Slashback: Ascent, Patents, Transferability 253
Your ruse, your clever trick. On August 22nd, we reported that OpenOffice.org's OS X version had been delayed for two years.
However, bluethundr writes "Hold the phone! Is it delayed or isn't it? Well, according to this story in the register, it AIN'T DELAYED...just undermanned. Apparently there are only TWO (count 'em! one...aw heck, where was I?) developers working on the OS X development team. Dan Williams (who is one of the two in question) says that 'the Mac version is in a Catch-22: with only two developers, it desperately needs man power. But no one will join the porting effort until they see momentum behind the Aqua port.' Maybe some of the coders among us could lend them a hand?"
Too late for the colonies, help save the mothership. leif.singer writes "While there still is some time left, please consider signing Eurolinux' petition against software patents in Europe." You'll be in good company: vinsci writes "In their news section, FFII has posted a more detailed story: "Within a few days, the petition calling the European Parliament to reject software patentability accumulated 50,000 new signatures.""
Free as in FreeDOS Jim Hall writes "I thought I'd submit this before the news item fell too far down our web page. If you remember about a year ago, Dell was to offer Windows-less PC's, instead pre-installing FreeDOS. You can now order a Dell with FreeDOS (or Linux) ... and have been for a while now. They are pretty nice machines, too (3.06GHz). We have the news item (with links to Dell) at the FreeDOS Project web site."
Nasty worms ought to at least produce spice. The NRC released an alert about worm infections and nuclear power plants. This is a reaction after the SQL-Slammer attacked the shut-down Davis-Besse nuclear power plant in January.
Tomorrow is another year. RoadKillian writes "New Scientist reports thats the QinetiQ 1, the record-breaking balloon which was supposed to rise to an altitude of 40km (131,000ft) has ripped during inflation. The weather is unlikely to permit another attempt this year."
When EULAs collide. Yesterday's story about selling a song downloaded from iTunes seems to have an unhappy ending: sideswipe76 writes "As I was watching this auction today, it approached $16,600! Now, if you try and check this link from eBay you get 'invalid item.' Is eBay wussing out just to avoid any legal snafus that _might_ occur? Or did he violate some ebay policy? Thoughts?"
a PC without windows? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:a PC without windows? (Score:2)
It's called Defenestration [defenestration.org]
iTunes Sale (Score:5, Informative)
Re:iTunes Sale (Score:5, Insightful)
I guess eBay is covering its ass with that clause. They probably only pull it out when there's something potentially dangerous being auctioned, and let it slide when something the RIAA isn't going to get pissed about goes under the virtual hammer. With the RIAA in the trigger-happy state its in currently, I can hardly blame them.
Not really (Score:3, Interesting)
on their Downloadable Media Policy [ebay.com] page?
Or was that secretly added after this song was listed?
Re:Not really (Score:4, Insightful)
As I said, they enforce that rule when it helps them, and lets it slide when it doesn't.
Re:Not really (Score:3, Insightful)
Does that mean it can be delivered electronically through a different medium? What if the seller dialed up the buyer's modem and set up a zmodem transfer? Or does nobody do that any more?
Re:Not really (Score:2)
The first shareware program I actually registered... *sigh*
Just don't use the Internet (Score:2)
How about X.25? DecNET? AppleTalk? Token Ring? Maybe they could do IrDA? Or just use IP over a LAN instead of the Internet?
Re:Not really (Score:5, Informative)
The buyer is protected (ostensibly) because the listing says that you will get the item when you tell them the password, thus if this is not true, you are guilty of fraud. And you comply with the letter of ebay's law. I'm guessing they feel the laws are clear on physical objects and claims but not on virtual ones, so they're bringing all the virtual things into the real world.
Makes me wanna go watch Lain.
Re:iTunes Sale (Score:2)
Re:iTunes Sale (Score:5, Informative)
Re:iTunes Sale (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:iTunes Sale (Score:5, Informative)
Re:iTunes Sale (Score:2)
They will remove auctions for material on CD-R, but only if you can prove that it is - e.g. the auction photo shows a Playstation with a stack of CD-Rs labelled with a Sharpie. If the seller uses CD labels and calls them "CDs" instead of "CD-Rs," you are right, they won't remove the auction.
