This Week In Techdirt History: September 13th - 19th

from the long-road dept

Five Years Ago

There was lots of back-and-forth in the copyright debate this week in 2010. Vandals bass player Joe Escalante attacked the public domain as "communism" that will destroy classical music (perhaps he didn't know how many wonderful works the public was missing out on), while John Rzeznik of the Goo Goo Dolls was admitting to using LimeWire and preferring a fan-made music video for one of their songs to the official one. Filmmaker Bevin Carnes went on an anti-free-culture rant and insisted that only creators who rely on copyright are qualified to talk about it, so conveniently the famous director Jean-Luc Godard was at the same time saying he doesn't believe in intellectual property, and donating to an MP3 downloader's defense. A spokesperson for the Canadian music industry was claiming user generated content supports piracy, while Rep. Darrell Issa was worrying that stricter copyright laws are restricting innovation. Amidst all this, we looked at some bigger ideas: why it's so important not to call infringement "theft", and how realizing that copyright restricts free speech opens your eyes to all sorts of problems. One good example happened in Russia, where officials were abusing copyright law to intimidate critics with the help of Microsoft, who rapidly backed down after being called out.

Ten Years Ago

In 2005, Napster was desperately trying to convince people its legal service was awesome (while music-losing iTunes crashes were making users wonder about that service too), the RIAA was over-touting its incomplete victory in the Grokster case, and Taiwan was sending file-sharing execs to jail.

Dell was trying (futilely) to compete with the iPod while ABC was partnering with a VoIP provider to offer an almost comically unappealing newscast service. Mobile content was still a tough game in 2005, with even the content creators doing very little consuming, and most consumers not being sure what things like 3G and VoIP actually are (though we wondered why they really should). The usage data that did exist was teaching us some rather obvious things, like the fact that people prefer breaking news on their phones, rather than old news.

Fifteen Years Ago

This week in 2000, we saw some of the earliest examples of big artists drifting away from their labels and towards the web: the Smashing Pumpkins released their latest album exclusively online as a free MP3 download, and The Offspring was doing the same (minus the exclusive part) while experimenting with reason-to-buy perks for big fans. Meanwhile, Courtney Love was suing Universal for a cut of its award in the MP3.com case, to test the claims that it was all about helping out musicians.

We also saw the first glimmers of lots of new technologies, some of which have become ubiquitous since while others still struggle. Long before Siri, Palm was looking into bringing speech recognition to PDAs — but in the form of remote interaction by phone. The idea of wireless location services was new and exciting, but with a lot of potential for early overhype. Beyond voice, people were also experimenting with gesture recognition and of course direct brain interfaces. Then there were the folks who, way back in 2000, were already trying to let you hail a cab with the press of a button on your phone.

Thirty Years Ago

On September 13th, 1985, before Techdirt began (and just less than a month after I began, incidentally) a legend was born: Nintendo released Super Mario Bros. for the Family Computer/FAMICOM in Japan. Later that year it would come to America, and three decades later the company would finally release a level building tool.

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Filed Under: history, look back


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  • icon
    techflaws (profile), 19 Sep 2015 @ 9:44pm

    Dell was trying (futilely) to compete with the iPod.

    Remember Micros~1 trying that with the Zune? Yeah, that didn't happen either. And of course, all you DRM lovers are now screwed.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Jake, 20 Sep 2015 @ 2:11am

    I didn't even know Dell had a line of MP3 players. They probably had a point with selling the Ditty on the basis of more songs at a lower bitrate; 64kb/s might be pushing it, but how much difference does any extra bitrate over about 96 really make if you're listening with iPod headphones?

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • identicon
      Anonymous Coward, 20 Sep 2015 @ 11:16am

      Re:

      How much difference does bitrate matter after a certain point, if the playback is intended to be heard by the human ear?

      Sony doesn't know, but thinks it's still a good marketing tool for the Walkman. I am, frankly, amazed that the Walkman still exists. I'm also thinking the world is getting way to acclimated to the Apple Economy, given that the nice Walkman (the original 'music everywhere, for everyone' device) sells for $1200. Add a Sony headphone amp & Sony headphones, and a full Walkman setup will run you $2900.

      Dear Sony: You've out-Appled Apple. The iPhone 6s+ is $750, and, uh, you can also make phone calls with it.

      (Yes, this comment is a massive digression, but googling 'Walkman' led to so much weirdness that I felt obligated to rant.)

      (http://www.sony.com/electronics/walkman/nw-zx2)

      link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 21 Sep 2015 @ 1:05pm

    And you're still trying to steal definitions! Yet Another Attempt To Legalize Theft By Re-definition: why it's so important not to call infringement "theft"

    https://www.techdirt.com/articles/20100913/22513210998.shtml

    Didn't work, now did it, kids? Just average_joe actually opposed on the thread, but you don't get to change the whole world's legal definitions to suit your notions.

    Every bit of your writing (including commentors!) then and since trying to support The Pirate Definition was wasted!



    No way in hell does this tiny little site support five re-writers and a Geigner. Most sites barely support one person. Techdirt is Vanity Publishing.

    Techdirt won't give hard numbers, but you see the same couple dozen fanboys at the link above five years ago. Its articles at SuprBay likely give some independent measure: in two months, the latest pieces from Pirate Mike each have nearly 400 views (actually keep rising unlike those further back, rather odd!):
    https://pirates-forum.org/Forum-Economics-Law-Politics

    Now to compare results: all of Techdirt for nearly twenty years hasn't affected the dinosaurs in ANY visible degree, yet just my hooting of Pi rate M ike here on his own site ran him off SuprBay!

    BTW: the minion who tried to downplay that by asserting those are automated postings made me notice it and follow up here! He must explain how my hooting stopped it, and then there's the comments from Pirate Mike (on his own threads, over 40 on one!). It was not automated.


    About 21th try getting past the censorship with TOR! Readers never know about my losses in the sub-rosa battle against censorship unless I tell them. Save your time if disagree with the pirates of Techdirt! It's not an open forum.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 22 Sep 2015 @ 9:39am

    Well, the latest censorship tactic is DELAY. Been trying since Saturday as stated, showed up only on Tuesday when I'm back to do it again.

    When no one likely to read it.

    Does prove that Techdirt censors, and as entirely controls what gets shown, is the publisher of all comments.

    link to this | view in chronology ]


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