At least the papers we write for school where we source Wikipedia only get read by the teacher... what was the senator thinking??Lawmaking via Wikipedia
A senator in Chile is under fire for a foray into open-source lawmaking: he apparently cribbed a huge section of a Wikipedia entry for a legal brief, The Santiago Times reports:
The brief proposed prohibiting the import and development of nanotechnology in Chile. It included seven articles, six of which were lifted directly from the web site, and lacked quotation marks or citations. In addition, the brief was complete with the web site’s spelling and grammar errors, and underlined, hyperlinked words.
The senator, Alejandro Navarro, “maintains that his actions were not those of a plagiarist, and that he simply used the web site as a source,” La Tercera reported.
While the Senate decides whether to send his case to the ethics commission, Mr. Navarro, who is a Socialist, may want to familiarize himself with the encyclopedia’s copyright policy, which would have sanctioned his huge cut-and-paste job, provided he gave proper credit.
But there’s also the problem of Wikipedia’s inherently moving-target nature putting his efforts out of date. He published the brief in late December; since then, Wikipedia’s entry on nanotechnology has been changed more than 500 times.
To get around that problem, of course, the law itself could be wikified. Well, maybe that would not be such a good idea…
Wednesday, May 30, 2007
Chile in the News!!
Tuesday, May 29, 2007
Rethinking this blog...
However, I don't want to drop out of the blogosphere completely, and I still want to keep everyone updated on my life in Chile. So, I propose a slight change in the way this blog works- instead of me posting entries on all the things I've been up to since the last time I posted, instead I'll just put up pictures, hopefully most with captions, to give you guys a sense of my life here. Of course, if you want to know more, you're more than welcome to email me to ask for updates and I'll gladly write back, but turning this into a picture blog will be easier for me and will mean much more frequent updates. And who know, maybe the blogging bug will bite again and I'll be driven to start posting text entries too!
Monday, May 14, 2007
Contaminación del aire; or, Why is my tissue black?
When we arrived in Santiago at the beginning of the semester, we were told about the city's epic air pollution. According to what we learned in one of our orientation sessions, Santiago has one of the worst air quality levels in the world- about equal to Bangkok and Manila, and twice as bad as Los Angeles. Santiaguinos have one of the highest rates of asthma in all of Latin America, and last year during the winter, one out of every three or four days was declared an air emergency. To try to reduce the pollution levels, the city government has introduced car restrictions, where cars aren't allowed on the road one day a week, and where the elderly and other at-risk people are urged to stay inside. And the city's gorgeous views of the cordillera looming over it are normally resigned to memory, since the smog in the valley has nowhere to escape.
At the beginning of the program though, the skies were really clear (at least, compared to my expectations). The cordillera was visible, the air seemed clean, and my host family couldn't stop talking about how much less pollution there was compared to years past. The relative clarity of the air was probably due to the new transportation system, which took thousands of buses off the street and replaced them with ones that ran 70% cleaner. The air was so clean, in fact, that the start of the vehicular restrictions that would limit the number of cars on the roads was postponed a month, something that hasn't happened in a long time.
But in the past week or so, our air quality honeymoon has ended. Looking out my program's office window on the 17th floor now, I can't see more than a half mile though the gray, sooty smog. My family keeps the doors and windows closed to keep the pollution out (as well as to keep the house from freezing, although 50 degrees is perfectly comfortable for them- but that's another matter). And people riding bikes on the street wrap shawls around their faces to keep their air as clean as possible.
I had thought that NYC was plenty polluted, but in comparison to here it's like a rural paradise. Here, most of the time the cordillera is hidden behind the smog that sits above the city. And Santiago is the only place I've been where my snot comes out black because of all the air pollution (sorry for the graphic image, but it's a topic of conversation among the people in my program). I guess it just underlines how different the rest of the world lives than the US- even in a developed country like Chile, air pollution like this is normal. And there are many other parts of the world where it's worse. One thing's for sure- next fall, I'll definietly appreciate running in Central Park and breathing the fresh air there a lot more than I've appreciated it before.