18 June 2008
It's In the Diary, Erik
Interesting post from Erik Huggers, ex-Microsoft bloke now Group Controller, BBC Future Media & Technology, called "My First Linux Desktop":Over the last two decades I have used every flavour of Windows and Mac OS, but till now had never used a Linux desktop.
My only encounter with Linux has been flashing my wifi access point with dd-wrt firmware (which is great btw) but that is obviously not the same thing!
George Wright recently convinced me to take home a laptop with Fedora9 installed.
...
I am glad that I got a chance to test drive Fedora and as a result have come to believe in the potential of Linux as a mainstream operating system.
As Ashley said in this post last year the BBC does a lot of work with open standards already but in the future we plan to do more.
We want to make iPlayer work on all operating systems including open source ones like Fedora and I am confident we'll make good progress on this before the end of the year.
End of the year, eh? We'll be there.
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Glyn Moody
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1:11 pm
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Labels: bbc, erik huggers, Fedora, iplayer
Going Beyond Gowers
One of the great things about the Gowers Review is that it used a solid economic analysis to show that extending the term of copyright in music recordings made no sense. The other great thing about it is that others can carry out similar objective analyses to arrive at the same result:Today, the leading European centres for intellectual property research have released a joint letter to EU Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso, enclosing an impact assessment detailing the far reaching and negative effects of the proposal to extend the term of copyright in sound recordings.
“This Copyright Extension Directive, proposed by Commissioner Mccreevy, is likely to damage seriously the reputation of the Commission. It is a spectacular kowtow to one single special interest group: the multinational recording industry (Universal, Sony/BMG, Warner and EMI) hiding behind the rhetoric of “aging performing artists”.
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Glyn Moody
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1:06 pm
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Labels: copryight extension, european commission, gowers review, jose manuel barroso
Microsoft Monopolistic in the Middle Kingdom?
Talking of China, it looks like Microsoft may be facing charges of monopolism there:
Neue Monopolvorwürfe gegen den Software-Riesen Microsoft: Laut einem Pressebericht untersuchen chinesische Behörden die Marktstellung des Konzerns - bald könnte es ein offizielles Verfahren geben.
[Via Google Translate: New monopoly allegations against the software giant Microsoft: According to a press report Chinese authorities investigate the market position of the group - soon could be an official procedure]
Posted by
Glyn Moody
at
10:32 am
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Labels: china, der spiegel, Microsoft, monopoly
Chinese As She Is Writ
The poem was originally published in the June 6 issue of Qilu Evening News, a newspaper circulated mainly in Shandong province. In the poem, Wang impersonated a dead victim expressing his gratitude to the government from his grave.
"天灾难避死何诉,主席唤,总理呼,党疼国爱,声声入废墟。十三亿人共一哭,纵做鬼,也幸福。银鹰战车救雏犊,左军叔,右警姑,民族大爱,亲历死也足。只盼坟前有屏幕,看奥运,共欢呼。“
Here is rather literal translation:
"Natural disaster is inevitable, so what should I complain about my death? The president calls, the Premier asks, the Party cares, the country is concerned, the voice goes into the rubbles. One billion and thirty million people shed tears, I felt happy even as a ghost. Silver eagles and army vehicles came to rescue, soldiers, police officers - the great love! I am satisfied to die. I only wish I could have a TV set so I could watch the Olympic Games and cheer with others."
Ah, yes, TV sets....
Posted by
Glyn Moody
at
10:01 am
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Thinking the World of Firefox 3
Posted by
Glyn Moody
at
9:57 am
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Labels: china, firefox 3.0, france, germany, iran, maxthon, open enterprise, poland, spain, UK
Time to Break Out the WINE
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Glyn Moody
at
9:25 am
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Labels: firefox 3.0, open enterprise, wine
How to Get a Real Job in a Virtual World
Interesting:My name is Simone Brunozzi, a 30 year old guy from Italy.
What’s interesting about me? Well, I’m a brand new Technology Evangelist for Amazon Web Services in Europe!
I’m going to tell you how I landed the job of my dreams, and I suggest that you pay attention because it’s a story you don’t hear every day.
Posted by
Glyn Moody
at
8:47 am
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Labels: amazon web services, italy, jobs, second life, simone brunozzi, technology evangelist, virtual worlds
17 June 2008
SproutCore Sprouts From Nowhere...
...well, at least as far as I'm concerned:Apple, continuing its reliance on open-source technologies, is using an open-source project called SproutCore to provide rich Internet applications like its new MobileMe service.
The idea is to use to keep Apple from being "locked into the browser plug-ins for...one particular standard."
