Ming the Mechanic
The NewsLog of Flemming Funch

Friday, May 6, 2005day link 

 Reboot
Reboot 7, June 10-11 in Copenhagen. I'll have to be there, of course. A conference for techie visionaries, and there will be some big ones there. Doc Searls, David Weinberger, Cory Doctorow, Robert Scoble - that kind of people.
reboot is the european meetup for the practical visionaries who are building tomorrow one little step at a time, using new models for creation and organization—in a world where the only entry barrier is passion. reboot is two days in june filled with inspiration, perspective, good conversations and interesting people.

[ | 2005-05-06 20:06 | 0 comments | PermaLink ]

 Rencontres Blog Pro Toulouse
OK, this is in French. An evening for blogging professionals in Toulouse, Rencontres Blog Pro. I didn't even realize there were so many big bloggers here, and this is the first event of that kind I'll go to here. My pal Lionel and I will be there, of course. And Loic le Meur will be there, whom I've met in London. Otherwise I don't seem to know anybody.
[ | 2005-05-06 20:14 | 0 comments | PermaLink ]

 Broadcast Flag down
The U.S. FCC (Federal Communications Commission) had decreed that from July 1st all equipment in any way connected with over-the-air TV broadcasts would have to be manufactured with a so-called Broadcast Flag. Which essentially means you couldn't do anything with the received program other than what its "owner" wanted you to do. I.e. you wouldn't be able to copy it, put it on a DVD, watch it on your computer, take a screenshot, or anything else that might be convenient and meaningful to you. All your equipment would be crippled, solely in the interest of protecting the broadcasters' business model. Or, rather, the way things worked a couple of decades ago. The movie, recording and broadcasting industry can unfortunately easily find corrupt politicians and public officials who will try to do their bidding.

But, luckily, this time it seems it didn't work. Today a U.S. Court of Appeals has ruled that the FCC has absolutely no authority to regulate what people do with their electronic devices at home, other than when it comes to the actual transmission through radio waves.

Somebody in the U.S. Congress might well decide to make such a scheme law anyway. But until then it seems that the plan is dead. Lots of other schemes are still in action, that try to limit the natural movement of information, and put all the controls in the hands of a few large companies, but at least this seems like good news.
[ | 2005-05-06 21:09 | 0 comments | PermaLink ]

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