From SOPA To Cybersecurity: All About Trying To Control The Internet
from the watch-this dept
Al Jazeera English recently did a very well done episode on its Fault Lines program about attempts by Hollywood and the US government to control the internet. It's about 24 minutes long and includes interviews with a bunch of people who were involved in protecting the internet discussing what happened. The first half is about the SOPA/PIPA fight, and how it was basically about Hollywood trying to hold back the internet:Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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Filed Under: control, cybersecurity, internet, sopa
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Moreover, the Arab world is the area, outside of China, with the most censorship and control of the internet. These are the areas where the most harm has been done to the free internet. Taking a lesson from their media on the issue is laughable at best.
Why do you fall for this shit? Are you that desperate to try to make a point that you are willing to blindly ignore the source's credential in the matter?
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Aw. That's what makes videos on the internet fun!
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Everytime I see a copyright/MAFIAA supporter, I think to myself that same thing.
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His partiality is thick enough to cut with a knife.
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It's the scary part.
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Way to deflect there. Why not address my points rather than giving it an offhanded was an a semi-attack?
Oh wait. You mean I am right and you hate to have to admit it and call Mike out for it. Okay, I understand. Next time try english instead.
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And you're asking others to address your points? You didn't make a single point except the above fallacy. You fail, hard.
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Wow, and you want people to address your obvious point on how the video is slanted against the U.S? Are you an idiot? Of course it's slanted against the U.S. but how does that mean it's the information is incorrect especially when they interview a US congressman.
Also, why did you even bring up the part about the "Arab world"?
Your point, if there is one, is lost in a soup of vague references.
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Iam responding to you because of point 3.
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People will respond to your messages only
1.If you make a point that is at least debatable.
2.If you make your point by respecting other people even though many people might disagree with that point.
3.If you behave like a piece of shit.
Iam responding to you because of point 3.
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What's latin for "stick it"?
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What points?
And yet you did not address a single point presented in the video, merely expressing scorn that it was made by an Arabic news organization.
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Kittens! My god.
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Okay I'll try, where's the point?
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Also Aljazeera has been using some competent journalistic and documentary talent, you should watch their news, it is well edited, well produced, well managed and trying hard to be impartial or at least apparently, different from Fox news or my favorite ones the UK tabloids.
I also watch the French, Latin American news, it is amazing how different things gets reported all over the world and the insights you can gain from it.
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Maybe he gets high getting people's attention by being a troll.
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You need to come up with valid points before judging something.
You don't respect anyone here and yet you are expecting us to respond to you your 'points'?
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been subject to SOPA. The bill targeted foreign sites yet the FUDfest continues.
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Well, fuck. Maybe I'm beginning understand why these people generally don't like Americans. (Hollywood)
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What I was pointing out was that the source is biased, and went looking for the story in the way they wanted to present it. They clearly ignored other points of view, or other people who would have negated their point of view.
Further, they ignored the basic fact that, in their home region, the internet is censored, blocked, controlled, and sometimes even disconnected at the whim of the various governments, dictators, and Royal Families.
So the question remains: Why use an incredibly biased source to support your point of view? Don't you think it makes it clear that Mike's view on this is just as biased as a result?
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Second, if there are counterpoints that you think can negate their points then by all means elaborate. You must know what those counterpoints are or you would not bring it up.
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Clearly I am a master of engrish.
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*ahem*
Fox News anyone?
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The irony is strong in this one.
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Aljazeera
If you follow aljazeera which i did for a short while you start feeling really uncomfortable as the truth when it comes out can be hard to swallow at times.
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Funny that you were completely incapable of refuting or even discussing any points made in the video. Just a lame attack on Mike because based on your ignorant opinion of a non-US news source.
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As for bias: As far as I know Al Jazeera (former BBC middle east) has british ideals for how news should be presented. In 2010? some group of scientists made a study of bias in media and surprisingly Al Jazeera was the least biased. It lends credibility to the study that FOX News was the worst by a margin in the study. Of US sources CNN did the best. BBC did better than CNN, but worse than Al Jazeera...
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And that's the most ridiculous and depressing thing I've heard all week.
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Never use the actions of a government to judge it's citizens. Citizens fault the government doing whatever it's doing, in fact the their the victims.
