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Offline JetRacer

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Re: rights vs preservation
« Reply #14 on: March 29, 2008, 01:11:08 AM »
@ abbub: this part "fundamentally broken".

I replied they're not "broken" just bought and payed for. They were designed the way they work rather than deteriorating to their current state.
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Offline Gwion

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Re: rights vs preservation
« Reply #15 on: March 29, 2008, 01:19:37 AM »
Quote

whabang wrote:
It will take a long time, but as the current generation grows older, the protection for intellectual property will grow weaker.


Im 13 actually im 14 not coz its past 12 and im in2 amiga and trying to get my friends in2 it so you could count me amigas next generation  :-D
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ChuckT

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Re: rights vs preservation
« Reply #16 on: March 29, 2008, 01:39:37 AM »
I think that intellectual property can be preserved on thumbdrives (USB drives) these days and the data retention on them is supposed to be 10 years.  The information can be encrypted if a company is worried about secrets but they could give the password out if they go belly up.

If you buy a product, it implies a relationship.  Don't we deserve anything as a customer?  

I think the current laws should be ammended.  My distant relatives bought a cemetary plot and I don't have any rights to the plot but the owner was bulldozing the stones down and another relative of mine got signatures, had the cemetary declared as a historical property and it went to trial and they were appointed as trustees.

If you buy stock in a company, only the bondholders are guaranteed to be paid back first.  When we buy a product meant to be used for long term, we are in a sense investing in that company.  We don't own the company but they owe us their end to the relationship.
 

Offline JetRacer

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Re: rights vs preservation
« Reply #17 on: March 29, 2008, 02:28:23 AM »
@ ChuckT: the point was kinda that such a password essentially would die with the company.

The trend goes towards the companies still owning the physical product and the customer is merely "lending" or licensing it until the day they die - with no right to 2:hand nor enherit it.

Quite frankly: if they could make money off our carcasses in a legal way then humanity would be hunted towards extinction.

I can tell you think people within a company have something to say about how a company behaves or can let their personal morals have an impact on how they do buissness. They don't. The executive is held in a leash by a board and the board answers to stockholders who answers to no-one and feels no moral obligations whatsoever, except for their account balance. They (stockholders) get together and say get cheaper laybour (read: next step down is exploiting the workers in the 3:rd world) like everyone else or we take our investments elsewhere". The board hear the whip crack and then they swing their whip towards the exec and the exec either takes the desition or walks.

Buissness with the big boys 101. We'd like to think that's not the case in Europe (or Asia for that matter) - but in contruary this is a global phenomena.

The root to the problem is usually a military-strategical one: buissness is of national interest and therefore buissness is above the law. Like when a highway or nuclear plant is forced through the legislation system and built under massive public protests.
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Offline Amithony

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Re: rights vs preservation
« Reply #18 on: March 29, 2008, 06:16:03 AM »
Quote

kamiga wrote:

It seems, on its face, to be stupid to let books fall apart, software go bad on a floppy, instead of preserving them.  What a waste.

What do you think?

Keith


I agree 100%. If I owned all of the rights to Amiga software and Hardware and books, I would make them public domain. I can see our machine sinking as time moves forward. Nobody wants to see that. But i guess we're entitled to an opinion. Here's hoping the Minimig can "re-kindle"(no pun intended amazon) interest. Heres looking forward to the MinimAGA. (A1200?)
 

ChuckT

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Re: rights vs preservation
« Reply #19 on: March 29, 2008, 11:12:17 AM »
If the Amiga was considered real estate, the users could call the neighborhood 'blighted' and the city council would put out bids for a comprehensive redevelopment plan under the power of eminent domain and get the land back.
 

Offline kamigaTopic starter

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Re: rights vs preservation
« Reply #20 on: March 29, 2008, 01:31:05 PM »
@abbub: Amen brother re: your general attitude towards the situation, MPAA, RIAA, and so on.

@jetracer: re: There is a trend towards licensing vs owning something and I think it sucks.  If I buy a music CD (which I haven't in years, out of principle), darn it, I own that CD.  If I want to make a copy to listen in my car, I'm going to.  If I want to rip it and put in on my ipod, that's what I'm going to.  The RIAA actually wants to you to buy multiple copies in this case.  The licensing thing gets ridiculous.

@amithony: Amen, I'd release the stuff to public domain too.  And some of the companies have actually done that.  It's amazing and speaks highly of them.  I haven't dug into all the alternatives, but yes, minimig looks pretty cool.  Great piece of work.


In general, my beef is with these companies and authors whose livelihoods we supported for a long time.  And sure, maybe some didn't become as rich as others, but I'd say most creators with a solid product and decent business plan made money.  And so the community PAID for that software to be produced.  Sure, we paid after the fact.  And sure the company assumed the risk by fronting the money --- but they were rewarded for doing so.  So when there is no more money to be made, isn't it time to give that software back to the people who paid for it to be produced??