Never heard of it, but if it offers a completely open alternative to the dreaded Flash, put me down for two of them....
Posted by
Glyn Moody
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1:49 pm
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Labels: apple, flash, Matt Asay, mobileme, sproutcore
The BPI Makes the BBC Broadcast its Stupidity
When I read this riposte by British Phonographic Industry's chief executive, Geoff Taylor, to an eminently reasonable column by Bill Thompson, who had noted the futility and counterproductive nature of attempts to stop filesharing, one passage immediately struck me:Let's look at the figures. More than six and a half million people in the UK illegally access and distribute music, and it is plain wrong to say that this is good for music.
Independent research has shown time after time that people who download illegally generally spend less on music than people that don't, which undermines investment in new music.
Hang on a minute, I says to mesself: isn't it exactly the opposite - that there are oodles of studies that show that people who download music actually spend *more*? Alas, I was feeling lazy, and I couldn't be bothered hunting out the verse and chapter to show that Mr Taylor was talking a load of nonsense.
But then, the wonder that is the blogospher kicked in. Techdirt's Mike Masnick picked up the rather insubstantial gauntlet flung down by Graham, and answered thusly:The real kicker, though, is his claim that independent studies say that those who use file sharing spend less on music. That's simply untrue. Study after study after study after study after study after study has shown the exact opposite -- noting that people who file share tend to be bigger music fans, and are more likely to spend on music.
If that's not a refutation, I don't know what is.
But what's really pathetic about this is that somebody in a nominally responsible position - one capable of making the BBC print "his side of the story" - should so barefacedly misrepresent the facts in order to cast slurs on an journalist's reputation.
Wouldn't it be rather better to face up to reality, admit that things in the digital world have "moved on" in Tony Blair's oft-repeated phrase, and come up with a better business model? Not least because it's pretty damn obvious to even the spottiest teenager else what that might be.
Posted by
Glyn Moody
at
1:13 pm
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Labels: bbc, bill thompson, bpi, filesharing, geoff taylor, mike masnick, music downloads, techdirt
Insecurity is Bad for Your Health
Outrageous:
A shocking article appeared yesterday on the BMJ website. It recounts how auditors called 45 GP surgeries asking for personal information about 51 patients. In only one case were they asked to verify their identity; the attack succeeded against the other 50 patients.
Posted by
Glyn Moody
at
12:56 pm
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Labels: bmj, GPS, national health service, ross anderson, security
Whatever Happened to Greek Civilisation?
You probably don't care much about the Greek National Land Registry unless you're Greek or have land in Greece, but I think we can all be saddened by the following from its site:
Η εφαρμογή είναι διαθέσιμη αποκλειστικά για Internet Explorer.
[Google Translate: The application is available exclusively for Internet Explorer.]
So much for Neelie's open standards.
(Via Linux Format Greece.)
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Glyn Moody
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12:47 pm
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Labels: ancient greece, internet explorer, national land registry
Firefox 3 Is Given to the World – Or Maybe Not
On Linux Journal.
Posted by
Glyn Moody
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10:08 am
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Labels: firefox 3.0, linux journal, pst, spreadfirefox, world date line
Share and Share-Alike
Fascinating study from the University of Herefordshire on the music habits of "young people". It conveniently confirms everything that I and others have been saying for some time. For example:Respondents seem to attach a hierarchy of value to different formats of music, with streaming on demand the least valuable (though still valued); ownership of digital files somewhere in the middle; and ownership of the original physical CD the most valuable. However, with respondents spending 60% of their total music budget on live music, it may be that “being there” is considered the ultimate music experience of all.
Doesn't that just scream "business model" to you?
This, too, was heartening:Those who do upload do so for mostly altruistic reasons – by far, the most cited reason was to give in return to others; or to recommend music.
This suggests that respondents recognise the value in the ‘share-ability’ of music and are motivated by a sense of fairness and the principle of reciprocity – something for something. They are operating within a moral code, even though they are acting illegally.
Again, this emphasises that people who are downloading and uploading music are not scofflaws, but operate "within a moral code" - unlike the recording industry, which seems motivated purely by greed and vindictiveness, unwilling to understand the market it purports to serve.
It could do worse than spending some time digesting the results of this survey, which pretty much provide a roadmap for the industry in terms of working with its customers, and making a pile of loot along the way.
