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January 29, 2008

DIY random CD cover

Flickrbaby_2   Flickrcallieveronica

Wow, I love these fake CD/album covers by mikelietz on Flickr. He writes here:

To make your own random CD cover, follow these steps:

1. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:Random The first article title on the page is the name of the band.

2. www.quotationspage.com/random.php3 The last four words of the very last quote is the album title.

3. www.flickr.com/explore/interesting/7days/ The third picture, license permitting, is the album cover. [To save time, get one from here.]

4. The finished product belongs in the  CD cover meme pool.

I was hoping there was a ready-made mashup tool that added album titles to a photo -- and I'm sure there are some Web 2.0 sites out there that let you do this -- but for the most part looks like you have to do the mashing up yourself.

Here's the Flickr pool, with 790 photos. And here's mine:

Janata

Cross-posted to Social Media.

January 29, 2008 at 12:31 AM in Remixes | Permalink | Comments (0) | Bookmark this entry on del.icio.us | blog comments on this post (0)

January 26, 2008

Net neutrality guru to speak

San Francisco Chronicle: Net neutrality guru and Columbia law Professor Timothy Wu speaks in San Francisco. For more: Netneutrality2008.org.

January 26, 2008 at 10:08 PM in Washington & public policy | Permalink | Comments (0) | Bookmark this entry on del.icio.us | blog comments on this post (0)

January 24, 2008

Yahoo in talks for DRM-free music service

Associated Press: Yahoo in early talks with major labels over possible MP3-based music service.

Yahoo Inc., is in early discussions with major record labels over offering unprotected MP3s either for sale or for free as part of an ad-supported service, two record company executives familiar with the talks said. ...

January 24, 2008 at 11:03 PM in Music | Permalink | Comments (0) | Bookmark this entry on del.icio.us | blog comments on this post (0)

January 17, 2008

Scrabble's owners want Facebook's Scrabulous shut down

Associated Press: Scrabble's owners want Facebook's Scrabulous shut down.

January 17, 2008 at 01:36 PM in Digital rights & copyright | Permalink | Comments (0) | Bookmark this entry on del.icio.us | blog comments on this post (0)

January 12, 2008

Lessig's last lecture on free culture

Lessig

From an announcement on Facebook:

Creative Commons founder and Stanford professor Lawrence Lessig is giving his final presentation on Free Culture, Copyright and the future of ideas at Stanford's Memorial Auditorium on January 31. After 10 years of enlightening and inspiring audiences around the world with multimedia presentations that inspired the Free Culture movement, Professor Lessig is moving on from the copyright debate and setting his sites on corruption in Washington.

Lessig is giving a final talk at Stanford University on the subject, and it is being recorded for the upcoming feature film "Basement Tapes," an open source documentary (see www.opensourcecinema.org).

Free admission.

Guests will also be treated to a sneak preview of some upcoming scenes from "Basement Tapes," and remixed work from the Open Source Cinema website.

You can just show up, though if you're a Facebook member you can RSVP there.

January 12, 2008 at 11:02 PM in Digital rights & copyright | Permalink | Comments (0) | Bookmark this entry on del.icio.us | blog comments on this post (0)

January 09, 2008

Anti-piracy dragnet hurts fair use of video

Mark Glaser at MediaShift: Anti-Piracy Dragnet Could Hurt 'Fair Use' of Copyrighted Video.

January 9, 2008 at 10:54 PM in Video | Permalink | Comments (0) | Bookmark this entry on del.icio.us | blog comments on this post (0)

January 02, 2008

Online video at risk of 'private censorship'

When college students make mashups of Hollywood movies, are they violating the law? Not necessarily, according to a new study on copyright and creativity from the Center for Social Media at American University.

It's a subject I've long been fascinated by and have wrestled with, both in Darknet and on Ourmedia.

The study, Recut, Reframe, Recycle: Quoting Copyrighted Material in User-Generated Video, by Center director Pat Aufderheide and Peter Jaszi, co-director of the Washington College of Law’s Program on Information Justice and Intellectual Property, shows that many uses of copyrighted material in today’s online videos are eligible for fair use consideration. In short, they may be perfectly legal — the legal terrain is still murky. These uses — an exercise of freedom-of-speech rights — are now being threatened by anti-piracy measures online.

The study dentifies nine kinds of uses of copyrighted material, ranging from incidental (a video maker’s family sings “Happy Birthday”) to parody (a Christian takeoff on the song “Baby Got Back”) to pastiche and collage (finger-dancing to “Harder, Better, Faster, Stronger”). The study points to a wide variety of practices — satire, parody, negative and positive commentary, discussion-triggers, illustration, diaries, archiving and of course, pastiche or collage (remixes and mashups) — all of which could be legal in some circumstances.

I've read the report (22 pages, PDF) and it's the best look at the subject I've seen. From the announcement:

The researchers followed thousands of links for videos on 75 online video platforms and discovered nine popular kinds of use (extensive database of examples at centerforsocialmedia.org/recutvideos).

1. Parody and satire: Copyrighted material used in spoofing of popular mass media, celebrities or politicians ( Baby Got Book )

2. Negative or critical commentary: Copyrighted material used to communicate a negative message ( Metallica Sucks )

3. Positive commentary: Copyrighted material used to communicate a positive message ( Steve Irwin Fan Tribute )

4. Quoting to trigger discussion: Copyrighted material used to highlight an issue and prompt public awareness, discourse ( Abstinence PSA on Feministing.com )

5. Illustration or example: Copyrighted material used to support a new idea with pictures and sound ( Evolution of Dance )

6. Incidental use: Copyrighted material captured as part of capturing something else ( Prisoners Dance to Thriller )

7. Personal reportage/diaries: Copyrighted material incorporated into the chronicling of a personal experience ( Me on stage with U2 … AGAIN!!! )

8. Archiving of vulnerable or revealing materials: Copyrighted material that might have a short life on mainstream media due to controversy ( Stephen Colbert's Speech at the White House Correspondents' Dinner )

9. Pastiche or collage: Several copyrighted materials incorporated together into a new creation, or in other cases, an imitation of sorts of copyrighted work ( Apple Commercial )

“Today, user-generated video accounts for a sizeable portion of all broadband traffic. Some of these videos add value to existing copyrighted material, usually without the copyright owner’s consent,” Aufderheide said. “This kind of work is the harbinger of an emerging era of participatory popular culture.”

The study is part of a larger participatory media project for the Center For Social Media’s Future of Public Media Project. As the report notes, next steps include further research and the convening of a blue-ribbon committee to establish best practices in fair use for online video.

Aufderheide and Jaszi are appearing at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas on Monday to discuss the research. To watch some of the mashups that the researchers watched, click here. A copyright and fair use blog on the subject is here.

Cross-posted to SocialMedia.biz.

January 2, 2008 at 07:45 PM in Digital rights & copyright, Video | Permalink | Comments (1) | Bookmark this entry on del.icio.us | blog comments on this post (0)