Archive for the Misc Thoughts Category

April 29th, 2008

What should be done about copyright, Part 2

Filed under: Misc Thoughts — jasonlevine @ 12:59 pm

A few weeks ago, I posted what I thought should be done about copyright penalties.  I left out one important point, however.  I think that copyright terms have grown out of control and need to be brought back in line with what was originally envisioned by the Founding Fathers.  Specifically, copyright should last for 14 years with one optional 14 year extension.  (You would need to apply for the extension.)  After that, the copyright would fall into the Public Domain and could be used by anyone.

That’s the way things were when the United States was founded.  Over the years, the optional extension became an automatic one, and was eventually rolled into the term itself.  In addition, the length of time that a copyright lasted got longer and longer.  Right now, a copyrighted work (for example, this blog post) made by a single author lasts for 70 years after the author’s death.  I happen to be in my 30’s.  Let’s say I live another 50 years.  This means that this blog post will enter the public domain in April 2128.  Of course, I won’t be around to see the blog post enter the public domain, but what about my children.  My youngest child is almost 1.  Let’s suppose that he lives to be 90 and has his last child at 30.  (Just for nice, round numbers.)  This means that my grandchild will be 91 when my work enters the public domain.  Presumably at that point I would have great-grandchildren and great-great-grandchildren milling about.

If this blog post was made for a company, then the copyright would last for 95 years from first publication or 120 years from creation, whichever is less.  (In this case, 95 years.)  This gives us a slightly better figure of the copyright expiring in the year 2103, when my hypothetical grandchild would be 66.

Even assuming that this blog post winds up being a huge money maker for my descendants/company (huge assumption there), copyright was never supposed to be about ensuring income to the descendants of authors and artists.  It was never meant to be a perpetual money maker for companies.  Copyright was designed as a compromise between the publics’ need to use the work to create more works and the author’s need for monetary compensation.  It creates a temporary, artificial monopoly on the work.

The author gets ownership of the work for a short time to generate revenue.  This gives them the incentive to make the original work and to make more works.  They know that the work won’t immediately get sold by someone else with the author left in the cold.  The public, meanwhile, gets assurance that the copyright term will end and they will be able to enjoy the work (and base more items off the work) without needing the original author’s permission.

With a perpetual copyright, you start running into problems tracking down the owner.  Say you wanted to make a film about Romeo and Juliet.  Who would own the copyrights to Shakespeare’s works?  You could spend decades researching that question without any success.  All copyrights *must* end or new works would be crippled.

So my proposal (let’s call it Jason’s Copyright Sanity Act) would be to limit copyright to the original 14 year term plus an additional, optional, one-time 14 year extension.  I might compromise to 20+20, but that’s about it.  I would also compromise by allowing an assumption that any works created up to 28 years before the JCSA was passed could be assumed to have applied for the extension.  As one final compromise to companies/individuals holding copyrighted works, I would phase copyrighted items out to the Public Domain a decade at a time, starting with the oldest items.  The first year after the JCSA was approved would see items from 1922 - 1929 fall into the Public Domain.  The year after that items from 1930 - 1939.  And so on until we were caught up.  It should only take 5 or 6 years to get fully caught up.  Of course, this whole proposal would have very little chance of passing through Congress as the content lobbyists would kill it on sight.

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April 2nd, 2008

What should be done about copyright

Filed under: Misc Thoughts — jasonlevine @ 9:54 am

Unless you’ve been living under a rock for the last decade, you’ve probably heard about the recording industry’s lawsuits against file sharers.  Now, I have no sympathy for people who willfully infringe copyright and yes, in my mind that includes downloading a song.  (At least in the US, it does.  Canada’s a different story.)  However, any sympathy I might have possibly had for the recording industry has long since been countered by their sleazy tactics — both to individuals accused of file sharing and to the artists that the recording industry claims to  be fighting to protect.

Yesterday, CNet posted a story about how the recording industry was told by a judge that “making available” isn’t grounds for copyright infringement.  This is a good thing since many P2P applications can share out portions of your hard drive with little to no notice.  Sure, technically minded folks would easily see what’s happening and change the settings, but Joe User isn’t going to know to do this and could wind up on the receiving end of a lawsuit without having any intention to illegally distribute copyrighted material.

CNet is celebrating this ruling as one more victory against the recording industry’s shotgun approach to lawsuits.  (Sue everyone, press for quick settlements, and seek to bankrupt the people who try to fight the lawsuits instead of settling.)  While I agree, I think that a bigger win would be getting Congress to update the fines involved for violating copyright.

