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MPAA Pushing DMCA in Europe
The Womb of Government Radio as Embedded Training Tool Private Client Web Sites Restored Evolving P2P Infrastructure New Sci-Fi Today News Feed Atlanta Schools to Lose Millions R.R.Bowker and BookSurge to Offer Sales Kiosks to Libraries Body By Swingline I Can Hear You Now Congressional e-Mail Works RosettaBooks 'Wins' e-Book Case with Settlement Theme Design
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Saturday, December 7, 2002MPAA Pushing DMCA in EuropeMPAA and RIAA fanatics have enough money, power and lawyers to bully European governments -- and they wield it without reserve. Let's hope the Norwegian court has more integrity.
DVD hacker on trial in Norway on Monday. Jon Johansen, the Norweigan teenager who helped crack the crypto on DVDs so that he could watch out-of-region disks on his PC, is facing charges on Monday in Norway. I asked a lawyer-friend about this today: if Norgeigan law doesn't have the "anti-circumvention" stuff that the American DMCA has, what has Jon been charged with? It turns out that the MPAA insisted that Jon be prosecuted and that the best the Norweigan prosecutors could come up with is a statute forbidding intruding on a computer, so they charged him with hacking his own PC. [Boing Boing Blog] The Womb of GovernmentI feel so much safer now -- how about you?
Friday, December 6, 2002Radio as Embedded Training ToolRadio's unique integration of news aggregation, desktop CMS, and multi-site/category publishing are a powerful combination for creating learning-directed web sites. But we still need a solid P2P framework to manage the bandwidth requirements of really effective training materials.
Embedded Training via Weblogs. Private Client Web Sites RestoredI recently changed hosting providers and have been reorganizing the tfrazier.org and terryfrazier.com domains. In order to better manage security I have begun using terryfrazier.com as my primary "public" domain, with tfrazier.org reserved for a variety of private uses.All proprietary client sites will continue to be hosted at tfrazier.org and any previous URLs and login info is still valid. It's taken a while to get this back up and I apologize for any inconvenience. Evolving P2P InfrastructureJohn Robb provides a brief analysis of P2P, including current problems and likely options for solving them. Improved P2P services will be a core component of new, small-scale intranets, personal networks, and the growing communites of Internet-only workers. Centralized document management systems have already become impediments to effective sharing among widely dispersed groups. If the Net is to foster the next-generation communities it will need better P2P architectures than those currently available.
Technologic Partners. Economical P2P distribution of large files. Will a system ever arrive that isn't tied to copyright infringement activities? Of course. This newsletter takes a look at the opportunity both in the enterprise and consumer markets. Thursday, December 5, 2002New Sci-Fi Today News FeedI'm officially an addict: Sci-Fi Today is news subscription number 110 on the old b.cognosco subscriptions list. Many thanks to Kit and myRadio for making the whole thing manageable.
Sci-Fi Today. Atlanta Schools to Lose MillionsOuch! Georgia is cutting $165 million from school funding next year. Is there a way to turn these lemons into lemonade? Can EduBlogs fill gaps, replace missing services, or help districts do more with less?
Schools look for ways to cut spending. AccessAtlanta Dec 5 2002 9:21PM ET R.R.Bowker and BookSurge to Offer Sales Kiosks to LibrariesWill public libraries sell books as well as lend them? The idea of book kiosks refuses to die, but at least this time there is no attempt to actually produce the book wiith the kiosk.
book vending kiosk. R.R.Bowker and BookSurge will be introducing their library based book vending kiosk at ALA mid-winter. This will bring libraries into a retail service sector and may well leverage an important new relation between the library collections and PoD technologies. [future of the book news] Librarians might use the Books-In-Print kiosk to purchase print copies of backlisted or OP items, but I wonder how much appeal this will have to the general public. How different is it from ordering via the Internet on a library PC? I don't see much here but I will be interested to see what reaction Jenny Levine at TSL has to this latest kiosk effort. Body By SwinglineThe all-season, all-weather, one-size-fits-all perfect gift for the outdoorsman in your life --
BODY STAPLER KIT I Can Hear You NowAmerican cell phone etiquette is changing for the better, except for the one place where you really don't want to hear from me.Rick Klau decries the rising cacophony of cell phone use in airport bathrooms.
Now a study, conducted by Wirthlin Worldwide, has found that the percentage of American cell phone users who think it's appropriate to talk on a cell phone in the bathroom has risen from 39 percent in 2000 to 47 percent in 2002. Thankfully, they seem to find cell use less acceptable everywhere else. Congressional e-Mail WorksThe post at Politech suggesting politicians are turning off e-mail is a whine about a problem that doesn't exist. How hard is it to go to your Senator or Congressman's web site and submit a query? Why is a practice used by dozens of service companies -- that of having a support form rather than an open e-mail address -- deemed threatening when used by a politician?I've used the e-mail forms for my Senators and Congressman dozens of times. Almost every time I've gotten a response -- sometimes an e-mail response, sometimes a written response via USPS. But I've always gotten some sort of response. The e-mail queries do not go off into a black hole. The complainant should try the system before whining about it.
Congress makes it even harder to reach out and touch 'em. Congresscritters are sick of hearing from their constituents, so they're shutting down or obscuring their email addresses and replacing them with forms that route the mail to god-knows-where. Of course, physical mail and Congress don't get along -- that's thraxpanik for you -- and their fax machines are usually out of paper. [Boing Boing Blog] RosettaBooks 'Wins' e-Book Case with SettlementControversial e-book publisher RosettaBooks has settled it's long-running suit with Random House over who owns the e-book rights to previously published works. RosettaBooks secured its rights directly from authors, who claimed that earlier contracts with Random House, which made no explicit mention of e-book or digital publishing, did not cover RosettaBooks work. Random House disagreed.Lawsuit Over E-Books Settled. Washington Post Dec 5 2002 2:08AM ET But I'm left wondering just how Random House granted exclusive e-book rights when it failed to prove in court it owns such rights. I suspect this isn't over, but the total dollars involved have turned out to be so small it just isn't worth fighting anymore. |
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This Page was last updated: Wed, 02 Jul 2008 22:06:57 GMT
License: Unless otherwise expressly stated all original material, of whatever nature, created by Terry W. Frazier and included in this website, its related pages and archives, is licensed under a Creative Commons License, some rights reserved.
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