... ishmael n. daro
May 28th, 2010

Fight for your right to fair copyright


The Conservative Party is hoping to revive the much-hated Bill C-61. It was proposed in 2008 and, had it been passed, would have allowed for fines of up to $20,000 for certain activities such as uploading music onto a file-sharing network. It was very much a punitive, heavy-handed American-style approach to questions of intellectual property. Luckily, there was a groundswell of opposition, led by University of Ottawa professor Michael Geist, and the bill was not passed.

Now, however, it seems the Conservatives want to try again and it doesn’t seem like much has changed about the substance of the bill.

The Globe and Mail reports:

This kick at the can, a followup to the ill-fated Bill C-61 of two years ago, is expected to go some way to appeasing international partners – especially the European Union and the United States – and big players in the entertainment industry, who want tougher rules on using copyrighted material.

One government insider said Canada simply cannot ignore the international consensus on the issue and make it acceptable for people to violate copyright, because major corporations will choose not to invest in Canada.

Of course, the threat that “major corporations will choose not to invest in Canada” is complete bogus. Canada is still an enormous, tech-savvy market that no serious media company will ignore. The entire copyright saga of the last decade is essentially between consumers who are adopting and adapting to technology very quickly and media companies that don’t understand or don’t trust the technology and the changes it is bringing about. They also probably want to continue making the obscene profits of the last four decades but people aren’t willing to pay those inflated prices.

As has been repeatedly documented, those who download materials illegally, or pirates, are also the biggest purchasers. A Norwegian study last year, for example, found that “illegal music connoisseurs are significantly more likely to purchase music than the average, non-P2P-loving user.”

Yet, despite being the best customers of the media giants, those same companies are pushing harder than ever to criminalize more and more online activity. Actual content creators, the musicians and filmmakers of the world, rarely see much of the money that record and film companies rake in and are usually just as frustrated by these companies’ old-fashioned thinking.

In an op-ed piece for the New York Times, lead singer of OK Go Damian Kulash described how stupidly their record label EMI had behaved. OK Go became a hit when their homemade video for the song “Here It Goes Again” went viral. Says Kulash, “To the band, ‘Here It Goes Again’ was a successful creative project. To the record company, it was a successful, completely free advertisement.”

But after the success of the video, EMI changed tack:

Now we’ve released a new album and a couple of new videos. But the fans and bloggers who helped spread “Here It Goes Again” across the Internet can no longer do what they did before, because our record company has blocked them from embedding our video on their sites. Believe it or not, in the four years since our treadmill dance got such attention, YouTube and EMI have actually made it harder to share our videos.

A few years ago, reeling from plummeting record sales, record companies went after YouTube, demanding payment for streams of their material. They saw videos, suddenly, as potential sources of revenue. YouTube agreed to pay the record companies a tiny amount for each stream, but — here’s the crux of the problem — they pay only when the videos are viewed on YouTube’s own site.

And so it goes. The copyright fight continues.

This latest attempt in Canada as well as the secretive international ACTA are on the wrong side of history and on the wrong side of technology, but here we go again.

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image: Flickr
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May 27th, 2010

Working in Saskatchewan

My summer job at the University of Saskatchewan library deals with cataloging and archiving some important documents from a B.C. Supreme Court case. It’s not the most exciting thing in the world, but some of the material can be rather interesting. Archiving in general is an area I had never thought about much but there are archivists around the world doing the legwork so we can have an accurate idea of history.

The Saskatchewan Council for Archives and Archivists recently completed an online gallery of work images from Saskatchewan. There are lots of great images going back decades. Here are some interesting ones:


“This com-poo-terr machine is a marvel. Feed it a dozen loaves of bread and it will actually write your name for you on a piece of paper! Boy, what are they gonna think of next?”


“Go on, Bobby, just keep chippin’ away at that rock. The three of us will supervise so you don’t hurt yourself. Remember that if you need a break, it’ll come out of your pay.”


“Remember the drill, boys. We throw the horses into the fire and if that doesn’t stop it, we call the police.”


