Archive for the ‘Pigopoly’ Category

Microsoft demoroniser

Wednesday, December 26th, 2007

John Walker has been so kind as to write a demoroniser perl script for cleaning up documents produced by Microsoft applications. I have, too, abandoned use of any Microsoft applications (some time ago), and I go so far as to (politely) ask those who send me things such as MS Word .doc formatted documents to please resend in an open, non-proprietary format. It’s just rude to send documents to the public at large with the expectation that they will buy whatever monstrously bloated, virus ridden software the sender has deigned to choose, is it not? So, please, please: do not send Microsoft formatted documents.

The excerpt below is from the demoroniser script’s introduction, and explains better than I could why this, unfortunately, is necessary:

Many slick, high profile corporate Web sites I visit seemed to exhibit terrible grammar completely inconsistent with the obvious investment in graphics and design. Apostrophes and quote marks were frequently omitted, and every couple of paragraphs words were run together which should have been separated by a punctuation mark of some kind.

This remained a mystery to me until I wanted to convert a presentation I’d developed in 1996 using Microsoft PowerPoint into a set of Web pages. A friend was kind enough to run the presentation through PowerPoint’s “Save as HTML” feature (I have abandoned all use of Microsoft products, so I did not have a current version of PowerPoint which includes this feature). When I got the PowerPoint-generated HTML back and viewed it in my browser, I discovered that it contained precisely the same grammatical errors I’d noted on so many Web sites, and which certainly were not present in my original presentation.

A little detective work revealed that, as is usually the case when you encounter something shoddy in the vicinity of a computer, Microsoft incompetence and gratuitous incompatibility were to blame. Western language HTML documents are written in the ISO 8859-1 Latin-1 character set, with a specified set of escapes for special characters. Blithely ignoring this prescription, as usual, Microsoft use their own “extension” to Latin-1, in which a variety of characters which do not appear in Latin-1 are inserted in the range 0×82 through 0×95–this having the merit of being incompatible with both Latin-1 and Unicode, which reserve this region for additional control characters.

These characters include open and close single and double quotes, em and en dashes, an ellipsis and a variety of other things you’ve been dying for, such as a capital Y umlaut and a florin symbol. Well, okay, you say, if Microsoft want to have their own little incompatible character set, why not? Because it doesn’t stop there–in their inimitable fashion (who would want to?)–they aggressively pollute the Web pages of unknowing and innocent victims worldwide with these characters, with the result that the owners of these pages look like semi-literate morons when their pages are viewed on non-Microsoft platforms (or on Microsoft platforms, for that matter, if the user has selected as the browser’s font one of the many TrueType fonts which do not include the incompatible Microsoft characters).

You see, “state of the art” Microsoft Office applications sport a nifty feature called “smart quotes.” (Rule of thumb–every time Microsoft use the word “smart,” be on the lookout for something dumb). This feature is on by default in both Word and PowerPoint, and can be disabled only by finding the little box buried among the dozens of bewildering option panels these products contain.

SCO fscked

Friday, August 10th, 2007

Groklaw’s PJ has the goods on SCO’s loss:

Court Rules: Novell owns the UNIX and UnixWare copyrights! Novell has right to waive!

Friday, August 10 2007 @ 04:52 PM EDT

Hot off the presses: Judge Dale Kimball has issued a 102-page ruling [PDF] on the numerous summary judgment motions in SCO v. Novell. Here it is as text. Here is what matters most:

[T]he court concludes that Novell is the owner of the UNIX and UnixWare Copyrights.

That’s Aaaaall, Folks! The court also ruled that “SCO is obligated to recognize Novell’s waiver of SCO’s claims against IBM and Sequent”. That’s the ball game. There are a couple of loose ends, but the big picture is, SCO lost. Oh, and it owes Novell a lot of money from the Microsoft and Sun licenses.

One of the witty commentators at slashdot pithily summarized the whole sorry ordeal:

There once was a CEO called McBride
Who thought he could take on Linux in stride.
But the creep from Santa Cruz
Was destined to lose
And get fscked in the ass by New York Gay Pride.

U.S. internet connection speeds lag

Friday, June 8th, 2007

I think it’s worth reprinting Doc Searls’ latest comment on the sclerotic nature of U.S. internet connections at the local level. Incumbent telecom carriers continue to impede market growth by offering crippled, asymmetric internet service, and by subordinating internet connectivity to older technologies.

Searls’ comment:

Local cooling

The U.S. continues to lag in Net connectivity. Right now it’s down to 15th, according to one among a variety of discouraging surveys. Kevin Barron:

While I admire the desire to drill down into the details, no matter how you count the lifeboats, the fact is the Titanic is still going down. Unless we wake up and realize how critical the Net has become to every facet of society, including our economy, we will wake up in icy waters instead.

Meanwhile, House Bill 1587 in North Carolina, misleadingly titled “The Local Gov’t Fair Competition Act”, would effectively prevent local governments from offering public services that “compete” with the barely competitive private phone/cable duopolies that currently offer Internet service as a side dish to their legacy offerings.

This legislation is nowhere informed by the realization that Internet service should be as much a public utility as roads, water, electricity and waste treatment.

What we really need is opening up of data connectivity to all kinds of enterprise and grass-roots initiative, with government help in the form of easements to both private and public network build-out efforts. We need the market to open up for other parties to do what the incumbent carriers will not do.

