Politics, open government, and safe streets. And the constant incursion of cycling.

Category: Distribution Page 14 of 15

Putting the Public in Public Hearings

Carl Malamud‘s recent work at finding a way to ensure that video of all open proceedings at the Capitol is freely available is a fantastic example of active citizenship. He’s just given Speaker Pelosi a report on his efforts, which I quite recommend as reading to anyone with even a passing interest in the mechanics of making public proceedings available to the public. For the rest of you, though, it can be summed up as this:

Based on 25 years of experience in the field of computer networking and a 2-year investigation of this specific issue, I have absolutely no doubt that it is technically and financially feasible for the U.S. Congress to provide a permanent broadcast-quality video record of proceedings and hearings for download on the Internet. Technically speaking, this is a “no-brainer.” This is simply a matter of will.

Make sure your Representatives put their will behind this effort.

Viacom Sues Google for $1B

Looks like I got my wish. I’d much prefer seeing this in the news to where they’re going to bury Britney’s hair, anyway.

E-book Readers

Well, it seems like someone has finally squeezed a dedicated e-book reader into (what strikes me as) an ideal form-factor. Unfortunately, that’s probably the easiest challenge that e-book reader manufacturers face. While I’ve got piles of electronics in the basement proving that I’m one of those early adopter suckers that Joel Johnson was talking about, I wouldn’t even consider buying an e-book reader until I knew that I could:

  • buy (most) every new title in a compatible format from multiple online vendors (I imagine old titles would be made available by demand and genre);
  • freely transfer/back up the title (i.e., no DRM); and
  • download any available title at most major bookstore physical locations (e.g., I could buy a copy of Robert Kaplan’s latest just before I got on a flight at DCA).

I suspect that e-books and paper books will have less of an overlap market than publishers think. Personally, I’ve occasionally read works entirely as an e-book (e.g., Cory Doctorow’s Someone Comes to Town, Someone Leaves Town, David Weber’s On Basilisk Station, and an assortment of Strange Horizon‘s stories), but I’d much rather use it as a supplement. A significant portion of my reading is done while on the move, and I can’t tell you how many times I’ve regretted leaving what I really wanted to read at home in favor of something a little more portable (this is why it took me forever to finish Infinite Jest, and the Baroque Cycle has become an exercise in reading the first ten chapters, over and over . . . ). So, if my conditions above were met, I’d most definitely be willing to invest in an e-reader, and either buy e-books on their own, or pay a premium for a paper copy that gave me rights to an electronic copy.

Sunday Reading

The NYT has a piece that touches on the question of what Gen. Pervez Musharraf means to the United States. It’s an important question – far more important than the two page treatment it gets there. I do fear that it will become a political question in the US before the US even understands the question.

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Jack Landers wonders what happened to public admiration of courage, valor, and honor:

Right this second, without resorting to Google, can you name a single decorated American war hero from the war in Iraq? It’s not as if there aren’t soliders and Marines over there doing extraordinarily heroic things in battle every day. It’s that nobody cares enough to tell their stories anymore. Not the Bush administration, not the media, not the general public. This is not a problem coming from the right wing or the left wing. It’s everybody.

Personally, I think it’s some combination of the cleaving of society (those who see nothing but brave soldiers, and those who see nothing but the immediate aftermath (a vast oversimplification, admittedly)) and a general loss of the concept of hero. In a way, we’ve seen almost every mythologized hero (George Washington, Abraham Lincoln, Martin Luther King, Jr.) deconstructed to show his human failings. So why make more? Until modern mass media can bring itself to grasp the concept of a uman hero, instead of a mythical one, I don’t think we’ll be seeing coverage of heroes any time soon.

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Harper’s John MacArthur poses the question we Americans who support withdrawal from Iraq should all be considering: who gets left behind? And speaking of Harper’s, I reread this amazing Jonathan Lethem essay on plagiarism this morning. I won’t pretend to recognize all of the literary references it in, but that’s one of the points. It’s not a work aimed at a popular audience (something I am always appreciative of), but it’s absolutely worth a read:

A time is marked not so much by ideas that are argued about as by ideas that are taken for granted. The character of an era hangs upon what needs no defense. In this regard, few of us question the contemporary construction of copyright. It is taken as a law, both in the sense of a universally recognizable moral absolute, like the law against murder, and as naturally inherent in our world, like the law of gravity. In fact, it is neither. Rather, copyright is an ongoing social negotiation, tenuously forged, endlessly revised, and imperfect in its every incarnation.

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And in service of jarring our perspective a bit: I was going to post a link to Slate’s photo series on bored couples, and extol its capture of the ordinary. And then I came across this photo by James Natchwey, who helps reminds us that our ordinary isn’t always.

