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NYTimes Article : The Tyranny of Copyright
In this Sunday’s New York Times Magazine:
The Tyranny of Copyright?
New York Times Sunday Magazine
A protest movement is forming, made up of lawyers, scholars and activists who fear that bolstering copyright protection in the name of foiling ”piracy” will have disastrous consequences for society — hindering the ability to experiment and create and eroding our democratic freedoms. This group of reformers, which Lawrence Lessig, a professor at Stanford Law School, calls the ”free culture movement,” might also be thought of as the ”Copy Left” (to borrow a term originally used by software programmers to signal that their product bore fewer than the usual amount of copyright restrictions). Lawyers and professors at the nation’s top universities and law schools, the members of the Copy Left aren’t wild-eyed radicals opposed to the use of copyright, though they do object fiercely to the way copyright has been distorted by recent legislation and manipulated by companies like Diebold. Nor do they share a coherent political ideology. What they do share is a fear that the United States is becoming less free and ultimately less creative. While the American copyright system was designed to encourage innovation, it is now, they contend, being used to squelch it.
Bush Dynasty
I’ve been hearing a lot lately about Kevin Phillips’ new book, American Dynasty: Aristocracy, Fortune, and the Politics of Deceit in the House of Bush. Looking forward to reading it.
Listen to an interview with Phillips on NPR.
Alaska Sun Dog
My dad snapped this beautiful photo of a sun dog in Alaska.
I took it last week on my way from Anchorage to Glennallen. It was about 20 below zero when I went over Eureka Summit just when the sun was rising over the mountains (about 11:00 a.m.). It was a cold trip. When I left Glennallen to return home the next day, it was 42 below. I guess global warming is taking a winter off.
P.S. If you want more details, I found this description on a web site:
“Sun dogs, also called mock suns, are colored, luminous spots caused by the refraction of light by six-sided ice crystals in the atmosphere. These bright spots form in the solar halo at points that are 22 degrees on either side of the sun and at the same elevation as the sun.”
Click the image for a larger view.
Britney has a Farah Fawcett moment (or two)
Britney utters to many unintentionally funny lines in the following article — hard to pick out just one to highlight. It was between this one and her attempt to deflect attention to Mars. Read the rest for a few good laughs.
Britney On Her Marriage: Vegas Made Me Do It
MTV.com News
“I do believe in the sanctity of marriage, I totally do,” she explained in a phone call to ‘TRL’ Wednesday, “but I was in Vegas and it took over me and things got out of hand.”
Looking at art through different glasses
Keys to online news
Plenty of newspapers require registration in exchange for viewing their online content. If you’re a regular reader of these newspapers, registering makes sense. But if you’re just following a link to a story that looks interesting and don’t want to jump through the registration hoops, the good folks at The Morning News offer salvation. Look on their masthead page for a user name and password that will get you past the gates.
Give it a try by checking out this story in the Los Angeles Times.
Gerhard Christmas Cards
My grandparents, Paul and Isabel Gerhard, started making Christmas cards in 1936, when they were living in Tokyo, Japan. This continued for 46 years, up until the year before my grandfather’s death in 1982.
The first five years — through 1940 — featured greetings from Japan and the early additions to their family, with the births of my aunts Laura, Marilyn and Sarah.
The 1941 card shows the three girls in America, after the family moved to the States less than a year before the outbreak of war between Japan and the U.S.
I love the pre-Photoshop cut-and-paste technique my grandfather often used in the cards. 1945, 1946 and 1947 are nice examples; the 1947 combo of diorama with cut-and-paste heads is one of my favorites. On the other hand, the 1949 beach scene looks a little rushed in its execution.
I suppose by posting these here I’m trying, in some small way, to make up for the fact that I don’t send out Christmas cards every year. Many thanks to Grandma and Grandpa for the Christmas memories!
Downhill Daredevils
A group of eight of us spent two days in Mazama (east of the Cascade Mountains) last weekend. The snow was great, as was the weather. X-country skiing the first day, and then a hike on snowshoes the second day. It’s been a while since I’ve gone cross-country skiing. For some in our group last weekend, it was the first time. The hill ended up being the highlight. Lots of laughs. Watch the movie (1.2 MB Quicktime movie).
More movies from the trip can be found in Photos & Flicks
From Seattle With Apologies
I’d like to offer an advance apology to my friends in Japan for the devastating tsunami that will likely hit Japan when the Pacific Northwest has another massive earthquake.
Luckily, if the 500-year-cycle prediction holds, it won’t be a problem for another 200 years or so.