Canada - ReadWriteWeb http://www.readwriteweb.com/feeds/tag/Canada en Copyright 2009 Richard MacManus readwriteweb@gmail.com Sun, 22 Nov 2009 12:00:55 -0800 http://www.sixapart.com/movabletype/?v=4.23-en http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/tech/rss Facebook to Address Privacy Concerns in Canada facebook_iphone_aug09.jpgA month ago, Canada's privacy commissioner Jennifer Stoddard announced that Facebook did not satisfy Canadian privacy law on several counts. After an investigation prompted by the Canadian Internet Policy and Public Interest Clinic (CIPPIC), Stoddard identified several areas where the company could better address privacy gaps for 12 million Canadian users (roughly 85% of Canadian netizens). The complaint raised concerns about "default privacy settings, collection and use of users' personal information for advertising purposes, disclosure of users' personal information to third-party application developers, and collection and use of non-users' personal information." The company was given 30 days to comply with recommendations and if Stoddard is not satisfied with Facebook's response she can go to the Federal Courts for enforcement. Today is Facebook's deadline.

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]]> facebook_canada_aug09a.jpgAccording to CTV Toronto, Stoddard's recommendations include "clarifying Facebook's privacy policies, making it easier for users to remove their profiles and curbing the amount of personal information the site collects from its members." Specifically, the service is being asked to disclose the amount of personal information made available to 3rd party app developers as well as the process of information disposal.

Acting Director of the Canadian Internet Policy and Public Interest Clinic David Fewer commented on the area of 3rd party application developers. Said Fewer, "We had a number of issues with this and so did the Privacy Commissioner. She was concerned about technological safeguards or their absence. She was concerned about Facebook taking steps to ensure that the 3rd party application developer only take the information they required. And we also had concerns about the clarity or degree to which the 3rd party application developer was accurately describing the personal information that they needed to provide the application."

Facebook is expected to submit a proposal and timeline to Stoddard within the day. A full list of the CIPPIC's 24 complaints and the Privacy Commissioner's report is available here.

On a related note, the Associated Press just published an article regarding a California-based Facebook privacy lawsuit. It appears the company will have to address concerns on a number of fronts.

Photo Credit: Makaristos

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http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/facebook_to_address_privacy_concerns_in_canada.php http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/facebook_to_address_privacy_concerns_in_canada.php Facebook Mon, 17 Aug 2009 17:40:33 -0800 Dana Oshiro
Canada Tells Facebook to Improve Its Privacy Practices facebook_logo_feb09.pngIf Facebook wants to comply with Canadian privacy laws, the company will have to make some changes to how it collects and retains information about its 12 million Canadian users. Privacy Commissioner Jennifer Stoddart singled out a number of issues her office found with Facebook's practices. These include the fact that the company's privacy policies are often incomplete and confusing, and that third-party applications can access far more information about a user than would be necessary for the application to work well. The complaint that triggered this investigation was filed by the Canadian Internet Policy and Public Interest Clinic (CIPPIC).

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Among other things, the commissioner, who reports to Parliament and can force companies to make changes to their privacy practices, asked Facebook to change the default privacy settings of photo albums to "Your Networks and Friends" instead of "Everybody," and to make sure that user profiles are inaccessible to search engines by default. Facebook is working on implementing these changes and with the per-object privacy settings that were recently introduced, most of these issues had been resolved already anyway.

Third-Party Apps

The area the commissioner focused on most, though, was third-party application and the amount of private information developers can access through these, and as of now, Facebook has not agreed to make any of the recommended changes. The commissioner recommends that Facebook should limit developers' access to only those pieces of information that are necessary to run an application, and that the company should also implement measures to prohibit the disclosure of personal information of users who aren't actually using an application themselves.

Deleting Accounts Will Remain Difficult

As for the retention of user information, Facebook apparently does not agree with the commission's recommendation to add information about account deletion to its privacy policy. For the time being, actually deleting a Facebook account will remain difficult. Under Canadian law, Facebook would have to have "appropriate purposes" to keep this information.

Facebook was also asked to add a section to its privacy policy about what happens to the accounts of deceased users (they are currently kept active), but here, too, Facebook refuses to make any changes because it considers "them unnecessary under the law."

Some Good News for Facebook

facebook_privacy_settings_jul09.pngIt's important to note that the original complaint that set off this investigation also alleged that Facebook should not ask users for their date of birth, name, and email address when registering for a Facebook account. Stoddard, however, argues that this is a reasonable request, even if Facebook didn't make the reasons for why it asks for this information very clear.

You can find more details about all the different allegations and the commissioner's recommendations, as well as Facebook's reaction, in the full report, as well as in this press release.

