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View Article  Don't take anything for granted

Leon Fleisher has a CD out called Two Hands.  For a long time he could only play with his left hand.  Now he has both again.  I love listening to this recording.  You can hear his joy at being able to use his right hand.

And he says being without that hand made him think differently about music. 

I’ve had to think about music in a much more detailed manner than I ever had before so that I could really describe what I’m doing…I think I became a far better musician; I became a far better teacher.

So:  don't take your hands for granted. 

View Article  Brief SOP report

Peter Ludlow was the key speaker tonight.  He said [very roughly paraphrasing]:  "Why do we need virtual worlds with Draconian terms of service allowing the world to destroy your creation and/or kick you off for any reason ("or no reason")?  Why not just go off and build your own thing with your friends in an open source environment?  Try Croquet.  Try Muppets.  Go ahead and learn to script.  It's really easy."  Ludlow was refreshing and straightforward.

Beth Noveck's conference is off to a good start.  It was entertaining to hear about A Tale In The Desert again.  It didn't sound fun last year and it still doesn't sound fun.  But it's good to think about governance.  If only we could make it fun. 

Second Life has a great PR campaign:  raise money, announce it the day of the conference, and have your journalist be the lead-off speaker.  Good work, guys.

View Article  State of Play begins tonight

I hear that SecondLife has just raised eight million dollars from Pierre Omidyar's group and others.  Dinner tonight is on them! [not really]

I'm very much looking forward to this weekend's conference, which I predict will be engaging, funny, and totally exhausting.  I'll blog, and so will many other people.

View Article  Big win for competition

Huge victory in the Lexmark v. Static Control [pdf] case today.  Lexmark can't use the DMCA to keep its competitors from marketing cartridges that work with Lexmark's printers.

With luck, this opinion will become the Hush-A-Phone decision of our time.  "Of course," we'll say.  "It's unthinkable that someone could use the DMCA to stop competition." 

It was not always so.

View Article  Webnote
Danah and Mary wrote about this a while ago, so this is old news, but Webnote is pretty neat.  As Mary says, it's like Third Voice.  But it's better at visually organizing notes on a screen.  And maybe it won't try to build a business model based on advertising -- that's what did Third Voice in.
View Article  Net Ecology Day

I'm proposing a Net Ecology Day.  And it has to be visual, so that people understand the differences between hierarchies and networks and get the chance to care collectively about the health of this network of networks.

It's my belief that the ecology of the net is deeply threatened. It's not just the attacks on P2P networks or government thoughts about requiring authentication as a condition of online life -- although these developments and others give rise to concern -- it's about what seems to be a general sense that the net is a dark and dangerous place.  A seedy place.  A place that needs to be constrained. 

This overall reaction to the net provides breathing room for all kinds of initiatives, ranging from the FCC's broadcast flag rule to ISP gags required by national police.  But very few people are paying attention to the overal ecology of the net.

Earth Day came into being because Sen. Gaylord Nelson became concerned in the 60s that no one was paying attention to the environment.  He wanted to "shake up the political establishment and force [the] issue onto the national agenda."  He wanted "to show the political leadership of the Nation that there was broad and deep support for the environmental movement." He succeeded beyond his wildest dreams.

On April 22, 1970, twenty million Americans took to the streets to demonstrate for a healthy environment.  Since then, Earth Day has become a global phenomenon, mobilizing hundreds of million of people in support of environmental issues.  Not all these people would support everyone else's issues, but once they had Earth Day they could support the collective activity of worrying about the environment.  As Sen. Nelson puts it: 

Earth Day worked because of the spontaneous response at the grassroots level. We had neither the time nor resources to organize 20 million demonstrators and the thousands of schools and local communities that participated. That was the remarkable thing about Earth Day. It organized itself.  

Now we have a new environment -- the internet -- that is under attack.  Not everyone will support everyone else's issues.  But we need to draw attention to the threat in some shared, ritualistic, visual way that will cause a shift in perception.  We need an Earth Day for the internet.  And we're in luck:  the internet is particularly good at organizing itself.

