William Dembski would like to use copyright to quash criticism

Although when it comes to other people’s works, William Dembski hasn’t seen a problem with taking copyrighted material and using it wholesale, dubbing over a computer animated video from Harvard and XVIVO of the inner workings of a cell with his own intelligent design-based commentary, when it comes to his own work he has a different standard. Mark Chu-Carroll points out at his Good Math, Bad Math blog that Dembski is talking about using threats of claimed copyright infringement to shut down criticism of a recent paper he published with Robert Marks. That criticism includes pointing out that sources cited by Dembski don’t say what he says they do, and providing counterexamples to Dembski’s mathematical claims. Rather than respond to the criticism, Dembski would rather shut it down. There are just a few problems with that–first, the criticism may well be fair use. Although it does quote a great deal of the paper by Dembski and Marks, it does so for the purpose of putting commentary and criticism side-by-side with quotations from the paper. Second, papers published by the IEEE require that copyright be transferred to the IEEE, so Dembski lacks standing even if there were infringement. Check out the RationalWiki critique of the Dembski and Marks paper.

November 17, 2009 · 1 min

Robert B. Laughlin on "The Crime of Reason"

The 2009 Hogan and Hartson Jurimetrics Lecture in honor of Lee Loevinger was given on the afternoon of November 5 at Arizona State University’s Sandra Day O’Connor School of Law by Robert B. Laughlin. Laughlin, the Ann T. and Robert M. Bass Professor of Physics at Stanford University and winner of the 1998 Nobel Prize in Physics (along with Horst L. Stormer and Daniel C. Tsui), spoke about his recent book, The Crime of Reason. He began with a one-sentence summary of his talk: “A consequence of entering the information age is probably that we’re going to lose a human right that we all thought we had but never did …” The sentence went on but I couldn’t keep up with him in my notes to get it verbatim, and I am not sure I could identify precisely what his thesis was after hearing the entire talk and Q&A session. The main gist, though, was that he thinks that a consequence of allowing manufacturing to go away and being a society based on information is that “Knowledge is dear, therefore there has to be less of it–we must prevent others from knowing what we know, or you can’t make a living from it.” And, he said, “People who learn on their own are terrorists and thieves,” which I think was intentional hyperbole. I think his talk was loaded with overgeneralizations, some of which he retracted or qualified during the Q&A. It certainly doesn’t follow from knowledge being valuable that there must be less of it. Unlike currency, knowledge isn’t a fungible commodity, so different bits of knowledge have different value to different people. There are also different kinds of knowledge–know-how vs. knowledge that, and making the latter freely available doesn’t necessarily degrade the value of the former, which is why it’s possible to have a business model that gives away software for free but makes money from consulting services. Further, the more knowledge there is, the more valuable it is to know where to find the particular bits of knowledge that are useful for a given purpose, and the less it is possible for a single person to be an expert across many domains. An increasing amount of knowledge means there’s increasing value in various kinds of specializations, and more opportunities for individuals to develop forms of expertise in niches that aren’t already full of experts. Laughlin said that he is talking about “the human rights issue of the 21st century,” that “learnign some things on your own is stealing from people. What we think of as our rights are in conflict with the law, just as slavery is in conflict with human rights.” He said that Jefferson was conflicted on this very issue, sayng on the one hand that “knowledge is like fire–divinely designed to be copyable like a lit taper–I can light yours with mine, which in no way diminishes my own.” This is the non-rival quality of information, that one person copying information from another doesn’t deprive the other of their use of it, though that certainly may have an impact on the commercial market for the first person to sell their information. “On the other hand,” said Laughlin, “economics involves gambling. [Jefferson] favored legalized gambling. Making a living involves bluff and not sharing knowledge.” He said that our intellectual property laws derive from English laws that people on the continent “thought … were outrageous–charging people to know