Saturday, July 4, 2015
Saturday, March 14, 2015
MY EXPERIENCE IN THE SUBJECT OF COA-8
You have to have a big vision and take very small steps to get there. You have to be humble as you execute but visionary and gigantic in terms of your aspiration. In the Internet industry, it's not about grand innovation, it's about a lot of little innovations: every day, every week, every month, making something a little bit better.
“If there's one thing you learn by working on a lot of different Web sites, it's that almost any design idea--no matter how appallingly bad--can be made usable in the right circumstances, with enough effort.”
― Steve Krug
The Experience of having a subject COA- 8 or INTRODUCTION TO INTERNET & WEB DESIGN is very unforgettable. I encountered a lot of ideas or new things that i need to be learned. The class also was very memorable. Our teacher and my classmates that always makes me feel happy. The COA- 8 experiences is not by me but to everybody. I'm here to discovered new things that I've not yet discovered. Though its seem like other topics was difficult, but i trying to be like on it or learn on it. A kind of experience that cannot forget. Through COA-8, I found new friends and learn how to be a good friend to them. And also our teacher is very approachable to us. She feel us how important is COA- 8 in our field and having a job in the future.
The things or learning that I learn in this subject are:
- Making Tables
- Application
- Forms
- Inserting hyperlink
- inserting design
- Using CSS codes
- Putting picture using CS codes
Lastly, before I will end this message. I would like to thank god first for giving us strength. Out teacher that also their to help us whatever things that we struggle and for understanding. And to my classmate that always their to help me when their are times that I need help.
"Life is about laughing and living, in good and bad times,getting through whatever comes our way and looking back and smiling...."
THANK YOU!
CYBER CRIME LAW
Source: Manila Bulletin |
The stated aim of the cybercrime law is to fight online pornography, hacking, identity theft and spamming in the conservative Catholic nation amid police complaints they lack the legal tools to stamp out Internet crime.
However it also includes a blanket provision that puts the country's criminal libel law into force in cyberspace, except that the penalties for Internet defamation are much tougher compared with old media.
It also allows authorities to collect data from personal user accounts on social media and listen in on voice/video applications, such as Skype, without a warrant.
Teenagers unwarily retweeting or re-posting libelous material on social media could bear the full force of the law, according to Noemi Dado, a prominent Manila blogger who edits a citizen media site called Blog Watch.
"Not everyone is an expert on what constitutes libel. Imagine a mother like me, or teenagers and kids who love to rant. It really hits our freedoms," Dado told AFP.
Compounding the concerns, those teenagers or anyone else who posts a libelous comment faces a maximum prison term of 12 years and a fine of one million pesos ($24,000).
Brad Adams, Asia director for New York-based Human Rights Watch, said the law was having a chilling effect in the Philippines, which has one of the world's highest per capita rates of Facebook and Twitter users.
"Anybody using popular social networks or who publishes online is now at risk of a long prison term should a reader -- including government officials -- bring a libel charge," Adams said.
About a third of the Philippines' nearly 100 million people use the Internet, with 96 percent them on Facebook, according to industry figures.
Five petitions claiming the law is unconstitutional have been filed with the Supreme Court.
Senator Teofisto Guingona, the lone opponent when the bill was voted on in the Senate, has filed one of the petitions to the Supreme Court.
"Without a clear definition of the crime of libel and the persons liable, virtually any person can now be charged with a crime -- even if you just re-tweet or comment on an online update or blog post," Guingona told the court.
The five petitions all say the law infringes on freedom of expression, due process, equal protection and privacy of communication.
University of the Philippines law professor Harry Roque, who filed one of the petitions, said the Philippines was one of a shrinking number of countries where defamation remained a crime punishable by prison.
Part of the penal code that was drawn up 82 years ago, it goes against the trend in many advanced democracies such as the United States and Britain where defamation is now punished with fines rather than imprisonment, Roque said.
Amid the public backlash, some of the senators who voted for the cybercrime law have started to disassociate themselves from it, even claiming they did not read the provision on libel.
However presidential spokesman Edwin Lacierda has defended the cybercrime law.
"The Cybercrime Act sought to attach responsibilities in cyberspace.... freedom of expression is always recognized but freedom of expression is not absolute," he told reporters on Thursday.
Nevertheless, Lacierda said the law could still be refined.
He called for critics to submit their concerns to a government panel that will issue by the end of the year specific definitions of the law, such as who may be prosecuted. — AFP
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