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Corey Doctorow

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[Live blogged from Cory Doctorow's talk at the USC Annenberg School for Communication]

[For background, Cory Doctorow is a science fiction novelist and blogger at BoingBoing]

[Starting off with introductions from the Director of the USC Center on Public Diplomacy, the Director of the Canada Fulbright Commission, and Adam Powell of USC's Integrated Media Center. Mr. Powell is discussing the important role that science fiction plays in guiding innovation.]

Spent the last few years living in the UK. When you touch down in the US you have to fill out a landing card thats covered in little form elements that you're meant to fill out. One of them is "occupation" which is such a twentieth century notion.

Science fiction is a fascinating bridge between theory and practice. When engineers explore the boundaries of what can be done it is an ethical breach. When sci-fi writers to this its called committing fiction.

[A good anecdote about a friend faking a web cast of Canada's Juno awards]

Tries to use literature to discuss emerging phenomenon. It's not about predicting, it's about writing about what's already happened.

Look at the recent incident where people paid Latin Americans sub-US wages to engage in repetitive click actions in massive multiplayer games.

One trend in computers is an open question of whether computers will be agents of self-determination or agents of control. He writes a story about this ongoing issue when he hears about MS Trusted Computing and is thought to be innovative. MS can't rebut his short story but readers can learn from that same story.

These systems can grow to become law. Like Lessig says, code is law. One elements of copyright law as it stands is that it is unlawful to tell people how to break copy restrictions systems.

Now you have people asserting that their printer cartridges are copyright protected work. Suddenly refilling a printer cartridge is a crime. With things like Trusted Computing this will get worse.

This is happening with our data. Moving from Apple to Ubuntu is enormously difficult in a way that hampers the free flow of data and thus of ideas.

Copyright is being practiced and challenged by engineers that are being asked to build systems that enforce an ambiguous and fuzzy system. They are designing systems that are robust against their own owners.

On the one hand there are developing countries who get the shaft but it's also happening in wealthy nations. In Sweden there is an actual political movement called the pirate party. Their aim is to abolish copyright and destroy the entertainment industry.

This is an issue in media studies where creators are forced to use new tools in a world with copyright laws written for the old way of creating.

The people who control the industry today view tomorrow of merely derivative.

Look at the Gray Album controversy.

This reminds one of the medieval system where if the Pope liked the work it got to survive.

So the academy is the place to study this, to ask how and why goods are made. Why is it that US who doesn't have exclusive rights in databases is still showing economic growth in this sector?

Is productizing intellectual property good for a university? These big questions need to be asked.

Does the creation of intellectual property aid scholarship or is a depropiterized regime aid scholarship? Look at the Enlightenment. Is a more pure expression of the academies interest to treat knowledge as a common good?

Look at the crazy policies on university campuses. They have pretty words but when the rubber meets the road scholarship is not protected.

[Question time]

Q: It's interesting how Down and Out In The Magic Kingdom is cited by public diplomacy practitioners. Social capital seems to play an important role in how the practice plays out.

A: Mostly looking at free and open-source software projects at the time. There are the self-interested business reasons for this but also ethical and social reasons. In the academy there are clearly people whose motivation is non-economic.

Q: More about USC's IP policy. It's more than file sharing.

A: Two things have come to attention. File sharing policy states that the purpose of the University is to promote intellectual property. This is appalling. Isn't the purpose scholarship? The other question is what happens when the school has an aggressive policy to productize the intellectual output of the school. For example, if the entire output of the film or music program became a public good would it be a net boom or a net cost? Look at the experience of the University of Reading where more money goes out then in after productizing.

Q: What about the life sciences?

A: Not really an area of expertise but worked with the Royal Society of the Arts on the Adelphi project. It should never be possible to productize life forms. One thing that seems to be a truth about negotiation is that things that were optional become mandatory. Flexibility is removed from these international agreements.

