Universal Music CEO Still Doesn't Believe In The Promotional Value Of Music (2)
share
digg
by
Michael Masnick (854)
on
Techdirt (928)
1 day
ago
permalink
A year ago, we were fairly shocked at an interview with Universal Music CEO Doug Morris. The guy gleefully explained how clueless he was about technology, and said that he didn't even know enough to hire people who could properly guide him to understanding how technology was impacting the music industry. Furthermore, he displayed an ignorance of basic economics and basic finance at the same time by insisting that any sort of promotion that might ...
McCain Campaign Sends Letter To YouTube Defending Fair Use (3)
share
digg
by
Michael Masnick (854)
on
Techdirt (928)
1 day, 3 hours
ago
permalink
This is impressive, and somewhat unexpected. It's rather rare to see politicians (other than maginal ones, at least) showing any sort of recognition of fair use. It's certainly not an issue you'd expect to see raised by a presidential candidate (of either party). However, John McCain's campaign has sent a letter to YouTube complaining about the site's unwillingness to consider fair use in videos before taking them down. You can read the whole letter at ...
Dear Newspapers: Locking Up Archives Shrinks Your Business (2)
share
digg
by
Michael Masnick (854)
on
Techdirt (928)
1 day, 18 hours
ago
permalink
Plenty of folks have pointed this out for years, but newspapers that try to lock up their back archives and charge for viewing those articles are very likely hurting their bottom line more than helping it. That's because those archives are a treasure trove of info that people would be interested in finding via a search engine -- but they almost never want to pay for it. For many years, the NY Times tried locking ...
xkcd Speaks Truth To DRM: You're A Criminal Either Way (3)
share
digg
by
Michael Masnick (854)
on
Techdirt (928)
1 day, 23 hours
ago
permalink
People sure do love xkcd. I saw the latest comic last night, thinking it was amusing, but I've never been this deluged with submissions from people saying that we absolutely need to post it here. Either way, it does make the universal point about why you shouldn't buy anything that includes DRM. Since any change to the DRM (such as shutting down DRM servers) means you'll probably need to break the law to actually keep ...
Watch Neil Gaiman Read His Whole Latest Book Online For Free... And Note That It's Still A Best Seller (2)
share
digg
by
Michael Masnick (854)
on
Techdirt (928)
2 days, 12 hours
ago
permalink
Famed author Neil Gaiman certainly is no stranger to embracing the economics of free infinite goods to help sell more not-free scarce goods. Richard now points us to yet another way that's working for Gaiman. In a new blog post about a just completed book tour for his new children's book, The Graveyard Book, Gaiman notes two interesting points. First, during the book tour, at each stop he read a different chapter of the book ...
Comparing The Mortgage Bubble To The Patent Bubble (2)
share
digg
by
Michael Masnick (854)
on
Techdirt (928)
4 days, 13 hours
ago
permalink
Bessen and Meurer have a brief, but interesting post noting at least some similarities between the "mortgage bubble" that resulted in the current financial crisis with the ongoing "patent bubble." In both cases, as they note, you're dealing with products where its not clear at all what the "rights" actually cover: What happens when you give out lots of property rights, but nobody exactly knows what those rights cover? Yes, that might describe software/business-method patents ...
New Jersey Elections Board Says This Election Is Too Important To Allow Outside Observers (1)
share
digg
by
Michael Masnick (854)
on
Feedhub - cgsheldon (16)
4 days, 13 hours
ago
permalink
via: Techdirt (drop this source • show all sources) • help relevance: Election; voting (tell me more...) rate it: | Transparency is key to a functioning democracy. No, we don't always have it, but we absolutely should be striving for it, or you can almost guarantee corruption will take over. That's why we've been so focused on the problems with e-voting machines for so many years, and pushing for increased transparency. Now, some of the ...
You Don't Encourage Innovation By Hobbling The Innovative Platform (1)
share
digg
by
Michael Masnick (854)
on
Techdirt (928)
4 days, 15 hours
ago
permalink
We've pointed out in the past, that the internet has always been a communications platform, not a broadcast platform, and that distinction is actually the key to understanding many of the "conflicts" you see online these days. The internet was built with core principles based on being a communication platform, and it was only much later, when the big broadcast content providers realized what was going on, that they started acting as if the internet ...
New Jersey Elections Board Says This Election Is Too Important To Allow (6)
share
digg
by
Michael Masnick (854)
on
Techdirt (928)
4 days, 21 hours
ago
permalink
Transparency is key to a functioning democracy. No, we don't always have it, but we absolutely should be striving for it, or you can almost guarantee corruption will take over. That's why we've been so focused on the problems with e-voting machines for so many years, and pushing for increased transparency. Now, some of the researchers who wrote a recent suppressed report, about potential security problems with the Sequoia e-voting machines used in New Jersey, ...
-
pfm said:
and so it begins...
-
trygve said:
That's a little alarming and sad that they won't allow non-partisan experts in electronic voting security observe the elections to help ensure things go smoothly and everything is legitimate.
-
Mark said:
Banana Republicization of the US proceeds at a breakneck pace.
Verizon Wireless Massively Raises Rates For Text Messaging Services (3)
share
digg
by
Michael Masnick (854)
on
Techdirt (928)
5 days, 1 hour
ago
permalink
It's no surprise that some things may be getting more expensive these days, especially as companies start dealing with the fallout from the financial crisis -- but it appears that some are going a bit overboard. There's a bit of an uproar among some, as Verizon Wireless is slapping a surprising 3-cents-per-text-message fee on top of every mobile terminated text message. That basically affects any company that provides some sort of SMS notification system or ...
