this is mikel.org

Michael Boyle's weblog

  • home
  • archives
  • about
  • words

Archives for July 2000

What if it were

July 20, 2000 by Michael Boyle

illegal to buy a copyright, if they could only be assigned for a limited time? What if, unless you were a salaried employee (hence making your work a product of the company paying you), you owned your work, period? If you were permitted to lease it, but not sell it outright?

I’m always torn in a discussion of Napster and the other digital music schemes. I have, from time to time, made my living (or an important part of it) as a writer. My brother’s a musician. Many, if not most, of my friends are writers or artists of some sort or another. These people work hard at what they do. But when I look at a particular acquaintance of mine’s CD, she doesn’t own the copyright, the record company does. When I write an article, I own the copyright – the newspaper or magazine it is published in only owns certain rights; usually the right to first publication.

I think a clearheaded study of how copyright works and a legal expression of how that system should function would go a long way to solving a lot of the current issues. It’s one of those situations, I think, when the road ahead in terms of the specifics will only be apparent when the first principles are reiterated and strengthened.

Trouble is, the pattern is clearly in the other direction – away from privileging the rights of individual copyright holders, towards rights of corporate copyright holders and other businesses involved in such matters. I have personally been involved with a number of publications that have asserted that their purchase of first publication rights includes, with no further compensation, the right to place the work in databases that, essentially, exist in perpetuity. And the DCMA points in that direction pretty clearly as well.

For the moment, I don’t have a huge problem squaring my deep belief in copyright – the right I have over my creative and intellectual work with the free distribution of songs on the net, but that’s only because of the total belligerance and seeming cluelessness of the recording industry, and it won’t hold indefinitely. At some point, I believe that copyrights should be inviolate. So my conclusion, for now, is that the whole concept of copyright must be strengthened and affirmed. Trouble is – I doubt it would be by those with the deepest pockets in this ongoing dialogue.

Tags: ALA, Bell, Business, Data, Friend, GNE, Intel, Music, Personal, War, Writers

I caught up with

July 19, 2000 by Michael Boyle

the Making the Macintosh site last night via Aaron‘s site and was completely transfixed. And given the announcements today it seems especially apropos to make the link. My favourite part was the Product Introduction plan from 1983, which lays out the whole thing. Some of the expected criticisms discussed in that old document are still parroted by people today. Most of it just seems quaint.

Tags: Aaron Straup Cope, Macintosh, SMS

Going to see

July 19, 2000 by Michael Boyle

X-MEN tonight – I actually went out of my way to get tix early instead of just showing up 10 minutes before as I normally do. It’s very odd, cause I haven’t been a comix guy for a long long time, that was a part of a much younger me. But I loved X-Men back in the day,  l’poque as we say in French.

Tags: French

You’ll see that

July 19, 2000 by Michael Boyle

I’m now a happier coffee drinker if you take a look at my cam today. I’ve already received many inquisitive and complimentary comments on my new mug, even if it did end up being the most expensive impulse buy of my life. Once you add shipping, convert to $US and add duty and taxes (collected at customs), it cost me more money than I want to think about.

From MacWorld Expo

July 19, 2000 by Michael Boyle

in New York today: Steve Jobs has announced a bunch of new stuff, including a G4 Cube, which is a really cool G4 machine in an 8″ x 8″ x 8″ enclosure and no fan. I covet one of these – it’s not a full G4 with all the ports and expansion, but I no longer really need that at home. Also announced were some new iMacs (in great new colours, and the entry-level goes for $800), a couple new displays, and multi-processor G4 professional machines.

Tags: Macworld, New York, Professional, Steve Jobs

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 5
  • 6
  • 7
  • 8
  • 9
  • …
  • 17
  • Next Page »

search

recent

  • Diouf Article
  • Anil Dash: We’re not being alarmist enough about climate change…
  • Learning about Gutenberg
  • From the “I thought I’d heard it all” file
  • One year since his passing: The Day Prince’s Guitar Wept the Loudest

Archives

Canada Arts Canadian Politics Microsoft Email Internet Friend Blogging Google Wired Test GNE War Web Design Software Search International Affairs Design Business NYTimes Montreal Copyfight Apple Sports Music Browser Personal Web US Politics Funny Social Networks Media
Michael Boyle Blog
  • Email
  • Facebook
  • Twitter

Copyright © 2000–2025 · Michael Boyle

Copyright © 2025 · Modern Portfolio Pro Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in