Overall, most of these recommendations seem quite reasonable, though especially with regards to third-party applications, it's a bit puzzling why Facebook doesn't want to do more to ensure its users' privacy.

As Facebook expands, its privacy settings have gotten more and more complicated, to the point where most users probably are just baffled by the number of choices and decide to just leave everything in the default setting.

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http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/canada_tells_facebook_to_improve_its_privacy_practices.php http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/canada_tells_facebook_to_improve_its_privacy_practices.php Facebook Thu, 16 Jul 2009 08:21:13 -0800 Frederic Lardinois
Study says 85% Online Canucks have Facebook Profiles facebook_canada_jun09.jpg According to research group Ipsos Reid's "Social Networking: 2009" poll, Canadians are flocking to social networking sites. In the last 18 months, the percentage of Canucks with a social networking profile has increased from 39% to 56%. This rapid rise in social networking users has Canadian marketers scratching their heads as to how they can best brand in the space. With more than three quarters of those online owning a Facebook profile, it's not surprising that the blue beast is the main topic of discussion in relation to marketing groups. Says report writer Mark Laver, "Online social networks tend to be extremely personal and this thus creates a dilemma for marketers and businesses - how to communicate in a personalized setting without upsetting the target audience."

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]]> Nevertheless, while traditional marketers are often met with resistance within the site, political advocates working within Facebook have had resounding success in Canada.

Perhaps most successful is University of Ottawa professor, Michael Geist's, outspoken stance against the introduction of the Canadian DMCA (Digital Millennium Copyright Act). A little over a year ago, Geist launched his Fair Copyright for Canada Facebook Group in the hopes of educating the public about a bill he saw as a "sell out to American pressure". Geist believed that Bill C-60 would have effectively duplicated American copyright legislation and created an unfair imbalance between copyright holders and general consumers. Thousands of Canadians agreed and the Fair Copyright Facebook group gained widespread popularity.

On the day the DMCA was to be voted upon, the Facebook group had more than 25,000 members and Federal Industry Minister Jim Prentice dissolved the legislation in favor of further analysis. While there was no admittance from the Minister that online resistance was the reason, Industry opposition Charlie Angus exclaimed, "They tabled the bill this morning, now 3 hours later he tells me they've got cold feet? Did they just discover Facebook this morning?"facebook_canada_jun09a.jpg

Whether Canadians like it or not, Facebook has changed the landscape of Canadian politics. Geist's Fair Copyright for Canada group currently has more than 89,000 members, and he was named the Electronic Frontier Foundation's Pioneer of 2008. Meanwhile, the Conservative government has promised to reintroduce the DMCA, but no date has been set in legislature. For more on the Geist and the Facebook group, check out the coverage on CBC's The Hour.

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http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/study_says_85_online_canucks_have_facebook_profile.php http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/study_says_85_online_canucks_have_facebook_profile.php Facebook Fri, 19 Jun 2009 13:00:00 -0800 Dana Oshiro
A Better Street View Comes to Canada Parts of Canada finally have their own Street View maps, but surprisingly, they didn't come from Google. Instead, the maps were created in a joint effort between British Columbia-based Canpages.ca and San Francisco-based MapJack, two companies that have teamed up to provide the service which Google has yet to bring to Canada. These new Street View maps also have features that the search engine giant doesn't offer, including a fullscreen mode and views of pedestrian pathways where cars can't travel.

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Canpages.ca, the Canadian business directory listing service similar to the Yellow Pages in the U.S., is home to the new mapping service where it's accessed by performing a search on their homepage. After your search results appear, they are accompanied by a traditional map of the business location. At the top of the map, you'll see an option to select "Street View" from the menu bar when it's available. You can also click on any of the blue highlighted streets to delve directly into Street View at that particular spot. As with Google's Street View, you can click on arrows to move forward and backward and there's even a small cartoon figure that appears on the map for reference.

Although the CanPages' Street View maps offer many similarities to Google's, what's most notable about this launch are the many differences between the two services. For example, all of the CanPages maps have been created using high resolution photography. Google, on the other hand, has only used high-res imagery in a select handful of international cities including San Francisco, Paris, and Seattle.

CanPages's maps also offer a fullscreen view which you can use to fully immerse yourself into the city scene. However, don't try to tilt the camera up to the sky - that's one feature the CanPages maps don't have - they're limited when it comes to panning vertically.

Another feature of the new Street View maps is a configuration menu which allows you to customize settings like image sharpness, brightness, quality, and projection or the curved effect. You can also choose to turn on or off additional visual aids, the blue navigation dots, or the grid.

