Domain: liberation.com
Stories and comments across the archive that link to liberation.com.
Comments · 5
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multi-modal?
I regularly read newspapers from the US, the UK, France, Germany, Spain, latin america and Denmark. IT's interesting to see them looking for different formulas to adapt to the challenges of the internet.
Several french newspapers (like Liberation and Le Monde) have tried to specialize their print and web based deliveries in such a way that the print edition offers in depth reports and analisys, while the web based portion is kept up to date with the cutting-edge-now-unfolding stuff. A few spanish papers seem to be following this trend (like El Pais).
I get the impression that danish papers don't really have a strategy, which stikes me as odd since Denmark is one of the most wired countries in the world. A lot of newspapers there seem to see their web presence as a way to publicize their paper and maybe sell a few stories, but there is no overarching strategy.
In the US you see lots of different approaches, like the Wall Street Journal which practically cut itself out of the blogging trend by keeping all of its material under lock and key except to paying subscribers, thereby insuring that their stories aren't linked to, the New York Times wants you to sell your soul to read anything, and Salon has the interesting strategy of making you watch an add to read their stuff. A kind of contract based approach.
I would really like to see a comparative study of the merits and shortcomings of different approaches. I would also like to see studies on how different reader demographics respond to different paper-web mixes. -
Re:FranceTerrorists already hit France at a chemical plant
According to Libération, the explosion was due to an accident, rather than terroristm.
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Mandrake : bought by Linux Users
This link , in French, basically states that the IPO was successful thanks to the Linux Community buying the stocks, and not the traditional investors... So it means that those users have control, people able to understand why Mandrake might not make a profit soon...
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Private copy of MUSIC is LEGAL in France
(IANA French L, but I play one on Slashdot)
According to the French legislation,
Article L. 122-5 from the Intellectual Property Code (in French, sorry)
in 2nd alinea it is said that you can copy non-software intellectual property for the private use of the copist.
(and it's the same text that allows fair use, in alinea 3.)
about twenty years ago (when audio tape appeared), the definition of "the copist" was refined to be "the owner of the copying apparatus".
For instance, you can copy CD albums to run them in your car CD player, as long as you still own the CD burner.
a few years ago, when CD burners were REALLY expensive, "CD copy center" shops appeared, where you brought your cd to copy, they selled you the balnk CD, and copied it for a fee. it was a fringe case of private copy, and the finally were shut down...
and to answer to another post, it won't be a govnernment office who will administrate the tax, it'a a small company (which already gets the taxes from analogic blank media) the SORECOP
it's due to get about 700 M FF(106 M Euro) in 2001 woth of taxes and it's been obfuscating (sp?) its accounting data since 1996.
there's a article (in French) on this here :
http://www.liberation.com/quotidien/debats/septemb re99/990906f.html
Bazoungus.
(french and late at work) -
More Freenet interviewsFrom here:
June 30, 2000: MP3 Summit Ian at MP3 Summit webcast
You can find Ian's hour long talk at the MP3 Summit about 1 hour 8 minutes into the Wednesday webcast.June 16, 2000: Guardian Free market fight for music moguls
Interesting article in a British national newspaper.May 27, 2000: LA Weekly Genie 1, Bottle 0
Very amusing article on Freenet and copyright. Highly recommended.May 24, 2000: Channel 4 News Hackers stay one step ahead
A very cool news item talking about recent attempts by the British government to censor the Internet and how Freenet will make this very difficult. Includes text and streaming video of the item.May 23, 2000: Libération L'anarchie est au bout du clavier
An interesting French article about Freenet, concentrating on the freedom of information aspects of the system rather than just copyright.May 12, 2000: National Post Napster secured page in Internet history
Interesting description of why Freenet is not vulnerable in the same way that Napster is, although I must say that their "final thought" is slightly perplexing!May 12, 2000: O'Reilly Network Gnutella and Freenet represent true technological innovation
A nice article concentrating, for a change, on the technical side of Freenet and Gnutella. Reasonably accurate, although it understates the efficiency improvement that Freenet should provide (describing it as of comparable efficiency to the WWW where it should be much more efficient).May 12, 2000: Het Nieuwsblad Vrijheid van downloaden
A Belgian article about Freenet.May 10, 2000: Houston Chronicle Software developer pledges to foil all intellectual property watchdogs
A version of the article below, doesn't require that you register.May 10, 2000: New York Times The Concept of Copyright Fights for Internet Survival
One of the better articles; concentrates on the copyright issue. Requires free registration.April 27, 2000: PCFormat Daily FreeNet
A brief article on Freenet.April 27, 2000: Heise News-Ticker World Wide Anarchy: Netz ohne Kontrolle
A German article on Freenet.April 26, 2000: CNET.com Free, anonymous information on the anarchists' Net
Entertaining article with some nice quotes.April 17, 2000: The Irish Times Anarchy Rules Alternative Web
A rather amusing article on Freenet.April 16, 2000: Freshmeat Client As Server: The New Model
An interesting article discussing distributed systems and how systems like Freenet are actually in a similar spirit to the original Internet.April 13, 2000: El País Freenet propone una red sin censuras, alternativa a la WWW
A Spanish article about Freenet.April 10, 2000: Slashdot.org FreeNet's Ian Clarke Answers Privacy Questions
A very informative interview conducted by the readership of SlashDot.org, probably the closest thing to a FAQ, aside from our faq.March 25, 2000: ABC News Freedom on the Net?
A rehash of the New Scientist article below, but likely to reach a much larger audience.March 25, 2000: New Scientist Out of control
A "big bad Internet"-style article, but it is reasonably well researched and seeks the opinions of those who might be considered Freenet's opposition.March 23, 2000: Heise.de Ein Netzwerk, das Zensur unmöglich machen soll
A German article on Freenet.March 14, 2000: OLinux Freenet, a polemic concept to deal with WWW
An English translation of a Brazilian interview with Ian Clarke. Focuses on the technical aspects of Freenet, and goes into a reasonable amount of detail as to how the system works.March 10, 2000: Webwereld Anoniem Freenet ultieme schuilplaats voor piraten
A Dutch article on Freenet. My Dutch is a little rusty but it looks like it is primarily inspired by the Wired article below.March 8, 2000: no spoon FreeNet : le réseau anonyme distribué qui supplantera le Web
An excellent French article on Freenet, draws an interesting parallel between Freenet and the writings of Neal Stephenson.March 3, 2000: Need To Know sufficiently advanced technology: the gathering
A brief but excellent article again approaching Freenet from a pro-freedom standpoint.February 24, 2000: PigDog Journal Get in on the Ground Floor of Freedom
A very positive little article describing Freenet and why they think it is interesting using some rather "colorful" language.August 14, 1999: Brave Gnu World FreeNET
One of the first articles about Freenet back when it was 100% theory. Still an excellent introduction to the way Freenet works.