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And that is a pretty assinine thing to say.
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Because all you are is an Industry Tool or a Government fool or probably both.
We are not all SHEEPLE !
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what's that fallacy called again ...
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then I will never buy anything from them...
I'll just download whatever I can to watch or play.
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Re: Regulating Musical Tastes
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John Stewart and Stephen Colbert
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Dear Troll
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You're giving the troll too much credit. As a no wit he aspires to be dim witted.
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If you protect yesteryears financial models, you are hurting the possibilities for the new models and if you do not, you are hurting the new models.
That is the choise and SOPA is infinitely biased towards yesteryears models and there were severe concerns from professors about the human right implications. Human rights? Aren't they for all of us?
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Youtube commenter "techcafe" says it well.
"It sucks being a candlestick maker in a electric light world... unless you can get control of the government to pass laws to protect candle sticks - and attack electric lights. THAT is what the recording & copyright industry is doing; paying congress to protect their candle-making, while attacking the electric light makers (internet users) of the world."
[username:]techcafe
The quoted comment encapsulates how things currently stand quite nicely, IMO.
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That's one of those wonderful ideas that sounds great on paper, but is unworkable for the most part in reality.
Micropayments systems generally fail because the costs per transaction online are just too high. It's one of those "been there, done that, watched it crash and burn" things. Most systems that allow you to pre-load for micro payments tend to end up either failing financially, or fail to offer enough products for you to want to load them up for payments. In order to make it work out for them they have to ask you to load your virtual card with many times more than the micro payment you want to make today, making it a hard sale for most consumers.
Credit card fees and such make it pretty hard to selling things for pennies. Many merchants face a "cost per transaction plus percentage" situation, either because of their card agreements, or the need for a processing gateway to handle their business. It's hard to sell something for 25 cents, when your gateway fees are 50 cents per transaction!
The only real bias in these laws was to protect and maintain a business that generates billions of sales every year, employs tens of thousands, and generates millions of direct tax dollars - and trickles down much more in each of these areas. The alternatives offered up are, well, anarchy. We don't have any functional system to replace what is there, just a whole bunch of wishful thinking and sort of a hippie commune business concept. It's nice, we can all move up to Big Sur and grow virtual veggies and weed for each other, but the economic model is a little lacking in roundness, if you know what I mean.
The real bias at play here is keeping people in jobs and keeping the economy rolling with actual sales and taxable revenue, not with "platform building" or "social interactions". Facebook continues it's faceplant on the stock market as people are coming to realize there isn't all that much there.
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And, yes, I am against MAFIAA and United Fascists of America.
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Finding new ways to compensate the creative among us
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You pay for propaganda? That's just silly.
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TAKING AWAY THE PRESIDENT'S FREE SPEECH RIGHTS!
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Shameless Terrorist Propaganda
Well, they can run, but they can't hide. We can still trace their tubes and bomb them. The Internet is a pretty big place, but so is Texas.
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Spotify, Netflix, Apple, etc. Not much anarchy there.
The real issue is that the internet is a disruptive change to the content industries. If we held back innovation for the sake of saving some peoples jobs, we would all be ridding horses and buggies right now.
"We don't have any functional system to replace what is there"
That's the point with disruptive change, the current content industries were at one point just small companies trying to make a buck. Now they are no longer needed as Gateway's to culture, the internet, and new companies do a better job.
Letting the current players adapt or die is better overall for the economy because it frees it from inefficiency. Just like automobiles made transportation more efficient, the internet makes distribution of content much less costly. There are some who find ways to make money from that and some who don't.
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Well, actually, Netflix and Apple run on the old system, so they aren't alternatives, they are just digital extensions of what was already there.
"The real issue is that the internet is a disruptive change to the content industries."
Nope. Piracy is a disruptive force, but not a change. Normal disruptive changes in business are a move from one reasonable successful model to an even more successful one. This is a move from a functional and successful model to no model at all, just give it all away.
"Now they are no longer needed as Gateway's to culture, the internet, and new companies do a better job."
Not true at all. What is getting pirated (and purchased) out there? The vast majority (nearly all of it) still comes from the label and studio side, and very little comes from the new companies. The consumption is still the "legacy" product base.
