800 Megs of Data Per Person Last Year? 177
Ant writes "Growing net, computer and phone use is driving a huge rise in the amount of information people generate and use.
US researchers estimate that every year 800MB of information is produced for every person on the planet.
Their study found that information stored on paper, film, magnetic and optical disks has doubled since 1999.
Paper is still proving popular though. The amount of information stored in books, journals and other documents has grown 43% in three years."
umm..repost (Score:4, Funny)
This article is so clearly a dupe... (Score:2, Informative)
Re:This article is so clearly a dupe... (Score:1)
FP (Score:1)
Re:FP (Score:1)
Why Journals are popular.... (Score:1, Offtopic)
mwahaha, flame away!
Re:Why Journals are popular.... (Score:2)
What about redundant information? (Score:1, Redundant)
Re:What about redundant information? (Score:5, Funny)
You mean stuff like this [slashdot.org]?
Re:What about redundant information? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:What about redundant information? (Score:5, Interesting)
Is a cracked version of some latest software package new data?
Honestly, only about 25k in the *.exe has been changed... but this would count as a doubling of information, hard drive space, whatever.
Likewise, when we chart medical information, we often duplicate the information from note to note to remind ourselves and others about the important aspects of the patient's history. Really...it's just data duplication.
Davak
Re:What about redundant information? (Score:3, Interesting)
When a person rips a cd to mp3, does s/he create new data? And when s/he copies existing mp3's, is that new data? I think it's impossible to define the term "new information", unless you go with the strictest definition: before the information was digitally genarated, it did not exist in any other form. Only then it is new.
redundant ... like dupe articles ? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:What about redundant information? (Score:2)
The article mentions "producing information", and not creating unique content for induviduals..
No Shock (Score:1)
redundant? (Score:1, Redundant)
:)
With HD's so cheap.. (Score:1)
but I'm no expert.
Go for 900 (Score:1)
Then they can duplicate the 900 megs article.
Makes you feel... (Score:5, Interesting)
It amazes me how much people don't think about privacy anymore. How the concept of supermarket sales has given way to 'Bonus Cards' which track what you buy. Few understand how this information can be used to piece together a bigger picture.
Some Wachovia Bank branches are now requiring a FINGERPRINT before you can cash a check. The situation is this: If you are not a customer, you are now required to give them a an electronic finger scan to cash a check made out under Wachovia.
Where does it end? Should I just give them a hair sample now or wait until my implant is required?
Re:Makes you feel... (Score:3, Funny)
The NSA doesn't care which Mary Kate & Ashley video is your favorite.
Re:Makes you feel... (Score:4, Insightful)
You're a great example of who I mean. No consideration at all...
Re:Makes you feel... (Score:2)
totally tyrannical survey system of every individual doesn't need you to know their groceries, have logs of their habits, all you need is some weasels.
1984 equivalent system doesn't depend on high tech, it depends on enough fucked up people. take a look on what east germany was, high tech surveillance(rfid tags, face recog cameras, whatnot) were not needed, just enough people spying each other. spying on people stepping on t
Re:Makes you feel... (Score:2)
Where does it end? Should I just give them a hair sample now or wait until my implant is required?
Neither. Under US law the cops don't need a warrant for anything you willfully disregard, and that extends to bodily waste. All they need to do is follow you around for a few days till they see one of yours fall, everyone loses hair constantly 24x7. Either that or they can just go through your trash [textfiles.com] and find a comb / hairbrush / kleenex, also without a warrant
Seriously, your paranioa is way too little, way
Drawing the line.... (Score:2)
I agree, too little too late, but I wasn't talking about law enforcement; I was talking about a corporation! Big difference, or at least I think so.
Re:Drawing the line.... (Score:2)
Re:Drawing the line.... (Score:2)
I was talking about a corporation! Big difference, or at least I think so.
ROTFL, if you think there's really any kind of a line between corperations and the government nowadays, you are either living in a fantasy land, or have been asleep for the past 50 years.
In a country where laws can be bought and sold, and rich CEOs can commit fellonys and get off scott free, the govenment *IS* a corperation.
Re:Drawing the line.... (Score:2)
Re:Makes you feel... (Score:2)
Re:Makes you feel... (Score:2)
No one can avoid shedding DNA, it is everywhere. It shouldn't be covered under the "willfully discarded" umbrella, but since it is, all bets are off.
Re:Makes you feel... (Score:2)
Where I come from (UK) it's considered theft to remove something from someone's trash without asking consent. (I got a couple of PCs from a skip outside someone's house by knocking on the door and asking politely :-> )
So unless you're a homeless hobo, you're being tracked. Everywhere.
Hmmmm.... Possibly. But why the heck would anyone want to track me all the time? Seriously, I can't think why.
Re:Makes you feel... (Score:2)
My sentiments exactly!