Posted by
Glyn Moody
at
8:18 am
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Labels: moral code, music downloads, sharing, survey, uploading
Open Voting Consortium
Elections seem like a no-brainer for openness: after all, fairness requires transparency, and you don't get more transparent than being fully open. And yet previous e-voting systems have proved notoriously fallible - not least because they weren't open. The Open Voting Consortium aims to do solve these problems:The Open Voting Consortium is a not-for-profit organization dedicated to the development, maintenance, and delivery of trustable and open voting systems for use in public elections. We are comprised of computer scientists, voting experts, and voting rights activists. We have a growing international membership base, but our organizing efforts are currently focused in California where we are actively engaged in legislation and implementing Open Voting as a model for the United States.
Needless to say, it's based on open source:We have developed (1) a prototype of open-source software for voting machines (2) an electronic voting machine that prints a paper ballot, (3) a ballot verification station that scans the paper ballot and lets a voter hear the selections, and (4) stations with functions to aid visually impaired people so they can vote without assistance. Open source means that anyone can see how the machines are programmed and how they work.
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Glyn Moody
at
7:24 am
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Labels: ballots, california, e-voting, open voting consortium
16 June 2008
To Open DB2, or Not To Open DB2: That is the Question
Interesting:IBM is positive about the possibility of bringing out its DB2 database-management software under an open-source licence.
While the computing giant has no immediate plans to open-source DB2, market conditions may make it unavoidable, according to Chris Livesey, IBM's UK director of information management software.
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Glyn Moody
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1:05 pm
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Labels: chris livesey, databases, db2, IBM
Open Enterprise Interview with Ryan Bagueros, North-by-South
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Glyn Moody
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1:01 pm
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Labels: argentina, brazil, ecuador, interviews, latin america, mexico, near-sourcing, North-by-South, NXS, open enterprise, Ryan Bagueros, venezuela
Polishing the Firefox 3.0 Download Pledge
Pledging to download Firefox 3 tomorrow is clearly a totally pointless activity (yes, I've done it, anyway), and yet some interesting factoids can be gleaned from the relevant page.
For example, despite - or maybe because of - its dismal showing in overal installed base, the UK's pledges stand at a decent 54,000 currently. This compares fairly well with Germany (55,000), Italy (56,000) and France (69,000). The real surprise, for me at least, is Poland, currently on 90,000: impressive.
Posted by
Glyn Moody
at
7:20 am
3
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Labels: firefox 3.0, firefox pledge, france, germany, poland, UK
BECTA and the Groklaw Effect
Ha!Right now Becta ( [the UK agency that snubbed the free software community] http://www.freesoftwaremagazine.com/community_posts/uk_agency_snubs_free_software_community) ) is in the process of being Groklawed by the free software community. A source close to the events right now told me quite clearly that Freedom Of Information Act requests are hitting Becta in flurries.
Posted by
Glyn Moody
at
7:01 am
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Labels: becta, groklaw, groklaw effect
The Sense of Microsoft's Open Census Move
I predict we'll be seeing a lot more of this:Microsoft has become a sponsor of The Open Source Census, a project started earlier this year that aims to track and catalog the use of open-source software in enterprises worldwide, the group announced Monday.
Call it the "loving to death" strategy: Microsoft entwines its tentacles around more and more of the open source world until it becomes almost - almost - an indispensable part of it. Result: the person on the Clapham omnibus is confused about what is and what isn't open source....
Posted by
Glyn Moody
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6:45 am
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Labels: clapham omnibus, loving to death, Microsoft, open census
15 June 2008
The Bang-on Blogosphere
Further proof that things are shifting in media-land:as Iain Dale, the Tory blogger who ran Davis's ill-fated leadership campaign, points out, while newspapers scorned the resignation the blogosphere largely embraced it: political chatrooms are overflowing with right-wingers offering to start a fighting fund, and left-wingers agonising over whether to support him. Even the Daily Telegraph's Saturday letters page was two to one in favour of the former MP for Haltemprice and Howden.
Could David Davis somehow have stumbled across something the establishment has missed, an untapped anger with what the public sees as a snooping, heavy-handed state that spies on it through speed cameras and CCTV and microchips on its rubbish bins, that tramples its freedoms and makes sloppy mistakes with its private data?
Update: Related thoughts here.
Posted by
Glyn Moody
at
7:34 am
1 comments
Labels: blogosphere, cctv, david davis, iain dale, mainstream media, MPs, tory
13 June 2008
BECTA Rubbishes Almost the Entire UK Open Source Industry
Posted by
Glyn Moody
at
11:13 am
2
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Labels: becta, ingots, mark taylor, open enterprise, oss watch, red hat, rubbishing, schoolforge, sirius, Ubuntu
In Praise of Government Leadership
Posted by
Glyn Moody
at
8:37 am
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Labels: disruptive, open enterprise, siemens, south africa, UK
Associated Press Decides to Look Stupid
I'm currently engaged in a legal disagreement with the Associated Press, which claims that Drudge Retort users linking to its stories are violating its copyright and committing "'hot news' misappropriation under New York state law." An AP attorney filed six Digital Millenium Copyright Act takedown requests this week demanding the removal of blog entries and another for a user comment.
