Bobinas P4G
  • Login
  • Public

    • Public
    • Groups
    • Popular
    • People

Notices by Hacker News ( unofficial ) (hackernews@pod.jpope.org)

  1. Hacker News ( unofficial ) (hackernews@pod.jpope.org)'s status on Thursday, 23-Aug-2018 04:13:27 UTC Hacker News ( unofficial ) Hacker News ( unofficial )

    Why Prosperity Has Increased but Happiness Has Not

    Our well-being is local and relative — if you live in a struggling area and your status is slipping, even if you are relatively comfortable, you are probably at least a bit miserable.

    Article word count: 1255

    HN Discussion: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=17819895

    Posted by tysone (karma: 5858)

    Post stats: Points: 102 - Comments: 110 - 2018-08-22T16:30:53Z

    #HackerNews #but #happiness #has #increased #not #prosperity #why


    Article content:

    Our well-being is local and relative — if you live in a struggling area and your status is slipping, even if you are relatively comfortable, you are probably at least a bit miserable.

    By Jonathan Rauch

    Mr. Rauch is the author of “The Happiness Curve: Why Life Gets Better After 50.”

    CreditTyler Comrie

    In 1990, Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher of Britain was challenged by a Labour member of Parliament on the subject of growing inequality. “All levels of income are better off than they were in 1979,” [1]she retorted. “The honorable member is saying that he would rather that the poor were poorer, provided the rich were less rich. … What a policy!”

    That slap-down was an iconic formulation of a premise of the Thatcher-Reagan conservative revolution: Poverty is a social problem, but inequality, as such, is not. Governments should aim to increase the incomes and opportunities of all, especially the poor, but to worry about the gap between the rich and the rest is “the politics of envy.”

    Morally speaking, Mrs. Thatcher and Ronald Reagan should have been right. As long as I am better off, why should I begrudge your doing better still? Yet something was amiss with this consensus — something that goes far to explain why Reagan-Thatcher conservatism has caved in under pressure from the populisms of President Trump on the right and Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont on the left.

    In America (and also in other countries), an impressive postwar rise in material well-being has had zero effect on personal well-being. The divergence between economic growth and subjective satisfaction began decades ago. Real per capita income has [2]more than tripled since the late 1950s, but the percentage of people saying they are very happy has, if anything, slightly declined.

    Why? Researching happiness and age, I did a deep dive into the relatively new discipline of happiness economics and emerged impressed by two findings. One is that all happiness is local. According to [3]World Bank data, the share of the world’s population living on less than $1.90 a day (inflation adjusted) declined to under 10 percent in 2015 from 44 percent in 1980, an astounding achievement.

    But ordinary people’s well-being depends mainly on their immediate surroundings. If you are an autoworker who loses your job in Massena, N.Y., when G.M. [4]closes its local plant (moving some jobs to Mexico) and who spends years out of work and who watches as schools shut down and shops go dark and young people flee — for you, the fact that America’s big coastal cities are doing great, or that more than half a billion Chinese have been lifted out of extreme poverty, merely rubs salt in your wounds.

    Second, all happiness is relative. Although moral philosophers may wish Homo sapiens were wired more rationally, we humans are walking, talking status meters, constantly judging our worth and social standing by comparing ourselves with others today and with our own prior selves.

    According to the Brookings Institution economist [5]Carol Graham, poor whites are far more unhappy and pessimistic than poor blacks, even though, in absolute terms, they are better off. That would not make sense if absolute standing determined subjective well-being. It does make sense, however, when we look at relative standing. Less-educated whites (especially men) have seen their relative standing decline sharply, both compared with their parents and with rising nonwhites. Blacks, by contrast, have seen themselves doing better than expected and closing the economic and social gap.

    Absolute standing is not irrelevant, and people will tolerate and sometimes even embrace inequality if they believe the system is fair and lets them get ahead. Still, the [6]witticism (frequently attributed to Gore Vidal) that “it is not enough for me to succeed; others must fail” is uncomfortably accurate. In a [7]striking experiment, certain households in Kenyan villages were randomly chosen to receive large financial windfalls. The lucky beneficiaries were pleased, of course, but their increased happiness was much more than offset by the increased unhappiness of other households, which lost nothing in absolute terms but suddenly saw themselves falling behind. Pondering the accumulated evidence, the British happiness economist Richard Layard concluded, “These studies provide clear evidence that a rise in other people’s income hurts your happiness.”

