21 July 2008
Copyright Moves from Reason to Emotion
Interesting discussion of the proposed extension to sound copyright, including the following:In setting up the rationalist background of his title, Professor Bently noted that the 2004 EC Staff Working Paper, the Gowers Report, and the EC-commissioned IVIR report had all approached the question rationally, with evidence-based and economic reasoning. Each had come out against extension.
Also worth noting is this comment from the other side:He challenged the economic evidence against extension, relying on counter-examples in a PwC report which had failed to identify any significant pricing difference between copyright and out-of-copyright music. To illustrate this point, he observed that iTunes charge 79p a track regardless of the existence of sound recording protection or lack thereof, and concluded that extending copyright would not act to the disbenefit of consumers.
Not for consumers, maybe, but what about that new group - those who want to *re-use* material? Plenty of disbenefit for them....
Posted by Glyn Moody at 1:03 pm 0 comments
Labels: copyright, gowers report, sound copyright
16 July 2008
The Android With No Brain
Posted by Glyn Moody at 10:35 am 0 comments
Labels: android, google, nokia, oha, open enterprise, symbian
15 July 2008
OpenDrive, Closed Minds
OpenDrive Version 1.0 (for Windows XP/Vista)
Yes, and?
Nice name, OpenDrive; pity about the product, which isn't.
Posted by Glyn Moody at 8:36 pm 0 comments
Labels: alta vista, closed minds, opendrive, windows xp
Making Clouds Open – and Secure
Posted by Glyn Moody at 10:08 am 0 comments
Labels: agpl, clipperz, cloud computing, open enterprise, open knowledge definition, open knowledge foundation, Open Software Service Definition
Modularity Gets Down to Business
Posted by Glyn Moody at 8:45 am 0 comments
Labels: alfresco, modularity, open enterprise, optaros
No FT, No Idea
The FT seems not to understand copyright:Brussels is expected to push ahead next week with reforms that would allow European singers and musicians to enjoy proceeds from their work for many more years.
Proposals to extend copyright protection for performing artists from 50 to 95 years were first outlined by internal market commissioner Charlie McCreevy in February and could be approved by the European Commission at Wednesday’s meeting.
If so, Europe would move into line with the US, and musicians – from ageing rock stars to session players – could enjoy a boost to their pensions.
Copyright is supposed to provide an *incentive* to create, not a *reward* for having created. Increasing the term of copyright protection will not suddenly make ageing rockers more creative. Moreover, the prospect of an extra 45 years' protection is highly unlikely to make young rockers rush out and create more. So this is a pure loss for the public domain. Thanks for nothing, Charlie.
Posted by Glyn Moody at 8:40 am 0 comments
Labels: charlie mccreevy, copyright, eu, ft, incentives, intellectual monopolies, rock stars
14 July 2008
True Open Source Quality
Posted by Glyn Moody at 4:53 pm 0 comments
Labels: eu, metrics, open enterprise, quality, sqo-oss, truth
In Praise of Modularity
Posted by Glyn Moody at 10:38 am 0 comments
Labels: data sharing, mark walport, modularity, open enterprise, open knowledge foundation, richard thomas
11 July 2008
EngLab: A Gift of a Program for Engineers
Posted by Glyn Moody at 12:57 pm 2 comments
Labels: engineers, englab, greece, matlab, open enterprise
...And Openness Can Save
I wrote about how closed systems can kill the other day; here's the other side of the coin - how openness could save lives during 'flu epidemics:"I can't be sure that a more open process would have prevented the epidemic, but it's possible, maybe even likely," said Salzberg, who argued his case in a commentary published yesterday in Nature. "They took the conservative approach, but the flu is always changing."
Posted by Glyn Moody at 8:40 am 0 comments
Labels: flu epidemics, openness, vaccines
10 July 2008
O Tell Me the Truth about... the Telecoms Package
Posted by Glyn Moody at 10:57 am 0 comments
Labels: eu, media companies, meps, open enterprise, syed kamall, telecoms package, three strikes
Globalisation's Upside
Yes, there is one:The European Union is moving forward with regulations that will significantly restrict the amount of power electric appliances can consume in standby, or "vampire," mode.
...
As far as I can tell, the United States has nothing similar at a federal level. The 2007 Energy Act only requires that the Department of Energy "incorporate energy use in standby mode and off mode" in "future standards for covered products."
But no worries -- if the Asian manufacturers who currently produce the bulk of the world's appliances are forced to rejigger their designs for the EU market, they'll probably do so as well for products aimed at the U.S.
One of many examples where the global nature of production means that the *most stringent" rules get applied to everyone.
Posted by Glyn Moody at 8:47 am 0 comments
Labels: energy, eu, globalisation, standby, vampire mode
09 July 2008
Abolish BECTA Now
Posted by Glyn Moody at 4:06 pm 1 comments
Labels: abolition, becta, bsod, Microsoft, open enterprise, quango
Come to the World eBook Fair
Every year, some of the top ebook companies and organisations come together to offer extremely large numbers of ebooks, absolutely free (mostly as in beer, but often as in freedom) as part of the World eBook Fair. Here are the facts and figures:
Third Annual World eBook Fair: July 4th to August 4th
Just two years ago The First World eBook Fair came on the scene with about 1/3 million books, doubled to 2/3 million in 2008, and now over one million.
