Making Content More Valuable or Stealing Revenue?
TechDirt has an interesting look at the short history of complaints over meta content delivery and traffic generation. Looking at everything from complaints over Google's Print program to RSS companies delivering ads on someone else's content the article begs the question, where should the line be drawn? One of the examples, Jason Calacanis of Weblogs Inc., even chimed in as one of the first few comments.
Let's get to the root here. If this works, I'm going to sue Mozilla - maker of Firefox - because their program presents my blog to people. Ahh..no I'm going to sue Microsoft for making IE which does the same thing. And they have more money.
How do you define ... non-commercial use in this context?
This is the question I've always had with creative commons: just what counts as non-commercial? If I take a BY-NC image off flickr, and want to use it in my blog, is that OK? What if I have google ads on my blog? Is that still OK? Does it make any difference if I'm actually making a profit or not? I've gone so far as to email some of the CC lawyers about this issue, and there seems to be no clear answer.
-Grey
Silver Clipboard: Time Management Tips
I was talking about how the networking modell kills the current copyright model.
Partly this is what I ment. Wouldn't it be so much easier if we just didn't have to put up with all this copyright mess (because frankly, most of these services are good things to exist)?
Content == Information. Someone else's information? That is only a valid phrase if noone else has that information. AKA, content creators should be only compensated for that and not given distribution rights afterwards.
It takes a man to suffer ignorance and smile
Be yourself no matter what they say
begs for trouble.
It's my browser - I'll decide. I'll decide if I want to block ads, look at RSS feeds, remix data from multiple sites into one Firefox tab etc. That's one of the things content providers have to deal with - that once the content is out there, it's usable by anyone in any way. It's not like they can do anything about it.
Reduce, reuse, cycle
Maybe a slash coder could add something to red-flag Slashdot editors when the phrase "begs the question" appears in a summary?
http://begthequestion.info/
http://www.glasswings.com/
How many times are we going to improperly use the phrase "begs the question?" Every time it happens, around 25% of whatever thread it was gets taken up by posts discussing its proper use. You think people on Slashdot would take this opportunity to learn something about proper usage.
It shows just how little of the forum discussions people submitting these stories read, either that or they're just doing it as a joke now.
Or, they could just be really fucking dumb.
It's almost as if the people submitting the stories care about nothing except seeing their name on Slashdot's front page every day. They spend so much time trolling for submittable news links on the internet that they can't be bothered to actually read the site itself, because if they DID, they wouldn't make this mistake roughly five hundred times a week.
A lot of money has been invested in creating messages to be disseminated across the 'Net. Additional money has bee invested in making these messages attractive, and in enhancing the reputation of the creators and authors. Now some sleazeball desseminates the message at a lower tier, and packs it with adds, thus diminishing the value of the original investment on one hand, and possibly marginally increasing the value on the other. I can see the points on both sides. Unfortunately, once the vehicle has left the showroom it gets scratches.
Hmmm... Suppose Bob takes a great picture of a pretty girl in a bikini and uses it to promote his photography. Suppose a notorious porn site uses only the headshot portion and even provides a link back to Bob's site.
On the other hand, suppose a site that is a directory for photographers uses Bob's picture to provide a link to his photography site.
Somehow I would think it's appropriate for Bob to be able to get the picture removed from the site that makes him look like a pornographer, but that means he also has the right to get it removed from the directory if he wishes.
Bob should have the right to control his picture, but unfortunately, it has left the showroom.
Keep in mind, we have a different situation if one or the other downstream sites has purchased the right to use the picture as they see fit.
Hmmm. If I purchase a print of Bob's picture, do I have the right to cut it up, paint over it and make derivative art? (Maybe, it depends on my written agreement with Bob.) I certainly have the right to take a picture of it and keep it in my insurance records to record my household goods. Do I have a right to make copies and give it to my friends, even if some of them actually go out and buy signed print later on? (That would be enhancing the value, wouldn't it?) If I don't charge for it, it's not a commercial venture, right?
Sorry, folks, but I think the author should retain the rights.
"The mind works quicker than you think!"
"Where the line is drawn" is thinking like a kid would.
There's no line: there are business models, with different objectives and different strategies. There's different perceptions, and different fears.
Ultimately, if there IS a line, it's different for every single person/company and will change for every product in time due to a number of factors, even someone's current mood.
There's no point guessing, no one is THAT smart. Just let things balance our and wherever it goes, it goes.
The more productive thinking would be "where I draw the line for MY content" and "how I can use the current situation to profit with my content".
Stop abusing this phrase. It just makes you sound illiterate. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Begging_the_question
It's obviously stealing revenue. I mean, I've got over $200,000,000.00 in a box at home that I've saved (I mean, stolen) because of piracy. All those media cartels are right: pirates have collectively stolen trillions of dollars from them over the past few decades. Check under your beds; you'll probably find a big box of money like I did.
