Archive for the 'Uncategorized' Category

29
Oct

301

This blog is in the process of being merged with my main blog at http://www.patrickcentral.com/blog/.

 

If you’re reading this, go there instead! I’m leaving these posts up for a while because they got heavily linked, and I am a traffic whore.

30
Jun

Best spam comment ever

I think because of the somewhat high profile inbound links to the meager content on this blog, it has become a target of spambots moreso than several of the other ones I maintain.

Given the unusual nature of some of my entry titles, it’s always entertaining what the AI for these bots comes up with to say – often things like “Interesting post about the revolution will be mashed up. I recommended it to all my friends who are interested in Corrugated Media.”

I can see where the machine gathered this information and the construct “Interesting post about %x. I recommended it to all of my friends who are interested in %y” would probably make a lot of sense of a lot of blogs, and might get by the radar. It’s hilarious when it fails though, as it did spectactularly today:

“I read similar article also named evolution will be mashed up at  Corrugated Media, and it was completely different. Personally, I agree with you more, because this article makes a little bit more sense for me”

Bear in mind this AI is intelligent enough to somewhat pattern match titles of articles but NOT smart enough to pattern math the blog titles to see that he is agreeing with me more than myself. Apparently this article makes a little bit more sense than an IDENTICAL VERSION AT THE SAME LOCATION.

Aaaanyway, anyone who would like to DDOS 64.22.110.2, enjoy. These people won’t stop until there’s some blowback, but I found this very amusing.

07
Mar

halo twenty six

So far on this blog, I’ve been rather preoccupied with the wonders of the modern internet age – the things that we can do now that we couldn’t have dreamed of in the past. In most cases, I believe these things, these tools, are wondrous new means of communicating, sharing, and connecting with others on wide-band and niche levels, and unreservedly consider them good things. I suppose it’s roughly time to consider some of potentially negative impact of these new tools, then. But not really.

If you’ve lived under a rock for the past few years, or wonder why you don’t see as much Vinyl in the record shops these days, or why the Dead hasn’t come by on tour lately, you may be unaware of the supposed scourge of the music industry – online file sharing.

In short, file sharing can allow people to steal anything that is not physical. Whether it’s video, audio, text – if it can be reduced to 1s and 0s, it can be stolen wholesale and instantly copied in perfect clarity as many times as the world’s magnetic, optical and flash media can store. With 8 gigabyte microSD cards and terabyte hard drives readily available in big box consumer stores, this is a hell of a lot of copies. Consumer broadband is now providing the plumbing to allow these copies to reach these storage devices at breakneck speed.

The actual means of online file sharing is irrelevant to this particular article. As it is possible to steal copyrighted material via the Internet, those who hold lucrative copyrights have been actively pursuing those who do so, making file sharing even of legal materials a game of cat and mouse. The struggle for the water to continue to find the cracks has created many innovations in the way the typical person uses the Internet, but again, this is for once not the point of this article. The simple fact is, it’s possible, and it will continue to be possible as long as the copyright holders fight an engineering and philosophy battle using lawyers, who in addition to not being engineers or philosophers, are outnumbered by a ratio of several thousand to one. And these people employ a lot of lawyers.

So, if we accept that it’s possible to steal intellectual property, and it’s not particularly likely that that will change, what do we do? Sue anyone who transmits an mp3 via a network? Tried it. Implement punishing copy protection that cripples product and leaves consumers thirsty for blood? Tried it. Leave the world of the “useful arts” to anarchy? Give up on trying to sell anything that can be stolen so easily and quickly? That’s crazy!

Or is it?

I was directed to an article by Kevin Kelly saying perhaps not, by the oft-praised-on-this-blog Jonathan Coulton. You should go read it. It posits a simple and elegant set of conclusions to take from all of the premises above:

When copies are super abundant, they become worthless.
When copies are super abundant, stuff which can’t be copied becomes scarce and valuable.

When copies are free, you need to sell things which can not be copied.

This is a more refined idea than the much-ballyhooed experiment by famed musicians Radiohead, when they allowed the unwashed masses of the internet to download their work, without copy protection, for whatever they wanted to pay, down to and including a big fat nothing. While I applauded this initiative, it was too simplistic for my taste. It cut out middlemen, yes, but it it was still essentially just adding a degree of granularity to the shiny-rocks-for-property system. There was a premium package announced, wherein one received nice physical copies of the album as well, but this made the digital release appear more of a leak-prevention preemptive strike than a bona fide rethinking of the artist-consumer relationship. There was no license granted to share, no “free sample” to try out (aside from just paying nothing, which many did not want to do out of fear that those watching this experiment would point and say “See! The cheapskates don’t want to pay!”) and most importantly, still no embracing of the above concept: sell what can’t be copied. Kelly’s “8 Generatives Better than Free” are a tremendous read, but one that Radiohead would have had to wait several months for.

