Fast Company
Op-ed: I helped draft California’s new privacy law. Here’s why it doesn’t go far enough (Fast Company)
Submitted by benton on Fri, 01/03/2020 - 06:13The internet’s last great myth is finally dead
The 2010s are defined by our total absorption into the digital. Engaging online quickly became a necessary part of being a person. “As more people began to register their existence digitally, a past time turned into an imperative: you have to register digitally to exist,” journalist Jia Tolentino writes. With that, she said, came the commodification of self, which keeps us endlessly tethered to the web, either as a means of self-promotion or as a way of feeding the human compulsion to connect. As we’ve remained here, our internet selves have grown more robust.
5 things Google got right in 2019—and 5 it got wrong (Fast Company)
Submitted by benton on Tue, 12/24/2019 - 10:305 things Facebook got right in 2019—and 5 it got wrong (Fast Company)
Submitted by benton on Mon, 12/23/2019 - 12:38The next generation of the internet is almost here—and it could even transform our farms
While the buzz around 5G is often focused on smartphones (and the technology’s promise of lag-free gaming and streaming), the cellular technology stands to hypercharge industries far beyond entertainment. With its high bandwidth, low latency (i.e., the ability to transfer lots of data with minimal delay), and high reliability, 5G is faster and more dependable than 4G, and so robust that it can replace wired connections—bringing everything from factory robots to fleets of autonomous vehicles online. Also poised for big change is agriculture.
5G’s rollout is confusing, uneven, and rife with problems
2020 looks like it will be your year to get 5G—but only in the sense of having that signal on your phone, not in the sense of knowing quite what it’s supposed to be or using it to its full potential. A new report from the network analysis firm Opensignal advises that while this revamp of mobile broadband is poised to reach far more of the US, it will do so in ways that may leave both carriers and their customers feeling some wireless whiplash.