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Net radio copyright fee date pushed back

There’s a glimmer of good news for Internet radio stations. CNET has a report that the implementation date for the contentious copyright royalty fee increases has been pushed back. (See previous posts here and here)

The U.S. Copyright Royalty Board has pushed back the date on which a contentious fee hike for Internet radio broadcasters takes effect.

In a 32-page final rule (PDF) formally published Monday, the three-judge panel within the Library of Congress set July 15 as the date that the new royalty rates required of Net radio operators will kick in–two months later than the original deadline.

After more than a year of vetting outside submissions, the judges issued an initial ruling on March 2, drawing widespread outcry from large and small commercial Webcasters and the public radio community.

The board prescribed rate hikes of .08 cents per song per listener retroactive to 2006 and then 30 percent each year until 2010, when they would climb to .19 cents per song per listener. It also said each station would have to hand over a minimum $500 royalty payment.

SoundExchange, the non-profit entity that collects the fees and supported the hikes, has said the CRB’s changes are necessary to compensate artists adequately.

A group called SaveNetRadio, whose members include Internet radio listeners, Webcasters and artists, says the decision will cripple the Internet radio medium if left untouched. It is supporting a new House of Representatives bill that would invalidate the board’s decision in favor of setting a level rate for all digital music services, including satellite, cable and Internet radio and Internet-based jukeboxes.

Here’s the link to the story

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World Press Freedom Day

Today, May 3, is World Press Freedom Day. Over at MediaChannel.org, they’ve put together a package of information about the day.

From the introduction:

The rights to life and to liberty and integrity and security of person and also to freedom of expression are fundamental human rights that are recognized and guaranteed by international conventions and instruments.” (UNESCO Resolution, General Conference 1997)

May 3rd is the annual World Press Freedom Day. This year’s theme is violence against journalists. MediaChannel has put together this special coverage package with resources for those concerned about freedom of the press.

UNESCO is celebrating World Press Freedom Day in Medellin, Colombia, where the 2007 UNESCO/Guillermo Cano Press Freedom Prize is being awarded posthumously to the slain Russian journalist Anna Politkovskaya.

Here’s the link to the website.

One guy’s flotsam is another’s jetsam

Let’s slot this into the “See? Some good can come of anything,” file, shall we?

This story comes from Science News via Boing Boing:

David Pescovitz: Fifteen years, ago a shipping container fell off a boat crossing the Pacific, spilling tens of thousands of rubber duckies, turtles, and other bath toys. The mishap was actually helpful for oceanographers who to this day occasionally find the toys and use their recovery location and time as data points in their study of ocean currents. This is just one example of how scientists count on floating junk in their efforts to map and understand subcurrents and other ocean phenomena. Interestingly, random bits of flotsam can sometimes work better than electronic devices designed for this purpose due to the limitations of battery power and algae growth that can block the sensors. From Science News:

Worldwide, about 10,000 cargo containers fall overboard each year. In most parts of the world, the dispersal of flotsam isn’t of major interest to researchers. But along the bustling trade routes that link eastern Asia to North America, the tennis shoes, kids’ sandals, hockey gloves, and other stuff that drops off ships is enabling scientists to fill in details of how the Pacific Subarctic Gyre works.

Often, the lost items float and can be readily identified as coming from a ship at a certain location. Recently, (retired oceanographer Curtis) Ebbesmeyer and his colleagues used almost a century of data from such floating objects to map the gyre’s major subcurrents and swirls.

Now, for the first time, scientists have determined that a lap around the Pacific Subarctic Gyre takes about 3 years. That information, in turn, led Ebbesmeyer and his colleagues to identify long-term variations in water temperature and salinity in the North Pacific that hadn’t been noted previously.

All this from studying flotsam…

…The flotsam-researchers’ techniques may not seem scientifically rigorous, comments Richard Thomson of the institute (of Ocean Sciences) in Sidney. However, he adds, “with oceanographers, the more data, the better. … [Studying flotsam] is one of the few ways to get it.”

Link to the original story

And here’s a link to a Wikipedia article on flotsam and jetsam, just in case you can’t get enough of this stuff.

What happens if sources stop talking to reporters?

One of the built-in contradictions (or is it a connundrum?) of the news-gathering business is that at the same time reporters are struggling to tell a story, they are forced to edit it like crazy.

When I was a reporter, I would routinely come back to the office with a notebook full of notes and quotes. I’d have various hand-outs that someone had given me, and often a tape recorder with the verbatim of the interviews I’d just done. Then I’d have to sit down and “tell the story” pulling the quotes and information that I thought worked in the story I was writing.