Re:iTunes Sale (Score:2)
Re:iTunes Sale (Score:5, Informative)
[Update 09-04-2003 3:02 PM]:
My GPG signed response:
I do not believe that my auction violates the downloadable media policy, I posted in my auction that I would not be violating it. I specifically ammended [forgot to run ispell] the auction to state that the buyer would not receive the item in question over the Internet.
Please reinstate my auction ASAP.
George Hotelling
[Update 09-04-2003 2:52 PM]:
Dear George Hotelling (me@mydomain.tld)
**PLEASE READ THIS IMPORTANT EMAIL REGARDING YOUR LISTING(S)**
We would like to let you know that we removed your listing(s):
2555673237 Double Dutch Bus by Devin Vasquez
for violating our Downloadable Media Policy. Please read our Downloadable Media Policy here:
http://pages.ebay.com/help/policies/downloadabl
We have credited any associated fees to your account. We have also notified the bidders that the listing(s) was removed, and that they are not obligated to complete the transaction.
If you relist this item, or any other item that violates eBay policy, your account could be suspended.
If you believe your listing was removed in error, please let us know by replying
to this email with supporting information.
Thank you for your cooperation.
Respectfully,
Customer Support (Trust and Safety Department)
Ebay Inc.
Re:iTunes Sale (Score:2)
Customer Support (Trust and Safety Department)
Ebay Inc."
Why does the trust and safety dept. make my ears ring of the ministry of the prevention of vice and the promotion of virtue.
Re:iTunes Sale (Score:2)
Re:iTunes Sale (Score:2)
How is this any different? The items in those auctions are delivered electronically, and don't physically exist.
Re:iTunes Sale (Score:2)
Re:iTunes Sale (Score:2)
Re:iTunes Sale (Score:2)
FreeDOS? (Score:2, Funny)
It sounds about as useful to me as that ~4.xxMB Win95 distribution...
Re:FreeDOS? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:FreeDOS? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:FreeDOS? (Score:2)
So it has it's uses. Plus you can use it to make some kind of distributable boot disk without having to worry about Microsoft coming after you.
Re:FreeDOS? (Score:2)
Oh man, do I feel old and I'm only 23. It's _DOS_, and the 640k limit was probably the most dispised thing about it. You may be interested in a DOS Extender, which gives you protected mode and access to more memory.
FreeDOS + Malloc.. (Score:2, Funny)
Please send me $299 for each installed copy of FreeDOS you have on your PCs..
Darl McBride
Routers (Score:2)
Now, take an old 200MHz Pentium, FreeDOS, and CNC Pro [yeagerautomation.com] and you got it all.
There's all kinds of uses for DOS. Lots of people still use it every day, even on their desktops. There's a LOT of old systems out there and recycling is a far better u
Didn't bother to RTFA, huh? (was Re:FreeDOS?) (Score:3, Informative)
Yes, that's right. Dell is rooking $629 for Windows. If that doesn't piss you off enough, read this [cypherpunks.ca].
However, I do have to say that I am glad there are now 2 major hardware vendors selling desktop systems with Linux as the only OS. IMHO, this is the only thing that IBM
But it might disable something... (Score:2)
Re:FreeDOS? (Score:4, Insightful)
Good luck. Most (if not all) OEMs will -not- ship you a system without an operating system preloaded. For many of them certain confidential contracts prohibit doing that in the name of "reducing piracy" (obviously the only reason to buy a computer with no OS is because you intend to use a pirated copy...).
If FreeDOS satisfies their contractural obligations, then is absolutely does enable this.
Re:FreeDOS? (Score:3, Interesting)
Regarding the closed eBay auction... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Regarding the closed eBay auction... (Score:2)
It is.
The right of first sale totally and completely aplies unless--get this--it's specifically waived as a condition of the sale.
For example, if, for some reason I sell novels and ebooks, and I include a "you may not resell this" clause in the (printed) novels but not the ebooks, and I point the clause out to everyone, and they're the exact same price... well, you're able to bandy around the ebooks, but you can't resell the novels.