Here's the suggestion for how this could work:  The central problem that we need to solve, the central complacency we need to overcome, is the general feeling that someone is (or should be) in charge of the internet.  We need to show the difference between networks and hierarchies.

What if, on one day a year, we globally built a picture of links together?  Each person could put a dot on the global page, identify it, and then draw a line to something online that they care about.  I bet the result would be a very interesting and dynamic network diagram that we could animate.  You'd see the thing pulse and change, as some links became thicker through popularity and clusters connected all at once.  Then, for one day, people could post this living, animated network diagram on their page or blog.  Very zippy.  We could make it possible for people to show "their" part of the network -- what they had decided was important.  (There are, to be sure, a few hurdles to overcome, but don't bother me with your petty technical difficulties (PTD)).

Then, by contrast, we could provide a "movie" of an animated hierarchy plodding along.  Blump, blump, blump.  Frozen and boring.

With these two pictures, one of them built in real time, collectively, by people around the world, we could see the difference between a network and a hierarchy.  We wouldn't need permission to do this.  We'd just need a good symbol and a good PR campaign.  Just one day a year.  In the fall.

If anyone is worried about the ecology of the internet, we need to reach the world to explain why we're worried.  It's not enough to reach a few classrooms.  We need a dynamic picture that, like early religious icons, can transmit  ritualistically the meaning of the internet to a network-illiterate world.  Religions figured this out long ago.  Truth is transmitted to our successors through ritual and music and pictures, not just the written word. 

Of course, this idea of net ecology is not a religion, it's a science.  Or is it?

View Article  Tech politics

The Computing Technology Industry Association (CompTIA) published today a short set of Bush and Kerry answers [pdf] to questions about technology policy.  For my money, the most interesting pair of statements came in response to the following question:  "What is the appropriate role for the federal government in addressing concerns about content over the Internet?"

President Bush immediately jumps to children, and gives a weirdly focused answer.  Let's take it apart. 

We must give our Nation's children every opportunity to grow in knowledge while protecting them.

Does this mean that the chief responsibility of the federal government when it comes to online content is to act as a terrified parent?  Is the internet assumed to be a dangerous, threatening, dark and seedy place? 

Parents have the first responsibility for protecting children online, by paying attention to their children when they are on the Internet, and by preventing children from giving out personal information online.

Okay, apparently the Administration is not alone in being a parent.  Parents can also be parents.  But we're really focused on those threatened kids.  Is the internet just a place for scaring children?

My Administration is standing with parents by waging a nationwide effort to prevent the use of the Internet to sexually exploit and endanger children.

Yes, apparently the internet is mostly for the exploitation and endangerment of children.  Which happens in chat rooms and by way of P2P services of various kinds.  We must get rid of this P2P idea.

My FY 2005 Budget would double funding for Justice Department programs that investigate and prosecute child exploitation and obscenity over the FY 2001 level. My Administration has successfully defended the Children's Internet Protection Act (CIPA), which requires schools and libraries to filter content that is harmful to minors if they are to receive Federal money for Internet access.

So the main role of the federal government when it comes to the internet, which is a dangerous, dark, and oppressive place, is to prosecute.  And to insist on filtering.  Rather than encouraging the development of tools that facilitate user control of their experiences (both in terms of filtering and making useful connections), the government is going to protect us on its own.

I signed into law the Dot Kids Implementation and Efficiency Act to create a new child-friendly domain on the Internet, which functions much like the children's section of the library, where parents can feel comfortable allowing their children to browse.

How many active, non-defensive registrations have there been in .kids.us?  According to Michael Gallagher's (NTIA official; rumored to be the next FCC Chairman if Bush wins) testimony in May 2004, "Currently, kids.us is home to thirteen active websites."

That's right.  There are 13 great places for kids to go online in kids.us. 

