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Quinn Norton (born 1973) is an American journalist, photographer and blogger covering hacker culture, Anonymous, Occupy movement, intellectual property and copyright issues, and the Internet. Her work has appeared in ''Wired News'', ''The Guardian'', ''Maximum PC'', and O'Reilly Media publications such as ''Make'' magazine. She has also been a long-time fixture at O'Reilly's Foo Camp. Norton currently writes a regular column, ''Notes on a Strange World'',〔(Notes on a Strange World, Medium Publishing. Described as "a writer’s attempt to understand a global society fast leaving behind the moniker “Modern.”" )〕 at Medium publishing. Norton has given a number of talks at technology conferences on the topic of body augmentation, usually under the title "Body Hacking",〔(''We Make Money Not Art'' ) A summary of her "Body Hacking" talk at the 23rd Chaos Communication Congress〕〔(Presenter on body hacking at Cusp Conference 2008 )〕 as well as taught a course at NYU titled "Laboratory of the Self".〔(NYU ITP directory )〕 As part of her research, she had a magnet implanted in the tip of her ring finger, enabling her to sense magnetic fields.〔(''NPR All Things Considered'' ) Radio Interview about the magnet in her finger and her body hacking story〕〔(''A Sixth Sense for a Wired World'' ) Article and pictures about her magnetic implant〕 The magnet was later removed. Norton has described a conceptual prank involving writing and executing a computer program that would output all possible melodies, theoretically providing the opportunity to claim copyright for all music.〔(''Guardian Unlimited'' ) Quinn's Symphonic Conundrum〕 == Personal life == Norton was married to Danny O'Brien. Norton dated Aaron Swartz for three years.〔 Articles in ''The Atlantic'' and in ''The New Yorker'' indicate that she was pressured by prosecutors to offer information or testimony that could be used against Swartz, but that she denied having information that supported prosecutors' claims of criminal intentions on Swartz's part. Prosecutors nevertheless attempted to use a public blog post on Swartz's blog that Norton mentioned, which may or may not have been co-authored by Swartz, as proof of a criminal intent. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Quinn Norton」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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