things." He put up a photo of a fortune from a fortune cookie, that said “The only good is knowledge, and the only evil ignorance.” He said this is what you might tell kids in school to get them to study, but there’s something not right about it. He then put up a drawing of Dr. Frankenstein and his monster (Laughlin drew most of the slides himself). He said, we’re all familiar with the Frankenstein myth. “The problem with open knowledge is that some of it is dangerous. In the U.S. some of it is off-limits, you can’t use it in business or even talk about it. It’s not what you do with it that’s exclusive, but that you have it at all." His example was atomic bomb secrets and the Atomic Energy Act of 1954, which makes it a federal felony to reveal “nuclear data” to the public, which has been defined very broadly in the courts. It includes numbers and principles of physics. Laughlin returned to his fortune cookie example, and said there’s another problem. He put up a drawing of a poker game. “If I peeked at one guy’s cards and told everyone else, the poker game would stop. It involves bluffing, and open access to knowledge stops the game.” He suggested that this is what happened last year with the world financial sector–that the “poker game in Wall Street stopped, everyone got afraid to bet, and the government handled it by giving out more chips and saying keep playing, which succeeded.” I agree that this was a case where knowledge–specifically knowledge of the growing amounts of “toxic waste” in major world banks–caused things to freeze up, it wasn’t the knowledge that was the ultimate cause, it was the fact that banks engaged in incredibly risky behavior that they shouldn’t have. More knowledge earlier–and better oversight and regulation–could have prevented the problem. Laughlin said “Economics is about bluff and secrecy, and open knowledge breaks it.” I don’t think I agree–what makes markets function is that price serves as a public signal about knowledge. There’s always going to be local knowledge that isn’t shared, not necessarily because of bluff and secrecy, but simply due to the limits of human capacities and the dynamics of social transactions. While trading on private knowledge can result in huge profits, trading the private knowledge itself can be classified as insider trading and is illegal. (Though perhaps it shouldn’t be, since insider trading has the potential for making price signals more accurate more quickly to the public.) Laughlin showed a painting of the death of Socrates (by Jacques-Louis David, not Laughlin this time), and said that in high school, you study Plato, Aristotle, and Descartes, and learn that knowledge is good. But, “as you get older, you learn there’s a class system in knowledge.” Plato etc. is classified as good, but working class technical knowledge, like how to build a motor, is not, he claimed. He went on to say, “If you think about it, that’s exactly backwards.” I’m not sure anyone is ever taught that technical knowledge is not valuable, especially these days, where computer skills seem to be nearly ubiquitous–and I disagree with both extremes. From my personal experience, I think some of my abstract thinking skills that I learned from studying philosophy have been among the most valuable skills I’ve used in both industry and academia, relevant to both theoretical and practical applications. Laughlin said that “engines are complicated, and those who would teach you about it don’t want to be clear about it. It’s sequestered by those who own it, because it’s valuable. The stuff we give away in schools isn’t valuable, that’s why we give it away.” In the Q&A, a questioner observed that he can easily obtain all sorts of detailed information about how engines work, and that what makes it difficult to understand is the quantity and detail. Laughlin responded that sometimes the best way to hide things is to put them in plain sight (the Poe “purloined letter” point), as needles in a haystack. But I think that’s a rather pat answer to something that is contradictory to his claim–the information really is freely available and easy to find, but the limiting factor is that it takes time to learn the relevant parts to have a full understanding. The limit isn’t the availability of the knowledge or that some of it is somehow hidden. I’d also challenge his claim that the knowledge provided in schools is “given away.” It’s still being paid for, even if it’s free to the student, and much of what’s being paid for is the know-how of the educator, not just the knowledge-that of the specific facts, as well as special kinds of knowledge-that–the broader frameworks into which individual facts fit. Laughlin went on to say, “You’re going to have to pay to know the