An Avast antivirus subsidiary sells 'Every search. Every click. Every buy. On every site.' Its clients have included Home Depot, Google, Microsoft, Pepsi, and McKinsey.
Category: Bookmark
Clayton Christensen passed away yesterday. I never met him and he was by many accounts a warm, generous individual. So this is not intended as a personal attack, and I apologise if it’s timing seems indelicate, but as so many pieces are being published about how influential Disruption Theory was, I would like to offer a counter narrative to its legacy.
It legitimised undermining of labour – the fact that Uber, Tesla, Amazon etc all treat their staff poorly is justified because they are disrupting an old model. And you can’t bring those old fashioned conceits of unions, pensions, staff care into this. By harking to the God of Disruption, companies were able to get away with such practices more than if they had simply declared “our model is to treat workers badly”.
Originally bookmarked on January 29, 2020 at 06:38AM
USNH Academic Technology Institute Presents the 2019-20 Open Ed Webinar Series The next in the series is Feb 6 at 7:00 pm - Ungrading: Pedagogical Possibilities for Going Beyond the Grade. Hosted by Robin DeRosa of Plymouth State University. Register here!
These webinars are designed for past and present ATI Ambassadors as a way to continue our learning and sharing help keep us current on trends in Open Education. At ATI 2019, ambassadors identified key areas of interest that they wanted to learn more about and explore more in depth.
I’m going to write a post or three about some of the friction that exists around using OER. There are some things about working with OER that are just harder or more painful than they need to be, and getting more people actively involved in using OER will require us to reduce or eliminate those po...
We are delighted to announce the full line up of featured speakers for our 2020 OER Conference. Joining The Zemos Collective and sava saveli singh who were announced at the end of 2019, we have now completed the line up with Joe Deville and Janneke Adema.
Unequal Scenes portrays scenes of inequality around the world from a drone.
KUBIKAJIRI (首かじり) head-eating ghost or ghoul of Japanese folklore rumoured to lurk in graveyards #FolkloreThursday #FolkloreGetsEvil pic.twitter.com/dDohstNevK
— Coffin Boffin (@DrSamGeorge1) January 29, 2020
An open source project to create a great list of feeds for journalists to follow. - scripting/feedsForJournalists
a copy of my .opml file . Contribute to sturobson/myRSS development by creating an account on GitHub.
Crossposter to post statuses between Mastodon and Twitter - renatolond/mastodon-twitter-poster
A resource for teaching economic principles to students from any programme of study, with a focus on developing analytical and data handling skills.
Research and data to make progress against the world’s largest problems
A collection of over 795 RSS feeds for web developers, updated monthly - simevidas/web-dev-feeds
Economy, Society, and Public Policy is intended to provide hands-on experience for students in using data to understand economic questions. For each unit there is an accompanying empirical project called Doing Economics. These address important policy problems using real data. Doing Economics: Empirical Projects is available as a free ebook. We have also produced a guide to Doing Economics for instructors.
Here’s a link to an .epub version and a .mobi (Kindle) version. For those who prefer a physical copy, Oxford has published it.
There are also app versions: Google Play, iBooks, and Windows App.
Do people even read blogs anymore?
— Sarah Parmenter (@sazzy) January 24, 2020