How will web decentralization shape revolution and terrorism?

16

October

2019

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Hello and welcome to my corner of the centralized internet where I get to tell you all about the newest, hippest technologies! Meanwhile, advertisers keep bombarding me with useless ads, companies keep tracking all my data to use for their own profit-seeking purposes or to resell for a quick buck, and China knows when I badmouth them (I’m sorry China, don’t do it, NOO-).

How do I escape this nightmare? Let me introduce you to the Decentralized Web

The regular internet was built with centralized points of control due to technological limitations as well as the need to keep some control over the internet. The purpose of the Decentralized Web is to reduce or eliminate such centralized points of control to have a system that can function when parts are missing, provides better privacy protection, provide more reliable access and make direct buying and selling possible without data collecting middlemen. It works thanks to a combination of peer-to-peer networks under a far faster internet than back in 1980 and block-chain inspired encryption that stores information in multiple anonymous locations (Decentralized web summit, 2019: https://www.decentralizedweb.net/about/).

This system is built to be resistant to meddling by central authority for better and for worse. It keeps your, and more importantly my, data safe. However, this system also keeps the data of terrorists, hate groups and revolutionaries safe.

  • Terrorists already use the dark web as a relatively safe way to communicate (Weimann, 2016: https://www.jstor.org/stable/26297596?seq=1#metadata_info_tab_contents), and having access to decentralized web technology makes organizing and recruitment that much easier. This is not a good thing…
  • Hate groups will become more able to close off their echo-chambers from outside voices of reason to more easily indoctrinate and radicalize their members. Be prepared for increased domestic terrorism folks…
  • Revolutions happen for various reasons on which anyone can disagree on whether the reasons are morally just or unjust, but it stands to reason that totalitarian regimes will not like the step to web decentralization as they lose control over their citizens, citizens which can now organize in a way they couldn’t before and start to challenge these regi- NO WAIT CHINA, I’M NOT TALKING ABOU-

So yeah, this article’s a bit of a bummer.

What do you think?

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4.5/5 (8) 50k views and counting, how to get MASSIVE views!!!

9

October

2017

 

 
Hello fellow BIM students,

Some of you might have noticed that certain posts are getting massive amounts of views.

all time high

The first thing that pops into your mind might be that these guys are actively sharing their content on social media. This is unlikely though because getting this many unique views on one post in one day (see images below) is really really hard to accomplish through that method.

13k views one day

13k views one day

The next possibility you might think about is that they are hiring a group of people through some view boosting website like the one below.

viewbotwebsite

However, we are all students, meaning that we have low budgets and would rather spend our money on partying, Netflix/Spotify subscriptions and other more rewarding activities. So I don’t consider this option viable in our situation.

So how do the top posts get their crazy amount of views? Did they press F5 non-stop for a couple of weeks in order to reach the top?

f5 broken

There must be some sort of secret method to their success. In this post, I would like to share my easy method with you guys to help boost YOUR view count up to 5k, 10k or even 50k! Let’s go!

Step 1: Decide the post that you want to boost!

This is obviously a very basic step, in order to get views on a post, you need to have posted at least some content. In this example, I use a very basic article I wrote about IBM’s supercomputer Watson (check it out: http://bit.ly/2y71SxK).

IBM watson article 2

 

Step 2: Download the Opera browser and open the blog post in multiple tabs!

Viewbotting on 5 tabs

Step 3: This is where the magic comes in, download the Super Auto Refresh extension for Opera!

Super Auto Refresh extension Opera

Step 4: Start the Extension and make it run on all tabs at a speed of 30 seconds!

Super refresher extension Opera browser

Why do I give you guys the advice to run it on 5/6 tabs max at a speed of 30 seconds? Because I encountered many many errors on the first days using this method running it at faster speeds. These error messages, see below, cause not only me but every other user trying to access the website to experience problems.

Internal Server Error

Service Unavailable

So if you don’t want a group of angry students chasing you because they couldn’t upload their blog posts please take this advice.

IS blog troubles


Step 5: Get some spare laptops, plug them into their chargers and don’t touch them for a couple of days/weeks!

This will help you feel like a real hacker and boosts the feeling that you can join Anonymous because you know your computer stuff.

3 laptops setup

 

Step 6: Watch your article reach some magic milestones! You are finally reaching the top of the list!
1000 views mark

2000 views mark

9999 views

20000 views

30k views

WAIT FOR IT…. 50k VIEWS WOAH!

50k views

Step 7: Sit back and relax, you did some really awesome hacking and can now enjoy your success for the rest of your life! You will always be remembered as that BIM student that knew how to reach the top!

all time high

As much as I enjoyed abusing the view count system behind https://digitalstrategy.rsm.nl// I would like to give some quick advice to the website admin. As soon as I realized that F5 views were counted as unique views although they came from the same IP-Address I started to look for ways to maximize my view count. I think that this in no way reflects the quality of my blog post and can actually destroy the intention of this web page. So to prevent things like this happening in the future please try to cap the number of views per IP-address or find some other way to achieve this.

