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| About site: http://www.w3.org/TandS/ |
Title: Science in Society - W3C Technology & Society Domain Concentrating on issues that arise from applications of Web technology, and devoting significant resources to international public policy issues. |
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World_Association_for_Case_Method_Research_and_Case_Method_Application_Europe Advancing the philosophy that complex economic and social problems, whether acute or chronic, cannot be solved by academic research bounded by the conventional constraints of strict rationality.
| World_Conference_on_Science Final reports from the international conference, addressing many aspects of the place of science in society, including ethics, science and technology in economic development, and environmental and eco
| Worldwide_Virtual_Network_of_Young_Practitioners_Working_on_Science_and_Society_Issues Aims to enhance the communication, discussion and collaboration between researchers and other groups of practitioners (e.g. NGOs, policy makers, media, etc.) in Science and Society.
| Advanced_Placement_Digital_Library_for_Biology,_Physics_and_Chemistry An NSF funded Rice University Digital Library project that hosts free reviewed online resources, linked to the content outline, for AP and Pre-AP teachers and students of biology, physics and chemistr
| All_Science_Den_com Articles about assorted topics, such as molecular biology, physics. Some include Flash animations to help explain concepts.
| American_Communications_Foundation_Newsource__Science_&_Technology Assists the commercial broadcast news media in its coverage of science and technology, which is often under-reported because of staffing and budgetary restraints. Enhances the coverage by providing re
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| Animonautes Production of 3D media to offer learning experiences in medicine, biology, astronomy and technology. Page includes sample videos. | | ANOVA_Science_Education Services public and private school districts and schools on the continental USA and in Hawaii through teacher and administrator seminars and workshops. | | Asia_Link_program__MUMA_project A training project dedicated to improve the quality of higher education for heritage management in Asia and Europe. The project runs from March 2004 to August 2006. | | Ask_Dr__Jekyl_and_Mr__Hyde Answers to a variety of science and technology questions, including questions you never thought to ask. | | Athena NASA page features earth and space science resources for K-12 and teachers. Included are class exercises with data collecting and background information for each topic, as well as related links. | | Attaining_Excellence_Through_TIMSS Resources for learning about and discussing the Third International Mathematics and Science Study, including related reports, data and commentaries. | | BBC_Science_&_Nature Information about humans, animals, space, the planet Earth and various hot topics. Includes TV listings, Listen Again online radio, news reports, quizzes, picture galleries and games. | | Berkshire_Biological_Supply_Company Online sale of living organisms for biology class, science fair projects, home teaching. | | BETR_World_Science_and_Computer_Education Offering information on classes and camps for science and computer education in Maryland and Virginia. | | Beyond_Discovery A series of articles that trace the origins of important recent technological and medical advances. Each story reveals the crucial role played by basic science. | | Bill_Nye_the_Science_Guy Online science laboratory. Includes learning activities and show information. | | Brainium A curriculum-based, online environment where teachers and students can share ideas, experiments and activities. | | The_Bubblesphere All about soap bubbles. Bubble blowing, solutions, history, fun, Java games, bubble machines and trivia. | | Candis_Mitchell\'s_Science_Teacher\'s_Site Designed to help educators search for internet material appropriate for their classrooms. | | Cornell_Theory_Center_Math/Science_Gateway Links to resources in mathematics and science for educators and students in grades 9-12. | | Cute_Science Learning materials for include coloring books, audio lectures, videos and workbooks. Subjects covered are math, science, and HTML. Includes product list and online order form. | | Department_of_Energy_Science_Education_Programs Internship and fellowship opportunities for undergraduate students and teachers related to science, technology, engineering, and mathematics. | | Did_You_Ever_Wonder? Each month a dozen questions are posed and answered by lab scientists on various topics on how things work in the natural world. | | Dive_and_Discover__Expeditions_to_the_Seafloor An interactive distance learning web site designed to immerse your students in the exciting process of deep-sea research and exploration. | | Dr__Carlson\'s_Science_Theater