What we don’t need is more pro-incumbent carrier legislation that will further lock out not just competition at the connectivity level, but prevention of countless businesses and public services that can only thrive on a wide open and ubiquitously deployed Internet.

In more hopeful news, my ISP, Sonic.net, lead by CCSF alumnus Dane Jasper, has applied to be a phone company. No doubt Sonic is being forced to do this due to the monopolistic machinations of our local oligarchy.

Why the corporate shop resists Linux

Thursday, May 24th, 2007

In following some of the trackbacks to the ZDNet article, Five crucial things the Linux community doesn’t understand about the average computer user, I stumbled across an excellent blog, Diary of a Mad IT Manager. As I was reading through the posts, I began to come across tales of the all too typical kind of disastrous, Microsoft-induced IT expenditures that I too had witnessed in my days as a tech support person, and later as a network administrator. For example:

A thought occurred to me today about the state of our computers here. We’re so used to rebuilding them, we’ve gotten better and more efficient at it. I mean, we’ve got all manner of support software designed to do nothing more than recreating and restoring an operating system and associated loaded applications on a computer in as efficient and timely manner as possible. Why? Because Windows sucks so much that we have to reload it on a regular basis.

And so I decided to put the question directly (though a bit profanely): why do corporations persist in using Microsoft products, when they so clearly cost so much more money than the alternatives? His reply, I thought, clearly articulated those reasons.

I replied in turn, and I think the exchange describes fairly concisely, at least in the corporate shop, the reasons for resistance to change: the cost, due to the weight of history, is too high. You may read the full exchange on Mad IT Manager’s blog here, or archived on my site here.

Reply to “Five crucial things the Linux community doesn’t understand about the average computer user”

Wednesday, May 23rd, 2007

A couple of points (not in the order of your arguments) [with edits to my original reply]:

1. *Desktop* linux is brand new — it, and the dozens of application software projects necessary to make a desktop linux go has only begun to come together over the past two or three years. To wit: Ubuntu, now the most popular distro, is only four years old. Keep in mind this principle: once you written the third or fourth version of something like .pdf/web viewers, or word processors, little further innovation is needed. How much different is MS Word 95 from 98, 2000, XP, or 2007/8, or Abiword and OpenOffice for that matter? Not much. MS got the word processor gui right when it still was on the Mac, where it ironically began. So, there will be an open source equivalent for every type of software, and many are just now getting to an 85% to 95% equivalency to their proprietary cousins.

2. If you have any doubt as to the profound power of a monopolist to retain control of markets without juridical oversight, or of the mechanics thereof, it might be time to take a cursory review of Microsoft’s misdeeds, or of Standard Oil’s.

The latest catastrophe about to be visited on world wide consumers by the prostrate and corrupt US legal system? Vista’s draconian DRM.

Here’s an excellent run-down of what will probably result in the break-up of Microsoft, or the US loss of software hegemony: A Cost Analysis of Vista Content Protection, by Peter Gutmann.

3. Everything you say regarding Linux based Desktop environments’ need to pay attention to gui usability, and to test, is spot on. Gnome still feels clumsy, and KDE does fine, once cleaned up by somebody like the Ubuntu project. Gnome and KDE are vastly improved from even a year or two ago, as are many of the other window managers out there.

4. Diversity in Linux distributions is a strength, not a weakness. You badly underestimate the scale of development unleashed by open sourced software. In addition, what you’ve said is akin to arguing that the West has been hurt by the free exchange of knowledge that characterizes its universities; that a closed, peer-reviewless, proprietary system of academic inquiry would serve humankind the best. This is demonstrably false.

The US constitution of 1787 sought to balance the need to reward innovation with the need for open academic inquiry. From the the broken US patent system to the DMCA, to the moribund state of US Anti-trust enforcement, this system is now in dire need of reform.

The plethora of linux distributions, ranging from 50 MB fully functional gui’d desktop environments to multi-gig distros such as Ubuntu, openSuse, et al., to embedded systems vetted for stability — the Linux ecosystem’s diversity is a testament to the virtues of free inquiry, the absurdity of patenting software, and the novel scale of intellectual work made possible by the internet.

5. The command-line: this is just silly. The command line exists on Windows boxes. One can hack the registry or talk to the OS via the Windows API, or, conversely, one can never see a jot of code on a Windows box, same as on Linux boxes. If Linux desktop environment and application users too often are subjected to command-line fixes, that just supports your argument that desktop oriented Linux environments still need work. That work is progressing at an astonishing speed, thanks again to the scale of development made possible by the internet and open access to code.

What I have found, however, is that the Windows command-line environment is gravely impoverished compared to Unix/Linux. Yes, I have done extensive work on both platforms. The Microsoft command line environment has come a long way, but it still lacks the depth and richness that the Unix/Linux environment possesses.

The article that this post is a reply too: Five crucial things … .

I also posted the trackback above as a reply in the blog.

San Francisco Chronicle doesn’t Digg the web

Friday, May 4th, 2007

The San Francisco Chronicle published a rather bone-headed analysis, User revolt at Digg.com shows risks of Web 2.0 (bylined Verne Kopytoff, Thursday, May 3, 2007) of the recent 09 f9 11 02 9d 74 e3 5b d8 41 56 c5 63 56 88 c0 dust-up on Digg.com.