The other thing that really amazes me is how people can abandon months/years of hard work and have no desire to preserve what they've done.  Example: CBS aired a short-lived series in 1983 called "Whiz Kids", which featured young school kids solving crimes with the help of their home-brew computer.  It was an attempt to take advantage of the buzz surrounding the movie "War Games."  In any event, it only made it one season and was taken off the air.  Within the past five years or so, there's been a desire by at least some old fans to have it brought to DVD.  Now while there is about zero chance of that happening, someone managed to contact the co-producer of the series.  The co-producer said, "Wow. Yes, I remember that show.  But I don't have a copy."  He even indicated that the original company that produced it is unlikely to have a copy, perhaps jammed in some corner of a warehouse, unlabeled.

Now how does a company, the actors, the producers, the camera men, everyone involved, spend tons of time, money, energy on producing a show across 6 months, and nobody has a copy of the work?  To me, it's absurd.  It's absurd because these people should have more respect for the work they've done, for what they've produced.  Luckily, some evil pirates scanned some VHS tapes in, and have made all 18-episodes available online -- if even in questionable quality.

How can an author write a book, spend hours upon hours writing that book, and at the end of the day not say, "I'm done making money on this, let's give it away online for free."  Getting this stuff into PDF couldn't be easier today.  I keep mentioning authors because information is the KEY to preserving this technology.  Reverse engineering stuff is hard --- original documentation, source code, or info surrounding the product/software/OS/hardware AT THE TIME IT's MADE is extremely valuable.

Thanks for discussion

Keith
 

Offline JetRacer

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Re: rights vs preservation
« Reply #21 on: March 29, 2008, 11:32:39 PM »
@ kamiga: well, in that perticular case the music industry have painted itself into a corner where you have the right to unlimited replacements and an obligation to give you a free pirate-protection-free cd if you claim the original didn't play. And the law holds them in a very short leash in this matter. And usually personal-use overule in court (US milage may vary).

Even the music industry realize what morons they were and stopped their anti-piracy protection schemes long ago. But every now and again some record label is blessed with a new idiot CEO presenting a new scheme that he claims will work 100% - until it actually hits the market and inevitably fails. Usually when 50cent thinks it's so pesky that his expensive Alpine multimedia system won't play the disc and the label is once again forced to distribute free unprotected versions.
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Offline kamigaTopic starter

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Re: rights vs preservation
« Reply #22 on: April 02, 2008, 04:59:56 AM »
For what it's worth, I managed to contact the producer of the show I mentioned a couple posts back.

I figured I really couldn't complain unless I tried to do something personally about it.

The producer got back to me.

He basically said that although he's tried to get the show put out on DVD that the company that owns the rights (Universal) simply doesn't think it's worth their while.  They didn't release a full season to begin with, and they think there's not enough interest.

So SOME people involved in the process DO care.  It's just the ones that have the ability to change things -- ie the ones in charge, don't think it's a worthwhile investment.

It's a shame that some larger organizations, like maybe the Library of Congress, or something, can't purchase these items and archive them.

Incidentally, the producer seemed to think that a mailing campaign of a few thousand people signing a petition and submitting it to Universal Home Video would do the trick.

Just a follow up

Keith
 

Offline Amithony

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Re: rights vs preservation
« Reply #23 on: April 02, 2008, 05:34:26 AM »
Quote

kamiga wrote:
For what it's worth, I managed to contact the producer of the show I mentioned a couple posts back.

Incidentally, the producer seemed to think that a mailing campaign of a few thousand people signing a petition and submitting it to Universal Home Video would do the trick.

Just a follow up

Keith


If only we could do the same for the Amiga to do the trick. :)
 

Offline Sig999

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Re: rights vs preservation
« Reply #24 on: April 02, 2008, 05:38:43 AM »
Quote

kamiga wrote:

In general, my beef is with these companies and authors whose livelihoods we supported for a long time.  And sure, maybe some didn't become as rich as others, but I'd say most creators with a solid product and decent business plan made money.  And so the community PAID for that software to be produced.  Sure, we paid after the fact.  And sure the company assumed the risk by fronting the money --- but they were rewarded for doing so.  So when there is no more money to be made, isn't it time to give that software back to the people who paid for it to be produced??


Although I think that is sucks when something drops off the map and it's no longer supported - I don't agree with your premise.

We didn't pay to have the software produced. We paid for a piece of software that did something we wanted.  So the whole concept of 'getting what's owed us' falls down, because nothing is really owed us at all after the fact.

There is no 'retroactively produced something for us' - I work in an industry where I produce things for other people - they come to me and tell me what I am to make for them, and I do it, then I get paid and they walk away with the product, they own it, and they can do with it as they will. It is a work for hire, and it's an agreement made before the fact - never afterwards.

