Google is a publishing company. It typically believes it has the right to profit from content created by other people, even without their permission. In fact, that is their entire business model -- selling ads against content created by other people. (search is how they draw in the eyeballs, or it used to be, now they also have phones, web services, etc.)
But in this deal with the "Authors Guild" they were really overreaching. They were trying to make themselves the defacto publisher of all copyrighted works. Period. Without paying the copyright holders ("the artists and writers") a dime.
Some companies might have tried to cut deals with authors to put their books on some kind of google branded service. But not google -- they try and get the laws re-written and cut deals with large, bureaucratic organization to make their behavior legal, and then dress it all up in "Freedom."
For google, this was never about "out of print" books. They wouldn't be out of print if there was money in them. This was always about the money. Thanks to this ruling, if Google wants money from publishing books they are going to have to make deals with authors. Just like any other publishing company.
I'm talking about paid digital video as a whole, not just "subscriptions" which would be an arbitrary line to draw.
The point I'm making is these kinds of services only succeed in the marketplace when they have content deals in place with the big content providers. The story says: "this has the ability to really change the streaming market" -- I would argue that the market will go wherever the content deals are.
Amazon knows this. I bet Amazon CAN put some big content deals in place. When that happens, THEN we can talk about them changing the market.
"Sure the selection isn't that great yet but this has the ability to really change the streaming market"
Really? That sentence right there sums up why engineering types consistently fail to take on the big players in this market.
I think you have it backwards: the "selection" is EVERYTHING. Until a company shows it can make the kind of content deals Apple can with the big content creators, it will fail to gain market share.
Sounds to me like a good way for no-such-agency to get a mole in a powerful position to install backdoors in a popular line of consumer communication devices.
I don't think this exec. is going to be allowed to check in code to the main repository without anyone reviewing it.
So if your theory is correct, that the NSA wants back doors in iphones, they will need Apple mgmt to go along.
And if Apple mgmt goes along with that (who knows), then what would the NSA need this mole for?
What I'm saying is, your theory doesn't really pass Occam's razor.
Asking open source customers to break the law to use your service isn't exactly friendly to open source.
They aren't asking you to use their service. They've decided that for now, writing a custom application targeting your demographic - people who use Linux exclusively - isn't likely to be profitable for them.
There's nothing in the licenses of the open source projects they are involved with (use / contribute to) that makes this a problem.
Seems to me this is a non-issue. You just wish they would support your OS of choice. I do too. But it's not exactly scandalous that they don't.
Hmm. Okay. You may be right. The overall good-vs-evil tone of the conversation and wikileaks fixation so irked me that I kind of glossed over this.
On the other hand, if a major tech vendor releases a new service that may be something newsworthy. No? Do we not consider it news when apple or google do something new? Should we? (Maybe I don't know the answer to that!)
I guess I clicked on the story kind of hoping to find out what slashdotters think about the new service. To find out if there is anything compelling in the new service. And instead I found slashdot's wikileaks fixation annoying.
But maybe you're right, and this never should have been a story. Maybe verbatim posting of press releases is better left to the likes of cnet etc!
I've been looking for a new DNS host. And it's funny, I actually clicked on this story thinking I'd get to read some informed comments about the pluses and minuses of Amazon's new service from people who would know.
Amazon "cloud" hosting services - popular with geeks, used by employed developers everywhere.
Slashdot - a place where informed geeks talk about technical matters.
See how I could easily have made that mistake?
But I forgot, sometimes on slashdot the world is divided into "good corporations" (!?) and "evil corporations" and Amazon (for cancelling the account of a high profile customer who was violating their terms of service) has now been labeled "evil" and therefore we can't talk about their technology anymore.
Amazon does stuff I like and stuff I don't. Just like Apple, Microsoft, Oracle, et al. And just about every other corporation in technology.
Are you guys honestly implying that Amazon whipped up and rolled out this new service over the weekend to, like, change the subject re: wikileaks? Perhaps you need to take a step back and look around.
I live in Seattle and know lots of people who work at Amazon. They aren't fascists or CIA agents (as far as I know). They're geeks who program cool stuff and sell it to make a living. Amazon cloud stuff (despite the name) is cool, and of general interest to anyone who does this for a living. A new service from them is of interest to this geek, anyway.
