Monthly Archives: November 2002
Modern Heroes
Front Widens on Copyright
NY Times on Third Party Politics
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.
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.
Part of the Problem
Has Threatened to Produce Transportation Device of Mass Distribution
(Fact) Check, Please?
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.
Michael Opened the Lost Ark
A fairly cruel, yet fascinating Photographic History of Michael Jackson’s Face.
Killer Appz
Better Homes and Gardens?
You can have an Airplane Home delivered and installed on your property as the winner of this auction.