Video podcast of cool science demonstrations. | | Dr__Fred\'s_Place Children's science author, Dr. Fred Bortz, including biographical information, list of books, FAQ's, and information about school visits. | | Ed_Quest Includes guided links for students, lesson plans and references for teachers, as well as collaborative projects directed towards the middle school level. | | Education_Links_-_Top_rated_educational_sites_ Collection of educational resources separated into categories such as astronomy, lesson plans, math, and webquests. | | Educational_Resources_Catalog In addition to the catalog itself, links are provided to curriculum materials, professional development, software, visual and audiovisual classroom support, print material and online resources. | | Elementary_Science_Program Includes activity of the month for students and teachers of elementary science, as well as an archive of past activities, and resources. | | The_ENC_Digital_Dozen Each month the Eisenhower National Clearinghouse selects a dozen useful math and science sites for teachers and students. Includes archives. | | EOA_Scientific_Internet_Campus Find educational information and interactive multimedia resources in earth science,geology,oceanography,space science, astronomy, physical science, and remote sensing. | | ERIC_Clearinghouse_for_Science,_Mathematics,_and_Environmental_Education Goal is to provide access to information for teaching and learning about science, mathematics, and the environment. | | Every_Child_a_Scientist For those who want to take an active role in improving the science program in their schools. | | Extreme_Science Science news and activities with an emphasis on extremes. | | Field_Trips Includes virtual science tours on nature topics. Includes related educational resources. | | FizzBang_Science Hands-on science books written by a high school teacher. Includes online shopping and sample experiments. | | Frank_Potter\'s_Science_Gems Resources are sorted by category and grade level. | | Free_Science_Worksheets Features over science labs for biology, chemistry, and physics, and numerous other printable note skeletons, graphic organizers, and worksheets. | | Fun_With_Science A professional geophysicist maintains this collection of resources for classroom demonstrations and hands-on exercises about physics, earth science, earthquakes, math and fun illusions. Includes video | | The_Gender_&_Science_Digital_Library_(GSDL) Aims to provide digital resources to help educators promote interest and engagement with STEM (science, technology, engineering and mathematics) topics for learners of all ages, particularly females. | | The_GLOBE_Program A worldwide hands-on, primary and secondary school-based education and science program. | | The_Great_Web_of_Science Providing links for science, astronomy, biology, chemistry, electronics, medicine, meteorology, oceanography,physics and space. | | Harvard-Smithsonian_Center_For_Astrophysics_-_Science_Education_Department Develops curricula, videos and activities to enhance learning of scientific topics. Includes list of projects and staff. | | Headstart_Courses Summer school programme of science and engineering experience courses at university for professional careers in science, engineering and technology. |
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W3C Technology & Society Domain Skip navigation W3C Home Technology and Society Domain Activities eGovernment Activity Patent Policy Activity Privacy Activity Security Activity Semantic Web Activity Web Services Activity Technology & Society Domain Mission | Activities | Historical Nearby: People of the T & S Domain. Mission Working at the intersection of Web technology and public policy, the Technology and Society Domain's goal is to augment existing Web infrastructure with building blocks that assist in addressing critical public policy issues affecting the Web. Our expectation is not to solve policy problems entirely with technology, but we do believe that well-designed technical tools can lead to policy approaches that are more consistent with the way the Web should operate. The Semantic Web is an important component in this endeavor, as it provides the means for various entities to instrument their interactions through formal specifications of vocabularies describing relevant policies, rules and resources. Semantic Web technologies will enable our machines to assist users in exercising more control over their online environment and interactions. Activities eGovernment Activity Patent Policy Activity Privacy Activity Security Activity Semantic Web Activity Web Services Activity eGovernment Activity From the introduction of the eGovernment Activity Statement: eGovernment refers to the use of the Web or otherinformation technologies by governing bodies to interact with theircitizenry, between departments and divisions, and between governmentsthemselves. The eGovernment Interest Group ischartered to explore how to