Monthly Archives: April 2007

The Note: Notably boring

Apparently, by “The Note is undergoing some changes”, you meant “we are sucking the life out of The Note”. This is horrible.

Posted by: hoodwich 12:37 PM
ABC News: The Note Is Ready

After a long hiatus, ABC News The Note, the daily missive from the Political Unit, has been reintroduced, and its a serious loss for political junkies everywhere. Gone is the biting, funny, cryptic and insightful commentary the page has long been known for. What has replaced it is nothing more than a morning “Must Read” list and an evening “Day Book,” or list of the next day’s events.

What a shame.

Large Capacity Machines

We at Fortune Land like a good visual pun.  So do the Eskimo, we are told.  Hmm.

Here is one  Pawn himself found one day in Westby, Wisconsin.  Not far from the Westby House Inn, was this signage on the side of a buildingLarge Capacity Machines

Now Wisconsinites may be a bit towards the plus sizes, but isn’t this going to far?

New York State pushes anti-censorship proposal on Google

New York State Comptroller Thomas P. DiNapoli has proposed a shareholder proposal to be considered by Google shareholders as part of the current proxy. His proposal would stop Google from participating in censorship and sharing user data. Here is the text of the proposal:

Internet Censorship

Whereas, freedom of speech and freedom of the press are fundamental human rights, and free use of the Internet is protected in Article 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which guarantees freedom to “receive and impart information and ideas through any media regardless of frontiers”, and

Whereas, the rapid provision of full and uncensored information through the Internet has become a major industry in the United States, and one of its major exports, and

Whereas, political censorship of the Internet degrades the quality of that service and ultimately threatens the integrity and viability of the industry itself, both in the United States and abroad, and

Whereas, some authoritarian foreign governments such as the Governments of Belarus, Burma, China, Cuba, Egypt, Iran, North Korea, Saudi Arabia, Syria, Tunisia, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, and Vietnam block, restrict, and monitor the information their citizens attempt to obtain, and

Whereas, technology companies in the United States such as Google, that operate in countries controlled by authoritarian governments have an obligation to comply with the principles of the United Nations Declaration of Human Rights, and

Whereas, technology companies in the United States have failed to develop adequate standards by which they can conduct business with authoritarian governments while protecting human rights to freedom of speech and freedom of expression,

Therefore, be it resolved, that shareholders request that management institute policies to help protect freedom of
access to the Internet which would include the following minimum standards:

1) Data that can identify individual users should not be hosted in Internet restricting countries, where political speech can be treated as a crime by the legal system.

2) The company will not engage in pro-active censorship.

3) The company will use all legal means to resist demands for censorship. The company will only comply with such demands if required to do so through legally binding procedures.

4) Users will be clearly informed when the company has acceded to legally binding government requests to filter or otherwise censor content that the user is trying to access.

5) Users should be informed about the company’s data retention practices, and the ways in which their data is shared with third parties.

6) The company will document all cases where legally-binding censorship requests have been complied with, and that information will be publicly available.

Definitive Proxy Statement

Haunting Beauty

The photographer Barbara Abel has captured a stunning series of photos of antique wax mannequins from a dusty warehouse in Detroit Michigan. Here is just a sampling. You can find the whole set, for sale, at her website.

Suspicion Jolie

Jumbo Religious Bon-bons

chocolatejesus.jpg

Paul Hina has some interesting comments about the Chocolate Jesus debacle in New York, this past Easter. Here is an excerpt:

“Catholic League head Bill Donohue called it “one of the worst assaults on Christian sensibilities ever”.

Really? Worst assault ever?

Donahue is an ass, and anyone familiar with his perpetual sense of outrage knows it.  I guess in some ways I can see how Christians might be offended by something like Serrano’s Piss Christ.  But this piece seems tame in comparison. If the piece were shaped from doody instead of chocolate then I could understand. But to me this artist is making an important social comment about the confectionary capitalism that revolves around western religious holidays.

Paul Hina: Chocolate Jesus

Well said!

Whatcha Doin?

eye-keyhole.jpg

From /. today:

MySpace has launched in China, the world’s most populous nation, but this definitely is NOT the MySpace you’re used to. Members are told to click a button to report any ‘misconduct’ by other users. MySpace’s definition of ‘misconduct’ includes actions such as ‘endangering national security, leaking state secrets, subverting the government, undermining national unity, spreading rumors or disturbing the social order’ — according to the site’s terms and conditions. In China these are all crimes which carry a hefty prison sentence. Any attempt to post content containing phrases that the Chinese government doesn’t like, such as ‘Taiwanese independence’, the banned ‘FaLun’ religious movement or the Dalai Lama, produces the following message. ‘Sorry, the article you want to publish may contain inappropriate content. Please delete the unsuitable content, and then try reposting it. Thank you.'”
Slashdot | New MySpace China Tells Users to Spy on Each Other

Criminalising the consumer

appledrm.jpg
The Economist gives us a sober and reasonable editorial on the issue of Digital Rights Management (DRM) more commonly known as copy-protection. Here is an excerpt:

Belatedly, music executives have come to realise that DRM simply doesn’t work. It is supposed to stop unauthorised copying, but no copy-protection system has yet been devised that cannot be easily defeated. All it does is make life difficult for paying customers, while having little or no effect on clandestine copying plants that churn out pirate copies….