The Retort is a community site comparable in function to Digg, Reddit and Mixx. The 8,500 users of the site contribute blog entries of their own authorship and links to interesting news articles on the web, which appear immediately on the site. None of the six entries challenged by AP, which include two that I posted myself, contains the full text of an AP story or anything close to it. They reproduce short excerpts of the articles -- ranging in length from 33 to 79 words -- and five of the six have a user-created headline.
So that's about 99.999% of the blogosphere that's violating copyright according to AP. How about if we help Associated Press by never linking to any of their stories...that should make them *really* happy. (Via Scott Rosenberg.)
Posted by
Glyn Moody
at
6:55 am
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Labels: associated press, blogs, copyright infringement, drudge retort
More Unspeakable Acts
Michael Geist has been warning about this for a while, and now the beast is out:Today the Government of Canada introduced long-overdue and much-needed amendments to the Copyright Act that will bring it in line with advances in technology and current international standards.
"Our government has committed to ensuring Canada's copyright law is up to date, and today we are delivering by introducing this "made-in-Canada" bill that balances the interests of Canadians who use digital technology and those who create content," said the Honourable Jim Prentice, Minister of Industry. "It's a win-win approach because we're ensuring that Canadians can use digital technologies at home with their families, at work, or for educational and research purposes. We are also providing new rights and protections for Canadians who create the content and who want to better secure their work online."
The phrase "made-in-Canada" would be funny if it weren't so pathetic: this bill has been dictated down to the last comma by Hollywood, and it would be hard to imagine anything less "made-in-Canada". Moreover, despite the misleading stuff about "win-win", this is simply a loss for Canadians, as Geist explains:1. As expected, Prentice has provided a series of attention-grabbing provisions to consumers including time shifting, private copying of music (transferring a song to your iPod), and format shifting (changing format from analog to digital). These are good provisions that did not exist in the delayed December bill. However, check the fine print since the rules are subject to a host of strict limitations and, more importantly, undermined by the digital lock provisions. The effect of the digital lock provisions is to render these rights virtually meaningless in the digital environment because anything that is locked down (ie. copy-controlled CD, no-copy mandate on a digital television broadcast) cannot be copied. As for every day activities like transferring a DVD to your iPod - those are infringing too. Indeed, the law makes it an infringement to circumvent the locks for these purposes.
2. The digital lock provisions are worse than the DMCA. Yes - worse. The law creates a blanket prohibition on circumvention with very limited exceptions and creates a ban against distributing the tools that can be used to circumvent. While Prentice could have adopted a more balanced approach (as New Zealand and Canada's Bill C-60 did), the effect of these provisions will be to make Canadians infringers for a host of activities that are common today including watching out-of-region-coded DVDs, copying and pasting materials from a DRM'd book, or even unlocking a cellphone.
While that is the similar to the U.S. law, the exceptions are worse. The Canadian law includes a few limited exceptions for privacy, encryption research, interoperable computer programs, people with sight disabilities, and security, yet Canadians can't actually use these exceptions since the tools needed to pick the digital lock in order to protect their privacy are banned. In other words, check the fine print again - you can protect your privacy but the tools to do so are now illegal. Dig deeper and it gets worse. Under the U.S. law, there is mandatory review process every three years to identify new exceptions. Under the Canadian law, its up to the government to introduce new exceptions if it thinks it is needed. Overall, these anti-circumvention provisions go far beyond what is needed to comply with the WIPO Internet treaties and represents an astonishing abdication of the principles of copyright balance that have guided Canadian policy for many years.
So far, so bad - and pretty much expected. But what struck me was the following gratuitous comment at the end of the press release:These amendments to the Copyright Act are part of the government's broader intellectual property strategy, which includes the recent amendments to the Criminal Code to combat movie piracy and the announcement that Canada will work with other international trading partners towards a possible Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement (ACTA).
In other words, all this stuff is just a prelude to the even more Draconian, even less democratic ACTA which is beetling towards us. Time to start protesting, people....
Posted by
Glyn Moody
at
6:43 am
2
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Labels: acta, anti-circumvention, canada, dmca, michael geist, wipo