Salon: Trent Reznor likes Return to Castle Wolfenstein. I bet he’s got a helluva gaming rig.
Ack! Pretty Hate Machine came out in 1989. I’m feeling older now. [via NewsForge]
But you need to be prepared for a variety of annoying and pathetic phone delays before you’ll get thru to a person. Swearing at the voice mail system loudly and vociferously is recommended. Swearing at the customer service representative is not.
I will be driving up to Ohio tomorrow. Hopefully I will be able to find some form of net access tomorrow and/or saturday. One must avoid the gaping calendar hole at all costs.
A Cato Institute Panel Debate
Copy Fights: The Future of Intellectual Property in the Information Age
The blog
Bear with me, as this will be the first time that I attempt to transcribe pen and paper notes into a weblog entry. A few weeks ago Ed Cone asked if any bloggers out there would attend the Cato panel debate that you are currently reading about. I’m just outside of DC, and I blog, so I said heck yeah. Ed lives in Howard Coble’s district in North Carolina, and Coble is the co-author of the bill being debated in Congress that fuled this debate.
After taking the long way around several closed sidewalks, I found the Cato Institute at 10th and M streets NW. The building looked really nice without being too over the top. After finding my registration card, I sat down to read some articles that were set out. Here’s a quick breakdown of the articles that I read:
Berman was unable to attend, but he sent an aide in his place. The panel as it sat was (from left to right):
As a sidenote, I’m listed on the second page as Matt Croydon from Postneo.com. I was probably the least significant person at the panel debate. Mike Grebb was listed as attending from Wired News, though I didn’t run into him. Perhaps I’ll scan the roster of attendees when I get a chance. After the panel discussion, I had someone ask me, “What’s postneo.com?” I replied with, “It’s just a weblog.” We had a quick conversation, and there is now one more weblog-aware person in the world.
world.weblog.awareCount++;
Adam Thierer, Director of Telecommunications Studies at Cato, was the moderator. He plugged the book that he and Crews have recently written called, amazingly, Copy Fights. There is a hardcover and paperback version available at Amazon. The panel debate was streamed over the web in both audio and video form. The streams are in Real Audio and Real Video formats. If you end up listening to the audio version of the debate, the speaking order is French, Dow, Miller, Corwin, Black, and Mitchell.
The bill in question is HR5211. You can type that into this page, or a version in PDF is here.
Mr. French
Mr. French spoke first. He was really sorry that Berman couldn’t make it, but he was at the White House doing Congressional stuff. He let us know early that pirates would attack the bill. He stated that the theft of copywritten works is the primary use of p2p networks. His main argument for the afternoon was that songwriters are supposed to get eight cents in royalties, and each illegal copy denies a songwriter their .08 cents. It was sort of a running gag, something that was referred to a million times during the debate.
Mr. Berman’s aide also used the word Libertarian about a bajillion times, told us why Libertarians should like the bill, and why Libertarians should not agree with his opposition. Somewhere at a campaign office in North Carolina, staffers were giving each other high fives. This spin had to be designed to hurt Tara Sue Grubb’s longshot chances against Howard Coble. Are they scared?
Mr. French noted that the bill would only provide a limited safe harbor for copyright owners to thward file traders from trading their own works.
Troy Dow
He wasn’t into Apple’s Rip. Mix. Burn. ad campaign. He noted that there was a disclaimer: don’t steal music. KaZaA was the same. They had a disclaimer too: don’t steal music. He noted that 4000-6000 movies are downloaded from KaZaA each day. Everybody out there was talking about the problem, not the solution, and he was behind the Berman bill 100% because Berman is looking for a solution.
He wants to be able to protect his copyright by hacking into the p2p network. National and local laws stipulate that he might be liable for damages for doing just that. The Computer Fraud and Abuse Act is holding him down, as are many state and local laws. He wants to know what are “reasonable mesaures” to protect his copyright, and he thinks that this bill allows him to take those “reasonable measures.”
James Miller
He pretty much read his paper. He argued that the recording and movie industry can’t compete against the free nature of p2p pirates. He noted that even if you could download a song for fifty cents legally, why would you when you could download the same song for free? With new epaper technology, the same could be said for free versus a $75 textbook. He doesn’t even think that the Berman bill goes far enough.