If you worked at a web startup whose business model is to charge theaters to syndicate movie times, you would feel differently.
I am not saying google shouldn't be allowed to do this. They should. But people should understand Google's search results page is an expression of their business strategy. Not a scientific formula.
Maps and tickers are pretty clearly value-added features, as are the arithmetic operators, etc.
Google health or the patent database, on the other hand, are a little more complicated. Just a little. They are an attempt to compete with existing companies in an advertising / content business where google doesn't yet have a toehold in the market.
There's no way that the patent listing referred to in the article (999999), or the acne article, are more useful to the searcher than real algorithmic results would have been. They're not necessarily even accurate (unlike a stock ticker which is a simple data point).
Obviously google has the right to use its success in search to try and push its way into other areas of business. But it's disingenuous to claim they AREN'T doing this. They are.
Whether it's evil or not is subjective. But let's not pretend google's search results page is some kind of scientifically valid result. A lot of what they show is part of their larger business strategy, and searchers simply need to understand that when they use google's products.
Search is different. The broker analogy is more accurate -- People's expectation with a search engine is that it's giving them accurate, neutral results. It's like thinking your stock broker is guiding you to buy certain stocks based on what will give you the best retirement -- then you find out actually he's been guiding you to stocks from companies that he does business with. (familiar from recent history.)
Sure it's free speech and they're a corporation and have the right to make a profit. But there is an expectation (cultivated by google) that their results are neutral, and they aren't.
When google makes money by advertising that's business. When they make money by changing their search results in a way that is less accurate but more profitable, that's less than honest.
These 2 things are each (separately) totally legal:
(1) Having a monopoly in a certain market (as MS was legally found to do in desktop operating systems during their antitrust battle).
(2) Leveraging your powerful position in one market to try and break into another market.
Both are separately legal.
But what you can't do, legally, is BOTH things at the same time. That's what got Microsoft into trouble with the law.
The last thing google wants is for the government to make a factual determination re: #1 (do they have a monopoly on search) because if that happens #2 becomes illegal.
(And suddenly a lot of Google's other little PROJECTs start getting shut down or spun off.)
So they're going to tread carefully. Sending out blackmail letters leveraging their search muscle to influence other sites' video policies would result in the big fist of govt. coming down on their heads.
You're saying this "mom" doesn't understand or really need high end photo editing software. And she also can't afford to spend much on it.
So why should Adobe lower the price for her? She doesn't have the money or need the software. She's a lousy prospect.
So who cares if she goes out and pirates their software? That does not represent a lost sale. Adobe was never gonna have her business to begin with.
You don't "market" a product to everybody. Or if you hate the word "marketing" we can say this: you dont' create and sell a product and hope literally everybody and their brother will buy a copy for one dollar apiece. Different products appeal to different people. Photoshop is high end software programmed for people who need it and can afford to pay for it. People who aren't in the "market" for such a product because they don't understand it and can't afford it are a waste of adobe's time. Trying to appeal to them AND to the high end at the same time would result in software that is middling, and pleases no one. Adobe knows their audience, knows what it can afford, and knows how to please them.
Nothing to do with which college you went to. It's just about figuring out where the money is and not wasting your time with everyone else.
Adobe does a LOT of dumb things but Photoshop pricing isn't one of them.
Their model for Photoshop is to create hands-down the best photo editing software there is.
Their target customer pays a day's wages every year or 2 in exchange for the continued use and expansion of what is truly Best In Class software.
What you're looking for is something simpler, like Acorn (for Mac). Or something cheaper (like pirated software or, if you are ethical, and don't need a tool with a super-efficient user interface, something open source). You're right that there is a market there.
And over time, Adobe has to worry about the Acorns of the world getting better and better and competing on price for the low end of the market.
But software companies that try and compete on price with pirated copies of their own products don't stay in business very long.
noone wants to shell out $60 for 200 functions 20 of which they will use from time to time.
Personally, I'll shell out. I make a living using photoshop and I support the idea that a bunch of extremely talented software engineers ought to be able to make a living developing it.
Maybe when getting a server cert is free/easy people will do it...