    Inequality, in short, is immiserating. One could cite more evidence in the same vein. Places in the United States with more inequality have higher [8]stress and worry, more [9]political polarization and lower [10]social connectedness, even among the wealthy. Moreover, what counts for subjective well-being is not just reality but also perception. If social media and reality TV disproportionately depict millionaires and amazing homes, or if talk-radio pundits insist that government takes from hard-working whites to subsidize lazy minorities, resentment grows, never mind what the statistics may say.

    In a poor country with low inequality, rising national income should make people happier, and of course reducing poverty is a good in and of itself. But in a wealthy, unequal country like today’s America, gains in national income can decouple from well-being.

    “Each person would become happier because he was richer, but less happy because other people were richer,” Mr. Layard writes. “The two effects would cancel each other out, because relative income would be unchanged.”

    Moreover, if [11]inequality is growing (as is the case in the United States), economic growth pushes the rungs of the socioeconomic ladder farther apart even as it lifts the ladder. Because people tend to compare upward when gauging status, they perceive themselves to be losing ground.

    In light of what happiness economists have had to say, the interesting question is not why the Reagan-Thatcher consensus finally failed but why it prevailed for two generations. Partly, I think, because its call to transcend envy is morally appealing, and partly because, in the 1980s and 1990s, pro-growth policies and free-market economics seemed to have turned around a troubled economy. But partly also because there was no viable alternative. Mainstream liberalism worried about inequality but offered only policies that much of the public viewed as discredited or unfair.

    Now the Reagan-Thatcherist alternative has crumbled, too. In 2008, the economic meltdown made the system look rigged and ignited a populist backlash. In 2016, the backlash coalesced behind the populisms of Mr. Trump and Mr. Sanders, each of whom had a compelling story to tell those suffering from real or perceived loss of status: We will de-rig the system with radical solutions like trade wars and socialized medicine. Those may be (as I believe) wrong answers to the problem of inequality, but they are answers, and their appeal is evident.

    Today it is free-market conservatism that is voiceless. After insisting for two generations that inequality does not matter, the heirs of Mr. Reagan and Mrs. Thatcher — people like the House speaker, Paul Ryan — have neither a coherent program to reduce inequality nor a philosophical rationale to seek one.

    Like it or not, inequality in today’s America drives politics toward rage and polarization, and toward destabilizing and dangerous populisms of both left and right. Trumpism and Sandersism have something to say about inequality, but mainstream conservatism does not, and it will be no match for them until it does.

    Jonathan Rauch, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, is the author of “[12]The Happiness Curve: Why Life Gets Better After 50.”

    Follow The New York Times Opinion section on [13]Facebook and [14]Twitter (@NYTopinion), and sign up for the [15]Opinion Today newsletter.

    A version of this article appears in print on , on Page A21 of the New York edition with the headline: More Wealth Has Not Made Us Happier. [16]Order Reprints | [17]Today’s Paper | [18]Subscribe

    References

    Visible links
    1. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pdR7WW3XR9c
    2. http://worldhappiness.report/ed/2018/
    3. https://ourworldindata.org/extreme-poverty#historical-poverty-around-the-world
    4. https://www.npr.org/2016/04/17/474544945/after-factory-plant-closures-job-loss-a-small-ny-town-struggles-to-bounce-back
    5. https://www.brookings.edu/experts/carol-graham/
    6. https://quoteinvestigator.com/2012/08/06/succeed-fail/
    7. https://www.princeton.edu/~joha/publications/Haushofer_Reisinger_Shapiro_Inequality_2015.pdf
    8. https://www.brookings.edu/research/stress-worry-and-social-support-inequality-in-americas-cities/
    9. https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/wonk/wp/2015/10/07/these-political-scientists-may-have-discovered-the-real-reason-u-s-politics-are-a-disaster/?utm_term=.7ea531ed80e6
    10. https://www.nature.com/articles/nature15392
    11. https://www.cnbc.com/2018/07/19/income-inequality-continues-to-grow-in-the-united-states.html
    12. https://us.macmillan.com/books/9781250078803
    13. https://www.facebook.com/nytopinion
    14. http://twitter.com/NYTOpinion
    15. http://www.nytimes.com/newsletters/opiniontoday/
    16. http://www.nytreprints.com/
    17. http://www.nytimes.com/pages/todayspaper/index.html
    18. https://www.nytimes.com/subscriptions/Multiproduct/lp8HYKU.html?campaignId=48JQY