Q: Just in SE Asia. Thailand's program of generic AIDS drugs is being targeted by US negotiators. Movements at the base in the developing world is around IP but in the US and Europe it seems to be around culture and copyright. Is there a possibility of real alliance between these two groups? Do free culture activists have an obligation to pay more attention to these life and death issues in other sectors?

A: There has been no central unifying idea around these fights for a long time. There is a need for an "ecology movement" like unity. The Access to Knowledge treaty is an example of this. The core of humanitarian efforts is the flow of knowledge goods.

After pressure from developing countries, WIPO created development goals.

The Access to Knowledge treaty is truly inspiring.

Q: What are the limitations?

A: Electronics companies can't stand up against the idea that their products shouldn't control their customers even though these controls don't sell more products. Nobody wakes up wanting iTunes to do less. Companies ship devices that are far more restrictive than they need to be.

What Apple worries about is that you replace your iPod every 18 months. The problem with this is that their business depends on switching costs being too high to get a Creative device instead. In this world what Apple gets from iTunes is a compatibility right. This locks customers in to Apple's product by increasing the switching cost.

So why will competitors do this? Wouldn't an open system undermine them? Because everyone wants to compete with Apple on Apple's terms. Now you get consortia that try to be a better partner than Apple but this results in a worse device because it caters to the needs of the music industry.

Media should not be a urinary tract infection, it should flow freely and easily.

Blu-ray and HD-DVD are totally useless technologies. Vista won't support them. You have to pay extra to play them on the PS3. It's like a hostage situation.

Q: Technological future of news media?

A: Dan Gilmore nailed this: classified ads are better on the web than on paper. Google AdWords conquered the long tail of this market. News gathering entities need to find a way to survive in a world where they aren't supported by advertising.

It's clear that analysis is something that non-professional blogs can do well but what about investigation? You're starting to see some of this but it's just the beginning.

Q: Free and open-source software movement? GPL and public diplomacy?

A: It's obvious that the Internet was invented by engineers and academics. That's why crtl-R copies the whole message when you reply. The free software movement comes out of the same tradition.

They reacted to the first instance where shared code suddenly became enclosed. They created the MIT license that allows you to do anything with code except keeping someone from editing it.

It's about fundamental freedom, understanding and communicating improvements to tools. It's about self determination.

What came later was open-source. They said that freedom is nice but calling it "free" doesn't help. Commodity code bases emerge from this.

Trusted computing makes it possible to ship open-source DRM. Look at Sun's Open Dream.

The open-source movement focussed too much on utilitarian purposes to the detriment of freedom.

Q: File sharing makes information more available than the marketplace. It seems that this will move into other realms. What about individual needs vs. social control?

A: There are also social needs that arise. Look at 3D meshes that can be made into physical objects. The curators of the David let Stanford take high-res 3D images of David but the condition that was set was that further propagation be restricted. This is ironic because you can't go to Florence without bumping into David because you used to become a sculptor by copying David!

Nobody wants to handle this as bad as the music industry. All this conservatism rather misses the point. The challenge with 3D printers is about making guns and super-bugs not Mickey Mouses.

Q: Any comments about activist news hoaxes?

A: Ah, the Yes Men guys. Tries to report and celebrate them as hoaxes but never be a willing participant. It undermines credibility. The special power of a blog is that its a place where, instead of a newspaper where the cost of production must be recouped, you get to write about what you find interesting. It would be bad note-taking to take a hoax and blog it as truth. In someone interested in architectures of control and political theater it is absolutely newsworthy that someone can show up as a HUD spokesman.

Q: Blogs v. Wikis?

A: Uses wikis all the time. When publishing a book uses errata wikis. Wikis or anything that involves participation suffers and benefits from the size of community. Communities are like uranium. If they're too big they require special treatment.

Look at Making Light and the book Getting the Buggers To Behave.

Q: So what's the solution for the music industry? Should artists make money from their work?

A: The challenge of the artist and the challenge of the music industry are not the same. Is there a place in the world for the owners of vaudeville halls today? No. Is there a place for music? Yes. The same is true for the music industry. They are not an efficient way of producing music. 80% of the music ever recorded isn't for sale.