Re:Makes you feel... (Score:2)
Oh, I'm sure they have standards in place, but there are exceptions - people make mistakes that aren't necessarily criminal but end up looking that way. See 'Brazil' sometime for an extreme example of this sort of thing. You know, it's closer than you think.
no kidding (Score:2)
Re:Makes you feel... (Score:2)
Did you know, for example, that th--
#^$~(NO CARRIER
Re:Bonus Cards? (Score:2)
Actually not a bad idea. Collecting data may be invaluable to them, but inaccurate data is worthless.
Excess... (Score:1)
Re:Excess... (Score:3, Insightful)
Ethopian refugees are counted in the "total number of people in the world", yet they probably don't own a hard drive.
Re:Excess... (Score:2)
I'm willing to bet the INS produces a lot of data for them (and about them) when they apply for residency under the status of refugee
Re:Excess... (Score:2)
Duplicate! (Score:1, Redundant)
This is a duplicate story; see previous one here [slashdot.org].
Only 800Mb per year (Score:1)
Re:Only 800Mb per year (Score:5, Funny)
I mean, I'm worth at least a gig...
Obvious Joke (Score:1)
More and more data (Score:4, Interesting)
Sadly, an assload of this information is useless, useless, useless. I spend more time detailing information in the medical chart than I actually spend with the patient.
In my lab, more data is better... however, when it's just useless information to keep the shark lawyers off my back it's a bad thing.
Davak
Re:More and more data (Score:4, Funny)
Re:More and more data (Score:4, Funny)
Assload is a relative term... like "a lot"
Normally one wouldn't ask "how many Libraries of Congress is a lot?"
Re:More and more data (Score:2)
Re:More and more data (Score:2)
Re:More and more data (Score:2)
Dupe! (Score:1, Redundant)
As this is a repeat (Score:2)
How about them sporting events?
Thats an interesting unit. (Score:1)
Get your units straight (Score:2, Funny)
Someone should program a calculator to convert all these units from one to another. Elephants to Great Pyramids, Great Pyramids to K-Marts, K-Marts to Libraries of Congress... Now that'd be innovation for ya !
they've cloned it! (Score:1)
weird (Score:1)
Where do I subscribe again?
It's really 400. (Score:5, Funny)
Also, if If everything is posted twice, like on slashdot, and like THIS story, that 800 MB is really 400 MB.
Re:It's really 400. (Score:2)
Re:No, even less (Score:2)
The first time around, the article gets a bunch of discussion.
The second time around, the article gets the same discussion, same arguments. Then it gets an equal amount of "dupe" talk.
X + 2X = 800. "Content" = 800/3.
(insane referece) That's like 17 volkswagon beetles.
Re:It's really 400. (Score:2)
Re:It's really 400. (Score:2)
I, for one, would moderate this comment "+1, Redundant".
It would be interesting (Score:1)
800M of what data? (Score:2)
Oh well, besides, I don't really know what that amounts to, the official Internet storage unit being the Library of Congress
My take on that figure (Score:2)
However, the stuff I do create are digital pictures. Lots of them. I take everything in 1600x1200 resolution, so each image is about 800KB, and my camera has a 128MB flash card. I fill it up quite often. I'd say I take on average 20 pics a day (which averages out to around 6 GB per year), and that's just in pictu
Everyone relax (Score:3, Interesting)
The medium is the message
world: USING LINUX since 1991!!
sco: SUING LINUX til 2011!!
This would be more interesting (Score:5, Insightful)
Some of us go through a truly silly amount of data. There's a nontrivial number of people reading this discussion who exhaust their dorm's 1 GB bandwidth cap every day.
On the other hand there's somewhere a barefoot palestinian refugee child for whom not so much as a piece of paperwork was generated since he was born.
These two extremes would probably tend to distort things. It would be interesting to find out if the study was based on usage of storage data as it appears and these extremes were included in the study, or if they just (being Americans) couldn't be bothered when compiling their study to talk to geeks and starving african children. If the former, i'd be curious how their results would change if they could somehow just like chop off the ends of the bell curve.
Re:This would be more interesting (Score:2)
The question really should be is it a normal distribution - I would guess yes . . .
Re:This would be more interesting (Score:2)
While I certainly agree with your post (except for the bell curve part) - I should like to point out that I was born a barefooted palestinian refugee - though these days I utilize many gigabits a day. While your correct in the fact that many people around the world do not access technology - nor have electronic (or even paper) records on them (I, for exam
Hm, that's funny... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Hm, that's funny... (Score:2)
Relevance...??? (Score:2)
On the edge of the Singularity (Score:3, Informative)
Judging by these posts... (Score:2)
As the Cree say... (Score:2)
Only after the last river has been poisoned
Only after the last fish has been caught
Only then will you find you cannot eat data
More relevant problem (Score:2)
Only after the last supertanker has called port
Only after last gas station has closed
Only then will you find Greenpeace doesn't sell beer at night
Re:More relevant problem (Score:2)
My 800M or the other guy's? (Score:2)
And does eliminating spam/virus email make a noticable hit in the numbers, or is it not even counted?