Nonetheless, Radiohead inspired many artists, many pundits, and many fans to reevaluate the system. One of those artists was Trent Reznor of Nine Inch Nails, who shortly afterward announced NIN was going label-free. NIN had previously flirted with viral marketing that gave away tracks without copy protection, but sites that picked up on this and promoted the tracks were shut down by the RIAA. It seemed Trent’s solution was to tell the RIAA their services were no longer needed.

Fast forward to this week. Trent reveals his take on direct-to-consumer sales, building on Radiohead’s deluxe physical collection concept, and embodying many of Kelly’s qualities. The collection is all Creative Commons licensed, so fans are free to destruct and share and generally play with the material as long as they give credit and don’t try to cash in on it. There’s a 9 track free taste that is lighting up torrent trackers worldwide, as well as 4 very logically designed tiers of paid patronage, all building on the prior tier – the basic download, for those who are happy with slapping stuff on their portable device, the physical disc package, the deluxe physical package, and a 300 dollar package with lithographs and DVDs and a limited, signed run. Of course, no one would buy the crazy package, but it was nice the option was available, right?

Or perhaps it could sell out in one day, grabbing a tasty 750,000 dollar revenue stream from run of 2500. The linked article, and many others, pretend as if Trent will be taking a giant novelty check for 3/4 of a million dollars down to the bank this week. Obviously, he had to eat and power his equipment for the 10 weeks it took to create Ghosts I-IV, he had to fund the commerce engine on the site that sells the material, there are materials and manufacturing costs involved in this ultra deluxe package. These things will take a huge bite out of the 750 grand, but it makes for a more dramatic headline. However, this is still a pretty amazing chunk of cash coming his way, and it is far more likely that when all is said and done, the digital copies at 5 bucks a pop, and the 10 and 75 dollar editions will sell enough to be far larger in profits than the novelty check from the 300 dollar edition would have been. Why do I think that? Because I plopped down 10 bucks for something I won’t get until April, and this:

Download

There’s a clear argument to be made here that this story is only applicable to those who already have massive audiences and fanbases. This is certainly the case for the more exotic packages NIN is offering, but I can think of several acts doing fairly well off free samples and direct paid downloads, while making physical discs available to those like me who like to see album art and have a tangible result of a transaction. Allowing free copies to be made under the license the music is published under doesn’t seem to have killed them, and in fact has inspired a sense of goodwill and word of mouth advertising that is vital to their success.

On top of this, Wil Harris posts a story about a method acts of any size can use:

After the show, the band sells a gift back for £10 – a blank CD, sleeve liner and a PIN code. The next day, you can use the PIN code to download the whole performance from the night before in high quality, DRM free MP3 – then burn it to the blank CD you bought.

[…]
With 25,000 people at a large gig like the O2, and just 10% of those buying the CD, that’s an extra $50,000 a night the band is making in CD sales. Who said paid-for music couldn’t prosper?

Certainly not that crazy ass Kevin Kelly. You just have to sell something that can’t be copied, whether it’s a philosophy of goodwill, a set of lithographs, or a memory of a great show.

27
Jan

A dream come true

Lazy Blogger Bulletin: Apparently I’ve been linked and rightly chided for a lack of updates by none other than Elizabeth Bear, whom my significant other and a personal hero have both been blogging about quite a bit recently. You have no reason to believe this post exists for any other reason than to cash in on this momentary intarwebs celebrity. However, I assure you it has existed in some form as a draft in my Gmail account for about 3 days now, since I encountered the site that spurred it. That’ll make more sense in a minute. Anyway, thanks, Ms. Bear, as it is possible Wil will read this, and I will atomize in utter geeky happiness. Also, you got me off my ass and writing, which I’m coming to understand is what people would pay you handsomely for, random denizen of the internet though you may be.

Without further ado:

It’s happening.

Let me step back a moment so that you have the faintest idea what “it” is.

