A blog doesn't need a clever name
Cyberethics, Crypto, Community, Freedom, Privacy, Property, Philosophy, MP3, Online Ed, Copyright, Iran, other current topics and fun stuff
Last updated:
3/1/04; 6:51:11 AM


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Friday, February 27, 2004

Court: DeCSS ban violated free speech. A California appeals panel reverses a 4-year-old injunction preventing publication of code that breaks Hollywood's DVD encryption scheme. [CNET News.com - Front Door]

Well, yeah. Yeah!
9:46:25 PM    comment []


EE Times: Efforts on to squelch China's wireless encryption plans. A number of key U.S. government and industry bodies are behind an effort to squelch a proposed Chinese wireless encryption standard that they believe will undermine the World Trade Organization's crucial trade efforts with China. [Tomalak's Realm]
5:56:04 PM    comment []

9,000 Google hits can't be wrong - or can they?. The search engine has become the reporter's best friend and a trusted source. [Christian Science Monitor | Top Stories]
7:12:02 AM    comment []

EFF on the Grey Album and Information Wants to be $5
Legal analysis of the Grey Album's copyright status:
Are the Grey Tuesday protesters protected by fair use?

Fair use generally refers to the federal copyright law exception contained in Section 107 of the Copyright Act. Because the White Album is not protectible under federal copyright law, fair use is not directly applicable.

A proposal to end the file-sharing wars for a measly $5:

Voluntarily creating collecting societies like ASCAP, BMI and SESAC was how songwriters brought broadcast radio in from the copyright cold in the first half of the twentieth century.

Songwriters originally viewed radio exactly the way the music industry today views KaZaA users -- as pirates. After trying to sue radio out of existence, the songwriters ultimately got together to form ASCAP (and later BMI and SESAC). Radio stations interested in broadcasting music stepped up, paid a fee, and in return got to play whatever music they liked, using whatever equipment worked best. Today, the performing-rights societies ASCAP and BMI collect money and pay out millions annually to their artists. Even though these collecting societies get a fair bit of criticism, there's no question that the system that has evolved for radio is preferable to one based on trying to sue radio out of existence one broadcaster at a time.

(thanks, Cory!)
7:06:10 AM    comment []

Supermarkets, Union Reach Tentative Pact. Supermarket executives and union leaders involved in a four-and-a-half month-old labor dispute in Southern California reached a tentative agreement on Thursday night. By Charlie Leduff and Steven Greenhouse. [New York Times: Business]
6:56:45 AM    comment []



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