And that’s the problem. I like to think I was a good reporter and that I managed to convey the “real” story, without being influenced by my own biases or preconceived notions of what the story was. But of course, that’s just wishful thinking. I was as much a part of the story as anyone else involved. Most of the people involved in the news business understand this – especially in the political world, which is where I spent most of my time. That’s why “sources” tended to deliver the goods to certain reporters. They had a pretty good idea in advance what kind of reception their comments would get and how the story would probably come out. That’s the way the game was played.

Times change
In today’s news environment (I’ve been out of the business for 12 years now) the rules have changed. Things like the 24-hour news cycle, the Internet, instant communications, blogs, company websites, etc, are putting all kinds of new pressures on the conventional reporters and editors that bring us the news. We’re living through an information revolution and who knows how it will work itself out. Perhaps it won’t. Continual change now seems to be a given in our world.

But however much the news-gathering process has changed, most reporters still depend on time-honored tools, like conducting interviews with their subjects, then digesting the results, choosing the appropriate “best parts” and presenting the story as a unified whole. The reporter as narrator provides the overall commentary and his sources contribute quotes and ideas at the appropriate places.

That’s how I did it. In fact, that’s still how I work, when I’m writing stories. But the problem is how often the “sources” in the story are uncomfortable with the result. They spent 10 minutes, or an hour or more chatting with the reporter. They answered a variety of questions and covered a whole range of subjects. But the final story might contain only a single quote, and often they don’t like the way it looks in print. I often ended up writing stories that I thought were accurate and others seemed to think so – but not the subjects of the story. And this didn’t just happen to print reporters. If anything, radio and TV reporters had to be even more ruthless, compressing everything down to five second clips that backed up what they were saying.

So back to the question that sparked this post. What if those sources decide not to talk to reporters anymore? What if the specialists and “smart people” that reporters always look for decide they don’t want to play that game anymore? What if they have their own blog, where they can write about the issue, but do it in their own words? What if they don’t need reporters to get their point of view out? And, most importantly, what if the public can just search on Google or Technorati under a hot topic and find those points of view themselves? Where does that leave our traditional reporting?

So many questions
There are a lot of questions and I don’t have the answers. But the discussion is on-going and worth watching and thinking about. I welcome your thoughts on this in the comments.

What got me started on this was a column by Jay Rosen, in his PressThink blog, called Last Week That Man Tried to Run You Over. Why Are You Having Dinner With Him? It’s about the New York Times recent decision to pull out of participating in the White House Correspondents Association Dinner.

I’ll let you read it for yourself, but what I wanted to note was Rosen talking about a couple of recent incidents where he was interviewed by reporters because of his status as a journalism professor. And while he was not misquoted, the way the results of the interview were used met the journalists’ needs, but did not necessarily reflect Rosen’s own views.

Here’s an excerpt:

Two weeks ago, Jim Rutenberg, a Times correspondent in the Washington bureau, interviewed me about the upcoming Correspondents dinner and in particular the choice of 70’s-era comedian, Rich Little, after last year’s funny man, Stephen Colbert, held the press and president—and the dinner itself—up to extremely effective ridicule. This is not the opinion of the journalists who were there, of course, Rutenberg included. In his view Colbert “just wasn’t funny.”

Rutenberg’s article made me wish I had followed, in this instance, blogger Dave Winer’s policy. When asked for a phone or e-mail interview, he usually declines. “If you have a few questions, send them along, and if I have something to say, I’ll write a blog post, which of course you’re free to quote,” he said last week. Responding to Winer, and to this event with Jason Calacanis and Wired magazine, Jeff Jarvis wrote: “The interview is outmoded and needs to be rethought.”

I know I’m rethinking it. Rutenberg and I had a pretty detailed conversation about the put down of the establishment press under Bush, certain failures of imagination in Washington journalism, the interpretation of Colbert’s performance in 2006, and the “musty” feel that the invitation to Rich Little had. I pointed out, for example, that Little was at his peak at roughly the same cultural moment that the Washington press coprs was at its peak in the afterglow of Watergate.

But what Jim needed me for was the bloggers vs. journalists debate. “In hiring an impersonator practiced in an old-school approach to comedy, meant to entertain but not offend, the White House Correspondents’ Association has, however, provoked left-leaning political activists, who see his assignment as a retreat from last year’s dinner.” (Subtext: Wow, the left is as angry with the press as the right was. Just listen to the so-called Net roots attack us for not carrying their message.)

