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| Tuesday, May 10, 2005 |
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Doc's (very short) list
Do you have a commercial blog?
| | Unless expressly permitted, you may not copy, reproduce, distribute, publish, enter into a database, display, perform, modify, create derivative works, transmit, or in any way exploit any part of this Service, except as permitted under the last sentence of this Section 4(a) and except that you may make one print copy that is limited to occasional articles of personal interest only. Without limiting the generality of the foregoing (but subject to the last sentence of this Section 4(a)), you may not distribute any part of this Service over any network, including, without limitation, a local area network, nor sell or offer it for sale. In addition, these files may not be used to construct any kind of database. Just as THP from time to time excerpts materials from other sources in order to support the various commentaries and writings contained herein, we respect the right of others to make "fair use" of the materials contained on THP; accordingly, you may from time to time excerpt and use materials set forth on this site, provided, that you must give the original author credit and such use must be for a non-commercial purpose only and not, for example, for re-sale. |
| | If your blog has advertising, does it not have commercial purposes? Arianna's lawyers give re-sale as a example of a commercial purpose. Is advertising another example? Just wondering. |
| | Also seems clear that credit to original authors, if not linkage, is also requried by this agreement. (Which really isn't an agreement, because almost nobody even knows it exists). |
| | Another question: Would it occur to you, even if you're a lawyer, to put a SERVICE USER AGREEMENT on your blog? |
| | A while back, Larry Lessig advised me (among other bloggers with public domain dedications on their blogs) to choose another license. I forget the exact reason, but it was roughly because the current copyright environment is insane. |
Woops
| | The three posts below I put in yesterday by mistake. Just moved them to today . Sorry about that. |
Hot talk
| | The deregulation of radio was tough on good-neighbor radio because Clear Channel and other conglomerates were anxious to vacuum up every station in sight for fabulous sums of cash and turn them into robot repeaters. I dropped in to a broadcasting school last fall and saw kids being trained for radio careers as if radio were a branch of computer processing. They had no conception of the possibility of talking into a microphone to an audience that wants to hear what you have to say. I tried to suggest what a cheat this was, but the instructor was standing next to me. Clear Channel's brand of robotics is not the future of broadcasting. With a whole generation turning to iPod and another generation discovering satellite radio and Internet radio, the robotic formatted-music station looks like a very marginal operation indeed. Training kids to do that is like teaching typewriter repair. |
| | After the iPod takes half the radio audience and satellite radio subtracts half of the remainder and Internet radio gets a third of the rest and Clear Channel has to start cutting its losses and selling off frequencies, good-neighbor radio will come back. People do enjoy being spoken to by other people who are alive and who live within a few miles of you. |
| | By the way, I also wonder if commercial blogs can legally quote from THP. See 4. (a) of its terms. IANAL, etc., but it looks to me like the answer is no. [Note: rather than subtract this paragraph from this post, I enlarged the topic with another whole post above.] |
Ease of destruction
| | JohnRM: I must be able to get paid for my break-it ability. |
Linerblogger
| | Larry wrote M*A*S*H and many other funny things. His whole blog post is a pile of fine one-liners. e.g. Being born again doesn't mean you get it right the second time. |
Why-fi
| | Interesting to see the providers of culture and governance gradually understand that public broadband is like public plumbing, and that charging for wi-fi is like putting pay toilets in the park. |
Cultural orientation
discuss
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