Thanks for reading guys and enjoy your road to success!

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Technology of the Week – How IOT disrupts Agriculture

22

September

2017

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Hi there!

Having a nice day? Did you have some nice meals? You probably have, as we students love to eat! However, did you know that we need to produce 70% more food by 2050 than we had to produce in 2006. Seems impossible!

Luckily, we’re living in a time of technological advancements. Internet of Things is about sensors in all things that surrounds us. These sensors transmit data back to a common IOT platform and this platform uses common language and advanced analytics to provide you, or your products with valuable information (IBM Think Academy, 2015). What does this have to do with food? Well, you’re about to find out.

IOT is disrupting the agriculture industry, this sounds like a bad thing, but it’s actually very good for us, as hungry students. IOT is making the industry a lot more efficient and has created a whole new industry segment: precision farming!

Precision farming is about managing variations in the field accurately to grow more food using fewer resources and reducing production costs whilst respecting the environment. And this is done by applying Internet of Things.

We used the theory of newly-vulnerable markets to assess the market disruption and found that all three conditions apply: the industry is newly easy to enter because of lower technology costs, it’s attractive to attack as there is a lot of money to make as we need more food in the future, and it’s hard to defend as incumbents are very old-fashion and don’t look further than current strategies.

One interesting example of the use of Internet of Things in agriculture is drones. A drone is an unmanned aircraft or machine, that is also known as an unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) or automated robot (IoT Agenda, 2017). The cost of production for drones continues to fall drastically, which means that the adoption of drone usage by people and companies is rapidly increasing.

There are many ways drones can increase efficiency in agriculture. They can perform a soil and field analysis. when the field is analyzed, the drones can also do the planting instead of the farmer, which is way faster (MIT Technology Review, 2016). Furthermore, drones can monitor the crop and do a health assessment to increase the efficiency.

By drones taking over these task, the farmer is enabled to make optimal use of resources, increase the profitability and sustainability of production, and reduce environmental impact.

But what will the future of agriculture look like? As you’ve seen, after the implementations of the drone, the farmer is now still actively involved in the whole farming process. We predict that, in the future, drones will operate autonomously. Currently, drones can take-off and land, determine flying patterns and determine flying height autonomously. In the future we predict that drones will become an “unsupervised learning system”. The profession of farming, as we know it now, could possibly disappear. A farmer will need to become more like a system manager than an agriculture know-it-all.  

 

Group 14

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Anonymous, hackers or hacktivists?

9

October

2016

5/5 (1)

With the digitalization of our society, the number of internet users has increased as well. In the year 2000, 414,794,957 (6.8%) users had access to the internet. Now, 16 years later 3,424,971,237 (46.1% of total population)users have access. (Internetlivestats, 2016). Of course, how more users on the internet, how more interesting it is for hackers to abuse their knowledge of the technical aspect of the internet.

Today I want to talk about one of the most well-known hackers organization Anonymous. Anonymous was founded in 2003, on the imageboard 4chan. Their members, so-called ‘Anons’ consider their selves as hacktivists, but what is the difference between a hacker and a hacktivist? A hacker is a person who gains unauthorized access to computer system. This can be either for good or bad reasons, but usually it is to deal damage to the system or in order to retrieve valuable information. (Merrian-webster.com, 2016) A hacktivist on the other side, is a person who gains unauthorized access to a computer system and carry out various disruptive actions as a means of achieving political and social goals. (dictonairy.com, 2016)

We can also differ white-hat hackers, which have good intention and black-hat hackers, which have bad intentions. White-hat hackers are usually computer system testers or security experts. Black-hat hackers are the hackers where you think about when people are talking about hacking, breaking into systems and dealing damage to those systems.

So before we place Anonymous into these categories, what have they done in the past 13 years? Let’s list up some, to my opinion, good actions of Anonymous:

  • Operation Deatheaters. (thousands of pedophile networks were shut down and names of visitors were published).
  • Shutting down hundreds of accounts, forums, websites of IS supporters
  • Leaking Bank of America corrupt and unfair mortgage practices.

On the other side, they did certain things which aren’t justifiable:

  • Hacking Sony’s systems in 2011. Caused a 10% stock value loss and published tens of thousands of private emails.
  • Putting personal information of HBGary Federal lawyers after Aaron Barr (CEO) said he had ‘cracked’ Anonymous. (Bright, 2012)

These are just a few examples of the hundred things Anonymous has claimed to do. Most good things they do have to do with publishing information and shutting down ‘bad’ websites. The bad things Anonymous is doing is mostly reacting to certain, in their eyes, bad deeds. Also, they respond to threats, like the HBGary Federal case.

