<span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family: arial, sans-serif; font-size: 13px; border-collapse: collapse; "><ul>Hi All,</ul><ul>this is an interesting read!</ul><ul><br></ul><ul>US agency's balloon hunt tests internet accuracy<br>
By Emilio San Pedro<br>BBC News<br><<a href="http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/8397649.stm" target="_blank" style="color: rgb(51, 102, 51); ">http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/8397649.stm</a>><br> <br>*The US defence research agency has used 10 red balloons in a contest to<br>
assess the accuracy with which information spreads on the internet.*<br> <br>The giant moored weather balloons were launched on Saturday morning at 10<br>undisclosed locations across the United States.<br> <br>More than 4,000 groups competed to be the first to pinpoint all 10.<br>
<br>A team from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (Mit) won the<br>challenge and a prize of $40,000 (£24,000).<br> <br>Johanna Jones, a spokeswoman for the US Defense Advanced Research Projects<br>Agency (Darpa), said that beyond the actual contest, the aim was to see<br>
whether social networking sites like Facebook and Twitter should be seen as<br>credible sources of information.<br> <br>Darpa is no stranger to innovative uses of technology.<br> <br>The agency - which is part of the US defence department - played a pivotal<br>
role in the creation of the internet itself.<br> <br>That original network was created at the behest of the US government as a<br>way to access and distribute information in the case of a catastrophic<br>event.<br> <br>Forty years on, with the internet in full swing, the same agency was keen to<br>
see if the power of social networking sites - with their tens of millions of<br>users - could be used as a credible source to alert authorities of impending<br>disaster or unrest on US soil.<br> </ul></span>Kind Regards,<div>
<br>-- <br>"It is time,Africans moved from a knowledge based society to a wise society" Dr. Nii Quaynor<br>
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