At the Guardian: another podcast, and how much will net access at the Beijing Olympics be limited?
More stuff goes up. First, the podcast, which is getting closer to what I’d really like it to be like - interviews (here with the BPI and ISPA over the “three strikes and out” proposition) which sound like proper radio cut-and-thrust (hopefully more like Today than You&Yours). Scott, our producer, is ex-BBC, and is gently but firmly steering us to better practice, as well as pointing out - always politely but never leaving room for doubt - when we’re doing it rubbish.
Tech Weekly podcast: action on illegal filesharing and Britain’s broadband future
Aleks Krotoski and the team dissect moves to force ISPs to prevent filesharing, the government’s lack of vision for super-fast broadband, and news on Facebook, eBay and YouTube
And with the China Olympics coming up, who’s to say that the media won’t find that certain sites won’t load? And that athletes won’t be proscribed for not blogging within tight enough limits? It’s crazy, I tell you. Another planet entirely.
Will Olympic athletes be gagged and blindfolded in Beijing?
We know blogging will be severely restricted and podcasts forbidden for Olympic athletes in Beijing, but will their internet access be censored as well?
- These posts might be related (the database thinks..):
- At the Guardian: the Tech Weekly podcast (13 February 2008; score: 66.83%)
- Guardian Tech Weekly podcast: the second one (30 December 2007; score: 59.47%)
- My latest at the Guardian: why do we want people to be computers, and three podcasts (10 February 2008; score: 56.38%)



