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Free-speech advocates once dreamed that the Internet might make it impossible for repressive governments to control information and stifle dissent. But while the Internet has given dissidents more ways to communicate with some privacy, authoritarian regimes have still found ways to censor websites, to monitor e-mail and to track down and jail online offenders. Still, in this game of electronic cat and mouse, the methods for evading roadblocks are evolving, and in Vietnam pro-democracy activists have hit upon a useful tool: Internet telephony, or Voice Over Internet Protocol (VoIP...
...have adopted such a stance, said Martin M. Linsky, an adjunct lecturer in public policy at the Kennedy School. “Patrick and Reilly are trying to present themselves as populists, especially Reilly, so it fits well with his presenting values,” Linsky wrote in an e-mail. In contrast, “Gabrieli is trying to present himself as the meritocracy candidate, the non-political candidate, the non-insider who will not pander to an active constituency (here, UMass alums),” Linsky wrote. Gabrieli, who serves on the board of the School of Public...
...leave thus far has been “devoted almost entirely to completing writing obligations that range from ‘quite late’ to ‘holding up the whole book,’” Hackman wrote in an e-mail. He will then work on a new book on the designs and leadership of teams in the intelligence community and enroll in a workshop on the dynamics of dissent. Steven Pinker, Johnstone family professor of psychology, said that this, his fourth professional sabbatical, has had a familiar focus on authorship. His first two sabbaticals...
...physics and math, according to James M. Moran, Menzel professor of astrophysics and the Astronomy Department chair. The second option, “Astronomy” would “provide an introduction to observational phenomena and explore new and unsolved problems,” Moran wrote in an e-mail...
...have very many concentrators now and many of our classes are large, larger than either students or faculty want,” Professor of Economics James H. Stock wrote in an e-mail. “So our challenge is to address the demand for secondary concentrations in a way that does not stretch our resources even thinner and thereby degrade the quality of education we provide to our undergraduates...