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January 4, 2006

Wipo and the War against the Internet: Some resources

The remarkable Seth Johnson, corresponding secretary of New Yorkers for Fair Use, has put together a set of resources for people interested in how the US delegation to WIPO is leading one particular battle in the War against the Internet. Our representatives are pushing to create a new right, based on a right granted broadcasters 44 years ago. Before you could copy or reproduce in any form material that you found on the Web, you would have to get the permission not only of the copyright owners but of whomever published the content online. This would apply even if you were reproducing material in the public domain. “Webcasters” (i.e., anyone who posts anything on the Web) would be granted this control automatically for 50 years after they post any content. Creating this new right would require that digital rights management be installed everywhere. Yahoo is the most visible promoter of the proposal, according to an excellent article by James Love, which concludes:

Both the broadcasters and the webcasters claim that they are just trying to curb piracy. Well, if the works they broadcast or webcast are copyrighted, we already have lots of laws and treaties for that, including for the example the two 1996 WIPO Copyright treaties (the WCT and the WPPT)…
In the words of the treaty critics, the treaty proponents are guilty of piracy of the knowledge commons. They are seeking to claim ownership rights in works they did not create, and which today they do not own. They want something different from copyright, and different from the legal regime that exists in any country. They want to own what they simply transmit.

Here is Seth’s list of resources:
1) James Love: The UN/WIPO Plan to Regulate Distribution of Info
on the Net

2) Ernest Miller: The Broadcast Flag Treaty
3) James Boyle: More Rights are Wrong for Webcasters

Next Readings

Letter to Congress Seeking Public Consultation
National Association of Broadcasters Spokesperson on Public
Interest Considerations

Letter to Yahoo, the Foremost Sponsor of Webcasting Rights
Questions Posed by Civil Society Coalition to WIPO on
Broadcasting Treaty

Letter from Technology Businesses on Webcasting
IP Justice’s Top Ten Reasons to Reject the Broadcasting Treaty
Statement by NGOs on Signal Protection
2003 CPTech Analysis
James Love and Manon Ress Audio Overviews [1] [2]

Statements from Most Recent WIPO Meeting on Broadcasting Treaty

Chile Proposal
Brazil Proposal
Civil Society Coalition
Consumers International
Third World Network
IP Justice
Union for the Public Domain
Open Knowledge Foundation
Libraries:
European Digital Rights

Other Analyses

IP Justice [1] [2]
Electronic Frontier Foundation [1] [2] [3]:
Union for the Public Domain
News Articles
[1]
[2]
[3]
[4]

Link Pages

http://www.cptech.org/ip/wipo/bt/
http://www.ipjustice.org/WIPO/broadcasters.shtml
http://www.eff.org/IP/WIPO/broadcasting_treaty/
http://www.public-domain.org/?q=node/33

[Tags: digitalRights copyright warAgainstTheInternet SethJohnson wipo]

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Categories: Uncategorized Tagged with: digital rights • media • web Date: January 4th, 2006 dw

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Bush non-counting of civilian deaths earns him the silver

The Bush administration has won a silver Falsies award from the Center for Media and Democracy for not counting civilian deaths in Iraq.

The gold went to “the video news release industry (with a nod to their accomplices in television newsrooms,” that is, the government agencies and businesses who create propaganda news clips that look like news segments and which get played as such by television news programs. (Thanks to Rose for the link.) [Tags: georgeBush iraq pr publicRelations]

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Categories: Uncategorized Tagged with: marketing • media • politics Date: January 4th, 2006 dw

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Brrr? Ger

Ethan has a photo essay on how to build a ger, a Mongolian tent-like thingie.

Very interesting, and it makes me appreciate the indoors ever more so. [Tags: EthanZuckerman dyi mongolia]

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Categories: misc Tagged with: misc Date: January 4th, 2006 dw

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The funnybone of the observer

My wife and I have always found the Russell-Moore-Apple sketch from “BehindBeyond the Fringe” very funny, although we’ve failed to convince our 15 year old that we’re right about that.

Here’s an mp3 of the original performance so you can decide for yourself.

[Tags: humor comedy BertrandRussell GEMoore philosophy]

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Categories: Uncategorized Tagged with: uncat Date: January 4th, 2006 dw

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January 3, 2006

2006 and truth

I’ve been hesitant to say this out loud because it’s just too baseless and empty, but what the hell:

2006 will be The Year of Truth.

