Don't Ask Me!

Consumer Retorts: Rants and Raves on the Business of Self- and Home-Improvement

Monday, November 27, 2006

DVD copyright rule updates

The U.S. Copyright Office just announced six new exemptions to copyright law. One of them permits professors to break copy protection on DVDs in order to make compilations to use in class. The AP covered the story:

The exemption granted to film professors authorizes the breaking of the CSS copy-protection technology found in most DVDs. Programs to do so circulate widely on the Internet, though it has been illegal to use or distribute them.

The professors said they need the ability to create compilations of DVD snippets to teach their classes - for example, taking portions of old and new cartoons to study how animation has evolved. Such compilations are generally permitted under "fair use" provisions of copyright law, but breaking the locks to make the compilations has been illegal.

Hollywood studios have argued that educators could turn to videotapes and other versions without the copy protections, but the professors argued that DVDs are of higher quality and may preserve the original colors or dimensions that videotapes lack.

"The record did not reveal any alternative means to meet the pedagogical needs of the professors," [Librarian of Congress James H.] Billington wrote.

"U.S. Copyright Office issues new rights" by ANICK JESDANUN, AP Internet Writer


The Library of Congress' official "Rulemaking on Exemptions from Prohibition on Circumvention of Technological Measures that Control Access to Copyrighted Works" says:

The Librarian of Congress, on the recommendation of the Register of Copyrights, has announced the classes of works subject to the exemption from the prohibition against circumvention of technological measures that control access to copyrighted works. Persons making noninfringing uses of the following six classes of works will not be subject to the prohibition against circumventing access controls (17 U.S.C. § 1201(a)(1)) during the next three years.

1. Audiovisual works included in the educational library of a college or university's film or media studies department, when circumvention is accomplished for the purpose of making compilations of portions of those works for educational use in the classroom by media studies or film professors.


http://www.copyright.gov/1201

Sunday, November 26, 2006

southern california

can evoke your contempt, but it certainly gets under your skin. everything is seems so easy. everyone else's car is so clean. It was the Thanksgiving season and we were supposed to give thanks, but academia, as I have known for a long time is filled with ingrates. Trying to rise above it all is also tiring. So I suppose one needs to lose oneself in work and enjoy the good weather, which I do, I do!

Sunday, November 19, 2006

tim wu's manifesto

It's time for a dumpling revolution (Slate Magazine)

Saturday, November 18, 2006

xmas is almost here...


This gift is good for parents and kids: Aquapets will make your holiday season very, very merry. Whoever invented this "interactive" toy is a genius of non-normative toy on toy joy....

Monday, November 13, 2006

David Bowie and String Theory

I just bought a CD compilation 1980 - 1987, and everything about the past rushed back at me, making me realize that string theory's speculations about time travel must be true. I had a recent experience of this with CSNY's Harlequin Lover too.

Little tiny, subatomic strings are dancing in a place where time has absolutely no meaning.

Friday, November 10, 2006

irony font

who sai there was no more irony? the Right Was Right is funny, right>?

sans parole

Robert Gates and Iran-Contra

Boing Boing has a predictably short-circuited but still interesting entry on Robert Gates' history in the Iran-Contra affair

James Carville vs. the Deaniacs, and the Deaniacs win!

Internecine warfare in the Democratic Party has begun... with the media plugged in elite represented by the ever slicker James Carville and the netroots + Howard Dean + economic populists duking it out over who should lead the Dems now. Carville wants Harold Ford who LOST his election in Tennessee despite his Bible thumping to replace Dean.

I saw Carville on CNN refusing to believe that the Dems would win the Senate. His smarmy punditry was inaccurate and uninteresting. If you got something so wrong in any other profession, there would be consequences, but not when you live in pundit heaven.

So let's just say that no one in the Carville camp, including Carville believed that the Deaniac led Dems could do take both house and Senate, but they did. And now the Carville/Clinton faction wants leadership of the Party.

Thursday, November 09, 2006

Olbermann's Election Night

Olbermann did a Run Down Of Memorable Election Night Moments

The Left must not Give an Inch on Reason

The Right promotes massive irrationality, but to counter this, we cannot merely defend self-preservation and self-interest. The Right has no proportion in its thinking -- there are too many prosperous Orange Coounty types who resent illegal immigrants and think that they are sucking on the social welfare teat. But thinking like this makes them UNHAPPY...because even in distorted form, they have Utopian aspirations. But their rage aganst the system is something we should not underestimate, especially after this recent setback.

Tuesday, November 07, 2006

take your votes to the cleaner

Liveblogging with a drink in my hand: EXCELLENT news from NY 20 and Montana

Dear Montana and Voters of our former home, NY District 20:

Thank you for voting against the Conrad Burns and John Sweeney respectively. Despite my general lack of enthusiasm for the Democrats and what they are able to articulate as a position, Burns' early lead and John Sweeney's loss in Dutchess County are warming my heart. I only wish I could have voted in Rhinebeck today. Our democratic congressman has no chance in this red, red county.

I'm just wondering what the H is going on in Virginia? Was Jim Webb such a poor candidate? Give me some insight here about how Allen can be doing as well as he is...he is speaking on CNN rather graciously and so I am wondering again, what is Webb doing?

OK at 10:09, it looks as if Jim Webb has pulled ahead and that George Allen is not the clown I thought he was, but a rather well spoken, but crypto-reactionary candidate, that is some one who can speak about democracy and freedom (stimulating your frontal lobes) while massaging your lizard brain.

It will be a long night, so I may turn in...I am not elated, but I think raising the minimum wage, which is already higher here in CA than in the rest of the country will be a start. This is also when I start to miss MN where I felt a deep intimacy with the middle of this country....

And New York elects Elliot Spitzer, one of the few bright lights in the past ten years...I'm jealous...we've got the Governator.

Ipod the new Orality? and other strange announcements

UCI Humanitech sponsored a panel called "From the Iliad to the Ipod" for which I was the respondent.

It is available as a podcast at the url above.

Sunday, November 05, 2006

US Presidential Speeches Tag Cloud - Chirag Mehta : chir.ag

Check out US Presidential Speeches Tag Cloud for a sense of history and rhetoric

Saturday, November 04, 2006

Bush more dangerous than Kim Jong-il

British voters see George Bush as a greater danger to world peace than either the North Korean leader, Kim Jong-il, or the Iranian president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. Both countries were once cited by the US president as part of an "axis of evil", but it is Mr Bush who now alarms voters in countries with traditionally strong links to the US.

A front page story in the Guardian sums up surveys carried out by The Guardian in Britain and leading newspapers in Israel (Haaretz), Canada (La Presse and Toronto Star) and Mexico (Reforma), using professional local opinion polling in each country.

Thursday, November 02, 2006

good news/bad news

the good news: it looks as if the dems will win at least the house next week

the bad news: it looks as if the dems will win at least the house next week...

I say this because American voters are going to expect some kind of miraculous change in Iraq and if a Democratic Congress can make any changes (like investigating Halliburton and Kellog Brown and Root), it is going to be incremental change...decreased corruption may make a slight difference in how the war is going, but it isn't going to lead to peace and prosperity on the banks of Tigris and immediate American withdrawal.

I'm depressed by this whole thing..because I suppose there shouldn't be tossups right now. There should be massive national consensus that the Republicans have failed to govern.

The positive side of this whole thing is that Congressional Pages are safer from heavy breathing SMS's than they were two months ago...I am not sure about the rest of us.