More to the point, I could take you
Re:Regarding the closed eBay auction... (Score:2)
Wouldn't you have to write the "you may not resell this book" clause *outside* the book? Because looks to me like it has nothing to do with copyright - more like contract law actually.
So basically, you can't write the no resell clause inside the book and expect people to be bound by it. The consumer has to be aware of the restriction before he pays.
Shrinkwrap licenses can go fuck themselves.
Re:Regarding the closed eBay auction... (Score:2)
Re:Regarding the closed eBay auction... (Score:2)
No matter what they say, you CAN sell books.
iTunes not actually property! (Score:5, Informative)
Incidentally, it is also a testament to the likely success of Microsoft's upcoming music download service, where you pay an annual fee and may download any 60 songs for playback on a handful of certified devices that are digitally tied to your account. If you get tired of some of the songs, you can turn them in and exchange them for new ones.
When you think about it, this plan makes a lot of sense, since it ushers in the new era of portable digital storage, which you can plug into your car, your expensive Harmon Karden system, or your walkman. It also makes sense in that it will probably make record companies more money than they make today, while making consumers happier.
Wouldn't you like to pay $120 per year and be able to "rent" any 60 songs at any time for as long as you want???
Right now, you could buy 8 or 9 CDs, or 120 iTunes songs, which for most people wouldn't be enough to really establish a satisfactory music library.
I know this post sounds pro-Microsoft, but it's actually pro-capitalism and pro-innovation. Capitalism works so well because it always encourages companies to come up with a better mousetrap, or in this case a better music distribution system.
Re:iTunes not actually property! (Score:2)
Re:iTunes not actually property! (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:iTunes not actually property! (Score:5, Interesting)
nahh I'll stick with the 6000 I permanently will have access to and OWN.
how about the 6 albums a week I encode.... no not lame CD's Those strange black plastic things...
I collect rare records, and in order to enjoy them I play them ONCE in order to rip them to mp3's..
many of them I can LEGALLY share on the internet as they are no longer copyrighted.
nahh, there's no legitimate use for P2P music sharing and unrestricted portable music formats...
enjoy your restricted life... I'll stay with my unrestricted music access and the car stereo, home stereo, boom box and portables that all play this unrestricted mp3 format.
Re:iTunes not actually property! (Score:2)
Re:iTunes not actually property! (Score:2)
I'm kinda surprised that somebody who collects old albums doesn't insist on CD quality audio for the digital masters. I'd figure your a serious audiophile if you collect old/rare albums. Personally, I'd turn each album into a C
Re:iTunes not actually property! (Score:2)
How do you figure this? Albums haven't been around long enough for the copyrights to expire, so for them to be "no longer copyrighted" they'd have to have been explicitly turned over to the public domain. Have they been?
Re:iTunes not actually property! (Score:5, Interesting)
> to "rent" any 60 songs at any time for as long as
> you want???
No I wouldn't. So assuming I am not completely braindead and I pick on average mostly songs that I like, then on average I am going to be paying $2 dollars a year for a single song. Which given that I still listen to music I bought 10 years ago (along with all the music I have bought between then and now) on a regular basis that means if I buy the sweet alubum under this plan that has ten songs, it will cost me $200 dollars in order to listen to it for 10 years. That sounds like a totally Bad Idea[tm] from my point of view.
I think the only way I would use something like this is if I could pay 10 dollars for a single month then go through as many songs as I could, to try and find cool new music (since as we all know most 'preview' clips kind of suck and it would be nice to hear the whole song in all it's hifi glory before making a decision) then just buy the albums of what I really liked.
Yar!
I pay ten bucks a month... (Score:2)
I like the Spanish [misia-online.com] and Russian [cdsound.com] stuff the best, although I have discovere
Re:iTunes not actually property! (Score:2)
Unless I exploit what I believe is a whole in MS's plan. I could trade in song N-1 for song N+1 while I play song N. Voila, I can listen to every song in their library, with no
Re:iTunes not actually property! (Score:2)
60 lousy songs? (Score:4, Insightful)
And if I have to keep paying rent instead of a flat fee, I'll go patronize artists who don't expect lifetime tenure or get huffy when I ask them "So what have you written lately?"