I think it works like this:
Try it (not that I am advocating stealing, mind you). It's amazing! And all this money is coming straight out of the bank accounts of various media cartels. I think it has something to do with that "voodoo economics" I heard about a few years back.
I don't know why it doesn't work when you steal shows or movies over the TV, or music over the radio. Maybe because it's older technology and the media cartels put anti-theft technology in it, and with computers they have yet to do so because that's newer technology.
Oh, crap. I just thought of something. I just posted this on Slashdot! Now thousands of people will be stealing it from me! That's what I get for posting my two cents worth of intellectual property. :(
Modern copyright is theft of culture from everyone and it retards the progress of the useful arts and sciences.
I think the bigger issue is still the concept of 'owning' an idea. Most economic activities - including things like licenses, etc. - are based on the idea of scarcity. I'm still not convinced that ideas are scarce goods, and therefore all the conventional economic thought doesn't really apply.
What are, to some extent, scarce are the idea producers. The thing that scares "the industry" is that it is now with unprecedented ease that ideas can be developed and disseminated; the 'idea producer' is now not as scarce as it once was. This is the problem - when people before said they were protecting 'ideas' they were really protecting the equipment and expertise to generate those ideas - now expertise and equipment are so readily available that the value of 'thinking' is actually becoming diluted - it's really just the old supply and demand situation.
"There are a dozen opinions on a matter until you know the truth. Then there is only one." - CS Lewis (paraprhase)
For the love of god, STOP ABUSING THIS TERM. I don't think I've once seen it used properly in my 4 years of reading /., and I doubt I missed much before that. Begging the question is a logical fallacy that invalidates the subsequent argument. This article raises a perfectly legitimate question that follows naturally from the preceding information.
/.-friendly terms: "Begs the question. You keep using that term. I do not think it means what you think it means."
Or, to put in in more
"Begs the question. You keep using that term. I do not think it means what you think it means."
Look, language changes over time. "Begs the question" now means "Leads one naturally to ask the question". "Moot" means "NOT worthy of discussion or debate". "Inflammable" means "flammable". Accept it.
Google should take them literally. Since Google makes money by selling ads on searches, Google sshould interpret their request as one to remove all their material from all their sites. This would opt them out ofg the worlds top search engine - at their own request. I wonder whether they would like becoming invisible to half the users on the Net.
Consciousness is an illusion caused by an excess of self consciousness.
R u saiing dat dis 's also a natral evolusion o englsih?
I have nothing to say.
Not this (right) side of the atlantic, it doesn't. "Begging the question" is, and always has been, a precise term for a particular logical error. You are attempting to foorce a change in the language to match your own particular taste; I and others will fight back with what is not only historicalusage but our everyday usage. (Likewise with your usage of moot. Inflammable has never meant non-flammable; it means capable of being inflamed, rendered into flames. The in- prefix has two sources, one meaning not from Greek and one meaning into or towards from Latin - this is the latter).
Consciousness is an illusion caused by an excess of self consciousness.
[blockquote]the point is, that a company like Google and its google of lawyers gets away with murder... if I started a company today that jsut copied books, videos and websites and displayed then on my URL... there would be a 3 second trial that would result in my hanging.[/blockquote]
I just bought myself a scanner. I'm going to get every book I can lay my hands on, and scan them into my computer system in it's entirety. Then I'm gonna open a kiosk downtown and, for the grand price of $1.99, I'm going to let anybody who wants to do a search on titles, authors, phrases - whatever they want.
When they get a match, my system will print out a list of all the stores in town that will sell them the book in question - and I'll even throw in the price of the book into the printout.
Now -just how bloody long do you think it will take for EVERY BOOKSTORE IN TOWN to be clamoring after me to make sure that I have their entire up-to-date pricelist?
About 30 seconds, max. Becuase I'm NOT "stealing their revenue". I'm NOT making money by illegally copying their content. I'm providing a service - and that service ENHANCES the value of their business, and will increase their sales.
The only judge what would even think about convicting me would be the one who just received the FOAD letter from the 37th publisher refusing to publish the gripping courtroom drama he's been writing since collage.
yeah its Google employees that read this ... if you made 12 mill in stock for coding a a page scraper you would be in on the cover up also :) wait till the men in black show up at my door :)
I already have the Pentium disco guys after me and I'm pretty sure I saw the blue man group in my drive way last week...so this is about par for the course..
yeah and you know what, I think I'm gonna take star wars episode 1 and edit out that lizard donkey thing that they thought was a-kin to an ewok... its enhancing the value... since apparently in your opinion.. thats not for the copyright holder to determine :)