The Best Robots of 2009 51
Comment Re:i'm getting a migraine (Score 1) 368
Submission + - Google Shareholder Proposal to Resist Censorship
The proposal cites the UN Declaration of Human Rights and declares that "technology companies in the United States have failed to develop adequate standards by which they can conduct business with authoritarian governments while protecting human rights to freedom of speech and freedom of expression". If adopted by shareholders, it would call for management to adopt 6 minimum standards including: not storing data that can identify an individual in repressive countries; using all legal means to resist censorship; and documenting and publicizing "all cases where legally-binding censorship requests have been complied with." The proposal was submitted by the Comptroller of New York City, which owns large amounts of Google stock in City pension plans.
Is a proposal like this (assuming it ever passed) feasible to implement? Would it actually do anything to open up repressive regimes? Is this a reasonable balance between upholding liberal democracy values and doing business in dictatorships? Would it have any effect on domestic issues such as DMCA takedown orders? Most of all, as a shareholder, what is Google's board of directors' justification for recommending that shareholders vote AGAINST this proposal? If you are a Google shareholder, were you aware of this proposal, and if so, are you going to vote for or against?
In France, Only Journalists Can Film Violence 531
Submission + - Copyright law used to shut down anti-coal site
Submission + - Cassini Returns Amazing New Imagery from Saturn
Submission + - Ocean Floor Crust Wound to Be Explored
Journal Journal: Office 2007 makes Outlook Express French. 2
The Register reports and Microsoft confirms, "Microsoft's Office 2007 switches Outlook Express spell-checkers to work only in French. Those disposed to communicate in other languages are being advised to use third-party programs." Incredibly, they use the occasion to promote their MVP program and search engine instead of offering a pa
Journal SPAM: Pentagon tells Bush: climate change will destroy us 5
Climate change over the next 20 years could result in a global catastrophe costing millions of lives in wars and natural disasters..
A secret report, suppressed by US defence chiefs and obtained by The Observer, warns that major European cities will be sunk beneath rising seas as Britain is plunged into a 'Siberian' climate by 2020. Nuclear conflict, mega-droughts, famine and widespread rioting will erupt across the world.
Submission + - Second Google Desktop vulnerability uncovered
Journal Journal: Home Biodiesel Refinery 1
On the SPEED channel the Truck Universe show is now playing an episode on Alternative Fuels: How to make your own biodiesel with the Fuel Meiser system.
Submission + - Pendulum swinging toward privacy
http://www.networkworld.com/community/?q=node/118
Submission + - Eric Flint's "Salvos Against Big Brother"
1) The product they want — electronic texts — are hard to find, and thus valuable.
2) The products they want are high-priced, so there's a fair amount of money to be saved by stealing them.
3) The legal products come with so many added-on nuisances that the illegal version is better to begin with.
Those are the three conditions that will create widespread electronic copyright infringement, especially in combination. Why? Because they're the same three general conditions that create all large-scale smuggling enterprises.
And...
Guess what? It's precisely those three conditions that DRM creates in the first place. So far from being an impediment to so-called "online piracy," it's DRM itself that keeps fueling it and driving it forward.
On a cold-blooded economic level, it is the understanding I've laid out above that always guided Jim Baen from the beginning of the electronic publishing era. Jim always understood all this. (In fact, I learned a lot of myself from watching him and talking to him.)
From the beginning, Baen Books has always consistently followed a course of action that is diametrically opposed to the one advocated by DRM enthusiasts.
Baen's policy can be summed up using the same three points I enumerated above:
1) Electronic editions of Baen's titles are not rare. In fact, they're almost ubiquitous. With less than a handful of exceptions — those usually involve contractual restrictions on electronic publication insisted on by a few estates — all Baen titles will be produced in an electronic edition as well as a paper edition.
2) The books are priced cheaply. Where most publishers insist on selling ebooks at a higher price than paperbacks, Baen sells them at a lower price — and a much lower price if you take advantage of their monthly Webscription service. You can buy a Baen title in electronic format for as little as $2.50 — and almost no title is priced higher than $5.
3) Finally, the books are designed to be as user-friendly as possible. Baen will provide the text in any one of five popular formats, some of which are completely unencrypted. No restrictions are placed on the customer's use of the book thereafter. They can do whatever they want with it, just as they can with a paper book.
Given all that, who is going to bother to steal a Baen title? How many people with enough intelligence to read a book in the first place are going to go through the time and effort to find a pirated edition of something that they could have obtained legally — very easily and quickly, at a stable and well-known web site — for five dollars or less? An edition, furthermore, which has been professionally prepared and doesn't carry the same sort of frequent OCR-scanning errors that most pirated editions do?
A Matter of Principle
Copyright: What Are the Proper Terms for the Debate?
Copyright: How Long Should It Be?
What is Fair Use
Lies, and More Lies"