Senate Guts Broadband Data Bill (1)
share
digg
by
Michael Masnick (854)
on
Techdirt (928)
5 days, 2 hours
ago
permalink
You may have heard recently about the new Broadband Data Improvement Act, passing through Congress, as it basically put into law what the FCC had already decided: the cutoff for what should be considered broadband needed to be raised, and the data collection methods for broadband penetration needed to be updated, from the clearly bogus methodology it currently uses. Sounds good, right? Except, as Broadband Reports lets us know, in moving from the House to ...
New Zealand Copyright Minister Sneaks In 3 Strikes Law; Yells At Those Who Ask Why (2)
share
digg
by
Michael Masnick (854)
on
Techdirt (928)
5 days, 7 hours
ago
permalink
There's been plenty of backlash around the globe towards any sort of law that requires a "three strikes" policy for kicking users off the internet for three unsubstantiated accusations of unauthorized file sharing. In many places, attempts at such laws have been abandoned. However, down in New Zealand, after one such law was proposed, a group of concerned citizens protested, and had the provision removed, while also adding in a provision that put liability on ...
University Gets Time To Notify Students Before Handing Over Info To The RIAA (5)
share
digg
by
Michael Masnick (854)
on
Techdirt (928)
5 days, 9 hours
ago
permalink
It's nice to see the courts finally pushing back on the RIAA's repeated attempts to expand the law to protect its business models and co-opt others into being their private enforcement force. TorrentFreak points us to the news that the University of California, Santa Cruz has won a lawsuit against the RIAA, which allows the university to notify a student and his or her parents with plenty of time, before handing over any info to ...
Record Label Gives Fans A Reason To Buy (2)
share
digg
by
Michael Masnick (854)
on
Techdirt (928)
5 days, 11 hours
ago
permalink
Yet another example of a small indie record label that actually understands the importance of giving fans a reason to buy, rather than just assuming that if they put out music, people should just buy. This example, sent in by reader Fitte Prins, involves a small heavy metal record label in Chicago that puts out a variety of limited edition vinyl records in beautiful packaging, with the idea of attracting collectors who like the vinyl ...
Books Are The Souvenir Edition For Your Idea (3)
share
digg
by
Michael Masnick (854)
on
Techdirt (928)
5 days, 22 hours
ago
permalink
We've talked at length about the difference between infinite goods and scarce goods in various areas, and how you should spread the infinite ideas to make the scarce goods more valuable, but here's a great quote that puts that in perspective when it comes to books. Mathew Ingram points us to an interview with entrepreneur and author Seth Godin, where he notes: "Books are souvenirs that hold ideas. Ideas are free. If no one knows ...
YouTube Taking Feature Advice From XKCD (4)
share
digg
by
Michael Masnick (854)
on
Techdirt (928)
5 days, 22 hours
ago
permalink
While any open online forum has its share of trolls and poorly written comments, YouTube is infamous for having a quality level below pretty much everywhere else. The (absolutely worth reading) online comic strip, xkcd ran a strip recently joking about one possible "cure" for this: having a virus written that would read a YouTuber's comment outloud before requesting final approval to post it. The idea was that any sane person would recognize how idiotic ...
Dear Bands: No Matter How Much You Dislike John McCain, He Can Most Likely Use Your Song (5)
share
digg
by
Michael Masnick (854)
on
Techdirt (928)
6 days, 2 hours
ago
permalink
The latest in a long line of musicians complaining about Presidential candidate John McCain for his use of their music at campaign stops would be the band the Foo Fighters. Now, as we've pointed out in the past, there are two separate issues to keep in mind here: In most cases, there's nothing these bands can do from a legal standpoint. Assuming the venue where the music is being played has paid its standard ASCAP ...
NSA Abused Wiretap Rights: Intercepted, Shared Private Calls Of Americans (6)
share
digg
by
Michael Masnick (854)
on
Techdirt (928)
6 days, 3 hours
ago
permalink
Now that Congress has totally capitulated and allowed the administration's warrantless wiretapping program to go on without question, it should surprise no one that leaks are coming out highlighting how the program is regularly abused to spy on everyday Americans who are calling North America from the Middle East. In fact, two separate "intercept operators" have apparently come forward separately, and talked about listening in on perfectly innocent calls between two Americans -- exactly the ...
Patent Lawsuit Silly Season: TechCrunch Sued For Patent Infringement After Critical Blog Post (3)
share
digg
by
Michael Masnick (854)
on
Techdirt (928)
6 days, 4 hours
ago
permalink
There are different levels of ridiculousness when it comes to patent lawsuits, with the lowest of the low being patent lawsuits based more on spite than on any legitimate claim. For a while, it seemed like Ray Niro's use of the infamous JPG patent, to sue a bunch companies he just didn't like, was perhaps alone in that category. But, it appears that we now have a new entrant. Apparently, some company (who we won't ...
The Evolution Of The App Dock: Apple Didn't Invent It And Doesn't Deserve A Patent On It (4)
share
digg
by
Michael Masnick (854)
on
Techdirt (928)
6 days, 4 hours
ago
permalink
Earlier this year, there was some buzzing among Apple loyalists that Dell was copying Apple when it launched a "Dell Dock" offering that would highlight what applications were open. The creators of the Dell Dock, a company called Stardock, then put up a fantastic blog post detailing the history and evolution of such docks, which came from many places well before Apple, and each step of the way added a little feature here or there, ...