Hu’s On First

George: Well, I’m asking you. Who is leading China?
Condi: That’s the man’s name.
George: That’s who’s name?
Condi: Yes.
George: Will you or will you not tell me the name of the new leader of China?
Condi: Yes, sir.
George: Yassir? Yassir Arafat is in China? I thought he was in the Middle East.

Modern Heroes

Just came across this Village Voice/Yahoo news article from a couple of weeks ago. Two New York high school counselors witnessed police being overly rough with a teenager and one of them started taking photos with a digital camera. The police cuffed the teen to a gate and, according to the article, proceeded to assault the photographer and his companion, spraying them with large amounts of mace. However, while one of the counselors was taking photos, the other was calling 911, and the phone was off the hook during the entire incident. Recordings of the 911 call were not released to the Voice, but will be part of the investigation. As will the digital camera, if it survives allegedly intentional efforts by the police to damage it during the fracas.
NYPD internal affairs is investigating.

NY Times on Third Party Politics

Just to follow up on my election-time musings, I thought I’d point out this recent New York Times opinion piece on third party politics.
Like several people who wrote in to the Times, I can’t accept Miller’s assertion that Libertarians are now serving, in effect, as Democratic Party
operatives.
I’m enough of an idealist to believe that it’s better to vote for the candidate who matches your position than to vote for the lesser of two evils because you don’t think your candidate can win.
Of course, with systems like instant run-off voting or other polling alternatives, we could avoid all that nonsense and come up with a much more accurate reading of the public will.

DMCA Discussed

Adam C. Engst, publisher of the TidBITS newsletter, has been writing incredibly clear and insightful articles about technology since 1990. In the latest issue, he provides an excellent discussion of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (or DMCA), inspired by a talk he recently attended.

Much has been written about what’s wrong with the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA). After all, it’s been used to jail programmers, threaten professors, and censor publications, and because of it, foreign scientists have avoided traveling to the U.S. and prominent researchers have withheld their work. In a white paper about the unintended consequences of the DMCA, the Electronic Frontier Foundation argues that the DMCA chills free expression and scientific research, jeopardizes fair use, and impedes competition and innovation. In short, this is a law that only the companies who paid for it could love.

Just who are we talking about here? Primarily the large movie studios and record labels, who own the copyrights on vast quantities of content and who have been working with one another and via their industry associations, the Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) and the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA), to control how we are allowed to interact with that content. Their unity of purpose and storm-trooper tactics have led some to dub them the “Content Cartel.”

However, the DMCA is merely one link in a chain that’s being used by the Content Cartel and many others to restrict access to the shared cultural heritage of the world, and in the process, extract money from our pockets, stifle innovation and competition, and protect entrenched interests.

… and a bit later …
In other words, it’s acceptable to link to DeCSS if your intent is not to disseminate DeCSS, but merely to report on its availability, a fact I proved to my satisfaction with a trivial Google search on “download DeCSS” that provided over 17,000 hits, many of them still functional. You can verify this for yourself; just remember that DeCSS is only for Windows.
Here’s where Professor Gillespie’s argument becomes a bit more speculative. Although the court went no further in this case, he suggested that in any future cases in which the legitimacy of linking was called into question, he felt that the court would include in its deliberation the nature of the publication in question. For example, if the New York Times chose to link to DeCSS or some other technology that violated the DMCA (as in fact the San Jose Mercury News and Wired News have, in making the point that a ban on linking is seriously problematic), he felt that the court would have little trouble accepting the journalistic intent of the link. On the other hand, if some silly little electronic newsletter aimed at Macintosh and Internet users were to perform the same action, he was concerned that it would be more difficult to make the same defense. And if TidBITS wouldn’t match up to the journalistic level of the New York Times in the eyes of a theoretical court, what about a blogger?
Indeed… what about a blogger? Check out the source for the complete content.

Now Playing: Gun Street Girl by Tom Waits from the album “Rain Dogs

Part of the Problem

So yesterday Amazon.com started accepting (non-refundable!) deposits for the Segway Human Transporter, and of course, there’s much more hype than there should be. (And, of course, I’m part of the problem just commenting on it…)
Still, after reading some coverage in Media Unspun, I had to pass along a couple of funnier bits.
BIN LADEN FEARED TO HAVE SEGWAY SCOOTER –
Has Threatened to Produce Transportation Device of Mass Distribution
Kandahar, Afghanistan (SatireWire.com) — U.S. forces searching an abandoned Al Qaeda hideout today said they found diagrams of skateboards, gyroscopic technology, and Osama bin Laden riding what appears to be a Razor scooter, further proof that the terrorist leader may have been planning to intensify his revolution by producing personal transportation devices of mass distribution.
source: SatireWire
What’s not to like about this device? Spend lots of money so you can exercise less, gain weight, and infuriate pedestrians — all while sporting a look that says, “I’m a rich nerd — mug me!” Reserve yours today!
source: Motley Fool

(Fact) Check, Please?

I respect filmmaker Michael Moore — he tries to
present political matters in terms that everyday people can understand, which I think is very important.
However, I’m a bit concerned at a report
from Spinsanity.org
accusing Moore of distorting the important issues he takes on in his latest film,
Bowling for Columbine.
The most important charges deal with how Moore’s editing of other sources is sometimes misleading or even false. Since no one (except Spinsanity) ever thinks of checking sources on a film, this is particularly unsettling.
Of course, falsification of imagery has been going on for years, and is just accelerating in the digital media age. Check out The Reconfigured Eye: Visual Truth in the Post-Photographic Era (now ten years old!) More recently, Wired News ran this article about the increasing circulation of Photoshopped images being passed around as if they were the truth.

Killer Appz

I don’t know how I lived without Huevos from Ranchero Software. Simple, and incredibly useful. Hit a key-combo (and while the default ctrl-esc requires a pretty substantial hand motion, it’s a strangely satisfying motion) and Huevos pops up. Type in a search string into the one and only box, and hit return, and it opens your default web browser with a Google search. Or if you take two more seconds, you can switch from Google to any other search engine which takes a simple string argument — just pick from the menu. And, of course, you can add more URLs to the healthy default set. No more waiting for a page to load just so you can type in your search and then wait again!
Best of all, it’s free — and open source! By the way, get Huevos 1.1 beta; it’s the first version with the hotkeys, and it has a cooler icon.