The fines involved were set up by Congress back at a time when the major copyright infringement worry was commercial operations.  The kind that would, today, burn a hundred copies of a DVD and sell them on eBay for $1 each.  The fines were set at $750 to $150,000 per infringement.  It didn’t take into account what I call “casual infringement.”  I define casual infringement as copyright infringement without seeking a profit.  So selling DVD copies illegally is commercial infringement.  Downloading/sharing the latest hit song on a P2P network is casual infringement.

Now that we’ve set up a distinction between the two, we should have differing fines.  After all, why should a home user who shared out 12 MP3s face the same fines as someone who sold burned copies of that music in an attempt to illegally profit off of someone else’s work?  Should both the profit seeker and the home user face fines of $9,000 - $1.8 million?  I would keep commercial infringement fines at the current levels.

Casual infringement, however, I would reduce to be more in line with the actual “damages.”  If a user shares a song, the damage to the recording industry isn’t $1.8 million.  At most, it is the amount of money that sales of the song would have brought in had the downloaders bought the song instead.  We can’t
know just how many people downloaded from a particular sharer’s song.  Not unless we got access to all of the ISPs log files and even then how do you take into account partial file transfers such as on Bittorrent?  So an arbitrary amount should be set.  Let’s say 10 downloads will be assumed unless you have proof of a more exact number.  This will keep the fine at the end high enough to be a real penalty without turning it into a life ruining event.  Assuming 10 people downloaded the songs, the recording industry is out 10 times the price that those 10 people would have paid for the songs.  (There’s an argument about “lost sales” here and I actually agree with it, but let’s put that aside for the moment.)  At iTunes and other online shops, you can buy music for $0.99 per song.  This gives us a fine per song of $9.90.

In the case of a home user who shared out 12 MP3s, the fine would be $118.80.  Not a trivial amount to be sure, but also not bank-breaking.  Of course, a more realistic scenario has the recording industry suing someone who shared out 1,000 MP3s.  In this case, the user would be facing a $9,900 fine.  Much less than the couple hundred thousand dollar fine current copyright law would lead to.  Yet, the user is sure to feel a financial sting (despite they aren’t bankrupted) and will reconsider doing it again.

Of course, this proposal has little to no chance of becoming law.  If anything, Congress’ ear is bent towards the industry which is asking for higher fines.  (Something which was just pulled out of the still bad for consumers Pro-IP Act.)

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February 1st, 2008

Feed Changes

Filed under: Misc Thoughts — jasonlevine @ 2:17 pm

I was having some RSS feed issues with Google Reader so I’m switching my feed to FeedBurner.  Hopefully, this solves the problem.  I’ve added a plugin to help redirect you to the FeedBurner link, but you might need to manually update your feed reader to point to http://feeds.feedburner.com/JasonsToolbox.  If there are any Google Reader users out there reading my feed, let me know how this new link works.

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January 16th, 2008

Big Ideas I’ll Never Implement: Followup

Filed under: Misc Thoughts — jasonlevine @ 9:46 am

Back in October, I blogged about a Big Idea I’ll Never Implement:  A Wii Health Club.  I envisioned it as a place that an individual or group could go to to exercise using a Nintendo Wii system.  It turns out that someone else had the same big idea.  Only they implemented it.  It’s in the Phillipines and I doubt that they got the idea from reading my blog (no lifetime membership for me, I guess ;-) ), but it’s still pretty cool.

From http://www.channeljayreviews.co.uk/2008/01/11/the-first-nintendo-wii-fitness-cafe/ :

FriiSpirit Fitness and Fun café, however, takes this aerobic activity to the next level. Founded by four friends on Katipunan road, the café’s unassuming façade better resembles a small restaurant hideaway than a fitness center. Once inside, the décor is reminiscent of a high-end techno lounge, with plush custom-made pink beanbag sofas and flat-screen televisions everywhere.

The café intends to gather groups of families or friends and have them sweat it out in a Wii-induced frenzy. The place is large enough to hold up to 50 people comfortably, even those who are swinging their limbs about frenetically in time to the games projected on the screens.

So if you’re in the Phillipines, you might want to burn off some extra weight by visiting the Wii-Fitness club.

On a related front, I’m really excited about a new “game” coming for the Wii.  I put game in quotes because it’s more of an entire exercise program than a simple game.  It’s called WiiFit.  The game sells for about $75US in Japan right now.  (US release date is rumored to be in May.)  It includes a balance board peripheral that can sense how your weight is distributed.  This means that balancing on the board differently sends different signals to the game.  For example, one of the mini-games involves tilting a platform to roll marbles into holes.  As you shift your weight on the screen, the platform tilts and the marbles roll.  Tilt just right and the marbles plunk down the holes.

