The Irish browser story:

The Irish browser story:

From Karlin Lillington’s Blog: Ok folks, here’s the scoop. I am just back from talking to one of MIT Media Lab Europe’s researchers, who both checked out the browser and talked to Adnan. He says the browser is ‘absolutely extraordinary’. He says that what Adnan has done is re-engineer the efficiency of how a browser operates, which allows it to run up to six times faster (but usually not that much faster — two to four times faster is more common). So it’s not managing bandwidth but managing the way the browser itself handles and presents information.  The researcher (whom I know and will vouch for) says that instead of simply tinkering with existing code he went down to the socket layer and reworked it at the protocol level (now, many of you guys will know the significance of this better than me, I’m just reporting the conversation). He added that it is incredibly clever work and stunning that a 16 year old has done this (I am not scrimping on the superlatives because that is what was said). (NB: A conversation in a group ensued that this work perhaps suggests that because the browser market is a virtual monopoly, there’s been little incentive to improve efficiency in this way — indeed, it might be beneficial to product development to just eke out a leeeetle more efficiency now and then and advertise it as continuing innovation… but I leave that to further discussion among the well-informed).

And Adnan has indeed worked in all the existing media players AND a DVD player so you can watch a DVD while surfing. And incorporated in a voice agent that will speak web pages, for young children or for the sight-impaired. The improved efficiency angle got the notice of the few media reports done on this so far, but it’s really not what Adnan himself was emphasising — it’s the whole package, said the MIT guy.

Not surprisingly Adnan now has more than one university interested in him. And he has apparently told the numerous companies who saw the browser in action and who wanted to commercialise it that, at least for now, he has no interest in commercialising it.

I will note that the MIT researcher had a big grin on his face and it was clear he found the whole project a pleasure to talk about. He also said he’d heard about the browser before he arrived at the Young Scientist exhibition and made a beeline to see it. Adnan apparently didn’t really think it would necessarily win an award –the researcher told me it was clear that it HAD to win. So there you go. I’m sure we’ll hear a lot more about all this soon.

And yes, he has copyrighted it.

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1,001 useful things you can do with a DMCA: Number 65

1,001 useful things you can do with a DMCA: Number 65

According to The Register, “Lexmark has invoked the controversial Digital Millennium Copyright Act in a legal action against a firm that makes chips that permit third party toner cartridges to work in its printers.

The printer company is suing Static Control Components for violation of the Copyright Act and the Digital Millennium Copyright Act regarding the Static Control’s Smartek microchips. Normally litigants would use patent laws in such cases but here we see another example of the surprising applications of the DMCA.

In November stores used the DMCA to defend the copyright of pricing lists, now its been applied to printer cartridge microchips.”

“What next?” asks The Register. Just so.

The inevitable American imperium: the case for recognising the inevitable — and its limitations

The inevitable American imperium: the case for recognising the inevitable — and its limitations

Fascinating, thoughtful New York Times Magazine piece by my former Observer colleague, Michael Ignatief, explaining why the US is becoming an imperial power, and what the dangers of that will be. Quote:

“Those who want America to remain a republic rather than become an empire imagine rightly, but they have not factored in what tyranny or chaos can do to vital American interests. The case for empire is that it has become, in a place like Iraq, the last hope for democracy and stability alike. Even so, empires survive only by understanding their limits. Sept. 11 pitched the Islamic world into the beginning of a long and bloody struggle to determine how it will be ruled and by whom: the authoritarians, the Islamists or perhaps the democrats. America can help repress and contain the struggle, but even though its own security depends on the outcome, it cannot ultimately control it. Only a very deluded imperialist would believe otherwise. ..”.

Nothing new here, perhaps, but the case is put thoughtfully and eloquently.

DeCSS case fails in Norway. Just as well they’re not in the EU

DeCSS case fails in Norway. Just as well they’re not in the EU
Register story.

“The entertainment lobby has failed to persuade a Norwegian court to convict a teenager for creating a utility for playing back DVDs on his own computer.

Jon Lech Johansen has been acquitted of all charges in a trial that tested the legality of the DeCSS DVD decryption utility he produced, Norwegian paper Aftenposten reports.

Norwegian prosecutors, acting largely on the behest of the Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA), argued in court that Johansen acted illegally in sharing his DeCSS tool with others and distributing it via the Internet. They claimed the DeCSS utility made it easier to pirate DVDs.

The court rejected these arguments, ruling that Johansen did nothing wrong in bypassing DVD scrambling codes that stopped him using his Linux PC to play back DVDs he’d bought.” NYT version.

Well, that’s one small step for mankind. But the DMCA is being incorporated into the laws of all EU countries as a result of the European Copyright Directive, so if anyone tries the same thing here then they will go to the slammer or face a huge fine. What I’ve never understood is how the Norwegian authorities were conned into bringing the case in the first place.

At last — the computing industry fights back

At last — the computing industry fights back
Mercury News story.

“The high-tech industry plans to launch a sophisticated new lobbying campaign later this month to strike back against Hollywood in a battle to shape rules of the road for new digital technologies.