Re:iTunes not actually property! (Score:2, Interesting)
It's actually pro-capitalism and pro-innovation. Capitalism works so well because it always encourages companies to come up with a better mousetrap, or in this case a better music distribution system.
Whew, for a minute I thought your post was serious!
The further it is from Napster, the less successful it will be. Apple is doing it pretty much right. Or as right as they can, considering.
The first thing I'd do with this MS BS system is convert it to an .AIFF file and store it on a CDR.
What if my wa
Re:iTunes not actually property! (Score:2)
The system I described would actually work better than Napster for most people: All good rips of the songs, excellent selection of songs, no viri, fully legal, it won't get shut down just when people get into it.
Re:iTunes not actually property! (Score:2)
You can resell CDs, this has been proven time and again, in spite of attempts of labels and artists to prevent this. This fact has not driven the commercial music industry under in spite of the fact that there are used CD stores in every city anyone is interested in living in, which means that they are near everyone in the United States, for
Re:iTunes not actually property! (Score:2)
Of course, there will still be some artists, and a lot of people trying to spread the word about their music, who will make non-DRM music readily available.
Re:iTunes not actually property! (Score:2)
WOW! Another incredible innovation from Microsoft! Someone should apply the same model to, say, DVD rentals! We could call it Netflix!
Re:iTunes not actually property! (Score:2)
Sometimes it takes genius to market an idea that anyone could have had and make it a reality. Haven't you seen those Accenture ads?
Re:iTunes not actually property! (Score:2)
The technologies existed but they were hella expensive. The first cordless phone spectrum was allocated by the FCC in 1980. Ten years later, the cost for a half-way usable cordless was around $500 a pop.
Re:iTunes not actually property! (Score:2)
Re:iTunes not actually property! (Score:2)
Re:iTunes not actually property! (Score:2)
Evolution in Action (Score:3, Insightful)
---
Where is it written that any organization or business should be guaranteed an unending flow of green? That attitude is about as anti-capitalistic, anti-consumer, anti-innovation and for that matter anti-competitive as I can imagine, and I can imagine quite a lot. Business is supposed to respond to the dictates of the marketplace, not the other way around! And the reason that businesses listen to the market is b
Re:iTunes not actually property! (Score:2)
But.... Will it work on Linux???
Re:iTunes not actually property! (Score:2)
Re:iTunes not actually property! (Score:2)
Re:iTunes not actually property! (Score:2)
eBay policy (Score:3, Informative)
Of course, who's to say eBay didn't just roll over under the pressure? Wouldn't be the first time.
Music on Ebay (Score:4, Informative)
I know that I once had the great experience of falling for a new TiBook 1GHZ for only $1500. Bidding went well above that, and Ebay then pulled. Turned out it actually was a scam.
My guess is that Ebay would happily risk stopping a real auction for the small chance it might be a hoax(instead of vica versa). In this case on the chance the bidders won't back their wagers.
Worth = principle (Score:4, Interesting)
eBay policy (Score:3, Informative)
Like the buyer would pay... (Score:2)
I have a close friend that this happened to when he was selling his Powerbook 867Mhz. The guy didn't pay and tried to get him to ship it to a different address...
like ANYONE is going ot pay $16k for a song
Email I received from eBay... (Score:4, Informative)
/joeyo
Re:Low id??? (Score:2)
Did you buy it at ebay? What was your bid?
I hear he got it for a song B-)
Petition Dollars? (Score:2, Funny)
"Within a few days, the petition calling the European Parliament to reject software patentability accumulated 50,000 new signatures."
Radical New Petition Method: Get everyone who signs to send one dollar. Fight Money with Money! $50,000+ should be able to buy a polititian, right?
iTunes (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:iTunes (Score:5, Insightful)
I would applaud Apple if they kicked more of the cash to artists, but that's like asking Best Buy to pay a share of their profits to the artist. The distribution channel is not responsible to the artist, the record company is. That's where we should look for reform.
Dan
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
You make some good points... (Score:2)
Worms in Power Plants (Score:5, Informative)
The CEO of the company that had the 'original' problem asserted that there must have been systems failures at other sites in order to bring down the entire grid. He said his company alone could not have caused the problems that occurred.