valuable information. Technical knowledge will disappear and become unavailable. The stuff you need to make a living is going away.” He gave as examples defense-related technologies, computers, and genetics. He said that “people in the university sector are facing more and more intense moral criticism” for sharing information. “How life works–would we want that information to get out? We might want to burn those books. The 20th century was the age of physics, [some of which was] so dangerous we burned the books. It’s not in the public domain. The 21st century is the age of biology. We’re in the end game of the same thing. In genetics–e.g., how disease organisms work. The genetic structure of Ebola or polio.” Here, Laughlin seems to be just wrong. The gene sequences of Ebola and polio have apparently been published (Sanchez, A., et al. (1993) “Sequence analysis of the Ebola virus genome: organization, genetic elements and comparison with the genome of Marburg virus,” Virus Research 29, 215-240 and Stanway, G., et al. (1983) “The nucleotide sequence of poliovirus type 3 leon 12 a1b: comparison with poliovirus type 1," Nucleic Acids Res. 11(16), 5629-5643). (I don’t claim to be knowledgeable about viruses, in the former case I am relying on the statement that “Sanchez et al (1993) has published the sequence of the complete genome of Ebola virus” from John Crowley and Ted Crusberg, “Ebola and Marburg Virus: Genomic Structure, Comparative and Molecular Biology."; in the latter case it may not be publication of the complete genome but is at least part.) Laughlin talked about the famous issue of The Progressive magazine which featured an article by Howard Moreland titled “How H-Bombs Work.” He showed the cover of the magazine, which read, “The H-Bomb Secret–How we got it–why we’re telling it.” Laughlin said that the DoJ enjoined the journal from publishing the article and took the issue into secret hearings. The argument was that it was a threat to national security and a violation of the Atomic Energy Act. The judge said that the rule against prior restraint doesn’t apply because this is so dangerous that “no jurist in their right mind would put free speech above safety.” Laughlin said, “Most people think the Bill of Rights protects you, but this case shows that it doesn’t.” After the judge forbid publication, it was leaked to a couple of “newspapers on the west coast,” after which the DoJ dropped the case and the article was published. According to Laughlin, this was strategy, that he suspects they didn’t prosecute the case because the outcome would have been to find the AEA unconstitutional. By dropping the case it kept the AEA as a potential weapon in future cases. He said there have only been two cases of the criminal provisions of the AEA prosecuted in the last 50 years, but it is “inconceivable that it was only violated twice. The country handles its unconstitutionality by not prosecuting.” The U.S., he said, is like a weird hybrid of Athens and Sparta, favoring both being open and being war-like and secretive. These two positions have never been reconciled, so we live in an unstable situation that favors both. He also discussed the case of Wen Ho Lee, a scientist from Taiwan who worked at Los Alamos National Laboratory, who took home items that were classified as “PARD” (protect as restricted data), even though everyone is trained repeatedly that you “Don’t take PARD home.” When he was caught, Laughlin said, he said “I didn’t know it was wrong” and “I thought they were going to fire me, so I took something home to sell.” The latter sounds like an admission of guilt. He was put into solitary confinement for a year (actually 9 months) and then the case of 50 counts of AEA violations was dropped. Laughlin characterized this as “extralegal punishment,” and said “we abolish due process with respect to nuclear data.” (Wen Ho Lee won a $1.5 million settlement from the U.S. government in 2006 before the Supreme Court could hear his case. Somehow, this doesn’t seem to me to be a very effective deterrent.) Laughlin said that we see a tradeoff between risk and benefit, not an absolute danger. The risk of buildings being blown up is low enough to allow diesel fuel and fertilizer to be legal. Bombs from ammonium nitrate and diesel fuel are very easy to make, and our protection isn’t hiding technical knowledge, but that people just don’t do it. But nuclear weapons are so much more dangerous that the technical details are counted as absolutely dangerous, no amount of benefit could possibly be enough. He said that he’s writing a book about energy and “the possible nuclear renaissance unfolding” (as a result of need for non-carbon-emitting energy sources). He says the U.S. and Germany are