09 f9 11 02 9d 74 e3 5b d8 41 56 c5 63 56 88 c0 is allegedly an encryption key that unlocks high definition media content encrypted using the AACS standard. It was cracked and posted to a web news group, Digg’d by others, and Digg was then hit with a DMCA ‘take-down’ diktat by the MPAA (The Digital Millenium Copyright Act is an unfortunate piece of legislation passed by the U.S. Congress that is the equivalent of outlawing kitchen knives because they could be used to commit crimes. Worse, the DMCA is being used by the MPAA and the RIAA to deny citizens fair-use copyright of media those citizens have legitimately purchased. Want to back up that DVD collection? Can’t do it in the not-quite-so-free United States of America).

Digg obliged the MPAA by censoring posts containing the AACS key, but users persisted, and Digg relented.

The Chronicle’s take on the controversy? Such shenanigans are the inevitable outcome of naive Web 2.0 companies’ loose reigns on the unwashed masses of the internet. It’s such a profound misunderstanding of the nature of the internet, the web, ‘Web 2.0,’ and this whole technological arena as to be an embarrassment.

According to the Chronicle,

The dust-up underscores both the power and the danger of what has come to be known as the Web 2.0 movement, a loosely defined group of Internet sites that foster online social networks and rely heavily on purely democratic principles to promote everything from news stories to music to photographs.

In truth, ‘Web 2.0′ technologies, which revolve around delivering a desktop PC-like, rich application experience to users via web browsers and the internet, have nothing at all to do with the democratising reach of the internet and the web. If anything, the development of centrally managed locations for posting material under the control of proprietary companies such as Flickr and Digg represent a step back from ‘democracy.’

What the SF Chronicle’s author fails to grasp is that the source of the internet’s democratising power is the nature of its underlying protocols, which make all hosts present in a single space (that is, a ‘cyber’ space) with zero distance between them. This is quite unlike traditional broadcast or print media, where delivery is expensive and slow, is overwhelmingly centralised, and ‘consumers’ of media contribute very little content in return.

Kopykoff continues:

Examples of Web 2.0 sites include the video-sharing site YouTube, the user-written online encyclopedia Wikipedia and the photo-sharing site Flickr. The movement also includes wildly popular social networking sites like MySpace and Facebook, on which users can interact with each other in a virtual setting.

Digg’s problems this week are just the latest example of Web 2.0 growing pains. Wikipedia is routinely buffeted by inaccurate or self-serving information, while YouTube is flooded with pirated videos.

Kopykoff has conflated so many different technologies it is difficult to know where to begin to parse the misapprehensions apart.

MySpace could hardly be called a Web 2.0 utilising site, nor would Wikipedia be put into this category. Web 2.0 makes applications such as Google Earth possible — applications that draw data from net repositories, but behave like an application residing on a local computer’s hard drive, such as Microsoft’s suite of office applications, which grew up on stand alone PCs, before there was a net.

Wikipedia’s woes — and its tremendous, novel breadth — stem directly from the ability of each host machine to talk directly to every other host machine on the internet, but again, its web presentation has probably zero of what one would call Web 2.0. Its failings are those of any mob scene, and that’s something that we learned how to cope with long before internet technology came onto the scene. Parliamentary rules of order, editors in news rooms such as Kopykoff’s, meritocratic universities, rules of civil service, and representative democracy all serve to improve the output of the ordinary human lot. Wikipedia chose to run itself as a mob would, and this has precious little to do with the medium that conveys it.

Identifying which communications are valid and sound and which are merely rumours, or the rantings of a hothead, or a mob of them, is a task little changed from the print and broadcast era.

I could continue to parse the article, but you probably get the idea. Kopykoff badly misunderstands the beast he (or she) has been sent to report on.

Sadly, the kernel of a story was there, but somehow Kopykoff missed it. It is this: why are so many people unhappy with the DMCA, the MPAA and the RIAA? Is outlawing all copying, or banning all technologies such as peer to peer communication — or strings of characters and computer programs — a legitimate means for dealing with crimes committed with those tools?

KSFO ABC / Disney Inc. Talk Radio Hate Speech

Sunday, January 14th, 2007

San Francisco Bay Area KSFO radio announcers Brian Sussman, Melanie Morgan, Lee Rodgers and Tom Benner have been engaging in a kind of brown-shirt like demagoguery and hate speech that would make Radovan Karad�ić or Josef Goebbals proud. Blogger Spocko (Spocko’s Brain is his blog) succeeded in bringing to the attention of several advertisers the nature of the KSFO programs, and they began to pull their advertisements. Spocko has also drawn attention to the role of corporate hegemons such as ABC / Disney Inc. (owner of KSFO) in tolerating and promoting demagogic hate speech.

Shortly after advertisers began to pull ads, Spocko’s internet service provider, 1&1 Internet Inc., was served with a copyright cease and desist letter by ABC / Disney Inc. on December 22th. On Januaary 2nd 1&1 Internet Inc. shut down Spocko’s web site. ABC / Disney Inc. allege that Spocko violated copyright by posting audio clips of the KSFO hate speech on his web site.

Although Mike Stark of Daily Kos has documented the Spocko audio files controversy thoroughly, I would like at least to republish Spocko’s original letter to one of KSFO / Disney’s advertisers, and follow that up with Spocko’s statements regarding the cease and desist letter (Thanks again to Mike Stark for his work on this story):

To: Wendy Clark, VP-advertising, AT&T

Dear Ms. Clark:

Thanks to radio hosts from KSFO your brand is being associated with torturing and killing people. Would your marketing people be happy to hear your commercial ran after Lee Rogers said this about a black man in Lincoln, Nebraska?

