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17 posts categorized "DRM"

April 09, 2008

RIAA Says Your Trash Is Unauthorized Distribution

You got to wonder how these discussions start and end in the offices of the RIAA and Entertainment companies. Now the RIAA and Universal Music Group is saying that tossing a promotional CD (the kind distributed to music reviewers, radio stations, and industry insiders)  into the trash is "unauthorized distribution."

The reasoning is that the statement "promotional use only" stamped on a label lets them own the CD for eternity. Of course as the EFF points out, that goes against a pesky little passage about US copyright called First Use. But then why let the law stand in the way of making ridiculous claims.

But come to think of it, I'd like to see this decided in UMG's favor. I mean the RIAA lawyers on the case put out enough trash, I'd like to see them go dumpster diving.

Via the Electronic Frontier Foundation and TechDirt

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March 29, 2008

Music Tax? Let's Just Call Me A Shareholder Instead

Dear Edgar,

So, you guys have come up with the idea of charging any Internet consumer a $5 a month tax as a way of paying for all those inflated damages you claim the music industry suffers because of piracy. You've realized that you can't stop the damage and you don't want to surrender, you've got to fight. I don't doubt that you do suffer some losses, but we all know rhetoric when we see it, but that's another topic for another day.

Lots of folks are screaming that this is extortion, racketeering, unabashed greed, or desperation. And of course there are those who look at what you are proposing as labeling everyone as guilty and to hell with the innocent. But maybe we need to look at this a different way.

The way I see it Edgar is this. My contribution of $5 a month (or $60 a year) sort of makes me (and everyone else) like a shareholder in your business. By buying into your racket I'm saying I believe in you. You're not only going to protect the world from music piracy, you're going to rejuvenate the business. I am going to reap the benefits of my little monthly investment in your business.

You will make good and damn sure that we actually have some folks making some real music worth my while out there. I'll gladly continue to pay for it, (I always do) if it is good stuff. But lately, you've seen a steep decline in revenue from me in the past, because your industry kinda thought it was about something other than music and lost its way. Let's be honest, with few exceptions, nothing that is being released these days is really that good or worth the price of admission. So, you're going to fix that, right?

Oh, and the majority of that $5 a month is going to go the artists, right? I doubt very seriously you're even remotely thinking of spending that $20 billion a year windfall on anything other than giving it to the artists. That's true, right?

And speaking of the artists, I see this as a real boon to them, assuming you do the right thing. Think of the savings you guys can reap by using this windfall to get rid of all those lawyers. That's even more money back to the artists, right?

And it doesn't stop there. Imagine all the bribes, er... excuse me, lobbying fees you'll save. You won't have to keep paying for the help of guys like this in government anymore, right?

But, you know Edgar, you shouldn't stop there. Let's do as the Canadians want to do and add a tax on devices as well. And, you know, let's add a tax on every guitar, piano, clarinet, tuba, pair of castanets, and spoon that is sold. I mean somewhere, somebody is going to pick up a pair of spoons at a family gathering and play some tune for those assembled. You might has well get the money up front on that one, too, don't cha think?

Oh, and by the way. I'm guessing that the prices of music will also drop, since you already add some to the bottom line to help protect against piracy. Another good call, right?

And I'm sure the computer manufacturers and software houses will be happy when you get rid of all that silly DRM nonsense that is forcing them to implement software that gums up every machine. I'm right on that one too, yes?

I can see this really taking off in a big way. I mean you could even go so far as demanding that hospitals charge parents when every new child is born, because you know that some parent somewhere is going to sing some song to their new infant that should be paid for. Let's charge them all and that way you've got your bases covered. And besides the way the Insurance industry works, no one will ever know the difference.How's that for an idea?

And don't forget the back end. Funeral homes. Yes. There is another good idea. We all know that once you get this going, somebody is going to get away with not paying you at some point in his/her life. So, let's tack a little onto the cost of each funeral or cremation, so we an catch them on the way out the door. Smart thinking?

It just goes on and on and on. I mean the way I look at it, my little $5 a month investment in your business and my reputation as a thief, (forget that innocent until proven guilty thing) should really help out and not just with your bottom line, but with life in general.

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March 09, 2008

MobiTV and Howard Forums Make Up

Good news. Looks like the folks at MobiTV called off the dogs they had unleashed on Howard Forums, according to this report on The Boy Genius Report. Rejoicing is heard all around.

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March 08, 2008

MobiTV Tries To Force Howard Forums To Shut Down

I made a mistake and goofed. One of your forum members posted something I should have secured. Therefore, I'm going to use the stupid DMCA/copyright laws to try and shut you down for my own mistake.

That's essentially the fight going on right now between MobiTV, who made the mistake and didn't secure their URLs, (which lead to paid content) and Howard Forums. A Howard Forum member posted those URLs in a forum thread. Now MobiTV is trying to have Howard Forums shut down saying that this is a copyright violation. We've seen crazier things, that's for sure, but the essence of this from MobiTV's part is that the URLs in question are protected under copyright. Give me a break. Clean up your own mess and back off. Tell your lawyers to get a real job because they're bilking you as well as trying to screw the other guy.