When the WGA strike became a reality last year, I had a lengthy and involved discussion with Christie about it. We discussed the ethics of royalties for content, the difficulties of negotiating in such a competitive industry, the impending Rise of the Hacks, etc.

At the time, it was my fervent hope that this experience would show quality content producers that they no longer need the entertainment distribution machine that has milked them so vigorously over the years. This is a belief I have had since I set up a video web site in about 2003. To me, this trumped writers getting a fair shake of online distribution revenue – sure, I wanted them to get paid, and get back to making my shows, but in the grander scheme of things, I wanted them to realize that the world has changed since their last, crappy contract negotiation. They don’t have to play hardball, because they don’t have to play ball at all. As such, I’m sure I appeared against the writers to a degree during this time; this could not be further from the truth. I simply wanted them to reach higher.

My argument not being a pipe dream leaned heavily on The A Daily Show site, and the videos their writers made on strike. Clearly, this wasn’t a tech-savvy media geek like me simply seeing all the pieces there. They were getting it.

I’ve been a fan of The Daily Show since about 1997, when it was hosted by Craig Kilborn. I saw a live taping of the show in 98, before Stewart even came into the picture. I remember watching Colbert’s first correspondent segment when it aired, and thinking “This guy will be amazing. I hope A. Whitney Brown mentors him in some fashion.” If you had told me during this time that they would eventually have an online storehouse of ~8 years worth of shows, browsable via a ubiquitous video streaming technology, all of which was feasible due to the widespread adoption of high-speed consumer broadband, advances in video compression technology, and cheap storage, I’d have hungrily bought whatever bridge or swamp land you were selling as well.

In anticipation of the strike, Viacom was able to put together this amazing digital storehouse not only for The Daily, but for Colbert’s solo masterpiece as well. Simultaneously, the striking writers were able to put up a video criticizing their corporate parent and deftly explain their stance, to the tune of half a million views plus. This is a step toward democratic media that warms the deepest cockles of my heart.

My hope was that upon receiving the audience they have with both their back catalog and their protests, they would realize that they had the tools they needed to circumvent the industry that was treating them in a way they weren’t happy with. This was the brass ring for me. To hell with DVD royalties, make the DVDs yourself. Broadcast the shows on the web. The technology is now there. The audience is now there. The ad revenue is now there. Instead of getting a better cut, I wanted them to bake their own pie.

Enter http://www.ucbcomedy.com/

During a follow-up trip to NYC in 1999, I visited a little place called the UCB Theatre. I’d become a huge fan of their Comedy Central sketch show, and was in fact favorably comparing them to The Kids in the Hall and other far more well-known sketch groups – I loved their humor, I loved their style. When I heard they had an improv theatre, I demanded many, many stops there during my visit. It was amazing to see these people I had idolized on television playing a tiny ex-burlesque stage shut down during Guiliani’s crusade against hedonism. To sit 4 feet from someone you thought was one of the most talented people on television and have them ask you questions directly, be able to chat with them after the show – it was positively amazing in ’99, and I’m glad to say it’s more possible but still as electrifying in 2008. For the record, I got an email back from JoCo about the last entry. Electrifying.

So, the UCB has continued their history of making me feel engaged with their work, as well as providing a handy example for me to use in dancing a jig and thinking that my dream may be coming true. They’ve got a setup that’s part Viacom’s Daily Show archive, and part Funnyordie.com – but all awesome. This is the future of quality content. This is how you do things on your own – and they’ve got a pedigree.

These people came from the Improv olympics, got a shortlived TV show, opened a live theatre, and today have theatres on both coasts and a video sharing site with a roster of contributers that makes comedy geeks like me positively tingle.

Even though I was arguing for it last November, I was skeptical that this would actually happen. Seeing it happen, and at the hands of one of my favorite groups of content creators ever, makes me happier than I can convey in this kind of blog.

Now if only the striking writers would stick a UCB-created Poo Stick in Hollywood’s face, and bellow “Say I’m your momma!,” I’d be positively ecstatic.

20
Oct

h3110

Welcome to my new blog.

It’s a new media commentary blog, but don’t expect me to use terms like Media 2.0 or Web 2.0 or Semantic Data Co-located Intertextualization.

I’m just going to be talking about the cool stuff that we can do with media now via the internet that would have been a complete pipe dream as little as 10 years ago.

On that note, I’d like to present one of my favorite videos on the subject:

[kml_flashembed movie="http://youtube.com/v/NLlGopyXT_g" width="425" height="350" wmode="transparent" /]




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