Category Archives: DPI
Thoughts on COUNTER: Counterfeiting and Piracy Research Conference
Generally the research presented was well-rooted in (what appear to be) rigorous methodological techniques, and perhaps this research might be adopted and leveraged by policymakers in their ongoing engagements with copyright, content producers, and the public. My expectations, however, are less positive: I fear that the work of the COUNTER research project will remain sheltered in academia, sequestered from the public, and consequently ineffective in reshaping the copyright debacle in but the most limited of fashions. Hopefully this is a case where academia can successfully puncture the academic/public divide and breech the public policy debate, but I’m not holding my breath. Continue reading
Draft – Deep Packet Inspection: Privacy, Mash-ups, and Dignities
A draft of a paper that I’m presenting to the Counter: Piracy and Counterfeit conference Continue reading
Why Mash-up Matters
Draft of the first part of a paper entitled, “Mash-up Meets Deep Packet Inspection: Culture, solutions, and the demand for transparency” Continue reading
Deep Packet Inspection and Mobile Discrimination
If last year was the year of wireline network management/neutrality in Canada, we might get lucky and see this one as the transition year that leads to a public discussion about Canadian telecommunications companies’ wireless network management/neutrality practices, with discrimination as the focal topic. Continue reading
