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December 22, 2004 -- 5:05 PM
posted by Al
Alright! in blatant proof of my uncoolness in western music zero! Yep! thats right! the big happy donut of nothing! Then again you guys probally haven't listened to the albums I listen to either so lets call it even.
December 22, 2004 -- 12:08 PM
posted by eric
take a tally: I've listened to 14 of the TOP 50 albums of the year according to pitchfork
how many have you listened to?
December 22, 2004 -- 11:40 AM
posted by Par
Oh, and three days before Christmas is a horrible time to attempt to accomplish anything at work. At least, that's my excuse.
December 22, 2004 -- 11:40 AM
posted by Par
Wow. I've read about Cory Doctorow's (also of BoingBoing.net fame) DRM talk, but I never actually read it until today. It's a little long, but well worth the read, and goes well with that Tycho quote I posted not long ago, in that the moral arguments about copyright law are superfluous. Cory rather handily takes on the argument of absolute morality in copyright law (the "downloading is theft" approach to the internet):
Tech gives us bigger pies that more artists can get a bite out of. That's been tacitly acknowledged at every stage of the copyfight since the piano roll. When copyright and technology collide, it's copyright that changes.
Which means that today's copyright -- the thing that DRM nominally props up -- didn't come down off the mountain on two stone tablets. It was created in living memory to accommodate the technical reality created by the inventors of the previous generation. To abandon invention now robs tomorrow's artists of the new businesses and new reach and new audiences that the Internet and the PC can give them.
It also goes well with the feeling I've had for a long time; that the industry must adapt to the medium, rather than trying to handcuff end users using new technology. Lost in the whole downloading debate, it seems, is the fact that copyright is not about ownership of a product, but the balance between ownership of tangible property and the ownership that comes with the development of that property ('intellectual property'). He also goes through a number of viewpoints on the whole DRM issue, including society, artists, business and, ultimately, Microsoft.
December 22, 2004 -- 11:21 AM
posted by edo
No no.. I used borrowed a calculator from Paras for that test. I still have to give it back to him. We didnt even need the calculator on the test... or I did the question wrong.