And that's it -- that's the end of the President's statement.  Granted, he was operating under strict word limits.  But still, it's worth wondering what's going on here.  Between protecting children (after all, even the oldest among us are  God's children, right?) and assuaging security concerns, the Administration we've got is going to be very forceful about constraining this awful, grimy, set of "internets" -- it'll take money, it'll take prosecutors, it'll take reams of international agreements, but someday we'll rein it in.

Sen. Kerry was able to talk about issues other than child safety in his response.  Here's his answer in full:

Concerns about content over the Internet range from parents worried about the proliferation of pornography to musicians worried about their works being stolen on peer-to-peer networks.

I am a big believer in technology and science. I strongly support attacking bad behavior -- putting child pornographers behind bars and prosecuting individuals engaged in mass piracy. But, regulating technology should be a last resort to solving any content problem.

I believe that technology will solve most content concerns. Software available to parents to filter out pornography is helping parents protect kids. Legal music and movie services are on the rise, with services like iTunes and iPods revolutionizing the marketplace. The role of the federal government is to remain vigilant in the protection of our children and in standing up for the protection of intellectual property. And, it is the role of the federal government to ensure that law and regulation encourage the development and deployment of new technologies.

He's worried about children and he's worried about IP, but Sen. Kerry seems to sense that technology is not all bad. 

Either way, whoever is elected, we may need an Earth Day for the internet.     

View Article  The Note and TheRegular

It's hard to choose between The Note and TheRegular.  The Note has the political junkie voice of Mark Halperin, lionized in this week's New Yorker.  TheRegular has a slashdot approach to political news -- and although it's just starting, it's going to be great.  The Note is (in a sense) a slashdot affair as well, but the collaborative filtering is done by Halperin and his team.  TheRegular has all of us (as soon as we start participating) helping out.

We're still at a primitive state when it comes to online blog-like news.  Why can't we see issues coming towards us, in a radar-screen-like way?  Why are we so tied to text and comments -- things that disappear "below the fold" if we're not watching every minute of the day?  Why don't we have structures for our obsessions that allow us to wield large amounts of data visually and gracefully?  When will our screens become pliable and musical? 

On the other hand, the nation is TheTired of electioneering.  Maybe it's just as well that TheRegular and The Note are just sending us text and friendly static colors.  Maybe more multimedia approaches to deliberation are overwhelming.  Let's get this election over with and then move on to changing our relationship to the screen.

View Article  The Future of Physics

Dennis Overbye of the Times had a beautiful article today about Dr. David Gross posing 25 questions about the future of physics.  Gross, a recent Nobel Prize winner, talks heroically about the intertwined disciplines in which physicists are interested.  He's talking to his "dream conference" of physicists, and he says the conference could have lasted a week -- because they only took two and a half days, everyone had to talk very quickly, and there was no time for questions.  He has a picture of a curve to describe the quality of talks:  "If you have no time to talk at all, the quality is zero; if you talk for a month, the quality is pretty small...length of time for the highest quality talk is between 10 and 30 minutes -- no more. ... After five minutes, you either understand everything and don't want to hear any more, or you understand nothing and don't want to hear any more."

He stresses that the most important product of knowledge is ignorance.  Science is shaped by ignorance.  So what questions do we still have to answer that are driving the field of physics?  Gross got a lot of help from his fellow physicists in creating this list.

The first four questions: 

1.  How did the universe begin?  how far back can we probe? can string theory determine what happened at the point at which the universe was created? was there a time before the big bang? is time itself an emergent concept -- so that we're formulating the question incorrectly?

2.  Dark matter -- 25% of the universe is dark, and we don't know what it is.  What is the nature of dark matter? how does dark matter interact with ordinary matter?  is it wimpy (this must be a physicist term of art)? can we detect it in the laboratory? what's its distribution in the universe? what does this tell us about structure formation?

3.  Dark energy -- which is 70% of the universe -- what is the nature of the dark energy?  Is it just a cosmological constant?

4.  Astrophysics.  How do stars form?  How do planets form? (this is the growth area in astrophysics, based on average age of the attendees)  What is the frequency of planets that can support life?

Gross really seems to be having fun giving this talk. 

