Posts Tagged ‘doctorow’

Toronto Mini-Maker Faire

Thursday, May 12th, 2011

Ryan Varga made this excellent mini-doc about the Toronto Mini-Maker Faire which I and my family attended last weekend. It was an awesome display of wit and intelligence and talent – and all of it open and inclusive.

Imma gonna join me a hackerspace, you betcha!

Makers: Mini Maker Fair Toronto from Ryan Varga on Vimeo.

I love the ethos of the Maker culture and wholeheartedly embrace the idea of knowing what the fuck is going on inside our gadgets – so we can make our own and better and more individualized creations.

Time to pump some humanity into the culture of tech which we find ourselves swimming in. If the future is, as Ray Kurzweil suggests, inevitably headed toward a Singularity where our machines become sentient and we become our machines we’d better be damned sure our humanity goes along for the ride.

This is the way that will happen.

Cheers.

CBC + iCopyright = Bullshit

Sunday, January 31st, 2010

cbc_copyright

Cory Doctorow posted on the BoingBoing blog about Cameron McMaster’s very detailed post on how the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation has signed up with iCopyright.

iCopyright, the American copyright bounty hunters used by the Associated Press, to offer ridiculous licenses for the quotation of CBC articles on the web (these are the same jokers who sell you a “license” to quote 5 words from the AP).

iCopyright offers “licenses” to use taxpayer-funded CBC articles on terms that read like a bizarre joke. You have to pay by the month to include the article on your website (apparently no partial quotation is offered, only the whole thing, which makes traditional Internet commentary very difficult!). And you have to agree not to criticize the CBC, the subject of the article, or its author.

As Doctorow points out, the content of the CBC is funded by taxpayers and yet we are expected to pay for the right to quote from that content.

And as McMaster says in his post:

Seriously, this is really screwed up. Our public broadcaster is using an American company that follows American laws of Fair Use (and probably not the most liberal interpretations of it) to control its content and also inciting everyone to turn each other in and for everyone be on the look out for digital rights bounty hunters? It’s a good thing we’re in Canada where we don’t have the DMCA and we have a Supreme Court ruling that stops Big Media from getting information about our IPs from ISPs.

Because even if you share the story, even if you print it, you could be tracked down and fined.

Bullshit.

That would mean I couldn’t quote Martin Morrow’s appreciation of the recently departed J. D. Salinger where he said:

The word “rebel” is so overused and misused in our culture that it seems pat and tired to apply it to J.D. Salinger. Yet, I can think of few prominent contemporary arts figures who actually deserve that label as much as he did.

Nor would I be able to include this portion from Charlene Sadlers piece on the use of iPhone apps by toddlers, where she said:

When Alexandra Samuel’s two-year-old first sat down to play a video game on her iPhone, the Vancouver mom was more worried about his impact on the device than the effect it could have on him.

Samuel was surprised by what happened next.

And Bob MacDonald’s commentary on the moth-balling of NASA’s shuttle program, where he says:

Back in the 70s, they were promised to be the cheap way to space, but after two of them exploded in flight, taking 14 lives, and after countless retrofits and rebuilds, every flight of the shuttle now costs about $1.5 billion. Granted, they are the most complex machines to ever fly and have accomplished amazing feats in space, but they demonstrate how NASA has turned into a cumbersome organization that spends a lot of money to go nowhere. No private transportation company could ever operate that way.

- could not be referenced without permission – and payment. No partial quotes are allowed, no excerpts – the entire article has to be paid for – by the month.

I include these quotes for the purpose of showing just how absurd and insulting is this most recent clusterfuck of CBC policy.

The pinheads at CBC responsible for this decision must have thought themselves to be extraordinarily clever when in fact they have shown themselves to be pitifully ignorant not only of the workings of the web, the basics of fair-dealing and fair-use and the differences between U.S. and Canadian copyright law – but also the very nature of the public trust which they are charged with managing on behalf of the citizens of Canada.

More from McMaster’s blog:

Thanks CBC! You serve your public well by outsourcing your DRM enforcement to an American company, which allows for money that could be invested in a Canadian company to be spent abroad. This company creates an atmosphere of self-censorship and fear. Because most Canadians don’t know the difference between Canadian copyright law and American, the users of your website, mainly Canadians, will be afraid to do anything – the digital rights bounty police will come after them. This company that limits non digital uses of your information and also disables the sharing of information, and most likely, subject your website viewers to all sorts of DRM tracking devices. Way to foster a public sphere!

Hey, CBC pinheads! Fuck you. How much is iCopyright going to charge me for the quotes in this blog? How much will I be asked to pay for quoting a video or audio snippet?

McMaster included a few page samples from the CBC website where they explain how (and for how much) you can license the right to use the content your tax dollars have already for. Here’s one:

You think I’m going to pay the CBC for the right to include the quotes above in this blog post? No. Duh. What do you think my response is going to be when any request for payment is made? Yeah – you got it. Fuck you.

