Posts Tagged ‘business’

John Perry Barlow At The eG8

Friday, May 27th, 2011

WITH UPDATES

John Perry Barlow, the author of the Declaration Of Independence Of Cyberspace, was at the recent eG8 conference where he spoke very eloquently about the bullshit efforts of governments and corporations to own and control the internet. French President Sarkozy bluntly described the internet as “a new territory waiting to be conquered”.

Yeah – you little weasel – that worked out real well for you and yours in Africa, didn’t it? Fucker.

It’s worth listening through the over-chewed garbage coming out of the mouths of the other participants as they spew nonsensical propaganda about the “creation industry” for Barlow’s response, where he cuts them off at the knees.

Listen to Barlow and learn – because the internet, the technological extension of your nervous system that connects you with other human beings around the world, is under siege by the corrupt powers who believe they are entitled to own and control you.

Have a nice day.

Cheers.

P.S. I found this stuff over at Roger Davies excellent blog.

P.P.S. Also scrounged from Davies’ blog is this short interview with Jeff Jarvis on his reaction to the eG8. Jarvis is always worth reading and listening to – like this excellent write up of the eG8 from his own blog.

eG8 – Jeff Jarvis – CUNY Professor in Journalism from OWNI on Vimeo.

P.P.S.S.-etc. And from Susan Crawford, via her Twitter feed, comes this excellent post by Alex Howard which pretty much sums up the whole eG8 clusterfuck.

AND – LAWRENCE LESSIG: so there

Keynote – e-G8 from lessig on Vimeo.

Everybody Knows

Wednesday, July 14th, 2010

I was in a shop with my son today and they were playing Leonard Cohen’s “Everybody Knows” while we were quietly persuing some neat old retro shit. I had my head buried in a box of vinyl disks, flipping through the cover art and falling, like Alice, down the rabbit to the days of my own teenage youth – when my boy sidled up to me and asked:

“Is what he’s saying true?”

“Who?”

“The guy in the song. The guy singing.”

“That’s Leonard Cohen.”

“Yeah, okay, but is it true?”

I looked at the somber face of my child entering his own version of the formative years and wanted to say all the things every parent has ever said to their child, every confidence building maxim, every fairy tale with a happy ending and every other desperate attempt to gloss over the bitter truths every one of us, through time, find easier to chew and swallow and, while not liking it, finding either acceptance or muted rebellion or numb ambivalence along with a meekly bowed head and the whispered prayer of: “Just leave us alone and it’ll be okay.”

I couldn’t lie.

“Yeah.”

“Oh.”

“It can change.”, I added feebly.

“Sure.”

He went back to poking through old hats and tin lunch boxes and I pretended to be interested in the old records for a little while longer – until the song ended – and then we walked home, talking about everything except how corrupt the world has been, is and hopefully won’t be.

The mix of retro memories, Cohen’s song and that brief burdened conversation between us helped me find a synchronistic link with this mashup of the song with clips from the old Man From U.N.C.L.E. series.

I couldn’t help but remember the scene in the Peter Yates film “Breaking Away” where Paul Dooley, as the father, has to admit to his son that life isn’t fair and people cheat and that’s just the way things are.

If you haven’t seen this film please seek it out. It’s the closest thing to a European film ever made in America.

I wanted to post that specific heart rending clip here to go along with this wandering scrawl of words but the best I could do was the wonderful “Refund?!!!” scene – which is actually better ‘cuz it’s funny.

Enjoy.

And, just so I don’t leave this post – and you – in an entirely bleak state of mind, rest assured that while I agree with the facts of Cohen’s grinding screed I am not bound by any attendant pessimism.

Regardless of the relentless and manic drive of the fascist cult of business to take over our governments, steal our public resources, deny our community voices and despoil all they cannot own and control – I really do believe it can change.