So:  for the cyberlaw/IP world, what 25 questions would we ask?

 

 

View Article  HBO and coyright law

HBO is saying that fair use applies only to broadcast, not to cable:

Q:  "Has the law changed? Please help me understand what is (and is not) legal for me to do with HBO programming. I have grown accustomed to making and often sharing copies of programs with friends and family.

The laws on copying distinguish between broadcast and non-broadcast programming. Broadcasters are required to permit consumers to make a single copy of broadcast programming for time shifting purposes. However, the law allows non-broadcast programming networks to decide what copying privileges they wish to extend to consumers."

HBO's position has support in Section. 1201(k)(2) of the DMCA, which says that pay-per-view/subscription television can take advantage of copy control technology required to be part of VCRs.

The interesting question is how subscribers to HBO will feel about this.  Are they so used to making copies that they'll leave HBO in droves?   Will they generally abandon cable for online sources of content?  Probably not. 

More from HBO's FAQ:

"Q:  Is only HBO doing this, and why?

HBO has decided to begin implementing copyright protection technologies now with the increasing proliferation of digital consumer electronic equipment. As television transitions from analog to digital technology, it will become important for distributors of high value programming to take similar steps."

Hang on to your old open devices. And don't look to cable and satellite providers to provide you with lots of choices.  Bit by bit, the analog hole is going to close.

View Article  Desktop search and spyware

This morning on MSNBC, two stories ran back to back. The first was about the FTC going after spyware.  The second was about Google's new beta product, Desktop Search.

Spyware, bad.  Desktop Search, good.  But what, really, is the difference?

Spyware, according to the FTC, "installs adware and other software programs that spy on consumers' Web surfing."  Desktop Search "keeps a copy of every Web page you visit and lists those pages in search results with the date and time of your visit."

A key difference is that you "consent" to the installation of Desktop Search, and you can un-install it easily. Spyware, by contrast, doesn't ask for permission.  But how informed is a consumer's "consent" to installation of Desktop Search?  Will people really understand that their instant message communications are being stored, that their "deleted" emails are actually retained for later searches, and that others using their PC will be able to access all of this information?

Over on Slashdot, people are excited (if a little contemptuous).  One comment:  "Software a son could love, but a mother could install."  Someone did say that Google gets a lot out of this --

Unless you choose to opt out, either during installation or at any time after installation, non-personal information collected will be sent to Google.

But that doesn't seem to be bothering a lot of the commentators -- Google says it's getting usage pattern data.  One Slashdot commentator did say:  "It's a lot less fun when your Google search finds your OWN porn."

The discussion about privacy and spyware and electronic places is incremental.  Today is a good snapshot day:  when mass media reported sound bites about "spyware" and "desktop search" back to back and no one experienced cognitive dissonance. 

Here's why we have no problem with "desktop search":  we aren't really worried about being watched.  We're really really worried about being in an abusive relationship with someone we don't even know. 

 

View Article  Intellectual law

Yesterday, I received a letter from US News & World Report.  It said, "As part of its spring 2005 report on graduate and professional schools, U.S. News & World Report is conducting a survey to identify the law schools having the top programs in intellectual law.. .. This survey is being sent to a sample of law school faculty listed in the AALS Directory of Law Teachers 2003-2004 as currently teaching a course or seminar in intellectual law.  Your participation in this survey in greatly appreciated."

For good or ill, the U.S. News rankings of law schools are looked at carefully.  So I knew instinctively that this was an important moment.

Who has the best program in intellectual law?

It's good to know that U.S. News cares about intellectual law.  Someone needs to.  I was relieved that Brian Leiter had visited Cardozo just the day before.  This signaled to me that clearly Cardozo had a strong intellectual law program.  So it was easy to vote for my own school.

And it wasn't hard to find a few other schools to vote for.  This profession is lousy with intellectual law specialists.  I sent back the survey in triumph.  I knew I'd contributed to the state of legal education in America.