“All right boys, it’s lunchtime. Come on, those horses aren’t gonna eat themselves.


“This is just awful. My grandmother could mix a better batch of cocaine than you. In fact, I’m pretty sure this is cottage cheese.”


“What’s going on? Are you two up to any shenanigans out here? A bank’s reputation is built on how quiet and motionless its staff is, so if I see you two — I saw that Theodore! That’s it, you get another six hours in the cage!”


“Used to be I had to go to the park and expose myself to one or two children at a time. Now with this fancy printing press, I can just leaflet the entire neighbourhood with naked pictures of myself.”


“That’s odd, I can’t find the name anywhere. I’m starting to suspect that “Gofuk Yorself” isn’t even a real name, or maybe it’s been misfiled. Sounds Dutch, whatever it is.

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images: SCAA
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May 27th, 2010

Some interesting spam comments

The trouble with running any site is the huge volume of spam one gets. Luckily WordPress has a great spam catcher to fight the sea of porn and penis pills. I was looking through my spam comments today and found a few gems. Each one seems to have a particular strategy to win you over.

The Flatterer

Woah, this guy really likes my blogging.

Definitely agree with that which you stated. Your explanation was certainly the perfect to understand. I say to you, I usually get irked when folks discuss problems that they plainly do not know about. You managed to kick the nail at the top and explained out everything without complication. Maybe, people can take a signal. Will more than likely return to obtain additional. Thanks.

The Confuser

What does that last line even mean?

Took me time to scan all the comments, but I undeniably enjoyed the article. It proved to be Vastly helpful to me and I am undeviating to all the commenters here! It’s many times subtle when you can not just be alert to, but also entertained! I’m unflinching you had rag theme this article.

Even More Confusing

This guy is even harder to understand… and he seems to be arguing with inanimate objects.

Me and my old china were arguing apropos an question major alike resemble to this! Conditions I skilled in that I was right. lol! Thanks after the knowledge you post.

The Double-Crosser

This spam comment is disguised as a question about how to fight spam comments. Hmm…

Howdy, i read your blog occasionally and i own a similar one and i was just wondering if you get a lot of spam comments? If so how do you prevent it, any plugin or anything you can advise? I get so much lately it’s driving me mad so any assistance is very much appreciated.

The Concerned Fan

I would have loved to be at the meeting where this spam comment was devised.

Do you think Brad and Jen will ever get back together? I have never been totally convinced that they really wanted to separate.

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image: Flickr

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May 26th, 2010

Bask in the glory of Jean Chrétien

Jean Chrétien’s official portrait was revealed yesterday in Ottawa. Painted by Ottawa artist Christian Nicholson, Chrétien’s is easily the most striking portrait in the Prime Ministers’ Portrait Gallery.

I will always have fond memories of the 20th Canadian prime minister. His savaging of both official languages, his wit and his charisma are all legendary. Today’s crop of politicians (with maybe the exception of Gilles Duceppe) could learn a thing or two from Chrétien about how to engage the public without talking down to them.

Jean Chrétien was prime minister when my family moved to Canada in 1997. As a result (and partly because of the 1997 election campaign) he was the face of my new country. And what a face it was. I remember even at nine years old marvelling that Canadian voters would elect a man whose face was partially paralyzed. It told me that Canadian tolerance was more than sloganeering, that Canada was truly a nation of openness and diversity.

Jean Chrétien was also prime minister long before I became politically aware enough to know that he wasn’t always the most ethical prime minister. I simply viewed him as an important man in Ottawa who somehow led a country that I was very glad to become a part of. And if my fellow Canadians saw fit to put their confidence in him, then he must be one hell of a guy.

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May 25th, 2010

Some lead with your ginseng?

From today’s New York Times, yet more proof that not everything that sets itself up as “natural” or “alternative medicine” should be trusted:

Nearly all of the herbal dietary supplements tested in a Congressional investigation contained trace amounts of lead and other contaminants, and some supplement sellers made illegal claims that their products can cure cancer and other diseases, investigators found.

