Tim K's Favorite Techdirt Posts Of The Week
from the another-tim dept
Normally I try to avoid writing, which was one of the benefits of going into computer science. However, I figured I'd give it a go for this week's favorite posts article. So first off, I wanted to start out with the post from Leigh bringing our attention to the great clip of Rob Reid. Rob does a great job of illustrating how ridiculous the numbers are that Hollywood uses in their attempts to justify their actions. They continue to show that facts and logic have no place in their world as they keep coming up with new ways for consumers to jump through hoops to get their content. We aren't asking them to come up with new ways to deliver the content. All that work has been done for them, they just need to actually start embracing it instead of trying to use QR codes to get people to buy physical discs or making people drive to a store and pay for the 'privilege' of a (more than likely DRM-riddled) digital copy.
This week really had a lot of stories highlighting just how full of themselves the *AAs are, as another story by Mike discussed their claims that without the brilliant gatekeepers there would be no content that people actually wanted. Aside from the fact that they don't actually make the content, I'm pretty sure there are many people on Kickstarter who would disagree with that. Tim Schafer being the most well known with his project ending with a massive $3.3 million dollar funding, which was more than 800% of the goal, for a game that those gatekeepers claimed people wouldn't want. And there are tons of other examples of musicians from Kickstarter and BandCamp, and I'm sure elsewhere who were successfully funded without the help of those gatekeepers.
There were two posts in particular this week that I thought the authors of the original stories did a great job of showing how they must think the public is completely stupid, because I do not see how they could possibly believe what they are trying to get us to believe. First was the article by Tim about the Author's Guild Boss On E-Book Price Fixing Allegations. He tries to describe how amazing Apple is because with Apple "publishers would make less money on every e-book they sold," and there would also be "lower royalties for authors." Yet, despite both of them making less money, the consumers end up paying more money. I can not see how someone can combine those statements into an argument for how Apple is the savior of authors. The second article was another by Mike that a lot of people thought was a bit lengthy, but as Mike noted, was a great point by point debunking of ridiculous claims. Again, I don't understand how people can believe some of their own arguments, let alone try and convince the public of these laughable statements. It does do a few good things though: it shows the world how much this guy doesn't understand the way things work today, it provides a nice single convenient location of debunked 'logic' for easy reference, and one can hope that it could lead him to getting fired, so there is one less luddite in charge.
Of course I cannot leave out the wildly popular article by Mike about how copying still isn't stealing. People seem to ignore the fact that we have different words for a reason. An important reason for the distinction between copying and stealing is so that people cannot make the ridiculous false analogy that Logan made about breaking into a place and stealing a painting versus downloading something from the internet. I'm sorry if you don't understand very basic concepts such as words having definitions and not meaning whatever you think they should mean, but everyone should at least be able to see a very clear distinction between the two, and they should never be used in an attempt to equate stealing and copying.
Now onto better stories from this week, where we have the story about Valve doing a great job again with CwF + RtB. I've been a fan of Valve since the counter-strike days, which by the way, I never even had to buy the game, or pay for the updates or the maps or anything with that game as it was all free with Half-Life (up until Source). That was a great way to CwF and they did it again with TF2. It's good to see that while some companies can no longer innovate, Valve is still doing a great job with their games. I have not actually played TF2 myself, but I hope other developers are paying attention to stories like this so that they can learn how to go free-to-play and still make money, or even increase revenue as Valve has done, and do it without hurting the players who do not want to, or cannot afford to, pay.
There were also a couple stories that I enjoyed seeing about people who are actually fighting back and not just giving in to government demands, or taking the money and running, even though that's what a lot of our representatives seem to be doing. If only our government would learn from us, and from their past mistakes and actually be more transparent as they are supposed to be and as Glyn said, not insult the public they are supposed to represent.
This ended up being a bit longer than I was expecting, but I would like to end with this great article about how India is trying to save lives. It never ceases to amaze me how many people are more concerned with their own pockets then saving lives. It is a little disheartening to read in this article about how, despite this being a very good thing, it will likely come with a lot of opposition. Hopefully, we will all do away with drug patents sometime soon (wishful thinking I'm sure), but for now it's great to see India grant this compulsory license to get this drug marketed at a significantly lower price than the current $70,000/year!


Once again
Difficult for MPAA to differentiate between infringing and non-infringing material, but everyone else should still easily be able to know immediately what's infringing.
Re: Re: Re: Oh really?
a·ban·don
/əˈbandən/
Verb
Give up completely (a course of action, a practice, or a way of thinking)
I don't think you know what abandon means. First paywalls means they are still utilizing the web. Second, I don't ever use any of those paywall sites. I'm at work, I don't have a TV, yet I'm watching the news on the marathon for free on the web. They are in no way abandoning the web.