Porn stars are the intelectuals of the future? (Score:2)
Perhaps they are the academics of the future?
I'm gunna marry that genious I saw the other day.
True it's a lot of info to create, but... (Score:2)
Sounds about right. (Score:2)
...and 3/4 of that are raw bitmap images (Score:2)
While I used Pngcrush [sourceforge.net] to squeek out the last few %, even the moderate compression offered by Photoshop was enough to make her happy for a week.
Re:...and 3/4 of that are raw bitmap images (Score:3, Informative)
Images with complex shapes compress terribly. I was out at a botanical garden trying to photograph the ends of tree branches as they fork off into millions of buds. It looks crappy in JPEG form.
hmmmmm (Score:2, Funny)
what is information? (Score:2)
If you store the same image in two different resolutions, does the high-res version contain more information?
Even if you cannot see the difference?
What IS information (Score:3, Informative)
The game of scrabble is a good illustration. Common letters (a,e,i,o,u,s) have 1 point. Uncommon letters (z,x) are 10 points. All letters have a different point score based on their frequency of use in the english language. (At least for the english version of the
Re:What IS information (Score:2)
Also surprize is a relative notion. Something might be surprising to me but not to you or the other way around.
Re:What IS information (Score:2)
I think I heard a single hand clapping.
Seems like significant overcount (Score:4, Interesting)
For example, the article cites 18 exabytes of what is basically analog data--sound and images--over telephone, radio, TV. It claims that 98% of that is in telephone calls, essentially all, in other words.
First thing is that most telephone calls are not recorded. Well, I dunno, maybe Carnivore and Eschelon are even worse than I think. So mostly this is just a question of how much bandwidth AT&T and MCI need to buy; I'm sure they care about that question, but most people have no reason to. Maybe how many tape drives the NSA needs to buy too.
Just how much information *IS* there in a telephone call though. At a certain level, ten million calls about the same snowstorm aren't really that information rich. But I understand that you want to hear YOUR sister complain about shoveling the snow, not somebody else's sister do so. But just at a technological level, how much is there to a phone call?
If I record the call as CD-Audio WAV format it comes to something like 9 MB a minute. But then, if I compress it to MP3, or Ogg Vorbis, or AAC, I'm down to something more like 1 MB a minute. In fact, if I go for a 56k bandwidth, or something along those lines, I can probably get it down to less than half a MB... and that's not really much different from what I could discern originally on my cell-phone on a noisy street, or over my old wiring in my house. So far, we've reduced the "information content" by 20 times by purely technial means. Then again, it's not clear if this is fair... in those cop shows where they reconstruct background noises to filter the gunshot or car crash in the background, they probably want the full original data... but do *I* care about that when I talk to my sister?
Moreover, audio compression is just the start. There's this old thing called TRANSCRIPTION that compresses quite a bit more. A stenographer (or maybe a computer program, at least at the NSA) can type up our conversation perfectly well. How much information is lost by reducing the "data" to:
Lulu's Sister: We got over 10" of snow, and it took me an hour to shovel it.
Even at the highest audio compression I can find, I need tens of kilobytes to encode this remark... as text we're down to a couple tens of BYTES. Maybe I've lost a little of Sis's inflection, but how much INFORMATION was there really, to start with? Some probably, but is it worth a thousand words? Moreover, I expect some lossy compression to reduce that text by at least another half.
Depending on just what you think is information, perhaps 300,000 times compression is possible. That brings exabytes down to gigabytes. Given some automated transcription technology, maybe I can store the whole last year of family chats on my local harddisk!
Well of course books are up (Score:2)
KFG
What's the point of measuring "data"? (Score:2)
Unless you're a hard disk manufacturer, does its size have any relation whatsoever to its value? If the figure is correct, I can store all the data I create, over my entire life (say 100 years to make it simple) on a 80GB hdd.
Which is of cou
Re:What's the point of measuring "data"? (Score:2)
Re:What's the point of measuring "data"? (Score:2)
Seems perfectly grammatical to me.
Well, English isn't my first language (Score:2)
Kjella
It's all because of "banned" material! (Score:2)
--Mike--
I produced 400 MBs of data on my computer, (Score:3, Funny)
Data, or information? (Score:2)
What about redundant information? (Score:2)
What about redundant information? (Score:2)
Please mod parent down! (Score:2)
Re:rip in the matrix? (Score:1)
Re:in case of slashdotting..... (Score:2)
Who cares though? As data expands, it gets cheaper and cheaper to store it...