Archive for December, 2009

Filipino “internet surfing behaviour” as regards Google and Yahoo! top searches and trends

Saturday, December 12th, 2009

Here’s a very interesting insight on Filipino “internet surfing behaviour” as regards Google and Yahoo! top searches and trends I just received from Janette Toral of Digital Filipino.com


This article, with images, is posted at
http://philippineinternetreview.blogspot.com/2009/12/google-and-yahoo-philippines-released.html

Both Google and Yahoo! Philippines recently announced its 2009 review highlighting the top searches and trends on their respective search engines.

Yahoo’s top overall search terms for Philippines in 2009:

1. Manny Pacquiao
2. Cory Aquino
3. Francis Magalona
4. Ondoy
5. Dionisia Pacquiao
6. Shalani Soledad
7. Eraserheads
8. University Athletic Association of the Philippines (UAAP)
9. Mar and Korina
10. Philippine Basketball Association (PBA)

In Yahoo!’s celebrity search rankings, our homegrown talent comes first. Local celebrity searches prove that national interest in controversy and scandal is growing. Kris Aquino touched people’s hearts during her mother’s wake as she detailed the last days of the beloved ex-president. The top celebrity searches in The Philippines also included:

1. Maricar Reyes
2. Angel Locsin
3. Sandara Park
4. Pamela Bianca Manalo
5. Kris Aquino
6. Marian Rivera
7. Michael Jackson
8. Coco Martin
9. Anne Curtis
10. Judy Ann Santos

In a market where mobile penetration is more than 68%, Filipinos are definitely spending a lot more time searching and surfing the Internet on the mobile. The top mobile searches for Philippines included:

1. NBA
2. Katrina Halili
3. Manny Pacquiao
4. Marian Rivera
5. Hayden Kho
6. Francis Magalona
7. Citigroup
8. Michael Jackson
9. Cory Aquino
10. PBA

Google Zeitgeist Philippines 2009

Google’s introduction of the results highlighted the popularity of personalities like Hayden Kho, politicians Benigno “Noynoy” Aquino III and Corazon “Cory” Aquino, events such H1N1 flu pandemic, the death of news anchor Ted Failon’s wife, and the typhoons that slammed into the country, as those that dominated the top searches in 2009.

This article, with images, is posted at
http://philippineinternetreview.blogspot.com/2009/12/google-and-yahoo-philippines-released.html

Philippine COMELEC 2010 election software cource code should be open for transparency and credibility of the process

Wednesday, December 9th, 2009

Smartmatic needs to bare open the source code of the computerized election system it supplies the Philippine Commission on Election (COMELEC) for transparency and to allay fears that the 2010 election can be rigged.

There’s no justification for keeping it a secret. The more secret it becomes, the more mysterious how it will process the vote counting. The more mysterious it becomes, the more suspicious will the outcome of elections be. This will raise more doubts in the integrity of the election.

NO, we don’t want to go back to the manual process and YES, we really need to computerized the election to speed up the process and to lessen “human intervention.” The more time it takes to process/count the results and the more chance for “human intervention,” the more the opportunity for cheaters to make the election process a circus, a mockery of our democracy.

In the manual system (ideally of course), the counting up to canvassing is held in front of watchers and the public to show transparency of the process. With the computerized election, this method has been replaced by the machines with less human intervention making it less prone to cheating. But wait, isn’t the source code also done by humans prone to error and there’s the chance that it might have bugs or can be rigged. Therefore, to remove this suspicion / doubt, the source code should be open.

I think the issue of intellectual property here is no longer important, opening the source code does not mean violation of IPR or copyright since violation of copyright happens only if it is copied and used illegally by others. And if it does happens, they still have the law that they can apply to prosecute violators. But this is not the current problem and it is not the paramount interest of the nation. Copyright laws or the application of other laws will become useless if we will have an unstable government as a result of a failed rigged election.

Then there’s the issue of security. This “making secret of the source code for security purposes” is an example of “Security by Obscurity” which time and again has been proven to be a flawed method for securing software. The rising popularity of Free and Open Source Software (FOSS) and its increasing used in both government, scientific institutions and commercial enterprises has proven that the more open a source code is, the more it becomes stable and secured because the more people examines and audits the code the lesser the bugs.

[Got to go, will continue posting my thoughts on this issue later. If you have reactions both for or against this opinion, please post your comments.]