Filed under

news

 

#TwitterTimes is actually rather good

I've been playing with the Twitter Times, an online news aggregator that tailors content specifically for Twitter users, and what it does is it looks deep into your Twitter followers and those you follow, checks out links etc. and then over a period of a day or two creates a continuously updated edition just for you. Very cool, and works rather well. Do check this out if the idea of focussed and relevant content is something you fancy.

My edition is here, you set your own one up in seconds:

http://twittertim.es/gregwallis

Filed under  //   Greg Wallis   Twitter   Twitter Times   news   news feed   social media  

Comments [0]

Warning: Do not take this picture

Today's main story in The Independent highlights the appalling behaviour of police forces throughout the UK regarding the over-zealous and deliberate misuse of Section 44 of the Terrorist Act whereby the police can search and detain anybody without a required reason to do so. This grey and bizarre legal instrument has been directed at photographers, amateur and professional alike, for taking innocent photographs of everyday subjects.

Our civil liberties are being eroded in a deliberate and Machiavellian way to grant insidious authoritarian powers to limit our democratic rights. If we don't stand up, speak up, and put a fight up, then the process will be irreversible and we'll have succumbed, by stealth, to what is effectively the seeds of neo-fascism (and yes, I'm serious).

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/warning-do-not-take-this-picture-1833127.html

And if you are interested in maintaining your rights and fighting back using the power of peaceful protest, then also check out this new group who I wish much success and who facilitate a dialogue between the public and the police.

http://www.mypolice.org/

 

Filed under  //   Civil Liberties   Greg Wallis   Section 44   Terrorism   Terrorist Act   The Independent   freedom   news   photographer   photography   police  

Comments [0]



© 2009 Greg Wallis