They don’t stop at some fun mini-games, though.  There are 15 different Yoga exercises and 15 “traditional” exercises (push ups, squat thrusts, etc) to do.  Your weight and BMI get tracked and graphed for you with the overall goal of improving your health/losing weight.  The folks at WiiFolder.com have some demonstration videos (using the Japanese version of the game).  I’m definitely going to try to get this once it hits the shelves in the US.  “Try” being the operative word.  I have a feeling that this will quickly sell out and will be hard to come by for awhile.

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October 18th, 2007

View Source Infringes Copyright

Filed under: Misc Thoughts — jasonlevine @ 8:01 am

This is too hilarious (yet at the same time, very sad).  Apparently, Dozier Internet Law believes that the copyright on their website allows them to forbid anyone from viewing the HTML code on their website.  They also forbid linking to their site without permission.

So, according to them, I’m breaking the law if I say that I went to http://www.cybertriallawyer.com/ and clicked View->Page Source.

How stupid can you get?

(Read All Criticism of This Website Is Hereby Forbidden for a more in-depth information on this.)

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October 15th, 2007

Big Ideas I’ll Never Implement

Filed under: Misc Thoughts — jasonlevine @ 2:32 pm
The other day, I was thinking about how I need to lose some weight.  Besides dieting (which my wife and I just started back on Weight Watchers), I thought of playing Nintendo Wii as a method of losing weight.  It’s already been documented in many places that playing Wii can help you lose weight.  But what about those folks who don’t own a Wii?

My idea first started as your typical gym/health club, but with an added Wii-Room. Then I thought, why not just go all-Wii? You could buy a few dozen Wiis (I’m assuming availability here) and hook them up in and internal network.  When you join the club, you sit down and create your Mii character (the avatar that gets displayed as “you” onscreen for those out there who have never played Wii before). You could then go from room to room playing different games. To increase the workout, you could rent weights to strap onto your wrists/ankles. Perhaps some weight rentals would come with your membership. The higher your membership level, the more you could get.

You could also play various games.  Tennis, Boxing, Bowling, Golf, and Baseball are all standard on the WiiSports pack that comes with the Wii, but there’s no reason why you couldn’t get other games.  Certain rooms would run certain games.  The wireless nature of the controllers would help here.  The Wii consoles themselves could be hidden in a locked box to prevent theft.  The WiiMotes would be checked out when you entered and checked back in when you left.  (Penalties could be assessed for breaking or losing a WiiMote.)

You could even bring in friends to play Wii/workout together. Friends would get pre-made generic Mii’s (to help encourage membership) and would need to pay for a Guest pass.

Nintendo is coming out with a WiiFit game/controller next year, so this would give the WiiWorkout Club more activities to do.

I don’t think I could ever implement this idea, so I’m putting it out there. If you open a WiiWorkout center, I’ll just take a few percentages of the profit… or a few free Wii games and free lifetime membership. ;-)

1 Comment

  1. Pingback by Nintendo » Big Ideas I’ll Never Implement — October 15, 2007 @ 2:39 pm

    […] gerard9s wrote an interesting post today onHere’s a quick excerptNintendo is coming out with a WiiFit game/controller next year, so this would give the WiiWorkout Club more activities to do. I don’t think I could ever implement this idea, so I’m putting it out there. If you open a WiiWorkout center, … […]

June 29th, 2007

What I’m listening to…

Filed under: Misc Thoughts — jasonlevine @ 1:54 pm

Three months ago, I wrote about AmieStreet.com.  Since then I’ve bought 70 songs and have only spent $5.55.  That’s less than 8 cents per song on average.  It’s also the equivalent of less than 6 songs from iTunes.  I’ve also been telling everyone I know about it (probably annoying them in the process).  Here are the songs that I’ve bought/am listening to.  (I’ll update it from time to time as I buy more songs.)

3 Comments

  1. Comment by TheGift73 — July 19, 2007 @ 1:30 pm

    Hi Jason,

    Firstly thanks for the info on AmieStreet.com. The main reason that i registered here was that i wanted to thank you for your browser test program. I found it to be very enlightening and useful. Will you be adding tests foe IE 7 and the latest releases for Firefox in the future? I will be getting quite a few of my friends to take your browser security test as i feel that you designed it in a very easy to understand way and will help them with their security issues.

    Once again thank you for your test and help.

    Richard.

  2. Comment by jasonlevine — July 24, 2007 @ 6:47 am

    Most likely I won’t be doing any more work on the browser tests. At least not in the immediate future.

