e-G8

Sean Parker and Aaron Fulkerson

I was invited to the e-G8 by the French President Sarkozy a couple weeks ago. I wrote two article about the event that were published at ReadWriteWeb.

What Will e-G8 Create: Solutions or More Cynicism?

…The e-G8 Summit precedes this years G8 Summit in Deauville on May 26 and 27. The purpose of the e-G8 is to inform the G8 leaders by gathering the world’s top Internet and digital leaders in advance of the bigger event. Given the closed-door nature of the event and its relationship to the G8 Summit it’s somewhat unsurprising that rumors about the nature of the meeting have been flying.

The e-G8 has the potential to be an important event and it is attracting a who’s who in technology and government. The attendee list boasts heads of state as well as prominent media and technology figures like Rupert Murdoch, Jeff Bezos of Amazon, Eric Schmidt of Google, and Mark Zuckerberg of Facebook; are all expected to attend.

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Aaron Fulkerson and JP Barlow

 

e-g8: "The Future of the Internet Wasn’t invited"

…The draft statement from the e-G8 Forum to the G8 Summit appears to have been authored in advance of the completion of the e-G8. Throughout the event, statements discussed on stage would be flashed as summary bullets. These statements often ran counter to the opinions and statements of many in attendance and were more a reflection of the views of large telcos and media conglomerates.

This left the small, but very vocal faction of Internet entrepreneurs, academicians and bloggers scratching their head. It was within this group that I found the most substantive conversations taking place. These discussions often had divergent opinions and views from those being represented on stage. It was this vocal minority that were actively pushing the message of an open Internet at every opportunity.

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It was quite an event. I hope you’ll read, tweet, and like my two articles.

Stolen and lost cameras

In March I left my camera in the seat back pocket of a Southwest airlines flight after helping an older woman with her bags. As soon as I got into the car to head to my appointment I realized my mistake and called Southwest. Alas, all they did was file a lost report and I assumed I would never see my camera again.

Then my co-worker, Mike, suggested I try out www.stolencamerafinder.com. It’s elegantly simple. I drug and dropped a photo I took with my camera. The service pulled the metadata about my camera from the photo including the serial number. I filed a report of the details of where I lost it. Done. Then the service monitors photo sites for my camera.

About two months after losing my camera Southwest found it and returned it to me. I was shocked! I thought it was gone forever. Then after shooting for a couple weeks with my camera, and uploading photos to my Flickr account I got this email: 

Hi Aaron,

You created a missing camera report on our website on 1st May for an Olympus E-PL1.

We have found photos matching your lost camera that were taken since that date which are appearing on your Flickr stream.

Did you manage to get your camera back from Southwest Airlines? If so, would you like us to remove the missing camera report?

Kind regards,

Karen Cooper

www.stolencamerafinder.com

Outstanding! Thanks Karen and StolenCameraFinder. You’re awesome.