I hate buying/installing SSL certs for clients. But:
How exactly are we supposed to create an "identity verification" process that's "free?"
The whole point of an SSL cert is supposed to be that someone, before issuing it, did some good old-fashioned sanity checking against the application and said, "yes, this person really IS the owner of the domain BankofSeattle.com"
How are you supposed to make that process "free?"
I wish it were easier. I do it all the time and hate it. So this is a sincere question.
But let's not assume it's ever going to be "free." Free, by necessity, means no human is putting any labor into it. Unless we are going to create an open source non-profit SSL issuing authority.
Ooh, sounds so very fun and stimulating. Any volunteers?
It's important to remember that, even though the late-2008 MacBook Pro 15 inch doesn't keep up in either colour accuracy or viewing angle with laptops from IBM/Lenovo, its display is still quite good and still falls on the right side of the line of acceptable display quality for field use by a working photographer, at least in ambient light that discourages reflections.
While at the same time, the slashdot headline says simply:
Photog Rob Galbraith Rates Macbook Pro Display "Unacceptable"
If you read the whole quote (not to mention the article), then surely you perceive my issue here.
You've expressed *your* opinion: that the MacBook Pro is not an acceptable choice for a professional photographer. Fine - go write a blog post and get timothy to link it.
But this article - the one slashdot actually liked to - says it *IS* acceptable.
Which is why I think the headline is... well, to put it kindly, a bit off the mark.
This "story" is a pretty egregious example of the slashdot submitter posting something that's utterly out of sync with the linked article (who I otherwise tend to assume is actually the blog author himself trawling for traffic).
Now, I've been around here long enough not to get all worked up and grumpy: "Jeez, slashdot editors, how about RTFA before you post these things?" Because I know it has always been this way and always Shall Be.
But nowadays, the difference is, there are other places I can go for online news and some of them actually do try to maintain some kind of quality control on submissions.
I'm not gonna disappear. I stopped taking slashdot seriously a long time ago. Now I just come for the women.
But continued relevance is at stake. Jeez, slashdot editors!
If these machines affected the outcome of the election, perhaps it is the American people (and the people of Iraq) who should be seeking punitive damages from Diebold.
some are expecting Apple to make moves away from DRM as well
Apple would love to "make moves away from DRM." Obviously they will do this as soon as the RIAA-signatory record companies make the DRM-free music available to them. The DRM is not central to Apple's business but is something the record companies forced on them to make the initial deals that created itunes.
After Jobs released the memo linked above, EMI made DRM-free music available to Apple, and Apple immediately started selling it DRM-free. Of course they'll do the same with the other labels.
I'm a dedicated, active user of Scrivener, doing a project in it right now and I can tell you, Scrivener isn't distracting -- it's that rare piece of software which just lifts you into a state of one-ness with your tools.
It never gets in the way, it's not bloated like word (which I abandoned only about 2 years ago). Scrivener is a gem. In edit mode (toggle by keyboard) I enter Flow State. Hours pass. Pages materialize.
Then when you want to zoom out, you pop open the "cork board," re-order your scenes like index cards, zoom back in on one of them and you're in the zone again.
You can even create versions of each chapter, independently from the rest of the novel.
It's like someone who really truly understood what writers need went out and learned UI design and programming. Which is what happened. Every vocation should be so lucky as to have a dedicated word processor made just for them.
Before Scrivener, my old system: 99 different files with names like "chapter14.5a_v2_late(pre-change).rtf" cluttered into a directory sorted by date modified. The new system: Scrivener.
Enjoy your sheltered life. I thought it was hype too, till it happened to me. now I hear myself ranting about "identity theft" and sometimes I stop and think, "when did I become this crackpot?"
Like anything, like war, cancer or flooding, the whole problem seems silly and irrelevant when it happens to other people. Then one day it happens to you.
I'm not comparing this to war or cancer -- but I don't think you've thought through the seriousness of this problem. Ask yourself this: What's your time worth?
What if you had to spend a hundred hours to fix this? Three hundred hours? What is 300 hours of your time worth?
What's it worth to you? to the economy at large? to your wife and family?
It's not Fox news, dude, it's real. Bury your head and feel lucky. That's the privilege of youth.
"whom we all fondly remember as Spock?"
