nospacesorspecialcharacters (profile), 13 Mar 2013 @ 9:57am
Can we just lower our pitchforks for a second...?
Is it just me that feels we're sometimes losing perspective and nuance here at TechDirt?
Moss even comes to the right conclusion himself at the end of the blog post, which is kind of disingenuous leave out don't you think?!
While we can’t always choose where we live, we can determine what we look at, and how we see it. Otherwise, we’re just walking around like zombies.
I don't see a call to censor anything or ban TWD, the guy is just airing his thoughts about how an obsession has affected him (and I consider myself borderline obsessed with TWD) and how that has caused him to reconsider his views on an issue.
Guys, reconsidering your views is not a change in stance, or politics, or a signal to start a revolution - it's merely a signal that you're giving more thought to an issue and checking our own bias.
nospacesorspecialcharacters (profile), 8 Mar 2013 @ 7:04am
Free Speech is just not very British
Changing libel law in the UK is going be as difficult as repealing the 2nd amendment in the US.
Much like the US constitution is built upon a culture of personal freedoms, UK libel law has grown out of a culture based upon status and pomp.
It is vastly more important in the average English mindset to be seen to right/upstanding/moral, than to be right/upstanding/moral. That goes for middle-class housewives all the way up to the Royal Family (although some would argue Prince Harry is doing his best to countermine that).
English people are worshipful - they love to worship. Where this used to be concentrated on religion, since the enlightenment this has gradually shifted towards worship of D-list celebrities, footballers and the like - who've basically become modern day royalty. Whereas the modern day royalty are treated more and more like their celebrity counterparts.
This causes an odd sort of backlash if you dare to criticize a celebrity for wanting to be like a "normal" person despite their whole status built upon standing out and being different. There are people who will defend the Queen and royal family as hard-working and deserving of having normal lives and privacy - despite their very special status.
Ask a typical English man on the street if people should be allowed to say something critical about the UK and be allowed to live in the UK and still claim benefits and the answer will be a flat out "No". The free-speech stuff doesn't even come up.
British newspapers - particularly The Sun and The Daily Mail - have actually brought this on themselves as they will usually be the first to decry the "free speech" of undesirable people like Abu Hamza.
Few in the UK will be outraged at someone being extradited for preaching hate. They will applaud it and ask why it took so long. No one considers this is a free-speech issue.
It's the same reason football fans attacked Imogen Thomas for her part in an affair with a famous married footballer - who used a super-injunction to silence her. No outrage over the super-injunction - instead outrage over the fact she might damage his career.
Most English people don't care about free speech. They see it as a novel American concept. They care more about not hurting peoples feelings, and if people have to be silenced in order not to hurt peoples feelings then by golly we should silence them.
nospacesorspecialcharacters (profile), 7 Mar 2013 @ 5:51am
We cannae do it captian!
"According to Jeff Cusson, HBO’s senior vice president of corporate affairs, “We think the key to combating piracy is to make content like Game of Thrones available worldwide within the smallest window possible…to 176 territories within the week of the U.S. premiere."
If only there was some kind of technology that could do that today, one that was fast, efficient and possibly peer-to-peer so it didn't tax the bandwidth on their own servers.
Imagine the possibilities if that kind of technology existed?
nospacesorspecialcharacters (profile), 28 Feb 2013 @ 7:25am
That said, the whole situation highlights (yet again) the nuttiness that is the end result of an "ownership society." Evil empire is a simple phrase that references Star Wars. The idea that it alone should be controlled by the New York Yankees seems preposterous.
nospacesorspecialcharacters (profile), 28 Feb 2013 @ 7:16am
Re: No right to be forgotten
You have no right of privacy to force others to forget facts already publicly known.
Says the anonymous coward; who may or may not be a convicted criminal or as yet undetected lawbreaker - we just don't know, and therefore we cannot protect ourselves!