The Business Software Alliance and Computer Systems Policy Project — two prominent high-tech trade groups representing Intel, Hewlett-Packard, Microsoft and other industry heavyweights — are forming a new coalition and working to enlist support from consumer and business groups.

They hope to convince Congress that strict copy-protection legislation that sets technological mandates would stifle innovation, harm consumers and threaten an already suffering tech industry.

“These things have a very big impact on our industry and on Intel,” said Intel lobbyist Doug Comer. “It’s not just about, `Are we driving up the price of the chip?’ It’s about what kind of future is being created for digital consumers.”

The entertainment industry had the upper hand in the battle last year, with a carefully orchestrated lobbying campaign and bills introduced by powerful lawmakers. Hollywood-backed legislation filed by Sen. Ernest Hollings, D-S.C., and Rep. Howard L. Berman, D-Los Angeles, would embed copy protection into PCs and an array of consumer devices.

But the legislation had consequences that Walt Disney and other backers hadn’t bargained for. It served as a rallying cry for consumer groups and tech companies to fight for consumers’ rights to make copies of CDs, DVDs and other digital works for personal use, as they do with TV shows and audio tapes…”

Gerry McGovern’s predictions for 2003 (and reflections on his predictions for 2002)

Gerry McGovern’s predictions for 2003 (and reflections on his predictions for 2002)
From Gerry’s Newsletter.

Predictions for 2003:
1) The global economy will remain sluggish. The IT sector will struggle to regain momentum. Web services and wireless communications will massively over-promise and under-deliver. This incessant hype that the IT industry is prone to, will damage the genuine potential of these technologies.
2) Organizations will standardize and streamline more and more of their web operations. Multiple websites, with multiple design approaches and publishing processes, will be frowned on as budgets are tightened.
3) Organizations will finally begin to develop return on investment models for their Internet operations. Many will find that their websites are simply not profitable.
4) Information architecture will grow in importance. More organizations will recognize that organizing information efficiently is one of the key challenges they face.
5) The intranet will expand its role as a critical tool by which an organization increases productivity, improves communication and reduces costs.
6) The role of women on the Internet will increase. An example will be in intranet management. Here, the shift of responsibility from IT to corporate communications will gain momentum. (Women dominate corporate communications.)
7) We will see the emergence of the ‘de-merger,’ where large, unwieldy mergers from the boom era, are taken apart so as to make them more efficient and profitable.
8) Spam will continue its inexorable rise. The principle of charging for data sent will begin to gain currency, as the global economy realizes how much spam, and other wasteful communication, is costing.
9) The myth that the Internet is borderless, and thus lawless, will finally die and be buried in 2003. Spam, viruses, terrorism, identity theft, and copyright infringement will be the key drivers for a raft of legislation.
10) Recession or no recession, boom or bust, the Internet revolution will continue apace. More and more of our business, commerce, communication, work and leisure will happen online. In many ways, the Internet revolution has only just begun.

And his recap on his predications for 2002:

1) Although the worst is probably over, there will be no major recovery in 2002. Things will stabilize during the first half of the year, with modest gains from there on.
2) This will be the year of the virus. Security will become an ever-increasing concern.
3) There will be increasing calls for comprehensive Internet legislation, as the Internet becomes more critical to the lives of millions. Copyright, crime and terrorism will be the focus of much legislation.
4) Spam will continue to be a major problem, and will be one of the key reasons people will want a more regulated Internet.
5) Bankruptcies, mergers and consolidation will continue. More people will go to fewer websites, as the Internet becomes controlled by a few mega-corporations.
6) The PC crisis will continue. For a significant percentage of the population there will be no compelling reason to buy a PC. For those that have one, there will be few compelling reasons to upgrade.
7) The wireless and telecommunications sector will continue to flounder. Too much cost, too much hype and too little demand for all these wonderful extra services, will badly hurt these industries in 2002.
8) A two-tier Internet will clearly emerge: for-free and for-fee. 9) Information architecture will become the crucial discipline in website design. This means a greater focus on getting your metadata, classification, navigation and search right.
10) Amazon.com will make a profit.

Roy (‘Woy’) Jenkins is dead

Roy (‘Woy’) Jenkins is dead

The last of the great lunchers has passed away. Former Home Secretary and Chancellor of the Exchequer and founder of the Social Democratic Party, also known as the Claret Drinker’s Friend. At first sight you might think him a booby (especially given his plummy voice and inability to pronounce the letter ‘R’), but he was a shrewd, intelligent and liberal man. I saw him in action once. It was in the early 1970s and I was working in the Back Half [literary section] of the New Statesman. Jenkins came in to deliver the copy of a book review we had commissioned (can you imagine a major politician nowadays bringing in his own copy?) and bumped in to the Editor, Tony Howard. After an exchange of pleasantries, Tony said that they were due to meet that evening at VS Pritchett’s birthday party. “So we are”, said Woy. “You know”, continued Tony, “it’s shameful that he has never had a gong [honour]”. “So it is”, replied Woy, “I’ll do something about it”. And he did: Pritchett was knighted shortly afterwards.