improve access to government through better useof the Web and achieve better government transparency using open Webstandards at any government level (local, state, national andmulti-national). Read more on the eGovernment Activity home page. José Manuel Alonso is the Activity Lead. The Activity includes this group: eGovernment Interest Group Patent Policy Activity From the introduction of the Patent Policy Activity Statement: The Patent Policy Activity's goal is to enable W3C toimplement and successfully operate the W3C Patent Policy. The policy was put into place in February 2004, and the work of developing and implementing it is complete. It is important that the W3C community have an organized way to monitor application of the policy as well as remain informed about relevant developments in the legal and standards environment. Read more on the Patent Policy Activity home page. Daniel J. Weitzner is the Activity Lead. The Activity includes this group: Patents and Standards Interest Group Privacy Activity From the introduction of the Privacy Activity Statement: For the past 9 years, the Platform for Privacy Preferences (P3P) was the very center of the W3C Privacy Activity. The P3P Specification Working Group has now completed its work on P3P 1.1 by delivering a Last Call Working Draft. Following the change in the privacy landscape following the 9/11 events, the group found there is insufficient momentum for implementations at this point in time. Although the group believes that P3P 1.1 is ready for implementation, it decided not to enter Candidate Recommendation, published the current specification as a Working Group Note, and have thus completed their last deliverable. The P3P Specification Working Group was closed on 21 November 2006. The P3P Specification Working Group delivered multiple important milestones for the Web. The most important documents are listed here: The Platform for Privacy Preferences 1.1 (P3P1.1) Specification (2006) The Platform for Privacy Preferences 1.0 (P3P1.0) Recommendation (2002) A P3P Preference Exchange Language 1.0 (APPEL1.0) (2002) P3P Guiding Principles (1998) P3P using Semantic Web ( unofficial 2004-version) (2002-version) It is important to note that the P3P Specification Working Group always looked further ahead. This is demonstrated by the three Workshops organized after the P3P 1.0 Recommendation: The 2002 Workshop on the Future of P3P (immediate improvements) The 2003 W3C Workshop on the long term Future of P3P and Enterprise Privacy Languages The 2006 Workshop on Languages for Privacy Policy Negotiation and Semantics-Driven Enforcement From the workshops one can already flair the evolution. P3P was developed in a context of the Web facing a human end-user using the Web to browse information. Nowadays, the world has become more complicated. Information offers and services facing the user are often assembled ad-hoc in the backend using web services of different providers in a social network made of contracts and now being mirrored into our ICT network infrastructure. In the early P3P days, companies wrestled with the policy to show to their consumers. They looked at their current practices and things where changed and streamlined to accommodate the privacy challenge inside enterprises. In order to be able to handle the increased complexity inherent to the management of privacy inside enterprises, those challenges where discussed and proposals where made. Enterprises are confronted with a wide range of privacy expectations from promises (policies) they made to the user, from regulators and competitors. In order to respond to all those challenges, enterprises adapted their IT infrastructure to also handle privacy. As long as this remains within one company, this is not an issue. But our economy is based on massive exchange and use of personal data. This means the internal handling of privacy metadata has to be interoperable if it comes to a data transfer over enterprise borders. Read more on the Privacy Activity home page. Rigo Wenning is the Activity Lead. The Activity includes this group: Policy Languages Interest Group Security Activity From the introduction of the Security Activity Statement: The work of the Security Activity follows two main directions. The Web Security Context Working Group focuses on the challenges that arise when users encounter currently deployed security technology, such as TLS: While this technology achieves its goals on a technical level, attackers' strategies shift towards bypassing the security technology instead of breaking it. When users do not understand the security context in which they operate, then it becomes easy to deceive and defraud them. The second direction of the work concerns XML security technologies, first in the XML Security Specifications Maintenance WG, now in the more broadly scoped XML Security WG". The Web Security Context Working Group follows up on the W3C Workshop on Transparency and Usability of Web