Mike, please can you reveal who this anonymous commenter is?
nospacesorspecialcharacters (profile), 26 Feb 2013 @ 7:19am
Re: Re:
He attends a public meeting and thinks he's "being ambushed"...
No, I used that term, based on my own speculation.
All we know for sure is that this reporter consistently asks for quotes and he has emailed the reporter in question and stated that he dislikes the reporter from asking for quotes after meetings.
Seems reasonable to me. I don't think it helps genuine free speech causes and issues to be conflating them with this kind of incident which is more a case of a politician not wanting to talk to a publication.
It's not even a freedom of information issue. The reporters just trying to get a quick and easy "quote" he can use rather than to figure out a way of summarizing the meeting himself. There's nothing being hidden or repressed here.
What if this was David Cameron and Rupert Murdoch? Would you be backing Murdoch and calling it a free-speech issue then?
nospacesorspecialcharacters (profile), 26 Feb 2013 @ 1:27am
The source article doesn't state he dislikes being quoted, the journalist's tweet actually states,
"Amused after @chrishawtree sends me email saying he dislikes he asking him for quotes after meetings. Is that not a job of a local cllr?"
So it seems Tim has followed the Grauniad into the trap of Tabloid truth twisting. He's not asking not to be quoted, he just doesn't want to provide quotes to the Argus and wants the reporter to stop ambushing him after meetings.
Now as to his public record I have no idea if he is a good councillor or not, but one thing I can say is a councillors job is NOT feeding quotes to newspapers in order to increase/maintain their PR - it's to represent his community to the council and government.
I'm sure the Argus are free to quote-mine him from other public speeches, including his Twitter feed, which it seems they do.
Is it a smart move to engage a newspaper this way? Probably not, but I don't see this as a freedom of speech issue - more of a freedom not to speak issue.
nospacesorspecialcharacters (profile), 15 Feb 2013 @ 8:38am
Split it the other way...
Some days, I just really wish we could split the internet up.
One internet for all the politicians, rights-holders and other sinkholes of humanity to argue over...
...and the other internet for the rest of us, ordinary folk who don't want to sue/monitise/censor/destroy each other, who just want to get on with the common-wealth sharing of information and pictures of cats.
nospacesorspecialcharacters (profile), 6 Feb 2013 @ 10:52am
I lol'd
Seriously, why do these women wear such provocative, sexy outfits if they then don't want to have shots like this circulating.
And is it just me or does anyone else think of poor Madonna's publicist having exactly the opposite problem? You get to a certain age and no-one wants to see that anymore...
nospacesorspecialcharacters (profile), 1 Feb 2013 @ 3:01pm
All Americans should be proud of their Pooper Hole.
It's such a shame I am not in the US even though I was aiming for it, I'm going to miss the Pooper Hole.
I gather there is nothing quite like getting together with several burly men, to celebrate and watch a Pooper Hole.
I know Americans get very excited about their Pooper Hole, is very important to them and they like the idea of sharing their Pooper Hole with all their friends and family.
I understand that a lot of people put a lot of things into the Pooper Hole in order to make it wide and accessible to a large audience. A lot of money is also put in the Pooper Hole. Let's hope all that cash doesn't make it a dirty Pooper Hole game.
nospacesorspecialcharacters (profile), 1 Feb 2013 @ 1:49am
Re:
This seems to confirm my own suspicions that Dotcom wants to make it extremely difficult for clueless MAFIAA execs to simply 'google' content stored on Mega's servers.
I wouldn't discount it just yet - it's a play to remove the benefit of Google to Hollywood. They can't issue DMCA's or sue if their bots can't simply search for links.
I also suspect Dotcom has configured his website to automatically blame a DMCA request - probably an underhand attempt to smear the DMCA process.
It's quite interesting to watch these developments. What happens if the MAFIAA can no longer use Google to find infringing content?
nospacesorspecialcharacters (profile), 30 Jan 2013 @ 1:22am
Re:
You've just given me an idea.
Since the DMCA process itself is usually pretty automated, what's to stop an ISP or video hosting service automating an opt-in DMCA counter-claim for their users?