How? I have no fucking idea. My generation has failed completely and the best we can do now is prepare those who come after us to be better human beings than we were. I am not a man of faith – but I do have faith in our children. And if I could, I would take back all the wrongs committed against them and somehow give a refund for all that has been broken and wasted. But I can’t do that, can I?

None of us can. And we all know it.

Hug the ones you love.

Cheers.

Canada – E.U. Trade Agreement Seeks To Fuck Canadian Democracy

Monday, January 18th, 2010

Yeah – you read that headline correctly. Cory Doctorow posted an item on BoingBoing about Michael Geist’s reaction to a leaked negotiating document for CETA, the Canada – E.U. Trade Agreement.

Similar to the still “secret” negotiations of ACTA, the E.U. is seeking to impose copyright reforms that include term extension, DMCA legislation, resale rights, and ISP liability.

Geist writes:

Having viewed the document, I can report that it goes downhill from there, promoting the key message that Canadian laws are inadequate, while liberally quoting a report from the Canadian IP Council and discredited counterfeiting data.

The document states that the trade negotiations are a “unique opportunity [for Canada] to upgrade its IPR regime despite local anti-IPR lobbying.” It includes an assessment of recent copyright reform efforts, noting that two bills have died due to “political instability.” The document adds that the copyright reform process was revived in 2009 with the national copyright consultation, but notes dismissively it may have been a “tactic to confuse.”

I am so fucking sick of this trade negotiation bullshit where corporations bypass the will of citizens, dictating social policy outside of any legislative process and shitting down our throats. It’s not just business and it’s not just Canada. This kind of crap is going on all over the place.

In Italy the Berlusconi government is proposing a mandatory license for the right to upload video to the internet. As it says in the Standard:

“The decree subjects the transmission of images on the Web to rules typical of television and requires prior ministerial authorization, with an incredible limitation on the way the Internet currently functions,” opposition Democratic Party lawmaker Paolo Gentiloni told the press conference.

Article 4 of the decree specifies that the dissemination over the Internet “of moving pictures, whether or not accompanied by sound,” requires ministerial authorization. Critics say it will therefore apply to the Web sites of newspapers, to IPTV and to mobile TV, obliging them to take on the same status as television broadcasters.

“Italy joins the club of the censors, together with China, Iran and North Korea,” said Gentiloni’s party colleague Vincenzo Vita…

“It’s the Berlusconi method: Kill your potential enemies while they are small. That’s why anyone doing Web TV — even from their attic at home — must get ministerial approval and fulfill a host of other bureaucratic obligations,” Gilioli wrote. He said the government was also keen to restrict the uncontrollable circulation of information over the Internet to preserve its monopoly over television news.

Business and government don’t like it when the citizens can speak to each other and hear other voices than those which have been approved.

Fuck them.

Internet Growth Chart

I can only hope the net is growing fast enough and becoming pervasive enough that it will be impossible to regulate like this without causing massive unrest and the public dismemberment of the greedy cretins responsible. But that doesn’t mean they won’t stop trying.

In the early days of radio the airwaves were public. Supposedly they still are but they are held in trust by governments who auction off the rights to the highest bidders. They call it spectrum management – also known as theft and control. In the very early days of radio anybody could be a broadcaster if they could get their hands on the gear. It was chaotic and anarchic and a shit load of fun. Imagine what the world would be like today if those airwaves hadn’t been hijacked by government and big business. It’s too easy to say it needed regulation or (with the benefit of hindsight) that the cultural treasures from those days (including news, music, comedies, dramas and their attendant advertising and propoganda) would have been lost. I’d like to think the airwaves would have evolved in a manner similar to the growth of the web – with innovations being introduced to help manage the chaos and new economic opportunities arising from it all. We’ll never know.

The web benefits from the rapid and ongoing acceleration of technological development. It is self-healing and does not require regulation to control it – it needs regulation to keep it free. If we’re lucky the web will grow in size and ubiquity to such a scale that it is no longer feasible – technically, culturally and politically – to wrestle it into a locked box.

