res ipsa.
And note I talk about this blog in the book. If Three Blind Mice wants to out himself, I’d be happy to send him a copy.
res ipsa.
And note I talk about this blog in the book. If Three Blind Mice wants to out himself, I’d be happy to send him a copy.
Doug Lichtman, a professor of law at UCLA, has a new IP-related podcast, The IP Colloquium. The first show is a fantastic interview with the EFF’s Fred von Lohmann (and CLE credit is available!).
REMIX has been released. There’s a site with stuff about it. There’s a link to buy it on Amazon. And there’s a page with reviews, including the one by L. Gordon Crovitz, former publisher of the Wall Street Journal.
Here’s what I was instructed to spam my friends with by the ever-vigilant Change Congress staff. I’m spamming my blog readers instead:
Dear Friends,
My organization needs your help.
Change Congress is asking candidates for Congress and current members of Congress, their stance on key reform issues from earmark reform to taking money from lobbyists and PACs. The goal is to provide a user-friendly map of where our politicians are when it comes to these key reform issues.
We’ve setup two ways people like you can help with our new iPledge Project:
1. Pester Your member of Congress:
Simply by going to the website below you can actually find your member of Congress as well as candidates in your district/state and drop them an email, letter or a phone call asking them to tell us where they stand on our issues. We provide scripts and all you have to do is press SEND.http://change-congress.org/ipledge/
2. TAG a politician
Stumble upon an article or press release where your member of Congress says they support earmark reform? We’re asking folks to attach these articles to the individual webpages of each politician by “TAGGING” it. This will let the community see what each politician has stated publicly on each of these key issues.http://change-congress.org/tag/
We’ll be meeting at our offices every Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday evening through October between 4PM – 7PM. Please join us for drinks, snacks, and laptops!
Change Congress
543 Howard Street (btween 1st and 2nd)
5th Floor
San Francisco, CA 94105The future of democracy will not simply rely on grassroots but also on the “netroots” — bands of internet users sharing and creating information with each other through websites.
I hope you can help!
Thanks so much,
As reported in Politico, Grover Norquist has joined the Open Debate Coalition.
“I’m happy to join the Open Debate Coalition in calling for dismantling the Commission or fundamentally reforming it so it is accountable to one constituency only: the public.”
This now is the unavoidable goal: “dismantling the Commission.” The most astonishing thing about this process has been the totally non-responsive “Commission on Presidential Debates.” I could get top people from both campaigns to respond almost immediately to the requests we made. But the Executive Director of the Commission, Janet Brown, didn’t have time for even the courtesy of a response to an email.
Enough of that, and enough of them. Join us now in a call that the Commission formally release the debates to the public. Either ping the Executive Director or sign-up at OpenDebateCoalition.org. Join us later to help remake this Commission.
YouTube has responded to McCain/Palin’s call for more process before taking political video’s down.
Chris Soghoian of Berkman has a nice post about McCain/Palin’s call on YouTube to review takedowns from campaigns before taking them down. He criticizes it as “special rules.”
True enough, it is a special rule. But isn’t it appropriate? For here’s the new game for politics in the YouTube age: complain enough to get an account shut down (according to YouTube testimony, 3 complaints gets an account shut down (pg 17 near the bottom), and ideally, do it at the critical time just before an election.
Of course, no one should be subject to this arbitrary game. But especially a campaign. Let’s start here and begin to build out from a clear example of bad incentives.
Jesse Dylan (director of the extraordinary “Yes We Can” video) has made a film about Creative Commons. It is released today, the first day of our annual campaign.
The McCain/Palin campaign has written a fantastic letter to YouTube demanding that they start getting real about the response they’re giving to notice and take-down demands of material that “are clearly privileged under the fair use doctrine.” Here is the letter. Bravo to the campaign.
Everyone and anyone is invited to the book release party hosted by the Stanford Law School for Lawrence Lessig’s new book Remix: Making Art and Commerce Thrive in the Hybrid Economy.
When: Wed Oct 29, 2008
Where: W Hotel SF – 181 Third Street, SF
Free food and drinks for everyone.
Reception is at 6:30pm
Program is at 7pm.
Contact Elaine Adolfo at [email protected] with any questions.