    HackerNewsBot debug: Calculated post rank: 104 - Loop: 460 - Rank min: 100 - Author rank: 162

    In conversation Thursday, 23-Aug-2018 04:13:27 UTC from pod.jpope.org permalink

    Attachments










  2. Hacker News ( unofficial ) (hackernews@pod.jpope.org)'s status on Friday, 25-May-2018 08:13:37 UTC Hacker News ( unofficial ) Hacker News ( unofficial )

    Google 'stole my videos', says film-maker Philip Bloom

    Film-maker claims his footage has been misused, after an internal Google video leaks online.

    Article word count: 775

    HN Discussion: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=17145844

    Posted by venturis_voice (karma: 201)

    Post stats: Points: 130 - Comments: 77 - 2018-05-24T16:48:08Z

    #HackerNews #bloom #film-maker #google #philip #says #stole #videos


    Article content:

    By Leo Kelion Technology desk editor

    [1]Snow storm Image copyright Philip Bloom Image caption Footage filmed of tourists caught up in a snowstorm was among that used by Google

    Google has enraged a leading film-maker by using his footage in a corporate video that later leaked online.

    The technology company used material from more than half a dozen of Philip Bloomʼs films to make a provocative presentation about ways it could exploit usersʼ data in the future.

    Mr Bloom makes a living from selling rights to his footage, among other activities.

    Google insisted that it took copyright law seriously.

    It said that the "thought-experiment" video had been intended to be seen by only a handful of people.

    It was made in 2016 by the head of design at X, Googleʼs research and development division.

    Google added that the executive had now been reminded about its strict copyright rules.

    Image copyright Sarah Seal
    Image caption Mr Bloom has worked with Star Wars creator George Lucas among other celebrities

    However, despite being aware of Mr Bloomʼs claim since last Friday, the technology company declined to say whether it now intended to make a payment.

    "My footage is represented online by two major stock-footage companies. And I license it for all sorts of projects and uses, from commercials to broadcast to corporate films," said Mr Bloom.

    "A fair amount of my footage has been licensed for internal use only, so to hear Google not state that they will compensate me for its use is very surprising.

    "Google via their YouTube platform are pretty strict when it comes to copyright breaches, so this is rather hypocritical of them and most certainly does not set a good example.

    Image copyright Philip Bloom
    Image caption Footage filmed at Northern Irelandʼs Giantʼs Causeway was also used in The Selfish Ledger

    "They have used 73 seconds of my footage from seven different videos without permission and they know they are in the wrong... so therefore I expect to hear from them regarding compensation."

    Googleʼs parent company, Alphabet, [2]reported a $12.6bn profit in its last financial year.

    Slow-mo snow

    The corporate video - titled the Selfish Ledger - had already provoked controversy [3]after The Verge news site published a copy of it last week. The website described it as showing an "unsettling vision of Silicon Valley social engineering".

    This helped bring its existence to Mr Bloomʼs attention.

    Image copyright Getty Images
    Image caption The X laboratory is the division behind Googleʼs Loon balloon trials and helped create its self-drive cars

    Mr Bloom - a former camera operator for the BBC, Sky and CNN - has a high profile on social media, where he offers film-making tips.

    His [4]YouTube channel has more than 168,000 subscribers and may have been the source for at least some of the copied footage, which included [5]slow-motion video of a snowstorm in New York.

    One US-based intellectual property expert said Google might find it hard to defend its behaviour, if the matter were to come to court.