It's a weird day when Leonard Nimoy has to be explained on slashdot.
Google is a publishing company. It typically believes it has the right to profit from content created by other people, even without their permission. In fact, that is their entire business model -- selling ads against content created by other people. (search is how they draw in the eyeballs, or it used to be, now they also have phones, web services, etc.)
But in this deal with the "Authors Guild" they were really overreaching. They were trying to make themselves the defacto publisher of all copyrighted works. Period. Without paying the copyright holders ("the artists and writers") a dime.
Some companies might have tried to cut deals with authors to put their books on some kind of google branded service. But not google -- they try and get the laws re-written and cut deals with large, bureaucratic organization to make their behavior legal, and then dress it all up in "Freedom."
For google, this was never about "out of print" books. They wouldn't be out of print if there was money in them. This was always about the money. Thanks to this ruling, if Google wants money from publishing books they are going to have to make deals with authors. Just like any other publishing company.
I'm talking about paid digital video as a whole, not just "subscriptions" which would be an arbitrary line to draw.
The point I'm making is these kinds of services only succeed in the marketplace when they have content deals in place with the big content providers. The story says: "this has the ability to really change the streaming market" -- I would argue that the market will go wherever the content deals are.
Amazon knows this. I bet Amazon CAN put some big content deals in place. When that happens, THEN we can talk about them changing the market.
"Sure the selection isn't that great yet but this has the ability to really change the streaming market"
Really? That sentence right there sums up why engineering types consistently fail to take on the big players in this market.
I think you have it backwards: the "selection" is EVERYTHING. Until a company shows it can make the kind of content deals Apple can with the big content creators, it will fail to gain market share.
The content is critical.
Nonsense. I'm sure "marketing collateral" will do the trick!
Sounds to me like a good way for no-such-agency to get a mole in a powerful position to install backdoors in a popular line of consumer communication devices.
I don't think this exec. is going to be allowed to check in code to the main repository without anyone reviewing it.
So if your theory is correct, that the NSA wants back doors in iphones, they will need Apple mgmt to go along.
And if Apple mgmt goes along with that (who knows), then what would the NSA need this mole for?
What I'm saying is, your theory doesn't really pass Occam's razor.
Asking open source customers to break the law to use your service isn't exactly friendly to open source.
They aren't asking you to use their service. They've decided that for now, writing a custom application targeting your demographic - people who use Linux exclusively - isn't likely to be profitable for them.
There's nothing in the licenses of the open source projects they are involved with (use / contribute to) that makes this a problem.
Seems to me this is a non-issue. You just wish they would support your OS of choice. I do too. But it's not exactly scandalous that they don't.
Hmm. Okay. You may be right. The overall good-vs-evil tone of the conversation and wikileaks fixation so irked me that I kind of glossed over this.
On the other hand, if a major tech vendor releases a new service that may be something newsworthy. No? Do we not consider it news when apple or google do something new? Should we? (Maybe I don't know the answer to that!)
I guess I clicked on the story kind of hoping to find out what slashdotters think about the new service. To find out if there is anything compelling in the new service. And instead I found slashdot's wikileaks fixation annoying.
But maybe you're right, and this never should have been a story. Maybe verbatim posting of press releases is better left to the likes of cnet etc!
God forbid an internet business should attempt to monetize something.
Fine, I'll bite, I can afford the karma hit.
I've been looking for a new DNS host. And it's funny, I actually clicked on this story thinking I'd get to read some informed comments about the pluses and minuses of Amazon's new service from people who would know.
Amazon "cloud" hosting services - popular with geeks, used by employed developers everywhere.
Slashdot - a place where informed geeks talk about technical matters.
See how I could easily have made that mistake?
But I forgot, sometimes on slashdot the world is divided into "good corporations" (!?) and "evil corporations" and Amazon (for cancelling the account of a high profile customer who was violating their terms of service) has now been labeled "evil" and therefore we can't talk about their technology anymore.
Amazon does stuff I like and stuff I don't. Just like Apple, Microsoft, Oracle, et al. And just about every other corporation in technology.
Are you guys honestly implying that Amazon whipped up and rolled out this new service over the weekend to, like, change the subject re: wikileaks? Perhaps you need to take a step back and look around.