Of course, stranger shit has happened in this world – if we let it happen.

No matter what kind of fancy sauce the politicians and lobbyists smear all over their pious reasons for wanting to control the net – and you – it will always smell and taste like bullshit. Trust your senses.

2010 marks the beginning of a crusade against the public use of the net. This decade will define what the net becomes – or is allowed to become. The outcome of these forces which seek to control your eyes, ears and minds will define how free you will be. This is no exaggeration.

Get angry. Get loud. Tell everybody. Be heard.

The net doesn’t just belong to you – it is you.

Defend yourself.

Cheers.

Quick Augmented Reality Update

Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009

Just a brief info blast as an addendum to my earlier post on Augmented Reality.

Bruce Sterling continues his obsession with AR (and other cool shit) in his Beyond The Beyond blog – you must read it – everyday.

Gary Hayes twittered a couple of good links yesterday – the first was an article in thewherebusiness.com which referenced Hayes’ own extensive post over at personalizemedia.com.

Hayes also posted a lot of cool videos to illustrate his points – here’s one of them:

The very near future is starting to look like a Harry Potter movie – on acid. You think I jest? Check this out.

The possible uses of AR is mind boggling – everything from education, art, entertainment, military, porn, medicine, research, and – yes – business. In his post Hayes is focusing on the potential business models which are likely to erupt from the widespread adoption of AR and even in that limited context he paints an extremely interesting image of what our world is going to look like.

Picture downtown Tokyo – all around you – all the time.

Its not all bleak though – as Sibylle Hermann points out there will be art.

How will our flabby monkey brains handle all this shit?

In my opinion the legalization of cannabis is no longer inevitable – it’s fucking essential.

Cheers.

A Decade Of Downloading

Tuesday, June 2nd, 2009

Michael Geist appeared on TV Ontario’s The Agenda last week, along with Bob Wiseman (formerly of Blue Rodeo), Matt Hartley of the Globe and Mail, Grant Dexter of MapleMusic, and Andy Maize of the Skydiggers and MapleMusic.

It’s a great discussion about the changes in culture and business wrought by digital downloading of music (in particular but other media by inference) with the clear emphasis being on how any business has to attend to the needs and desires of the consumers citizens who buy the products and services being offered for sale.

While the big attention being paid to the disruptive effects of digital media, commerce and accessibility invariably focuses on the music, film and television industries we can clearly see a rising tide of resonant effect in other industries as citizens become used to and insist upon having the ability to speak loudly and clearly about what they want and don’t want. This ripple-to-tsunami effect on the culture will touch more than industry, reaching deep into the processes of governance, law and how we share this planet with each other.

I’ve often been accused of being naive whenever I look past the current state of things and attempt to get a glimpse of the further consequences which await us. Naiveté connotes ignorance and while I might sometimes be admittedly dirt stupid about many things I’d like to believe I am far from ignorant. There’s a difference between naive and hopeful; and I am hopeful for what lies in store for us as we continue to embrace and use these new tools, these new extensions of our senses. It harkens back to Stewart Brand‘s arguably hubric “We are as gods … “ statement in the opening pages of 1969′s The Whole Earth Catalog:

We are as gods and might as well get good at it. So far, remotely done power and glory — as via government, big business, formal education, church — has succeeded to the point where gross defects obscure actual gains. In response to this dilemma and to these gains a realm of intimate, personal power is developing — power of the individual to conduct his own education, find his own inspiration, shape his own environment, and share his adventure with whoever is interested.

That’s not naive and it sure as shit is more than just being hopeful. It is a declaration of intent and one we would all do well to remember and embrace. The arguments of today in response to how our past is being changed before our eyes is, at best, a mildly interesting discourse.

The better conversation is: What do we do next?

Cheers.

P. S. And as we accelerate on our journey into the future-now we must still contend with the heavy clay-laden feet of the dying dinosaurs as they waddle behind us and eagerly copy each others lies to justify their indolence and greed.