both struggling with this legal morass around nuclear information. (Is the unavailability of nuclear knowledge really the main or even a significant issue about nuclear plant construction in the United States? General Electric (GE Energy) builds nuclear plants in other countries.) Laughlin said that long pointy knives could be dangerous, and there’s a movement in England to ban them. Everybody deals with technical issue of knowledge and where to draw lines. (Is it really feasible to ban knives, and does such a ban constitute a ban on knowledge? How hard is it to make a knife?) At this point he moved on to biology, and showed a photograph of a fruit fly with legs for antennae. He said, “so maybe antennae are related to legs, and a switch in development determines which you get. The control machinery is way too complicated to understand right now.” (Really?) “What if this was done with a dog, with legs instead of ears. Would the person who did that go to Stockholm? No, they’d probably lose their lab and be vilified. In the life sciences there are boundaries like we see in nuclear–things we shouldn’t know.” (I doubt that there is a switch that turns dog ears into legs, and this doesn’t strike me as plausibly being described as a boundary on knowledge, but rather an ethical boundary on action.) He said, “There are so many things researchers would like to try, but can’t, because funders are afraid.” Again, I suspect that most of these cases are ethical boundaries about actions rather than knowledge, though of course there are cases where unethical actions might be required to gain certain sorts of knowledge. He turned to stem cells. He said that the federal government effectively put a 10-year moratorium on stem cell research for ethical reasons. Again, these were putatively ethical reasons regarding treatment of embryos, but the ban was on federally funded research rather than any research at all. It certainly stifled research, but didn’t eliminate it. Next he discussed the “Millennium Digital Copyright Act” (sic). He said that “people who know computers laugh at the absurdity” of claiming that computer programs aren’t formulas and are patentable. He said that if he writes a program that “has functionality or purpose similar to someone else’s my writing it is a violation of the law.” Perhaps in a very narrow case where there’s patent protection, yes, but certainly not in general. If he was arguing that computer software patents are a bad idea, I’d agree. He said “Imagine if I reverse-engineered the latest Windows and then published the source code. It would be a violation of law.” Yes, in that particular example, but there are lots of cases of legitimate reverse engineering, especially in the information security field. The people who come up with the signatures for anti-virus and intrusion detection and prevention do this routinely, and in some cases have actually released their own patches to Microsoft vulnerabilities because Microsoft was taking too long to do it themselves. He said of Microsoft Word and PDF formats that they “are constantly morphing” because “if you can understand it you can steal it.” But there are legal open source and competing proprietary software solutions that understand both of the formats in question–Open Office, Apple’s Pages and Preview, Foxit Reader, etc. Laughlin said, “Intentional bypassing of encryption is a violation of the DMCA.” Only if that encryption is circumvention of “a technological measure that effectively controls access to” copyrighted material and the circumvention is not done for the purposes of security research, which has a big exception carved out in the law. Arguably, breakable encryption doesn’t “effectively control access,” though the law has certainly been used to prosecute people who broke really poor excuses for encryption. Laughlin put up a slide of the iconic smiley face, and said it has been patented by Unisys. “If you use it a lot, you’ll be sued by Unisys.” I’m not sure how you could patent an image, and while there are smiley face trademarks that have been used as a revenue source, it’s by a company called SmileyWorld, not Unisys. He returned to biology again, to talk briefly about gene patenting, which he says “galls biologists” but has been upheld by the courts. (Though perhaps not for many years longer, depending on how the Myriad Genetics case turns out.) Natural laws and discoveries aren’t supposed to be patentable, so it’s an implication of these court decisions that genes “aren’t natural laws, but something else.” The argument is that isolating them makes them into something different than what they are when they’re part of an organism, which somehow constitutes an invention. I think that’s a bad argument that