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Archive for April, 2007

Where were you when the berries went out?

So is it sufficient to call this a BlackOut, or to be able to actually talk about it funny-style do we have to call it the Great BerryOut of ‘07?

Man, if I needed any more reasons to be wary of RIM’s continuous death grip over its devices, I’ve got them now. If there’s anything we should have learned from the internet, it’s that single points of failure = teh suck.

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Open Access and DRM

As an initial matter, it seems like DRM is not incompatible with at least the distributional goal of Open Access. Getting more works of scholarship onto the network to reach where physical copies don’t is a big part of why people care about Open Access, even if they don’t especially care about copyright reform in general. Framed as “getting knowledge to those who wouldn’t otherwise have it”, Open Access has more intuitive appeal, and DRM would seem to help in this effort by alleviating some copyright holders’ fears of market substitution. Similar to “freemium” web services like Flickr, the copyright holder can make their money selling individual rights and privileges rather than bundling them with the basic access right.

The problem with this idea, beyond the basic “scraps from the table” opinion of OA users it implies, is that this DRM that will segment a market in rich countries may obliterate the market in poor countries. If you have a PDF that can’t be printed, but you can only afford to access a computer once a month for a few minutes, your access to that work is nominal at best. It may be enough for reference works and such, but it’s hardly living up to the ideals of Open Access, and we might want to find something else to call it.

I’m obviously only touching the tip of the iceberg here, and probably others have covered this ground before, but the blog is for the musings, no?

UPDATE: as always, Google shows how well-trod the ground is, e.g. The role of digital rights management in Open Access

More members of MySpace than Mexicans in Mexico

There’s an avalanche of alliterations for you. It’s also a vaguely astonishing fact; the numbers involved don’t really surprise me, but it reminds me that MySpace is reaching almost too broadly. When everyone’s on there, and everyone is everyone’s friend, then everyone just has a blog. Not a bad thing, to be sure, but Blogger and WordPress do it better, without nearly as much godawful Javascript “pimping”.