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The Norm: I Hope This Isn't Your Spouse!

Spouse

 

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On This Day: January 5

Updated January 4, 2012, 1:28 pm

NYT Front Page

On Jan. 5, 1914, Henry Ford, head of the Ford Motor Company, introduced a minimum wage scale of $5 per day.

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On Jan. 5, 1863, Constantin Sergeyevich Stanislavsky, one of the greatest masters of Russian drama and a founder of the Moscow Art Theatre, was born. Following his death on Aug. 7, 1938, his obituary appeared in The Times.

Go to obituary » | Other birthdays »

 

On This Date

By The Associated Press
1781 A British naval expedition led by Benedict Arnold burned Richmond, Va.
1896 The Austrian newspaper Wiener Presse reported the discovery by German physicist Wilhelm Roentgen of a type of radiation that came to be known as an X-ray.
1933 Calvin Coolidge, the 30th president of the United States, died in Northampton, Mass., at age 60.
1949 In his State of the Union address, President Harry S. Truman labeled his domestic program the “Fair Deal.”
1970 The soap opera “All My Children” premiered on ABC-TV.
1972 President Richard Nixon ordered development of the space shuttle.
1973 Bruce Springsteen’s debut album, “Greetings From Asbury Park, N.J.,” was released.
1981 Police in England arrested Peter Sutcliffe, a truck driver later convicted of the “Yorkshire Ripper” murders of 13 women.
1994 Former House Speaker Thomas P. “Tip” O’Neill died in Boston at age 81.
2004 After 14 years of denials, Pete Rose publicly admitted that he’d bet on baseball while manager of the Cincinnati Reds.
2011 Rep. John Boehner of Ohio was elected speaker as Republicans regained control of the House of Representatives on the first day of the new Congress.

Current Birthdays

By The Associated Press
Robert Duvall, Actor

Actor Robert Duvall turns 81 years old today.

AP Photo/Evan Agostini

Bradley Cooper, Actor

Actor Bradley Cooper turns 37 years old today.

AP Photo/Matt Sayles

1925 Lou Carnesecca, Hall of Fame basketball coach, turns 87
1928 Walter F. Mondale, Former vice president, turns 84
1932 Chuck Noll, Hall of Fame football coach, turns 80
1938 King Juan Carlos, King of Spain, turns 74
1942 Charlie Rose, Broadcast journalist, turns 70
1944 Ed Rendell, Former governor of Pennsylvania, turns 68
1946 Diane Keaton, Actress, turns 66
1948 Ted Lange, Actor (“The Love Boat”), turns 64
1953 Pamela Sue Martin, Actress (“Dynasty”), turns 59
1953 George Tenet, Former CIA director, turns 59
1954 Alex English, Basketball Hall of Famer, turns 58
1969 Marilyn Manson, Rock singer, turns 43
1978 January Jones, Actress (“Mad Men”), turns 34

 

Historic Birthdays

Constantin Sergeyevich Stanislavsky 1/5/1863 (1/17/1863 N.S.) – 8/7/1938 Russian actor, producer, teacher and philosopher of theater.Go to obituary »
69 Francisco Suárez 1/5/1548 – 9/25/1617
Spanish theologian
74 Shah Jahan 1/5/1592 – 1/22/1666
Mughal emperor of India and builder of the Taj Mahal
34 Zebulon Montgomery Pike 1/5/1779 – 4/27/1813
American army officer and explorer
41 Stephen Decatur 1/5/1779 – 3/22/1820
American naval officer
77 King Camp Gillette 1/5/1855 – 7/9/1932
American inventor and manufacturer
91 Konrad Adenauer 1/5/1876 – 4/19/1967
First chancellor of West Germany (1949-63)
77 Henry Sloane Coffin 1/5/1877 – 11/25/1954
American clergyman
76 Herbert Bayard Swope 1/5/1882 – 6/20/1958
American journalist and editor
55 Yves Tanguy 1/5/1900 – 1/15/1955
French Surrealist painter
87 Stella Gibbons 1/5/1902 – 12/19/1989
English novelist and poet
87 Hubert Beuve-Méry 1/5/1902 – 8/6/1989
French publisher and editor of “Le Monde”
72 Dame Kathleen Kenyon 1/5/1906 – 8/24/1978
English archaeologist
58 Alvin Ailey Jr. 1/5/1931 – 12/1/1989
American choreographer and dancer; founded Ailey American Dance Theater