could only justify patenting the isolation process, not the sequence. Laughlin showed a slide of two photos, the cloned dog Snuppy and its mother on the left, and a Microsoft Word Professional box on the right. He said that Snuppy was cloned when he was in Korea, and that most Americans are “unhappy about puppy clones” because they fear the possibility of human clones. I thought he was going to say that he had purchased the Microsoft Word Professional box pictured in Korea at the same time, and that it was counterfeit, copied software (which was prevalent in Korea in past decades, if not still), but he had an entirely different point to make. He said, about the software, “The thing that’s illegal is not cloning it. If I give you an altered version, I’ve tampered with something I’m not supposed to. There’s a dichotomy between digital knowledge in living things and what you make, and they’re different [in how we treat them?]. But they’re manifestly not different. Our legal system[’s rules] about protecting these things are therefore confused and mixed up.” I think his argument and distinction was rather confused, and he didn’t go on to use it in anything he said subsequently. It seems to me that the rules are pretty much on a par between the two cases–copying Microsoft Word Professional and giving it to other people would itself be copyright infringement; transforming it might or might not be a crime depending on what you did. If you turned it into a piece of malware and distributed that, it could be a crime. But if you sufficiently transformed it into something useful that was no longer recognizable as Microsoft Word Professional, that might well be fair use of the copyrighted software. In any case in between, I suspect the only legally actionable offense would be copyright infringement, in which case the wrongdoing is the copying, not the tampering. He put up a slide of Lady Justice dressed in a clown suit, and said that “When you talk to young people about legal constraints on what they can do, they get angry, like you’re getting angry at this image of Lady Law in a clown suit. She’s not a law but an image, a logos. … [It’s the] root of our way of relating to each other. When you say logos is a clown, you’ve besmirched something very fundamental about who you want to be. … Legal constraints on knowledge is part of the price we’ve paid for not making things anymore.” (Not sure what to say about this.) He returned to his earlier allusion to slavery. He said that was “a conflict between Judeo-Christian ethics and what you had to do to make a living. It got shakier and shakier until violence erupted. War was the only solution. I don’t think that will happen in this case. [The] bigger picture is the same kind of tension. … Once you make Descartes a joke, then you ask, why stay?” He put up a slide of a drawing of an astronaut on the moon, with the earth in the distance. “Why not go to the moon? What would drive a person off this planet? You’d have to be a lunatic to leave.” (I thought he was going to make a moon-luna joke, but he didn’t, unless that was it.) “Maybe intellectual freedom might be that thing. It’s happened before, when people came to America.” He went on to say that some brought their own religious baggage with them to America. Finally, he said that when he presents that moon example to graduate students, he always has many who say “Send me, I want to go." And that’s how his talk ended. I was rather disappointed–it seemed rather disjointed and rambling, and made lots of tendentious claims–it wasn’t at all what I expected from a Nobel prizewinner. The first question in the Q&A was one very much like I would have asked, about how he explains the free and open source software movement. Laughlin’s answer was that he was personally a Linux user and has been since 1997, but that students starting software companies are “paranoid about having stuff stolen,” and “free things, even in software, are potentially pernicious,” and that he pays a price for using open source in that it takes more work to maintain it and he’s constantly having to upgrade to deal with things like format changes in PDF and Word. There is certainly such a tradeoff for some open source software, but some of it is just as easy to maintain as commercial software, and there are distributions of Linux that are coming closer to the ease of use of Windows. And of course Mac OS X, based on an open source, FreeBSD-derived operating system, is probably easier for most people to use than Windows. I think there was a lot of potentially interesting and provocative material in his talk, but it just wasn’t formulated into a coherent and persuasive argument. If anyone has read his book, is it more tightly argued? ...

