Bond

I saw Skyfall over the weekend and I thought it was great.

The action was intense, the Bond girl was hot and, most importantly, Bond briefly drives as Aston Martin DB5 like Sean Connery did in Goldfinger.

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Film

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Trimming Fat

Ars Technica: Microsoft to kill off the Messenger client and regroup under the Skype brand

Microsoft’s instant messaging and video chat are set for a major shake-up, with Microsoft announcing today that the Windows Live Messenger brand and client will be retired in the first quarter of 2013. They’ll be replaced by the Skype client and Skype name everywhere, except for China, which will retain the Messenger naming.

I like seeing Microsoft take steps to trim fat from the their product line.

Of course, this is Microsoft, so they’re as likely to botch this as they are to make it a success.

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Technology

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Jurassic

While my brother was in town visiting me this past week in Los Angeles, he requested we hit the Museum of Jurassic Technology on Santa Monica Boulevard. We both loved it.

A poor description would be to say it’s odd.

Here’s a bit from their introduction:

Like a coat of two colors, the Museum serves dual functions. On the one hand the Museum provides the academic community with a specialized repository of relics and artifacts from the Lower Jurassic, with an emphasis on those that demonstrate unusual or curious technological qualities. On the other hand the Museum serves the general public by providing the visitor a hands-on experience of “life in the Jurassic”

And:

The Museum of Jurassic Technology traces its origins to this period when many of the important collections of today were beginning to take form. Many exhibits which we today have come to know as part of the Museum were, in fact, formally part of other less well known collections and were subsequently consolidated into the single collection which we have come to know as The Museum of Jurassic Technology and thus configured, received great public acclaim as well as much discussion in scholastic circles.

The Museum, however, not content to rest on its laurels, kept pace with the changes in sensibility over the years. Except for the periods of the great wars in this century (when twice portions of the collection were nearly lost) the Museum engaged in a program of controlled expansion. Walking through the Museum, the visitor experiences, as it were, a walk back in time. The first exhibits encountered are the contemporary displays and reaching the far end of the Museum, the visitor is surrounded by the earliest exhibits.

It’s a small museum and will take you around an hour to see everything. If you’re into overlooked scientists obsessed with magnetism, pseudo-science home remedies and a brief history of the mobile home (complete with little dioramas) then you’ll love this place.

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History

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Lighten Up

The Verge: UK court orders Apple to pay Samsung’s legal fees in full after ‘false and misleading’ notice:

The Court of Appeal of England and Wales has ordered Apple to pay the legal fees of competitor Samsung on an ‘indemnity basis’ after the company published a “false and misleading” notice in the wake of a patent lawsuit over the iPad. The judgement, intended to humiliate Apple, will require the company to pay for all expenses associated with Samsung’s legal defense, with any disputes over the exact amount likely to be resolved in the latter firm’s favor.

These UK judges are being a bunch of dicks with this legal disclaimer issue. They’re acting like a bunch of drama queens.

I think it all gets back to bitterness over the Revolutionary War.

It’s same reason George Lucas filled the Death Star with British actors.

(I’m only half kidding)

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Business

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Voting Viz

A little note on The New York Times’ coverage of the U.S. Presidential Election from this past week.

First: I love that they took down their paywall until it was over. I think that was a thoughtful gesture by an organization wanting an informed public.

Second: They continue to bust out solid data visualizations.

Sometimes a visualization (when done right) can communication things words cannot, or at least communication things more concisely.

Below are some screenshots I took the night of the election.

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Politics

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Ownership & Copyright [Updated]

Short Version:
You can’t watermark images of artwork or photographs you don’t own the copyrights to. No, even if you buy a book and scan the images.

TLDR Version:
There’s a Tumblr I follow called Vintagegal. The site features tons of photos of classic movie stars from the 1920’s through to the 1970’s as well as pinup illustrations and shots from horror films.

It seems though, that the site’s creator, Cat, is confused about copyright law. In a post from 1 November titled, Here We Go Again, she (unintentionally) makes it clear how little she understands.

Below is the post in it’s entirety:

People you are just going to have to get over the fact that I will indeed watermark my scans. Just like people watermark their gifs.

I can physically hold these pictures, so yes I own them. I paid for them. I bid on them. I buy things and take the time to scan and edit them to share. And since people constantly re-post them, yes I will watermark them.

The hypocrisy that makes it ok to watermark gifs and not scans on here is ridiculous.

I am sorry some of you STILL can’t grasp this concept.

I really do not care if you choose to unfollow for this reason, or any reason, just don’t waste my time sending me some lame message about it.

Reposting is not the same as re-blogging.

This is the last time I will ever address this.

Cat is not the only person ignorant of what is legal and not legal in the realm of copyrights surround art and reproductions of art. I’ll even be the first one to admit I have a lot to learn on the subject.

But I do know this: When you buy a book of artwork (photographs, paintings, illustrations) and then scan images from the book and post them on your blog, you do not have the right to put your watermark on them. You actually don’t even have the right to post them to your website in the first place. You do not own the copyrights to those images. The right to copy is not yours. Is this sinking in?

This is similar to a DJ who creates a carefully curated playlist of tracks by other musicians and thinks it’s ok to “watermark” a voiceover saying their DJ name on top of the tracks they’ve arranged. You can’t do that.