I'm not troubled by having ranking systems out there, and perhaps we ought to embrace them even more emphatically than we do.  It's snarky to question U.S. News's proofreading.  But it did make the enterprise feel a little shallow. 

View Article  What You're Really Voting For

We're not really voting for a candidate.  We're voting for the team that candidate will bring to Washington.  Keep that in mind -- despite all the attention being paid to Bush's background and Kerry's background, who they are as individuals is not the measure of what kind of government we'll have.  (I'm listening to the debate with half an ear as I post this -- nothing new so far; all the same bland statements we've already heard -- so maybe it's good news that we're not voting for either of these guys.) 

What should we look for in the team we vote into office?  We all know that complex systems do best when they're poised between rigidity and randomness -- quivering, dynamic, right between too much order and too much chaos.  When systems are in this position, they grow and change with ease, without becoming either too stuck (and unable to take on new information that would help them adapt) or too wacky (drifting into disorder and unable to achieve any advances).

We're in a rigid state right now.  We're afraid.  We're full of concern about security and globalization and epidemics and who knows what.  We're clamping down.  We're closing our borders and our minds to outside information.  This may be heresy in these days of fear, but it's clear to me that we've gone too far in this direction.  Too much order is in our lives, and we have the illusion that we can control our destinies.  We have the arrogance to believe that we can be completely safe.

We need to choose the team that will move the lever in the direction of openness and dynamism.  We need to choose the team that is willing to listen to the rest of the world -- to take on information and energy from others.  Otherwise, we'll be cutting ourselves off from unknown and possibly better destinies.  Sure, we can't see exactly where we're going.  No one can.  But we can do our best to make sure that we remain the agile and gifted country that we have been in the past.

Based on what we know of the Bush team, that group isn't about to loosen up.  They'll be looking, instead, for more and more order.  More security.  More authentication.  More collection of information.  More structure.

We don't know much about the Kerry team, but Kerry himself says he wants to talk to other countries.  He's signaling openness.  He's a guy who likes to do investigations.  If his team includes some former Clintonites, we're likely to get quite a bit of energy and maybe some disorder along the way.  We'll learn new things, we'll engage with the rest of the world, and we'll stay on our toes.

Along this axis, this continuum between rigidity and randomness, we need to pull the knob that moves us more towards a dynamic future.  Take a good look at these two teams -- not these two guys.  The risk of increased order is unacceptably great.

View Article  How to globalize

How should Yale Law School become a global law school? 

It seems to me that the goals should be to (1) create groups of people around the world that are not Yale graduates but understand the goals of a Yale law school education and feel affiliated to Yale -- and add to the Yale experience in ways we can't predict, (2) make Yale graduates comfortable that they (a) know how to find something out about a foreign law system (even if they never practice there) and (b) understand the contingent and evolutionary nature of legal systems, and (3) form strong alliances with other institutions around the world, so that students and professors and programs can flow across the borders.  One law school, many doors.  To do this, you need money, open borders, and lots of feedback mechanisms.

Here's a ten point proposal:

1.  Use the alumni. Have them help the school find more connections outside the US. 

2.  Use those connections outside the US to funnel  substantial cohorts of foreign fellows to the school.  Rely on the recommendations of alumni and foreign institutions, coupled with essays by applicants, and try to devolve responsibility for the applicants (quality control, some financial assistance) to alumni associations around the world.

3.  Have each group of foreign fellows be in residence at the school for two weeks.  Have them form part of an existing first-year small group for one of those two weeks (going to all the first year classes).  Have them work with professors in seminar settings for the second week.  Have them bond and commit to working on public service projects (across geographic boundaries, together) over the ensuing three years.  

4.  Have each cohort return to the school for a refresher one-week meeting once each of the next two years.  Call them Koh Fellows.  Get the alumni to fund the Koh Fellow project.

5.  Don't have more than four cohorts come to the school each year -- two initial meetings (one fall, one spring) of two cohorts, and two refresher meetings (one fall, one spring) of the existing cohorts.  Cohorts should be welcome additions to the law school community, not intrusions on the law school's small world.

