Thursday, February 24, 2011

Can your Facebook get you out of Jury Duty?

The Wall street Journal recently came out with an article that showed how some lawyers are scouring Facebook to pick up on details of potential jurors. This is just the latest way social network sites are helping to change our judicial system.  Lawyers try to find personal details about jurors to see which side they would be more sympathetic to. This technique is becoming increasingly popular because lawyers have a very limited amount of time during the selection process. This is another example of be careful about what you put out there on the internet, it could get you jury duty....

*** It is very scary to think about how much of our internet viewing history is compiled somewhere... Truth is after 9/11 and the Patriot Act the government has the ability to compile anything and everything that they want on you including your browsing trends.  Somewhere in a far away computer in the basement of some secret building there is a computer with a file in it and your name on it collecting information on you based on what you search, type, and browse... It is scary to think about but a reality in today's new, new media world.  We must realize that we live in a time where people can very rarely go under the radar and stay off the grid.

Remember what you put out there including your "private social media sites" is forever out there and cannot be erased totally.  For many years employers have used social media sites as a tool when referencing and hiring potential employers.  Today iss a fast-paced ruthless world where time is money and they don't have the luxury of waisting time anymore.  So before you go on a job interview just be prepared to be comfronted by your past.

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703561604576150841297191886.html?mod=WSJEUROPE_hpp_editorsPicks_2



Searching for Details Online, Lawyers Facebook the Jury

Attorneys Seek Cues on Potential Jurors in Networking Sites

Facebook is increasingly being used in courts to decide who is—and who isn't—suitable to serve on a jury, the latest way in which the social-networking site is altering the U.S. court system.
Prosecution and defense lawyers are scouring the site for personal details about members of the jury pool that could signal which side they might sympathize with during a trial. They consider what potential jurors watch on television, their interests and hobbies, and how religious they are.
Leah Nash for The Wall Street Journal
Josh Marquis has used Facebook in his job as district attorney of Clatsop County. Ore.
Josh Marquis, district attorney of Clatsop County in Oregon, did background searches on Facebook to help pick a jury for a penalty trial last summer to determine if a convicted murderer should get the death penalty. He was looking for clues on how potential jurors might feel about the defendant, a man who killed a couple as a teenager in 1988. The jury imposed the death penalty.
Jury consultant Amber Yearwood in San Francisco found that one potential juror in a product-liability case last year held strident opinions on a host of issues, and dispensed unsolicited medical and sex advice. "Often juries offer opinionated people like that the perfect opportunity to wield their influence," said Ms. Yearwood. The prospective juror was bounced.
Some legal experts oppose this growing practice of scouring social-media sites, arguing that the traditional jury-selection process, which involves lawyers questioning prospective jurors, provides more valuable information than out-of-context online comments.
"I don't think we should abandon that system in favor of Internet snooping," said Jason Schultz, co-director of the Samuelson Law, Technology & Public Policy Clinic at the University of California, Berkeley, law school. "There are a number people who post who they want to be, as opposed to who they are."

Social Clues

Details on possible jurors that prosecutors, lawyers and jury consultants say they look for:
Favorite TV or radio shows. Some DAs say crime programs might give a misguided idea of how the justice system works.
Rants. People who have strong opinions and no qualms about sharing them could try to dominate the jury's discussions.
Tweet levels. Lawyers worry that people prone to detailing their lives online will chatter about jury deliberations.
Friends. May include people who might influence opinions— or reveal links to parties to the case that should automatically disqualify someone.
Some appellate courts have upheld lawyers' rights to research jurors online, including one in New Jersey that ruled last year that a lower-court judge erred by prohibiting a plaintiffs' attorney from using the Internet in the courtroom. The court wrote: The fact that the plaintiffs' lawyer "had the foresight to bring his laptop computer to court and defense counsel did not, simply cannot serve as a basis for judicial intervention in the name of 'fairness' or maintaining a 'level playing field.' "
Jury selection is not the only way in which social media are altering the nation's courts. Divorce lawyers have used information in social-media posts to extract higher alimony payments from indiscreet spouses, experts and lawyers report. And in some juvenile courts, judges considered what defendants wrote online to help determine whether they were remorseful.
Using Facebook and other social media such as MySpace and blogs are particularly appealing during jury selection because lawyers have limited time to ask questions. Social-networking sites often contain candid, personal information generated directly by the user. "These days, it's the place where people voice their opinions," said jury consultant Art Patterson.
Armando Villalobos, the district attorney of Cameron County, Brownsville, Texas, last year equipped his prosecutors with iPads to scan the Web during jury selection.
He acknowledged that they sometimes dug up only the unprotected tidbits that Facebook users share with everyone, such as their alma mater or favorite band.
Many people, he said, limit access to more telling details to those they have "friended." (It's unclear, for example, what his prosecutors would glean from Mr. Villalobos's own Facebook page, without friending him: It shows he is married and a fan of the TV show "Spartacus.")
Mr. Villalobos is considering a method to get behind the site's private wall to learn more. One option: granting members of the jury pool free access to the court's wi-fi network in exchange for temporarily "friending" his office.
Some citizens in Brownsville are apprehensive about lawyers rummaging through their online lives. "It feels as if they are tapping into our personal lives," said Lazaro Leal in an interview conducted via Facebook. Legal teams aren't convinced by that reasoning.
David Cannon, a Los Angeles-based trial consultant, discovered on blogs that a potential juror in a personal-injury case had made extensive attempts to contact extraterrestrials. He recommended that his clients, who were representing the defendants, not select her. "It just showed an instability," he said.
Paul Kiesel, a plaintiffs' lawyer in Beverly Hills, Calif., said his firm ran searches of social-networking sites during the jury-selection process in a recent sex-abuse case involving a Catholic priest. The case was settled, but Mr. Kiesel said the information would have proved invaluable.
"We could glean whether someone was identified with a religion, and get a sense of how devout they seemed to be," he said. "It's a waterfall of information, compared to the pinhole view you used to get."
Mr. Marquis, the Oregon DA, said that even small details, like a person's favorite show, could say something about them. A predilection for crime shows, such as "CSI: Crime Scene Investigation," tells Mr. Marquis that the prospective juror might have unrealistic expectations that DNA evidence could be obtained from every crime scene.
"It's way more complicated and expensive than it is on TV," he said.