November 7, 2009 · 20 min

Hitler orders DMCA notices for "Downfall" parody videos

Brad Templeton, chairman of the board of the Electronic Frontier Foundation, has produced his own “Downfall” parody video, making fun of the fact that Constantin Films has issued DMCA notices to remove all of the “Downfall” parody videos from YouTube: UPDATE (April 20, 2010): This video has been taken down from YouTube after a complaint from Constantin Films, which Brad Templeton has protested. The video is now available at Vimeo. ...

October 27, 2009 · 2 min

Anthony Watts abuses DMCA to suppress criticism

Anthony Watts, a radio meteorologist who has collected evidence of badly sited weather stations to argue that climate change data is incorrect, was the subject of Peter Sinclair’s latest Climate Change Crock of the Week video. Rather than attempt to refute the criticism (which would be difficult–both “good” and “bad” weather stations show the same long-term temperature trends), Watts resorted to the Digital Millennium Copyright Act to get Sinclair’s video taken offline. Watts doesn’t hold copyright on television footage he appears in on Glenn Beck’s show, which has been used in fair use excerpts, anyway. But the video is back, and you can see it for yourself here. (Via Pharyngula.) UPDATE: As Rich Trott points out, Watts has replied here. He says that the basis of his copyright complaint is that the video shows the cover of and photographs and graphs from his book, but doesn’t say why he thinks the video exceeds fair use. He says that the NCDC’s response to his data (a) used out-of-date data and (b) used a process guaranteed to have two similar graphs, by taking a weighted average of the good and bad station reports even in the line reported as just the good stations. This is not exactly correct–there is a correction for urban heating that does use nearby station data, but even if you do not perform the urban heating adjustment step, you STILL get two graphs with essentially the same trend. (This was indirectly linked to in my previous post on this subject, through my link to the Daily Doubt blog of frequent commenter Hume’s Ghost.) UPDATE (August 10, 2009): Climate Progress points out the inanity of Watts’ defense of his DMCA abuse, observing that he’s suggesting copyright infringement on the basis of a few graphs and images shown from his book, which is given away for free in PDF form on the Internet. So not only was Sinclair well within fair use based on the amount and substantiality of material used, there’s no chance that Sinclair’s video could possibly have had any adverse effect on the commercial market for Watts’ book, since there isn’t one. ...

July 31, 2009 · 3 min

Copyright treaty classified on national security grounds

The U.S. government is negotiating the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement, a treaty which imposes new controls over copyright, but refuses to let the general public know its specific content. In response to a Freedom of Information Act Request from Knowledge Ecology International, the Obama administration responded that the content is classified for national security reasons pursuant to Executive Order 12958, a Clinton order from 1995. As Declan McCullagh points out, the executive order “allows material to be classified only if disclosure would do ‘damage to the national security and the original classification authority is able to identify or describe the damage.’” He also points out that one of Obama’s first acts as president was to sign a memo that said that FOIA “should be administered with a clear presumption: In the face of doubt, openness prevails. The government should not keep information confidential merely because public officials might be embarrassed by disclosure." The claim that this treaty cannot be disclosed for national security reasons sounds bogus, but if it’s so, what’s the purported damage being prevented? In the absence of a clear rationale, this treaty should be openly discussed and available to the general public.

March 15, 2009 · 1 min

CC-licensed NIN album is Amazon's #1 MP3 seller for 2008

The record labels and the RIAA have insisted that peer-to-peer filesharing is cannibalizing the music industry and that aggressive lawsuits and copy protection are necessary to protect the industry. But Nine Inch Nails released Ghosts I-IV under a Creative Commons license which allowed free redistribution from its initial release, while also selling it in MP3 format from its website and via Amazon.com, with no copy protection. The result–it’s the #1 selling MP3 album on Amazon.com for 2008 and generated $1.6 million in revenue for the band in its first week, with no cut to a record label. Looks like record labels are now superfluous for established artists, who no longer need to see their revenue cannibalized by middlemen. ...