“Now you start with the Sear’s Diehard the battery cables connected to his testi*les and you entertain him with that for awhile and then you blow his bleeping head off. ” (Audio link)

You should know the person calling for the execution and torture of the black man in that clip READS THE AT&T commercials on the air. Right now on KSFO Lee Rogers is THE VOICE of AT&T to the SF Bay area. (Audio Link)

Sadly, calling for the death and torture of individuals and groups of people is a regular occurrence on KSFO 560 AM, owned by ABC Radio Disney.

Another example: immediately after the 6 am ABC Radio news on October 27th:

Lee Rogers: I say they catch the person, tie ‘em to a post and burn ‘em. Set ‘em on fire.

Officer Vic: Yeah.

Lee Rogers: Let ‘em know what it feels like.

Melanie Morgan: Hog tie ‘em first. That would be good.

Next, Lee Rogers talks about a protester at a Cindy Sheehan event:

“Whoever did that should have been stomped to death right there. Just stomp their bleeping guts out.” (Audio link).

Within three minutes they called for someone to be burned alive and a protester to be stomped to death. If you dismissed the first clip as a “joke”, note that in this clip they were clearly not joking:

Melanie Morgan famously called for Bill Keller of the New York Times (and nine editors from other papers) to be hanged. (Audio link)

On Nov. 14th Melanie Morgan said this about Nancy Pelosi:

“We’ve got a bulls-eye painted on her big laughing eyes.” (Audio link)

Also note that Morgan reads the Cingular Wireless commercials on KSFO.

Of course political speech is protected, but I believe the FBI and the FCC frown on targeting elected officials for death or inciting violence toward leaders of any political party.

Because of how ads are purchased, your ad placement agency probably didn’t know that Tom Brenner (the “comic relief” called Officer Vic) regularly mocks advertiser’s products. Listen as he:

* calls Chevrolet’s product “shi**y”
* (audio link) suggests an anti-virus product is part of a protection racket (audio link)
* pretends a cold pill is really a suppository (audio link)

The odds are your product will be mocked. If they don’t respect a big client like Chevrolet, will they respect your brand?

And it’s not simply calls for killing specific people or mocking products, the radio hosts at KSFO proudly talk about their anti-Muslim views. Based on my research, your business has rules about discrimination against people of other religions, so what message are you sending when your employees or customers hear your advertisements right after Brian Sussman demands of a caller:

“Say Allah is a Wh*re!” (audio link)

Or when Lee Rogers says,

“Indonesia is really just another enemy Muslim nation. … You keep screwing around with stuff like this we are going to kill a bunch of you. Millions of you. ” (audio link)

Maybe you haven’t heard any complaints. Would KSFO management let you know about complaints? Doubtful. Morgan’s husband, Jack Swanson, is KSFO’s operations manager. The president of KSFO, Mickey Luckoff, started the station format and has a history of defending hosts like Michael Savage until he was forced to fire him.

I understand you can’t listen to all the shows you advertise on - no one can. You rely on the accurate representation of the sales reps and the show description. But you don’t need to take my word, listen to the programs. You probably won’t have to listen long to hear something that offends or disgusts you. If you wish to hear the complete context on any clip or the audio during a date your ad ran contact me I have an educational archive of audio clips, I’ve listed a few below.

I want to emphasize that if you withdrawal your ads you aren’t limiting their free speech, just removing your paid support of it. Some other company without the values you describe on the AT&T website can support them. You can choose to advertise elsewhere. This is really about YOU. Do YOU want to be associated with these comments? Do you want your company and brand to be associated with these comments?
I urge you to discontinue advertising on KSFO during the shows hosted by Melanie Morgan, Lee Rogers, Tom Brenner and Brian Sussman.

If you want to contact KSFO here is a link to their website. If you wish to express your displeasure to their parent company contact Zenia Mucha, Senior Vice President, Corporate Communications, The Walt Disney Company PHONE: (818) 560-5300 CA, (212) 456-7255 NY or email Heather Rim, Vice President, Communications, ABC, Inc. heather.rim@abc.com.
Sincerely,

[Spocko]

P.S. I would appreciate hearing your final determination in this matter.

Spocko, on the significance of ABC / Disney’s cease and desist copyright action:

95 percent of blog fights don�t mean anything, but I think this one does since KSFO is using the full weight and force of an ABC/Disney lawyer and copyright law against a private citizen blogger. I dared to use the audio content in question for nonprofit educational purposes (I don�t even have ads on my blog!), and thus under the protection of the Fair Use Doctrine set forth in Section 107 of the Copyright Act, 17 U.S.C.�107.

Here’s the balance of Spocko’s statement regarding the matter:

ABC Radio Lawyer tells Spocko to Shut Up

Two days before Christmas I got a Cease and Desist letter from ABC regarding my use of audio clips from KSFO radio hosts Melanie Morgan and Lee Rogers on my blog, Spocko’s Brain (see attached PDF).

KSFO is a Disney affiliate whose radio hosts broadcast violent rhetoric directed toward journalists, liberals, Democrats, Arabs and Muslims all over the SF Bay Area and to the world via the Internet. I commented about the content of these host’s broadcasts on my blog and informed KSFO’s advertisers about what they were supporting by letting them listen to the exact audio quotes from the hosts.