So whether Anonymous is a good or a bad organization is a matter of perspective. I wouldn’t say they are white-hat or black-hat hackers/hacktivists. In 1996  at the DEF Con Hacking Conference they made up a new kind of hackers/hacktivists: grey-hat hackers/hacktivists. These are hackers/hacktivists which may sometimes violate the law, but not have malicious intentions like the black-hat hackers. I would say they are grey-hat hacktivists, what do you think?

Thank you for reading!

Feel free share your knowledge and opinions about this topic!

(Also, if you’re interested in Anonymous, check out the movie ‘We Are Legion'(2012)).

 

 

 

References

Bright, P. (2012, October 03). With arrests, HBGary hack saga finally ends. Retrieved from http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2012/03/the-hbgary-saga-nears-its-end/

Hacker. (2016, October 09). Retrieved from http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/hacker

Hacktivist [Def. 1], (2016, October 9) Retrieved from http://www.dictionary.com/browse/hacktivist

Internet users. (2016, October 09). Retrieved from http://www.internetlivestats.com/internet-users/

La Monica, P. A. U. L. (2014, December 15). Sony hack sends stock down 10% in past week. Retrieved from http://money.cnn.com/2014/12/15/investing/sony-stock-hack/

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Is Internet of Things driving our World?

7

October

2016

4.92/5 (13)

The world of technology is becoming more and more familiar with Internet of Things; it has entered our lives and is everywhere around us, but the definition is not quite new. It was back in 1999 when Kevin Ashton, a British technology pioneer working at Auto-ID labs at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), coined the term “Internet of Things”. But what is actually Internet of Things (IoT) and why it deluged in our lives?

Internet of Things is considered any connection (inter-networking) between physical devices/vehicles/buildings and electronics/software/sensors, enabling them to collect and exchange data. It allows objects to be sensed and controlled remotely across existing network infrastructure, creating opportunities for more direct integration of the physical world into computer-based systems. A short but accurate definition for IoT could be: “the infrastructure of the information society”. IoT is expected to offer advanced connectivity of devices and services that goes beyond machine-to-machine (M2M) communications. In fact, with IoT what in an earlier age would have been defined as magic is now a reality; designed, planned and operated by technology pioneers around the world.

Nowadays, progressively, big innovative companies, with the technology industry as the pioneer, design and develop devices capable to connect to the internet and interact with their environment making up a new way to collaborate, innovate and socialize. Smart devices like smartphones, smartwatches, electric cars and home equipment are some of the leading actors driving the evolution of Internet of Things. A recent example concerning IoT is the smart city project, a very ambitious plan which has as main goal to manage a city’s assets through communication technology in order to improve quality of life.

Although IoT has become a crucial part of our everyday life, there is a major challenge web-connected product designers face and try to vanquish: how to make the devices self-powering. Some smart devices, particularly wearable ones, consume enough energy during the day driving users to devote attention for regular charging. It can become a really annoying brain teaser especially if you have five or ten smart devices. To tackle this, wearable devices exploit movement and flexion in order to draw off energy while other devices take advantage of their environment using photovoltaic cells to generate solar power or any other available infrastructure.

The Internet of Things poses some challenges, but also a world of opportunities, because it is applicable to a wide spectre of sectors and markets. From transportation industry to clothing and from agricultural industry to entertainment the take-off of IoT will shift the organizations and the businesses to innovate, increase efficiency and become more sustainable Also, predictions range from 20 to 50 billion products being connected to the Internet by the end of this decade and all of them will be designed to make life easier for us.

 

 

 

References:

https://digitalstrategy.rsm.nl//2016/10/02/smart-cities-how-will-they-change-our-lives/

https://www.technologyreview.com/s/602114/the-internet-of-things-outlook-and-challenges/?utm_campaign=internal&utm_medium=homepage&utm_source=collection_3&set=535821

http://www.itu.int/en/ITU-T/gsi/iot/Pages/default.aspx

 http://www.postscapes.com/internet-of-things-history/

 https://www.ericsson.com/spotlight/services/internet-of-things/

 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kevin_Ashton

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smart_city

 

 

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Freemium, explained. 5/5 (12)

21

September

2016

Having discussed a few different pricing models in class, I questioned why one in particular hadn’t been brought up yet: freemium. Did you know that as much as 95% of the apps in Apple’s AppStore employ freemium models? For those Android fans, the number on Google Play is even greater, at an incredible 98%! Yet, what exactly is it? I would like to attempt to answer this question (bear with me), and provide some insight into the types of businesses that we are now dealing with on a day-to-day basis.