Sunday, February 20, 2011

Technology moves quick!

This is how I feeel about technology it's almost impossible to keep up today!

***In recent years America and the world have experienced what I like to equate to a sort of media renessance where old ideas are being changed and adapted and new, new technologies are being developed seemingly almost daily! Technology and our world have never moved so fast.  This commercial adds a lightness and well as a shinning light on a reality in the technology world. New, new tech is a fast paced industry with the ability to change worlds as evident with the recent protests in Egypt and other countries.  Technology has become a global force with the power of the people in full support. 
It is partially due to need for adaption and change in an ever growing world as well as a subconcious need to have the newest and the best or everything at all times.  These two factors have lead to the pain and hardship of a few people.... Good thing there's Best Buy around to buy back your old technology.

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Twitter wants to go multilingual faster


Twitter Wants to Go Multilingual Faster

BARCELONA, Spain — During the protests and rallies that erupted in Egypt, Twitter emerged as a crucial way for demonstrators to communicate and for journalists to quickly broadcast reports and observations from the ground.
But Dick Costolo, the newly appointed chief executive of Twitter, said the service’s user experience is not yet as accessible and simple as it needs to be.
“I shouldn’t have to think about using Twitter,” said Mr. Costolo, who was speaking during the Mobile World Congress, the big trade show for the cellphone industry here.
But there’s little continuity or similarity among the various ways that people can post messages to Twitter from the mobile applications on the iPhone, Android-powered devices, BlackBerry smartphones and the Web.
“Right now, those experiences are too dissimilar and I have to relearn Twitter each time I use it,” he said.
Regarding languages, Mr. Costolo said that although Twitter had been slowly rolling out versions in Spanish, Korean, French and Japanese, the company is planning to move much faster.
Beginning Monday, he said, Twitter was introducing a new tool called the Twitter Translation Center, which would allow volunteers to help translate the service into other languages.
The Twitter Translation Center is not designed to translate the volume of international messages flowing through the system but rather adapt Twitter’s mobile Web site, its help center and applications into a variety of languages to make it easier for people around the world to use. Facebook used a similar system of volunteers to roll out its service worldwide in numerous languages.
Mr. Costolo gave several examples to demonstrate the growing role of Twitter in major world events, like the political unrest in Egypt and the earthquake in Haiti. He even pointed out its role in amplifying and socializing the at-home television-watching experience. He said that during major events, Twitter was sustaining, on average, a rate of 3,000 messages a second.
In highlighting innovative ways to broaden Twitter’s accessibility, he pointed to the efforts of Google to quickly assemble a service that allowed people in Egypt to post messages to Twitter by voice during the Internet blackout imposed by the government.
Still, he was quick to add that he thinks Twitter is just a “very small piece of the puzzle.”
“There’s been a lot of discussion about the importance of Twitter but it takes away from what was able to be accomplished,” he said. Twitter’s main role in the evolving way that people communicate and share information, he said, is to ensure “that we’re instantly connecting people to what’s important to them.”

***I think it is absolutly incredible that social media sites including Twitter have had such a huge impace on such a global scale.  The protest in Egypt and other parts of the countries have been a call for change and Twitter and Facebook have lead the charge.  The social media site have been the platform on which the protesters can rally and plan.  Because of this huge uprising throughout countries across the world Twitter the American based country has been in an all out mad dash to make the site multilingual in hopes that it may help facilitate change for the better across the globe.  It is a huge step in the emerging importance that new, new media and social networks play in our society and cultures today.***


Monday, February 14, 2011

New, New Technology: The I Phone 5


This Video is a spoof on everything technology. Our generation unlike any other really is going through a sort of technological renissance where everthing from music to computers to televison to phones is being changed and adapted.  Our cell phones now have the all-in-one capability of those different technological mediums and there are the size of our palms and easily fit into our pocket. We literally have the world at our finger tips.

This video simply makes lite of how, good we really have it and how technology keeps getting better and phones keep getting smaller, to where they are so, so small "it's like they aren't even there". 

The actually I Phone 5 will be making its debute sometime in the 2012 year and will undoubably change the world and the cell phone as it have so many times before.

Thursday, February 3, 2011

Web 2.0

The hallmark of web 2.0 is media convergence, the technological merging of content in different mass media.  The innovations made within the digital communication over the past few years have created and incredible madia convergence and sharing between difference social media sites.  A definition of web 2.0 is making new and improved forms of online connection between two or more people, between two or more online services or between individual users and software applications. Examples of Web 2.0 include social networking sites, blogs, wikis, video sharing sites, hosted services, web applications, mashups and folksonomies. The first video is a brief explination of all things that go into web 2.0. the second video is a bit more dry but goes in dept and gives a very good explination of f what web 2.0 means.