Lawrence Lessig to Leave Copyright Sphere
brandonY writes "The founder of Creative Commons, the Stanford lawyer behind the 'Eldred v. Ashcroft' case, and the author of 'Code' has spent the last 10 years working tirelessly on behalf of limited copyright terms, net neutrality, and the public domain. Tuesday, Lawrence Lessig announced on his blog that he has "decided to shift my academic work, and soon, my activism" from fighting the good fight for the public domain to fighting the good fight against corruption and the influence of big money's effects on legislation in general."
Here's 50 "donations" to start with:D 000000128&ContribID=U0000000007&Display=ID
http://www.opensecrets.org/orgs/topindivs.asp?ID=
More:p ?txtName=Walt+Disney+Co&txtUltOrg=y&txtCycle=2005& txtSort=name
http://www.opensecrets.org/softmoney/softcomp2.as
http://www.opensecrets.org/ is full of such records of "donations" made on behalf of Disney.
And that's just one website.
Now ask for something hard to find.
;)
Resistance is futile. Your technological distinctiveness will be added to our own. You will become one with the morgue
Since Lessig admires Gore, it is worth pointing out that the three biggesst setbacks for the public domain (DMCA, 1998 Bono Extension, URAA) were signed by Clinton.
What does that have to do with Gore? As VP, his only legislative duty was to break ties in the Senate.
It does not help my impression of Gore either to get the Inconvinient DVD that says "share" this movie with your friends, while the movie starts with a $250,000 FBI threat against sharing the movie.
Did Gore insert that FBI notice? Was it his responsibility to ensure that it was either present or removed? Of course not. It was included by the distributor, as they all are.
When they said "share", they meant "repurchase". Sales are more important than the message, I guess.
Oh please. Go find some real points.
This is a surprising comment to me, given the general political awareness and libertarian leanings on slashdot. Not only has it been seriously discussed, it has been implemented in places. In Arizona, for example, statewide candidates have the option to run publicly funded campaigns due to an initiative that passed a few years ago. They must collect a certain number of $5 donations to qualify, then they get a set amount for the primary, and another set amount for the general election. If someone decides to go the private-funded route, whatever money they raise is matched dollar for dollar in the public fund.
There are a number of glaring problems with it:
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Are you referring to the fractional reserve banking system as the source of new money? I just recently came across that, thanks to someone's sig line on here, which pointed to the "Money as Debt" instructional animation at http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-905047436 2583451279 which is incredibly illuminating. It did take me a few weeks to prove to myself that it isn't bullshit though, and it helped that I have a friend who loan officer at a bank and he believes in the current system. He played a great devil's advocate.
Eugene Debs: "Money constitutes no proper basis of civilization"
What incentive do I have to do that though? There's going to be an election either way, hell it's probably better that very little money is going to be spent on it. If my donation isn't going to give my candidate a competitive advantage there's just no reason for me to do it.
Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!