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The Blog : December 2004

Thursday, December 30, 2004 - 5:01pm
If you've been following the entertainment industry's recent strategy of suing filesharers into submission, check out Jeff Howe's excellent "Wired" piece about the underground networks that are responsible for most of the pirated content on the Net. As Howe points out, a relatively small number of people have to engage in a lot of criminal activity before a movie or CD is even available on networks such as Kazaa and WinMX:
It's all a big game.... Whoever transfers the most files to the most sites in the least amount of time wins. There are elaborate rules, with prizes in the offing and reputations at stake.... Once a file is posted to a [top underground network], it starts a rapid descent through wider and wider levels of an invisible network, multiplying exponentially along the way. At each step, more and more pirates pitch in to keep the avalanche tumbling downward. Finally, thousands, perhaps millions, of copies - all the progeny of that original file - spill into the public peer-to-peer networks: Kazaa, LimeWire, Morpheus. Without this duplication and distribution structure providing content, the P2P networks would run dry.
This, of course, runs contrary to the industry's reasoning for suing public P2P users, which is that regular consumers are buying music and movies and then sharing them with the world:
In reality, the number of files on the Net ripped from store-bought CDs, DVDs, and videogames is statistically negligible. People don't share what they buy; they share what is already being shared - the countless descendants of a single "Adam and Eve" file. Even this is probably stolen; pirates have infiltrated the entertainment industry and usually obtain and rip content long before the public ever has a chance to buy it.
Through interviews with several people active in the underground networks, Howe provides a detailed account of how pirates obtain their source material, prepare it for distribution, and unleash it upon the world. [Wired.com] The Shadow Internet

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Howe's story comes just one day after Clive Thompson's equally intriguing report on BitTorrent, the most recent thorn in Hollywood's side. [Wired.com] The BitTorrent Effect
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Wednesday, December 29, 2004 - 8:29am

I first read Dan Brown's "The Da Vinci Code" a little over a year ago, and I thought it was one of the most poorly written books I had ever read. And I loved every minute of it. My enjoyment of the book had little to do with it's plot. Instead, what drew me in was the same thing that is still drawing people in: the book's wild historical claims about sacred bloodlines and secret societies with celebrity members.

The Da Vinci CodeAfter I finished the book, I tried to read "Holy Blood, Holy Grail." After the first 100 pages, two things became readily apparent. First, Brown's novel is essentially an adaptation (i.e., rip-off) of "Holy Blood," and second, the historical claims made in both books are complete fabrications.

Unfortunately, most of the criticism generated by these books has been in the form of "this-stuff-is-false-because-it's-not-in-the-bible"-type nonsense. None of these Christian loyalists could be bothered with something as basic as historical research. As a result, Brown's novel has yet to be effectively debunked in the popular press. Which is what makes Laura Miller's article ("The Da Vinci crock") on Salon.com such a welcome addition to the debate.

Miller outlines the major claims made by Brown, properly attributes them to "Holy Blood," and then explains why they are completely bogus. In addition, the article points out that Brown now has a personal interest in establishing his claims as nonfiction because he is being sued by the authors of "Holy Blood." If the holy grail and the Priory of Sion are part of the historical record, then his adversaries can hardly claim exclusive ownership of them (which, of course, weakens their lawsuit). And since "Holy Blood, Holy Grail" is itself marketed as nonfiction, its authors find themselves walking a tightrope.

For all its flaws, I do still love "The Da Vinci Code." It made for one of the wildest rides a book has ever given me (for as long as I bought into the novel's version of history, anyway). But the process of discovering Brown's sources and losing faith in the whole thing, well, that made for a pretty wild ride, too. [Salon] The Da Vinci crock

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Tuesday, December 28, 2004 - 6:41pm

With the number of dead approaching 60,000, media coverage of the Asian earthquake tragedy is already devolving into reports of supermodels and martial arts stars.

As usual, the BBC News website is the most reliable source for lucid reporting. Especially interesting is the news agency's "Reporters' Log," which provides first-hand accounts from correspondents in the affected areas.

I haven't had much opportunity to watch television coverage of the disaster, but Slate.com's Dana Stevens recommends CNN specifically because it isn't hyping the celebrity angles (and other irrelevancies) as much as Fox and MSNBC.

I can only assume Stevens' recommendation doesn't extend to CNN.com, which was the first news outlet to report on the safety of Oprah's interior decorator.

