Content industries to take Morpheus case to the Supremes
Hollywood studios and record companies on Friday asked the US Supreme Court to overturn a controversial series of recent court decisions that have kept file-swapping software legal.
Content industries to take Morpheus case to the Supremes
Hollywood studios and record companies on Friday asked the US Supreme Court to overturn a controversial series of recent court decisions that have kept file-swapping software legal.
Larry Lessig’s lecture launching Creative Commons UK
Audio recording available from here. (8MB)
Masked predictions
The Economist of 25.09.04 reports that, according to Buyseasons, a US costume company, Dubya Halloween masks are outselling Kerry masks by 57% to 43%. Why is this interesting as well as depressing? Because sales of Halloween masks have correctly predicted the results of the last six presidential elections!
Maurice Wilkins is dead

The quiet, unassuming ‘third man’ in the Double Helix story has died at the age of 87. The X-ray diffraction images provided by his unit in King’s College, London (many of them done by Rosie Franklin) gave Francis Crick and James Watson the clues they needed to deduce the helical structure of DNA. The Guardian ran a lovely obituary of Wilkins written by the late Anthony Tucker which quotes the beautiful description of his work he gave in his Nobel dissertation. “Determining the three-dimensional structure of a molecule by means of x-ray diffraction”, he said, “is rather like trying to understand the workings of a folding chair by looking only at its shadow.”
Why I’m happy to pay the BBC licence fee
NEWS.COM report:
The British Broadcasting Corp. has announced an open-source video compression project that it hopes could one day give Windows Media Player a run for its money.
The BBC didn’t make a particularly big show of the project at LinuxWorld in London, but if the codec lives up to expectations, it could soon be challenging proprietary video technology.
The codec, called Dirac–after physicist Paul Dirac–is still in the early stages of testing. But developers say when it goes into beta in the fall of 2005, there’s a good chance it will be as good, if not better, than anything else out there.
Lead developer Thomas Davies, who founded the project three years ago, has Microsoft’s Windows Media Player in his sights.
Davies stressed that he is not seeking to create a product, but rather a tool that other developers can use to build their own software.
“It is an entirely general-purpose code,” he said. The technologies used are suitable for everything, he said, from low-resolution mobile phone screens to high-definition television and even cinema. “You could use it for desktop video production, you could use it for streaming, or you could use it for movies–anyplace where you need compression.”
Mirror, mirror
Autumn sunlight on a wall
The First (and Last) Law of Web Design
(from Mark Hurst)
On any given Web page, users will either…
– click something that appears to take them closer to the fulfillment of their goal,
– or click the Back button on their Web browser.
This is all you need to know. Ignore it at your peril.
Unconstitutional
This is the poster for Robert Greenwald’s new film.

You can download a trailer from here.
The economics of music distribution
William Fisher’s instructive four-slide PDF summary of how online distribution of music would change the economics of the industry. [Via Larry’s Blog. Thanks to Azeem for spotting that I’d got Mr Fisher’s first name wrong (I’d called him ‘Mike’.) Just to confuse things further, Larry called him ‘Terry’!]