Civil society tends to become a sort of artificial reservoir for an endangered species: the democratic intellectual, protected by the international institutions
Civil society tends to become a sort of artificial reservoir for an endangered species: the democratic intellectual, protected by the international institutions
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Felix Cohen's blogFelix CohenMicrosoft has, apparently out of the blue, released technical details of most of its largest selling products which will allow competing companies and open source developers to create software that integrates far better with the Seattle company’s solutions. For example, Microsoft has released full details of the file storage formats it has used for its Office products, and has committed to allowing developers to be able to add new format functionality to the software. Read the rest of this post...27 - 02 - 08
Felix CohenWikileaks, the shadowy but seemingly genuine service for hosting leaked government and corporate documents, suffered a serious setback yesterday, when a US court forced their internet provider to remove their address records from their servers. Read the rest of this post...19 - 02 - 08
Felix CohenAs a resident of the both terminally hip and poverty-stricken London borough of Shoreditch, I was amazed to see this announcement in The Register recently; my neighbours have been watching me stumble home drunkenly (although, I hasten to add, never criminally so, and never on a school night)! It seems, you see, that a pilot program(me) has been running in the area, whereby users of a governement sponsored broadband scheme would be able to access channels showing them (at a low resolution) the views from various CCTV cameras around the area. Ironically, the viewing figures for the CCTV and associated programming rivalled both Big Brother and Eastenders; life imitating art? Read the rest of this post...12 - 11 - 07
Felix Cohen
This week Comcast released the final figures for how many people chose to pay (38%), or not(62%), for Radioheads ground-breaking (OK, not really, but significant for such a large act) release of their new album, In Rainbows, which was released on the internet under a ‘pay what you want’ model. 09 - 11 - 07
Felix CohenThe last couple of weeks have seen a lot of action in openDemocracy's forums; enough, in fact, to encourage us to give a summary for those readers who don't participate in the forums; these are great discussions and deserve exposure. Last week, henry_hart_1, started a thread on 'Israel Delivers Airmail to Iran by Way of Syria'; a discussion of Israel's recent incursion into Syrian air space, what (or whether) they had attacked: especially if there were nuclear materials involved. Henry's point is that this was a message intended for Tehran. the thread has continued actively, and many of our our most active forum members have contributed to the debate; especially regarding how Russia might react, and to just what extent this might be the action of a US/UK/Israel alliance...and of course, as is the often the way on this sort of matter, the debate has been somewhat heated, lively and at a high level. Great reading! There's more about whether Russia is getting up to steam in the thread 'Russia prepares for war', started by another old hand in the oD forums, eric_5, who wonders where the next Reagan is going to come from to thaw Russia's relations with the west. Go read it to see what our members think of Reagan's success the first time around. Read the rest of this post...26 - 10 - 07
Felix CohenIt's a common internet adage that there are no women online; clearly untrue, massively misogynistic, yet still trolled out in discussion forums everywhere. XKCD provides this brilliant counterpoint:
(linked under Creative Commons from the truly suberb XKCD web comic, by Randall Munroe) 08 - 10 - 07
Felix CohenThis week the Future of Web Apps (FOWA) conference was held in London. Unfortunately, due to a bad landlord, I was unable to make it over to the conference till the end of the last day, but nonetheless managed to catch a very interesting panel on some of the lessons that successful web application developers and companies had learnt over the last few years. I also had a chance to get a feel for how the industry is feeling in the wake of the sub-prime crisis and a general economic slowdown. I had anticipated that the tech crowd might be subdued; even concerned, by the threat of a cut in investment, but it seems that the community is still financially bouyant, and there is no shortage of interesting new applications and programming languages to keep innovation happening. (I particularly like the look of the new Adobe Air system for taking web based applications onto the desktop). Read the rest of this post...05 - 10 - 07
Felix CohenYesterday the OLPC Foundation announced that they would be making the OLPC (One Laptop per child) laptops available to buyers in the developed world; with the caveat that when you purchase one for yourself, you’re also paying for one to be sent to a child in the developing world. Hardly a difficult ethical decision, especially once you see and get a chance to play with, the OLPC itself, which is one of the cutest and most engaging products I have ever used (although it did take me a few minutes to work out how to open the lid, apparently the kids get it every time). Read the rest of this post...25 - 09 - 07
Felix CohenWhilst I'm loathe to continue blogging so much about Microsoft, I wanted to highlight the antitrust judgement that the European courts handed back to them today. Microsoft was up for antitrust behaviour in Europe for a couple of reasons; firstly shipping their Media Player with their operating system; it's a similar thing to what has happened to them in the past with the browser, Internet Explorer. And, while with IE, there was a genuine, if FUD-y reason for the browser to be included in the OS (basically, much of the same back end is used for browsing your files), Windows Media Player provides few, if any, system wide benefits. Secondly, refusing to provide sufficient details of how their server technology works so that other companies could interoperate with MS servers. Read the rest of this post...17 - 09 - 07
Felix CohenThis weekend, the blogosphere was aflame with reports of Microsofts Genuine Advantage Servers crashing. And on a Bank Holiday weekend, no less. The Windows Genuine Advantage(WGA) servers are what your Windows XP or Vista installation 'phones home' to in order to verify that you are not using a pirated copy...if the servers think you are, there are various restrictions and warnings placed on your account. All most unpleasant, I'm told, although as a Mac/Linux user I am unbearably smug about such things. BoingBoing threw petrol onto the fire initially, and when the WGA manager replied to say he couldn't give a time for a fix, why, it seemed to some people like this was the death knell for Microsoft. Treating paying customers like thieves? An outrage! Read the rest of this post...30 - 08 - 07
Felix CohenWhile this post over at uncov, the Techcrunch for cynics, might seem a little inflammatory, people search is apparently going to be one of the big new search tools we use from now on. I went on to Spock to see what it had to say about me, and, after battling with many errors and server problems (this doesn't feel like a site that was ready to come out of beta), managed to find my profile listed. And filled with manifold and varied errors and omissions. I didn't study at Manchester uni, it's been quite a while since I was an editor on Bath's student newspaper(better, of course, while I was there!)and, although I am entreprenurial, I certainly don't run the beerandbreasts.com website! Read the rest of this post...16 - 08 - 07
Felix Cohenby Felix Cohen Max Blumenthal, son of one of our authors, has put together this great short documentary on Republican college kids. Enjoy!
