Waiting for Columbus
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I'd drunk most of the first pot of coffee this morning and when going to replenish the coffee with some fresh, realized we're about out of coffee. Now, a household of seven goes through a couple of pots a day and in extreem instances, three or four pots. (We'll leave the discussion of home brew beer/and micro brew consumption for another time and posting.) So off to the store, to pick up a few things. (yeah right!) $50+ later I'm home with various and sundry stuff to tide us over until we can do another real shop. Memo to self, "Don't buy fish or meat from the fresh cases on sunday morning."


EFF is asking for your help with the Broadcast Flag. This is a proposed technology mandate that would give Hollywood studios a veto over the design of the output and recording technologies that get built into DTV receivers -- which is by way of saying the stuff that we take for granted on our general-purpose machines, like CD/DVD burners, high-speed cabling standards like FireWire, and so on. This is an unprecedented maneouvre: the Hollywood studios are saying that tech companies should have to get the studios' permission before releasing new tools to their customers. These are the studios that tried to ban the VCR, that sued ReplayTV over commercial-skipping, that put Fritz Hollings up to the CBDTPA bill, a proposal to make *all* technologists get the entertainment industry's approval before producing new equipment.

What's more, the Broadcast Flag demands that approved technologies will have to be built to be "tamper-resistant." That means that we'll have a law that will require an entire class of general-purpose technologies to use only obfuscated, closed-source drivers. That's right, it bans open source for tech that can be used in DTV applications.

The worst part is: there's no problem. Hollywood has made more money every single year since the last fight like this, over the VCR. Last year was the movie companies' best year since 1959 -- this despite a worldwide economic crisis! Hollywood doesn't dispute this, but they insist that since there *might* be a problem tomorrow, they need to take extrodinary measures today. This is ridiculous, of course: it's like eating your seatmate on the off-chance that your plane will crash.

Well, the FCC sought comment on this. They asked the public and other organizations to participate in the rulemaking, to help them make up their minds. EFF has been calling on our supporters to send notes into the Commission in opposition to this plan, and we've passed over 15,000 faxes onto the Commissioners' desks.

Numbers count in this fight. When over 700,000 Americans wrote to the FCC on media consolidation, it so alarmed lawmakers that Fritz Hollings (of all people!) called for Congressional action to limit media consolidation. We need lots of people to write into the FCC asking them to set this proposal aside, and we want you to help.

Link [Boing Boing]



A picture named shirky.jpgDavid Weinberger reports on a Clay Shirky presentation. Clay's still giving the power-law rap. His thesis is that weblogs are just like television all over again. That makes Luddites feel comfortable, until you see that's not what's actually going on. My thesis: it doesn't matter if only 25 people read your blog, or even 2.5 people, if they're the right 2.5 people. My weblog worked, we were able to route around the BigCo's and establish new standards without their help or approval. Clay went contrarian on that too. My distribution didn't come close to matching PC Mag or PC Week, yet somehow I was able to influence the whole industry from this little pulpit. It's not about how many eyeballs you aggregate, it's which ones. [Scripting News]


 
 

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Updated: 10/20/03; 8:58:50.
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