  3. Comment by DraftKing — August 14, 2007 @ 12:42 pm

    I also enjoy Amie Street — it’s a great way to find new music (and at a great price.) Good call on talking it up…

May 19th, 2007

New Arrival

Filed under: Misc Thoughts — jasonlevine @ 10:53 pm

This post is about 6 days late, but things have been rather busy here. At 12:31pm on Monday May14th my wife gave birth to our second son, Jacob Solomon Levine. Jacob weighed in at 8lbs 15oz and was 20 inches long. Mother and new baby are fine and are home now. Noah (our first son) loves his new baby brother and wants to help out any way he can (even when it’s something that an energetic 3 1/2 year old shouldn’t do).

Here’s a photo of new Baby Jacob:

Baby Jacob

And here’s one of Noah and Jacob together:

Noah and his new baby brother

By the way, I must apologize about any delayed comment postings. When I set up this blog, I set comments to auto-approve. Unfortunately, comment spammers invaded with links to XXX rated sites and other trash. Until I come up with a better way of stopping them, I have changed the setting to require me to approve each comment. It’s a pain, but it’s better than some scumbag using my site to promote his spammy way of life.

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April 29th, 2007

Weekly… except for the last 5 weeks.

Filed under: Misc Thoughts — jasonlevine @ 10:35 pm

Last week, I said that I was going to try to do weekly reviews of different products and services that I found online.  Instead, a series of events (Passover, health problems that my wife experienced, etc), sidelined those reviews.  My initial plan was to do a flurry of reviews to make up for the ones I missed.  However, with a new baby coming onto the scene any day now (19 days until the due date and the doctors think that there’s no way we’re going to make it that far), I’ve realized that there’s no way that I’ll be able to make a weekly review schedule.  Instead, I’m going to make a series of monthly reviews.  If I find that I have more things to review than once per month permits, then maybe I’ll increase the frequency of the reviews.

Until then, here’s my review for the month of April.  A lot of you likely use FireFox as your browser of choice.  I long ago switched from Internet Explorer to FireFox (after a stop over with Maxthon).  I like FireFox as it is, but the extensions that are available just put it over the top.  Here are three of my favorites (in no particular order):

1.  SlimSearch

Ever find an address on a webpage and wonder how to get there?  Ever read about something online that you would like to read more about on Wikipedia?  Or maybe you just want to do a Google search to find more information about a topic?  SlimSearch can do all of those.  You just highlight a word (or phrase, or address), then right-click and select SlimSearch.  A sub-menu will then expand to show many options including Google Search, Google Maps Search, Froogle, Wikipedia, IMDB, and many more.  It makes searches much easier.

2.  repagination

I appreciate this one every time I’m searching for products online or am reading a multi-page article.  I simply right-click on the “Next Page” link and tell the repagination extension to retrieve all of the following pages.  Then FireFox automatically loads the next pages and appends them to the current page.  The result is one very long page that I can read through, search on, or print out.

3.     IE Tab

As a web developer, I try to tailor my web pages to work in both Internet Explorer and FireFox.  However, there are some websites out there that make their sites work only in Internet Explorer.  When you reach one of those sites and just have to use it, IE Tab will let you keep surfing from within FireFox even as you use Internet Explorer’s rendering engine.   Simply right-click on the tab and select Switch Rendering Engine.  The page will reload using Internet Explorer, but still in FireFox.  For you web developers out there, IE Tab can also be useful to quickly see just how well your page works in both FireFox and Internet Explorer.

1 Comment

  1. Comment by VeraLenora — May 11, 2007 @ 8:19 pm

    About 20 years ago, children, before Al Gore realized ARPANET could be opened to the public and become what we now calll the Internet, I read an article about the future of computing. In it the writer suggested that someday we might read a text, and needing some more information, just mark or highlight it someway and receive a flood of information. The writer suggested this might be possible in about … 500 years. Now there’s SlimSearch. How time flies.

December 28th, 2006

Happy Holidays/New Year

Filed under: Misc Thoughts — jasonlevine @ 8:46 am

Hey all,

Ok, I’m a bit late on the holidays part. Still, I hope everyone had a happy holiday season and here’s hoping that everyone has a wonderful 2007!

Noah Holiday Card 2007 (Small).jpg

1 Comment

  1. Comment by knight-gkla — February 27, 2007 @ 5:18 am

    Hi Jason, Glad to see you’re still on the net. Hope you can help with this one, couldn’t see anywhere else to put it. I’ve used cookiejar for years and I think it’s great. Just upgraded to Vista (probably a mistake) and it worked fine run as administrator. However the Vista upgrade from Xp was a disaster and lots of the system began to crumble. A clean install is great but I can’t get cookiejar back, I get an error “Runtime 76, path not found”. I know you don’t recon to maintain this, but the program works fine if I can instal it.

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