6.  Have the Koh Fellows report on the progress of their projects to the world.  Online. 

7.  Inspire sister institutions to bring different groups of Koh Fellows together, in different places around the world.

8.  Use the other institutions at Yale.  Work with them on cross-disciplinary global projects.  Focus on one institution a year.  Set goals for the global projects that are objective.

9. Form alliances with other global law schools.  Work on curriculum reform with those other law schools.  Share faculty with those other schools.  Experiment with online course materials -- and make them open to the world.

10.  Change the first-year curriculum to include a comparative law course of some kind.  Create global fellowships for existing students, offering to pay back their loans if they commit to working in international affairs/human rights for 10% of their career.  Have these students report back over the course of their careers about what they've done.   

View Article  Reunion panel

Jack Balkin organized a panel at the Yale Law School reunion this weekend.  Reed HundtJonathan Blake, Michael Levine and I were on the panel.  The title of the panel was 'Global Connections,' which I think signaled to each of us that we could talk about anything we wanted to.

I decided to talk about networks, music, and death.  Reed talked about the decline of law over the last three decades.  Jonathan talked about international law firm practice.  And Michael talked about aviation regulation.  Jack said nothing (but should have).  It was really more like a potluck than a panel.  We all had a fine time.

I had two messages, really, to put across.  And one plea. 

The two messages were:  (1) the importance of networks that are permitted to evolve and create order (cf. hierarchies), and (2) a sense of optimism about the future. 

 

The plea was:  "Reunions are a time for reflection, and of course we all think about death -- that guy looks like hell, we say to ourselves, but I'm doing all right.  We need to live with the constant awareness, as Bach did, that our existence is not only finite but always in danger of ending suddenly.  Hope resides in the worthwhileness of what our lives have been.  By joining and strengthening interesting global networks we cause order (and thus, evolution) to continue.  Even if it's out of our control. 

 

So: be the link to someone else.  Be the link that causes a phase change to occur and a miraculous, giant, useful cluster to emerge."

 

I'm not sure what Dean Koh is getting at with his focus on globalization.  I'm of course supportive of maintaining the law school's strength.  But making a truly global law school would require reinventing the school from the ground up, and I don't think anyone's interested in doing that. 

 

The admissions office is good at finding top-flight people who are quite similar to the people who have been there in the past (but are much more talented than the older generations were).  The professors are good at writing down groundbreaking legal ideas.  Yale is the smallest law school in the country.  In order to become a key "global" law school, you'd have to admit different kinds of people, teach different kinds of things, hire different kinds of professors, and operate on a vast scale.  How do you get from here to there? 

 

If anyone can do it, Harold Koh can, and I'm behind him.  But I got the sense this weekend that not many people understand what he wants to change, and how.  In my next entry, I'll suggest some steps that the school could take to get from here to there.      

View Article  Don't Touch That Dial

There's a long section in the Copyright Act (sec. 110) that basically says that "the following list of deals we've made aren't copyright infringement."  For example, display of a movie in a classroom (unless it's an illegal copy), performance of a "nondramatic literary work" for free, and several other things.  Here's a link to the section.

Although you may find this incredible, the content community is proposing an addition [search for HR 4077] to this section that would make automatically skipping commercials an infringement. 

Every evening at dinner, my (otherwise silent) family watched Walter Cronkite.  When the commercials came, someone would always turn down the volume.  Then we'd sit in complete silence until the next bit of CBS news.  This was our hallowed tradition.  If there had been some kind of great device that let us skip the commercials completely, we would have embraced it.  (If it had cost nothing.  I'm from a thrifty and silent family.)

The proposed text, to be called the Family Movie Act (!) would say:  "It is not an infringement of copyright

`[for a member of a private household to make imperceptible] limited portions of audio or video content of a motion picture during a performance in or transmitted to that household for private home viewing, from an authorized copy of the motion picture, or the creation or provision of a computer program or other technology that enables such making imperceptible and that is designed and marketed for such use at the direction of a member of a private household, if-

`(A) no fixed copy of the altered version of the motion picture is created by such computer program or other technology; and
`(B) no changes, deletions or additions are made by such computer program or other technology to commercial advertisements, or to network or station promotional announcements, that would otherwise be performed or displayed before, during or after the performance of the motion picture.';...

