Posts from — November 2004
Put it all online
I had the opportunity of sitting with Ismail Serageldin, the director of the Library of Alexandria at a session at the STS Forum. He told me a story about a fellow educator and librarian who was dismayed that students were only citing things that they could find on the Internet and were no longer using physical libraries. Ismail said that he disagreed. He told me that he felt that students using the Internet were correct and that it was the libraries that needed to make more material available online. I totally agree. (He also said he was a fan of Wikipedia.) So it’s good news that:
Matt Haughey @ CC Blog30 Million newspapers to be put online
Great news for the public domain: The National Endowment for the Arts and the Library of Congress are putting 30 million newspaper pages online, dating from 1836 to 1922.
It’ll take until 2006 to complete the project but the Library of Congress has put up a sample from The Stars and Stripes, an armed forces paper, posting every issue from 1918-1919.
(Via Joi Ito’s Web.)
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all great news. but i suppose it is much like the online archives of the norfolk and western railroad in the end, they exist online, but no one can find them and if they can find them, they might not find them of particular value for any given reason under the sun. in short, there is a difference between putting things online and putting things online and making them useful.
November 18, 2004 No Comments
I despise Wal*mart
I despise Wal*mart: “Having stood atop the Pyramid of the Sun at ancient Teotihuacan, in awe of the vast and stunning metropolis that has dominated the skyline for thousands of years, I could weep at the mere thought of the Wal-Mart that opens next month only 1.6 km away.
(Via Purse Lip Square Jaw.)
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shopping wins….. yep, in a consumer culture…. it does, and sometimes with horrid results.
November 18, 2004 No Comments
At such times, in place of the voice of duty which no longer peaks in men’s hearts, the cheifs are forced to substitute the cry of terror or the lure of some apparent interest by which they deceive their creatures. At such times one has to have recoruse to all the petty and contemptible ruses they call maxims of state and secrets of the cabinet. Rousseau Discourses on Political Economy….
November 17, 2004 No Comments
Broadcasters Try to Steal More of the Public Domain, This Week at WIPO
Broadcasters Try to Steal More of the Public Domain, This Week at WIPO: “
Many of you will remember the broadcasting industry’s efforts to push a power-grabbing treaty through the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO). If the broadcasters have their way, the treaty will:
- Give broadcasters copyright privileges over material they did not create, but merely broadcast, including control over public domain material. They would get these powers for up to 50 years.
- Make it illegal to circumvent technology locks that enforce broadcasters’ control over what users can do with broadcasts.
And if a small group of webcasters gets their way, they’ll get these powers too.
In the last session the pro-treaty forces were pushing to move to the final stages of negotiation, while the developing countries in opposition were trying to slow down the process to get rid of the most odious positions.
The round of negotiations this week is more of the same, except that now there are even more civil society NGOs in attendance and WIPO recently welcomed a “Development Agenda” that explicitly acknowledges the need for these treaties to promote access to the public domain, not inhibit it. On the other side, the webcasters are making an extra hard push, and there still isn’t a great deal of transparency and media coverage to keep the dogs at bay.
Stay tuned. Union for the Public Domain has two people here to make the arguments for the public domain, and we’ll be posting daily updates to the UPD site (http://public-domain.org), including detailed notes on everything that happens in the assembly hall. In the meantime, don’t hesitate to contact your country’s copyright office to urge them to take a stand against this treaty.
(For more details on the treaty, see: http://www.public-domain.org/node/view/47)”
(Via Union for the Public Domain -.)
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so…. if i were a registered broadcaster, and i rebroadcast c-span stuff in a unique format, it would then be mine? neat…… not really. this is a real butchering of copyright and ownership.
November 17, 2004 No Comments
Watley Review: AOL Admits 40% of Subscribers Don’t Have Computers
Watley Review: AOL Admits 40% of Subscribers Don’t Have Computers: “”
this can’t be true…… if it is, they are so in the wrong.
November 17, 2004 No Comments
netLibrary
November 17, 2004 No Comments
Feel better!
November 17, 2004 No Comments
FCC casting chill on reproductive rights
FCC casting chill on reproductive rights: “
Dispute over a single wordCHAPEL HILL – There’s a big difference between reproductive rights and reproductive health, says the head of a group forced to substitute one word for the other in an underwriting announcement on a local radio station.
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i wonder what they don’t think is political. wouldn’t every prairie home companion be political, social, religious? this seems purely to be the fcc putting forth anormal standards for political purposes.
November 17, 2004 No Comments
How programming languages have warped my writing
How programming languages have warped my writing: “How programming languages have warped my writing: “Because of HyperTalk, I am never sure how to spell highlight. I always want to spell it ‘hilite’.Because of AppleScript, I always want to write ‘thru’ instead of ‘through’.Because of Java, I’m inclined to write ‘Cristina+Liberty’ instead of ‘Cristina and Liberty’.Because of perl,…”
(Via Inspirational Technology.)
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this is a perfect example of so many affects of programming skills. just the social governance implicit in this little bit more or less shows, if it is true, that my dissertations thesis is correct….. of course, i have other evidence.
November 17, 2004 No Comments
VidLit™ – Yiddish with Dick and Jane – An educational recitation from the bestselling parody by Ellis Weiner and Barbara Davilman – LIttle, Brown and Company
quite good
November 17, 2004 No Comments