Correct Me!
James Joyce said, "A man's errors are his portals of discovery." I'm part of The Report an Error Alliance. If I made a mistake, let me know
about it!-
Recent Posts
- DOJ Takes Extraordinary Step in Seizing AP Phone Records
- Speak, and Speak Immediately: The Risen Subpoena, the Executive Branch, and the Reporter’s Privilege
- DoJ Ignores FOIA Requirements and Congressional Intent, Continues to Deny Fee Waivers to Bloggers
- The Case of the Misleading Wired Headline: The Importance of Legal Reporting Getting It Right
- Broken Promises: A Lack of Executive Branch Transparency in Obama’s First Term
Twitter ‘dates
- Media letter to DOJ: Stronger laws needed to protect reporters on.msnbc.com/19sOjUw via @msnbc-- 4 days ago
- DOJ Takes Extraordinary Step in Seizing AP Phone Records tinyurl.com/cqbd2xv #firstamendment #freepress #subpoena #doj-- 6 days ago
- DOJ Takes Extraoridinary Step in Seizing AP Phone Records wp.me/pY5oJ-RR-- 6 days ago
Top Clicks
Mind Cloud
Al Franken Apple AT&T BP Cell Phone Censorship Comcast Copyright Death Panels Electronic Frontier Foundation Ethics Facebook FCC Federal Communications Commission First Amendment FOIA Fourth Amendment Free Press Free Speech Google Internet Jon Stewart Journalism Julius Genachowski Media NBC Net Neutrality New York Times NPR Objectivity Oil Spill PBS Politifact Press Access Privacy Public Media San Francisco Society of Professional Journalists Stephen Colbert Subpoena Supreme Court Twitter Verizon Wikileaks YoutubeFollow My Feed
Blogroll

Tag Archives: Google Transparency Report
Google Pulls Back the Curtain Again: A Brief Review of Its Transparency Report
by Matthew L. Schafer Yesterday, Google released its transparency report for the first half of 2012. The report, which Google releases on a biannual basis, tracks user traffic to Google sites around the world, intellectual property takedown requests, government takedown … Continue reading
Posted in Internet Policy
Tagged Google Transparency Report, Takedown Requests, Transparency
Leave a comment
United States Asks Google for User information on 4,601 Occasions in Six Months
by Matthew L. Schafer In an effort towards increased transparency, Google has released a month-by-month list of governments who most often request information on users and make takedown requests. From July of 2009 to December of 2010, the United States … Continue reading