Wonderful story by Larry Lessig about the way the copyright thugs have reached deep into even elite universities. He wrote a scholarly paper. He launched a copy of Morpheus and put his paper in the shared folder. Went home for the weekend. On Monday he comes into the office and his computer is disconnected. Stanford security had paid him a visit. “That’s illegal,” they said. Note the irony. Larry is the author of the paper. He owns the copyright. All he sought to do was to use Morpheus to share it freely. But the RIAA and its legal lackeys are so obsessed with the idea that we are all thieves that they cannot contemplate the notion of anyone using file-sharing software for sharing ideas. [Thanks to Dave Winer for this.]
Daily Archives: May 17, 2002
A Dozen Things We Know About Blogs
A Dozen Things We Know About Blogs
Thoughtful web essay about the phenomenon.
Why openness is best — even in cryptography. (Especially in cryptography?)
Why openness is best — even in cryptography. (Especially in cryptography?)
“Cryptography is hard, and almost all cryptographic systems are insecure. It takes the cryptographic community, working over years, to properly vet a system. Almost all secure cryptographic systems were developed with public and published algorithms and protocols. I can’t think of a single cryptographic system developed in secret that, when eventually disclosed to the public, didn’t have flaws discovered by the cryptographic community. And this includes the Skipjack algorithm and the Clipper protocol, both NSA-developed.”
Excerpt from Brice Schneier’s latest Cryptogram newsletter.
More fallout from AOL Time Warner
More fallout from AOL Time Warner
“NYT” report on Gerald Levin’s departure.
“You just lost $54 billion,” an angry shareholder told the executives yesterday, referring to the noncash charge that AOL Time Warner took in the first quarter to account for the company’s plunge in value since the merger. “Where’d that come from?” the accuser continued. “Our pockets — the shareholders — not the options you got.”
Because Mr. Levin is expected to continue as an adviser to the company, analysts and company executives are wary of discussing his legacy on the record. But a recurrent criticism is that Mr. Levin gave away too much of the company when he agreed to merger terms in January 2000 that granted America Online 55 percent of Time Warner for AOL stock — just months before the bursting of the Internet bubble.
No one can predict the future of the stock market, of course. But industry executives also fault Mr. Levin for having overestimated the opportunities for complements between Time Warner’s conventional media holdings and AOL’s Internet business.
“When he sold to AOL, he sold for nothing,” one industry executive said. “It was pretty clear that the great synergies Jerry talked about were unrealistic.”
Will Bluetooth 1.1 do the business?
Will Bluetooth 1.1 do the business?
Useful — and fairly measured — “NYT” article.
” Almost alone among the cast of literary friends and enemies who populated his life, Orwell has managed to preserve and extend his relevance into a world that he would scarcely recognise.” D.J. Taylor on George Orwell’s enduring influence. Had he lived, GO would have been 99 next month.