[Yahoo! News] Czech Supermodel Injured in Tidal Wave
[Yahoo! News] Reports: Jet Li Escapes Maldives Flooding
[BBC News] Asia Quake Disaster: In Depth
[BBC News] Reporters' log: Asia disaster
[Slate] Masters of Disaster: CNN's earthquake coverage rises above the rest
[CNN.com] American who survived tsunami tells of devastation

News, Tsunami, TV
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Sunday, December 26, 2004 - 9:11pm

A diplomatic standoff between India and the U.S. over last week's Indian crackdown on pornography appears to have been averted. The showdown centered on the arrest of Avnish Bajaj, CEO of EBay's Indian subsidiary, after his company's site listed an auction for the cellphone sex video at the heart of the controversy. The Guardian reported last week that Condoleezza Rice allegedly phoned an Indian ambassador to demand the release of Bajaj, who is a U.S. citizen. A U.S. State Department spokesperson also told reporters that "this situation is one of concern at the highest levels of the U.S. government," prompting at least one Indian politician to accuse the U.S. of "meddling."

The confrontation apparently subsided after Bajaj was released on bail.

India Daily reports that the ongoing controversy may lead India to pass its own version of America's controversial "Digital Millenium Copyright Act." Legislators hope that such a law will provide clearer definitions of ISP and website liability than those currently in effect.

[Guardian Unlimited] Delhi schoolboy sparks global porn row
[LA Times] American Freed in Indian Scandal
[India Daily] India plans US model cyber law

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Thursday, December 23, 2004 - 3:16pm

The story of a family's fight to see its late son's email is generating a lot of debate this week. U.S. Marine Justin Ellsworth was killed in Iraq last month, and webmail provider Yahoo! is refusing to grant his family access to his account. Yahoo! based its decision on company policy that email accounts and all contents associated with them terminate upon a user's death and that accounts are deleted after 90 days of inactivity. The story took a turn for the absurd today with USA Today reporting that Ellsworth's family has received offers from two hackers to help them break into their son's account. To their credit, the family has expressed no interest in such a course of action, opting instead to seek a resolution with Yahoo!

Those supporting the soldier's family state the importance of protecting history. Comparing the email account to letters written by WWII soldiers, they say the deletion of the email by Yahoo! would amount to the loss of important documents of family history.

As the son of an avid genealogist (and former Marine), I certainly understand a family's desire to obtain any record of their son's life so that it can be preserved and passed down to future generations. As a fallen American soldier, Justin Ellsworth deserves that kind of honor (and then some). But if his family wants a record of his wartime correspondence, they should obtain copies from the recipients of that correspondence.

Access to Ellsworth's email account would give his family access to a lot more than just his war emails. In fact, any emails authored by the soldier himself would only be included in the account if he opted to save his sent messages, an option that is turned off by default in Yahoo! Mail. What family members would be more likely to find are emails sent by others to their son. What about those people's right to privacy? Yahoo! is in no position to weigh the merits of every request it receives to open a deceased user's account. In a time when civil liberties seem to be disposable, a company that truly protects its customers' privacy should be applauded.

Ellsworth's father says that what he really wants access to are the final messages that the soldier didn't get a chance to send before his death. The family is hoping to print out copies of these drafts for inclusion in a scrapbook. Unfortunately, because Ellsworth had not yet sent these messages to anyone, it is arguable that he had not yet waived any expectation of privacy associated with the messages. Furthermore, it's simply not possible to grant access to these messages without compromising the privacy of messages that the family has no entitlement to see. (Unless Yahoo! staffers read all of the account's contents themselves to determine what to release and what to protect; but such a course of action in itself would be an invasion of privacy.)

There's a reason we password protect our accounts: because the contents are private. I love my family very much, but that doesn't necessarily mean I want them sifting through my inbox after I'm gone. In reality, I'd have no problem with them accessing my email accounts, but my ISP shouldn't make that assumption for me. Or anyone else.

What about corporate email accounts? Many people use their email at work for personal correspondence (regardless of their employer's email policies). Should companies be expected to grant network access to a deceased employee's family? I doubt such an expectation would ever garner widespread support. Why, then, should a corporation's right to protect its secrets be any more important than an individual's right to do the same thing?

[CNN.com] Dead Marine's kin plead for e-mail
[USATODAY.com] Marine's family gets e-mail dispute help
[Slashdot.org] Dead? Hope You Left Someone Your Passwords
[iafrica.com] Yahoo blocks dead soldier's emails

Email, Privacy, Tech, Yahoo
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