January 7, 2009 · 2 min

Scientology vs. the Internet history lesson

Jeff Jacobsen and Mark Bunker are hosting a 90-minute Internet radio show on the battle between Scientology and the Internet that took place before Anonymous, and it’s about to start now (4 p.m. Arizona time, 3 p.m. PST, 6 p.m. EST). A number of old-timers from alt.religion.scientology will likely be calling in. It’s on blogtalkradio, show title is “Old-Timers give a history lesson." First guest: Modemac, skeptic, SubGenius, and author of an Introduction to Scientology website, on the early history of alt.religion.scientology. Second guest: Paulette Cooper, author of The Scandal of Scientology, an early major book-length criticism of Scientology, who was the victim of dirty tricks including framing her for a bomb threat and filing 19 lawsuits against her. Third guest: Ron Newman, author of the Church of Scientology vs. the Net web pages and alt.religion.scientology regular. Fourth guest: Yours truly. UPDATE (January 5, 2009): A few clarifications and additional links: The “Miss Bloodybutt” story Modemac referred to is described in the article Jeff and I wrote in Skeptic magazine, which includes dates. The -AB- posting didn’t predate the event and included information from the police report. I interviewed Tom Klemesrud and Linda Woolard as part of my research for that story. I was taken out to lunch by Scientology’s Mesa Org OSA Director, Ginny Leeson, who asked what they could do to stop the criticism and pickets. My reply was that if they stopped suing people and trying to stop criticism, the pickets would probably stop. Ginny Leeson was soon replaced by a new OSA Director, Leslie Duhrman, who was a lot more hostile and aggressive–she went after picketer Bruce Pettycrew with legal action. I have received legal threats from Scientology and a DMCA notice, but nothing ever came of them; I periodically see Church of Scientology IP addresses visiting my web sites (also here). My Scientology private investigators page is still online, though woefully out-of-date. I wasn’t the one who first called for coordinated international pickets, that was Jeff Jacobsen. I did issue (on behalf of the “Ad Hoc Committee Against Internet Censorship”) the first coordinated press release about why the picketing was occurring, in response to Scientology’s “Cancelbunny” that was issuing cancellations of Usenet posts containing their secrets. There was a Salon.com article in 1999 about Susan Mullaney (“xenubat”)’s posted audio files of L. Ron Hubbard saying embarrassing things, which Scientology used the DMCA to shut down. She issued a counter-notice and the material came back online. Some of those clips were used in very funny Scientology-critical songs by “Enturbulator 009” or the “El Queso All-Stars." I’ve previously posted a “Scientology sampler” of my history of Scientology criticism and some posts about the “Anonymous” protests. This blog has a “Scientology” label you can click to find all my Scientology-related posts.

January 4, 2009 · 3 min

Cranky 9/11 truther joins lawsuit against Obama

The case of Philip J. Berg v. Barack Hussein Obama, filed in the eastern district of Pennsylvania in an attempt to argue that Obama cannot become president because he is not a U.S. citizen, has been joined by Paul Andrew Mitchell, a “private attorney general” and 9/11 truther known for filing nonsensical papers with the courts. The character of Mitchell’s filing can be seen on p. 5, where he writes that “I, Paul Andrew Mitchell, Sui Juris, hereby verify, under penalty of perjury, under the laws of the United States of America, without the ‘United States’ (federal government), that the above statement of facts and laws is true and correct …” The italics and bolding are as in the filing. Mitchell is one of the crackpots who argues that the United States of America is distinct from the United States and that he’s not subject to the laws of the latter, including the income tax, because he’s a “sovereign citizen." Mitchell used to be a customer of Primenet, an Internet Service Provider based in Phoenix, that was my employer. He named us in one of his lawsuits, along with numerous other ISPs, on the grounds that one of our users had the temerity to put a link on his web page to a copy of Mitchell’s “The Federal Zone: Cracking the Code of Internal Revenue.” Mitchell insisted that he didn’t authorize that copy of his work, and that our user’s link constituted contributory infringement of his copyright. When I pointed out that the link was actually a dead link and didn’t point to anything at all, this did not persuade him that Primenet shouldn’t be sued. He never bothered to properly serve Primenet with papers, and the case was thrown out of court. Mitchell is or was also a member of the “Scholars for 9/11 Truth” organization; I’ve previously written more about Mitchell and that organization on this blog. ...