    "It just looks bad from a PR perspective for a big company that deals with copyrighted material every second of every day not to respect someone elseʼs rights," said Jennifer Van Doren, from the law firm Morning Star.

    "Even if the video was for internal use, the film-maker still has the right to stop its use or require payment to prevent it being copyright infringement."

    US law does [6]allow a "fair use" defence to permit unlicensed use of video in some circumstances, but Ms Van Doren said it was typically limited to education, news reporting and criticism of the material itself.

    Common problem

    It is not unusual for the media industry to avoid copyright payments where they are due.

    Image copyright Philip Bloom
    Image caption Footage Mr Bloom filmed to promote the charity Shelter UK was also used

    Film editors, for example, commonly use soundtracks lifted from other films without permission until their own scores are ready, and these can sometimes be played to test audiences.

    Mr Bloom has previously complained of his footage being "nicked all the time", including one instance when an online reviewer had used his images in a title sequence used for multiple videos.

    But Google has long faced accusations of failing to do enough to respect othersʼ intellectual property - [7]whether it be scanning books, [8]presenting othersʼ photos or [9]"enabling piracy".

    And Mr Bloom has signalled he intends to chase the matter up in this instance.

    Media playback is unsupported on your device

    Media captionWATCH: Mr Bloom tested a variety of drones for the BBC in 2016

    "This is a good opportunity for people to realise that you canʼt just download someoneʼs content from [YouTube] without permission or licensing - even if you own the company like Google do," he said.

    References

    Visible links
    2. https://abc.xyz/investor/pdf/2017Q4_alphabet_earnings_release.pdf
    3. https://www.theverge.com/2018/5/17/17344250/google-x-selfish-ledger-video-data-privacy
    4. https://www.youtube.com/user/philipbloom/videos
    5. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=njLR6CLel7g
    6. https://www.copyright.gov/fair-use/more-info.html
    7. http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-36072243
    8. http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-43085053
    9. http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-36783351

    HackerNewsBot debug: Calculated post rank: 112 - Loop: 439 - Rank min: 100 - Author rank: 10

    In conversation Friday, 25-May-2018 08:13:37 UTC from pod.jpope.org permalink

    Attachments










  3. Hacker News ( unofficial ) (hackernews@pod.jpope.org)'s status on Wednesday, 14-Mar-2018 08:00:11 UTC Hacker News ( unofficial ) Hacker News ( unofficial )

    Derek Sivers: Books I've Read

    Hacker News Comments: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=16581403

    Source: https://sivers.org/book

    #hackernews

    In conversation Wednesday, 14-Mar-2018 08:00:11 UTC from pod.jpope.org permalink

    Attachments



  4. Hacker News ( unofficial ) (hackernews@pod.jpope.org)'s status on Thursday, 22-Feb-2018 12:01:08 UTC Hacker News ( unofficial ) Hacker News ( unofficial )

    Why I Collapsed on the Job

    Hacker News Comments: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=16434948

    Source: https://www.chronicle.com/article/Why-I-Collapsed-on-the-Job/242537

    #hackernews

    In conversation Thursday, 22-Feb-2018 12:01:08 UTC from pod.jpope.org permalink

    Attachments



  5. Hacker News ( unofficial ) (hackernews@pod.jpope.org)'s status on Thursday, 04-Jan-2018 16:01:13 UTC Hacker News ( unofficial ) Hacker News ( unofficial )

    How an A.I. ‘Cat-And-Mouse Game’ Generates Believable Fake Photos

    Hacker News Comments: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=16070328

    Source: https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2018/01/02/technology/ai-generated-photos.html?_r=0

    #hackernews

    In conversation Thursday, 04-Jan-2018 16:01:13 UTC from pod.jpope.org permalink

    Attachments



  6. Hacker News ( unofficial ) (hackernews@pod.jpope.org)'s status on Monday, 01-Jan-2018 16:01:09 UTC Hacker News ( unofficial ) Hacker News ( unofficial )

    Zero-Width Characters: Invisibly fingerprinting text

    Hacker News Comments: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=16046329