Translation:  you can turn the volume down or skip the commercials by hand, sure.  But you MAY NOT create a computer program that would automatically skip the commercials, or turn the volume of those commercials down for you.

So the commercials have become even more important than the content, is that it?  We MUST watch them?  We can't use technology to help us skip them?  We can't use our own devices to, like cars, drive us around neighborhoods we don't want to go to when we're on our way from point A to point B?  If we're going to skip those neighborhoods, we're going to have to walk.  Don't use that nasty technology.

And what's really important about this section is that it suggests that skipping commercials in a "transmission" is somehow an infringement of the distribution right.  This is crucial to understand: copyright law provides the owner of the distribution right with the exclusive right to "publish" tangible copies of the content to the public.  Publish means handing a copy of the thing over to someone else. 

Now the big push by the content community is to make online, electronic transmission of content part of the distribution right -- even though the tangible object, the fixed version of the content, isn't created until it's reassembled by the recipient's browser or other client software.  There simply isn't a tangible object being handed from one person to another when you're dealing with online transmission.

This move is much more important than attacking the skipping of commercials.  It would potentially enable a copyright owner to control all transmissions of the bits of their content online as part of the "distribution" of that content.  All secondary transmissions would be violations of the "distribution" exclusive right.  All secondary markets would be controlled, notwithstanding the first sale doctrine's notion that you only get one chance to sell something. 

So:  keep up the pressure on HR 4077. 

View Article  No induce -- for now

Following some extreme brinksmanship -- will Sen. Hatch try to ram through some version of the Induce Act that we haven't even seen? -- it looks as if Induce is dead for the moment.

But Barnabas Collins looked pretty dead from time to time too.  It's a useful bet that we'll see Induce-like legislation proposed again, and soon.  (Sen. Hatch is, of course, stepping down from the chairmanship, and that may change the landscape.) 

Wouldn't it be a better idea, she said plaintively, to compete by offering low-cost, whizbang-searchable sources of content online -- rather than through legislation and litigation?  It's true that the RIAA has good reasons to want to reverse the effects of the 9th Circuit's Grokster decision.  But it's just too hard to define "bad" P2P systems without running the risk of chilling [pdf] the development of perfectly legitimate products and services.  In fact, it may not be possible.  P2P is an idea, like the internet.  

To all of the people who worked constructively with the RIAA to try to define "bad" P2P, bravo.  To all of the people who worked constructively with the RIAA to avoid constraining new legitimate technologies, bravo to you too.  And to all a good (and long) night.  

View Article  Letter to FCC: No Jurisdiction To Impose the Broadcast Flag Scheme

Led by Public Knowledge, a group of plaintiffs is challenging the FCC's jurisdiction to enter the flag rules.  (And only just in time -- the rules will otherwise take effect in mid-2005.)  Read the brief [pdf], and see particularly fn.15:  The FCC arguably does not have legislative rulemaking authority at all under Title I of the Communications Act.

Translation:  when FCC is dealing with something or somebody who isn't a common carrier (Title II), a broadcaster (Title III), or a cable company (Title VI), it needs express statutory authority from Congress to make rules about that something or somebody.

This footnote has implications for the IP-enabled services rulemaking as well as the current broadcast flag case.  If an IP-enabled service doesn't use the traditional telephone numbering system, arguably the FCC doesn't have any say over it.  No social policies.  No pretending that the entire internet is an "information service" over which FCC has ancillary jurisdiction.

It's a fine brief, and we'll see what the FCC has to say in response -- and we'll all be watching how the D.C. Circuit deals with these large jurisdictional problems.  Who's in charge of the internet?  We are -- the end users.   