Via jkOnTheRun

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March 06, 2008

TechDirt's Continuing Series on Copyright and IP

TechDirt is running an excellent series on Copyright, Trademarks, Patents, and Intellectual Property. I linked to the first in the series a bit ago, but missed doing so with the second in a busy time. So, here's the link to Patents, Copyrights, and Trademarks, Oh, My!, as well as the latest in the series, If Intellectual Property is Neither Intellectual, Nor Property, What Is It? This is great reading if you have any interest in the subject matter at all. By the way, you should have an interest in this.

January 22, 2008

MPAA: 44-15=Oops!

Hollywood has always been as famous for funny math as it has been for movies, so I guess this makes sense on some level. The MPAA has said that the 44% figure it had been using for domestic losses from college students downloading on college campuses, was, well wrong. Supposedly "human error" led to the mistake and it now says the figure is more like 15%. Only problem I have with this, is since when have the lawyers at the MPAA ever been mistaken for humans?

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January 14, 2008

RIAA Idiots In Their Own Words

If the transcript of the actual interview is anything like the quotes in the preview article on The Digital Home, this is going to be well worth a read. If not for the sheer gall that the lawyers for the RIAA must eat and regurgitate every morning for breakfast before going to work, then for the sheer inanity of it all. I love this quote:

"College students have reached a stage in life when their music habits are crystallized," Duckworth said. "And their appreciation for intellectual property has not yet reached its full development."

I think the RIAA instead of spending money on lawsuits should fund a study on what the appropriate age is when one's appreciation of intellectual property should be considered mature.

 

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January 13, 2008

The Myth of El Dorado

texas-conquistador Sometimes the naming of things is prophetic, sometimes just stupid, and sometimes Freudian. Microsoft has named its digital watermarking system El Dorado. It might eventually classify as all three of the above. Digital watermarking is the latest move towards allowing entertainment companies to protect their content and supposedly will replace DRM. All it really does is shift the technology behind the concept. Given that the Myth of El Dorado led many to search for a city of gold, at least calling it that exposes the motivations.

A lot of folks got excited that the majors are supposedly abandoning DRM in favor of digital watermarking, but I have my doubts that that this sort of "forensic precision" will be the answer and predict it will cause all sorts of disruption.

I don't think they ever found the gold of El Dorado and I doubt they will this time either.

More reading at Wired.

December 31, 2007

2008 Wicked Stage Predictions

Nostradamus Someone will be elected President of the US, despite everyone's best efforts to screw it up.

Whomever is elected president will not get the usual honeymoon that new presidents receive.

There will be natural disasters.

There will be extreme weather conditions at various places on the planet.

Extreme weather will be blamed on Global Warming.

Scientists will insist Global Warming isn't real.

There will be several celebrity trials, murders, scandals, etc.. that will dominate the news.

The Writers Strike will never end. No one will notice. No one will care.

The RIAA will branch out to start suing other lawyers for using boilerplate legal language in EULAs.

New products will be announced. Some will actually be released. Some will actually sell units.

Google will continue its march towards world universal control of all data.

Microsoft will continue to suck at marketing its products.

Apple will continue to roll.

Steve Jobs will continue to fight with the entertainment industry. He'll win some and lose some. He'll  be perceived as the winner and the loser, depending on the phase of the moon.

Web 2.0 will become Web 2.1.0319428. We're not ready for Web 3.0 yet.

The Gang will continue to be this decade's best effort at surrealism.

The Russian Bot gang will take down another country.

Savings will become the new consumer buzz word.

Telco's and big media companies will continue to bite the hands that feed them, even though they continue to get slapped by those same hands. What's a little pain when you have profits?

Robert Scoble will upset someone somewhere with a blog or Twitter post.

Someone will patent stupidity and then we are all doomed.

There will be predictions made at the end of 2008.

December 16, 2007

Sunday Morning Reading

Some Sunday morning reading to share.

Expressionism The Richter Scale video controversy keeps popping up, and so does the video. I'm sure it will get knocked down again by photographer Lane Hartwell. Michael Arrington has embedded it again here. Eric Rice tosses in his $.02 here. This may indeed be a copyright/fair use debate, but it is also an interesting expressionistic tussle over the craziness that is copyright law these days. Or is it just Wack-A-Mole?

Steve Gillmor on Overnight Success: Twisting and turning into crazy crevices, but he posits that Ray Ozzie, and thus Microsoft won the war with some interesting allies.

Google getting ready to rumble with Microsoft? So says The NYTimes. Old news. Guess they should have read Overnight Success.

In the wake of Marc Orchant's passing away, Dave Winer talks about Future-safe archives, or what to do with all those words on the Intertubes after you're gone. Good questions.

Two bullies fighting. Comcast is going after the NFL in court over what Comcast perceives as the NFL trying to get folks to switch carriers. Too bad so many don't have that option. To leave Comcast. Via The Consumerist.

Chris Pirillo highlights Bruce Munro on DRM issues. Interesting look back at the short-sighted practices of the Recording Industry.

Funny but too true. CrunchGear on installing Vista SP1.

The NY Times highlights the administration's efforts to give immunity to the Telco's on the warrantless search front. So, if nothing is being done wrong, why does immunity need to be granted? I'm just asking.

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