Created by contributions from 100+ eLibraries from around the world, here are the largest collections.
As of midnight Central Daylight Time July 4, 2008 these are the approximate numbers:
100,000+ from Project Gutenberg
500,000+ from The World Public Library
450,000+ from The Internet Archive
160,000+ from eBooks About Everything
..17,000+ from IMSLP
1,227,000+ Grand Total
Pretty impressive.
And while we're on the subject of free, here is a good list of "100+ Sources for Free-As-In-Beer Books & Texts Online", which includes a lot of fairly obscure but highly worthy sites. Recommended.
Posted by Glyn Moody at 1:43 pm 1 comments
Labels: ebooks, internet archive, michael hart, project gutenberg, world ebook fair
How Proprietary Systems Can Kill
Or could do:
The bewildering variety of new medical devices in U.S. hospitals promises higher standards of care. But it also poses new opportunities for error. A growing number of physicians believe that the interoperability of medical devices--their ability to communicate with each other--could make hospitals safer and more efficient.
"Today, there are many proprietary systems available from different vendors, but the problem is, these systems can't talk to one another," says Douglas Rosendale, a surgeon who works on information integration at Veterans Health Administration and Harvard Brigham and Women's Hospital. "If they can't interface, then they can't share information, which could have an impact on patient care." Estimates of the number of preventable deaths caused each year by medical errors in American hospitals range from 98,000 to 195,000.
You know the answer, people: open standards, open source. (Via James Tyrrell.)
Posted by Glyn Moody at 1:14 pm 0 comments
Labels: hospitals, medicine, preventable deaths, proprietary systems, us
A New Dawn
Well, not quite, but here's another of those open source, open hardware thingies:
aurora is a usb powered multichannel mixer in a typical dj form factor. the device features two linear channel faders, a single a/b crossfader and eight backlit buttons. twenty four backlit knobs allow you to control effects. aurora, unlike most midi controllers, enhances performances with controllable ambient lighting.
Great idea, pity there aren't more.... (Via Leslie P. Polzer.)
Posted by Glyn Moody at 1:09 pm 0 comments
Labels: aurora, multichannel mixer, open hardware
Beyond Second Life: Virtual Worlds' Second Wind
Posted by Glyn Moody at 11:09 am 0 comments
Labels: aol, compuserve, IBM, lively, open enterprise, opensim, second life
ACTA Slouches Towards Bethlehem
The extremely pernicious Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement (ACTA) continues to move forward. Here's what the anachronistic back-slapping club known as the G8 has to say on the subject:We encourage the acceleration of negotiations to establish a new international legal framework, the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement (ACTA), and seek to complete the negotiation by the end of this year.
Remember, this is an agreement that has been drawn up behind closed doors, with input from the industries that depend on intellectual monopolies, and zero input from the rest of us. Democracy? Who needs it?
Posted by Glyn Moody at 9:42 am 0 comments
Labels: acta, bethlehem, g8, intellectual monopolies, slouching
Reasons to Be Tearful
Posted by Glyn Moody at 8:56 am 0 comments
Labels: ip addresses, ipv4, ipv6, pluggd.in
08 July 2008
How to Get Rid of the "War on Terror"
Bruce Schneier has some has his usual wise words on the subject of "terror":Terrorism is a heinous crime, and a serious international problem. It's not a catchall word to describe anything you don't like or don't agree with, or even anything that adversely affects a large number of people. By using the word more broadly than its actual meaning, we muddy the already complicated popular conceptions of the issue. The word "terrorism" has a specific meaning, and we shouldn't debase it.
But, sorry Brucie, it's too late: they've already debased it.
But debasement is a two-edged sword. What we should do now is to use "terrorism" for even the most trivial infraction: "parking terrorism", "litter terrorism", "noise terrorism" - you get the idea. In no time at all, even the politicians will recognise that the whole concept of "terror" has become eviscerated, and risible. The "War on Terror" will sound - rightly - about as sensible as a "War on Flatulence".
Posted by Glyn Moody at 12:53 pm 0 comments
Labels: bruce schneier, flatulence, war on terror
Welcome, Open Education News
The young field of open education is gaining momentum and energy. As additional projects, foundations, universities, and other participants join the movement, the need increases for a single source to gather, sort, analyze, synthesize, and disseminate news related to open education. As a field, open education is now where the field of open access was a few years ago. Peter Suber’s wonderful Open Access News provides an invaluable service to the OA community, and we intend to replicate this service with Open Education News.
Sounds good to me. (Via Open Access News.)
Posted by Glyn Moody at 12:44 pm 0 comments
Labels: david wiley, open access, open education, peter suber
Apple, the Security Paragon
Not:Apple just gave out my Apple ID password because someone asked
Posted by Glyn Moody at 12:33 pm 0 comments
How Should Mozilla Execute Its Vision?
On Linux Journal.
Posted by Glyn Moody at 10:10 am 0 comments
Labels: circles, dave eaves, David Ascher, Firefox, linux journal, mark surman, mitch baker, mozilla, mozilla manifesto
GNOME Gets Stormy...
Posted by Glyn Moody at 8:37 am 0 comments
Labels: executive director, gnome, mitch baker, mozilla, open enterprise, openlogic, Stormy Peters