Today is the Day Against DRM

Day Against DRM
Today is the Day Against DRM, the official day assigned to oppose Digital Rights Managment. DRM is a technology designed to stop you from reading, listening, and watching books, articles, magazines, newspapers, DVDs, movies, videos, TV, radio, and music. A few corporate groups are strong-arming your government into trying to change the law so that DRM is required in all media, and to make it a crime punishable with jail-time to avoid DRM.

DRM provides you with no value. It doesn’t help you read the newspaper online; it makes it harder to read. It doesn’t make it easier or more enjoyable to watch a movie; it makes it harder or in some cases impossible to watch a movie that you have PAID for. It doesn’t help you listen to music you have purchased; in fact it may require you to pay over-and-over again to keep listening to a single song that you have purchased.

DRM doens’t help artists either. It makes it harder for them to get their work out to an receptive audience. It makes it more expensive for them to publish their work.

Lobby groups for companies that buy the licensing rights for books, music, and movies from the artists that create content are fighting hard to make DRM part of your life. Maybe you want to fight back? Maybe you don’t? Here are a few things you can do either way:

  • Don’t use iTunes, don’t buy an iPod, and don’t buy form the iTunes store. The files you get from iTunes can be “turned off” by Apple anytime they want. If they want to make a few extra bucks off you next year, they just have to change the system so that your files won’t play anymore unless you pay for an “upgrade.” There are plenty of places that sell plain-old MP3s.
  • Check out MusicIP Mixer from musicip.com. Not only will it play regular old MP3s, but it will play Ogg Vorbis file. Ogg Vorbis files give you better quality for the same size file, AND the format isn’t owned by any company… you will always be able to play your Ogg music… forever and ever.

For more information visit Ten Things for OCT3

Blog Day: Five Blogs You Might Find Interesting

About Blog Day

I am told that today is Blog Day and that on Blog Day bloggers are supposed to blog about five blogs that they believe their readers will find interesting.

is getting pretty big, and ever since becoming a graduate student in Library and Information Science, I have been mostly adding library/infosci blogs. Thus, I find it strange that when I made this list of “five blogs that I think you should know about” there was just one library blog that made the cut.

Five Interesting Blogs That I Think You Should Know About

CogNews

News about Cognitive Science. This is the slashdot of cognitive science, with infrequent posting but excellent selection of content.

All In The Mind

Podcast from ABC (Australian Radio Station) about psychology. Really interesting 30 minutes podcasts. I highly recommend checking the archives for the recent interview with Daniel Dennet on Evolutionary Psychology and Religion and another recent episode on Stalking.

Junk Charts

I usually don’t like sites that just criticize other people’s work. However Junk Charts is special. It is a thoughtful and very productive criticism of data visualization (i.e. charts and graphs that are misleading or deceptive or just plain bad)

Statistical Graphs and Data Visualization

Despite the title sounding dull, this is a very exciting topic. If you have ever heard of or read Tufte, then you will undoubtedly find this site useful and interesting.

Unit Structures:: Fred Stutzman

Fred Stutzman is a Ph.D. student in Library and Information Science. He is by now becoming famous for his work on the adoption of Facebook by college students. If you search Google Video you will find that he has given a talk at Google about his research on facebook. His site also has some links to MP3 files of recent interviews he gave. His postings about his research are well worth reading.

Photographing Fireworks

Canada Day is coming up this weekend. In my neighborhood there is a large fireworks display. In fact, it is almost in my backyard… they launch from less than one block away. I was delighted to find this HOWTO on photographing fireworks.