Presidential Library Begins Digitization Program
“The entire collection of papers, documents, photographs and audio recordings of former U.S. President John F. Kennedy is to be digitized and made available online.
‘The 10-year project to build a new digital library is a joint collaboration between IT vendor EMC, the JFK Documents to Be Digitized, Published Online and the U.S. National Archives and Records Administration.”
“The archives of the Kennedy Presidential Library’s research facilities currently include more than 8.4 million pages of the personal, congressional and presidential papers of JFK, along with more than 40 million pages of 300-plus other individuals who were associated with the Kennedy Administration or mid-20th century U.S. history.”
Andy McCue. JFK Documents to Be Digitized, Published Online. News.com. June 12, 2006.
CopyCense™: The law, business, and technology of digital content. A business venture of Seso Digital LLC.
Appeals Court Allows Online Wiretaps
“The Bush administration’s plans to force Internet providers to comply with extensive wiretapping rules received a boost on Friday, when a federal appeals court upheld the controversial regulations.
“A three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals in Washington, D.C., refused to overturn the Internet surveillance regulations, saying the Federal Communications Commission made a ‘reasonable policy choice’ when approving them last fall. FCC Chairman Kevin Martin, a Republican, applauded the ruling.
“Judge Harry Edwards, who had called the FCC’s arguments ‘gobbledygook’ and ‘nonsense’ during oral arguments before the appeals court last month, dissented. He said the 1994 Communications Assistance for Law Enforcement Act, or CALEA, does not give the FCC ‘unlimited authority to regulate every telecommunications service that might conceivably be used to assist law enforcement.'”
Declan McCullagh. Appeals Court Upholds Net-Wiretapping Rules. News.com. June 9, 2006.
Related Stories & Documents:
- U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit. American Council on Education v. Federal Communications Commission & U.S. (No. 05-1404). (.pdf) June 9, 2006.
- U.S. Code. Communications Assistance for Law Enforcement Act, 47 U.S. sec. 1001, et. seq. (Courtesy of Cornell University’s Legal Information Institute.)
CopyCense™: The law, business, and technology of digital content. A business venture of Seso Digital LLC.
Evil Holds More Money for Google
“Google’s mantra is “Don’t be evil,” which as corporate mottoes go is the equivalent of “Build an eternal bonfire in the parking lot and fuel it with thousand-dollar bills and the occasional Gutenberg Bible.”
“The worldwide market for evil is stratospheric, and Google is uniquely positioned to take advantage of it. They’ve made some halting inroads in China, but economists — many of whom are themselves evil — estimate that if Google abandoned its inefficient policy completely, it could capture 38 percent of the evil market. That’s more than Microsoft and Lindsey Lohan combined. Here are just a few of the many ways Google could provide cutting-edge, convenient and extremely evil services.”
Lore Sjöberg. Google: Don’t Not Be Evil. Wired News. June 7, 2006.
Related Stories & Documents:
- Mail & Guardian Online. Google Signals U-Turn Over Chinese Site. June 8, 2006.
- Ars Technica. Google: We Compromised Our Principles. June 7, 2006.
- Search Engine Watch Blog. Brin Suggests Google Might Reverse Chinese Censorship In The Short Term; Meanwhile, China Ramps Up Google.com Blocks. June 7, 2006.
- Sean Michael Kerner. Is Google Evil? Internetnews.com. May 10, 2006.
- Preston Gralla. Is Google Evil? O’Reilly WindowsDevCenter. Aug. 24, 2005.
CopyCense™: The law, business, and technology of digital content. A business venture of Seso Digital LLC.
DRM Dominates Blu-Ray & HD-DVD Formats
Updates added. Original CopyCense post published June 8, 2006.
“Having grown tired of one war, we’re on the eve of another, complete with alliances, secret codes, and laser beams. The real battle isn’t between Sony and Microsoft and their chosen formats, it’s between the manufacturers and us — the consumers, the ones who ultimately pay for it all. And the battle is over Digital Rights Management (DRM), because in addition to increased storage, these new disks are packed full of copy-protection functions, some of which impair our ability to use the content we pay for, the way we like and are legally entitled to.
“Sony is championing a standard called Blu-ray, Microsoft is pushing HD-DVD. Both formats have plenty of corporate backers. The upcoming PlayStation 3 will support Blu-ray, the Xbox 360 will get an add-on drive that uses HD-DVD.