It would have to be opt-in, because otherwise it would expose every user to a lawsuit automatically. But if you're a creator and are confident that every video you post will be fair use, or your own work - you should be able to automatically set up a DMCA counter notice that your service provider can automatically respond with and keep your content up.
nospacesorspecialcharacters (profile), 29 Jan 2013 @ 10:30am
Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re:
When it comes to unfair contract terms... I've had plenty of success by writing a formal letter to a company trying to make a financial claim on a contract I have signed, stating exactly that their contact terms are unfair and therefore unlawful and I do not intend to continue.
I've also backed it up with examples and willingness to test my assertion by stating they should cease and desist from contracting me unless it is via a court summons. I have not yet been taken to court, my guess is the other parties in each case were unwilling to see their claims of a fair contract tested.
I get the feeling that people telling me this is not possible don't have much experience in business or in negotiation. It's always a 2 sided affair and usually the big mean company will have something to lose. It just takes a while for someone with a big picture mentality inside the company to work out what's about to happen.
nospacesorspecialcharacters (profile), 29 Jan 2013 @ 7:42am
Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re:
Nice try Kryton... but it's cynicism like that which stops people from appealing to the courts as their last line of defense in a democracy.
My experience with magistrates in general is they tend to be pragmatic and fair. Even with a corrupt magistrate, you have the chance of appeal - or you break the law and become a prisoner of conscience.
If the law is wrong, it's the duty of every citizen to disobey that law.
In this case though the worst you're looking at is bankruptcy if the legal costs are high - and either way, a company like Machinima would face a PR nightmare - I would argue they have more to lose as you would be endangering their future existence.
And what magistrate is going to make a rule that "Yes, Machinima owns everything you do in future", making you pay their legal costs to the point of bankruptcy and then ruling that even after bankruptcy you are still owned by them - there's just zero chance of this happening.
Based on my reasoning above, I think those who are saying that it's not worth the trouble fighting something like this are contributing in spreading the FUD that these companies are all-powerful and cannot be stopped. It's just bullshit and people need to take a stand.
On the post: Newspaper Publisher Disturbed By His Own Reaction To Walking Dead; Thinks Censorship Might Be The Answer
Can we just lower our pitchforks for a second...?
Moss even comes to the right conclusion himself at the end of the blog post, which is kind of disingenuous leave out don't you think?!
I don't see a call to censor anything or ban TWD, the guy is just airing his thoughts about how an obsession has affected him (and I consider myself borderline obsessed with TWD) and how that has caused him to reconsider his views on an issue.
Guys, reconsidering your views is not a change in stance, or politics, or a signal to start a revolution - it's merely a signal that you're giving more thought to an issue and checking our own bias.
On the post: UK Politicians Offer An Awful Bargain: Give Up Free Press If You Want Defamation Reform
Free Speech is just not very British
Much like the US constitution is built upon a culture of personal freedoms, UK libel law has grown out of a culture based upon status and pomp.
It is vastly more important in the average English mindset to be seen to right/upstanding/moral, than to be right/upstanding/moral. That goes for middle-class housewives all the way up to the Royal Family (although some would argue Prince Harry is doing his best to countermine that).
English people are worshipful - they love to worship. Where this used to be concentrated on religion, since the enlightenment this has gradually shifted towards worship of D-list celebrities, footballers and the like - who've basically become modern day royalty. Whereas the modern day royalty are treated more and more like their celebrity counterparts.
This causes an odd sort of backlash if you dare to criticize a celebrity for wanting to be like a "normal" person despite their whole status built upon standing out and being different. There are people who will defend the Queen and royal family as hard-working and deserving of having normal lives and privacy - despite their very special status.
Ask a typical English man on the street if people should be allowed to say something critical about the UK and be allowed to live in the UK and still claim benefits and the answer will be a flat out "No". The free-speech stuff doesn't even come up.
