Archive for March, 2005
Wednesday, March 30th, 2005
It’s real spooky when CIOs advocate locking down the internet and greatly restricting access and the freedom to make even little scripts:
Let’s make all end user devices nonprogrammable. No one can connect to the Internet on a machine that creates code. If you want a computer to do programming, you would have to be licensed. […]
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Tuesday, March 29th, 2005
Timothy K. Armstrong sat in and has a long post detailing the argument. SCOTUSblog also has good info, including:
Several members of the Court — but especially Justices Antonin Scalia, Stephen G. Breyer and David H. Souter — seemed troubled about the potential impact of a tightening of copyright law on small inventors — “the […]
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Tuesday, March 29th, 2005
Via BB, a c-span segment with a debate between EFF’s Fred von Lohmann and Solcitor General Theodore Olson (in the RIAA/MPAA ring) on Grokster. Some callers make very good points, including one who notes that indie musicians rely on P2P for exposure. As Cory Doctorow points out, Fred von Lohmann totally schools Olson.
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Tuesday, March 29th, 2005
It’s a decent length and covers many of the competing interests and issues. Music file-sharing case before high court. Ruling could have major effect on future of entertainment industry, consumer rights. Benny Evangelista, 3.28.5
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Tuesday, March 29th, 2005
When should virtual property be treated like physical property?
excerpt:
Massive multiplayer games have exploded in popularity, with games that range far beyond the quests and giant rat killings of a traditional title such as “Everquest II.” Some skip Dungeons & Dragon-style role-playing altogether in favor of a free-form world not unlike a virtual “Burning Man.” … […]
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Monday, March 28th, 2005
Copyfight’s Alan Wexelblat comments on P2P FUD and cites a japanese study (PDF) that didn’t find any negative effect on CD sales due to p2p and, in fact, found evidence that using p2p may increase CD purchases. That’s not the only study to find similar results, and just the other day I mentioned the […]
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Monday, March 28th, 2005
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Monday, March 28th, 2005
The Economist is running a story on tomorrow’s Grokster v MGM hearing that gives a short overview of the case and the history of attacks on the tech industry by the content industry.
The conclusion (also cited by BB):
But even if the entertainment business manages to coax more users into paying for legal downloads and succeeds […]
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Monday, March 28th, 2005
NPR has an interview with Donald Knuth, author of the multi-volume Art of Computer Programming and creator of TEX.
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Sunday, March 27th, 2005
And he makes some important points in his blog post on it:
It wont be a good day when high school entrepreneurs have to get a fairness opinion from a technology oriented law firm to confirm that big music or movie studios wont sue you because they can come up with an angle that makes a […]
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Friday, March 25th, 2005
Danny Sullivan of Search Engine Watch has a blog post taking a critical look at tagging and the history of web metadata attempts. He notes that metadata has largely been useless and overly complicated for use in the overall web and argues that tagging has the same problems, one major problem being the lack […]
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Thursday, March 24th, 2005
Yahoo! has added a search page specifically for content licensed under a CC license. Stuff like this makes me love search wars.
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Thursday, March 24th, 2005
Excerpt:
Three months after undertaking an ambitious project to digitize thousands of books, Harvard University Library (HUL) and the Google Print project are facing scrutiny from publishing organizations, who claim the project may infringe copyright law.
Read on @ the Havard Crimson Online
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Monday, March 21st, 2005
Earlier this month, Greg Duffy posted a fascinating dissection of Google Print with details on how Google’s cookie apparently works and an algorithm for getting past the copyright restrictions. Excerpt:
Most web browsers allow small text files, called cookies, to be stored on behalf of web servers … this allows a persistent state to be […]
Posted in Free Culture, Library, Code | 1 Comment »
Monday, March 21st, 2005
I was browsing Apple-related forums and came across a nice long list of all of the new Tiger features. There are rumors that it will be coming out as soon as next month and I’m really excited to see some of the new features, in particular Core Data (bottom of page). Click below […]
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Monday, March 21st, 2005
The BBC has a great overview on the current state of DRM and ‘trusted computing.’ This is something that will likely have a strong impact on libraries considering how quickly we are moving to electronic publications and restrictive contracts. While I don’t know the details regarding what trusted computing is capable of […]
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Sunday, March 20th, 2005
Last week SFGate ran a story discussing the storm surrounding the unreleased Fiona Apple album. What’s really interesting is that it vividly demonstrates the faultiness of the RIAA fear mongering toward p2p. You see, the album has leaked online and fans are sharing it like crazy. According to the RIAA fictional narrative, […]
Posted in Free Culture, Library | 1 Comment »
Sunday, March 20th, 2005
From the FlickrBlog:
Holy smokes, SOMEBODY out there is bad at keeping secrets!! Yes! We can finally confirm that Yahoo has made a definitive agreement to acquire Flickr and us, Ludicorp. Smack the tattlers and pop the champagne corks!
And here I am reading Hackers and Painters and Paul Graham’s experiences with the same thing.
By the […]
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Sunday, March 20th, 2005
Sen. Orrin G. Hatch (R-Utah), one of the entertainment industry’s most powerful congressional allies, will remain at the forefront of the national debate over copyright and illegal downloading after being named to head a new subcommittee on intellectual property.
from WaPo
It’s a rather unfortunate path we are headed down. /. discussion here
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Saturday, March 19th, 2005
The Findory neighborhood for Bibliotheke shows all of the related blogs on Findory and represents their relative ‘connectedness’ through size and shading.
Findory itself is pretty cool. As you read articles or blog posts it changes the ranking of other articles, thus personalizing the interface by giving you stories according to your past reading.
Posted in General, Search, Library | 1 Comment »