Why the C&L Letter Now?

In mid-December I got confirmation that a major national advertiser, VISA, pulled their ads from the Melanie Morgan and Lee Rogers show, based on listening to audio clips I provided them. I also think that FedEx, AT&T and Kaiser are considering pulling their ads. Visa isn’t the first advertiser who has left KSFO, multiple advertisers have left the station, especially from the Brian Sussman show. In July of this year when KSFO lost MasterCard as an advertiser someone from KSFO “outed” me on a counter-blog (which I won’t link to). This same person has also threatened me with local and federal criminal action for using the audio (which I clearly used under the fair use portion of copyright law). And because they have suggested violence toward me (in addition to talking about suing me “for everything I have”) I have chosen to remain anonymous.

As Thers has said, 95 percent of blog fights don’t mean anything, but I think this one does since KSFO is using the full weight and force of an ABC/Disney lawyer and copyright law against a private citizen blogger. I dared to use the audio content in question for nonprofit educational purposes (I don’t even have ads on my blog!), and thus under the protection of the Fair Use Doctrine set forth in Section 107 of the Copyright Act, 17 U.S.C.�107.

It’s about Money not Ideology

Talk Radio is a multi-billion dollar industry. It is also a regulated industry because the public gave the broadcast airwaves to radio stations. There are rules. First there are FCC rules with fines of $325,000 for obscene and indecent speech, thanks to the Christian Right. Interestingly, the radio union, (which KSFO hosts hate so much) worked very hard to stop those fines from being directed to individual radio hosts. So the corporation will bear the burden of any fines. Next, there are guidelines at the local station level, the network level and the parent company level. So even if the inciting of violence and hate speech is ignored by the FCC, the continued violent rhetoric has been, and continues to be, approved at the station level (KSFO) the group level (KGO-KSFO) the company level (ABC Radio) and the parent company level (Disney). They are ALL aware of this speech, and because they have not acted in a meaningful way, they all are giving approval for it to continue.

No Management Action

When Keith Olbermann and Media Matters ran Melanie Morgan’s comments about “putting the bull’s-eye on” Speaker-elect Nancy Pelosi, management did nothing. Morgan did a jokey non-apology where she never even mentioned she used the term bull’s-eye.

I’m guessing Lee Rogers may have gotten a memo telling him to stop talking about burning people alive, torturing them and blowing their brains out, because on November 30th, he defiantly said to management and advertisers, “Nobody is gonna tell me what to talk about or not talk about or in what fashion on this radio program. It ain’t gonna happen!”

ABC/Disney acted only when they lost revenue. Then they went after ME with a cease and desist letter.

Why me? I’m not the one saying journalists should be hanged, thieves should be tortured and killed, people should be burned alive, stomped to death or have their testicles cut off. I’m not the one saying that millions of Muslims should be killed on the presumption that they are extremists or just because they live in Indonesia. I’m not the one who says that lying is as natural as breathing to Egyptians and Arabs or demanding that a caller “Say Allah is a Whore” to prove he is not an Islamist. I’m simply documenting this speech and providing it to the people who are paying KSFO hosts on commercially supported broadcast radio.

They have Lawyers, Guns and Money. I’ve got a 5th tier blog and no money

Because I and some other listeners hit right-wing talk radio in the pocket book, they are acting like wounded animals and brought out the big guns, Corporate Lawyers. Am I scared? Hell yes. They can easily squish me like a bug and tie me up in legal battles for the rest of my natural life (and Vulcans live a long time), not to mention that unlike KSFO radio hosts, I’m not getting paid hundreds of thousands of dollars and generating millions of revenue for a multibillion-dollar parent company. If I pursue this further I expect the next step is a “CyberSLAPP” suit.

I don’t want to consider the possibility of Morgan’s good friend Michelle Malkin deciding to publish my address and real name so that her minions can send me death threats or “white powder” in the mail. Chad Castagana, was charged with mailing more than a dozen threatening letters containing white powder to liberals. He got the idea from someone that journalists, liberals and democrats were the enemy and deserved to die.

Brian Sussman proudly poses with his handgun in KSFO publicity shots and says that he thinks that everyone should have the right to have a machine gun. Maybe I’m over reacting, why would they attack me? I’m not famous, I’m not an elected official, I tried very hard to be accurate about what THEY said BY USING THEIR OWN WORDS.

I tried to help companies protect their brands from being tainted with the violent rhetoric and anti-any-religion-but-right-wing-christianism speech. I wanted to help the VPs of marketing avoid being associated with Lee Roger’s “testicle talk” or Sussman talking about cutting off a finger and a penis of an Iraqi in his imaginary torture sessions.

It’s about Brands: All the Blessings, None of the Taint

I have found out that KSFO is sold to advertisers as “a Disney affiliate” with all the associated family-friendly connotations. So KSFO is getting all the benefit of the Disney name as well as the massive infrastructure of ad sales at the national level. Clearly ABC Radio doesn’t want KSFO hosts’ horrific comments to actually reach advertisers. Advertisers are kept in the dark so KSFO can benefit from the Disney brand glow (ABC Radio News creditability glow?).

Advertisers should be able to decide if they want to keep supporting this show based on complete information. We already know that management at ABC and Disney support these hosts, which means that the ABC/Disney Radio brand now apparently includes support for violent hate speech toward Muslims, democrats and liberals.