The report was put together by the Government Accountability Office in preparation for Senate hearings set for Wednesday that will discuss how much regulatory power government ought to have over food manufacturers through the FDA.

There is a chance that pending legislation could more tightly control the booming, multi-billion dollar supplement industry but “it is uncertain how tough the bill will be on supplement manufacturers, and it has been the subject of fierce lobbying.”

Critics of mainstream medicine may gripe about the “poisons” that Big Pharma is selling but at least real drugs go through rigorous trials and testing before hitting the market. Herbal supplements, on the other hand, have a much lower threshold to pass before making it to store shelves.

Additionally, many of the supplements you find at the drugstores are made by the same big pharmaceutical companies that make real drugs, but with far less stringent safety mechanisms. Besides, I’d rather have potential nausea, headaches or fever than lead poisoning.

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image: Flickr

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May 24th, 2010

My latest obsession: MSTRKRFT and the Fresh Prince

This is hardly a new clip, but I’ve been watching it repeatedly for the last week. It’s an old clip from The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air with DJ Jazzy Jeff playing drums while Will Smith does some funky ’90s dancing. The song, “Bounce” by MSTRKRFT, is also pretty infectious.

I wonder if I can get that shuffle down before the next night out.

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May 20th, 2010

Flickr finds

This is clever. Imagine a fireball.

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image: Flickr

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May 19th, 2010

Everybody Draw Mohammed Day


Tomorrow, May 20, is the first annual Draw Mohammed Day. It came about as a response to the threats against South Park and the subsequent censorship of that show. Draw Mohammed Day has largely been driven by a Facebook group but there has been a lot of press coverage as well. However, the idea first came from a Seattle Cartoonist named Molly Norris.

It started as an attempt to show that blasphemy is simply no longer an appropriate reason for censorship in society, with people drawing humorous, often respectful images of what they claimed to be the prophet Mohammed.

My submission for Everybody Draw Mohammed Day

But before long, the images on Facebook got more and more extreme, depicting Mohammed having sex with various animals and the like. Then it got political, with many people ranting about Barack Obama, Israel, communism and everything else you can imagine. Many Muslims (I assume) responded by posting threatening messages about payback and saying everyone who posted images of Mohammed would see some sort of retribution. Meanwhile extremist Christians, missing the point of the event, used Facebook to go on about how much greater Christianity was than Islam…. Let’s just say things got out of hand.

Still, the overall project of promoting Freedom of Speech despite threats from some religious extremists is a good one. Sure, there is a lot of hateful, racist vitriol flying around the Internet right now, but if this does become an annual event, maybe all sides will learn to calm down. We know the campaign is getting a lot of attention — for example, Facebook has been banned in Pakistan as a result — and hopefully it will change some attitudes about what is and is not appropriate in secular society.

My favourite submission to the Facebook event, which perfectly captures the original spirit of the campaign, is posted below with the following caption:

This is my contribution. My Muhommad is a friendly happy prophet that respects America’s right to free speech and is buddies with Jesus, they’re like brothers in fact, he hates violence and loves cake and Plays videogames. I love him.

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May 18th, 2010

The end of the European Union?


The financial turmoil in Europe has raised some serious doubts about the continued survival of the European Union. Doug Saunders of the Globe and Mail wrote a great piece about it recently. Overall the article strikes a skeptical tone but concedes that Europeans have invested so much into integration over the last several decades that failure simply isn’t an option and that the Union will need to continue. Here’s a choice quote:

Never before in history has such a vast infrastructure of diplomacy, scholarship, aid, outreach and policy-making been assembled with so little effect beyond its own borders.

[link]

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image: Flickr
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May 18th, 2010

New LCD Soundsystem album out today

LCD Soundsystem’s third and probably last album This Is Happening is out today. The first single “Drunk Girls” has a chaotic video directed by Spike Jonze (embedded below) that subjects James Murphy and the band to some pretty rough treatment.

A much better song, though, is the slow-burning nine-minute “You Wanted A Hit,” which has already spawned a bunch of remixes.

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LCD Soundsystem – You Wanted A Hit

[MySpace] [Amazon] [iTunes]

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