What I think we will see more of is people participating actively in both the “old” and “new” media. It will start with people like Rosen, who have their own blog. He may well still grant interviews to people, but he’ll offer his own transcripts on his website, or in his blog. We’re already seeing that sort of thing more often, where someone will write that they were interviewed for some show, and post a transcript of the interview. The show might include only part of it, but the entire interview is available. That didn’t used to happen.

As news junkies, we will now be able to do more of our sleuthing to find out all the details about a story and make up our own minds on an issue. We can watch the news conference live (not just edited clips later), then we can visit the various sites of the groups involved and get their side of the story. Then we can watch the various stories produced and see how they interpret the material that we’ve also been able to look at.

I know that sounds like a lot of work but as our technology develops, we’ll be able to find those original sources as effortlessly as changing the channel on our TV. I think it will make for a more news coverage. We will still have “star” reporters who are visible and trusted, but they will have earned our respect by what they do – not by what they’re told by people who know the “real” story. And that’s OK with me.

Vudu Casts Its Spell on Hollywood – New York Times

Have you seen Apple TV? This new way to get audio and video from your computer to your TV has been taking off since its introduction a few weeks ago. I don’t have one…yet. But I admit I’m sorely tempted. Especially since my Ipod died last week and I don’t have the resources to buy another one yet. I’m suffering some severe gadget withdrawal at the moment.

But as good as Apple TV seems to be working, it still doesn’t deliver something that I’ve long hoped for — instant access to every movie ever made. The holy grail, in other words, for movie buffs. Think about it. All these movies, in digital form, just waiting on a server somewhere for me to order them up and watch it on my TV. That’s a good thing to think about. Unfortunately, it’s only a dream, right?

Well, it looks like it could come true sooner than I thought. At least, the concept is getting closer. This weekend, The NY Times has a very interesting piece on Vudu, a Silicon-valley start-up that looks like it might take the world by storm this summer. It’s a good read and it gives dreamers like me a bit of hope that we might reach movie nirvana yet.

Here’s the link to the story.         

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Woman who lost teaching degree over MySpace photo sues university

There have been warnings about pictures and comments people leave on social media sites coming back to haunt them. But this is one of the more severe that I’ve heard of:

Woman who lost teaching degree over MySpace photo sues university:

Here’s the story:

MILLERSVILLE, Pa. — A woman denied a teaching degree on the eve of graduation because of a MySpace photo has sued the university.

Millersville University instead granted Stacy Snyder a degree in English last year after learning of her Web-published picture, which bore the caption “Drunken Pirate.”

“I dreamed about being a teacher for a long time,” said Snyder, 27, who now works as a nanny.

The photo, taken at a 2005 Halloween party, shows Snyder wearing a pirate hat while drinking from a plastic “Mr. Goodbar” cup. It was posted on her own MySpace site.

Although Snyder apologized, she learned the day before graduation that she would not be awarded an education degree or teaching certificate.

Jane S. Bray, dean of the School of Education, accused Snyder of promoting underage drinking, the suit states.

The federal lawsuit seeks at least $75,000 in damages. Millersville spokeswoman Janet Kacskos referred questions to a state System of Higher Education spokesman, who declined comment.

Link via Digg

UPDATE — Here’s another story, via TechDirt, about a Canadian man denied entrance to US after a Google search turned up a story he’d written about his LSD use 30 years earlier.

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Stumbling on Happiness: why we suck at being happy

When Cory Doctorow recommends a book with this much enthusiasm, it’s usually worth checking out. Here’s his review from Boing Boing:Stumbling on Happiness: why we suck at being happy:

Cory Doctorow:

Daniel Gilbert’s Stumbling on Happiness is one of those pop-science books that delivers a serious a-ha punch at least once a chapter, a little insight into the way that the world works that stops you right where you are and makes you go back and reevaluate how you got there.

Gilbert is a Harvard Psych prof, and in this book, he doesn’t seek to explain how to be happy — in fact, the introduction specifically disclaims this intention — but rather, how happiness happens. And why happiness is so elusive.

Happiness is certainly elusive. How many times have we chased some goal, some purchase, some strategy, sure that we needed it to be complete, only to discover later that we’re no happier than we were when the whole steeplechase started? This is the crux of Gilbert’s thesis: why are we so consistently bad at estimating how happy some course of action will make us?

For Gilbert, the answer lies in our faulty perceptions. We misremember how happy we’ve been in the past, we mispredict how happy we’ll be in the future (his section on futurism should be mandatory reading for every science fiction writer and tech journalist). Citing study after study, Gilbert lays out the lucid and funny case for the idea that our brains aren’t very good at measuring what’s going on in our brains.