I wonder if any of the MS worms that were circulating at the time actually were to blame for the outage as has been speculated here before?
The webcast of the hearing will be available here [house.gov] when it's ready.
Re:Worms in Power Plants (Score:2, Insightful)
If that's true, than the "MS worms" aren't actually to blame. The admins who left those machines open to the net and who also didn't patch two months ago are to blame.
Re:Worms in Power Plants (Score:2)
It's obvious (Score:4, Funny)
The bids that the guy was getting for his ITunes song, Double Dutch something or nother, should make the RIAA seriously consider selling all of their music on EBAY.
Heck, I'm thinking about recording a tune or two for that sorta money.
Simpsons (Score:2)
Ok, the next highest bid was I believe yours, sir, with 2.1 million.
Yes, well. Were there any serious bids on this item?
Your ruse, your clever trick (Score:3, Funny)
FreeDOS or free DOS (Score:2)
Why use e-bay? (Score:5, Insightful)
Considering a 99 million dollar bid was placed it'd also be handy to list all the bids placed allowing people to bid in between in case higher bids fall through. It was also aliviate false inflation.
No point in putting in a fake high bid if anyone can bid lower.
It would then also be possible to contact the losing bidders at the end and ask them to donate their bid to the EFF or whatever even though they won't get a crappy song for it.
Using e-bay doesn't test the legality of anything relevant. It simply tests E-Bay's TOS. Selling it himself would test the legality of selling the iTune.
Ben
Great (Score:2)
Maybe Taco can lend a hand. He can lead them away from Aqua and into the purity of Violent Purple [slashdot.org].
Yet another iTunes Auction... (Score:2, Informative)
eBay item=2555862144 [ebay.com]
OpenOffice already runs on OS X (Score:5, Informative)
There probably isn't much interest in the Quartz/Aqua port because there doesn't seem to be much point to it: it's a lot of work and won't behave much differently.
As OS X becomes more mainstream, the "purity" of its user interface (if you can call the mix of Cocoa and Carbon "pure") will increasingly go away: people will port MFC, Swing,
Re:OpenOffice already runs on OS X (Score:2)
Re:OpenOffice already runs on OS X (Score:2)
Yes, and you know what? Apple isn't the only company that has those features: they exist on all major platforms, and GUI users on all major platforms demand them. In fact, if anything, OS X lacks a few features and mechanisms that X11 has.
But, in fact, functionally, there is very little of importance that is missing in OpenOffice/X11 on OS X. Note that cut-and-paste already works for text.
I haven't tried the X11 port, but I
FreeDOS if only..... (Score:3, Funny)
Or no OS at all! (Score:3, Interesting)
Not too hard to imagine a cluster of these.
Scariest line in the article... (Score:4, Interesting)
The investigation also found plant computer engineering personnel were unaware of a security patch that prevented the worm from working.
Now I hate to deride any of my fellow IT workers but does Davis-Besse employ trained monkeys to run their network? Seriously. In addition to being plastered all over Slashdot and every IT news site in the known universe, it was covered extensively on all the major news networks. That's incompetence folks, plain and simple.
News like this (not to mention the actions of SCO, the RIAA/MPAA keiretsu, and the degredation of freedom in the US through the DMCA, PATRIOT I/II acts, et al.) makes me want to move to the most remote tropical island in the world and set up a benevolent technocracy. Who's with me? :-)
Re:Scariest line in the article... (Score:2)
Nah, the monkeys' demands were too much in this IT job market. They wanted to be paid in bananas, and by the hour no less.
The iTunes Fear (Score:2)
Therefore, if they anticipate the item is going to cause legal wrangling, they'll simply pull it. Perhaps that's the clause we should assume eBay is invoking on the sale of the iTunes file.
The seller freely admits he's testing his rights of resale, which means they could be challenged in court. I'm guessing this was a good decision for eBay.
Re:FreeDOS doesn't even eat it's own dogfood: (Score:2, Interesting)
itsits.gif [angryflower.com] (safe for work)
Re:FreeDOS doesn't even eat it's own dogfood: (Score:2)
Funny that the name doesn't use it properly.
Re:Worms producing spice ? (Score:2)
Re:$16,000 iTune? (Score:2)