British newspapers - particularly The Sun and The Daily Mail - have actually brought this on themselves as they will usually be the first to decry the "free speech" of undesirable people like Abu Hamza.
Justice at last! Hate preacher Abu Hamza facing life in a U.S. prison on terrorism charges after final extradition appeal fails
See you later, Britain hater
Few in the UK will be outraged at someone being extradited for preaching hate. They will applaud it and ask why it took so long. No one considers this is a free-speech issue.
It's the same reason football fans attacked Imogen Thomas for her part in an affair with a famous married footballer - who used a super-injunction to silence her. No outrage over the super-injunction - instead outrage over the fact she might damage his career.
Most English people don't care about free speech. They see it as a novel American concept. They care more about not hurting peoples feelings, and if people have to be silenced in order not to hurt peoples feelings then by golly we should silence them.
On the post: HBO: The Key To Combating Piracy Is To Make Game Of Thrones More Available... Except Here
We cannae do it captian!
If only there was some kind of technology that could do that today, one that was fast, efficient and possibly peer-to-peer so it didn't tax the bandwidth on their own servers.
Imagine the possibilities if that kind of technology existed?
On the post: Ridiculous: Trademark Board Lets Yankees Control 'Evil Empire' Despite It Being An Insult Used By Another Team
Do not underestimate the dark side of the USPTO.
On the post: Google, Facebook And Twitter Ordered To Delete Photos By UK Law Enforcement
Re: No right to be forgotten
Says the anonymous coward; who may or may not be a convicted criminal or as yet undetected lawbreaker - we just don't know, and therefore we cannot protect ourselves!
Mike, please can you reveal who this anonymous commenter is?
On the post: French Politicians Worry That Free Creative Commons Works Devalue 'Legal' Offers
Another luddite...
Presumably he took out a license to use MySQL, Ruby programming language and paid Twitter for the Twitter account?
No, you say? All free, you say?
On the post: British Politician Tells Local Paper It Can't Quote Him Because He Dislikes Its Readers' Comments
Re: Re:
No, I used that term, based on my own speculation.
All we know for sure is that this reporter consistently asks for quotes and he has emailed the reporter in question and stated that he dislikes the reporter from asking for quotes after meetings.
Seems reasonable to me. I don't think it helps genuine free speech causes and issues to be conflating them with this kind of incident which is more a case of a politician not wanting to talk to a publication.
It's not even a freedom of information issue. The reporters just trying to get a quick and easy "quote" he can use rather than to figure out a way of summarizing the meeting himself. There's nothing being hidden or repressed here.
What if this was David Cameron and Rupert Murdoch? Would you be backing Murdoch and calling it a free-speech issue then?
On the post: Copyright Strikes Again: 'Real Calvin And Hobbes' Shut Down By Copyright Claim
On the plus side...
Just not him, his children, or his children's children.
On the post: British Politician Tells Local Paper It Can't Quote Him Because He Dislikes Its Readers' Comments
So it seems Tim has followed the Grauniad into the trap of Tabloid truth twisting. He's not asking not to be quoted, he just doesn't want to provide quotes to the Argus and wants the reporter to stop ambushing him after meetings.
Now as to his public record I have no idea if he is a good councillor or not, but one thing I can say is a councillors job is NOT feeding quotes to newspapers in order to increase/maintain their PR - it's to represent his community to the council and government.
I'm sure the Argus are free to quote-mine him from other public speeches, including his Twitter feed, which it seems they do.
Is it a smart move to engage a newspaper this way? Probably not, but I don't see this as a freedom of speech issue - more of a freedom not to speak issue.
On the post: Will The ITU's Increasing Focus On Control And Surveillance Split The Internet?
Split it the other way...
One internet for all the politicians, rights-holders and other sinkholes of humanity to argue over...
...and the other internet for the rest of us, ordinary folk who don't want to sue/monitise/censor/destroy each other, who just want to get on with the common-wealth sharing of information and pictures of cats.
On the post: Would President Obama Answer A Question About The DMCA During His Google Hangout?
