6:56 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Internet| Venezuela · Comments Off
26 May 2009
So is access to the internet a right or a luxury? Decree No. 6649 coming out of Venezuela seems to side with it as luxury.
The decree seeks to eliminate “luxuries” or “superfluous expenses” among the public expenditure, among which includes the Internet.
This seems to go against an earlier decree No. 825 from 2000 that said that internet access and use were a priority.
A campaign, Internet Prioritaria, has launched in response to the latest decree, with a goal of keeping the internet as a government priority.
6:37 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Internet| Media| Tech| society · Comments Off
20 Apr 2009
Gone are the days when marketers and businesses doubted whether U.S. Latinos would use the Internet en masse. Well, actually, they still doubt — but now they have some hard numbers to contend with. According to a new study by comScore, there are some 20 million Latinos online and that number is growing fast. Latinos as a user group are growing at a rate of close to 50% faster than the general population. MediaWeek reports:
In February of 2009 comScore found there to be 20.3 million U.S. Hispanic visitors on the Web, representing a surge of 5.8 percent versus February of 2008. During that same period of time the general Web population grew by 3.9 percent. A similar growth disparity was evident for engagement measures such as total minutes spent online and total page views, where Hispanics exhibited growth that was five times as fast as the general population.
While the numbers look really good, MediaWeek reports that Latinos still only make up 11% of the total online population due to late adoption of the Internet.
Via / MediaWeek
9:00 pm By la Macha · Internet| Media| media justice · Comments Off
9 Mar 2009Via New America Media comes the news that elderly Latin@s are being targeted in the digital divide:
A recently launched nationwide program will aim to help elderly Latino/Americans get comfortable in cyberspace in an effort to overcome one of the widest gaps in the so-called “digital divide” between those who are able to access and use the Internet and others who are not.
Wanda Rodriguez-Mercado, a project coordinator at the Pasadena-based National Association for Hispanic Elderly, a non-profit group that helped test Generations on Line Espanol, said she expects the program to make a big difference in the lives of senior citizens.
“In working with Hispanic and Latino elders every day, I know the thrill of discovery for them and the disappointment when they know something is beyond their reach,” Rodriguez-Mercado said. “I watched a woman in her 70’s go from shy to confident when she was able to use the Internet and quickly become a mentor to others.”
The issue of access is not going to just go away. As the article states even younger Latin@s are not always using the internet because of language barriers. But even so, it’s really great to see that elderly populations are getting attention they deserve and are recognized as important internet consumers.
2:00 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Internet · Comments Off
18 Apr 2008
According to one head honcho at AT&T yes, and soon. Speaking at a Westminster eForum on Web 2.0 this week in London, Jim Cicconi, vice president of legislative affairs for AT&T said that without investment, theInternet’s current network architecture will reach the limits of its capacity by 2010.
“The surge in online content is at the center of the most dramatic changes affecting the Internet today,” he said. “In three years’ time, 20 typical households will generate more traffic than the entire Internet today.”
But is he really concerned about the future of the internet and say little blogger like me or is he really concerned about his own stake?
4:10 pm By Maegan La Mala · Internet| Lifestyle · 2 Comments
15 Feb 2008
It’s February 15th…do you know where your Valentine is? Did you spend the holiday alone, cursing it as a Hallmark consumerist excuse to spend money, or were you instead pining away because (say in whiny voice) “everybody’s got somebody except me…”?
A new all-Latino dating site called QuieroLatino might be the solution to your singledom. The site officially launched yesterday, on el dia de los enamorados and we’ve heard there’s a lot of buzz on QuieroLatino already.
4:48 pm By Maegan La Mala · Internet| Media| VivirLatino · 1 Comment
17 Dec 2007
This year, our humble online home, VivirLatino turned two years old. And VL wouldn’t exist at all if someone, 10 years ago today, hadn’t come up with the concept — or at least the term:
The word “weblog” celebrates the 10th anniversary of it being coined on 17 December 1997.The word was created by Jorn Barger to describe what he was doing with his pioneering Robot Wisdom web page.
The word was an abbreviation for the “logging” of interesting “web” sites that Mr Barger featured on his regularly updated journal.
How much has the blogosphere changed since then? According to the BBC, the year following Barger’s coining of the term there were only 23 blogs online. Now there are 70 million.And if you love or hate social networking sites like MySpace or Facebook, you have blogs to thank. They paved the way for the social sharing of information and creation of virtual networks.
Via / BBC News
6:53 pm By Maegan La Mala · Internet| Latin America| Tech · Comments Off
14 Sep 2007
The computer virus, as Maegan told us a few months ago, is alive and well — and living in Latin America. An aggressive “Trojan” virus is sweeping across the region, being passed from computer through MSN Messenger.
Internet users in Argentina, Uruguay, Chile and Spain are potential victims of a virus that acts through MSN instant messaging service. Once it has infected the computer, the malicious code attempts to trick the user’s contacts into downloading the virus, automatically sending messages in Spanish, Portuguese and English.
According to Spain’s 20 Minutos, some of the messages being sent to MSN users are “jajajaja recuerda cuando tuviste el pelo asi”, “Esta es la foto nuestra que voy a poner en MySpace” or “Wanna see the pics from my vacation?”
Once installed, the virus, called Win32/SdBot, lets the malicious code’s sender take control of the victim’s computer.
Via / 20 Minutos
VivirLatino is a daily publication published by 2 Mujeres Media, dedicated to featuring all the latest politics, culture, entertainment of interest to the diverse and influential Latino and Latina community in the U.S.
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