"Letting the current players adapt or die is better overall for the economy because it frees it from inefficiency. "
What you don't seem to get is that copyright doesn't stop anyone with a better idea, a better system, and better product to operate in their own ways. If there is a better way that makes so much more money, the labels will climb over broken glass to get to it. What's lacking here is a concrete base, a solid foundation, an actual functional business model to replace the current actual functional business model.
". Just like automobiles made transportation more efficient, the internet makes distribution of content much less costly. "
Yes, but it doesn't change the cost to make what is being transported, and that is still the big end of the deal. Don't get trapped into thinking that marginal distribution costs are the start and the end of it. Even economics professors and theorists agree that the supply demand curve calculations fail when your product is almost entirely an up front cost, not a marginal cost.
In simple terms, don't believe the hype. Please point to the part of the "new company" music industry that has made even 20% of the sales in the last year (so about 1 billion).
*crickets*.
Nothing there.
So you want the music industry to give up 5 billion (was 10 billion) of business for, what, air?
Fail whale.
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Since we aren't talking murder here, I will guess you were waving your arms and jumping up and down as you tried to write this, ranting and raving.
Let's be fair here. The Arab states almost without exception have some form of internet censorship or restriction in place. For them, it is normal to censor things, it's the way their societies have worked for generations.
So getting lessons about freedom from a group of people who don't know about freedom, well...
Only Mike (and his choir) could not see the bias in all of this, and the direction that the story took, seemingly with the conclusion written before the "facts" were even collected.
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Re: Youtube commenter "techcafe" says it well.
yeah, especially when nobody has electricity, it's just a rumor, and nobody has a plan to put electricity in place, there is no business model to support it, nobody wants it, and there is no generating plants.
Yup, it's good to be a candlestick maker.
My suggesting to Mike Masnick and the Techdirt crew: Stop worrying about what the music and movie industries are doing. If they are useless, if they are "legacy players", and if they are on their last legs, what they do won't matter. You need to look at your own issues.
If you really want to disrupt the music industry, try actually doing it with product, with business, and with some common sense. Don't just support piracy to cripple the existing industry - it doesn't make the feeble attempts to take over the music world look any better.
Don't worry about tearing down what is already there. If you don't like the old neighborhood, go somewhere and build your own. Make it so good that everyone moves there, and you win the point.
Until then, you are just crapping on something - but you cannot do better yourself.
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Re: Shameless Terrorist Propaganda
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Re: Re: Youtube commenter "techcafe" says it well.
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Re: Re: Youtube commenter "techcafe" says it well.
With more music and movies being made than ever before, most of us aren't terribly concerned about the state of "the industry". The fact that you think they're being "crippled" despite the evidence of healthy output means either you're completely wrong about the state of the industry or you're completely wrong about the effect of piracy.
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Re: Re: Re: Youtube commenter "techcafe" says it well.
They just go to their strange notion that someone enjoying a copyrighted work without paying is somehow screwing them even if they could not or would not have bought the product anyway.
Nor do they consider that piracy rates might be the RESULT of sales they DID get and the "pirates" are only downloading the pirated version out of fustration that their legally purchased copy doesn't work because of DRM.
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Re: Re: Youtube commenter "techcafe" says it well.
I can't build a new neighborhood when everything I try to do is "owned" by someone that keeps complaining I must pay him for anything I do even if it is in my own property.
And yes I could do better I just need to get rid of the monopoly guys first.
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Computers do that, we reached the point where you can carry all the studio equipment in your pocket.
The cost of producing that crap is minimal.
Now lets see how many musicians were making a living before and after the tech came along.
I want the music industry to die already.
I don't care if there are 5, 10 or 20 billion in it, it is not worth it if it comes at the expense of civil liberties and individual rights.
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Really? where have you been last few years? Green revolution? I feel sorry for you if you'd rather have "balanced" "news" like FOX.
"Since we aren't talking murder here, I will guess you were waving your arms and jumping up and down as you tried to write this, ranting and raving."
Now this is some deflecting here - have you addressed any points here? Let me check:
- you rant about him ranting and raving
- because they have censorship, they can't know freedom? Wow, talk about being condescending.