 

 

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Internet Access Is Not a Human Right– It is Merely a Tool to Exercise Other Fundamental Human Rights

FROM the streets of Tunis to Tahrir Square and beyond, protests around the world last year were built on the Internet and the many devices that interact with it. Though the demonstrations thrived because thousands of people turned out to participate, they could never have happened as they did without the ability that the Internet offers to communicate, organize and publicize everywhere, instantaneously.

It is no surprise, then, that the protests have raised questions about whether Internet access is or should be a civil or human right. The issue is particularly acute in countries whose governments clamped down on Internet access in an attempt to quell the protesters. In June, citing the uprisings in the Middle East and North Africa, a report by the United Nations’ special rapporteur went so far as to declare that the Internet had “become an indispensable tool for realizing a range of human rights.” Over the past few years, courts and parliaments in countries like France and Estonia have pronounced Internet access a human right.

But that argument, however well meaning, misses a larger point: technology is an enabler of rights, not a right itself. There is a high bar for something to be considered a human right. Loosely put, it must be among the things we as humans need in order to lead healthy, meaningful lives, like freedom from torture or freedom of conscience. It is a mistake to place any particular technology in this exalted category, since over time we will end up valuing the wrong things. For example, at one time if you didn’t have a horse it was hard to make a living. But the important right in that case was the right to make a living, not the right to a horse. Today, if I were granted a right to have a horse, I’m not sure where I would put it.

The best way to characterize human rights is to identify the outcomes that we are trying to ensure. These include critical freedoms like freedom of speech and freedom of access to information — and those are not necessarily bound to any particular technology at any particular time. Indeed, even the United Nations report, which was widely hailed as declaring Internet access a human right, acknowledged that the Internet was valuable as a means to an end, not as an end in itself.

What about the claim that Internet access is or should be a civil right? The same reasoning above can be applied here — Internet access is always just a tool for obtaining something else more important — though the argument that it is a civil right is, I concede, a stronger one than that it is a human right. Civil rights, after all, are different from human rights because they are conferred upon us by law, not intrinsic to us as human beings.

While the United States has never decreed that everyone has a “right” to a telephone, we have come close to this with the notion of “universal service” — the idea that telephone service (and electricity, and now broadband Internet) must be available even in the most remote regions of the country. When we accept this idea, we are edging into the idea of Internet access as a civil right, because ensuring access is a policy made by the government.

Yet all these philosophical arguments overlook a more fundamental issue: the responsibility of technology creators themselves to support human and civil rights. The Internet has introduced an enormously accessible and egalitarian platform for creating, sharing and obtaining information on a global scale. As a result, we have new ways to allow people to exercise their human and civil rights.

In this context, engineers have not only a tremendous obligation to empower users, but also an obligation to ensure the safety of users online. That means, for example, protecting users from specific harms like viruses and worms that silently invade their computers. Technologists should work toward this end.

It is engineers — and our professional associations and standards-setting bodies like the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers — that create and maintain these new capabilities. As we seek to advance the state of the art in technology and its use in society, we must be conscious of our civil responsibilities in addition to our engineering expertise.

Improving the Internet is just one means, albeit an important one, by which to improve the human condition. It must be done with an appreciation for the civil and human rights that deserve protection — without pretending that access itself is such a right.

Vinton G. Cerf, a fellow at the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, is a vice president and chief Internet evangelist for Google.

 

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