One in Ten Thousand.

The Silicon Alley Insider raises an important question, with regard to Radiohead's testimony against RIAA in a case against a college student: Would Radiohead be able to take that stance if they hadn't sold millions, "without the protection and promotion of an RIAA that Radiohead now blithely dismisses"? But while arguing RIAA's importance with regard to the vast majority of musicians is mildly amusing in its fallacy, the article doesn't stop there:
We love Radiohead, but we're not sure if the band realizes they're superstars, and the normal rules don't apply to them anymore. The band's "pay what you want" idea for the In Rainbows album may have been successful, but for every one Radiohead there's ten thousand would-be rock stars selling CDs out of the trunks of their car (or MP3s on some little-visited web site) and starving.
So, one Radiohead per ten thousand would-be rock stars. Apparently the authors ignore that this is exactly the status quo that the RIAA nurtured in decades past, exactly what the internet, mp3, file sharing and indeed Radiohead's testimony help change: total control over music promotion, repertoire selection, bias in favour of genres/artists by a few multinational corporations aimed at nothing more than profit maximisation. Put another way: A small minority of artists getting all the exposure [and some of them going bankrupt despite the megacorps' multi-million contracts], while millions more being unable to promote their music, make money, live off it. Those same approaches that have led to a just few hundred artists getting millions and the rest starving. If anything, testifying against the RIAA, especially if you've attained superstar status, goes against that. Lastly, Radiohead --- whether you like or dislike their music --- have proven their artistic integrity as well as their popularity time and again, most certainly without RIAAs help. There's no doubt that the interests of musicians around the world should be protected; RIAA never did that and most probably never will.

That's not how Western democracies work

Dealing with illegal file-sharing is a job for the police. It is their job to enforce the law. Now we have given private corporations the legal right to go after our civilians. That's not how Western democracies work.[...] In a study, 80% of people thought we shouldn't go after file-sharers. But ask them how they feel about taking money out of the pockets of musicians, authors or artists and that number falls by a significant amount. Ultimately we have to change peoples perception on file-sharing.
Indeed we do. But most importantly we have to change executives' in those media multinationals perception on culture, art, freedom of communication and privacy as well as protect our liberties from unbounded profit and greed. If file sharing did anything, besides rendering the status quo obsolete, it was to bring to the spotlight on how slanted and unfair the media industry is: favouring less than 1% of the artists globally, fixing prices to maximise profit, compromising on our very own cultural foundations through the systematic, condescending promotion of junk while at the same time making thousands of executives rich for no reason whatsoever. There's no doubt that stealing is bad, although I'm not so sure that not-for-profit sharing of digital copies is. What I am sure about is that what the industry is accustomed to doing --- and keeps trying to achieve, now through the institutions --- is worse.

Το Στοίχημα της Πληροφορίας.

Σύμφωνα με εκτιμήσεις, μέσα στο 2009 θα ‘παραχθούν’ 4-5 exabytes — δηλαδή τέσσερα με πέντε εκατομμύρια terabytes — νεας, μοναδικής πληροφορίας παγκοσμίως από ιδιώτες και επιχειρήσεις, εξαιρώντας αυτή που παράγεται σε μεγάλα επιστημονικά κέντρα στα πλαίσια ερευνητικών προγραμμάτων (βλ. CERN) ή κυβερνήσεων. Στην εποχή των πολλαπλών διαθέσιμων Terabytes για οικιακή χρήση στην Ευρώπη, τις ΗΠΑ […]

Bye bye Last.fm

It's not that they are asking for money to keep themselves going. No, they are --- and have been for a time --- owned by CBS. It's not even that they put it like this on their blog ("promise that we’ll be hard at work improving the service for years to come."), but it's mostly that they are so keen to discriminate, they've been doing it for a while (see geographically-limited iPhone app, geographically-limited free radio service etc.) and now they will make their service unattainable for so many worldwide. Pandora was the better of the two services. Last.fm was the more 'decent' one (socially) and apparently the savviest one from a business point of view as it managed to keep the service available worldwide for longer. The change to Last.fm radio will probably mean the end of the service for many users outside of the three countries that will keep enjoying it for free. For me, I guess my subscription will not be renewed.

Leading the way!

Towards a thoroughly electronic Police State. As if more cameras per capita than any place in the world were not enough, the UK's frightening databases on…well, practically everything are handsomely presented by the Beeb. And some of the data there is, apparently, stored illegally. It's surprising why this is not a cover story on the BBC web site. Does Britain really want its government to know so much?

iPhoneOS 3.0

Ανακοινώθηκε αργά μέσ’την ημέρα (ώρα Ελλάδος) προχθές, γρήγορα έφτασε στα χέρια χιλιάδων εγγεγραμμένων προγραμματιστών για iPhone. Το νεο λειτουργικό προσφέρει πολλά, τόσο σε χρήστες όσο και στους ανθρώπους που σχεδιάζουν και αναπτύσσουν εφαρμογές για τη συσκευή. Για τη χώρα μας ιδιαίτερου ενδιαφέροντος φυσικά αποτελεί το ελληνικό πληκτρολόγιο, το οποίο περιλαμβάνει την ίδια τεχνολογία αυτόματης διόρθωσης […]