In the case of a work of art, the copyright usually resides with the artist or artist’s estate, if they’re deceased. In the case of stills (or animated GIFs) from movies, the copyright usually resides with the movie studio that produced it.

I understand these laws when I post images to Daily Exhaust I don’t own the copyrights to. How does the law work when there’s a violation? The copyright owner contacts me about the offending image and I take it down.

The other issue Vintagegal brings up in her post involves reposting versus reblogging. Reblogging is an important function on Tumblr, where her site is hosted. Reblogging a post from someone else’s Tumblr on to your Tumblr maintains the trail of attribution. Reblogging allows you to see where the content of the post you’re looking at originated. It’s part of what makes Tumblr such a thriving community.

I agree with Vintagegal that reblogging is not only important on Tumblr, it’s just plain courteous. In the case of Daily Exhaust, I host it on a shared server environment on Dreamhost and I’ve been using Movable Type for my blogging software since I launched the site in 2006. Movable Type has no built-in reblogging feature which means I manually type in and link to the sources of my posts. The Internet is built on the strength of links and I think it’s important to give credit where it’s due and who knows, when someone sees I’m linking to their site, they might end up interested in Daily Exhaust and decide to reference one of my posts.

There’s another detail about reposting I should mention: I always download, rename and upload images to my server when constructing my posts. I do this for two reasons. First, it’s illegal to deep link to an image on someone else’s site. It’s called ‘bandwidth stealing’ because you’re not hosting the image, but reaping all the benefits of showcasing it on your site. And what if your site receives thousands of visitors a day and the site you’re deep linking to has a small bandwidth cap? You could potentially cost that person thousands of dollars. The second reason I re-upload images to my site is so it can be as self-contained an archive as possible. Sure, embedded YouTube videos eventually die, but I at least want the images posted to Daily Exhaust to last as long as the words written on it do.

But just because someone does not reblog or link back to your post does not give you the right to watermark images. In fact, if I wanted to, I could crop off any (illegal) watermarks from images I find and repost them on my site. In turn, I would also have to take down those images if the copyright holder asked me to.

Note: There are scenarios I have not accounted for in this post where you can post copyrighted material without risk of prosecution, such as reproducing images in educational environments. I also didn’t discuss images in the public domain.

Update: Reader (and law student) Eli Stoughton emailed me to correct my use of the term “deep linking”:

What you are doing is actually the exact opposite of what you would want to do to steer clear of infringing. What you are describing is not deep linking, but actually inline linking. And the legal precedent on inline linking is that inline linking is not infringement. The reason for this is that when you inline link an image, you have not copied that image on your server. In fact, you are merely telling the web browser to display that image. If you, instead, make a copy of the image on your server, then this constitutes making a copy and could potentially be infringement.
So, despite the fact that your intentions are well-meaning, the way you are doing things could be found to be infringement, whereas if you were inline linking, you would most likely be in the clear.

I’m happy people are keeping me on point. While my process of copying images to my server is more of a copyright infringement than inline linking to another site, I’d still rather have a archive of posts without broken image links (that I might have to take down) than to feed off of someone else’s bandwidth.

Truth be told, most of the images I post on Daily Exhaust run little risk of being taken down since many times they’re kitschy ads and illustrations from books and magazines from the early 20th century or photos by people who know and are ok with me reposting their work (like Just A Car Guy).

In my experience, if your intentions are good and you properly credit and link back to your sources, most people don’t have a problem when you repost their content.

Update 2: Seems Vintagegal has pulled the link I was referencing from her Tumblr. I’m not sure why. I guess she doesn’t realize it’s still accessible via Google Cache.

Categories:

Education

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Electoralistic Stuff

Daily Exhaust doesn’t focus on politics (unless Shepard Fairey decides to make a new Obama poster), but if you’re interested in commentary on the U.S. presidential election, fellow Exhauster Bryan will be updating his site, Missile Test, throughout the night tonight (as well as pulling his hair out and watching his blood pressure rise).

See everyone on the other side.

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Politics

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Mindshift

All of Shawn Blanc’s internet nerd friends are loving the new iPad Mini. The fact that it’s lighter, smaller and still uses all of the apps and games from their larger iPads seems to be making up for the lack of a Retina screen.

John Gruber points out even Paul “Windows Supersite” Thurrott’s initial reactions to the original iPad in 2010 are coming true.

…and Instapaper’s Marco Arment thinks the iPad Mini will be the best-selling iPad from now on.

This is making me think Microsoft is not only getting to the tablet party late with their Surface, but they’re not even wearing the right attire. Everyone is changing into smaller, thinner and lighter iPad Minis and Microsoft is ringing the doorbell with a heavy, 3-piece suit, suitcase and let’s not forget, a keyboard!

[cue the obligatory 1980’s record-scratch, while everyone at the house party goes silent and turns to look at Microsoft standing awkwardly at the door, nervously *clicking* their Touch Cover]

Once again, Google is proving itself to be much more of the ‘Microsoft of the 2000s’ than Microsoft is. When the iPad came out, instead of racing to come out with their own 9/10-inch tablet, they saw where the puck was going, and that was to the 7-inch form factor. They debuted the Nexus 7 in 2011. They waited until November of 2012 to release a 10-inch tablet.

People are continuing to move even farther away from “tradition” PC experiences and it might be too late for Microsoft.

The mindshift is underway.

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Technology

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