Authentication (Workshop report), held in New York City on 15 and 16 March 2006. The Group is currently working through Last Call comments on Web Security Context: User Interface Guidelines. The XML Security Specifications Maintenance Working Group concluded its work by performing interoperability testing, assisting the XML Core Working Group in moving Canonical XML 1.1 to Recommendation, and successfully publishing XML Signature 2nd Edition. Most participants transitioned into the new XML Security WG, which is taking up the results from the 2007 Workshop on Next Steps with XML Signature and Encryption. Read more on the Security Activity home page. Thomas Roessler is the Activity Lead. The Activity includes these groups: Web Security Context Working Group XML Security Working Group Semantic Web Activity From the introduction of the Semantic Web Activity Statement: The goal of the Semantic Web initiative is as broad as that of the Web: tocreate a universal medium for the exchange of data. It is envisaged tosmoothly interconnect personal information management, enterprise applicationintegration, and the global sharing of commercial, scientific and culturaldata. Facilities to put machine-understandable data on the Web are quicklybecoming a high priority for many organizations, individuals andcommunities. The Web can reach its full potential only if it becomes a place where datacan be shared and processed by automated tools as well as by people. For theWeb to scale, tomorrow's programs must be able to share and process data evenwhen these programs have been designed totally independently. The SemanticWeb Activity is an initiative of the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) designedto provide a leadership role in defining this Web. The Activity develops openspecifications for those technologies that are ready for large scaledeployment, and identifies, through open source advanced development, theinfrastructure components that will be necessary to scale in the Web in thefuture. The principal technologies of the Semantic Web fit into a set of layeredspecifications. The current components are the Resource Description Framework(RDF) Core Model, the RDF Schema language and the Web Ontology language(OWL). Building on these core components is a standardized query language,SPARQL (pronounced "sparkle"), for RDF enabling the 'joining' ofdecentralized collections of RDF data. The GRDDL Recommendation and the workon RDFa aims at creating bridges between the RDF model and various XMLformats, like XHTML. The POWDER Working group develops technologies tofind resource descriptions for specific resources on the Web; descriptionswhich can be ‘joined’ to other RDF data. Finally, SKOS is a model and anRDF vocabulary for expressing the basic structure and content of conceptschemes such as thesauri, classification schemes, subject heading lists,taxonomies, 'folksonomies', other types of controlled vocabulary, and alsoconcept schemes embedded in glossaries and terminologies. Read more on the Semantic Web Activity home page. Ivan Herman is the Activity Lead. The Activity includes these groups: GRDDL Working Group OWL Working Group Protocol for Web Description Resources (POWDER) Working Group RDF Data Access Working Group Rule Interchange Format Working Group Semantic Web Coordination Group Semantic Web Deployment Working Group Semantic Web Health Care and Life Sciences Interest Group Semantic Web Interest Group Web Services Activity From the introduction of the Web Services Activity Statement: Web services provide a standard means of interoperating between differentsoftware applications, running on a variety of platforms and/or frameworks.Web services are characterized by their great interoperability andextensibility, as well as their machine-processable descriptions thanks tothe use of XML. They can be combined in a loosely coupled way in order toachieve complex operations. Programs providing simple services can interactwith each other in order to deliver sophisticated added-value services. The W3C Web Services Activity is designing the infrastructure, definingthe architecture and creating the core technologies for Web services. The SOAP 1.2 XML-basedmessaging framework became a W3C Recommendation in June 2003 and the SOAPMessage Transmission Optimization Mechanism (MTOM) in January 2005. Here is a comprehensive list of Recommendations pertaining to the W3C Web Services Activity: XML Protocol Working Group: SOAP Version 1.2 Part 0: Primer (Second Edition) SOAP Version 1.2 Part 1: Messaging Framework (Second Edition) SOAP Version 1.2 Part 2: Adjuncts (Second Edition) SOAP Version 1.2 Specification Assertions and Test Collection (Second Edition) XML-binary Optimized Packaging SOAP Message Transmission Optimization Mechanism Resource Representation SOAP Header Block Web Services Description Working Group: Web Services Description Language (WSDL) Version 2.0 Part 0: Primer Web Services Description Language (WSDL) Version 