The word “freemium” was coined by combining the words “free” and “premium”. Accordingly, two types of features are identified under the model, namely those which are free and those which are considered premium features. In a freemium business model, consumers are given free unlimited access to a business’ core product, and revenue is earned from a small portion of the user base who sign up for premium features. Of course, as with any proposed business model, there are both benefits and limitations.

Strengths:
Growth potential
In a word, freemium is scalable. When we perceive something as “free”, a lot of barriers are already removed, making users much easier to win over (perhaps that next targeted Facebook ad will be just enough). This becomes especially true for internet-based businesses where, due to internet economies, the marginal cost of each new customer is very low.

Marketing
Not to be forgotten are the potential marketing benefits of a free offering. Relating strongly to the previous point, the ease with which users can sign up and start using a product/service extends to the ease with which new users can be invited to join in on the fun. If the initial user didn’t convert, there’s a good chance that one of those they invited might.

Network effects
Building again on the massive user base that can be achieved by a freemium business model are network effects. Specifically, these are achieved when a product/service is perceived as increasingly valuable as more and more people use it. When properly leveraged, network effects could define the sustainable future success of a business, which is especially true under a freemium business model. In addition, by offering a free (basic) product, it’s easier to own the network effects and prevent someone else from using them against you.

Weaknesses:
Need for a large user base
In an article from Business Insider, this weakness was summarized as a “numbers game”, and I couldn’t put it better myself. “If only 1% of your users are going to pay you, then you need to have lots and lots of free users (millions, typically) to make that 1% enough money.”

Need for many return users
Freemium models need to offer a product/service that increases in value over time in the eyes of the consumer. Relevant, here, are experienced goods: products whose value is only determined by a consumer after a period of use. Investor Sean Parker said of Spotify that, once you create all your playlists and organize your music, “we’ve got you by the balls,” which is a perfect illustrative example. Of course, ensuring that your offering falls into this category might be a difficult task, so the need for it should be considered a setback of the freemium model.

Slow profit
As perceived value to the consumer is supposed to increase over time, it can be quite a while before a freemium business reaches break even, much less makes a profit. Of course, with the scalability of the model, once profitability is achieved it can be achieved in massive proportions – but it will probably only come with patience.

So that just about sums it up. I hope that now you might have a slightly better idea of how freemium business models work and that it may serve as a fruitful dinner party conversation in the future! If you can think of any variations, interesting applications, or anything (really, anything) else, just use the comments section below.


Sources:

www.freemium.org/what-is-freemium-2
www.techcrunch.com/2011/09/04/complete-guide-freemium/
www.businessinsider.com/what-is-the-freemium-business-model-2011-4
www.businessinsider.com/sean-parker-spotify-2010-10
www.businessinsider.com/what-is-the-freemium-business-model-2011-4#evernote-is-a-big-freemium-success-1

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Differentiation as the basis of competition

9

September

2016

5/5 (3)

In his article about strategy and the internet Michael Porter (Strategy and the Internet, 2001) points out that because of the internet technology companies tend to shift the basis of competition away from quality, features, and service and toward price. I think he makes a very good point, but let’s take a different view on this.

Therefore, let’s take a look on Adam Smith’s perfect market. In order to have perfect competition some conditions must be fulfilled. The most important conditions are:

  1. Lots of buyers
  2. Lots of sellers
  3. Homogeneous products
  4. No entry barriers
  5. Perfect knowledge and information

The effect of these conditions are that firms have no possibility to stand out and ask a different price than their neighbour. If you sell the same t-shirt as your neighbour and he sells it for less money, nobody will buy your shirts. Due to the perfect information everybody knows that your neighbour sells it for less. So far economics 101.

Over the past few decades businesses were able to sell products for a price which they could set themselves. The local clothing shop might have been selling the same products as the clothing shop a few miles further for a higher price. But it never minded, nobody knew this difference.

Internet has changed the situation completely. Because of the internet the barriers disappeared. Your local retailer can sell his clothes online, just as the retailer from a few miles further. The potential group of buyers immediately increases from the local town to everybody with access to the internet. Besides, lots of retailers which were unattainable become attainable and sell the same products as you were used to buy from the local shop. We can see that the internet shifted the market more to the perfect competition. Because of the internet there are more buyers and sellers on the market, the entry barriers are lower (see also the Porter article) and we know exactly what we can buy where and for what price.

Coming back on where I started. Porter sees that there is a fierce price competition going on because of the internet and that we shifted away from competition based on the differentiation of products and service. But the internet does not change anything about the homogeneous condition of perfect competition. The only way to stand out is to deliver a differentiated product or service. Otherwise the price will indeed be the basis of competition.

Isn’t the internet exactly the reason to shift the basis of competition towards quality, features and service?

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