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Last Visit 2021-10-06 10:32:59 |Start Date 2003-11-18 03:11:54 |Comments 44 |Entries 234 |Images 130 |Sounds 1 |Videos 31 |Mobl 89 |Theme |

09/27/05 07:55 - ID#34242 pmobl

Posted from a mobile phone using p:mobl!

Last week i sent a photo of this which i know isn't a swastika but is awfully weird.
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Location: Buffalo, NY


09/22/05 11:36 - ID#34241 pmobl

Posted from a mobile phone using p:mobl!

The train coming in. I'm curious about the motion blur.

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09/22/05 11:36 - ID#34240 pmobl

Posted from a mobile phone using p:mobl!

At the station this morn.

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Category: copyright

09/21/05 08:56 - ID#34239

Google Library

"This is a plain and brazen violation of copyright law," Nick Taylor, president of the New York-based Authors Guild, said in a statement. "It's not up to Google or anyone other than the authors, the rightful owners of these copyrights, to decide whether and how their works will be copied."Quoted from: Boing Boing: Authors Guild sues Google over print program



Via BoingBoing comes a bunch of material about the recent class-action suit brought by the Authors Guild against Google for the Google Library project. I cannot believe how backwards some authors are, and I'd extend that criticism to artists of all types. Here's a newsflash: Nobody wants to read your book. That's why your publisher screwed you over and demands repayment for the amount of the advance your book sales didn't earm back, and that's why your books aren't available six months after they are released. I have done so many websites for photographers who complain: "Don't make the pictures big enough to see really good -- I don't want people to steal them." What? What can you do with a web-res image, even if it's 800x600 pixels? The print would look like crap, and how much are you using if somebody borrows your image for a presentation or personal project? And guess what? Making big samples available does not negate your ownership of your own work.

Avoiding the whole "should be" discussion about how fucked up copyright and intellectual property law is in the US, Google came back with a fair use claim:

Google doesn't show even a single page to users who find copyrighted books through this program (unless the copyright holder gives us permission to show more). At most we show only a brief snippet of text where their search term appears, along with basic bibliographic information and several links to online booksellers and libraries.

Here’s what an in-copyright book scanned from a library looks like on Google Print: Google respects copyright. The use we make of all the books we scan through the Library Project is fully consistent with both the fair use doctrine under U.S. copyright law and the principles underlying copyright law itself, which allow everything from parodies to excerpts in book reviews.



Now, seriously -- what is being lost here? Even the EFF thinks Google has a good fair-use defense:

Do you know how much Amazon takes from each book sale? A huge percentage. Most of it. I was working with a photog who sells books of his work, and he said that he hated Amazon and would much rather sell through PayPal because Amazon takes such a huge commission on each sale. Amazon essentially required him to sell his books under cost (because he self-published and had no giant multinational megaconglomerate to foot the bill).

With the current state of publishing, which is a bleak wasteland of megacorporations (almost none of which are US based) and small presses who cannot secure decent distribution (because of the two giant multinational megaconglomerates who have a stranglehold on the industry -- Ingram and Navarre). Most books sell fewer than 1000 copies, and the average first novel puts an author anywhere from $4000-10,000 in debt to the publisher. (Yeah, those advances are often dependent on your book selling enough copies to make back the amount of the advance, and most books don't sell that well.) To give them credit, most publishers don't actually demand cash payment; rather, they will simply keep all of your royalties (forever) until you have made back your advance.

Of course, a first novel with no promotion doesn't sell. And this is often cited as the single biggest reason a book fails -- by the time book reviews come out in magazines, most booksellers are nearing the end of their sell-through duration. That means that as people might be reading a review of your book, the local bookstore (or bookstore chain) is likely pulling your novel off the shelves. What a vicious cycle.

Publishing has been in a majorly bad situation for about 20 years now. Nothing is really making it better. Try to buy a copy of a little-known book that came out two years ago -- it's almost impossible. Amazon has helped a lot, but at the same time it has further caused damage to the small booksellers who actually keep up with the books that are coming out and do nice things like call you by name and recommend titles you might enjoy. The last thing authors (often some of the most egotistical and self-obsessed creative types out there) need to do is follow the scent of cash to the courthouse: Google will win. They have the right to do what they are doing. You can't get upset because you didn't think of it, and just because nobody is needlessly bribing you to participate.
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09/20/05 07:41 - ID#34238 pmobl

Posted from a mobile phone using p:mobl!

So i found this swastika on the floor of just pizza and i thought it was a pattern but i couldn't find anymore. Wtf?
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09/20/05 01:01 - ID#34237 pmobl

Posted from a mobile phone using p:mobl!

Video evidence of subliminal advertising.

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09/20/05 12:56 - ID#34236 pmobl

Posted from a mobile phone using p:mobl!

i saw this subliminal frame come up on the television. Wtf? This is in the middle of brainiac, some british show on g4.
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09/17/05 08:46 - ID#34235 pmobl

Posted from a mobile phone using p:mobl!

Janis tapping at her goody
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Category: pets

09/17/05 03:50 - 71ºF - ID#34234

Tongue Parasites and Hairless Dogs

The parasite, Cymothoa exigua, attached itself to the host fish's tongue and snacked on it to the point where it replaced the missing part of the tongue. The parasite, which does not harm humans, only appears to feed on snapper, Luttjanus guttatus.Quoted from: Discovery Channel :: News :: Fish Tongue-Eating Parasite Spreading?



And I wanted to point Paul to a page about hypoallergenic dogs.




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That's a decent link from a dog-fan perspective -- complete with doofy dog themed design. I loves it. And here are some specific hairless breeds:

Chinese Crested (these are so ugly you gotta love them)

American hairless Terrier (these don't really look ugly at all -- in fact, from a distance they look like short hair Jack Russels)

Peruvian Hairless Orchid (these look pretty cool and seem decent sized - little dogs are actually cats in dog suits)

Xoloitzcuintli (come on- there's some serious clout here -- your dog is of a breed nobody else can pronounce or spell and it has a mohawk. fucking bad ass)

So see, Paul -- you could learn to love a doggie, too. It might have to be a freaky weird doggie, but that's OK. If you an pull some strings with your mob friends to get me a permanent job in town, then I promise I'll get you a hypoallergenic dog so you can enjoy the benefits of doggie companionship.

And I could have listed a bunch of hairless cats, but I'm lazy and don't like cats as much.


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Category: politics

09/14/05 12:25 - 72ºF - ID#34233

Bush's UN Notepad

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I'll tell you what I'm BLATHERING about: I've got information, man. New SHIT has come to LIGHT. And, shit, man...
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Permalink: Bush_s_UN_Notepad.html
Words: 24
Location: Buffalo, NY


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