Sony BMG demotes CEO for deploying DRM

From Boing Boing

Sony BMG music has demoted its CEO, Andrew Lack. One of the reasons he got the sack was that he oversaw the release of eight million music CDs that were deliberately infected with malicious software that covertly installed itself on music lovers’ PCs, spied on them, and destabilized their systems, and left them vulnerable to opportunistic infections from other malicious programs.

Shoots, Hides and Leaves…

.. is the delicious headline on Dan Froomkin’s column in the Washington Post:

The vice president of the United States shoots someone in a hunting accident and rather than immediately come clean to the public, his office keeps it a secret for almost a whole day. Even then, it’s only to confirm a report in a local paper.

Why Salon published the new Abu Ghraib photos

Salon has published the new set of Abu Ghraib prison photographs (in contrast with most of the US media). Here’s an excerpt from the editors’ explanation of their decision:

Abu Ghraib cannot be allowed to fade away like some half-forgotten domestic political controversy, which may have prompted newsmagazine covers at the time, but now seems as irrelevant as the 2002 elections. Abu Ghraib is not an issue of partisan sound bites or refighting the decision to invade Iraq. Grotesque violations of every value that America proclaims occurred within the walls of that prison. These abuses were carried out by soldiers who wore our flag on their uniforms and apparently believed that Americans here at home would approve of their conduct. Rather than hiding what they did out of shame, they commemorated their sadism with a visual record.

That is why Salon is willing to publish these troubling photographs, even as we are ashamed to live in a country that somehow came to accept that torture and prisoner abuse were simply business as usual — something that occurs while a sergeant catches up on his paperwork.

Quote of the Day

I think science has always been under assault to some extent. I think there are fashions in cycles in which science is attacked for a period of time and is embraced for a period of time and it’s attacked again. Generally attack against science is part of a greater attack against intellectualism in general. I think right now we’re in an anti-intellectual period in the United States, but I think the pendulum will swing back in the other direction again. I agree with you that we’re not seeing anything now that hasn’t happened in earlier centuries.

Alan Lightman, in an interview with LiveScience.com on “The Future of Science”.

The riches of the Web

I’m writing an article about the blogging phenomenon at the moment and, naturally, use the web as a research resource. It’s wonderful what there is out there if you go searching. For example, this excellent piece in New York Magazine, which looks at the operation of power law distributions in blogging. And then there’s Dave Sifry’s State of the Blogosphere survey and his more recent analysis of the growth of the blogosphere as media, in which he discusses some of the emerging trends in handling information overload. These are all thoughtful and helpful essays, and I can get them without leaving my study. Fifteen years ago, this would have been unthinkable. And I still can’t quite take it for granted.

Soundslides

It’s funny how hard it can be to do some simple things using computers. For ages I’ve been looking for an easy way of creating illustrated lectures which can be published as Flash movies (a technology Larry Lessig has used to great effect, but with the aid of serious ad-hoc geekery). Since then, Larry has published a method of doing it using iMovie, which is clearly feasible (if a bit tedious), but has the downside that it produces huge MP4 files. I’ve just come on Soundslides which is still in Beta but does produce Flash files and might be just what I’m seeking.

Update: Just opened my mailbox this morning to find a message from Ian Yorston pointing me at Videocue, which is out of Beta and also works as a teleprompter. It only outputs Quicktime files, though — no Flash, as far as I can see. Still… for $39.95…