By the way – iCopyright offers a reward of $1,000,000 for reported piracy. You want to report me? Fuck you too.

I don’t know what makes me more furious, the idiotic attempts of old media carpetbagger shysters selling their bullshit schemes to attach a meter to every friggin’ slice of information we use in conversation – or the dirt stupid idiots at the CBC who actually thought this was a good idea. I really hope more people make noise about this to not just embarrass the CBC but to also continue to insist that publicly funded works belong to the public.

Want to add your voice?

Join the Canadians against CBC’s iCopyright DRM Facebook group.

You can also go to the CBC Contact page and tell ‘em what you think.

The CBC would do well to take a lesson from the National Film Board who have been putting their works online – for free – for everyone to access.

As it sez in the CBC article on the subject:

The online screening room was created as part of a $1.3-million project to digitize the NFB’s collection of historic films.

“This is part of our ongoing response to the digital revolution,” NFB chair Tom Perlmutter said in an online news conference on Wednesday.

The NFB, which restructured its film programs over the past 18 months to free up resources for the digital project, plans to put 10 new films a month online.

That’s how it should be. Instead the CBC is acting in a crass penny-ante manner by signing up with a U.S. based group of extortionists, attempting to charge people a fee for the right to quote from articles. It is an ill-advised and ignorant scheme which reeks of U.S. copyright policy snake-oil that CBC pinheads have bought and swallowed. You dumb fucks.

CBC – fuck off.

Cheers.

P. S. Cameron McMaster is far more level-headed than I and he has posted a very cogent response to the groundswell of outrage about all this. You can read his post here and follow his thoughtful advice on what else we can do.

And whilst I do just that I shall also continue to tell the CBC to fuck off.

Cameron McMaster has responded in the comments and suggested a post by The Torontoist which includes a response from the CBC. Good reading.

Us Now

Friday, May 15th, 2009

Yesterday started out well and then just ended in a steaming heap of suckage for me but I shan’t dwell upon that here. Instead I give you Banyak Films documentary Us Now all about mass collaboration through the Web and how it’s reshaping the future of government.

You can find it at the Us Now Vimeo page or you can just watch it here:

Found this through a BoingBoing post from Cory Doctorow.

Very cool insights which everyone should be aware of. This is why Net Neutrality and net access is important and is very much a free speech issue. Watch it. Share it. Talk about it. Act on it.

Now if you’ll excuse me I’m off to the backyard to write some neat shit.

Cheers.

The Militarization Of CyberSpace

Tuesday, March 31st, 2009

Great post in BoingBoing today from Cory Doctorow about CBC Radio’s Search Engine interview with the folks at the University of Toronto’s CitizenLab regarding their uncovering of a global hacker spy-ring. As Doctorow points out, the major focus of the interview – and the most compelling – is how this “signals a turning point in the ongoing militarization of cyberspace, and whether this demands a comparable peace movement for the Internet.

You can find the full interview at the CBC Search Engine site or just listen right here:

I’ve pointed out before on this blog the fucktard antics of the U.S. Air Force in their attempt to achieve dominance (their words) in cyberspace and how the Pentagon has classified the internet not just a potential theatre of war but as a potential enemy – the internet itself as an enemy which must be controlled and, if necessary, defeated.

Whatever those dicks are smoking I want a pound of the other stuff.

I’m not adverse to being defended against those who would seek to do us, or anyone, harm – but I’ll be damned if I’ll agree to live in a dictatorial police state in order to have that protection.

The genie is not going back in the bottle. The net isn’t just the next wave of communications toys destined to fall away to the back shelves of an antique shop along with the old radios and television sets. The net is becoming our Main Street. It is where we are going to be living. Yeah, sure, the real world will carry on, for better or worse, under our inept efforts to manage and care for this garden – but the net will form a large chunk of where and how we live our lives. The net will be where we define ourselves as human beings.

Look around. Look on the street where you live. How would you feel about it being a battleground? A lot of folks in the world already live that hellish physical reality. Can you imagine troops on your street telling you where you can and can’t go? Imagine being followed, listened in on and told what you can and cannot say or hear. Imagine speaking to a friend and seeing them be whisked off the street and taken away without explanation. It happens already – all over the world – even in our neck of the woods.

That’s the digital equivalent we are speaking of. This same shit is happening in cyberspace, where there are no rules of international law governing the behaviour of governments and corporations for the protection of the unwashed masses known sometimes as cattle, sheep, peasants or – perhaps more quaintly – people.

If we are intent upon reclaiming the rule of law in our world we need to include cyberspace in that effort. A peace movement for the internet? Sign me up.

Pay attention. Make noise. Don’t be afraid – be pissed off.

Cheers.