    Source: https://www.zachaysan.com/writing/2017-12-30-zero-width-characters

    #hackernews

    In conversation Monday, 01-Jan-2018 16:01:09 UTC from pod.jpope.org permalink

    Attachments



  7. Hacker News ( unofficial ) (hackernews@pod.jpope.org)'s status on Saturday, 02-Dec-2017 18:01:12 UTC Hacker News ( unofficial ) Hacker News ( unofficial )

    Python 3 Readiness: 345/360 most popular Python packages now support Python 3

    Hacker News Comments: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=15832924

    Source: http://py3readiness.org/

    #hackernews

    In conversation Saturday, 02-Dec-2017 18:01:12 UTC from pod.jpope.org permalink

    Attachments



  8. Hacker News ( unofficial ) (hackernews@pod.jpope.org)'s status on Saturday, 02-Dec-2017 00:01:08 UTC Hacker News ( unofficial ) Hacker News ( unofficial )

    MacOS Update Accidentally Undoes Apple's “root” Bug Patch

    Hacker News Comments: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=15828767

    Source: https://www.wired.com/story/macos-update-undoes-apple-root-bug-patch/

    #hackernews

    In conversation Saturday, 02-Dec-2017 00:01:08 UTC from pod.jpope.org permalink

    Attachments



  9. Hacker News ( unofficial ) (hackernews@pod.jpope.org)'s status on Tuesday, 28-Nov-2017 12:01:10 UTC Hacker News ( unofficial ) Hacker News ( unofficial )

    How We Just Lost the Web, What We Learned from It, and What We Need to Do Next

    Hacker News Comments: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=15795808

    Source: https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2017/10/drms-dead-canary-how-we-just-lost-web-what-we-learned-it-and-what-we-need-do-next

    #hackernews

    In conversation Tuesday, 28-Nov-2017 12:01:10 UTC from pod.jpope.org permalink

    Attachments



  10. Hacker News ( unofficial ) (hackernews@pod.jpope.org)'s status on Tuesday, 28-Nov-2017 07:00:11 UTC Hacker News ( unofficial ) Hacker News ( unofficial )

    The Science of Addictive Junk Food (2013)

    Hacker News Comments: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=15793448

    Source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/02/24/magazine/the-extraordinary-science-of-junk-food.html

    #hackernews

    In conversation Tuesday, 28-Nov-2017 07:00:11 UTC from pod.jpope.org permalink

    Attachments



  11. Hacker News ( unofficial ) (hackernews@pod.jpope.org)'s status on Sunday, 19-Nov-2017 07:00:12 UTC Hacker News ( unofficial ) Hacker News ( unofficial )

    GNU nano 2.9.0

    Hacker News Comments: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=15731079

    Source: https://www.nano-editor.org/news.php

    #hackernews

    In conversation Sunday, 19-Nov-2017 07:00:12 UTC from pod.jpope.org permalink

    Attachments



  12. Hacker News ( unofficial ) (hackernews@pod.jpope.org)'s status on Friday, 17-Nov-2017 12:01:10 UTC Hacker News ( unofficial ) Hacker News ( unofficial )

    GNU Music and Songs

    Hacker News Comments: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=15720542

    Source: https://www.gnu.org/music/

    #hackernews

    In conversation Friday, 17-Nov-2017 12:01:10 UTC from pod.jpope.org permalink

    Attachments



  13. Hacker News ( unofficial ) (hackernews@pod.jpope.org)'s status on Friday, 03-Nov-2017 11:01:07 UTC Hacker News ( unofficial ) Hacker News ( unofficial )

    LineageOS fork replaces Google binary blobs with open source code

    Hacker News Comments: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=15617615

    Source: https://lineage.microg.org/

    #hackernews

    In conversation Friday, 03-Nov-2017 11:01:07 UTC from pod.jpope.org permalink

    Attachments



  14. Hacker News ( unofficial ) (hackernews@pod.jpope.org)'s status on Friday, 27-Oct-2017 11:01:08 UTC Hacker News ( unofficial ) Hacker News ( unofficial )

    Ten Things I Wish I'd Known Before Using Vagrant

    Hacker News Comments: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=15567063