2.0 Part 1: Core Language Web Services Description Language (WSDL) Version 2.0 Part 2: Adjuncts Web Services Addressing Working Group: Web Services Addressing 1.0 - Core Web Services Addressing 1.0 - SOAP Binding Web Services Addressing 1.0 - Metadata Semantic Annotations for WSDL Working Group: Semantic Annotations for WSDL and XML Schema Web Services Policy Working Group: Web Services Policy 1.5 - Framework Web Services Policy 1.5 - Attachment Read more on the Web Services Activity home page. Yves Lafon is the Activity Lead. The Activity includes these groups: Web Services Coordination Group SOAP-JMS Binding Working Group Web Services Choreography Working Group Web Services Policy Working Group XML Schema Patterns for Databinding Working Group XML Protocol Working Group Web Services Resource Access Working Group Historical News Items 29 October 2003: Acting on the advice of the W3C HTML Patent Advisory Group, W3C has presented the United States Patent and Trademark Office with prior art establishing that US Patent No. 5,838,906 (the '906 patent) is invalid. W3C Director Tim Berners-Lee has written an unprecedented request to US Under Secretary of Commerce for Intellectual Property James E. Rogan to take action to remove the patent to allow operation of the Web. Please refer to the briefing 10 October 2003: The RDF Core Working Group has released the second Last Call of six Working Drafts. The Resource Description Framework (RDF) supports the exchange of knowledge on the Web. Comments are welcome through 7 November. Also updated is the Working Group Note LBase, a framework for specifying the meaning of Semantic Web languages. RDF Primer RDF Concepts and Abstract Syntax RDF Semantics RDF/XML Syntax Specification (Revised) RDF Vocabulary Description Language 1.0: RDF Schema RDF Test Cases 5 September 2003: The RDF Core Working Group has released six Working Drafts in response to Last Call comments. The Resource Description Framework (RDF) supports the exchange of knowledge on the Web. Also published as a Working Group Note is LBase, a framework for specifying the meaning of Semantic Web languages. Read about the Semantic Web Activity. RDF Primer RDF Concepts and Abstract Syntax RDF Semantics RDF/XML Syntax Specification (Revised) RDF Vocabulary Description Language 1.0: RDF Schema RDF Test Cases 28 August 2003: W3C invited its Members as well as other key commercial and open source software interests to attend an ad hoc meeting hosted by Macromedia on Tuesday 19 August in San Francisco, CA, USA. Participants discussed Eolas v. Microsoft and US Patent 5,838,906. W3C has created the public-web-plugins@w3.org archived public mailing list for discussion. Please refer to the report from Steven R Bratt, W3C Chief Operating Officer. 19 August 2003: OWL Web Ontology Language is Candidate Recommendation. OWL is used to publish and share sets of terms called ontologies, providing advanced Web search, software agents and knowledge management. Comments are welcome. Read the press release and FAQ and more about the Semantic Web Activity. The OWL Web Ontology Language in six parts: Overview Guide Reference Semantics and Abstract Syntax Test Cases Use Cases and Requirements 11 August 2003: W3C's Semantic Web Advanced Development initiative announces a new release of IsaViz, a visual environment for browsing and authoring RDF models represented as graphs. Version 2.0 supports GSS, an RDF-based stylesheet language. Other new features include datatype support, enhanced navigation, better handling of namespace prefix bindings, and an import/export plug-in interface. Learn more about IsaViz. 18-20 June 2003: W3C Workshop on the long-term Future of P3P and Enterprise Privacy Languages held at the ICPP in Kiel, Schleswig-Holstein, Germany. 13 June 2003: The Web Ontology Working Group has released XML Presentation Syntax for the OWL Web Ontology Language (OWL) as a W3C Note. The Note suggests one possible XML presentation syntax and includes XML schemas for OWL Lite, OWL DL, and OWL Full. OWL is used to publish and share sets of terms called ontologies, providing advanced Web search, software agents and knowledge management. Read about the Semantic Web Activity. 10 June 2003: W3C launches its Semantic Tour today in Rome. Funded by the European Commission, the tour includes events in London, Munich, Athens and Brussels promoting W3C technologies that bring to the Web more effective discovery, automation, integration, and reuse of data. 29 May 2003: The Web Ontology Working Group has released a Last Call Working Draft of the OWL Web Ontology Language Test Cases. Designed for OWL developers, the draft is a companion to the OWL language definition. 21 May 2003: The World Wide Web Consortium has approved the W3C Patent Policy based on review by the W3C Advisory Committee and the public. Written by the Patent Policy Working Group, the policy received more support from the Membership than any Recommendation in recent history. 