I live in Seattle and know lots of people who work at Amazon. They aren't fascists or CIA agents (as far as I know). They're geeks who program cool stuff and sell it to make a living. Amazon cloud stuff (despite the name) is cool, and of general interest to anyone who does this for a living. A new service from them is of interest to this geek, anyway.
Sheesh, people.
If you worked at a web startup whose business model is to charge theaters to syndicate movie times, you would feel differently.
I am not saying google shouldn't be allowed to do this. They should. But people should understand Google's search results page is an expression of their business strategy. Not a scientific formula.
Maps and tickers are pretty clearly value-added features, as are the arithmetic operators, etc.
Google health or the patent database, on the other hand, are a little more complicated. Just a little. They are an attempt to compete with existing companies in an advertising / content business where google doesn't yet have a toehold in the market.
There's no way that the patent listing referred to in the article (999999), or the acne article, are more useful to the searcher than real algorithmic results would have been. They're not necessarily even accurate (unlike a stock ticker which is a simple data point).
Obviously google has the right to use its success in search to try and push its way into other areas of business. But it's disingenuous to claim they AREN'T doing this. They are.
Whether it's evil or not is subjective. But let's not pretend google's search results page is some kind of scientifically valid result. A lot of what they show is part of their larger business strategy, and searchers simply need to understand that when they use google's products.
Search is different. The broker analogy is more accurate -- People's expectation with a search engine is that it's giving them accurate, neutral results. It's like thinking your stock broker is guiding you to buy certain stocks based on what will give you the best retirement -- then you find out actually he's been guiding you to stocks from companies that he does business with. (familiar from recent history.)
Sure it's free speech and they're a corporation and have the right to make a profit. But there is an expectation (cultivated by google) that their results are neutral, and they aren't.
When google makes money by advertising that's business. When they make money by changing their search results in a way that is less accurate but more profitable, that's less than honest.
Mod parent up. This is exactly right --
These 2 things are each (separately) totally legal:
(1) Having a monopoly in a certain market (as MS was legally found to do in desktop operating systems during their antitrust battle).
(2) Leveraging your powerful position in one market to try and break into another market.
Both are separately legal.
But what you can't do, legally, is BOTH things at the same time. That's what got Microsoft into trouble with the law.
The last thing google wants is for the government to make a factual determination re: #1 (do they have a monopoly on search) because if that happens #2 becomes illegal.
(And suddenly a lot of Google's other little PROJECTs start getting shut down or spun off.)
So they're going to tread carefully. Sending out blackmail letters leveraging their search muscle to influence other sites' video policies would result in the big fist of govt. coming down on their heads.
Deservedly so IMHO.
Well I can see you've got capitalism all figured out. go out there and knock'em dead, tycoon!
You're saying this "mom" doesn't understand or really need high end photo editing software. And she also can't afford to spend much on it.
So why should Adobe lower the price for her? She doesn't have the money or need the software. She's a lousy prospect.
So who cares if she goes out and pirates their software? That does not represent a lost sale. Adobe was never gonna have her business to begin with.
You don't "market" a product to everybody. Or if you hate the word "marketing" we can say this: you dont' create and sell a product and hope literally everybody and their brother will buy a copy for one dollar apiece. Different products appeal to different people. Photoshop is high end software programmed for people who need it and can afford to pay for it. People who aren't in the "market" for such a product because they don't understand it and can't afford it are a waste of adobe's time. Trying to appeal to them AND to the high end at the same time would result in software that is middling, and pleases no one. Adobe knows their audience, knows what it can afford, and knows how to please them.
Nothing to do with which college you went to. It's just about figuring out where the money is and not wasting your time with everyone else.
Adobe does a LOT of dumb things but Photoshop pricing isn't one of them.
Their model for Photoshop is to create hands-down the best photo editing software there is.
Their target customer pays a day's wages every year or 2 in exchange for the continued use and expansion of what is truly Best In Class software.
What you're looking for is something simpler, like Acorn (for Mac). Or something cheaper (like pirated software or, if you are ethical, and don't need a tool with a super-efficient user interface, something open source). You're right that there is a market there.
And over time, Adobe has to worry about the Acorns of the world getting better and better and competing on price for the low end of the market.
