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A byte sized companion...Deep Links

May 08, 2005 - May 14, 2005 Archive

May 13, 2005

Paying the Piper

The New Yorker quotes EFF co-founder John Perry Barlow on old and new ways for musicians to get paid for their work: "The value of songs falls, and the value of seeing an artist sing them rises, because that experience can't really be reproduced."
» link | Posted at 02:18 PM by Danny O'Brien | Permalink | Other Links: Misc.

University Uses Copyright to Unmask Blog Critics

St. Lawrence University is using copyright claims to discover the identity of the people behind a website critical of the faculty. Meanwhile, one faculty member is using his blog to defend their right to anonymity.
» link | Posted at 11:40 AM by Danny O'Brien | Permalink | Other Links: Anonymity

Broadcast Flag Rises Again

That didn't take long, did it?
» link | Posted at 10:48 AM by Danny O'Brien | Permalink | Other Links: Broadcast Flag

DRM and RFID, Together at Last

A UCLA group is exploring implementing DRM - using RFIDs. Ed Felten says it isn't totally crazy. In theory, at least. (Via CoCo blog.)
» link | Posted at 10:47 AM by Danny O'Brien | Permalink | Other Links: DRM

Thinking of the Orphans

Joe Gratz helpfully summarizes the reply comments submitted in the Copyright Office's Orphan Works proceeding. (Via Importance Of...)
» link | Posted at 10:46 AM by Danny O'Brien | Permalink | Other Links: Copyright

Filtering - Still Fallible

Consumer Reports tests show that filtering software has marginally improved, but still blocks perfectly legitimate speech - including KeepAndBearArms.com and National Institute on Drug Abuse. (Via Freedom to Tinker Dashblog.)
» link | Posted at 10:45 AM by Danny O'Brien | Permalink | Other Links: Free Speech

May 12, 2005

Music, Movies, and Now Television

The MPAA is now filing lawsuits against sites providing BitTorrrent trackers that include metadata files on TV shows.
» link | Posted at 01:58 PM by Danny O'Brien | Permalink | Other Links: P2P

May 11, 2005

Big Brands Fund Spyware

Not deliberately, perhaps - but the LA Times says ads for Mercedes and Travelocity are being spat out by some of the most pernicious adware products. (Via Eric Goldman.)
» link | Posted at 11:49 AM by Danny O'Brien | Permalink | Other Links: Spyware/Adware

Small Steps to Fight Trolls

Brenda Sandburg analyzes the latest modest legislative proposals to defend patent law against patent trolls. She also reveals that Peter Detkin, who coined the term, now works for Nathan Myrhvold's Intellectual Ventures -- a company that's been accused of trollishness itself.
» link | Posted at 11:39 AM by Danny O'Brien | Permalink | Other Links: Patents

Good Patriot, Bad Patriot

The American Bar Association is hosting a blog containing arguments for and against allowing the PATRIOT Act "sunset" provisions to expire. It's under a Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs Creative Commons license, so you can reuse the pieces.
» link | Posted at 11:13 AM by Danny O'Brien | Permalink | Other Links: USA PATRIOT

May 10, 2005

REAL ID Passes

Proponents tacked the REAL ID Act onto an Iraq military spending bill, guaranteeing passage. Now the US has a federal standard for identity cards - the de facto national ID system Americans have always rejected.
» link | Posted at 05:49 PM by Danny O'Brien | Permalink | Other Links: Bad Laws

Observe WIPO Close-Up

The deadline for public interest organizations to apply for "permanent observer" status with WIPO is this Sunday, May 15th. Earlier this year, WIPO tried to bar groups that hadn't obtained permanent observer status from discussions about the organization's future. Don't let administrative shenanigans tip the scales toward the IP maximalists - apply with plenty of time to spare. (Via CPTech.)
» link | Posted at 03:37 PM by Danny O'Brien | Permalink | Other Links: International IP

Zappster

Via Copyfight, Frank Zappa's "proposal" for a music download service - made in 1983.
» link | Posted at 12:00 PM by Danny O'Brien | Permalink | Other Links: P2P

Schneier on REAL ID

Bruce Schneier points out the fallacies and perils of the REAL ID Act.
» link | Posted at 11:52 AM by Danny O'Brien | Permalink | Other Links: Bad Laws

Thoughts on Australian Fair Use

Kim Weatherall has a great summary of the issues to consider if you're submitting comments to the Australian government on whether and how to codify fair use.
» link | Posted at 11:52 AM by Danny O'Brien | Permalink | Other Links: International IP

Adobe Head Says Software Patents Are a Bad Idea

Adobe CEO Bruce Chizen acknowledges that allowing software patents to slip under the wire in the 1980s was a mistake, but says it's too late to turn back now. Thankfully, that's not the case for Europe and India.
» link | Posted at 11:51 AM by Danny O'Brien | Permalink | Other Links: Patents

May 09, 2005

Licensing Complexities Kill Podcast

It appears that under ASCAP rules, podcasting can't be classified as time-shifted streaming. That means that radio stations can't just switch to podcasting their broadcast shows, as podcast pioneer Infinity Radio belatedly discovered.
» link | Posted at 11:40 AM by Danny O'Brien | Permalink | Other Links: Copyright

Hilary Rosen On Why DRM is Bad

The former president of the RIAA is mad that she can't play non-iTunes music on her iPod and can't convert other online music stores' files to work correctly on it. As Ernest Miller explains, that's a world that the Rosen-supported DMCA created -- an environment of restricted markets, with no legal interoperability tools.
» link | Posted at 11:11 AM by Danny O'Brien | Permalink | Other Links: DRM

What's Good for the Goose...

Roger Dannenberg responds to RIAA President Cary Sherman's op-ed tarring universities for "irresponsible" use of Internet2 with a rebuttal calling the recording industry's own history of "monopolistic suppression of innovation" an irresponsible use of networks.
» link | Posted at 10:10 AM by Danny O'Brien | Permalink | Other Links: P2P

Influence Australia's Fair Use Rules

The Australian federal government recently published an an issues paper (300KB PDF) on fair use and is taking public comments -- one of the few chances Australians have to moderate the DMCA-like anti-circumvention rules the US is exporting worldwide. Dan Bell has the scoop.
» link | Posted at 10:02 AM by Danny O'Brien | Permalink | Other Links: International IP

May 08, 2005

Identity Crisis

You have less than forty-eight hours to contact your senator, and tell them to stop the National ID card plan that was slipped into Tuesday's $82 billion military spending bill. The UnRealID emergency site lets you read about the dangers, view others' mail to their senators, and fax your own representative.
» link | Posted at 04:12 PM by Danny O'Brien | Permalink | Other Links: Bad Laws