- bias, Mike (patronizing?), choir, bias, quotation marks around the word facts
Hmmm... I see no points from video addressed here. Strange.
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Not exactly. They do run on the "system" of selling access to media, so in that way they are similar. But they have significant differences that make them closer to a "new" business model. iTunes Match is a good example.
Normal disruptive changes in business are a move from one reasonable successful model to an even more successful one.
That is not even remotely what "disruptive change" means. A disruptive change is a change in market conditions, not business models, usually brought about via technology. The "even more successful" models don't exist until upstart industries find ways of capitalizing on disruptive changes. But the disruptive changes come about whether "even more successful" models exist or not.
This is a move from a functional and successful model to no model at all, just give it all away.
The only person who thinks anyone is saying "just give it all away" is you.
What you don't seem to get is that copyright doesn't stop anyone with a better idea, a better system, and better product to operate in their own ways.
That's exactly what it does. If that were true, Megaupload or The Pirate Bay would be perfectly legal, since that's exactly what they were doing.
If there is a better way that makes so much more money, the labels will climb over broken glass to get to it.
That's not what "efficiency" means. In fact, the more efficient an economic system is, the less money labels will make. Their profit arises entirely from economic inefficiency.
Taking a dozen songs, packaging them together in $1.50 worth of plastic and paper, and selling them for $15, is not economic efficiency. Yet that's the only reason record labels were able to achieve their profits in the 90's. On the other hand, taking those songs, packaging them as digital files, and distributing them for $1 each is much more efficient. And it's the main reason labels aren't making as much money nowadays.
Yes, but it doesn't change the cost to make what is being transported, and that is still the big end of the deal.
Then, the sunk cost will shift from those who make money under the old, inefficient system - manufacturers and wholesalers (which is what record labels really are) - to those who make money under new, efficient systems.
That may not happen soon (copyright ownership has delayed this process considerably). And the "new" moneymakers may be the same companies as the "old" moneymakers (if they embrace change and adapt). But it will happen.
Please point to the part of the "new company" music industry that has made even 20% of the sales in the last year (so about 1 billion).
Digital sales are certainly part of the "new company" music industry. I'm pretty sure iTune, Amazon MP3, Spotify, Rhapsody, and eMusic made a hell of a lot more than 20% of sales. Not to mention services like Pandora, Tunecore, CD Baby, RouteNote, Soundcloud, Kickstarter, etc - the impact of which is hard to quantify, as most don't report to Soundscan.
The real question is how much the "old company" music model made - that is, sales of physical CD's. They still sell plenty; but as of 2011, they make up less than half of total sales for recorded music. (That's in dollars; in purchases, digital overtook physical way back in 2007.)
Since the "new company" music models pay artists a much higher percentage of income than the "old company" music models, I'll bet that they all account for a lot more than 20% of the money that actually goes to musicians.
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Re: Finding new ways to compensate the creative among us
Two things are consistent in their experiences:
1) there is no single new way of working, you have to tailor any approach to the artist and the fans in question.
2) there is no short cut, each and every way involves hard work and dedication - as you'd expect in any other walk of life.
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Music imprints feelings upon us. Try to watch Lord of the Rings without the soundtrack for instance. It loses its soul.
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Just like every other news outlet regardless of nationality. There is no indication that Al-Jazeera is any less reliable than mainstream western news organizations. I do find it interesting, though, that Al-Jazeera frequently pisses off middle-eastern governments.
The proper way to use news outlets, from any source, is to get your news from multiple sources, use critical thinking skills, and take no source as gospel.
It's OK to write off particular outlets when they have shown by their history that they are particularly unreliable (Fox comes to mind), but even they are not completely without value. Al-Jazeera, however, has a pretty decent track record of accuracy when you look back at their reporting vs what has turned out to be factual in the long run.
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Re: Re: Youtube commenter "techcafe" says it well.
I'll stop worrying about them when they stop attacking me and the freedoms I hold dear.
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comment
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news reliability
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Re: Re: Re: Finding new ways to compensate the creative among us
* and those are just the ones I've heard of
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Re: Re: Youtube commenter "techcafe" says it well.
No dice. If they're going down we're going to make sure they don't take the whole planet with them, which they seem intent on doing.
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