But instead of directing the hosts to refrain from violent rhetoric and hate speech, they go after the weakest person with the fewest resources. It’s cheaper and easier.

Bottom line: ABC/Disney is supporting and profiting from this violent speech, they should at least also accept any negative connotations or financial impact it might have to their image.

What can you do?

1. As El Gato Negro suggested, let’s distribute the audio clips of violent rhetoric and hate speech to multiple locations on the internet so that the ABC/Disney lawyers will have to find and send cease and desist letters to ISPs with stronger policies than the nice people at 1&1.

2. Crank this up around the blogosphere, if you have a blog link and post about this.

3. Let’s see if anyone in the mainstream media cares. Sadly they have a hard time writing about people who want them dead. I would think that at least the PUBLISHERS and MANAGEMENT at the New York Times, the Washington Post, the Wall Street Journal, and the Associate Press would want to at least defend their own journalists and photojournalists. To date only the LA Times has called Morgan out for accusing them of photojournalist misconduct…

Some members of the press HAVE covered this. When Joe Conason at Salon did a story about Morgan and KSFO he got called a hack by Morgan. When Todd Milbourn of the Sacramento Bee did a story about Move America Forward he got called a liar by Morgan.

4. Donate to groups who would defend bloggers, journalists and others that Morgan, Rogers and Sussman attack. Specifically I’m recommending you donate money to the Electronic Frontier Foundation, the Committee to Protect Journalists , and Media Matters.

You can also support the journalists who are doing their jobs and are threatened with death from talk radio hosts.

5. Write the advertisers of KSFO. I have a list of SOME of the advertisers who advertise on KSFO. Drop me a line at spockosemail @ gmail.com and I’ll send you a link to an updated list.

As always, be polite, let them know what they are supporting and how it is impacting their brand in your eyes. They often times have their own stated values that they want to maintain, you may want to ask if their corporate values align with what is being said on KSFO (often times the hosts are the VOICE of their brand in the Bay Area, so it’s not just the fact that their ad is run right after some violent hate speech, but that the person who is reading their copy is the person who is spewing the violent rhetoric.)

I’m open to other ideas too.

I’d like to thank everyone who has written letters to advertisers, especially PTcruiser and BP. Thanks Blog-Integrity folks for the forum, and special thanks to El Gato Negro.

LLAP,
Spocko

Telco Front Groups Oppose Network Neutrality

Saturday, August 12th, 2006

I have always followed the rule that one need know only the funding behind propositions and candidates to know what to vote against: the side with the laughably small funding probably best represents the interests of the vast majority of the populus. The oligarchs, as always, have their shills. Telco (telephone company) funding of front groups opposed to internet network neutrality, as reported by Common Cause, should, therefore, come as no surprise (Wikipedia network neutrality introduction).

The Common Cause site provides a revealing look at each of the front groups. For example, there is a description of the deceptive advertising of HOTI (Hands Off the Internet), a group that includes BellSouth, Cingular, and AT&T:

With its pithy name, viral web cartoons, high profile spokesman (former White House press secretary Mike McCurry) and barrage of print and television advertising, HOTI has been effectively injecting the telephone industry’s arguments on net neutrality into the public debate in recent months.

And they manage to do it while hiding their relationship with their corporate backers. K Street Confidential columnist Jeffrey Birnbaum wrote in The Washington Post that “no one can determine who is supporting Hands Off the Internet by looking at its ads alone. To find out, one must dig into its Web site.”[1]

Not surprisingly, the Common Cause report continues, HOTI poses as a wolf in sheep’s clothing, and fundamentally misrepresents the issue at hand:

HOTI ads “are the epitome of doublespeak,” according to Birnbaum.[4] For example, one print ad attempts to frame the Hands Off the Internet message in pro-consumer terms. “Net neutrality means consumers will be stuck paying more for their Internet access to cover the big online companies’ share,” the ad claims.[5] But every major consumer group supports net neutrality, and opposes HOTI’s plan to give telephone and cable companies gatekeeper status over the Internet.[6]

HOTI’s web-based advertising campaigns look and feel like something a consumer or grassroots group might publish. Their catchy, flash animation web videos try to persuade citizens that the government and Google are trying to control the Internet through net neutrality. The benefits that would accrue to the telephone and cable industry if telecom legislation passes without net neutrality language are never discussed, of course.

Learn more: visit Save the Internet’s FAQ.

Cory Doctorow’s Anti-DRM Speech

Saturday, July 15th, 2006

Cory Doctorow’s Anti-DRM Speech gives a good summary of why DRM (”Digital Rights Managment” — an excellent piece of Orwellian new-speak, if ever there was one), as advocated by oligopolists’ mouthpieces such as the RIAA, violate fair use rights, and stifle intellectual and commercial innovation.

An excerpt:

Remember Schneier’s Law? Anyone can come up with a security system so clever that he can’t see its flaws. The only way to find the flaws in security is to disclose the system’s workings and invite public feedback. But now we live in a world where any cipher used to fence off a copyrighted work is off-limits to that kind of feedback. That’s something that a Princeton engineering prof named Ed Felten and his team discovered when he submitted a paper to an academic conference on the failings in the Secure Digital Music Initiative, a watermarking scheme proposed by the recording industry. The RIAA responded by threatening to sue his ass if he tried it. We fought them because Ed is the kind of client that impact litigators love: unimpeachable and clean-cut and the RIAA folded. Lucky Ed. Maybe the next guy isn’t so lucky.