At least 2006 will be a good year for truth.

I don’t know why I think so. But I do. And I’ve never been right yet.

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Categories: misc Tagged with: misc Date: January 3rd, 2006 dw

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Jeff Hawkins’ brain

I just came across this photo I took at a conference last spring. That’s Jeff Hawkins, author of On Intelligence, a fascinating revisionist view of the brain. He carries a plastic brain with him.

Jeff Hawkins and plastic brain



[Tags: brain JeffHawkins OnIntelligence]

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Categories: Uncategorized Tagged with: photos Date: January 3rd, 2006 dw

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Chinese removes blogger from MSN

Rebecca reports that MSN Spaces has kicked off Anti, a popular blogger who is critical of the Chinese government.

Scoble has just posted in no uncertain terms his disagreement with his employer. (If Microsoft gives Scoble any guff, he should remind them that this is exactly why companies need to have bloggers.) [Tags: RebeccaMackinnon scoble microsoft china blogging censorship]

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Categories: Uncategorized Tagged with: bridgeblog • digital rights • politics Date: January 3rd, 2006 dw

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Yahoo Widgets

Yahoo has done a good job emulating the Mac’s Dashboard widgets with its own Yahoo Widgets. (Yahoo bought Konfabulator to get its Widget engine.) They even look cool like the Mac ones do. But, Yahoo is not doing a good job helping us to find them. For example, there are 186 widgets in the System Utilities folder on the Web site, and 276 in the Fun and Games category. Then there are nine more categories. That’s too much to browse, even if you set it to show 25 at a time.

How about taking a page from Firefox Extensions and offer listings by most popular and highest rated? Or, heaven forbid, do we need a meta-Widget? [Tags: yahoo widgets macintosh firefox]

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Categories: Uncategorized Tagged with: taxonomy • tech • whines Date: January 3rd, 2006 dw

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January 2, 2006

Classification by crocodile

An illustration that you can never tell how people are going to want to classify things:

When Bernard P. Grenfell, Arthur S. Hunt and J. Gilbart Smyly discovered the mummies of the “papyrus enriched” holy crocodiles in Egyptian Tebtunis, they sensibly decided to include in the first volume of their publication a “classification of papyri according to crocodiles,” for papyri in the belly of the same animal might reveal relationships reflecting their administrative provenance and an original arrangment.

In Ernst Posner, Archives in the Ancient World (The Society of American Archivisits: Chicago, 1972) p. 5 [Tags: EverythingIsMiscellaneous taxonomy crocodiles egypt]

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Categories: Uncategorized Tagged with: everythingIsMiscellaneous • taxonomy Date: January 2nd, 2006 dw

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New issue of JOHO

I just published a new issue of my free newsletter, JOHO.

Why the media can’t get Wikipedia right:
In the wake of the Seigenthaler Affair, Wikipedia made some changes. Why did the media get the story so wrong?

When the mainstream media addressed the John Seigenthaler Sr. affair — he’s the respected journalist who wrote an op-ed in USAToday complaining that slanderously wrong information about him was in Wikipedia for four months — the subtext couldn’t be clearer: The media were implicitly contrasting Wikipedia’s credibility to their own. Ironically, the media got the story fundamentally wrong.

Most media reports presented the narrative line of the story roughly as follows: A person of indisputable honor was smeared in Wikipedia. Faced with incontrovertible evidence of its failings, the mainstream media shamed Wikipedia into reluctantly becoming more like them. See, Wikipedia was unreliable all along, just like we said! We’re the grownups, and now we’re making Wikipedia grow up…

Are leaves mulch?:
Peter Morville’s criticism of folksonomies, et al.

I’m very fond of Peter Morville’s Ambient Findability, a highly readable exploration of what’s going on in the field of information architecture, i.e., how we find stuff, written by a practitioner and thought-leader.

Larry Irons wrote to me recently, however, asking about Peter’s jibe about the idea that I’ve been pushing, that we’re moving from trees of knowledge to big piles of leaves…

Cool Tool :
Power scanning!

What I’m playing: Murderous rivolity rules.

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Categories: misc Tagged with: misc Date: January 2nd, 2006 dw

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