But software companies that try and compete on price with pirated copies of their own products don't stay in business very long.
noone wants to shell out $60 for 200 functions 20 of which they will use from time to time.
Personally, I'll shell out. I make a living using photoshop and I support the idea that a bunch of extremely talented software engineers ought to be able to make a living developing it.
Maybe when getting a server cert is free/easy people will do it...
I hate buying/installing SSL certs for clients. But:
How exactly are we supposed to create an "identity verification" process that's "free?"
The whole point of an SSL cert is supposed to be that someone, before issuing it, did some good old-fashioned sanity checking against the application and said, "yes, this person really IS the owner of the domain BankofSeattle.com"
How are you supposed to make that process "free?"
I wish it were easier. I do it all the time and hate it. So this is a sincere question.
But let's not assume it's ever going to be "free." Free, by necessity, means no human is putting any labor into it. Unless we are going to create an open source non-profit SSL issuing authority.
Ooh, sounds so very fun and stimulating. Any volunteers?
While at the same time, the slashdot headline says simply:
If you read the whole quote (not to mention the article), then surely you perceive my issue here.
You've expressed *your* opinion: that the MacBook Pro is not an acceptable choice for a professional photographer. Fine - go write a blog post and get timothy to link it.
But this article - the one slashdot actually liked to - says it *IS* acceptable.
Which is why I think the headline is... well, to put it kindly, a bit off the mark.
Mod Parent up.
This "story" is a pretty egregious example of the slashdot submitter posting something that's utterly out of sync with the linked article (who I otherwise tend to assume is actually the blog author himself trawling for traffic).
Now, I've been around here long enough not to get all worked up and grumpy: "Jeez, slashdot editors, how about RTFA before you post these things?" Because I know it has always been this way and always Shall Be.
But nowadays, the difference is, there are other places I can go for online news and some of them actually do try to maintain some kind of quality control on submissions.
I'm not gonna disappear. I stopped taking slashdot seriously a long time ago. Now I just come for the women.
But continued relevance is at stake. Jeez, slashdot editors!
If these machines affected the outcome of the election, perhaps it is the American people (and the people of Iraq) who should be seeking punitive damages from Diebold.
Apple would love to "make moves away from DRM." Obviously they will do this as soon as the RIAA-signatory record companies make the DRM-free music available to them. The DRM is not central to Apple's business but is something the record companies forced on them to make the initial deals that created itunes.
After Jobs released the memo linked above, EMI made DRM-free music available to Apple, and Apple immediately started selling it DRM-free. Of course they'll do the same with the other labels.
I'm a dedicated, active user of Scrivener, doing a project in it right now and I can tell you, Scrivener isn't distracting -- it's that rare piece of software which just lifts you into a state of one-ness with your tools.
It never gets in the way, it's not bloated like word (which I abandoned only about 2 years ago). Scrivener is a gem. In edit mode (toggle by keyboard) I enter Flow State. Hours pass. Pages materialize.
Then when you want to zoom out, you pop open the "cork board," re-order your scenes like index cards, zoom back in on one of them and you're in the zone again.
You can even create versions of each chapter, independently from the rest of the novel.
It's like someone who really truly understood what writers need went out and learned UI design and programming. Which is what happened. Every vocation should be so lucky as to have a dedicated word processor made just for them.
Before Scrivener, my old system: 99 different files with names like "chapter14.5a_v2_late(pre-change).rtf" cluttered into a directory sorted by date modified. The new system: Scrivener.
Enjoy your sheltered life. I thought it was hype too, till it happened to me. now I hear myself ranting about "identity theft" and sometimes I stop and think, "when did I become this crackpot?"
Like anything, like war, cancer or flooding, the whole problem seems silly and irrelevant when it happens to other people. Then one day it happens to you.
I'm not comparing this to war or cancer -- but I don't think you've thought through the seriousness of this problem. Ask yourself this: What's your time worth?
What if you had to spend a hundred hours to fix this? Three hundred hours? What is 300 hours of your time worth?
What's it worth to you? to the economy at large? to your wife and family?
It's not Fox news, dude, it's real. Bury your head and feel lucky. That's the privilege of youth.