Monday, September 18. 2006
Wizards of OS 4 conference
The weekend I was at the Wizards of OS conference in Berlin. I was so engaged that I didn't find time to blog from there (and the »freifunk« wasn't very stable, but they told me it's the fault of the Deutsche Telekom).
It was a very interesting conference, met a lot of cool people. I spent most of the time with the people of the Free Software Foundation at their booth.
I met people from the »Bayrischer Rundfunk« (german public television station) and discussed about abolishing the GEZ and free content licensing of public television materials. I talked to a free radio activist about historical copyright issues and we ended up in discussing the kyoto protocol and uranium mining in Kongo. Had some discussions about politics in latin america with one guy coming from argentinia. That may give you a short impression about the variety of interesting people I met there.
On the conference topics, it had the theme »Free Software, free culture, free infrastructure«. An interesting panel I want to mention was the discussion about open frequencies. It was basically that only a small number of the frequency spectrum are available to the public at the moment, but wireless lan is already creating some interesting things (freifunk), so the conclusion was that more open frequencies might lead to much more interesting technology. There was a guy from colt telecom talking about the political issues of this subject and the old telecommunication lobby (for example the ITU). Another guy was from Indonesia and talked about projects they did with public wireless technology and their efforts to build own antennas.
Lawrence Lessig helt the keynote, he is definitely a good speaker, while it was far to much »popstar«-like to me (book-signing session afterwarts). His topic was the «Read-Write-Society«, and for one thing I can fully agree with him: It's time to fight DRM.
It was a very interesting conference, met a lot of cool people. I spent most of the time with the people of the Free Software Foundation at their booth.
I met people from the »Bayrischer Rundfunk« (german public television station) and discussed about abolishing the GEZ and free content licensing of public television materials. I talked to a free radio activist about historical copyright issues and we ended up in discussing the kyoto protocol and uranium mining in Kongo. Had some discussions about politics in latin america with one guy coming from argentinia. That may give you a short impression about the variety of interesting people I met there.
On the conference topics, it had the theme »Free Software, free culture, free infrastructure«. An interesting panel I want to mention was the discussion about open frequencies. It was basically that only a small number of the frequency spectrum are available to the public at the moment, but wireless lan is already creating some interesting things (freifunk), so the conclusion was that more open frequencies might lead to much more interesting technology. There was a guy from colt telecom talking about the political issues of this subject and the old telecommunication lobby (for example the ITU). Another guy was from Indonesia and talked about projects they did with public wireless technology and their efforts to build own antennas.
Lawrence Lessig helt the keynote, he is definitely a good speaker, while it was far to much »popstar«-like to me (book-signing session afterwarts). His topic was the «Read-Write-Society«, and for one thing I can fully agree with him: It's time to fight DRM.
Posted by Hanno Böck
in Computer culture, Copyright, English, Gentoo, Life, Linux, Movies, Music, Politics
at
22:30
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Defined tags for this entry: berlin, copyright, freesoftware, freifunk, frequencies, itu, lessig, linux, wos, wos4
Thursday, September 14. 2006
Buchrezension: »No Copy - Die Welt der digitalen Raubkopie«

Das Buch enthält einen Ausführlichen Teil über die verschiedenen »Szenen« (Warez, FXP, Filesharing), welcher für mich noch der Spannendste war, da ich damit bislang kaum Berührung hatte (wenn man mal von der inzwischen komplett im legalen Bereich werkelden Demoszene absieht). Inklusive der mir bislang unbekannten Skurillität, dass es in der Warez- und Crackerszene teilweise gar bestrebungen gab, die eigenen Releases mit Kopierschutzartigen Mechanismen zu versehen. Desweiteren beschreibt es die Anfänge der Hackerkultur, den Homebrew Computer Club und den berühmten »offenen Brief« von Bill Gates, in dem er sich bei seinen Clubkollegen über unrechtmäßige Kopien seiner Software BASIC beschwert. Die Entwicklung von GNU, Linux und der Wikipedia wird grob umrissen.
Das aufkommende Filesharing und die konsequenzen für Musik- und Filmindustrie werden besprochen, den Statistikfälschungen von GVU und anderen wird nachgegangen, die Strafverfolgungsaktionen und Urheberrechtsreformen beleuchtet.
Das ganze Buch wirkt leider sehr schlampig geschrieben, die ein- oder andere Korrekturrunde hätte sicher nicht geschadet. So würde Richard Stallman sich vermutlich »not amused« zeigen über die Behauptung, er sei Protagonist der »Open Source-Bewegung«, Bittorrent ist auch kein komplett dezentrales Protokoll. Beim Kapitel über Kopierschutztechnik wird munter Hacken und Cracken durcheinandergewürfelt und es wird überhaupt nicht klar, warum ein Kopierschutz immer knackbar sein wird, aber andersrum es durchaus theoretisch möglich ist, einen nicht hackbaren Server aufzustellen.
Insgesamt enthält das Buch wenig neues und spart viele wichtige Aspekte aus. So wird kaum auf den kulturell schaffenden und bewahrenden Aspekt von Copyright-Brüchen (Grey Album, Emu/Rom-Szene) eingegangen, die kriminellen Aktivitäten der Medienindustrie (Sony-Rootkit, Pay-for-play) finden kaum Erwähnung. Am Ende bleibt auch unklar, was die Autoren eigentlich wollen. Copyright abschaffen oder reformieren? Sind Schwarzkopien prinzipiell in Ordnung oder nur manchmal? Es bleibt bei einem diffusen »Musikindustrie hat was verschlafen«, was zwar richtig, aber schlicht belanglos ist.
Es enthält zwar den ein- oder anderen interessanten Denkansatz, etwa die Provokative These, legale (freie Software, Wikipedia) und illegale (Warez) Aktivitäten als verschiedene Ausprägungen der gleichen Grundideale anzusehen, insgesamt ist es jedoch vor allem eine Enttäuschung.
Posted by Hanno Böck
in Books, Computer culture, Copyright, Politics
at
18:41
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