My review of the “Elvis at 21: Photographs by Alfred Wertheimer” exhibition at the Los Angeles Grammy Museum. Photograph © 2010 j.r.mchale
The New York Times on which categories of articles are most likely to hit their most emailed list
The New York Times on which categories of articles are most likely to hit their most emailed list
According to the Times, “the results are surprising … people preferred e-mailing articles with positive rather than negative themes, and they liked to send long articles on intellectually challenging topics. Perhaps most of all, readers wanted to share articles that inspired awe, an emotion that the researchers investigated after noticing how many science articles made the list.”
Five Dials literary magazine celbrates David Foster Wallace
Five Dials literary magazine celbrates David Foster Wallace
A special issue of Hamish Hamilton’s literary magazine Five Dials presents “A celebration of the life of David Foster Wallace with contributions by Don DeLillo, Jonathan Franzen, Zadie Smith, George Saunders and others.” Free email subscription required in order to obtain the pdf.
I have a soft spot for artwork that involves text. A review of the new book “Art and Text” at I Love Typography. From the review: “It covers works that include some text, are made up of text, or are text. The subject of these works is often the intersection of art, philosophy, and linguistics. While a few older works are shown, the focus of the book is 1960–2008 with most of the work from the latter decades.”
FBI wants records kept of websites visited
FBI wants records kept of websites visited
From CNET: “The FBI is pressing Internet service providers to record which websites customers visit and retain those logs for two years … FBI Director Robert Mueller supports storing Internet users’ ‘origin and destination information,’ a bureau attorney said at a federal task force meeting”
“Any new government policy that requires the hiring of lawyers and accountants will not lead to new jobs” – Mark Cuban
Writing in his Blog Maverick: “The simplest way to create more jobs is to allow small business and entrepreneurs to spend less time and money on lawyers and accountants and redirect that intellectual and financial capital to the core competencies of their business. Any new government policy that requires the hiring of lawyers and accountants will not lead to new jobs, it will lead to time and money being wasted and fewer jobs being created.”
A Free Internet, If We Can Keep It
A Free Internet, If We Can Keep It
Ed Felten of Princeton and the “Freedom to Tinker” blog addressing Senator Clinton’s sort-of attack on online anonymity: “This is a common pattern: Given a difficult technology policy problem, lawyers will tend to seek technology solutions and technologists will tend to seek legal solutions. (Paul Ohm calls this ‘Felten’s Third Law’.) It’s easy to reject non-solutions in your own area because you have the knowledge to recognize why they will fail; but there must be a solution lurking somewhere in the unexplored wilderness of the other area.”
Twitter Plans Technology to Prevent Censorship
Twitter Plans Technology to Prevent Censorship
Possible? Realistic? From the Financial Times: “Evan Williams, the chief executive and co-founder of Twitter, which has been credited with helping anti-government protesters in Iran to organise resistance, said Twitter was working on ‘interesting hacks’ to stop any blocking by foreign governments.”
Twitter Libel Suit Dismissed
Horizon Group Management, of Chicago, had filed a libel lawsuit against a former tenant who tweeted “Who said sleeping in a moldy apartment was bad for you? Horizon realty thinks it’s okay.”
According to law.com: “Other high-profile Twitter defamation cases are pending. For example, a clothing designer sued rock star Courtney Love in Los Angeles County, Calif., Superior Court in March alleging defamation, invasion of privacy and infliction of emotional distress because of a serious of unflattering tweets that Love wrote about her. A judge declined to throw out the suit in October.”
See also: http://www.businessinsider.com/illinois-court-rules-tweet-non-libelous-babble-2010-1
Larry Lessig: “For the Love of Culture: Google, Copyright and Our Future”
Larry Lessig: “For the Love of Culture: Google, Copyright and Our Future”
“I only know that the two extremes that are before us would, each of them, if operating alone, be awful for our culture. The one extreme, pushed by copyright abolitionists, that forces free access on every form of culture, would shrink the range and the diversity of culture. I am against abolitionism. And I see no reason to support the other extreme either—pushed by the content industry—that seeks to license every single use of culture, in whatever context. That extreme would radically shrink access to our past.
Instead we need an approach that recognizes the errors in both extremes, and that crafts the balance that any culture needs: incentives to support a diverse range of creativity, with an assurance that the creativity inspired remains for generations to access and understand.”
Wired: In the Next Industrial Revolution, Atoms are the New Bits
Wired: In the Next Industrial Revolution, Atoms are the New Bits
“The tools of factory production, from electronics assembly to 3-D printing, are now available to individuals, in batches as small as a single unit. Anybody with an idea and a little expertise can set assembly lines in China into motion with nothing more than some keystrokes on their laptop. A few days later, a prototype will be at their door, and once it all checks out, they can push a few more buttons and be in full production, making hundreds, thousands, or more. They can become a virtual micro-factory, able to design and sell goods without any infrastructure or even inventory; products can be assembled and drop-shipped by contractors who serve hundreds of such customers simultaneously.”
Problem in Search of a Business: Future Safe Archives
Problem in Search of a Business: Future Safe Archives
Dave Winer: “Every time a relative passes this issue comes front and center for me. Most other times it’s just lurking in the shadows. We need one or more institutions that can manage electronic trusts over very long periods of time. The institutions need to be long-lived and have the technical know-how to manage static archives.”
io9: Twenty Best Science Fiction Books of the ’00’s
The CPM has done more to stunt innovation and drag down quality products than any single thing on the Internet
Jonathan Zittrain speaking about “Minds for Sale” presented by CodeX: Stanford Center for Computers and the Law
In their words: 32 Experts weigh in on Mac vs. PC security
Citizen Media Law Project: Primer on Copyright Liability and Fair Use
Citizen Media Law Project: Primer on Copyright Liability and Fair Use
The Citizen Media Law Project’s short primer on copyright and fair use in the context of citizen media.
Copyright Law Blogs: A List (by popularity)
The EFF Blogger’s Legal Guide
The EFF’s basic online guide, basic online guide including legal liability issues, issues associated with bloggers as journalists, etc.