Barry Ritholtz has a nice analysis of the spin the Music Cartel is putting on the recent copy-protected Velvet Revolver CD that just came out. An excerpt (from Barry’s email, not blog post) that especially caught my eye:

Here’s the oddest aspect of the DRM: iPod-owning Velvet Revolver fans cannot transfer the music from their CDs to their pods unless they violate DMCA and hack their CDs. That’s right — if a consumer wants to use their legally purchased CDs on their legal MP3 player, they must become felons. The same is true for those iPod onwers who buy the music on iTunes music store — it wont work with their pods.

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Foxnews raves about Michael Moore?

Here’s something I didn’t expect to be saying: Fox News just gave Michael Moore’s Fahrenheit 9/11 a rave review!

I hadn’t been following the film since Disney tried to bar Mirimax from distributing it. (Depending on who you believe, that was either because they were worried Jeb Bush would rescind special tax advantages for Disney World or just because Disney was chicken about being associated with controversy.) While I wasn’t looking it seems Mirimax’s co-chairmen Harvey and Bob Weinstein purchased all worldwide rights from Disney, and the film will be distributed by Lions Gate Films (a Canadian company) along with IFC Films and the Weinstein brothers’ own ad-hoc Fellowship Adventure Group.

The trailer looks pretty darned good — film opens nation-wide Friday, June 25th.

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G.W. Bush Public Domain Audio Archive

The Bots have put up a public-domain database of full MP3s from G.W. Bush’s speeches, debates and other statement. It’s mostly laid out for cutting up into remixes (like their latest song, Fuzzy Math) but they’re also providing the full linear speeches for whatever people want to do with them. In a couple months they’ll be sponsoring a contest for best use of the database — I’m looking forward to seeing what people come up with.

(Props to Lawrence Lessig for the link.)

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Girl Genius

Speaking of comics online, Phil Foglio has a new one out called Girl Genius that’s pretty cute. First issue is free online, I’ll probably spring for all four in paper form.

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Something Positive

Three weeks ago R.K. Milholland got fed up with people criticizing the spelling in his online comic Something Positive so he posted a dare: donate his current day-job salary ($22,000) to his pay-pal account and he’ll quit and work full-time on the comic. The donations flooded in, and yesterday he gave his 2-weeks notice.

Just one more example of how “selling” content isn’t the only economic model out there, or necessarily even the best. All sorts of things become possible when what you produce has practically zero marginal cost.

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Real live link vulnerability for Mac OSX

I don’t think this has appeared in the wild yet, but no doubt it will soon. It’s an exploit that allows someone to execute arbitrary code on OSX just by visiting a website, regardless of browser, by using Javascript to download a disk image and then using Javascript to open help://Volumes/Rootkit/Rootkit.script. The browser passes the request on to the Help Viewer, which will gladly execute code. The exploit is being discussed on the MacNN Forums and has been summarized on TidBITS.

No solution from Apple yet (though apparently they’ve known about it for two months already — sheesh), but a stop-gap solution is to install MonkeyFood Software’s free MoreInternet and then set the helper app for type “help” to some innocuous program like “chess.”

On the minus side, it’s sad to see OSX suffering the same pain I’ve teased Windows users about all these years. On the plus side, I’d been meaning to play more chess anyway…

UPDATE: In flaming about the above exploit, the MacNN folk found a variation that doesn’t have a full work-around, though you can make it harder for an attacker to get the payload to your machine. See the top of the thread for details.

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Statistical Debugging

This is cute — download a special version of open-source software like Evolution, Gaim, The Gimp, Nautilus, or Rhythmbox from The Cooperative Bug Isolation Project and they’ll randomly sample usage paterns to try to automatically detect bugs that make software crash. Unlike the usual “this application has unexpectedly quit, shall I email a crash log to the developer” kind of thing, this one collects sparse data from both crashes and normal use, enabling an automated classifier to tease out what the differences were.

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Sony LIBRIé review

This review of the Sony LIBRIé e-Book reader sounds typical of what I’ve heard — thumbs up the new E Ink screen, interface could be improved but isn’t bad, and as usual the content side of the Sony house is willing to make the whole package next-to-useless by throwing enough DRM on the device to insure no one will want it. I can see the advertisements now:

Read for hundreds of hours without changing batteries — just like paperbacks!
Great resolution — just like paperbacks!
Magically disappears after 60 days — just like paperbacks!

Didn’t they learn anything from minidisc?

Of course, this time their system is Linux-based, and Sony is making at least some of their software available online, so people might be able to write their own content for what sounds like decent and certainly interesting hardware technology. Wonder if that’ll happen fast enough for the LIBRIé to get its legs before Phillips & others make a version that will actually play eBooks already out there?

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The bias of science

Scientific American has written an editorial severely critical of the Bush administration’s “disdain [for] research that inconveniences it,” citing misrepresentation of findings, suppression of studies, deletion of data from government web pages, and playing gatekeeper on future studies by making it harder for scientists from “hostile nations” to publish in the US and by trying to give industry scientists more control over the process for determining EPA research. It brings together several criticisms from the past three years that amount to a disturbing step backwards in how our administration gets its facts.

I got word of the editorial from Declan McCullagh’s Politech list, where Declan introduced the piece with this rather odd disclaimer:

It is not unthinkable that scientists have political biases. In fact, it would be remarkable if many were not lifelong Democrats who may be tempted to be a bit more critical of a Republican’s science policies than they would, say, a Bill Clinton’s. Moreover, many scientists rely on government funding of domestic programs, which arguably increases faster under Democratic regimes.

That said, this editorial is pretty disturbing and ties enough threads together to be pretty convincing.

Is our nation so polarized now that anything praising or critical of our president is first assumed to be partisan rather than actually making a valid point? Like the rest of the country, scientists span the whole spectrum of personal political, cultural and religious biases. The common bias in our profession is the one at the heart of science itself: that the truth is worth knowing, even if it isn’t the truth we wish were so, and that society is better off knowing the truth and then having open and reasoned debate than basing our actions on blind dogma, unexamined assumptions and gut feel.

In other news, the US is losing its lead in scientific excellence.

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