18 April 2003: The XKMS Working Group has published Last Call Working Drafts of the XML Key Management Specification (XKMS) and its bindings. The documents specify protocols for distributing and registering public keys for use with XML Signature and XML Encryption. 02 April 2003 : OWL Last Call Working Drafts Published, The Web Ontology Working Group has released six Working Drafts, five in Last Call, for the OWL Web Ontology Language 1.0, including the OWL Guide, Overview, Use Cases and Requirements, Semantics and Abstract Syntax, Reference, and Test Cases. OWL is used to publish and share sets of terms called ontologies, providing advanced Web search, software agents and knowledge management. 19 March 2003: Patent Policy Working Group publishes Proposed Policy: W3C Royalty-Free Patent Policy supported by summary and press release 24 January 2003: RDF Core publishes last call documents, The RDF Core Working Group has released six Last Call Working Drafts : RDF Primer, RDF Test Cases, RDF/XML Syntax Specification (Revised), RDF Vocabulary Description Language 1.0: RDF Schema, RDF Semantics, and Resource Description Framework (RDF): Concepts and Abstract Syntax. Also published is a W3C Note, LBase, a framework for specifying Semantic Web languages in a uniform and coherent way. 6 January 2003: Summary Report - W3C Workshop on the Future of P3P 10 December 2002: XML Encryption Syntax and Processing - Recommendation 10 December 2002: Decryption Transform for XML Signature - Recommendation 14 November 2002: Royalty-Free Patent Policy - Last Call 12 November 2002: Workshop on the Future of P3P 08 November 2002: XML-Signature XPath Filter 2.0 - Recommendation 03 October 2002: XML Encryption Syntax and Processing - Proposed Recommendation 03 October 2002: Decryption Transform for XML Signature - Proposed Recommendation 27 August 2002: XML-Signature XPath Filter 2.0 - Proposed Recommendation 18 July 2002: Exclusive XML Canonicalization Version 1.0 - Recommendation Workshop on Digital Rights Management for the Web (January 2001) P3P Candidate Recommendation Draft (December 2000) Canonical XML and XML Signature Candidate Recommendation (November 2000) XML Encryption workshop (November 2000) P3P patent infringement issue clarified: W3C issued a legal analysis finding that P3P does not infringe the Intermind patent [ Press Release, Patent Analysis] (October 28 1999) Common Markup for Micropayment Last Call Draft (August 25 1999) "Cambridge Communiqué": Members of the RDF & XML Schema working groups clarify the relationship between XML and RDF Schema specs and outline a work program for harmonizing approaches to Web data architecture. (October 7 1999) RDF Interest Group Launched (August 20 1999) XML Signature Working Group launched jointly with IETF. (June 1999) 18 April 2002: Daniel Weitzner (Chair, W3C Patent Policy WG) provides testimony at a United States Justice Department/Federal Trade Commission hearing on Antitrust, Intellectual Property and Standard-setting. 16 April 2002: P3P Recommendation released - see also the press release 18 March 2002: XML Key Management Specification - Bulk Operation - First Draft 18 March 2002: XML Key Management Specification - First Working Draft 18 March 2002: XML Key Management (2.0) Requirements - Last Called 04 March 2002: XML Encryption Syntax and Processing - Candidate Recommendation 04 March 2002: Decryption Transform for XML Signature - Candidate Recommendation 26 February 2002: Royalty-Free Patent Policy - Public Working Draft published 14 February 2002: Exclusive XML Canonicalization - Candidate Recommendation 14 February 2002: XML-Signature - Recommendation 11 February 2002: The Platform for Privacy Preferences 1.0 Deployment Guide - revisions published 28 January 2002: The Platform for Privacy Preferences 1.0 (P3P1.0) Specification - Proposed Recommendation 24 January 2002: Current Patent Practices - Note published 18 December 2001: RDF/XML Syntax Specification (Revised) - Public Working Draft 18 October 2001: XML Encryption Requirements - Last Call 18 October 2001: XML Encryption Syntax and Processing - Last Call 18 October 2001: Decryption Transform for XML Signature - Last Call Workshop on XML Key Management Canonical XML Version 1.0 - W3C Recommendation 1999 Overview of T&S Activities, an earlier version of this page. Ralph Swick, Technology and Society Domain Lead Last modified by $Author: ijacobs $ on $Date: 2007/06/26 03:28:02 $ Copyright © 2001-2008 W3C ® ( MIT , ERCIM , Keio), All Rights Reserved. W3C liability, trademark, document use and software licensing rules apply. Your interactions with this site are in accordance with our public and Member privacy statements. |
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Concentrating | on | issues | that | arise | from | applications | of | Web | technology, | and | devoting | significant | resources | to | international | public | policy | issues. | |
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