His answer will be something along the lines of...
Has there ever been a point in history where a politician has been challenged on something and they've answered something to the effect of:
Nope, I don't recall either.
On the post: Teri Buhl Threatens To Sue Us And Others; Still Seems Confused About The Law
Re: Re: again...
On the post: Beyonce Meet Streisand: Publicist Tries To Remove 'Unflattering' Beyonce Photos From The Internet
I lol'd
And is it just me or does anyone else think of poor Madonna's publicist having exactly the opposite problem? You get to a certain age and no-one wants to see that anymore...
On the post: Investigative Journalist Claims Her Public Tweets Aren't 'Publishable;' Threatens To Sue Blogger Who Does Exactly That
Re:
On the post: Oreo Wins The Superbowl Ad Wars With A Timely Tweet
Re:
.
.
.
Come on guys, let's get this one rolling...
On the post: One Of The Funniest S#*$r B$@l Ads You'll See This Year Makes Fun Of NFL Trademarks
All Americans should be proud of their Pooper Hole.
I gather there is nothing quite like getting together with several burly men, to celebrate and watch a Pooper Hole.
I know Americans get very excited about their Pooper Hole, is very important to them and they like the idea of sharing their Pooper Hole with all their friends and family.
I understand that a lot of people put a lot of things into the Pooper Hole in order to make it wide and accessible to a large audience. A lot of money is also put in the Pooper Hole. Let's hope all that cash doesn't make it a dirty Pooper Hole game.
On the post: Odd: Mega Removing Any File It Can Find That Is Publicly Indexed -- Even Completely Legitimate Uploads
Re:
I wouldn't discount it just yet - it's a play to remove the benefit of Google to Hollywood. They can't issue DMCA's or sue if their bots can't simply search for links.
I also suspect Dotcom has configured his website to automatically blame a DMCA request - probably an underhand attempt to smear the DMCA process.
It's quite interesting to watch these developments. What happens if the MAFIAA can no longer use Google to find infringing content?
On the post: Copyright As Censorship: Birth Blogger Fight Goes Legal Over DMCA Abuse
Re:
Since the DMCA process itself is usually pretty automated, what's to stop an ISP or video hosting service automating an opt-in DMCA counter-claim for their users?
It would have to be opt-in, because otherwise it would expose every user to a lawsuit automatically. But if you're a creator and are confident that every video you post will be fair use, or your own work - you should be able to automatically set up a DMCA counter notice that your service provider can automatically respond with and keep your content up.
On the post: YouTube Stars Fighting YouTube Networks Over Their Contracts
Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re:
I've also backed it up with examples and willingness to test my assertion by stating they should cease and desist from contracting me unless it is via a court summons. I have not yet been taken to court, my guess is the other parties in each case were unwilling to see their claims of a fair contract tested.
I get the feeling that people telling me this is not possible don't have much experience in business or in negotiation. It's always a 2 sided affair and usually the big mean company will have something to lose. It just takes a while for someone with a big picture mentality inside the company to work out what's about to happen.
On the post: YouTube Stars Fighting YouTube Networks Over Their Contracts
Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re:
My experience with magistrates in general is they tend to be pragmatic and fair. Even with a corrupt magistrate, you have the chance of appeal - or you break the law and become a prisoner of conscience.
If the law is wrong, it's the duty of every citizen to disobey that law.
In this case though the worst you're looking at is bankruptcy if the legal costs are high - and either way, a company like Machinima would face a PR nightmare - I would argue they have more to lose as you would be endangering their future existence.
And what magistrate is going to make a rule that "Yes, Machinima owns everything you do in future", making you pay their legal costs to the point of bankruptcy and then ruling that even after bankruptcy you are still owned by them - there's just zero chance of this happening.
Based on my reasoning above, I think those who are saying that it's not worth the trouble fighting something like this are contributing in spreading the FUD that these companies are all-powerful and cannot be stopped. It's just bullshit and people need to take a stand.
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