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September 18, 2003

The boomerang effect

Rick Munarriz at Motley Fool has a column on the record companies recent attacks on small-time file sharers:

Amidst enough mixed signals to freeze up a recording studio mixing board, we're down to a bloody battle that no one wanted. In filing suit against 261 citizens who have downloaded free music files from the Internet, the fortified music industry has essentially started shelling a galleon manned by 60 million pirates that look like you and me. As a result, the attackers have a daunting challenge on their hands. How do you sink the ship while saving the passengers? And, while we're at it, does anyone know how many olive branches it takes to craft a makeshift lifeboat?

...

In a great thread within our Fool Community (subscription required) some of our members were debating whether or not the term "piracy" is an appropriate tag for MP3 swappers. You're welcome to share your thoughts if you'd like to, but I'm not much in the mood to pass judgment. Unlike the RIAA, I have no interest in cultivating 60 million enemies in an industry in which platinum success is measured a million fans at a time.

My point is that, regardless of what you brand it or where it falls within the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, does any of it matter if the collateral damage smells of hara-kiri? Alienation may have merit on an artistic level, but it's certainly not a welcome trait for an industry that is banking on the disposable income of the masses.

...

Yes, traffic to the P2P file-trading networks fell over the summer as consumers learned to respect RIAA's long arm of the law. However, the decline in music CD sales actually accelerated during the same period. The industry killed the pirate, but in so doing ripped out the soul of the once-ardent music fan inside. While the notion of 60 million people ripping off the industry was painful, at least they valued music as something worth pilfering.

I'm reading a book right now on distruptive versus sustaining technologies and eventually I'll probably blog something here. mp3s and file sharing are disruptive certainly, and disruptive technologies have killed more than one established company (in fact, that's very often what kills well-run established companies), but it's hard to feel as much sympathy as one might when the record labels are so busy killing themselves off. And it's really hard to have much sympathy when they're mucking with long-running copyright laws and, particularly, with the critical balance between creators and consumers of creative works.

An Interview with the founders of Word Pirates

David Weinberger and Dan Gillmor are interviewed at Connected at Corante on their new Word Pirates site:

Q: What was the impetus behind this site?

DW: Dan Gillmor and I were having dinner (at a blogging conference, of course), griping about how we lost the battle once the phrase "intellectual property" and "piracy" entered the common parlance. Before I knew it, Dan had fashioned a pirate's cap out of a napkin and was brandishing a baguette as a makeshift cutlass. Or something like that.

DG: Actually, I couldn't make a pirate's hat out of a napkin if my career depended on it. I guess it's possible that I waved a baguette, even though I've been on a low-carb diet for a while. But I like the story.

...

Q:Is this meant to be a "People's Version" of William Safire's column "On Language" in The New York Times Magazine? Will William Safire have to hang up his hat?

DW: Safire, when he isn't fulminating rightly, covers a lot more linguistic territory, as does Barbara Wallraff in The Atlantic Monthly. But there's lots of room for this enterprise. At least, that's what we're maintaining until Dan and I take the site through its IPO and we buy Safire and Wallraff's asses.

DG: If you're really nice to us in this article, we'll give you some pre-IPO shares

Word Pirates

David Weinberger and Dan Gillmor have launched Word Pirates, designed to help us take back our language from:

Marketers, politicians and other short-sighted, self-interested, sticky-fingered people have been stealing our words. Not only do they take them for commercial purposes, but they misuse them entirely. They're Word Pirates and we're going to take back what's rightfully ours. For instance...

For instance, the word "pirate" itself has been taken over by the Big Content companies. They mean "anyone who shares files." Real pirates murdered, raped and stole. They didn't share music, rightly or wrongly.

You go!

...via BoingBoing

Nobody Died

Nobody Died When Clinton Lied posts pictures spotted on California highways with such slogans as:

Dulce et decorum est Pro Halliburton mori

or

It is sweet and proper to die for Halliburton

September 14, 2003

Tracking's Progress

I haven't said much about tracking here lately (I haven't said a lot lately, but that's a different story). Charming Billie and I have been tracking all summer and we were making decent progress until about a month or so ago when Billie decided she had forgotten everything she ever learned and--hey! aren't those birds pretty?

This is very much Billie's learning style and it's so frustrating. She doesn't refuse to do something; she doesn't even resist, really, she just looks at me with a round-eyed blank expression as if to say--you have never asked me that before; I have no idea what you're talking about. It's not a training plateau, it's a wall of something that's not exactly resistance masquerading as incomprehension. In other training I've persisted with the training, through several weeks of that 'look.' (I have no idea what you're talking about. If I did know what you were talking about, I'm sure I'd do it, but I don't) and eventually, she doesn't just decide to 'get' it again, she gets it at a far higher level than she did before the training wall, as if she's been looking at me blankly while simultaneously absorbing everything I say.

So that's what I'm doing right now, but it's very tricky in tracking since in tracking even more than other training, you don't really know what they know or what they think you're trying to teach them, you never really know what they understand, you only know what the outcome is.

When Billie looks like she's wandering aimlessly and not paying attention, she might, in fact, be tracking up a storm (the odds are against it, but you never know). Should I be patient, should I be firm, should we lay off for awhile, should we go back to square one--and, hey, look at those birds!

September 05, 2003

Human or...Replicant?

The Wave Magazine administers the Voight-Kampff Test, from Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep and Blade Runner to San Francisco's mayoral candidates:

Matt Gonzalez--

It’s your birthday. Someone gives you a calfskin wallet. How do you react?
Matt Gonzalez: I’m sorry, what kind of wallet?

TW: Calfskin.
MG: Calfskin, I don’t even know what that is.

TW: Do you know what a cow is, Matt?
MG: Yeah.

TW: Baby cow.
MG: Um, I have no idea how I would react.

TW: You’ve got a little boy. He shows you his butterfly collection plus the killing jar. What do you do?
MG: These are great questions. I’m not sure if they’re ideal for 9:00. We were up pretty late at the office. I can only associate to things that I’ve seen or done in my own life….

TW: You’re watching television. Suddenly you realize there’s a wasp crawling on your arm.
MG: I guess I would probably just knock it off.

TW: You’re in a desert walking along in the sand when all of the sudden you look down, and you see a tortoise, Matt, it’s crawling toward you. You reach down, you flip the tortoise over on its back, Matt. The tortoise lays on its back, its belly baking in the hot sun, beating its legs trying to turn itself over, but it can’t, not without your help. But you’re not helping. Why is that, Matt?
MG: Well I don’t think I would have knocked it over in the first place and I don’t get any amusement out of making tortoises suffer, so I don’t think that would be me. You must have confused me for one of my opponents.

TW: Shall we continue? Describe in single words, only the good things that come into your mind. About your mother.
MG: Just a positive person, no negative energy at all. Next time could we do this later in the day?

...via BoingBoing