Matter of fact, the next guy wasn’t. Dmitry Sklyarov is a Russian programmer who gave a talk at a hacker con in Vegas on the failings in Adobe’s e-book locks. The FBI threw him in the slam for 30 days. He copped a plea, went home to Russia, and the Russian equivalent of the State Department issued a blanket warning to its researchers to stay away from American conferences, since we’d apparently turned into the kind of country where certain equations are illegal.

Network Neutrality (Redux)

Sunday, July 2nd, 2006

An excellent column by Robert Cringely proposes bypassing the telcos altogether in the last mile, thereby mooting the question of “Network Neutrality” (the proposal is in the context of a discussion of Microsoft’s future).

Cringley outlines the problem:

To Bob Frankston’s way of thinking this all comes down to who owns the infrastructure. The phone and cable companies own the wire outside our homes but we own the wire inside. (It didn’t used to be that way, you know. There was a time when the phone company owned the wire in our walls even though we paid for its purchase and installation.) The Internet has been a huge success to date specifically because nobody much controls the electrons. This is as opposed to services like broadcasting where some perceived scarcity of spectrum allowed governments to determine who could give or sell us entertainment and information. The ISPs (by which I mean telcos and cable companies) would very much like to go back to that sort of system, where they, not you, are the provider and determinant of what bits are good bits and what bits are bad.

No thanks.

Cringely describes Frankston’s solution to the Telco’s anti-capitalist, anti-entrepreneurial, and anti-social tendencies:

This would be a real marketplace not a fake one. Today’s system is a fake because it depends on capturing the value of the application — communications — in the transport and that would no longer be possible because with the Internet the value is created OUTSIDE the network.

“One example of the collateral damage caused by today’s approach is the utter lack of simple wireless connectivity. Another is that we have redundant capital-intensive bit paths whose only purpose is to contain bits within billing paths,” Frankston explains. “In practice, the telcos are about nothing at all other than creating billable events. Isn’t it strange that as the costs of connectivity were going down your phone bill was increasing — at least until VoIP forced the issue.”

“We have an alternative model in the road system: The roads themselves are funded as infrastructure because the value is from having the road system as a whole, not the roads in isolation. You don’t put a meter on each driveway. Tolls, fuel taxes, fees on trucks, etc. are ways of generating money but they are indirect. Local builders add capacity; communities add capacity and large entities create interstate roads. They don’t create artificial scarcity just to increase toll revenues — at least not so blatantly.”

“I refer to today’s carrier networks as trollways because the model is inverted — the purpose of the road is to pass as many trollbooths as possible. We keep the backbone unlit to assure artificial scarcity. Worse, by trying to force us within their service model we lose the opportunity to create new value and can only choose among the services that fill their coffers — it’s hard to come up with a more effective way to minimize the value of the networks.”

A model in which the infrastructure is paid for as infrastructure — privately, locally, nationally, and internationally can create a true marketplace in which the incentives are aligned. Instead of having the strange phenomenon of carriers spending billions and then arguing that they deserve to be paid, we’d have them bidding on contracts to install and/or maintain connectivity to a marketplace that is buying capacity and making it available so value can be created without having to be captured within the network and thus taken out of the economy.

So why not do it? Well the telcos and cable companies would hate it. Who made them gods?

Thanks to Doc Searls for the link.

Ten Worst Patent Abusers

Tuesday, May 2nd, 2006

Thanks to Birdhouse for the following:

The EFF has assembled a list of ten of the worst patent abusers out there, and wants their heads on a platter for “Crimes against the public domain, willful ignorance of prior art, egregious display of obviousness.” Fortunately, fair use has a posse.

Network Neutrality

Sunday, February 12th, 2006

I posted on the issue of net neutrality in a classroom forum (for my Network Administration class at CCSF):

Doc Searls of Linux Journal wrote a column, “Saving theNet: How to Keep the Carriers from Flushing the Net Down the Tubes,”about this issue recently.

Searls is a strong advocate of the point of view that the main reasonfor the internet’s extreme malleability and explosive growth has beenthe abstraction of applications from the underlying networkinfrastructure. To use his term, the internet is a “stupid” network: thenetwork says nothing about what applications (the networks “endpoints”)can or should be. In contrast is the PSTN, of Ma Bell fame — thepenultimate example of a circuit switched “smart” network. Searlsargues that the telcos, owners of the PSTN, yearn to exert the kind ofcontrol over the internet that they have over the PSTN, and that theyare moving to reestablish their hegemony by arguing before the USCongress in favor of doing so.

What would this mean in a pratical sense for you and I? It would meanmuch less diversity on the application side, and little or no control,or ability to develop our own solutions. Think cell phones, where it isvirtually impossible — if not illegal — to control the software on thebox. Reverse engineering the software, even if only to build beneficialnew applications, is a violation of an agreement that you entered intoin order to get phone service. This closed, proprietary software worldis a fundamentally different development (and user) environment from theworld of tcp/ip, where standards are published and vetted openly in theform of RFCs.

This is a complicated issue, but it would behoove us not tounderestimate its implications. The outcome of the fight for control ofintellectual “property” in the form of patents and copyright onsoftware, in conjunction with the struggle for control of networkinfrastructure, may very well determine whether the “useful arts”continue to flourish in the U.S., or, conversely, as we’re alreadywitnessing in both the software and telecom world, the US slips intorelative obsolesence.