24 - 07 - 07
Felix CohenThe most recent wave of British terror attacks; cars at Glasgow airport, parked outside the TigerTiger nightclub in london and in various other locations, has failed to instil any kind of terror in me. In fact, it has ameliorated many of the concerns I had about further attacks this summer, especially as Brown took on the mantle of PM. Why? Because the terrorits in this case have shown an absolute lack of talent, skill or intelligence in their bomb construction. While the 7/7 bombers were able to undertake the very difficult and dangerous task of mixing peroxide based explosives successfully, this round of petrol, domestic gas cylinders and nail bombs is frankly, laughable. Read the rest of this post...06 - 07 - 07
Felix CohenFelix Cohen at the iCommons summit 2007, Dubrovnik Having heard the party and caiprinha stories from Rio last year, I was eagerly looking forward to Saturday night at the iCommons. Some cliff-diving from the sea-facing bars was followed by a great dinner with Becky Hogge, David Berry and Tom Chance (amongst others) gave me a chance to discuss the philosophies of the commons further. We were also joined by Anna Berthold, the Prject Manager for virtual worlds at the USC center on Public Diplomacy, who briefly held court against Dave Berry on whether the corporeality, or lack there of, of Second Life made it more or less significant as a tool for public diplomacy. The debate was quickly overtaken by the table full of pizza-eating, red wine glugging commons-ers, but it's an interesting question and I hope we get the chance to hear more from Anna on it. Read the rest of this post...17 - 06 - 07
Felix Cohenby Felix Cohen at the iCommon Summit 2007 The session on the philosophy of the commons this afternoon was fascinating. Despite some high-brow (or perhaps high falutin') language in some of the discussions, the feeling one was left with was of a movement that is struggling to define itself, but slowly realising how such a thing might be possible. Too many (in my opinion) analogies were drawn with the Free Software movement, but this finlly enabled people to discuss just how similar the iCommons movement is to free software. And as Larry Lessig pointed out in the first of many comments to be made about our philosophy as a movement, we are not the free software movement. Software is a 'domain' that lends itself particularly well to a core definition, as they have their 'leader' in Richard Stallman, and their licenses grew quite specifically from the principles that he had laid down. The Creative Commons licences, however, grew on many ways from the GNU GPL and other free/open licences for software, and the movement has never had a unversally agreed upon set of principles. However, Lessig argues, perhaps we will not be able to come up with unifying principles for the cultural commons, or free culture, as 'culture' is not a domain like software development, but a (poorly defined) umbrella for many different cultural activities and domains: from photography to music and with a thousand things between. Only by these individual domains coming to terms with what it means for them to produce free culture will we be able to move towards a set of unifying principles, although maybe not even then.
Felix Cohenby Felix Cohen at the iCommons summit 2007 Lawrence Lessig appeared to backtrack, or at least clarify, a little on his 'two economies' notion in his keynote last night. While most of the the news and discussion was regarding his semi stand-down (and possible interest in working with Barack Obama?) Rather than the two cultures being somewhat mutually exclusive, Lessig talked about the way that content creators can move between the two cultures; they should be considered as 'modalities' which authors are in at any time, or that apply to certain classes of people's work. I'm happier with this discussion than I was with what appeared to be two very separate pools of people; now we have a Venn diagram with a lot of crossover and dynamic change. And this makes a lot of sense to some Creative Commons advocates (even Tom Chance seemed to have slightly softened towards him last night). I can understand it, as I find myself moving between the two economies for my work. All of my academic and discursive work is published under a Creative Commons licence, but work that I do in outside consultancy (I design cocktail menus) is rarely if ever released under free licences. Read the rest of this post...16 - 06 - 07
Felix CohenFelix Cohen at the iCommons 2007 Summit A long and exciting day at the iCommons summit today. Despite a late start (I can never get the hang of these pesky time zones!) this mornings workshop on supporting open content through membership campaigning was a success, and you can likely expect to see some of the ideas that we worked on being used in our next membership campaign! Following on from that, I had the chance to lunch with some fascinating people, including the leader of the GlobalLives project, who aim to record 24 hours of the lives of a representative group of people from all over the world and present it (under a Creative Commons licence of course). The project is very exciting, and you can look forward to further links between openDemocracy and the project. Read the rest of this post...15 - 06 - 07
Felix Cohenby Felix Cohen at the iCommons summit 2007 in Croatia Tony and I arrived at the iSummit last night, and after a brief dip in the Adriatic ocean to get rid of the travel blues, headed to the roof of the fantastic Revelin fortress in Dubrovnik to mingle with our fellow Commoners. It's a busy, very international conference, and most of the people I found myself talking to were national Creative Commons representatives, who had been at the lengthy legal sessions that day to discuss translating the new Creative Commons 3.0 licences into their local languages and make sure that there were no issues within their jurisdiction. Read the rest of this post...15 - 06 - 07
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