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"I just read the most plausible of law review papers suggesting the potential for protection of a private space within social network sites (SNS). Fellow UNC grad student Woodrow Hartzog proposes the use of Promissory Estoppel as a means to protect self-disclosure in online communities. It would create a type of contract or agreement between users of a site whereby a protection would exist for information disclosed in that community or site. If someone else shares the disclosed, private information, with a few caveats, they can be held accountable."
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"rssCloud is meant to carry more frequent traffic and more content than the original RSS and Atom. It maintains an XML format (making it relatively verbose for SMS, although Winer tries to separate out the rich, enhanced data). Perhaps because of the increased traffic it would cause, it's less decentralized than RSS, storing updates in Amazon S2."
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"How do you name step files? What to put in each step? What not to put in steps? Here are some guidelines that will lead to better scenarios. If you are new to steps and the general syntax, please read Feature Introduction first."
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"That attitude carried on to seduce academic libraries and graduate English courses, where students were made to believe that Hugo and Dostoevsky, Maugham and Conrad had not written crime and spy novels. The virus still flourishes in our schools and cultural institutions; our self-appointed guardians of culture still leave genre writers off the literary tea guest lists. She writes mysteries, my dear, she'll show up reeking of gin. Or you get: He writes thrillers? How crass. It's so American.
"Popular fiction" has become a term of vulgar connotation, but it reeks of ironic paradox: obviously we sobersided Canadians ought to be reading unpopular fiction. (As an aside, reflecting an antithetical American attitude, I once got a rejection from a publisher down there who complained a manuscript was "too literary for the genre.")"