Post in Burningbird’s DRM Discussion

Friday, January 13th, 2006

I posted a reply in a discussion of Digital Rights Management on Shelley Powers Burningbird weblog:

In regards to this statement:

But the same copyright laws that protect big corporations also are the same laws that protect individual artists’ rights. I know because I have used copyright to protect my own work from infringement.

I beg to differ. Big corporations are not people. It is disingenuous, at best, to imply that their rights somehow are equivalent to those of individual persons. The enormous concentrations of wealth and power that corporate entities have become — so powerful now that they are fundamentally subverting the system of free exchange of ideas, in the form of copyrights with reasonable limits, reasonably and narrowly defined patents, and subordination to the will of legislatures — can in no way be equated to individual persons.

It is ironic that corporations (and by the use of the word corporation here I refer especially to the 1% that control about 80% of our economy) are subverting the system of free scientific and cultural inquiry, created by legislative fiat (again, in the form of reasonable limits on scope and life of patents and copyright), that gave birth to them.

I would like to add, because it seems necessary to say so out loud, that a reasonable juridical system of copyright and patents is the best guarantor of the free exchange of ideas. The free exchange of ideas, coupled with robust legislative and judicial oversight, helps to ensure that markets are productive and flexible.

This is not the system we in the U.S. have now, and the recent extension of copyright life to absurd lifespans, as well as the distortions we are witnessing in the patent legal arena, serve the interests of an extremely narrow segment of society, and do not serve the general welfare.

Why Switch From Microsoft to Linux

Friday, October 21st, 2005

I stumbled across an fairly good article, titled
Why Linux isn’t too fat & MS hurts customers
, that enumerates reasons to switch from Microsoft to Linux (or, rather, to anything open source).

An excerpt:

The other big benefit is that companies can control their own destinies more finely by using Linux. When you use Windows, you get whatever version of Windows was shipping when you bought the PC.

Often, most of a company is using an older version of Office. Then someone gets a new PC with the latest Office, and starts sending around Word documents. People with the older versions of Office can’t read those, and pressure quickly rises to upgrade everyone to the latest Office. Microsoft could easily make the old and new file formats compatible, but they deliberately do the opposite to force unnecessary upgrades on the market.

The correct approach when your company stumbles into this situation is to take the opportunity to introduce OpenOffice into your company. Microsoft makes a big song and dance about “supporting what customers want,” but they really don’t support what customers want. Microsoft acts to protect its monopoly, rather than supporting what customers want.

At work, I tried to make the point that it might not be a good idea to encase the intellectual output of a thousand employees into formats whose proprietary owner not only has a record of extortionate capriciousness, but one who has broken the law to maintain its monopoly control of markets (I’m referring to Microsoft, of course), but I was ignored. One more reason to move on.

Corrupt American Corporate media

Friday, July 1st, 2005

The American corporate media are corrupt, oligarchic, dangerous; choose your adjective. I prefer vacuous.

Hmmm…it seems that the link above is from an Arianna Huffington post. The key portion:

* ABC News: “Downing Street Memo”: 0 segments; “Natalee Holloway”: 42 segments; “Michael Jackson”: 121 segments.
* CBS News: “Downing Street Memo”: 0 segments; “Natalee Holloway”: 70 segments; “Michael Jackson”: 235 segments.
* NBC News: “Downing Street Memo”: 6 segments; “Natalee Holloway”: 62 segments; “Michael Jackson”: 109 segments.
* CNN: “Downing Street Memo”: 30 segments; “Natalee Holloway”: 294 segments; “Michael Jackson”: 633 segments.
* Fox News: “Downing Street Memo”: 10 segments; “Natalee Holloway”: 148 segments; Michael Jackson”: 286 segments.
* MSNBC: “Downing Street Memo”: 10 segments; “Natalee Holloway”: 30 segments; “Michael Jackson”: 106 segments.

Oligarchy’s Gates

Thursday, February 10th, 2005

This post serves to memorialize a comment that I made, in the case that it disappears. The comment is still up here.

It was posted in the comments section of Joi Ito’s site, January 07, 2005, which was titled: “Bill Gates calls free culture advocates communists.”

27- Robert @ January 24, 2005 07:03 PM

I believe that the intent of the movement to reform copyright and patent law is to maintain a free society — one in which capitalism is possible. The irony of Bill Gates’ remarks in the interview Joi Ito cites is that Microsoft’s activities have stunted innovation through illegal monopoly.

Microsoft’s impetus has been towards control of markets, which is a perfectly predictable outcome, given the mandate of its constitutive documents. Nevertheless, Microsoft has more in common with Soviet-style ministries than Bill the propagandist would have us believe.

And this is why we have legislatures and courts: because some values cannot be represented fairly by truck in money alone.

One of those values is that for capitalism and “the useful arts” to flourish there must be some limit on their ownership. The progenitors of ideas must be rewarded, but so too must the benefit of their labor be dispersed to society as a whole.

It is precisely the belief of those who argue against irrational patent law and excessively lengthy copyrights that these benefits are not devolving to society in a reasonable period of time.

And, of course, there is nothing in the legal instantiation of property that forbids gifting, and volunteerism. The GPL and Creative Commons licenses are quite supportable legally, at least as supportable under international copyright law as any other.

I would argue that we are all the richer for the efforts of voluntary organizations; indeed, a good deal of liberty and civil society can be attributed to those who have given freely of their time, property — and ideas.


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