Framework for legal ecosystem for ICT entrepreneurship in developing countries

I had the good fortune to present this morning on a panel at MIT on the issue of how to create a local “habitat” in developing countries for the successful growth of entrepreneurial activity in the information and communications technologies sector.  (The event is called “Workshop on Global ICT Education Program,” with a stellar list … Read more

Berkman speaker series

One of the things I’m most excited about at the Berkman Center is the largely informal speaker series that we’ve been running.  Most sessions take place at lunchtime in Baker House and are quite informal in nature.  Occasionally, the lectures are on a larger stage, as when Yossi Vardi visited us last week.  For instance, … Read more

Bill Ury, Program on Negotiation at the Berkman Center today

We’re very fortunate to have Bill Ury and several of his colleagues from the Harvard Law School’s Program on Negotiation here at the Berkman Center today.   Bill Ury’s focused on the idea of “e-Parliament,” a means of “helping humanity get to YES.”  Ury knows a lot about this topic: he’s co-author of the long-time bestseller, “Getting … Read more

Collaboration

[Update: mp3, stream, wav file of Yossi Vardi’s lecture available here.  Also, see Turmis’s Musings for additional color.] “People are interested in a good story,” Yossi Vardi says, “and not in the facts.”  So take his lecture today at Harvard Law School, sponsored by the Berkman Center, on its own terms. Yossi Vardi says the most … Read more

Congressional Anti-Piracy Caucus formed

US lawmakers have their eye on piracy of music, movies and software on a global level.  The “worst offenders,” according to a member of the newly-formed Congressional Anti-Piracy Caucus, include Brazil, China, Pakistan, Russia and Taiwan.  Maybe so.  But the US Congress should take care in this matter to see the subtleties on this complex topic … Read more

Digital Democracy, JJ Disini-style

JJ Disini is exploring “the upper limit of human capacity for processing information — human throughput.”  He surmises: “This probably explains why we will always need intermediaries to perform sorting functions for the Web or highlighting information we need to know (ah, the ever-enduring demand for advertising).  In the context of online democracy, this means that there’s … Read more