November 22, 2008 · 2 min

A Shared Culture

Jesse Dylan has made a short video about Creative Commons licensing (which is used for the contents of this blog), and how it helps patch the flaws in current copyright law.

October 18, 2008 · 1 min

Misinformation about Google's Chrome EULA

Adam Frucci at Gizmodo writes: So, are you enjoying the snappy, clean performance of Google Chrome since downloading yesterday? If so, you might want to take a closer peek at the end user license agreement you didn’t pay any attention to when downloading and installing it. Because according to what you agreed to, Google owns everything you publish and create while using Chrome. Ah-whaaa?This is false. The EULA doesn’t transfer ownership of anything. The provision that has everyone upset is the rather broadly worded provision 11.1: 11.1 You retain copyright and any other rights you already hold in Content which you submit, post or display on or through, the Services. By submitting, posting or displaying the content you give Google a perpetual, irrevocable, worldwide, royalty-free, and non-exclusive license to reproduce, adapt, modify, translate, publish, publicly perform, publicly display and distribute any Content which you submit, post or display on or through, the Services. This license is for the sole purpose of enabling Google to display, distribute and promote the Services and may be revoked for certain Services as defined in the Additional Terms of those Services.Note that the very first sentence says that you retain all intellectual property rights. This gives Google the rights to do the things it already does–let other people play YouTube videos you upload, syndicate your Blogger content, store cached versions of your web pages, allow people to see versions of your web pages translated into other languages, display thumbnails of images on your web pages in Google Images search, and so forth. The last sentence appears to limit it solely for the purpose “to display, distribute and promote the Services” and not allow them to, say, use your content in order to compete with you, undermine your intellectual property rights, etc. An earlier provision in the EULA also makes this explicit: 9.4 Other than the limited license set forth in Section 11, Google acknowledges and agrees that it obtains no right, title or interest from you (or your licensors) under these Terms in or to any Content that you submit, post, transmit or display on, or through, the Services, including any intellectual property rights which subsist in that Content (whether those rights happen to be registered or not, and wherever in the world those rights may exist). Unless you have agreed otherwise in writing with Google, you agree that you are responsible for protecting and enforcing those rights and that Google has no obligation to do so on your behalf.So even if 11.1 is a bit too broad, there’s this provision to fall back on if you feel your intellectual property rights are being infringed. Some commenters at Gizmodo said that they didn’t agree with this provision and therefore have uninstalled the software, but that’s not sufficient to terminate this agreement. Terminating the agreement requires you to give notice to Google in writing and close all of your accounts with them: 13.2 If you want to terminate your legal agreement with Google, you may do so by (a) notifying Google at any time and (b) closing your accounts for all of the Services which you use, where Google has made this option available to you. Your notice should be sent, in writing, to Google’s address which is set out at the beginning of these Terms.One thing that is clear from these terms is that Google definitely wants to interpose itself between user and content in a manner similar to what Microsoft has done for years with Windows, and in a much stickier way than telecom providers are between user and content. If you have network neutrality concerns about telecom providers or had antitrust concerns about Microsoft’s bundling of the Internet Explorer web browser with Windows, you should probably have similar concerns about Google, given the way use of its browser is bundled with an EULA covering all of its services. Shouldn’t I be able to discontinue this EULA by getting rid of the browser, and not by terminating all of my accounts with Google? Will there be a lawsuit about unbundling the Google Chrome browser from the rest of its services? UPDATE: Ars Technica reports that Google says this was an error and they will be correcting the license, which was borrowed from other Google services, apparently without careful review. It also notes that since Chrome is distributed under an open license, users can download the source code and compile it themselves without being bound by the agreement. The major flaw in the 11.1 language is that it gives Google the right to publish content you merely “display” in the browser, even if it’s private content on a local server or restricted content from a secured website. That clearly wasn’t their intent, but that’s an implication of how it was written. ...

September 3, 2008 · 4 min
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