Miller sees two alternatives to the Berman bill. Hollywood can sue thieves into submission, but that won’t work. The industry can impose digital rights management, but that’s hard to do effectively. He did concede that you can never stop very sophisticated users, but you should be able to stop the majority of people from stealing through p2p networks.
Phil Corwin
And then the other side of the panel spoke. He noted that the internet is the most disruptive technology since the internal combustion engine. He said that copyright is a means to and end, not the end itself. The value of an unprotected digital file is almost zero.
He cited the recent war on file sharers. The Hollings bill, Verizon suit, and other legislation would brand millions of young americans into criminals. According to him, p2p is the essence of the internet. He noted a study by Stan Liebowitz who did a study on file sharing. He concluded that there was no proof that file sharing is causing harm now, but it will soon. Then he said that it never will be harmful to the industry, now he thinks that there is currently no harm, but in the future there will be a 20% reduction in CD sales. I think he should make up his mind.
He noted that CD and audio tape sales were down, but that the summer box office numbers were up. DVD sales are also up 80%. He was not happy with the Department of Justice’s passive role as a result of this bill. Any means that the record and movie industry uses to protect their copyright will remain private at the DOJ. How would people outside the US be affected by this bill?
He thinks we should calm down. Where’s the evidence? The record and movie industries are poised to make more money than ever according to him. He noted that p2p networks were not the only way that illegal files are traded. Many illegal files are traded of Aol’s Instant Messanger.
Ed Black
He has an analysis of the bill somewhere, I’ll have to find it later. He said that the peachy description of the bill by Mr. French was not realistic. He was involved with the DMCA, a bill that was a compromise to many people. He thinks that this bill is based on extreme interpretations of the DMCA. Intellectual Property is too impartant and he is worried that it will be ruined. IP should not be stretched beyond its purpose, but to be preserved.
He noted that every copy of music or other files downloaded from p2p networks is not illegal. From what I hear, almost all of it is though. He accused the industry of trying to preserve a middle managment form of distribution that is inefficient and that makes many people lots of money. He did not that laws from another era need to be updated. How exactly do you modify older laws for today?
John Mitchell
He asks whose intellectual property are we protecting? If the rights of copyright holders is enlarged, when does it begin to limit the rights of others? He noted that DRM can curtail what you have legally bought. He raised privacy concerns if the industry is allowed to write spyware programs that report back your illegal activity without your consent.
Conclusion
I have a few more pages of notes from the rebuttals and Q&A session. I’ll try to get them online soon. All in all the panel debate was like two seperate groups talking into a wall in the middle. At points it reminded me of a high school debate. Horses were beat into the ground (eight cents!) and analogies were overused (if someone stole your bike…).
Overall it was a great event to attend. I also got a free lunch out of it. I know this blog entry doesn’t do justice to the event, but I’m tired and need some food. Eventually I’ll clean it up and make it a story.
The Pasamuf team is proud to announce the first release of Pasamuf – the document sharing tool. Pasamuf indexes your favourite doument files (doc, pdf, xls, …) and makes them searchable and downloadable for others in your community. It is completely written in Java and works via web services.
Note that this release is an re-release (about 3 months old) and is not intended to work! A stable everywhere-to-use version is coming soon!
We’ll have to keep an eye on this, it’ll be interesting to see how this does once it is ready for semi-primetime.
IASlash: W3C/NIST workshop on usability & the web. November 4-5. All you need to do is write a position paper.
OSNews: FreeBSD 4.7-RC1 is out. What I’m really waiting for is the next release of OpenBSD, mostly for the release song and cover art. The 3.0 release song has made its way into a roadtrip mix of mine.
I’m back from the Cato Institute panel debate. A full writeup might have to wait until I’m done with work.
Silicon.com: In an article about Microsoft asking 2,300 organizations if they wanted to see Microsoft’s source code. Only 150 said yes. Jason Matusow, shared source manager at Microsoft, was quoted in the article as saying:
“One of the great myths of open source is that everyone wants to look at source code.”
Ximian announces Evolution 1.2 beta. Evolution is Ximian’s workalike of Microsoft Outlook. [via PC Linux Online]
Infoconomy: Sun considers $1,100 cheap.