While most of today’s DRM schemes that come embedded on CDs and DVDs are likely to disappear over the next year or two, the need to protect copyrighted music and video will remain. Fortunately, there are better ways of doing this than treating customers as if they were criminals.

One of the most promising is Audible Magic’s content protection technology. Google is currently testing this to find the “fingerprints” of miscreants who have posted unauthorised television or movie clips on YouTube.

The beauty of such schemes is that they don’t actually prevent anyone from making copies of original content. Their purpose is simply to collect royalties when a breach of copyright has occurred. By being reactive rather than pre-emptive, normal law-abiding consumers are then
left in peace to enjoy their music and video collections in any way they choose. Why couldn’t we have thought of that in the beginning?
Tech.view | Criminalising the consumer | Economist.com

Meanwhile, the RIAA just keeps getting more and more creative in their pursuit of their criminalized customers. Here is a /. story about their latest exploits:

In an attempt to change the rules of the game, the RIAA secretly went to a federal district court in Denver with an ex parte application. The goal was to get the judge to rule that the federal Cable Communications Policy Act does not apply to the RIAA’s attempts to get subscriber information (pdf) from cable companies. Just to clarify, ex parte means that the application was secret, no one else — neither the ISP nor the subscribers — were given notice that this was going on. They were, in effect, asking the Court to rule that the RIAA does not need to get a court order to be able to force an ISP to disclose confidential subscriber information. The Magistrate Judge declined to rule on the issue (pdf), but did give them the ex parte discovery order they were looking for.
Slashdot | RIAA Secretly Tries to Get ISP Subscriber Info

Spitzer Introduces Marriage Bill

BUOYED BY GOVERNOR'S BILL, THE PRIDE AGENDA PLANS LARGEST ALBANY LGBT CROWD SINCE FIRST GAY RIGHTS MARCH IN 1971 (Richard C Wandel/ LGBT Community Center, National Archive of LGBT History)

Showing why he is a great hope for free thinking people everywhere, Eliot Spitzer kept his word today:

Updated. As expected, Gov. Eliot Spitzer introduced a bill today to legalize same-sex marriage in New York. (Gay City News had the early word this morning.) Mr. Spitzer’s staff had been trying to put the legislation together in time for Monday’s Tuesday’s lobby day by gay-rights groups. And it looks like they succeeded.
Spitzer Introduces Marriage Bill – The Empire Zone – N.Y. / Region – New York Times Blog

Also covered here:
GayCityNews – Spitzer Offers Gay Marriage Bill Today — Friday, April 27

Just a Touch

Touch

New York magazine has a profile of Wesley Autrey, Sr., the “Subway Hero” who saved the life of Cameron Hollopeter in New York earlier this year.

We won’t bore you with all of the details of the article, you can find it on their website (http://www.nymag.com) if you wish. The thing we wanted to bring to your attention was this quote, from Wesley’s sister Linda:

Wesley grabbed Cameron — grabbed him, touched him, squeezed him. We don’t do that anymore. Computers, cell phones, Palm Pilots — we don’t touch. I think there’s a message in that — bigger than a movie deal, book deal, you know what I mean? There’s a human message for all of us.

That’s a very keen observation, we don’t do that anymore. The real downside of all of the sources of terror and fear in our world today is that we are afraid to touch others.

Laced With History – John M. Kohler Art Center, Sheboygan, WI

Spirit House - Anna Peach
Above is a photo of a piece called “Spirit House” by Anna Peach. It is a dress and train assembled of found pieces of lace. It must be seen to be truly appreciated, the scale and construction are most impressive (as Tom would say).

To give you an example of the ingenuity of the artists in the lace exhibit. There is one who does pieces with “lost substrate” (my term). Think of “lost wax” bronze casting, where an original is made in wax, a mold is then cast around it, then the mold is heated to melt the wax, which runs out. Finally, the mold is filled with bronze to produce a finished piece. In the lost substrate process, delicate lace work is created on a soluble material. Once the lace work is finished, the whole piece is washed with water, the substrate dissolves, leaving only the lace. Brilliant!

Another brilliant example of creative artwork is a piece constructed entirely of hot glue mixed with pigment. The piece, called “Swirl” is like a great big swirl of paisley, and is about twelve feet across. Is is exhibited in a corner room of the gallery. It provokes the question, “How did they move it?”

Much is made in this exhibit of the role that lace has played in society over the years, and its delicate dance with such variable concepts as femininity and feminism. Merrill Mason, amongst others, plumbs the depth of these relationships with a collection of pieces in which lace is cast in iron or bronze, and in exploring the molds which would be needed to do so.

http://www.jmkac.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=36&Itemid=36