Perhaps the nicest feature, though, is the pedestrian maps. Captured by a team of photographers who traveled on foot with shoulder-mounted cameras, the CanPages maps let you explore parts of cities where cars can't go. For now, this allows you to travel down pedestrian walkways, but the company hopes to use their unique camera set up in the future to film hotel lobbies, retail stores, shopping malls, and parks.

CanPages also made privacy a priority from the start. When Google launched their service, faces and license plates were plainly visible. Only recently have they responded to people's concerns and began to blur these images. On the CanPages maps, however, not only are these items blurred, there's also a link at the bottom-right corner of the map that lets anyone submit concerns about that particular image.

A Better Street View

Considering that Google's Street View technology has still not made its way to Canada, the CanPages maps provide a good alternative - actually, given the features offered, we could even say they provide a better one. For now, CanPages Street View maps encompass the cities of Vancouver, Whistler, and Squamish (all in British Columbia). The company plans to expand to Toronto and Montreal next, followed then by as much of Canada as possible.

Image credits: krisabel.ctv.ca

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http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/a_better_street_view_comes_to_canada.php http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/a_better_street_view_comes_to_canada.php Products Wed, 18 Mar 2009 05:09:45 -0800 Sarah Perez
How to Enjoy Craigslist's New Blog, Born Without an RSS Feed When they say Craigslist is simple, it really is remarkably simple. The company finally launched an official blog and it's every bit as functionally pared down as the rest of the site. Maybe even more so - there's no way to subscribe. What's a blog without subscription? A blog that gets read a lot less than it would be otherwise!

That's a real shame because there's already some very interesting looking content there. This is a solvable problem, though.

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]]> Michael Arrington, who saw the blog first, writes "The blog is lacking a RSS feed and has only rudimentary comments, but it is a true blog nonetheless." Why didn't they just through up a WordPress install? Nobody knows. While the bloggyness of it all seems debatable, we've got your RSS feeds right here.

Half for fun and half for work, we created an RSS feed for the new Craigslist blog that you can subscribe to below. That blog should be interesting, but if it ends up half as interesting as the Best of Craigslist section of the site - then look out Technorati 100.

The New Craigslist Blog

Full feed URL: http://feeds.feedburner.com/craigslistblog2

The body of the posts won't be delivered in this feed, as we struggled to scrape a feed at all using Feed43. When I say we, in this case, I mean my dashingly handsome and brilliant co-blogger Josh Catone.

Unfortunately, you can't take for granted that anything you build on top of Craigslist is going to survive, even if it solves a problem over there. The beautiful multi-city search tool Crgslst got shut down days after we wrote about it here. Luckily the wonderful Image preview extension for Firefox still works - check that one out.

The Best of Craigslist

The feed URL below will deliver the items on the Best of Craigslist page - warning lots of naughty words - very funny stuff. Even the Best of Craigslist's own native RSS feed is broken, so we scraped that too. Anybody who said you couldn't build a huge company online without giving RSS its due was obviously wrong.

Feed URL: http://feeds.feedburner.com/BestofCraigslist2

As was pointed out by one of our fantastic commenters, it turns out there is a full feed available for Best of Craigslist at feed://www.craigslist.org/about/best/all/index.rss. Though for some reason the page itself doesn't have the URL right.

We hope you enjoy these feeds. Isn't RSS a wonderful thing? We sure think so here at RWW.

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http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/craigslist_blog_rss_feed.php http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/craigslist_blog_rss_feed.php Blogging Thu, 03 Apr 2008 10:30:30 -0800 Marshall Kirkpatrick
MySpace Pushing New Apps Hard After watching from the sidelines for almost a year while rival Facebook had praise heaped upon it by the press for the success of their application platform, it is no wonder that MySpace would be pushing its recently released developer platform hard. It has been just about 3 weeks since the first few apps were unleashed on the MySpace public, and over the past two days MySpace had made a pair of announcements that demonstrate just how much the company is committed to seeing their platform succeed.

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First, MySpace is taking the unorthodox move of giving applications some access to their PR department. MySpace announced on Monday that it is looking for a few good apps with whom to put out joint press releases. This is undoubtedly a good move for MySpace PR because it allows them to create a more continuous buzz about the platform. But like the platform itself, sharing the stage with app developers is a surprising shift from old policies for the News Corporation-owned social network.

This is, after all, the same News Corp. whose President and COO Peter Chernin said in 2006, by way of introducing plans for MySpace to compete with many of the companies that had helped it grow, "If you look at virtually any Web 2.0 application, whether its YouTube, whether it’s Flicker, whether it’s Photobucket or any of the next-generation Web applications, almost all of them are really driven off the back of MySpace."

