Categories
AV Related Copyright/OCL General

Worse than no modding . . . . DTV lockdown

Straight from EFF . . . the word on the new push to lock down consumers rights on digital TV.

EFF aims this at Europeans but as you will read it will apply to Australia.

This system requires tight controls over analogue outputs. These outputs are very useful in current digital devices — they ensure compatibility with existing consumer equipment and enable innovative products. Without unrestricted analogue outputs, sophisticated personal video recorders could not exist without special arrangement or permission from copyright holders or broadcasters.

CPCM allows rightsholders to specify restriction of playback to a single “household,” granting copyright holders a veto over which households are “legitimate” and which ones are “illegitimate.”

No account of the exceptions to copyright that safeguard education, criticism, free speech, and fair dealing is taken in CPCM. An educator who may have a legal right to show a clip to her class has no means of taking restricted content out of a CPCM system and into a classroom. A volunteer adding assistive information for disabled people to a programme has no means of extracting the programme into an environment where this activity can take place.

The proponents of CPCM promise an as-yet-unspecified “compliance body” that would require manufacturers to adhere to a set of rules for designing DTV equipment, that would ban Free and Open Source Software-based tuners, players, recorders, and so forth (on the grounds that these technologies could be modified to remove the restrictions set by the rightsholders or broadcasters).

Categories
Copyright/OCL General

More on modding

I’m not sure how long this decision in the High Court will stand given the reassessment by the Federal Govt on the anti-circumvention and DMCA as part of the FTA. But fingers crossed. Most people wouldn’t have taken it as far as the High Court.

Kim Weatherall has a lot of good things to say on this (as usual).

Categories
Copyright/OCL General

Fight for your right to Mod

This is a very good and important court ruling and in truth I’m surprised it was the, up until now, very convervative Australian high court that did it.

http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20051006-5396.html

if I buy a car and i respray it and put mag wheels on it i dont breach the car makers copyright so why should it be different with game moding or console moding…? It strikes me that the fundemental issue here is the the long ago estblished notion of the fact that the user doesnt BUY or OWN software they BUY a liscence to use it… One of the greatest cons inflicted upon the populous in the modern era…

Categories
Copyright/OCL General

EU takes on massive digitisation

The EU goes down the GooglePrint and Yahoo path.

From the Register

“Without a collective memory, we are nothing, and can achieve nothing. It defines our identity and we use it continuously for education, work and leisure,” said Information Society and Media Commissioner Viviane Reding. “The internet is the most powerful new tool we have had for storing and sharing information since the Gutenberg press, so let’s use it to make the material in Europe’s libraries and archives accessible to all.”

Google’s library project takes the book collections of several research libraries – about 15 million books – and makes this content searchable online. According to the Commission, Google’s initiative “triggered a reflection on how to deal with our European cultural heritage in the digital age.”

Google has faced problems: some copyright holders whose books featured in the libraries were upset and are currently suing the search company. The Commission hopes to avoid such problems by addressing copyright issues upfront. It does not depend on legal change in order to succeed; it can also work within today’s laws. Its only driver for adjusting the laws is to increase the range of material on offer. Without change, the Commission can still stock works in which copyrights have expired or where permission is granted by copyright holders.

Categories
Copyright/OCL General

Open Source Conference Papaers

Some good papers on open source. Including one from Siva Vaidhyanathan.

Categories
Copyright/OCL General

GooglePrint/Library Update

An authoritative update on the Google Print saga makes for good reading, exploring the fair use and other issues involved.

Categories
AV Related Copyright/OCL General

Sampling / George Clinton & Hank Shocklee

Great discussion of George Clinton and Hank Shocklee at the Future Of Music conference in the USA.

A sample (ha!) of the discussion –

arguing for the sampler-as-instrument, shocklee wanted to stress that a particular performance–the presumably ‘original’ materials for which one might hold a copyright–is not always what sample-based producers are looking for: “sometimes we sample because we just want the sound.” he offered an example to clinton: “you’ve done some incredible things with the moog synthesizer in terms of filters, effects [etc.] … in order for us to get those sounds today [is impossible].”

To hear the ORIGINAL conversation you can grab it from here.

The rest of the conference panels are online here. There are some great topics being discussed incluidng blogging and podcasting as well as the future of distribution.

Categories
Copyright/OCL Digitisation General Interactive Media

Ubu Web – Open Art Archive

UbuWeb.

As they explain themselves, Ubuweb is “the definitive source for Visual, Concrete + Sound Poetry”. Check it out and be amazed, and listen and watch some of out of print music and video and text from a slew of artists whose names will be familiar but whose work is notoriously hard to get hold of.

UbuWeb has no need for money, funding or backers. Our web space is provided by an alliance of interests sympathetic to our vision. Donors with an excess of bandwidth contribute to our cause. All labour and editorial work is voluntary; no money changes hands. Totally independent from institutional support, UbuWeb is free from academic bureaucracy and its attendant infighting, which often results in compromised solutions; we have no one to please but ourselves.

UbuWeb posts much of its content without permission; we rip out-of-print LPs into sound files; we scan as many old books as we can get our hands on; we post essays as fast as we can OCR them. UbuWeb is an unlimited resource with unlimited space to fill. It is in this way that the site has grown to encompass hundreds of artists, hundreds of gigabytes of sound files, books, texts and videos.

Categories
Copyright/OCL General

Rights Clearances & Documentaries

A touchy subject but some interesting points raised here – http://www.theconglomerate.org/2005/09/iprs_in_context.html

It will be interesting to see how the fair use exemptions unfold here in Australia and how these affect how we do things within the museum.

Categories
AV Related Copyright/OCL General

BBC Creative Archive launches

Fresh open license video for use by anyone . . . . in the UK.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/tv_and_radio/4225914.stm