    Source: https://zwischenzugs.com/2017/10/27/ten-things-i-wish-id-known-before-using-vagrant/

    #hackernews

    In conversation Friday, 27-Oct-2017 11:01:08 UTC from pod.jpope.org permalink

    Attachments



  15. Hacker News ( unofficial ) (hackernews@pod.jpope.org)'s status on Friday, 20-Oct-2017 06:15:08 UTC Hacker News ( unofficial ) Hacker News ( unofficial )

    How MDMA Went from Club Drug to ‘Breakthrough Therapy’

    Hacker News Comments: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=15504072

    Source: https://www.wsj.com/articles/how-mdma-went-from-club-drug-to-breakthrough-therapy-1508332237

    #hackernews

    In conversation Friday, 20-Oct-2017 06:15:08 UTC from pod.jpope.org permalink

    Attachments



  16. Hacker News ( unofficial ) (hackernews@pod.jpope.org)'s status on Sunday, 17-Sep-2017 06:45:10 UTC Hacker News ( unofficial ) Hacker News ( unofficial )

    Alan Kay is still waiting for his dream to come true

    Hacker News Comments: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=15261691

    Source: https://www.fastcompany.com/40435064/what-alan-kay-thinks-about-the-iphone-and-technology-now

    #hackernews

    In conversation Sunday, 17-Sep-2017 06:45:10 UTC from pod.jpope.org permalink

    Attachments



  17. Hacker News ( unofficial ) (hackernews@pod.jpope.org)'s status on Saturday, 16-Sep-2017 13:01:12 UTC Hacker News ( unofficial ) Hacker News ( unofficial )

    The True American: On Henry David Thoreau

    Hacker News Comments: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=15259758

    Source: http://www.nybooks.com/articles/2017/08/17/henry-david-thoreau-true-american/

    #hackernews

    In conversation Saturday, 16-Sep-2017 13:01:12 UTC from pod.jpope.org permalink

    Attachments



  18. Hacker News ( unofficial ) (hackernews@pod.jpope.org)'s status on Tuesday, 05-Sep-2017 03:01:10 UTC Hacker News ( unofficial ) Hacker News ( unofficial )

    Raddit: an open source Reddit clone

    Hacker News Comments: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=15171771

    Source: https://raddit.me/

    #hackernews

    In conversation Tuesday, 05-Sep-2017 03:01:10 UTC from pod.jpope.org permalink

    Attachments



  19. Hacker News ( unofficial ) (hackernews@pod.jpope.org)'s status on Monday, 28-Aug-2017 03:01:10 UTC Hacker News ( unofficial ) Hacker News ( unofficial )

    The ocean is a strange place after dark

    Hacker News Comments: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=15111258

    Source: http://www.bbc.com/earth/story/20170818-five-amazing-things-that-happen-in-the-ocean-at-night

    #hackernews

    In conversation Monday, 28-Aug-2017 03:01:10 UTC from pod.jpope.org permalink

    Attachments



  20. Hacker News ( unofficial ) (hackernews@pod.jpope.org)'s status on Saturday, 19-Aug-2017 13:01:10 UTC Hacker News ( unofficial ) Hacker News ( unofficial )

    Mastodon is big in Japan. The reason why is… uncomfortable

    Hacker News Comments: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=15053064

    Source: https://medium.com/@EthanZ/mastodon-is-big-in-japan-the-reason-why-is-uncomfortable-684c036498e5

    #hackernews

    In conversation Saturday, 19-Aug-2017 13:01:10 UTC from pod.jpope.org permalink

    Attachments



  • Before

User actions

    Hacker News ( unofficial )

    Hacker News ( unofficial )

    Tags
    • (None)

    Following 0

      Followers 0

        Groups 0

          Statistics

          User ID
          419
          Member since
          2 Aug 2016
          Notices
          69
          Daily average
          0

          Feeds

          • Atom
          • Help
          • About
          • FAQ
          • Privacy
          • Source
          • Version
          • Contact

          Bobinas P4G is a social network. It runs on GNU social, version 2.0.1-beta0, available under the GNU Affero General Public License.

          Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 All Bobinas P4G content and data are available under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 license.