It sucks when someone takes their ball and goes home - but at the end of the day they own the ball and can do with it as they please - even if that means doing nothing with it. I can't steal their ball to continue the game with my mates, no matter how much I want to play it.

 

Offline Amithony

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Re: rights vs preservation
« Reply #25 on: April 02, 2008, 07:03:22 AM »
Quote

Sig999 wrote:

Although I think that is sucks when something drops off the map and it's no longer supported - I don't agree with your premise.

We didn't pay to have the software produced. We paid for a piece of software that did something we wanted.  So the whole concept of 'getting what's owed us' falls down, because nothing is really owed us at all after the fact.



I guess that means they shouldn't worry too much if the software gets distributed over the internet for FREE. If they are no longer interested, they shouldn't care what happens to the source should they?
 

Offline Sig999

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Re: rights vs preservation
« Reply #26 on: April 02, 2008, 10:20:01 AM »
Quote

Amithony wrote:
I guess that means they shouldn't worry too much if the software gets distributed over the internet for FREE. If they are no longer interested, they shouldn't care what happens to the source should they?


I guess I mean what I wrote - as for what anyone who wrote and then stopped developing software, I couldn't speak for them now could I?

That's their call to make, and theirs alone. Some folks turn things over to the public domain, others declare it 'abandonware' and let folks copy it to their hearts content.

Others don't - and are quite within their rights to have takedowns issued and whatever else floats their boat. They own the rights - for good, for ill, to do with as they see fit - and no matter how you write it up, that's the alpha to the omega of it.

In the end everyone will do what they want anyway, and that's the way of the world, and to make themselves feel better they'll come up with justifications for their actions.

*shrug*

The more things change, the more they stay the same.

The average joe might copy and swap and do whatever.

What the smart joe would do is write their own version to fill the niche.

Then of course theres the other route of trying to ask the holders of the rights if they mind... a few people do that.

 

Offline kamigaTopic starter

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Re: rights vs preservation
« Reply #27 on: April 03, 2008, 12:11:27 AM »
Quote

Sig999 wrote:

It sucks when someone takes their ball and goes home - but at the end of the day they own the ball and can do with it as they please - even if that means doing nothing with it.



Do you think abandoning a piece of work, or specifically denying others rights to distribute it, does justice to the original effort put into creating it?  Assuming the profit potential is gone, as a creator, wouldn't you want to see more people using, enjoying, appreciating your creation?  Doesn't that add respect(to you, to your creation) and make your past effort seem more worthwhile?

To me, just knowing that others have appreciated my contributions to the community, is a reward that money could never replace.

Example: Let's say I wrote a book in 1990 on the Atari ST(sorry I can't resist).  Outside of that book, I'm a nobody, except in small circles.  I've made some money from the book, but the Atari ST went away, and it's no longer published.  It's now 18 years later and I'm approached out of the blue, by a well-meaning stranger, who wants to OCR my book, and make it available because a number of ST enthusiasts could really use the material.

I don't know about you, but I'd be jumping up and down for them to do this!!  WHY?  Because these people UNDERSTAND the value of that information.  They appreciate the work I did  18 years ago!!  My creation is still relevant!

Doesn't that improve your self-worth?  Why not?

Keith
 

Offline persia

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Re: rights vs preservation
« Reply #28 on: April 03, 2008, 01:24:23 AM »
A clearing house that checked with owners of programs and provided copies of programs that the authors agreed to allow distributed would be fine.  The issue here is that the owner of the IP has absolute rights when it comes to their software, yeah they can sit on it if they want, but you could provide a site for owners who don't.
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Offline Sig999

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Re: rights vs preservation
« Reply #29 from previous page: April 03, 2008, 07:10:02 AM »
Quote

kamiga wrote:

Do you think abandoning a piece of work, or specifically denying others rights to distribute it, does justice to the original effort put into creating it?  Assuming the profit potential is gone, as a creator, wouldn't you want to see more people using, enjoying, appreciating your creation?  Doesn't that add respect(to you, to your creation) and make your past effort seem more worthwhile?



I think it has absolutely nothing to do with it. If it's their  work, and they choose to abandon it and keep the rights - they  can if they choose. It has nothing to do with what *I* think or want. What 'justice' is done to *their* original effort is left up to them - they have numerous choices, but they are theirs to make, irrespective of what decisions you, me, or anyone else wants or thinks is right.

As for the example - well, that's what you'd do... that's your right and your decision. But just because that's what you'd do, or what I'd do, doesn't mean that everyone else has to follow the direction of our compass.

A *real* example would be me telling you what you should do with your creation because it's what *I* want you to do... I have a feeling you'd tell me to sod off - and rightfully so!

Which leaves only one REAL decision, and it's not if what they are doing is wrong or right (because whatever they choose - it's right, for whatever reasons), it's whether others will respect their rights and their decisions.