The PCs, which have still to be given a brand name, will be assembled from commodity components that Sun will source from the open market. Sun intends to sell the Linux PCs in units of 100 at a cost of around $1,100 (1,125) each, with part of that paid upfront and the remainder spread over the lifespan of the PC.
While that unit cost is actually slightly higher than an equivalent machine from Dell or HP, the real cost savings will come from replacing Microsoft software with open source alternatives and from lower administration and support costs.
Aside from the Linux operating system, the PCs will mimic a typical Windows set-up by using the Gnome desktop environment, the Mozilla browser, the StarOffice applications suite and the Evolution clone of Microsoft Outlook.
This seems to be good, however I’m trying to figure out where Sun isn’t going to loose their shirt on this computer. I’m sure that the specs on this commodity hardware machine will be easily duplicated for 25-40% less through other vendors or by building the machine yourself. It also appears that once again Sun will be using its software (a derivative/rebranding of Red Hat Linux) in order to sell hardware. Anyone can go download .ISOs of Red Hat Linux, but they’ll have to spend a premium on hardware in order to get Sun’s identity management software and control panel.
I hope that Sun does well, but I’m not sure if they’ll be able to. [via Kenneth Hunt and Newsforge]
Blog: An automated weblogging application. Have you heard of it?
Blog is an automatic web logging program which allows you to update your site easily without the hassles of HTML editing and having to use a separate program to upload your work. You simply set Blog up with the necessary information for logging into your site via FTP, define a template to specify the look for your page and then type in your entries in the main Blog window and click Publish and Blog does the rest! Blog also handles the task of generating archival entries for older posts. It is a really convenient way to keep a site (or multiple sites) updated without going through several programs to do the job.
Blog can be operated in three different modes – a) Standalone – which allows a single person to maintain their own site(s) from their desktop machine b) Server – which allows collaboration between several people or for the same person to post from multiple locations using the third mode of Blog which is … c) Client. The Client and Server modes might be a bit confusing to set up but do refere to the included Blog.txt file which is present in all distros of Blog to get some hints as to what you need to do.
The interface is sparse, clean, and seemingly functional. It looks like it can manage the weblog via ftp, has templating support, and is free-as-in-beer. [the first useful link harvested from Betanews]
Sam Ruby changed his RSS feed again, which apparently breaks my RSS aggregator that you see on the right hand side of this page. I’ve removed him from my subscriptions list! At least until I have some time to figure out what’s wrong with the XSLT-based RSS aggregator I’ve written.
I have a feeling that we will see quite a bit of the homegrown RSS aggregators choke on RSS 2.0, even thought it’s not really supposed to break stuff. Granted that the big three blogging packages will soon be able to handle RSS 2.0 gracefully, but this means that a lot of the single-programmer RSS aggregators and generators are going to be hitting the drawing board.
Hopefully this will be good for the long term and only minorly annoying in the short term.
The Shifted Librarian likes the new Phillips Stremium. The funny thing is that this sounds like exactly the same thing that the Kerbango could have been (had 3com not bought it and killed it), and then some. We’re talking CD, CD-R, CD-RW, mp3, broadband and traditional radio.
I want one.
The Cato Institute’s Copy Fights panel debate is tomorrow. Keep your eyes peeled for a writeup as soon as I get back from it.
MacCentral: Apple starts shipping its new (really expensive) Dual 1.25GHz PowerMacs.
CNet: Lindows 2.0 is a coming. Michael’s Minutes on Lindows’ web site has several screen shots and feature blurbs.
Newsforge also reports in about the United Linux press release and conference call. They and others have issues with an earlier ‘closed beta’ which may potentially have violated the GPL:
UnitedLinux admitted it had its partners sign a non-disclosure agreement in order to use the closed beta, which likely means that UL violated the copyright of kernel developers everywhere and others who have contributed to GNU/Linux. If the NDA was structured so that the GPL would take precedence on non-proprietary, Free Software elements of the software, then that NDA would not violate the terms of the GPL. It is more likely, however, that the NDA squashed the GPLed freedoms by forcing recipients of the closed beta to agree that they would not redistribute any portion of the software.