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tag → station11
  1. 08 February 2006

    Free Culture

    Lawrence Lessig

    2190 days ago

    A real interesting book. Lessig is crusading against those who look to impede our development as a society (the book is quite US centric) by locking up all almost everything produced within our culture in the past 80 years by means of outrageous and unconstitutional copyright law.

    Lessig has a lot of resentment towards the American legal system, and rightly so. On many occasions he deprecates it. He’s not happy about the current state of congress either, openly indicting it of rampant corruption and being disconnected from american society.

    He systematically shows how completely wrongheaded the laws governing copyright have become in america. Works that should have lapsed into the public domain thirty years ago are still protected because those holding the rights to those work mercilessly lobby and provide large sums of dollars to congressmen and women.

    He proposes a solution to the problem in the epilogue, but for the most part the entire book is used to further his (entirely righteous) tirade against what copyright has become. It’s hurting our creativity. We’ve reached a turning point in culture at which we can either cut copyright law back to a much more reasonable set of statutes or live in a society in which creative expression is forbidden to draw upon any previous form of expression.

    I’ve pirated music for quite awhile, and don’t see myself stopping any time soon. I make the kind gesture of buying a CD when I really love it, but every time the RIAA decides to sue another kid, I’m less likely to fiscally support them.

    So like most every other part of our government now, copyright policy has degenerated into a corporate driven engine to assure big media a windfall share in profits. Never before in any free society has the right to expression been so severely limited.

    So Lessig has a radical argument. He points out that this is one of the biggest deals of our time. A few years ago he argued his case, that the Sonny Bono act was blatantly unconstitutional, before the supreme court. he failed, and feels it was his fault.

    He brings up the fact that under the current law, 43% of americans are felons. And this was in 2002, I can’t imagine it’s having shrank. Something is clearly wrong when not only does the current law flout the constitution, which calls for a limited term of copyright, but it entirely flouts common sense.

    The internet is big and scary to entrenched interests, for all the good it does for the average person, it sure fucks up their business model. And we can’t let that happen now, can we?

  2. 03 December 2005

    2258 days ago

    Hey Ya Charlie Brown

    I hope you didn’t get tired of this earlier this year, becuase it’s just that good. I’m really not that much of an OutKast fan, nor have I ever loved Charlie Brown.

    But who can’t smile while watching this movie?

    via Kjell Olsen2258 days ago
  3. 22 September 2005

    2330 days ago

    Google Sued

    Google wants to do nothing more to 20,000,000 books than it does to the Internet: it wants to index them, and it offers anyone in the index the right to opt out. If it is illegal to do that with 20,000,000 books, then why is it legal to do it with the Internet? The

    via Kjell Olsen2330 days ago
  4. Also somewhat recently