Chris O'Donnell's Favorite Techdirt Posts Of The Week
from the people-being-dumb,-thinking-we-are-dumb,-making-dumb-decisions dept
Hi there. I'm Chris
O'Donnell and I've been reading Techdirt since the very early days,
maybe even as far back as the last millennium. My favorite posts this
week all share a theme, they are examples of people being dumb, people
thinking we are dumb, and companies making dumb decisions that are
counter to their financial interests.
Since companies are now people, we can start with this example of Swedish
rights holders shutting down a fan run translation site. Instead of
recognizing that fans are adding value to their products, for free, the
rights holders made their work less accessible to non-native speakers
by shutting down the fan site. Then they doubled down on the bad will
by getting the police to react with necessary force.
No post about dumb would be complete without the RIAA. However, in
this case the dumb actually falls more on Pandora, who are still
struggling to get out from under their dumb decision in 2009 to accept
ridiculously high royalty rates that only applied to them. The post
also features a conservative think tank and an analyst claiming that a
market where prices are set by a 3 judge panel is a free market.
Combine all that with the the RIAA being involved and its almost too
much dumb in one place.
How could a copyright
claim involving a large gorilla statue that sort of looks like
Freddie Mercury (deceased lead singer of Queen) be anything but dumb?
Another guaranteed entrant into any post rounding up examples of dumb
behavior is the state government of Florida. They
accidentally banned all computers and smart phones in the state with a
piece of sloppily written legislation.
Dumb criminals are a common subject on Techdirt, and this week's
example may be one of the dumbest.
Fugitive Wanda Podgurski tweeted "Catch me if you can," while on the run.
Since you are reading this here, you probably don't even have to click
through to know how this story ends.
Congress
is another guaranteed entrant into any carnival of dumb. This
week's poster child for idiocy is RIAA lapdog Marsha Blackburn. She is
dumb enough to believe the propaganda fed to her by the RIAA and
others, dumb enough to publish an op-ed repeating the propaganda, and
apparently dumb enough to think it will convince anybody to side with
the RIAA.
In another example of a company acting dumb, Putt-Putt decided to
remind us all that they are still in business (who knew?) by suing
Mojang over user generated content in Minecraft.
Game developer Eidos doubled down on dumb by using DRM to lock out paying users
of the newest version of Deus Ex if they download the game to a
jailbroken iOS device. Of course, there is no warning before purchase
that the $6.99 you are spending will be wasted if your device is
jailbroken.
Finally, we have the not surprising news that Microsoft
was a willing participant in helping the NSA spy on Hotmail,
Skydrive, and Skype users. The dumb here is anybody that believed
Microsoft's ridiculous commercials claiming they were more trustworthy
than Google.
(untitled comment)
Hell, even Ryan Reynolds was quick to jump on the newly public domain to help promote the MVNO Mint Mobile, in which he owns the largest stake.
What? Ryan Reynolds owns my mobile provider?
/div>(untitled comment)
I live this bullshit daily. Insulin costs about $1 per vial to produce. Retail cost for my wife would be $400 a vial if Virginia law didn't limit it to $50 a month for insulin. That law just went into effect last year. The preceding two or three years, we hit her out-of-pocket maximum on a high deductible health plan in February each year, just from insulin and insulin pump supplies at retail.
/div>(untitled comment)
The post says it will offer a stripped down version called "InJobs," which will only contain users' contact information and job histories. It's just LinkedIn with all the "social" stuff removed, like the ability to share posts or articles.
How do we get this verion of LI in the US?
/div>(untitled comment)
I unfollowed everybody except my wife and kids on FB several years ago. The improvement in my FB experience was magical and instantaneous. I started following people again during the COVID lockdown, but I doubt I follow 50 of my 225 FB friends.
/div>Re: Re:
I have Peacock premium - still need an actual cable package to watch anything live. Peacock is showing summaries and highlights. I live 12 miles from the broadcast towers but can't get NBC to come in OTR.
/div>Re:
When I see somebody "defending the Constitution" my default assumption is that they have no idea what it says.
/div>Needs to include email
It costs me $1.00 to email a family member in jail. 50 cents for the email and 50 cents to prepay for the reply. Attachments are a quarter each.
/div>(untitled comment)
NBC killed the NBC Gold streaming app and moved Premier League matches to Peacock. So I'm one of those paying customers.
/div>That sounds like work
If total traffic is down then those news sites are going have to figure out a way to replace the Facebook traffic.
That sounds like work, and avoiding work seemed to be the point of the law in the first place.
/div>Honeymoon period
I was wondering how long my good feelings about the Democrats being in charge would last. We have an answer. 16 days.
/div>Cut Hulu Live two weeks ago
I cut the coax cable cord 3 years ago, but I've had Hulu Live which is just like cable...until two weeks ago. Haven't missed it all. I've got Peacock for EPL, MLB TV free via Tmobile for baseball come April, the Hulu/Disnry+/Espn+ bundle, Netflix. Roku, and a Plex server. We are not hurting for flat screen based entertainment.
/div>Hulu Too
Hulu Live is going up another $5 to $65/month. It was $30 a month when I cut the cord 3 years ago. I'm trying to talk my wife into dropping back to basic Hulu for $12/month.
/div>(untitled comment)
This story alone justifies my monthly contribution.
/div>(untitled comment)
Funny how all these tech-bros get concerned about the ethics of their former employers AFTER they cash out their options.
/div>(untitled comment)
" Oracle's executive sweet"
If intentional - brilliant.
If not - claim it was :)
/div>(untitled comment)
So Parler's business plan is to attract the people too toxic for Twitter? What could possibly go wrong?
/div>(untitled comment)
When did we first exchange blog comments about OOTP? That would have been around the time I started reading here - so maybe 2000 or 2001? Looking forward to post 100,000!
/div>(untitled comment)
I watched some NBA2K on ESPN last weekend and it was more entertaining than watching the NBA on ESPN.
/div>(untitled comment)
If I'm Mayor Pete's email marketing manager I asked for a very large raise yesterday.
/div>@Jack aas been on Mastodon for a month
@Jack apparently started a Mastodon account about a month ago, per the founder of Mastodon.
/div>More comments from Chris ODonnell >>
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