The objective of copyright isn't about compensating its about encouraging creation. We should measure music production, not music compensation.

The measure should be how many people get to participate in culture, not how much money they make.

Q: Isn't about entrenched bureaucracy? Aren't they acting rationally by trying to protect themselves.

A: But whether or not an industry succeeds should determine policy. There are people at Warner Brothers and Sci-Fi who see the future and are trying to adapt.

Coding Alone

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While Julie is off in the midwest visiting her family, I'm at home getting in some good coding time.

For the last month I've been building on my experience at the Rails Studio I attended in Portland to try to actually make something with this new technology. I'm finally hitting that point where all those hours of reading code and books about code and blogs about code and e-mails about code and IRC threads about code are actually paying off.

Last night I finally hit that point where I really got what I was doing. In proper Rails style, I spent a few hours really thinking about how the application should work. I drew some screens. I thought about how that would work and then drew some new and better screens. As I planned this out it began to dawn on me that not only could I draw this on paper but I actually knew how to make what I ended with.

So I got to coding. I wrote my database schema. I generated my scaffold. I wrote my views with a little quicky CSS to get me through. I looked it over in Firefox and for the first time every checked actual working code into my Subversion repository.

These days there are so many great inspirations out there. The design community is really on fire with development fever. For the last few years I've watched my ideas pop up from other people a few months after I think of something. This simple fact, that if you have a need someone else probably does to. Eventually somebody will make what you thought of. It won't be quite like what you would have made but what right do you have to complain? You just sat on a good idea instead of getting real and making it.

That's not going to be me anymore. I'm really pushing myself to get the skills I want to make my ideas happen and I have many of them. The first one is to start writing about my experience. I won't bore you here with the intricacies of how I'm doing what I'm doing. I'm creating a different, geekier blog for that purpose.

Never fear, this site will live up to it's name and continue to contain my almost daily observations in this hourly world. Mostly in the form of blog posts like this one about what's going on in my life and as an unending stream of links on the homepage and in the RSS feed.

What's my excuse?

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Ok.... first of all this is not my new design. This is a great template that I am using until I can find some time to finish my own.

Lately I've been swamped as I prep to head up to Pragmatic Programmer's Ruby on Rails Studio in Portland, OR, in just under two weeks. Going through the Ruby Pickaxe book has been a mind expandingly useful experience that has taken away from everything else. The problem is, you see, it took away from my posting to these pages with the regularity I would like.

So I'm back. Hold me to it!

New uber feed

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A quick aside about how to read my fascinating musings.

Any reader of this site will notice that the number of updates to del.ico.us and flickr vastly outpace my updates to the actual "blog" itself. In order to see all of these updates you either must come to the site (and who actually goes to web sites any longer?) or subscribe to three different rss feeds.

Oh ho, no longer, dear readers, does your time need to be wasted in this manner. Instead you may now subscribe to a master feed that integrates these three data streams into one uber feed. Switch your subscriptions and enjoy!

Navel Gazing

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I've been tagged by Star. I tried to run away but I'm slow...

Here goes my addition to the four things meme:

Building Your Brand With Blogs

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Notes from a panel discussion about building brands with blogs. This is an attempt at live blogging. My comments are parenthetical.

Coudal, Fried, Scoble, and Holzschlag. This is gonna be great!

Guest Blogging At The Carpetbagger Report

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In addition to my regular rants and observations on this blog and on The Wall of Separation, the official blog of Americans United for Separation of Church and State, I will be guest blogging over at The Carpetbagger Report the first three days of this week.

Check it out!

Moblogging

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I am jumping on the Moblogging bandwagon and will beging posting thoughts and low-quality photos from my new cell phone. Although it is unclear how long this cell phone will be in my possession, I plan to tinker with this medium as long as I can!

I would post...

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There is so much to blog about today but I am just pooped from the GRE this morning.