Gilbert’s funny, conversational style reminds me of Freakonomics, as does his subject-matter. For happiness is at the core of more than psychology — it’s also at the heart of justice, economics, political science, ethics, and many other key organizing disciplines that set the Earth in motion. This was the kind of book that made me reexamine more than my life’s goals — it made me re-think my politics and economic activity, too.

I listened to an unabridged edition read by the author, and it was very fine. Gilbert has the timing of a stand-up comic, and the book itself is just so funny to begin with. Highly recommended.

Link to book,

Link to audiobook

Update: Louis sends in this video of the author speaking at the TED Conference

(Via Boing Boing.)

Congress May Save Net Radio

There may be some good news on the Internet Radio front, which is facing potentially catastrophic increases in royalties fees. (See this earlier post for more on how services like Pandora are affected). But on Thursday, a bill was introduced in the US Congress that seeks to reverse the earlier decision.

From PC World:

U.S. Reps. Jay Inslee (D-Wash.) and Don Manzullo (R-Ill.) filed the legislation Thursday. The bill reverses a recent decision of the federal Copyright Royalty Board (CRB) to nearly triple the amount of royalties Internet radio broadcasters pay to copyright holders for playing a song.

The Copyright Royalty Board earlier this month approved a rule that would force commercial Internet radio stations, regardless of their size, to pay a new, higher flat fee to the record labels each time a song is played. Royalty rates for Web-casters – starting retroactively at $0.0008 per song in 2006 will climb to $0.0019 per song in 2010. As it stands now, the rates will go into effect May 15.


Here’s the link to the story.:

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Friday fun for Apr 27, 2007

I’ve got a mixed bag of entertainment this Friday. There’s an interactive segment involving a dog and typing; a bit of a how-to (although I doubt you can); an imaginative video using Flash; and a quiz to test your intellect. Oh…and a gratuitous guitar video (just because).

Like I said, it’s a mixed bag, but hey — it’s almost the weekend, right?

Here we go…

I do dog tricks

This is the interactive part. Click this link and you’ll figure out what’s required. Can anyone say “precious?”

How to create a 3-D sidewalk image

I’ve linked to some previous videos about 3-D sidewalk artists (here’s one of my posts) and I think I’ve seen the one that’s the subject of this video before. But this is a video about how the piece was made. It’s fascinating to see the care that goes into creating the illusion of depth using a 2-D picture. It’s kind of long, but interesting.

Here’s the link to the video.

Get the beat

It’s not a guitar video, but it goes well with one. An imaginative use of Flash animation and a catchy beat.

Watch the video here.

Did I mention there would be a quiz?

Do you like challenges? I found another on-line science quiz from the BBC. This is a hard one — at least I didn’t do that well. Surprising how often the right answer is not what you expected.

Take the quiz yourself here.

And finally, the gratuitous Guitar Video

It’s been awhile since I’ve put up a guitar video. Here’s one from the Sydney Opera House. This guy is a 12-string virtuoso.

Here’s the link to the video.

Enjoy!

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Wired Magazine: How the CIA Used a Fake Sci-Fi Flick to Rescue Americans from Tehran

If, like me, you’re old enough to remember the Iranian revolution, you’ve probably already heard the story about how six Americans who dodged the initial hostage-taking in Tehran were sheltered by the Canadian Ambassador, Ken Taylor, and then smuggled out of the country. It was quite a story.

I can’t remember whether I knew all the details included in this article Wired Magazine: How the CIA Used a Fake Sci-Fi Flick to Rescue Americans from Tehran, but it is a fascinating story.

My own connection to the Iranian revolution came the year before, in the fall of 1978. I was travelling in Europe and I’d arrived in Greece, with the intention of heading overland through the middle East all the way to India. But trouble was brewing in Iran and the word coming back from others who had been there was to avoid the area.

I was travelling with some Australian chaps who were on the last leg of their around-the-world tour and they were determined to continue through to India in their VW minibus. They decided to continue on, but I lost my nerve and stayed in Greece, ending up in a small village called Agia Galini on the south coast of Crete.

I heard that they did make it through but not without incident. If you want to get the flavour of that era, try and track down a copy of Craig Grant’s The Last India Overland, published by Coteau Books. I’m sure it’s out of print by now but worth reading if you can find it. Craig was in Europe that same fall (although we didn’t know each other then) and he ended up on the last Magic Bus (a popular tour bus line) that travelled from Europe through to India. I did find another book about the era, called Magic Bus: On the Hippie Trail from Istanbul to India by Rory MacLean. Here’s a link to an excerpt.

Hard to believe all that was nearly 30 years ago, isn’t it?

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