☞ Expressing Anger
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US senators, that is. I'm sure the Commission will completely ignore them.
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"Government is the unelected incubus which needs parliament only in order to cloak itself in its electoral legitimacy."
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From which we learn that it is in your health interests to engage now to protest about the secrecy behind ACTA and to its terms, and if you are in the UK to the proposed Digital Economy Bill. Just walking away from these outrages puts you at greater risk from a heart attack.
☞ Flaws In The System
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From Forbes, no less: "In 2009, 30 million people sit unemployed in America. Yet, the speculators have managed to lift the stock market up, and the media pretends that we're having a recovery." -- As I have said in every keynote for many years, when you create a system, you create the game that plays it and if the system remains unchanged it becomes the game.
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"It consists almost entirely of penalties for people who do things that upset the entertainment industry ... as well as a plan to beat the hell out of the video-game industry with a new, even dumber rating system. ... What isn't in there? Anything about stimulating the actual digital economy." -- Awful, shameful stuff. And the fact the Tories aren't speaking against it means we can expect no better from them.
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As if Europe's men needed more encouragement.
☞ Time for Questions
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Until the end of January instead of the middle. At this point it's all just more blows to a bruised body.
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These are great questions which deserve (but won't receive) honest answers. By the way, I hate the name of this party and will not join or support it until it chooses a name which does not demean the victims of crimes at sea and give the pro-big-media lobby a perfect talking point with which to discredit these great arguments.
☞ Mistakes That Can't Be Admitted
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Paul Graham gets it spot on again. Apple's attitude is Google's biggest asset in the battle for the mobile market.
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Looks like non-US developers can now submit software for the Java Store, although they can't charge for it. Glacial, but the destination is worth heading for I think.
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This fits in with the populism-over-wisdom approach characterise by UK politics at the moment. Sugar is not the worst possible role model for today's connected society, but he has to come close. Another Mandelson decision, I am sure.
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I agree with (the ever remarkable) Quinn here. My children are now old enough to tell me if I lived up to this ideal, which is a bit scary.
☞ Sometimes the Improbable is the Answer
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A bit of apocalyptic sci-fi, but no less plausible than the other scenarios.
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Closures still causing debate after all these years. As I understand it (and I'm not close to the situation so I may be wrong), work continues on JDK7 in OpenJDK. When the JCP gets unstuck, JSRs will get submitted, and the expert group will then be able to decide what to keep/add. Pragmatism, community, open source.
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"While the government and the music industry posture about illegal filesharing, smaller, smarter companies are simply out-competing it" -- Copyright abuse of most kinds is just a message to the market saying "business model available". We don't need new laws to protect the incumbents, we need entrepreneurs to outpace them.
☞ Getting A Clue
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While these proposed reforms of the US system are to be welcomed, they fail to address - or even acknowledge - the real issues, which are to do with the way patents are used to support demands for injunctive relief and demands from non-practicing patent holders. Both allow extortion of the "nice business you have there, shame if anything happened to it" kind and need urgent attention, especially in the ICT industry.
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Very worthy and very broad.
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Excellent news here - I hope they follow through fully and don't find a way to make it closed at the 11th hour.
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Great story about using a Googlewhack to monitor for researchers pursing a secret.
☞ Inconvenient Truth
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Answer: Yes. So why do the labels want to kill it off? Because they don't. Translation: All this toxic law to cut people off the internet is all about protecting big businesses with tired business models and not about protecting music artists, art or culture. Shame on you, Lord Mandelson.
A Software Freedom Scorecard
I spoke this morning at the South Tyrol Free Software Conference in Bolzano, Italy. My subject was the idea of a "software freedom scorecard", a list of indicators for the strength of software freedom in an open source project or product, about which I wrote recently. The slides are available for download.
I also refer to reptiles, and that's a reference to another blog post.
☝ Starting November With Some Free Music
I just posted this week's free music downloads list over on my personal blog.
☞ Three Kinds of Progress
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I do hope it's actually a hearing and not a kangaroo court. So far the EC spokespeople that have responded on the record seem to treat all counter-arguments with very little respect, which is probably what finally made Oracle snap on Monday.
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Very interesting language, even if it's yet another extension of Google's hegemony.
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While the sentiment is a common on, as Matt says it's a bit rich coming from SAP. I can't help thinking this is more to do with their frustration that the EU didn't include Java in their Statement of Objection despite SAP's best efforts to join in with the rest of the companies busily trying to advantage themselves in the name of "competition".
☞ A Day of Challenges
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US Department of Justice issues a statement that's the diplomatic equivalent of a challenge to the EU regulator.
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Completely agree with the points made here. The deep evil of software patents is less their actual enforcement in the cases where there is merit. It's the many, many cases where they are used cynically to force out-of-court payments with menaces, as illustrated here. The absolute minimum changes needed to the system are to outlaw this sort of practice or at very least make any money extorted be repayable with interest in the event the patent is later overturned.
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The European Commission declares war
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Looks like the gloves are off.
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Bad news for software freedom. Yes, it's pragmatic, but it means the diseased status quo of the mobile industry is infecting Android. (And yes, I have fought every instance of Sun doing the same thing)
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DAISY is a talking book format that allows texts to be read out loud - especially valuable for the visually impaired. Today saw the launch of a new add-on for OpenOffice.org that makes creation of DAISY talking books easy. Great news, congrats to Vincent & the team.
☞ The Unexpected
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I like this reflection from Chris Messina. The OpenOfficeMouse is just part of the rich flora and fauna that happens when you're in a place that's truly open. It's not in any way associated with Sun or endorsed by the OpenOffice.org project, just an excursion into entrepreneurship by an enthusiast.
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How long before the "advance passenger data" required by airlines includes your Facebook and Twitter IDs?
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I saw this from Highway 17 near Los Gatos and thought it must have hit Felton - but from the various accounts it must have actually been much further away and much higher. In which case, it was an enormous fireball over the ocean that made a heck of a splash.
☝ Music for a Bad Week
It may just be that you need some free music to soothe away the bad taste from a bad week. There are a bunch of pointers on my personal blog.
☞ Copyright Fascists
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Michael Geist put the evidence together from the available "leaks" and shows us all why ACTA is anti-open, anti-freedom. If democracy means anything today we need to mobilise popular opposition to this disgusting travesty before it's too late.
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EFF's title sums up the purpose of ACTA nicely. It's a secret work by the copyright fascists to lock down their business model before we all realise what's going on, and to do so at a trans-national level so that no country is empowered to challenge it. Dirty, dirty, dirty.
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Once you're past the tabloid sensationalism, there's an insight in this piece - that the copyright fascists tend to concentrate on monetising a cult of personality whose actual music doesn't stand too much scrutiny.
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Could prove useful, although I couldn't make the list of places work.





Posted by webmink