For fans of the robot, drool on this :

Copy-rite is old bollox. InformatioNation wants to be free.Wikipedia wrote:The American copyright had lapsed in 1953, which eventually led to a proliferation of versions being released on video. Along with other foreign-made works, the film's U.S. copyright was restored in 1998.[12] The constitutionality of this copyright extension was challenged in Golan v. Gonzales.
F.W. Murnau Foundation (which now owns the film's copyright where applicable) and Kino International (now the film's American distributor) released a digitally restored version of 3378 metres (which equals a running time of 124 minutes at 24 frames/s) in 2002, supervised by Martin Koerber. It included the original music score and title cards describing the action in the missing sequences. Lost clips were gleaned from museums and archives around the world, and computers were used to digitally clean each frame and repair minor defects. The original score was re-recorded with an orchestral ensemble. Many scenes had still not been recovered at that point and were considered lost. Among the missing scenes are the adventures of 11811, a worker who trades places with Freder; the Thin Man spying on Josephat; Maria's incarceration; Rotwang's gloating and her subsequent escape; and scenes which establish the longstanding rivalry between Johann Fredersen and Rotwang.
- Dale Coba"We hold these statements to be self-evident,
that all bits are created equal,
that they are endowed by their hardware with certain indeletible Rights,
that among these are Life, Liberty
and the pursuit of Ubiquity."
How very 1994 ... Please come out of the dot-com bubble, it burst years ago.dale coba wrote:Copy-rite is old bollox. InformatioNation wants to be free.Wikipedia wrote:The American copyright had lapsed in 1953, which eventually led to a proliferation of versions being released on video. Along with other foreign-made works, the film's U.S. copyright was restored in 1998.[12] The constitutionality of this copyright extension was challenged in Golan v. Gonzales.
F.W. Murnau Foundation (which now owns the film's copyright where applicable) and Kino International (now the film's American distributor) released a digitally restored version of 3378 metres (which equals a running time of 124 minutes at 24 frames/s) in 2002, supervised by Martin Koerber. It included the original music score and title cards describing the action in the missing sequences. Lost clips were gleaned from museums and archives around the world, and computers were used to digitally clean each frame and repair minor defects. The original score was re-recorded with an orchestral ensemble. Many scenes had still not been recovered at that point and were considered lost. Among the missing scenes are the adventures of 11811, a worker who trades places with Freder; the Thin Man spying on Josephat; Maria's incarceration; Rotwang's gloating and her subsequent escape; and scenes which establish the longstanding rivalry between Johann Fredersen and Rotwang.
Who would stop the encoding and copying of petabytes, from router to iPad to dashboard and brain implant?
- because Law and Technology have been sooooo successful at ceasing the inexorable progression.
Bottom line seems to be, piracy without profit may not be disincentivized in a free society.
Social network, p2p-sharing of video mash-up collages using commercial film and tv will be the norm
for Generation... what are we up to, A? B?
Maybe you persecute it, may-y-y-be you slow it, maybe you deny yourself the fruits of Piracy.
Time marches on, Kurzweil knows.
Whatever will the Singularity make of the Rights of Copy?
If I knew C, I'd wittily encode- Dale Coba"We hold these statements to be self-evident,
that all bits are created equal,
that they are endowed by their hardware with certain indeletible Rights,
that among these are Life, Liberty
and the pursuit of Ubiquity."
(born mid -X)
It is in the United States. There was an attempt to restore the copyright in 1998, but Golan Vs. Holder held that this attempt was invalid. The missing footage is not a new creation. It was published at the same time as the rest of the footage, which is currently public domain.Rotwang wrote:Metropolis not in the public domain. The reconstruction is the culmination of many years of hard work and research. If you feel you owe them nothing then the restoration of other films ends there, the preservation of films ends there and let's watch the world go to hell.
Rotwang, I know I'm embodying, heroicizing this reading - because I still can't see your vision winning, or even stemming the tide. You believe that the combined ethical actions of many, many, many individuals will add up to the desired ethical result. If persuasion could influence the trend, we would have seen it by now.Rotwang wrote:Metropolis not in the public domain. The reconstruction is the culmination of many years of hard work and research. If you feel you owe them nothing then the restoration of other films ends there, the preservation of films ends there and let's watch the world go to hell.
This is especially pertinent to me Dale, since I am at the coalface, so to speak. I grapple with this every day. How do I as a potential content creator, make enough profit to keep doing what I love and provide the viewers with what THEY love?dale coba wrote:If we care about creators, we must find the new business models for them to prosper.
Dale, this is something I've been thinking about already, with my @visceralblack feed. But I've largely been inactive up to now with just a few tweets. I guess I should post more....dale coba wrote:A thought: with new Twitter apps, more power users will be reading the whole feed for choice hashtags and keywords (fembot, gynoid, android, cyborg, robot). A Twitter campaign might pull in the curious, with crafted, 140-character prose to echo moments and lines from the characters in your story.