Bob Bonniols Blog-O-Rama
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Monday, January 05, 2004
 

Thanks Xeni !

Mars moblog: amazing photos beamed home from NASA Spirit
Now *that* is a photoblog. Chronologically indexed gallery of interplanetary snapshots from this weekend's Mars landing. The first images sent back are of limited quality -- and only in black and white -- because data transmission rate from Spirit's antenna back to Earth is limited. Higher-res color images are expected to be relayed back from the orbiting Mars Global Surveyor and Mars Odyssey Spacecraft later today, according to Mission Control. At left:

"This mosaic image taken by the navigation camera on the Mars Exploration Rover Spirit has been further processed, resulting in a significantly improved 360 degree panoramic view of the rover on the surface of Mars."

Link to NASA's Mars moblog, link to full-size, 360-degree composite panorama image. Link to AP story with details on how NASA's coping with bursting web traffic for the online images (= 1300 web servers around the world!).


10:18:15 AM    comment []

From one of my favorite sources, and a fabulous author to boot: Cory Doctorow...

Kuleshov and reframing: is it illegal to frame a picture?
My co-worker Jason Schultz has written a great LawGeek article about the way that copyright and the
Kuleshov effect (in which art can be made to mean opposing things throught framing or recontextualizing) interact. The US courts have handed down some jaw-droppingly stupid rulings on this matter, as it turns out, in relation to a company called Albequerque ART.

ART specialized in buying up books and art-cards, cutting them up and glueing them to tiles, then selling the tiles. This seems pretty straightforward: if you buy the book, you own it -- you should be able to glue the pages to anything you care to and sell them on, provided that everyone concerned knows that you're not selling the original deal, and provided that you are actually buying and cutting up actual books, and not just buying one copy and scanning it and running off fresh copies from your laser-printer.

ART got sued by various people, and the courts handed down rulings that said that while framing a picture isn't an infringmenet of the author's copyright over derivative works, that really, really outre frames that change the context do -- the next time you think about getting a New Yorker cover framed for the toilet wall, think again:

The court cannot agree that permanently affixing a notecard to a ceramic tile is not recasting, transforming or adapting the original art work. Placing a print or painting in a frame and covering it with glass does not recast or transform the work of art. It is commonly understood that this amounts to only a method of display. Moreover, it is a relatively simple matter to remove the print or painting and display it differently if the owner chooses to do so. Neither of these things is true of the art work affixed to a ceramic tile. Moreover, tiles lend themselves to other uses such as trivets (individually) or wall coverings (collectively).

Link


10:05:20 AM    comment []


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