How Musicians Make Money From DRM-free Music, Part VIIDCCCXCI

Looking through Salon.com, I see that their (free) Song of the Day is now available as a podcast. I subscribe. The most recent 9 songs download onto my computer. I let them start playing as I work. I start digging a song. I look to see who the artist is – huh, something called Ted Leo and the Pharmacists. Sounds very familiar – oh, they’re a local band. In fact, haven’t I seen something about a concert, lately? Indeed I have. Concert on the 29th? Tickets $15? Cool, I’ll take two.

That’s how a musician makes money. DRM-free music gives me a chance to see how I like an artist, and if it’s my thing, I’ll pay for something more.

Technology Journalism at Its Best

If you haven’t seen this slash and burn effort by Joel Johnson, former editor of Gizmodo, check it out. A taste, to get you to follow the link:

And you guys just ate it up. Kept buying shitty phones and broken media devices green and dripping with DRM. You broke the site, clogging up the pipe like retarded salmon, to read the latest announcements of the most trivial jerk-off products, completely ignoring the stories about technology actually making a difference to real human beings[.]

Seriously, read it.

Weekend Roundup

Because I’m just so far behind.

The most important discussion arising from the ridiculousness in Boston: 70s haircuts.

Your local news . . . from Bangalore! (Keep in mind that unless you live in a major metro area, you probably don’t get your “local” news from anywhere reasonably considered local.  So what difference does this really make?)

I’m less than enamoured with the junior senator from New York. I don’t have any problems with Sen. Clinton’s electability, or “divisiveness” or any of the other ridiculous junior high tests people seem to like to talk about. It’s that I simply don’t think that she’s at all committed to anything but herself. Now, that can be said about many politicians, but it shouldn’t be the sole driving force behind all of their decisions. (Hell, even Dick Armey can say he was wrong on Iraq.) All that said, I’d become much more appreciative of her if she’s really serious about this.

Non-disclosure agreements for state legislators? Sounds like a pretty clear breach of Do No Evil, Google. And since I think Robert X. Cringley may well be onto something with his theory that Google’s planning to build datacenters in most states . . . well, we should all be on the lookout.

I’ve added a new link under Media, to the right. It’s Fora.tv, best summed up as a YouTube for thinking people. Check it out.

Hoping for a Heavyweight Copyright Smackdown

Earlier this week, in a conversation with a friend, I described YouTube as “potentially the biggest single copyright infringer in history.”  It seems that Viacom may share my sentiment.

Now, just because I think that YouTube owes much of its existence to copyright infringement, it doesn’t mean that I agree with the laws that make it so.  In fact, I think they’re an awful set of laws, from a public interest perspective.  But who’s going to argue for the public interest?   Pretty much no one with any effectiveness.  So I’d very much love to see a clash of the well-funded titans over this.

Here’s hoping.

You’re Warned, WAMU

Yes, I see things are afoot at your end of the dial, with WETA heading back to classical, and WGMS (now WXGG-FM) picking up some of your public radio programming. So I’m sure you’ll see this as an opportunity to reshuffle your own programming a bit. Fine, have at it. But there are two things you better not do:

  • Do not mess with Kojo Nnamdi (I am still shocked (and quite selfishly pleased) he hasn’t been snatched for a national show), and
  • Do not even dream of touching Ray Davis.

Okay, enough with the demands. Now to the requests:

  • Please find some space for Farai Cheideya. I don’t care what you do with Tavis.
  • Do not be tempted by Prairie Home Companion.

Note to DCRTV: I’d really like to link you for posts like this, but your site structure is atrocious. It’s a shame, considering how easy it is to fix that, and how valuable your content generally is.

Tim Wu on YouTube

Tim Wu has a great piece on Slate, arguing that YouTube greatly benefits from the notice and takedown processes provided by the much (and rightly) reviled DMCA. Much as he’s done with net neutrality issues, Tim’s done an excellent job of describing the crux of the issue:

[M]uch of the copyrighted material on YouTube is in a legal category that is new to our age. It’s not “fair use,” the famous right to use works despite technical infringement, for reasons of public policy. Instead, it’s in the growing category of “tolerated use”—use that is technically illegal, but tolerated by the owner because he wants the publicity. If that sounds as weird as “don’t ask, don’t tell,” you’re getting the idea. The industry is deeply conflicted about mild forms of piracy—trapped somewhere between its pathological hatred of “pirates” and its lust for the buzz piracy can build.

Read the whole thing for a short and illuminating history of the laws and policy arguments that brought us to this point.

If you’re as interested in this as I am, jump over to Tim’s site, where a conversation on the concept of “tolerated use” seems to be developing.

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