It's the same Fox Interactive Media (the arm of News Corp. that controls MySpace) whose Chief Revenue Officer Michael Barrett said last year, "We probably should have stopped YouTube. YouTube wouldn’t exist if it wasn’t for MySpace. We’ve created companies on our back."

And it's the same MySpace that famously blocked widgets (such as YouTube and Photobucket -- the latter of whom it eventually bought) that competed with products of its own.

But a lot has changed in the past year. Not only has MySpace embraced the idea of an application ecosystem and launched a developer platform, but they also announced plans in January to create a startup incubator. Is it too little, too late, though? Will MySpace's platform be as successful as Facebook's has been?

Apps in the News Feed ... Er, Friend Subscriptions

Yesterday, MySpace also announced that it would begin pushing notifications of app installations to its Friend Subscriptions -- their equivalent of the Facebook News Feed.

Interestingly, while MySpace is just rolling out this feature, Facebook has recently begun to impose restrictions on how applications interact with the News Feed in an effort to combat information overload and growing noise. It will be interesting to see if MySpace repeats the same mistakes Facebook has made, or learns from them and implements tighter restrictions on it Friend Subscriptions from the start.

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http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/myspace_pushing_new_apps_hard.php http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/myspace_pushing_new_apps_hard.php Products Thu, 03 Apr 2008 10:25:53 -0800 Josh Catone
AideRSS Raises Money To Attack Information Overload The Canadian company AideRSS produces one of my favorite tools on the market right now. Their RSS feed filtering service is very useful in all kinds of circumstances. You can enter any RSS feed and it will score each item in the feed by number of comments it received, number of times it's been tagged in Del.icio.us, Diggs and inbound links it's received. You can then get a new feed of just the most popular items from your original feed.

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The company announced today that it's closed a round of funding from Waterloo, Ontario early stage investors Tech Capital Partners and a collection of Canadian Angel investors.

The basic functionality of AideRSS is remarkably simple but powerfully useful. It's the kind of thing everyone I talk to about it says "wow, that's cool and useful looking." Getting a little money in the bank should help AideRSS make its product more robust as well. To be honest, I have experienced frustrating performance issues since I discovered this service - but its functionality has been so compelling and unique that I find myself coming back to it regularly anyway.

ReadWriteWeb first covered AideRSS prelaunch in July, when Josh Catone gave it an in-depth review.

Information Overload

The company is positioning themselves as a solution to the growing problem of information overload. That's a big statement and implementation of that idea can take many forms.

I used AideRSS, for example, in building the ReadWriteWeb Toolkit for 2008. In that post I made available a collection of the top RSS feeds in each of five fields I believe are going to be hot in 2008 (Data Portability, Semantic Web, Mobile, etc). Each of those topics ended up having quite a lot of feeds in them and for the sake of efficiency there was no better way to offer our readers a feed of just the most popular items in these top feeds than to use AideRSS. I spliced each topic's feeds into one feed, ran than feed through AideRSS and then ran the AideRSS feed through FeedBurner - but you don't have to do anything nearly so complicated to use this very useful service. You can do a lot of very cool things with AideRSS, though. Try putting in del.icio.us feeds and search feeds, for example.

A simpler example is this. You might feel overwhelmed with the number of posts that ReadWriteWeb makes each day and want a feed of just the most popular items. You can visit or subscribe to this URL to do that: http://www.aiderss.com/best/readwriteweb.com

Limitations of AideRSS

There's lots of different ways to try and determine what the best items in feed are. AideRSS uses explicit Attention Gestures on 3rd party networks to track global popularity. Just because things are popular doesn't mean they are good, though, nor does it guarantee that they are the right items for you to read.

AideRSS is clearly taking a different approach than other systems based on your personal Attention Data, like FeedHub (our coverage) and some of the Newsgator products that rank news according to your reading habits. Other apps can filter news according to what's hot among a particular group of users you belong to (Attensa in the enterprise and to some degree Google Reader).

Everyone wants to tackle these issues and AideRSS has a particular approach to doing so.

Reaching Out

AideRSS has a freely available, public API that other apps can leverage internally as well. The showcase example so far is the super-search tool Lijit, which uses the AideRSS API in addition to various other cool tricks it can do.

This little Canadian company could have a bright future ahead of it. It does a great job of serving both a core need for all users and satisfying the need for magic that RSS power users have. Check it out, it's worth at the very least a few minutes of your time. You might find yourself coming back to it regularly like I have.

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http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/aiderss_funding.php http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/aiderss_funding.php Products Wed, 09 Jan 2008 08:08:31 -0800 Marshall Kirkpatrick