Blogging in the raw

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Have you ever wondered what blogging looks like? Thanks to the AP you can see Joshua Marshall, author of the indispensible Talking Point Memo (powered by Movable Type), in all his blogging glory. Sitting alone, anonymous, in a crowd, silently observing every detail, taking it all in and posting live to the world. Action. Excitement.

Joshua Marshall Blogs

Joshua Marshall epitomizes the growing influence of blogging in politics and news. He raised $4,500 from readers to finance a trip to New Hampshire allowing him to blog live from the front line to a daily readership of about 45,000. Blogs are quickly becoming for the left what talk radio has been so long for the right. Marshall, who has written for print publications including the venerable American Prospect magazine, is able to reach as many people as a medium size newspaper through is blog.

To explore the growing role of blogs, Minnesota Public Radio will be broadcasting a live radio special Sunday, January 25 from 9 to 11pm EST. The Blogging of the President: 2004 radio special and the blog of the same name are inspired by Theodore White's The Making of the President 1960. This will be a call-in show with a number of blogging celebrities. Lefty blogger Atrios will take on Andrew Sullivan (big gay hypocrite tool of the homophobic Rev. Sun Myung Moon). That dynamic duo will be accompanied by long ago Presidential candidate Gary Hart, Joshua Marshall, Richard Reeves, and others. The show promises to be good and will be aired all around the country. Check your local NPR/PRI station or PublicRadioFan for availability.

This is the latest list:

WNYC-AM, NY
KPCC, LA (and Pasadena)
WBEZ, Chicago
KERA, Dallas
WGBH, Boston (Hour 2 only)
WZBC, Boston (Hour 1 only)
WAMU, Washington DC
KUOW, Seattle
KNOW, Mpls/St. Paul
KOPB, Portland, OR
WNKU, Cincinnati
WCAI/WNAN - Cape and Islands Public Radio
WHRV, Norfolk, VA
WNED-AM, Buffalo, NY
Yellowstone Public Radio, Montana
Vermont Public Radio
WPSU, University Park, PA
North Country Public Radio, Canton, NY
KRWG, Las Cruces, NM

Who is this guy?

Sam Felder is a web designer and occasional writer in Los Angeles, CA.

Born in Washington, DC, Sam and his family moved to Peoria, IL, where he grew up and went to school. He returned to DC in 2003 and left for the west coast in late 2005.

See me speak at SXSW Interactive 2008

Archives

Recent Activity

April 16

  • Sam saved the link The Next Page: Thirty Tables of Contents
  • Sam tweeted, "I don't think tonight's presidential debate could possibly have had less substance: http://tinyurl.com/6arb64"
  • Sam is attending IxDA-SF Presents: Matt Jones, "Playfulness in Design" at odopod
  • Sam tweeted, "slowly getting better at making espresso. still terrible at foaming soymilk..."

April 15

  • Sam tweeted, "Glad that I filed my income tax last week. I had to pay but at least I don't have to spend today stressed out!"
  • Sam tweeted, "OH: I think the future of dolls is..."

April 12

  • Sam tweeted, "biking in SF makes me want terrain view in google maps on the iPhone. These hills are serious!"
  • Sam tweeted, "every time I see an airplane gracefully take off I'm impressed that we can do that. It really is amazing!"

April 10

  • Sam tweeted, "Making plans for a great weekend up in SF. The weather is going to be great and I plan to spend as much of it outside as possible."
  • Sam tweeted, "Loving the new season of Radiolab http://www.wnyc.org/shows/radiolab/"

April 9

  • Sam tweeted, "up late watching video from TED"
  • Sam saved the link NewsVisual

April 7

  • Sam tweeted, "Why does iTunes keep downloading partial podcasts? I don't want 18 minutes of This American Life. I want the full hour!"

April 4

April 3

  • Sam saved the link City songbirds are changing their tune
  • Sam tweeted, "I dreamt that it was suddenly May and I had forgotten to file my taxes. Is it a sign that I should stop procrastinating?"

April 2