View Article  "Bad" P2P and Spyware

As the negotiations on the Induce Act continue, it's likely that there are people sitting in a room on Capitol Hill debating how to define "bad" P2P applications and products in legislative language.  The same exercise is certainly going forward with respect to spyware.  It may be that we're taking the wrong approach to these questions.

How do you describe code you don't like without sweeping in untold numbers of existing (and yet-to-be-created) innovations?  Answer:  You try really really hard and create tortured definitions, then hope for the best.  It's inevitable that some "good" P2P applications will provide the kinds of tools that KaZaa and Grokster did/do.  It's inevitable that some "good" spyware will have the potential to be used "badly."  (Although we've gone pretty far with this question by calling an entire category of things "spyware" -- like "broadcast flag," which sounds so benign and positive, "spyware" sounds positively evil no matter what its uses.)

Maybe, instead of defining what code we don't like, we should define what relationships we don't approve of.  People that intend to rob me of my control over my attention, without my wanting them to (or without my getting some benefit that I want in exchange) are creating a relationship with me that I don't want.  Like a car alarm under my window (note: there are no car alarms under my window -- I'm lucky), their work is keeping me from focusing.  That's wrong, and that's something we may want to condemn globally.  Similarly, someone who wants to make money from massive uploading of copyrighted works, but tries to avoid liability under standard copyright law, is creating a relationship with the marketplace that we may want to condemn.

Working on defining oppressive relationships -- and getting at what really makes us mad, rather than trying to anticipate how technology will be used -- has got to be a better approach than trying to define "bad" technology. 

View Article  Go ahead -- you manage the campaign

From the Christian Science Monitor:  "New presidential election simulation game lets you create an aggressive ad strategy, debate opponents – even schedule a whistle-stop tour. Do you have what it takes to create a winning presidential campaign?" 

The game is free, and it's here.

View Article  Networks and hierarchies II

Jack Balkin just gave a paper at NYU, "Virtual Liberty:  Freedom to Design and Freedom to Play in Virtual Worlds," and I was privileged to be there.

Jack's thesis, very roughly stated, is that as virtual worlds become more important we should have default rules (sort of a UCC for virtual worlds, which Jack quickly noted could be called the "UVC") that provide frameworks for the rights and duties associated with life in the world.  Having these default rules would be more protective of free speech values, which otherwise would be undervalued by the private parties involved in the worlds.  In exchange for having adopted a particular framework, a virtual world designer would be shielded from tort liability.  The central point he's making is that free speech values broader than our own US version of consitutional free speech (which gives you rights only against the government) should be protected, and virtual worlds give us the chance to do this.

This was a fascinating presentation.  In response, people pointed out that we already have "ISP law," in the form of 47 USC 230 and other safe harbors, but Jack adroitly responded that these statutes aren't rich enough to protect users' speech.  Someone else noted that assuming that pre-defined "rights" could be imported into a networked virtual world is difficult, because a "virtual world" is defined by interaction, not by pre-defined hierarchy.  And someone else pointed out that defining what is a "virtual world" in the first place is nearly impossible.  Jack is a flexible and able polymath, and none of these questions was even slightly tricky for him.

At any rate, virtual worlds, as we now know them, combine aspects of networks (strong guilds, player relationships etc.) with hierarchies (presence of omniscient game gods).  So rules will evolve and order will emerge from player/game interactions, but all of this bubbling activity is always subject to being wiped out by the guy at the top of the ladder -- the designer. 

I'm someone who thinks that the risks of trying to assign virtual worlds in advance to some regulatory category (leading inevitably to bad mappings and regulatory arbitrage) outweigh the risks of these erasures by the game designers.  It seems as if virtual world gods will be careful to hang on to the subscribers they've got, and won't throw those relationships away by acting abusively.  It further seems predictable that markets for rulesets will emerge as between the worlds (given both transparency and adequate competition). 

But Jack (and no doubt others) are worried about speech being squelched, and private actors being beyond the reach of public law.  People can be hurt in virtual worlds.  So:  anyone for the Uniform Virtual Code?