realise opposition activists' biggest fear – that a platform that has remained relatively free has become the target of Kremlin ire.
I have two kids -- a three year old, Theo, and Brieza, who is one. It's been amazing watching both of them grow. What's funny about little kids growing is how it seems to happen in spurts. Everything will be going along, normal day to day, and then all of a sudden you stop and say "holy cow -- I can't believe he can do ___", whatever that is. For instance, the time when Theo, then 18 months, said "too tight" as I strapped him into the car. At the time, that blew me away, as before then he has only been muttering simple half-words. This past week was another watershed moment in growing. It's been hot, and we've naturally spent as much time in the water as possible. We live near a lake, so we went swimming there on Saturday, some friends of ours are part of a pool club, so we spent the 4th of July there, and we spent most of yesterday at a birthday party where there was a pool to swim in. What's amazing is the way Theo -- all of a sudden, over the past few days, really -- loves being in the water more than anything. He can't get enough of it. At the pool party yesterday, he spent at least 2 hours bobbing up and down wrapped in an inflatable yellow duckie. On Wednesday, he went down the kiddie water slide probably 30 times. I can hear you saying -- "and...". The amazing thing is that before the past few days & weeks, Theo was terrified of water. Would scream bloody murder if we tried to bring him into a swimming pool. We were worried that he'd never learn to swim and might not ever even take a shower. Now, he is a water bug. Not afraid, can't get enough, charging ahead, rubber duckie in hand. I guess the point of all of this is to remember that it's possible to push our limits, learn new things, and conquer new territory. Of course, toddlers are specifically engineered for this purpose, so maybe they have it easy. But despite that, they're still great inspiration for the rest of us.
Without question, the situation in Russia is absolutely about censorship, and is pivotal from a human rights perspective.
With Russia's main state television channels under the control of the government, and its few free newspapers unable to be distributed across a vast country with poor infrastructure, the internet has become a growing source of free information. Until now, the Kremlin has limited its attempt to control the internet to paying commenters affiliated with youth group Nashi to leave pro-government comments on critical websites, according to thousands of emails leaked by the Russian arm of Anonymous earlier this year. Blogs and social networks have been key to organising the mass street protests that have swept Moscow since Putin announced he was returning to the presidency late last year.
Will a SOPA-style blackout in Russia (though much smaller) be effective? 2) The Washington DC City Council has introduced an "Uber Amendment" that would force Uber out of competition with city taxis through pricing requirements.

While this is clearly in a whole different ballpark than the Russia situation, it's similarly about using policy to clamp down on new, networked, web-enabled ways of doing things. It's also another case study in web activism -- TechCrunch's coverage has the specifics, and also includes a series of opportunities for readers to speak up to DC commissioners. Apparently Uber is launching its own campaign, which I'll be looking to follow. 3) SOPA in bits and pieces, act one.
As is to be expected, we're starting to see the zombie children of SOPA / PIPA appear in bite sized pieces. At bat this week, Lamar Smith is drafting legislation to expand the role of "IP Attaches" to the US government. Mike Masnick at Techdirt covers the the latest act here: From the Techdirt coverage:
The specifics of the bill appear to go further than the version in SOPA. It is clear that the bill itself is framed from the maximalist perspective. There is nothing about the rights of the public, or of other countries to design their own IP regimes. It notes that the role of the attaches is: to advance the intellectual property rights of United States persons and their licensees; The bill also "elevates" the IP attaches out of the US Patent and Trademark Office, and sets them up as their own agency, including a new role: the Assistant Secretary of Commerce for Intellectual Property. Yes, we'll get another IP Czar, this time focused in the Commerce Department. When even the USTR is recognizing the importance of limitations and exceptions to copyright, to have Congress push a bill that basically ignores limitations and exceptions and only looks to expand Hollywood's special thugs within the diplomatic corp. seems like a huge problem.
Of course, there are many, many, many more - small and large, local, national and international. To me, all of this goes to show that while the Internet demonstrated amazing power with SOPA/PIPA, it is a different kind of challenge when things are wide ranging, small, and diffuse.
Without question, the situation in Russia is absolutely about censorship, and is pivotal from a human rights perspective.
With Russia's main state television channels under the control of the government, and its few free newspapers unable to be distributed across a vast country with poor infrastructure, the internet has become a growing source of free information. Until now, the Kremlin has limited its attempt to control the internet to paying commenters affiliated with youth group Nashi to leave pro-government comments on critical websites, according to thousands of emails leaked by the Russian arm of Anonymous earlier this year. Blogs and social networks have been key to organising the mass street protests that have swept Moscow since Putin announced he was returning to the presidency late last year.
Will a SOPA-style blackout in Russia (though much smaller) be effective? 2) The Washington DC City Council has introduced an "Uber Amendment" that would force Uber out of competition with city taxis through pricing requirements.

While this is clearly in a whole different ballpark than the Russia situation, it's similarly about using policy to clamp down on new, networked, web-enabled ways of doing things. It's also another case study in web activism -- TechCrunch's coverage has the specifics, and also includes a series of opportunities for readers to speak up to DC commissioners. Apparently Uber is launching its own campaign, which I'll be looking to follow. 3) SOPA in bits and pieces, act one.
As is to be expected, we're starting to see the zombie children of SOPA / PIPA appear in bite sized pieces. At bat this week, Lamar Smith is drafting legislation to expand the role of "IP Attaches" to the US government. Mike Masnick at Techdirt covers the the latest act here: From the Techdirt coverage:
The specifics of the bill appear to go further than the version in SOPA. It is clear that the bill itself is framed from the maximalist perspective. There is nothing about the rights of the public, or of other countries to design their own IP regimes. It notes that the role of the attaches is: to advance the intellectual property rights of United States persons and their licensees; The bill also "elevates" the IP attaches out of the US Patent and Trademark Office, and sets them up as their own agency, including a new role: the Assistant Secretary of Commerce for Intellectual Property. Yes, we'll get another IP Czar, this time focused in the Commerce Department. When even the USTR is recognizing the importance of limitations and exceptions to copyright, to have Congress push a bill that basically ignores limitations and exceptions and only looks to expand Hollywood's special thugs within the diplomatic corp. seems like a huge problem.
Of course, there are many, many, many more - small and large, local, national and international. To me, all of this goes to show that while the Internet demonstrated amazing power with SOPA/PIPA, it is a different kind of challenge when things are wide ranging, small, and diffuse.
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