“Both standards incorporate sophisticated DRM technology. The current crop of DVDs uses a copy protection scheme that encrypts the disk, but that scheme was broken several years ago and the hack was widely incorporated in innumerable freeware DVD decryption programs. The movie studios have vowed not to let that happen to them again.”
David H. Holtzman. The DVD War Against Consumers. BusinessWeek Online. May 30, 2006.
Related Stories & Documents:
- DRM Blog. DTV + HDTV + HDMI + HDCP + DVI = BAD DRM. May 15, 2006.
Updates:
- Ken Belson. As DVD Sales Slow, Hollywood Hunts for a New Cash Cow. The New York Times. June 13, 2006.
CopyCense™: The law, business, and technology of digital content. A business venture of Seso Digital LLC.
DRM Dominates Blu-Ray & HD-DVD Formats
Updates added. Original CopyCense post published June 8, 2006.
“Having grown tired of one war, we’re on the eve of another, complete with alliances, secret codes, and laser beams. The real battle isn’t between Sony and Microsoft and their chosen formats, it’s between the manufacturers and us — the consumers, the ones who ultimately pay for it all. And the battle is over Digital Rights Management (DRM), because in addition to increased storage, these new disks are packed full of copy-protection functions, some of which impair our ability to use the content we pay for, the way we like and are legally entitled to.
“Sony is championing a standard called Blu-ray, Microsoft is pushing HD-DVD. Both formats have plenty of corporate backers. The upcoming PlayStation 3 will support Blu-ray, the Xbox 360 will get an add-on drive that uses HD-DVD.
“Both standards incorporate sophisticated DRM technology. The current crop of DVDs uses a copy protection scheme that encrypts the disk, but that scheme was broken several years ago and the hack was widely incorporated in innumerable freeware DVD decryption programs. The movie studios have vowed not to let that happen to them again.”
David H. Holtzman. The DVD War Against Consumers. BusinessWeek Online. May 30, 2006.
Related Stories & Documents:
- DRM Blog. DTV + HDTV + HDMI + HDCP + DVI = BAD DRM. May 15, 2006.
Updates:
- Ken Belson. As DVD Sales Slow, Hollywood Hunts for a New Cash Cow. The New York Times. June 13, 2006.
CopyCense™: The law, business, and technology of digital content. A business venture of Seso Digital LLC.
Washington Shows Web Companies No Love
“An impressive array of tech titans has joined the It’s Our Net coalition. Among them: Google, Yahoo, Microsoft, eBay, Amazon, and IAC/Interactive. They’re banding together to fight for rules aimed at preventing what they say would be discrimination by telephone and cable companies in directing Web traffic. The group has enlisted a diverse cadre of supporters, from the conservative Christian Coalition, to the liberal MoveOn.org, to consumer-minded groups like the Consumer Union.
“But for all that seemingly formidable firepower, the coalition has had a tough time finding support in Washington. In particular, it’s struggled to enlist the aid of the many lobbyists who can make all the difference in getting a message to the right legislator at the right time.
“Why? Established telecom and cable companies, well-versed in the ways of Washington, are sitting on the opposite side of the policy issue.”
Burt Helm. Web Titans’ D.C. Blues. BusinessWeek Online. June 8, 2006.
CopyCense™: The law, business, and technology of digital content. A business venture of Seso Digital LLC.
Netflix As Meritocratic Film Archivist
“Between The Godfather and The Godfather: Part II, Francis Ford Coppola made a movie called The Conversation. It stars Gene Hackman as a paranoid wiretapper in Watergate-era San Francisco, and the cast includes Robert Duvall, and a young Harrison Ford. The movie was nominated for best picture in 1975, and Mr. Coppola has actually called it the finest film he has ever made.
“Yet The Conversation was on its way to the movie graveyard just a few years ago. Since video stores have room for only a few thousands titles, some didn’t carry it.
“Then came Netflix. The Internet company stocks just about all of the 60,000 movies, television shows and how-to videos that are available on DVD (and that aren’t pornography). Just as important, Netflix lets users rate movies and make online recommendations to their friends. The result is a vast movie meritocracy that gives a film a second or third life simply because — get this — it’s good.”
David Leonhardt. What Netflix Could Teach Hollywood. The New York Times. June 7, 2006.
CopyCense™: The law, business, and technology of digital content. A business venture of Seso Digital LLC.