Re: Oh really?
professionals are abandoning the web.
What world do you live in?
(untitled comment)
That technology has been around for years. Why is Apple trying to patent it now?
That's SOP for Apple. Followed by suing everyone else.
Re: You CAN'T disagree that "it facilitates piracy".
Computers, hard drives, flash drives, the internet all facilitate piracy. What's your point?
(untitled comment)
The cloud also represents a threat in that it facilitates piracy, and the pirates seem to have gotten into this space first
Who would have guessed that? Probably because Hollywood doesn't actually come up with new tech other than tech to try and screw their customers.
Re: And so too will VPNs "pipes" be cracked!
By the way, ever notice how much focus here is on keeping identity hidden? The most obvious purpose is so you can download infringed content.
Says the person who is always on this site commenting, but never creates an account. Obviously OOTB must be pirating this site!
Re: Re: Re: To Tim it's academic: to her and employees, it's LOST income.
Could the same be accomplished at half the price? How about $10,000 per year? Or $0? ... Kathy Wolfe has obviously worked hard to keep Wolfe Films running for more than a quarter-decade. She deserves a salary and I hate to see that money flowing into an effort that's not paying off.
Yeah...What a dick
Re: To Tim it's academic: to her and employees, it's LOST income.
Saying something is a fact does not make it so. Hence the desire for the actual numbers/research she used to come to that conclusion
In the wrong business
$30K for sending probably mostly automated DMCA. Which does nothing because as she stated, after taking down links more popped up the next day. So you have ridiculous money, one would assume not much work after the initial setup of your DMCA bots, and guaranteed work because people will just keep reposting links, and content owners will continue throwing money at it hoping that they are actually doing something that helps.
Spotify
I listen to about 95% of my music through spotify, and I pay the $5 a month for no commercials. The other 5% is from driving around and listening to the radio. So pretty much spotify is the reason I don't need to buy/download/whatever music anymore, not anything else that the music industry might claim.
Re: Re: HBO Go != Netflix Competitor
I would think that the 10 year deal with Universal would prevent that, since the whole point is to force people to continue paying for cable. If HBO just bypasses that for their own service without Netflix, Universal is just as screwed as if they went to Netflix
HBO Go != Netflix Competitor
I think people are missing the larger idea of what's happening here, and that's HBO becoming the closest thing Netflix has to a direct competitor. The groundwork is already in place with the aforementioned Go service. Add in exclusive access to movies from all those studios, and $15 a month for HBO Go starts looking nearly as appealing as $15 a month for Netflix.
I don't consider that a competitor at all, certainly not one for the same price. Because in order to get that you need the $100+ cable package, which is why it will never compete directly against Netflix.
(untitled comment)
If having the device active was all it took to potentially take down a plane then their rules wouldn't do jack shit to prevent that anyways. I've listened to my phone (in airplane mode) while taking off, all you have to do is have a hoodie on. They can't stop that, so how would they stop someone trying to 'take down the plane' by having the device on, when they could just leave it in their pocket or face down, and they wouldn't even know it's on. And an electronic device doesn't hurt more when it's turned on, just an fyi to the FAA
Re: This is just incorrect
Isn't the whole point of spending all that money for the advanced features, Which the other Tim said in the article No one spends $80 for a "plug and play" mouse (or over $300 with the keyboard -- which also requires a connection and an account).
Re: Re: Zero?
It was published in 2005
$20k for a 7 (almost 8) year old book in a week (or two, don't remember how long this bundle was)? That's pretty damn good if you ask me. Not to mention Bob just ignores most everything that doesn't go well with his 'argument'
Re: That's a narrow niche: wait until China copies 'em.
Have you never heard of the CwF thing they have talked about here? That's exactly what this is about. CW&T connected with their fans, and appealed to them to not support the other company who copied. If CW&T had been a shitty company, I doubt people would have really cared too much about supporting CW&T vs another company. But yeah, Mike never talks about that and is totally against it.
Boring news?
by providing the first few lines of our stories to Internet users, the service reduces the chances that they will look at the entire story in our web sites
Is the news so boring that after a few lines they are don't want to read any more than the first couple lines?
Re: Let's not "push it"
A lot of those examples in this article had nothing to do with concerts...
Re: BUT the whole field just keeps growing!
Nobody said it was completely stopping innovation. We have said several times that they are slowing/hindering innovation. How much faster would it grow if they spent more money on innovating than on lawsuits? How many more startups would be successful if they didn't have to worry about being sued out of existence because of the cost, not because of a valid claim.